Bellator 151: Caldwell vs Warren Live Discussion - 3/4/16

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Zi Nazi
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Dec 31, 2014
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Complete Results
  • Darrion Caldwell def. Joe Warren via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 1, 3:23
  • Fernando Gonzalez def. Gilbert Smith via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)
  • Bubba Jenkins def. Goiti Yamauchi via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27, 29-27)
  • Joe Taimanglo def. Sirwan Kakai via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Treston Thomison def. Aaron Roberson via submission (guillotine choke) – Round 2, 2:20
  • Jermayne Barnes def. Derek Palmer via submission (strikes) – Round 2, 1:17
  • Neiman Gracie def. Roger Carroll via unanimous decision (30-26, 30-27, 30-27)
  • Ricky Turcios def. Steve Garcia via split decision (29-27, 28-29, 30-27)
  • Justin Patterson def. Chance Rencountre via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)
  • Ray Wood def. Chris Jones via TKO (strikes) – Round 1, 3:10
 
Last edited:

ECC170

Monster's 11,ATM 2,Parlay Challenge,Hero GP Champ
Pro Fighter
Jan 23, 2015
14,567
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great main card..Warrens getting tuneed up...Watch the Greco master get launched in a headlock by Caldwell..
 

Ranger

Well-Known Member
Nov 17, 2015
497
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Joe talamandingo is a beast and cant wait to see him fight! This card is amazing and cant wait for it. A lot of these fights are potential no. 1 contender fights. I think Darrion and Goti will be fighting for the title after this fight. The only thing that sucks is that MVP got injured and pulled out against Gonzalez; if he had won that fight, he would have got a title shot. And I think he would have blasted Gonzalez into tomorrow. Either way I hope they give MVP Paul Bradley or Brennan Ward. It's time for Bellator to stop babying him and give him some tough ass fights.
 

JustynLikesCP

Lurker
Mar 1, 2016
1
0
Cannot wait for this card, I will be live covering the event for Combat Press. It's gone under the radar but solid fights!
 

CutmanMatt

MMA Hematologist
Jan 31, 2016
570
2,165
Steve Garcia vs. Ricky Turcios on the UC is worth checking out if you can. It's the sleeper fight of the night in my opinion
 

CutmanMatt

MMA Hematologist
Jan 31, 2016
570
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I'm excited to see Neiman Gracie as well
For sure. Roger Carroll will be the most experienced dude Neiman's fought so far, by a long shot. I expect that fight to be all ground, they're both submission aces.

Renzo will be there cornering Neiman too, I know if I was nervous about fighting a guy with 29 fights, that would help me out ,lol.
 

TheEmperorRises

Right click hospital, left click cemetery
Dec 4, 2015
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For sure. Roger Carroll will be the most experienced dude Neiman's fought so far, by a long shot. I expect that fight to be all ground, they're both submission aces.

Renzo will be there cornering Neiman too, I know if I was nervous about fighting a guy with 29 fights, that would help me out ,lol.
 

Ranger

Well-Known Member
Nov 17, 2015
497
385
For sure. Roger Carroll will be the most experienced dude Neiman's fought so far, by a long shot. I expect that fight to be all ground, they're both submission aces.

Renzo will be there cornering Neiman too, I know if I was nervous about fighting a guy with 29 fights, that would help me out ,lol.
One guy I would to see bellator have fight more often is abdul razak alhasan. Not sure if you heard of him he is from Ghana and fights out of texas. He was on the prelims of the Grove vs Beltran card. I heard good things about the jackson's fighter and of neiman. Hopefully Neiman can evolve...I think Renzo's is good place to train because of all the talented fighters that train there.
 

CutmanMatt

MMA Hematologist
Jan 31, 2016
570
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One guy I would to see bellator have fight more often is abdul razak alhasan. Not sure if you heard of him he is from Ghana and fights out of texas. He was on the prelims of the Grove vs Beltran card. I heard good things about the jackson's fighter and of neiman. Hopefully Neiman can evolve...I think Renzo's is good place to train because of all the talented fighters that train there.
I remember Razak. He fought Virgil Zwicker on that show. Didn't go his way unfortunately. I don't think he's on our current roster. Which isn't to say he wont ever be again, they may just want him to get another W or 2 outside of the org first. He'd be a good matchup for Philipe Lins.
 

