LAS VEGAS -- Welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre survived a stiff challenge
from No.
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Johny (Bigg Rigg) Hendricks, hanging on to win a razor-thin split decision at
UFC 167 on Saturday night. An irate UFC president Dana White reacted to the
decision for St-Pierre in disbelief, even calling for the Nevada governor to
launch an investigation into the Nevada State Athletic Commission. He wondered
out loud how anyone could score the fight for the champion. Hendricks fell to
his knees as the decision was announced 48-47, 47-48, 48-47 for the Canadian,
who took a beating en route to the win before a crowd of 14,856. "Without a
doubt, my toughest fight," said a battered St-Pierre, who hinted at retirement
in his post-fight comments in the cage. "I couldnt see out of one of my eyes,"
he added. "He really messed me up." St-Pierre (25-2) said he needed to take some
time to mull over his future and made a point of thanking the UFC before he left
the cage. "I have to step away for a little bit," said the 32-year-old from
Montreal. That drew fire from White, who said Hendricks deserved an immediate
rematch. Judges Sal DAmato and Tony Weeks scored rounds one, three and five for
St-Pierre. Glenn Trowbridge scored the first, second and fourth for Hendricks.
"I am the champion," Hendricks told the post-fight news conference. "The judges
ripped my heart out tonight," he added. St-Pierre was hurting elsewhere. He went
straight from the cage to the hospital. His face covered with red welts, GSP
arrived midway through the news conference after being stitched up. He said he
left his soul in the octagon against Hendricks. St-Pierre declined to detail the
personal issues bothering him other than they were family matters, he couldnt
sleep at night and needed a break. He did not say if he was retiring but it
sounded a possibility. The two fighters collected an extra US$50,000 for fight
of the night. St. Pierre made a number with a few more zeros at the end, given
his position as the UFCs biggest pay-per-view draw. Hendricks (15-2) did what
other challengers could not do, take GSP out of his game. He blunted St-Pierres
wrestling attack for much of the night and hurt him with strikes and knees. The
challenger smiled and held his hands up in the air when the final bell rang.
St-Pierre did too, but his face did not look like that of a winner. "I thought I
clearly won the fight," said Hendricks, who called St-Pierre a great competitor.
Hendricks started strongly but St-Pierre absorbed the onslaught and held strong,
biding his time for the championship rounds. The fight was mainly contested on
the feet as the two cancelled out their considerable wrestling skills.
St-Pierres face showed the toll of the fight while Hendricks, despite absorbing
punches, showed few marks. The card at the MGM Grand Garden Arena celebrated the
UFCs 20-year anniversary. Brazilian jiu-jitsu ace Royce Gracie won UFC 1, an
eight-man elimination tournament, on Nov. 12, 1993, at McNichols Sports Arena in
Denver. Hendricks, an Oklahoma native who now makes his home in Dallas, walked
out to country music. St-Pierre, wearing a gi, came out to French rap. In the
stands, giveaway red and blue bracelets flashed during the introductions. GSP
was close to a 2-1 favourite against Hendricks, a former NCAA wrestling champion
with one-punch knockout power. The crowd was solidly behind the champion.
Hendricks smiled as the two fighters touched gloves before the first round. The
crowd roared as St-Pierre landed a takedown within 20 seconds. But Hendricks
quickly got up. At the 40-second mark of the first round, St-Pierre surpassed
B.J. Penns record of five hours three minutes and 51 seconds for career fight
time in the UFC. St-Pierre pushed for another takedown, eating some punches and
elbows in the process. The crowd chanted "GSP, GSP." But Hendricks took the
champ down briefly as they clinched at the fence and St-Pierre was cut by the
eye. Hendricks repeatedly kneed St-Pierre in the clinch with the champion using
kicks to keep him away when they separated. It was a good round for the
challenger. Between rounds, St-Pierres corner told him to box and wrestle, not
just box. Hendricks scored with uppercuts but GSP got a reprieve when Hendricks
lost his mouthpiece. At the fence, Hendricks used knees to soften up the
champion, who fought back with his jab and kicks. Hendricks seemed to be slowing
slightly as the round ended. But St-Pierres face showed damage. In the third,
St-Pierre was busy with strikes as the fight remained standing. Hendricks was
not as active but scored a late takedown, only to see GSP fight his way back to
his feet. St-Pierre jabbed and kicked in the fourth to a thundering chant of
"GSP, GSP." The champion found himself on his back, seemingly from a slip,
allowing Hendricks to score damage from above. Hendricks surprisingly let a
bloodied GSP get back to his feet so they could resume punching. St-Pierre came
out desperate in the fifth, taking the fight to Hendricks. He scored with
strikes and then took him down. But the challenger did not break. St-Pierre
continues to rewrite the UFC record book. It was a record 19th win in the UFC
for St-Pierre, moving him past Hall of Famer Matt Hughes at 18. It also extended
his string of victories to 12, the longest current run in the UFC. St-Pierre has
not lost since his first title defence in April 7, 2007, when 10-1 underdog Matt
(The Terror) Serra knocked him out three minutes 25 seconds into the first round
at UFC 69 in Houston. Three fights later, at UFC 83 in April 2008, St-Pierre
avenged the loss and won his title back The victory moved GSP past former
middleweight champion Anderson Silva for most wins in UFC title bouts at 12.
