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5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis

Dreadhead Kev

UFC president Dana White ringside on Beale Street.

Last weekend in front of Jerry “The King” Lawler’s Hall of Fame Bar & Grille on Beale Street, UFC president Dana White was involved in a professional wrestling match for the first time ever. White’s debut in the squared circle was another historic wrestling moment in city know for its wrestling history. 

Here are five facts about the UFC boss’s “Beale Street Brawl”:

1) White was in the corner of Derrick King and Matt Serra in a tag match featuring one wrester and one MMA fighter on each team and one WWE Hall of Famer as a special enforcer outside the ring.

2) White entered the ring towards the end of the match and played an important role in the finish before getting attacked from behind by Maria Starr.

5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis (5)

3) All of the action was filmed for the reality show Dana White: Lookin’ for a Fight.

[slideshow-1] 4) White picked Memphis over Mania.

5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis

5) Mr. Belding was there.

5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis (2)

5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis (3)

Listen to Kevin Cerrito talk about pro wrestling on the radio every Saturday from 11-noon CT on Sports 56/87.7 FM in Memphis. Subscribe to Cerrito Live on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, tunein, PlayerFM or Sticher. Find out about his upcoming wrestling trivia events at cerritotrivia.com. Follow him on Twitter @cerrito.

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News The Fly-By

Fight Club

This month, V3Fights, which hosts mixed-martial arts (MMA) fighting competitions, is joining the professional ranks of the Memphis Grizzlies, Memphis Redbirds, and Mississippi RiverKings.

V3Fights is going pro after a little more than four years of hosting amateur MMA fights around town. The “pro” designation means V3Fights can compensate its own fighters, and they can pay for big-name national and international MMA stars to come to town.

“As an amateur organization, we can’t pay fighters. We are only allowed to give them money toward travel. But as a pro organization, we can bring fighters in from all over the world,” said V3Fights president Nick Harmeier.

V3Fights got its start in 2009 with an MMA fight at the Delta Fair. Soon, the group began hosting regular bouts at Newby’s. Once it outgrew that venue, it moved to Minglewood Hall.

V3Fights be holding its first pro fight, with a top bill of Wade Johnson of Bradford, Arkansas versus Craig Johnson of Sevierville, Tennessee, on January 18th at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts. V3 will continue to host some amateur fights at Minglewood Hall but hope to hold several pro events throughout the year at the Cannon Center.

The iconic MMA octagon ring will be set up in the orchestra pit, and seating will be set up on the stage surrounding the octagon, creating the signature MMA “bowl feeling,” Harmeier said.

“We wanted to bring something to downtown Memphis. We would have loved to do FedExForum, but we’re definitely not there yet,” Harmeier said. “The Cannon Center made the most sense.”

Although V3 Fights is a professional MMA organization now, Harmeier is quick to point out that the Memphis-based fighting club is not trying to compete with the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), the most well-known pro MMA organization.

“We don’t want to be the UFC, which is like the NFL [National Football League] of MMA,” Harmeier said. “We want to be more like the NCAA [National Collegiate Athletic Association]. We want these guys to come in as young strong talent, and hopefully, they can make it to the next level of fighting for the UFC.”

Tennessee law allows fighters to use elbows and knees in pro MMA matches, a tactic that isn’t permitted in amateur fights.

“It’s a lot easier to cut someone with an elbow,” Harmeier said.

Additionally, pro fights have five-minute rounds rather than the three-minute rounds in amateur fights, and the gloves used in pro fights are lighter in weight.

Harmeier said going pro made sense because so many of its long-time fighters were going pro.

“As we evolved as a business and as our fighters evolved, we decided to go pro to continue the sport,” Harmeier said. “We wanted to give them a good platform.”

But V3 isn’t forgetting the little guys.

“We plan to keep the amateur fights going at Minglewood Hall. Those events help us market those guys from the get-go,” Harmeier said. “A lot of amateurs fight like pro fighters, so the skill set for amateurs in this part of the country is really stepped up.”

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Knock Down, Drag Out

The overwhelming smell of body odor is enough to knock a person out.

But a little sweaty funk is unavoidable in a room where 14 young guys are practicing mixed martial arts (MMA) at a recent Team Vortex training session. The mostly shirtless twentysomethings are teamed up in pairs, and to the casual onlooker, each couple might appear to be engaging in a fond embrace. But then, boom, one pushes the other to the ground, where they continue wrestling on the floor.

It quickly becomes obvious that this is no hug fest but rather a practice session for the team’s upcoming “Fight Night V,” a mixed martial arts cage match pitting 17 pairs of amateur fighters against each other.

The event, to be held at the Millington Naval Base, will feature three-time Ultimate Fighting Champion (UFC) and jiu-jitsu fighter Royce Gracie as an honorary guest. Gracie’s family is credited with popularizing mixed martial arts in Brazil in the 1920s. The UFC hit the American mainstream in 1993 after Royce took home the organization’s first championship belt.

“MMA is like pro wrestling but realistic,” explains Min Kang, a barrel-chested Korean-American who founded Team Vortex in 2006. “You can fight standing up or on the ground. You can fight close in, like dirty boxing, but there are some rules.”

Pop in an old UFC video from the early ’90s, and it appears that mixed martial arts is a vicious blood sport where anything goes. But after establishing some rules in the late ’90s, participants say the sport became safer than boxing.

“The referees will stop the fight before you get hurt,” says 22-year-old Andy “The Stunner” Uhrich, one of Kang’s first students. “In boxing, you’re taking all blows to the head for 15 rounds. [In MMA], if you get hit one good time or get knocked down or knocked out, they stop the fight.”