Ranger

Well-Known Member
Nov 17, 2015
497
385
I remember Razak. He fought Virgil Zwicker on that show. Didn't go his way unfortunately. I don't think he's on our current roster. Which isn't to say he wont ever be again, they may just want him to get another W or 2 outside of the org first. He'd be a good matchup for Philipe Lins.
Do you know when lins will be fighting next?

btw I was talking about this guy, not the LHW that lost to Zwicker: Abdul Razak Alhassan MMA Stats, Pictures, News, Videos, Biography - Sherdog.com
 

CutmanMatt

MMA Hematologist
Jan 31, 2016
570
2,165
Do you know when lins will be fighting next?

btw I was talking about this guy, not the LHW that lost to Zwicker: Abdul Razak Alhassan MMA Stats, Pictures, News, Videos, Biography - Sherdog.com
Ahh, my bad. totally different fighter, you're right. We do a lot of shows in his area, so I wouldnt be surprised at all to see him on again. Especially since he had a good showing his first show out.

Lins will be fighting again pretty soon. Within the next 6 months I would say. Kid is such a beast, just got bit by the injury bug.
 

MMABROdotcom

Well-Known Member
Oct 2, 2015
308
507
Little article on Fernando Gonzalez to get things going ahead of Friday night:
Eyes on the title, Fernando Gonzalez out to take his respect at Bellator 151

Josh Connor

Under the bright lights of the WinStar World Casino this Friday night in Thackerville, Ok., Fernando Gonzalez (24-13) will make his MMA return at Bellator 151. Having taken a brief hiatus from MMA to compete in the kickboxing portion of “Bellator Dynamite 1” in September against Paul Daley (38-13), Gonzalez returns his focus to the Bellator welterweight division where he is riding the momentum of a four fight win streak and gunning for a title shot. Despite narrowly dropping the kickboxing match to Daley on the judge’s scorecards, Gonzalez walked away from the contest more confident in his skills and the progress he is making as a fighter after nearly a decade at Team Quest.

Fernando Gonzalez vs. Paul Daley at Dynamite 1 (Photo credit: Bellator MMA)

"If it was an MMA fight, I won an MMA fight. Obviously, they scored the kicks above the strikes, so I can see how they gave [Daley] the win, but the actual fight I feel that I beat him. This is someone who is known for knocking everybody out, and I went and fought him at what he is best at and had him running from me in the third round. To me, I feel I won that fight. The second and third round I believe were mine, but it is what it is. I still proved a point where I can hang with [Daley] definitely on the feet. I actually had him gassed and running from me at nine minutes, another six minutes I think I put him away.” -Fernando Gonzalez
Standing in front of Gonzalez on fight night was originally to be highly touted and undefeated 9-0 Bellator welterweight Michael “Venom” Page (MVP), best known for his flashy striking and crowd pleasing knockouts. However, after MVP withdrew from the bout for undisclosed reasons several weeks into the fight camp, Gonzalez began to form his own opinion about what transpired.

“I honestly believe the nerves got to [MVP]. To me, it’s a sign of respect on my side because the way he is beating all these guys pretty easy for him to back out of a fight obviously shows how he views me as a fighter. That I am a tough test, and that I was going to give him a tough fight. He has only done that with a few other guys that are at that level, Brennan Ward and Kurtis Millender. For me, I didn’t really take it as a bad thing. I think it actually elevated my stature where guys are actually seeing I must be tougher than sometimes given credit for. Whatever reason he backed out for, I honestly think they don’t want to get that loss on his record without fighting someone who actually has a big name.”

Standing in MVP’s place on fight night and making his Bellator debut will be Gilbert Smith (12-4), a UFC and RFA veteran who most recently defended his RFA welterweight title in October at RFA 31 before signing with Bellator. For Gonzalez, he welcomes the toughest competition possible as he looks to clear his path to a title shot in 2016.