Saturdays win was GSPs ninth successful title defence and ninth straight title
defence, one behind Silva in each category. And it was his 14th championship
fight, one behind Randy Couture. St-Pierre came into the bout holding the UFC
mark for most championship rounds fought (47). Earlier, veteran (Ruthless)
Robbie Lawler won a split decision over Canadian welterweight Rory (Ares)
MacDonald in a wild back-and-forth fight that was judged 29-28, 28-29, 29-28 for
the underdog Lawler. MacDonald (15-2) drew criticism from White for his
performance last time out in a win over Jake Ellenberger. But he got plenty of
love Saturday, at least early on from the crowd. He walked out to cheers and
Rihannas "We Found Love." The ovation grew as he was introduced in the cage and
there were chants of "Rory, Rory" within the first minute. The chant changed to
"Robbie, Robbie" in the third round as the 31-year-old Lawler (22-9 with one no
contest) knocked the Canadian down and punished him. A tired MacDonald managed a
late takedown and some ground and pound of his own, finishing the fight with a
flurry of blows. The 24-year-old MacDonald, who came into the fight a 4-1
favourite, was ranked third among welterweight contenders while Lawler was No.
10. A native of Kelowna, B.C., who trains alongside GSP in Montreal, MacDonald
has said he wont fight St-Pierre. Saturdays loss will take care of that, at
least for the time being. Lawler was aggressive in a close first round with
MacDonald looking to use movement, kicks and jabs to blunt his opponents attack
or spin out of range. Lawler kept coming in the second round but seemed to be
tiring. And when he slowed, MacDonald countered. He also scored a takedown to
take the round. In the co-main event, former light-heavyweight champion Rashad
Evans pounded out a first-round TKO over Chael Sonnen in a fight between friends
and co-workers as Fox TV analysts. After they clinched at the fence, Evans
(24-3-1) managed to take Sonnen (29-14-1) down and then improved his position,
taking his back and hammering away until referee Herb Dean stepped in at 4:05.
Earlier, Tyron Woodley knocked out veteran welterweight Josh Koscheck at 4:38 of
the first round. Koscheck (19-8) was driven backwards by an early right. And
referee Herb Dean hovered over the fighters as Woodley battered Koscheck on the
ground later in the first round. But the veteran hung on -- briefly. Woodley
(12-2) ended it brutally, crumpling Koscheck with a right to the chin and then
hitting him with another on the way down. It earned him $50,000 for KO of the
night. Russian flyweight Ali (Puncher) Bagautinov won his 10th straight via a
29-28, 29-8, 30-27 decision over seventh-ranked Tim Elliott (10-4-1). Bagautinov
(12-2) landed a lot of punches but had to fight off a second-round guillotine
from the unorthodox and durable Elliott, who was not afraid to absorb several
strikes to land one of his own. The undercard featured more perspiration than
inspiration although lightweight Donald (Cowboy) Cerrone and welterweight Rick
(The Horror) Story were on their game. Cerrone (21-6 with one no contest) used
his striking superiority to batter Evan Dunham (14-5) before submitting him in
the second round. Cerrone, ranked No. 10 among 155-pound contenders, stuffed
Dunhams takedowns and then scored one of his own before locking in a triangle
choke at three minutes 49 seconds of the second round. Both men needed a
victory, having each lost two of their last three bouts. Cerrone picked up
$50,000 for submission of the night. Story (16-8) dominated with punishing
strikes and leg kicks en route to a unanimous 30-27 decision over Brian (Bad
Boy) Ebersole (50-16-1 with one no contest). Ebersole, his chest hair shaved
into an arrow pointing upwards, made as if Story wasnt hurting him but clearly
took a lot of punishment. Ebersole later said he has been fighting through back
pain in recent bouts. Brazilian middleweight Thales Leites used his grappling
skills to have his way with Ed (Short Fuse) Herman (21-9 with one no contest) on
the ground and win a unanimous 30-27 decision in a gruelling bout. Leites (22-4)
is now 2-0 in his second stint with the UFC, faring poorly in a 2009 title shot
to Anderson Silva at UFC 97 in Montreal in his first go-round. Bantamweight
Sergio (The Phenom) Pettis (10-0), the younger brother of lightweight champion
Anthony (Showtime) Pettis, won his UFC debut via a 30-27, 30-27, 29-28 decision
over a hard-nosed Will Campuzano (13-5). Welterweight Jason (The Kansas City
Bandit) High (19-4) won a unanimous 29-28 decision over UFC newcomer Anthony
(The Recipe) Lapsley (25-6 with two no contests) in a fight contested mainly on
the ground. Mexican bantamweight Erik (Goyito) Perez looked impressive in
earning a unanimous 30-27 decision over Edwin (El Feroz) Figueroa in a spirited
scrap. For Perez (14-5), it was a return to the win column after a loss to
Takeya Mizugaki in August snapped a run of eight straight victories. Figueroa
(9-4), who has now lost three straight, earned points for making it through the
three rounds. He said later his knee "popped out" in the second round.