“Everyone thinks MMA is brutal, but it’s not,” adds Nomie Davidson, who helps Kang coach the 30 or so Vortex team members. “You can stop by ‘tapping out’ or by referee. Or a judge can stop the fight in the amateur league. It’s not an out-and-out free-for-all.”

In fact, Kang boasts that none of his team members have sustained serious injuries in a fight. The most common complaints are cramps, swelling, and sore joints.

“Man, if we could only get BenGay to sponsor us,” says Kang with a laugh.

Mixed martial arts combines wrestling, grappling, boxing, kickboxing, jiu-jitsu, and just about every martial art out there. In the local amateur league, knees and elbows to the head aren’t allowed. Fighters go at each other in three three-minute rounds.

Team Vortex trains using a method called hyper-blend, in which fighters tailor maneuvers to their own personal style. For example, Kang may demonstrate a move to his students, but the students are free to tweak it as they please.

At a recent training session, 19-year-old Zack “The Man” Hanson puts the hyper-blend method into practice. Davidson demonstrates a grappling technique on Hanson in front of the class, and the paired men begin trying it out on one another. But Zack tells Davidson he knows a better way. Hanson shows Davidson his way, and the coach agrees.

“Hey, guys. Stop for minute and watch this. Zach knows a better way,” says Davidson, as the men halt practice to watch a new demonstration.

Today, Kang and Davidson train about 30 students, ranging in age from 17 to 28, four days a week at the Raleigh Community Center. But Team Vortex has humbler beginnings.

“In June 2006, we started in my two-car garage,” Kang says. “I had one student and he got injured, but he brought me Andy [Uhrich]. All Andy wanted was a six-pack. He didn’t want to fight, but we tried it for fun and it turned into something.”

That something is Uhrich’s recent move from the amateur league to pro status. Uhrich made his pro debut last month in a bout against veteran fighter Chris “2 Cruel” Gates in “The Art of War 4,” a cage match held at Grand Casino in Tunica.

“When I got there, it was everything I dreamed of. Big lights and cameras and everything,” Uhrich says. “Once I stepped into the ring and the cameras were in my face, I froze like a deer in the headlights. I got hit a few times and then I started fighting, but I lost to a triangle [choke].”

Now that Uhrich has gone pro, there’s no going back. But in the city that bred current UFC champion Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, Kang has hopes that his fighters could be the next big stars.

“Rampage started out in the amateurs here,” Kang says. “You never know. You may see ‘The Stunner’ and ‘The Man’ out there someday.”

“Fight Night V” is Saturday, November 17th, 7:30 p.m. at the Millington Naval Base’s North 82 Gym (7519 Memphis Ave.). For more information, call 388-6338 or 517-6709.

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The Ring, Rampage, and Raleigh-Egypt

A little over a month ago, Memphis native Quinton “Rampage” Jackson was named the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s (UFC) light heavyweight champ after taking down defending champion Chuck Liddell in under two minutes.

The nationally televised fight was broadcast to thousands of people via Pay-Per-View. But tonight, at a modest gym in Southeast Memphis, Rampage has a much smaller audience. And the competition hasn’t had a cameo on Entourage.

Jackson is visiting from his home in Irvine, California, and training for the first time since the Liddell knockout. While talking to fans at the gym, a twentysomething man in a red shirt grabs the fighter, catching him off-guard. Jackson takes the man to the floor, but the man responds by wrapping his legs around Jackson in a move that looks like a pretzel.

The two wrestle around on the ground until the red-shirted man gets the 205-pound Jackson on the ground underneath him. He’s sitting on the champion’s chest, his back end facing Jackson’s head.

“Did he put his ass in my face?” asks Jackson.

“I think he did,” chimes a fan on the sidelines, as other people laugh at the fighter’s sarcasm.

Jackson reverses the move, sending the other fighter back into a submissive position. After the UFC champ wins the battle, another man jumps onto him before he has a chance to catch his

UFC Champ Quinton Jackson wrangles with a training partner at Mullen’s Karate

breath. The two go at it for about 20 minutes until, again, Jackson triumphs.

“I submitted him, but he let me,” says Jackson. “It’s just training. In the gym, there are no winners or losers.”

The comment reflects the easygoing attitude of the 29-year-old mixed-martial artist. Sitting on the red, padded floor of the gym, his gleaming gold UFC champion belt beside him, Jackson discusses growing up in Memphis and his newfound celebrity status.

A self-professed lazy fighter, Jackson does not like to train. But he has little choice as his next fight, a September 8th battle against the current champion of UFC’s counterpart in China, approaches.

“If my trainer don’t make me do it, I don’t do it,” says Jackson when asked about his pre-fight training regimen. He doesn’t train with weights but rather sticks to sparring matches, wrestling, ju-jitsu, push-ups, and sit-ups.

Jackson began wrestling at Raleigh-Egypt High School, a decision he says saved his life. Before taking up the sport, he was hanging out with a tough crowd and skipping school. But he quickly excelled on the school’s wrestling team, earning fifth place in a state tournament during his senior year.

These days, his high school hobby is truly paying off. Jackson’s win against Liddell earned him overnight celebrity in the United States.

“Now I’ve noticed that a few more big companies are interested in endorsing me. MTV wants to give me my own reality show,” Jackson says. “I’m the first mixed-martial artist to get my own shoe.”

Though Jackson’s family still resides in Raleigh, the fighter says it will be awhile before he moves back to the Bluff City. He says he needs the gyms in California, where other UFC fighters live, to be successful. And for now, he’s going to battle to stay on top.

Is there anyone he dreams of fighting?

“I don’t care as long as I get paid,” he says. “I’d fight my mama if they paid me enough money. … I’m joking. She might get mad at me.”