“Since I came to Bellator, I have asked for nothing but tough fights. I want to fight the best guys in Bellator. Gilbert is a tough guy so he is going to come in there mentally strong. He has got a lot of heart so I think we will make for an exciting fight to be honest. It’s his debut fight so he is going to come in there well prepared to put on a good show. I feel my boxing skills are just a little bit better than his. He has good grappling, but I have really good grappling people haven’t gotten to see yet. Training ten years with Dan Henderson, you are going to pick up some skills on the ground. Basically where he is going to want to take it, I feel I will still be stronger than him and get that finish.”

Leading up to Bellator 151, Gonzalez has been working extremely hard at Team Quest to make sure his weight for this fight is on point as he knows that is the only current discriminator which could be used against him in his bid for the title. After nearly a decade in the trenches at Team Quest putting in the work, Gonzalez reflected on just how far he has come as a fighter since first joining the team nearly a decade earlier.

"When I came into [Team] Quest, I was already a striker. Dan [Henderson] had brought me in as a lefty to mimic Vitor Belfort when he was fighting him the first time in Vegas. So, I came in there with striking already, but obviously I had training with good wrestlers and Division I wrestlers as well. I remember on my first day at Team Quest I shot in on Dan [Henderson] to do something, and Dan nearly knocked me out with a hip. Hips into me, sprawled, and I was like ‘Oh sh*t’. And then getting beaten up by him while on bottom, I was like ‘This is where I need to be to up my game on my wrestling.’ I thought I knew something, but once you go against an Olympian it is a whole different story. I learned a lot from [Henderson], and I’ve been there about 10 years with Dan."



For Gonzalez, the road to the welterweight title starts Friday night against Gilbert Smith at Bellator 151, and he looks forward to entering the cage and taking his respect one opponent at a time until the welterweight strap is firmly around his waist.

"I’m letting [Bellator] know I want to fight these guys. Eventually the top guys will have to fight the top guys, and I am one of them. Put me in there. I don’t care if it’s [Josh] Thomson who has the title or Benson [Henderson], whoever has the title, I want to fight for the belt so when I have it around my waist I can call out Paul Daley. I can call out these guys who have no reason to run anymore. Get in here and fight me. I know the way I fight. Win, lose, or draw, [Bellator] are always going to call me back to fight. They are always going to give me another good fight, another opportunity.”

Fighter Take:
A future Bellator bonus system: "To be honest, you are going to see a lot more knockouts, a lot more people going for it. That is one of the biggest things I feel we are lacking a little bit. One fight [in the UFC] can change a fighter’s life. You give me 20 or 30 [thousand] on top of what your purse is, I know for me I am going to go for the kill if they put that bonus in play. Just for the lifestyle too. I still kind of work and teach classes and stuff like that. The more I can dedicate myself just to my craft and getting better everyday, they are going to see better fights out of me. If they do that, [Bellator] will be changing people’s lives. That’s what we are all doing it for. We obviously all have families and want to make sure after fighting we have enough to take care of them."
 

MMABROdotcom

Well-Known Member
Oct 2, 2015
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Joe Warren reflects on past, focused on preserving future with win over "The Wolf"

3/1/2016

Comments



Joe Warren (Photo Credit: Bellator MMA)
Dave Willford

The main event of Bellator 151 this Friday features former Bellator featherweight and bantamweight champ Joe “The Baddest Man on the Planet” Warren (12-4, 1 no contest) vs Darrion “The Wolf” Caldwell (8-0). Before starting mixed martial arts, Warren had a long career in collegiate wrestling, and later in international Greco-Roman wrestling, highlighted by a 2006 Greco-Roman world championship in the 60 kilogram (130 pound) division.

Coming from amateur wrestling, at first Warren was a bit of a reluctant mixed martial artist, with no intention of competing in the sport. He explains, “I never really was a fighter, you know? My teammates were Dan Henderson, Randy Couture, and Matt Lindland, and all those studs. I was the young guy on their team. So while I was winning, I was watching all my teammates kick everyone’s ass, you know? They were making a lot of money, and they were excited. They always talked to me about it, and then after I won a world title, I was actually snowboarding in Aspen with my brother, and I got a call from Dan Henderson and he said ‘Hey, we got you a fight.’ I said, ‘I’m not a fighter!’ He said, ‘You are now. They’ll give you thirty grand to fly over to Japan and fight these guys.’”