Light-heavyweight Gian Villante (11-4) posted his first UFC win with a TKO over
(Donnybrook) Cody Donovan at 1:22 of the first round to open the card.
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. The CFLs leading rusher kept adding to his gaudy numbers this season and
scored the winning touchdown with just over two minutes to play. The New
Westminster, B.C., native plowed three yards into the end zone for the last
score of a heated, see-saw battle between the two teams with the best records in
the CFL.NEW YORK, N.Y. - Taj Gibson enjoyed coming home for the holidays.
Gibson, a Brooklyn native, scored 20 points and Jimmy Butler added 15 to help
the Chicago Bulls rout the Nets 95-78 on Wednesday. "It was stressful," said the
28-year-old, who grew up minutes from Barclays Center. "I did a toy drive and I
was tired, but it was great to see my family." Gibson led a balanced offence
with six players in double figures for Chicago, which was buoyed by the return
of guards Kirk Hinrich and Butler. With the Bulls trailing 50-49 early in the
third quarter, Butler took over, keying a 21-5 run that gave Chicago control.
Butler, who sat out the last game with a right ankle injury, started the burst
with a 3-pointer and added a three-point play that made it 57-52. That was the
first of 12 straight points by the Bulls. Another three-point play by Butler
made it 66-52. "Coming out of halftime was a focus for us," Hinrich said.
Chicago (11-16) led by 19 at the end of the period after Reggie Evans dunk with
less than a second left ended a 5 1/2-minute field goal drought for the Nets
(9-19). Brooklyn couldnt get much closer in the fourth and was serenaded with a
chorus of loud boos from the fans. "They cheer when things are good and they let
you know when things arent going good," Nets coach Jason Kidd said. "They expect
good and they expect it 90 per cent of the time, but right now we are 90 per
cent bad and so they have every right to boo and express how they feel." What
once was viewed as a Christmas Day showdown between Eastern Conference
contenders became a matchup of two of the NBAs biggest disappointments so far,
as both teams have been plagued by injuries. Deron Williams scored 18 points and
Mizra Teletovic added 17 for the Nets, who have lost four straight. "Im
surprised at this season, how its played out altogether," Williams said. "Its
like a nightmare the way the injuries have been, the things we talk about every
day, the lack of effort, the lack of energy.
Custom Redskins Jersey. quot; The victory was
Chicagos second straight, the first time since five consecutive wins from Nov.
8-18 that the Bulls had two in a row. Chicago is starting to get healthy with
the return Hinrich and Butler, both of whom started. Hinrich spurred a 12-0 run
midway through the second quarter that gave Chicago a 39-31 lead. Williams then
scored seven straight to make it a one-point game. Chicago led 41-38 at the half
before Butler took over. "Its good to get guys back," Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau
said. "Our starters were very solid and our bench guys did a great job. Taj was
super." The Bulls were still missing Luol Deng (Achilles) and Derrick Rose, who
is sidelined for the season with a right knee injury. Brooklyn has its own
injury issues with centre Brook Lopez lost for the season Friday to a broken
right foot. "We talk about it a lot. Were really trying to figure out what it
is. Its tough," Teletovic said of the Nets struggles. "A lot of NBA teams arent
going to give you anything easy. You really have to concentrate and bring a lot
of energy to win the game." The two clubs were wearing their Christmas
short-sleeve jerseys that look straight out of a rec league game. Instead of
numbers and a team name on the front, there was a big shiny logo. There are
numbers on the sleeves, while the backs look more like a normal NBA jersey. Both
squads were also wearing striped socks to complete the outfit. Notes: The Nets
were still missing Andrei Kirilenko, who has been sidelined this season with a
back injury. Kidd said before the game that his forward is making progress. ...
Kidds always loved playing on Christmas. "One of the biggest honours as a player
and coach is to participate on Christmas," he said. "The world is watching so
you can showcase your talent." ... These two teams met in the first round of the
playoffs last season and the Bulls won in seven games. ... Chicago has won eight
of the last 10 regular-season meetings.
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