Joe Warren (Photo Credit: Bellator MMA)

So, faced with the offer, he made his entry into the mixed martial arts world, competing in the DREAM featherweight tournament in 2009. There he faced and defeated Chase Beebe, and then Norifumi “Kid” Yamamoto, before losing to Bibiano Fernandes in the tournament semifinals. “At the time I had just won a world title. I believed no one in the world was tougher than me at that weight at that time. So I jumped on a plane and went over there. Nothing like jumping into the deep end with both legs. It was a really tough start for me. I kind of really didn’t like the sport until just recently.”

At the beginning, he basically just had wrestling to rely on. Still, the wrestling was enough to get wins in his first two matches. Deciding to stay in mixed martial arts and joining Bellator in 2010, he knew he would have to add other skills to his wrestling, “I never really wanted it as a career, and it ended up being a career. That being said, I’m a world-class athlete, a world champ - a four-time world champ now - and I understand what it means to win. So I just went back to the drawing board. Marc Montoya, at Factory X, my coach, they just kept me focused. Every single day I learn a little bit more. I’m a student of this game. There are too many sports involved in mixed martial arts for you to think that you are the best at all of them. I’m just trying to be able to hold my own with the best in every single sport. I feel confident right now that my skill level in all the different martial arts is at par, and focused on putting a hole through Darrion Caldwell and getting another belt here.” Even at the start of his Bellator career, the training paid off, with Warren winning the Bellator featherweight title by second-round knockout over Joe Soto in September 2010.

Later, he moved down to bantamweight, winning an interim title in May, 2014, and unifying the title by beating Eduardo Dantas in October of that year. Last year he lost that title to current champ Marcos Galvao, and fully expects to get another shot at the bantamweight belt once he gets past Darrion Caldwell, “I am the next person fighting for that belt. I could have waited and got that shot, but I’m a fighter and they gave me an opportunity to fight Darrion Caldwell, and not have to wait another five or six months to get a fight. So I was honored to get that opportunity. Any time Viacom and Bellator put their trust into Bellator’s Baddest Man, I go out there with a lot of motivation and drive to get the job done.”
“You know, I beat both of those Brazilians’ asses before. That is my belt. I was caught in a kneebar from a world champion jiu jitsu fighter, Marcos Galvao. He did a great job and caught me. Nothing I can do. That’s the unpredictable part of MMA. You can be 100% and still get caught in something funky. And he got me. It’s very sad for me and my family that that belt was gone, but I’m focused on this fight right now, on Darrion Caldwell. I don’t care what those two guys do to each other. They both know in the back of their minds that as soon as they win, they got me coming, and that’s not a very comfortable situation for either of them. They’re just focused on getting this win, and I’m just focused on putting a hole through one of them and getting that belt back.

While confident, Joe Warren is not looking past Darrion Caldwell. “He brings a lot to the table. He’s a tall, energetic, explosive fighter. That means nothing to me. He’s just another body in front of me to put a hole through so I can get that Bellator belt back.” Caldwell is undefeated so far, and like Warren has an extensive wrestling background, but Warren is no longer purely a wrestler. He now has more skills to bring to the fight, although he remains confident in his main tool, “I would love to knock this guy’s head right off. I’d like to break his arm. I’d like to submit him. I’d like to finish this fight any way possible. That being said, we’re wrestlers. That’s what I win at. My pedigree is wrestling. If it needs to get to who is tougher, then it’s going to be a wrestling match, and that’s going to be a match I win. He’s a Division 1 collegiate wrestler; I’m the Baddest Man on the Planet. I’m a Greco-Roman world champ; I’m a three-time Bellator world champ. I’m not some chump coming up trying to make a name. He’s trying to make a name on me. That’s how it works. I said last interview that I was Bellator’s bantamweight gatekeeper, if you want to win anything in Bellator, you’ve got to come through me, and that’s not going to happen. I’m here again to put on a performance live on Spike for all my Bellator Nation, and I’m excited to get that opportunity.”

Caldwell at 5’10” is taller and longer than most bantamweights, but Warren doesn’t think this will give Caldwell an advantage, “ ...maybe his face is going to be easier to punch because it’s not going to be so low. I’m going to throw some punches and kicks, and try to put everything I have into all of my techniques, and we’ll see what happens. I’ve fought taller fighters. I’ve fought bigger fighters. I’ve held the belt at 145, and those guys are way bigger. That’s why I dropped to 135, because I was out of my class size-wise.”

Joe Warren battles L.C. Davis (Photo Credit: Bellator MMA)

Nor does the fact that Caldwell is coming into the fight undefeated bother him. Warren feels his skills, and especially his experience in fighting tougher competition than Caldwell has faced, will make a big difference. “God damn right! I’ve been fighting at the top, top level ever since I walked into a cage. I’ve been fighting with a belt on my waist, or fighting for a belt every single time. I’m very comfortable with fighting. I’m always the underdog. If they want to call me the favorite, I still see myself as the underdog. I believe my experience is going to help a lot in this win of mine. Just the experience of having to go those hard fights against those undefeated fighters. It’s a whole different type of fight when you’re fighting a guy with no losses on his record, and that’s something I’ve done several times, and I’ve won every time. He’s got a lot of pressure on him. Me, it’s another fight for me to impress myself in front of the Bellator Nation, and I’m honored to get the opportunity to do that.”

There seems to be more fighters jumping from one promotion to another these days, with Phil Davis and Benson Henderson recently joining Bellator from the UFC. Warren doesn’t plan to join in this trend. “No, I’m a Bellator man through and through. I bleed Bellator. I started this league, and I’m going to finish it. This kind of weight class is mine there. If I don’t have the belt on, I’m fighting for the belt. I came to Bellator with the decision back then to go to the UFC, and I chose Bellator. Now these other people are starting to get the opportunity to make that choice, and they’re being smart. Like I’ve said before, Bellator is where the cool kids fight. That’s just the bottom line. Bellator as an organization gets bigger every single time, gets more exciting every single time, brings something new to the table. Anybody Bellator. Scott Coker, or Viacom wants to bring from another league over, I’ll be happy to beat the shit out of them in that Bellator cage and show them what that means to be part of the Bellator team.”

Having joined the promotion and fighting for them since Bellator 13 six years ago, he’s seen the organization change, and expects to be part of it going forward. “I’ve won three world titles now for Bellator. And I’ve won it with Bjorn and with Coker. And they’ve stuck behind me the same through the first fight to the last fight. I see the change, just getting bigger and more explosive, and I’m really honored to watch Bellator getting the numbers that they are. And I’m honored that I’m pretty much the face of Bellator. I started here since the beginning, and we’re bringing a lot of fun faces in, but everyone needs to remember who started Bellator, and where it’s going to end. I’m proud to say that I’m a Bellator fighter, and that I do hold that strap all the time, for Bellator. It’s a great organization. It just seems to get bigger every single time and more exciting.”


Still, fighting in the lighter weight classes is less lucrative than at heavier weights. “Like I like to say, if I’m 200 pounds, I’m a multi-millionaire right now. OK, that’s what it would be. But since I’m a 135’er, since I’m a bad ass bantamweight, I’m fighting for every single thing. Bellator takes care of me, and I get paid at the top of the list for bantamweight fighters anywhere. That being said, when I get my wins, I get paid, but it is hard. We are the tougher fighters, we are the fighters who give you the better show. We’re the fighters who put everything we have into that cage, I feel like a little bit more than the bigger guys. But, I think that’s changing. The guard is changing a little bit, I definitely think the lighter weight fighters deserve a lot more money than they do get paid.”

“The Baddest Man on the Planet” is now 39 years old, but he’s not thinking of retirement anytime soon. “I don’t see any slowing down in the future here. I don’t even notice I’m that old. I’ve been in the sport for a short amount of time, just five or six years. I don’t really get injured. I haven’t had any injuries. I haven’t had any physical problems slow me down from fighting. I believe I’m better every single day. I believe when I start to slow down, and don’t get better every day, and I’m not being able to fight in there with the best, that’s when we’ll make that decision. But right now, that’s not anywhere on my future.”

When that day does come, he has lots of options on what to do next, whether it’s in the wrestling or MMA spheres, or even commentating, which he’s done for Bellator from time to time. “At that point, we’ll make the decision. Like I said, Viacom, Spike, and Bellator have been there for me through this whole deal. I would love to get an opportunity to work for Viacom and Spike and Bellator, and give back a little of what they’ve given to me. I have been competing for so long, I haven’t really been able to give back. That being said, in the Olympic wrestling, Greco-Roman wrestling, collegiate wrestling, I have so much to give back that I’m noticing right now. Possibly in coaching. I’d love to get on that microphone and talk a little shit for Bellator. I’d like to be part of, just the organization, or, I’m real focused on trying to give back a little bit. I have so much technique and so much winning mentality that I can teach and show, that I’m not sure where it’s going to go. It could go Division 1, it could go coaching. Right now I’m not really sure. One day at a time.

All of that is the distant future, though. For this Friday against Darrion Caldwell, Warren says, “My focus is violent, my technique is precise, and I’m focused on one thing: winning. I know how to do this every single time.”
 

MMABROdotcom

Well-Known Member
Oct 2, 2015
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Other side of the cage's take from Darrion:
Darrion Caldwell looks to unleash one man wolf pack on Joe Warren at Bellator 151

3/2/2016

Comments



Darrion "The Wolf" Caldwell (Photo Credit: Bellator MMA)
Josh Connor

“[Bellator] is about building stars. I’m a star in the making. I’m a star today. Bellator was the right choice.” -Darrion "The Wolf" Caldwell

As Darrion “The Wolf” Caldwell (8-0) prepares to make his sixth appearance under the Bellator banner Friday night in Oklahoma at Bellator 151, he will remain focused on the reasons he signed with the fight promotion in the first place. He is here to be a star. To get his hand raised in victory on Friday night against a gritty former champion like Joe Warren (13-4), Caldwell knows he will need to be at his best and mindful of the game plan Power MMA head coach Aaron Simpson has prepared and the process which has brought him victory after victory since his promotional debut in 2014.

Aaron Simpson is an MMA genius. He knows exactly where to put you in a fight to win. What better guy to have in your corner than a guy who has been in the struggle, who’s been on top, and finishing his career as a coach. Sticking to the game plan for sure. And that is what I am going to do in this fight against Joe Warren, stick to the game plan of what I have been working on and the repetitive motions I have been putting my body through. Fighters they want to work so many aspects, but you are only fighting one fighter, one person out there. You are not fighting the whole division. Every fight is a game plan, and sticking to it is most important.”
With a win over Warren on Friday night in Thackerville, “The Wolf” will undoubtedly stake his rightful claim as next in line at a future title shot against the winner of Glavoa-Dantas, a Bellator 150 bantamweight title fight canceled last week in the wake of Marcos Glavao being ill. When questioned about the title bout cancelation, Caldwell did not mince words.

“Those guys don’t want to fight so as long as I keep winning fights they are going to get pushed to the side. They want to be p*ssies about fighting each other, then let’s go ahead and scratch those fights and get them some guys that they will fight. If they want to fight me or Joe [Warren] or whoever in the weight class then let’s do that. Let’s not pussyfoot around one another. There are four guys in this division vying for the number one spot, and two of them are constantly pulling out against one another so let’s get them the hell out of there and make room for the guys who want to fight every single one of them.”

For Caldwell, he knows the road to championship gold and achieving the financial goals he has laid out for himself in the sport run through the long time face of the promotion in Joe Warren. Caldwell hopes to use the SPIKE platform on Friday night to put the new breed of fighter he represents on full display and take one step closer to getting the bantamweight strap around his waist.

“A win over Joe [Warren] is everything. It just proves that I am the best in the division. He has beaten both of these guys who had the title in the weight class. I’ve come into this sport looking up to Joe in wrestling and MMA. So, a win over a guy like Joe, it just solidifies that I am ready for anyone.”
For Caldwell, after three and a half years in the sport of MMA, he feels the timing is right, and that his star is about to be launched into the MMA stratosphere. A win over Warren gets Caldwell one step closer to the 25 minute championship fight he has been mentally preparing himself for years.

“I just think I am always on, you know. Whenever the lights are on and the cameras are shining, it’s my time. I prepare for this. I’ve prepared to peak for one specific night. Preparing for one specific night to peak for 25 minutes, and that is what I am preparing for."

In victory, Caldwell will leave it up to Bellator and matchmaker Rich Chou to determine what is next, but he fully intends to have an active 2016 inside the Bellator cage.

Richard Chou does a great job with keeping me busy. I leave it into the hands of the matchmaker and Bellator. I’d like to fight. It’s all about the money for me and keeping my pockets fat. The more times I fight, the more money I get. I want to be able to retire off of what I have made in the sport, and not ever have to do a seminar or college wrestling coaching or anything. I want to be able to walk away with millions in my pocket as an undefeated champion. Anything less is not ok with me. I put my body through a lot of sh*t.”

Fighter quick takes:
Aljamain Sterling: "Whoever is going to step up across the cage, I have a beef with. I followed Aljamain’s career before him going into free agency. I thought it would be a nice fight for me, and just great to beat up an undefeated guy and put a blemish on his record."
Bellator 149: "I think it was a very entertaining card. I was laughing, excited, whatever it was I was like ‘F*ck, this is crazy.’ It is definitely a [card] that I would watch again, and I’m sure for most of the public they would definitely watch that fight again."
Nickname: "Back in 2010, N.C. State did an article on me on the front cover. They said ‘the one man wolf pack’. Our team wasn’t doing so hot at the time, after I graduated I just took that and obviously I am a Wolfpack alumni. I’m hungry as a wolf. What better nickname to give me than “The Wolf”.
 

CutmanMatt

MMA Hematologist
Jan 31, 2016
570
2,165
Just got on site. Looks like all the Main card is on weight and ready to go. Everyone's in high spirits. Its so much easier when the hotel and the venue are connected.

I'll be cornering Kakai, Yamauchi, Smith and Caldwell on this one. As well as wrapping up Carroll, Taimanglo, Yamauchi, Gonzalez and Caldwell.
 

Ranger

Well-Known Member
Nov 17, 2015
497
385
Ahh, my bad. totally different fighter, you're right. We do a lot of shows in his area, so I wouldnt be surprised at all to see him on again. Especially since he had a good showing his first show out.

Lins will be fighting again pretty soon. Within the next 6 months I would say. Kid is such a beast, just got bit by the injury bug.
Do you have any idea who Lins will be fighting next? And why 6 months, last I heard he pulled out of the carmont fight with 'deunge fever' it doesnt take that long to overcome does it?

Im glad to hear that Abdul will fight soon he's 30 and he should fight often as possible. Hopefully against someone that can get him some recognition. Another thing I have to ask is it seems that bellator has an entire roster filled with talent I could name a talented HW if your interested, but rather than grooming the talent they have they are scouting for more talent. And i get what Coker is doing but at the same time i feel like it hurts the talented fighters that they already have on their promotion because they dont get to be as active as they could be? Do you understand what i am saying?
 

CutmanMatt

MMA Hematologist
Jan 31, 2016
570
2,165
Do you have any idea who Lins will be fighting next? And why 6 months, last I heard he pulled out of the carmont fight with 'deunge fever' it doesnt take that long to overcome does it?

Im glad to hear that Abdul will fight soon he's 30 and he should fight often as possible. Hopefully against someone that can get him some recognition. Another thing I have to ask is it seems that bellator has an entire roster filled with talent I could name a talented HW if your interested, but rather than grooming the talent they have they are scouting for more talent. And i get what Coker is doing but at the same time i feel like it hurts the talented fighters that they already have on their promotion because they dont get to be as active as they could be? Do you understand what i am saying?
I have no idea who he'll be fighting next. And WITHIN the next 6 months. I've heard his name batted around for cards earlier than that. Even if I knew though, that's not something I could toss out on a message board.

If I remember correctly, he tore his ACL before he had Dengue fever (in the anundson fight), so I would imagine he was out of the gym for quite a while. Muscle memory is a thing, but if you've been off your feet for almost 18 months without being able to train hard, a good coach isn't going to let you jump in with top level competition after just a 6-8 week training camp.

I do understand what you're saying, but thats a Scott Coker/Rich Chou question.