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Thursday, June 14, 2007

PRIDE: Bushido, Vol. 9

PRIDE: Bushido Vol.9

The fights:

Paulo Filho vs. Ryuta Sakurai
Akihiro Gono vs. Daniel Acacio
Dan Henderson vs. Ryo Chonan
Ikuhisa Minowa vs. Phil Baroni
Murilo Bustamante vs. Masanori Suda
Dokonjonosuke Mishima vs. Charles Bennett
Hayato Sakurai vs. Jens Pulver
Joachim Hansen vs. Yves Edwards
Takanori Gomi vs. Tatsuya Kawajiri
Luiz Azeredo vs. Naoyuki Kotani
Dan Henderson vs. Akihiro Gono
Murilo Bustamante vs. Ikuhisa Minowa
Hayato Sakurai vs. Joachim Hansen
Takanori Gomi vs. Luiz Azeredo

I was constantly told by my MMA buds that I “had” to watch Bushido 9, that it was a “must buy.” They couldn’t have been more right. This is a DVD that can’t be excluded from any MMA fan’s DVD collection.

PRIDE Bushido 9 was an explosive event which held the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds of the first ever Welterweight tournament and Lightweight tournament. The event went down at the Ariake Coliseum in Tokyo, Japan on September 25, 2005. The event was of course under BUSHIDO rules. In BUSHIDO, fights are two rounds as opposed to three. The first round is ten minutes, and is followed by a second round of five minutes.

Hosts of the event are Mauro Renallo and the best in the business, Bas Rutten. Without question, all the matches most definitely lived up to the hype built around them, well, with the exception of the Baroni v. Minowa bout. This 2 DVD set contains over 3 hours of MMA goodness with special features including a fight glossary, photo gallery, fighter bios, and a few more goodies. With fourteen action packed fights, you cannot go wrong for twenty bones on one of, if not the best, MMA event of 2005, chump change!

Without further ado, here are my two cents for each of the bouts:

Welterweight Tournament: Alternate Bout

Paulo Filho vs. Ryuta Sakurai:

In this fight Filho puts a Jiu-jitsu clinic on Sakurai with a line of submission attempts. Filho takes this bout with a graceful armbar with just under four minutes of the first round, The Brazilian displays his exceptional ground game and tremendous strength.

I think Filho is a good fighter, but needs to face better competition. Also, his fights aren’t the most exciting ones either. Filho’s (14-0) record is consisted of six submission wins, seven decisions and one TKO victory. With Filho’s recent signing to the WEC maybe we’ll get to see big things in the future from the undefeated middleweight.

Welterweight Tournament: Quarter Finals

Akihiro Gono vs. Daniel Acacio

This match was a classic standup battle between a kickboxing champion and a member of the famous Chute Boxe entourage, Gono and Acacio, respectively. Gono displays solid boxing skills while Acacio attempts to counter those skills with Chute Boxe’s signature arsenal of knees, Muay Thai clinches, and soccer kicks. In the end Chute Boxe’s Acacio falls short to a unanimous decision in favor of Gono.

Acacio almost looked promising with his rather impressive wins before Gono. Unfortunately, Acacio went on to losing three more fights on top of his loss against Gono and earned a less than impressive decision win in his latest fight.

Dan Henderson vs. Ryo Chonan

Dan Henderson, current welterweight and middleweight champion of PRIDE, faces off against Ryo Chonan in the third fight of the night. Ryo Chonan is best known for his remarkable flying scissor heel hook win over current UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva. Apparently Henderson had somewhere to go and decides to end the bout in just 22 seconds, dropping Chonan with his signature right hand and pounding his way to a lightning quick victory.

Phil Baroni vs. Ikuhisa Minowa

This match was a sequel to Minowa’s first loss against Baroni back in Bushido Vol. 7. I found Minowa’s pre-fight interview funny when he flexes his biceps to the camera and says “Baroni, this for you.” Talk about an intimidation factor! This fight was the worst one of the night. Minowa, in a desperate attempt to neutralize Baroni’s overwhelming power, serves as a blanket for fifteen minutes and avenges his first loss against Baroni with a mind-numbing decision victory. At least fans didn’t have to put up with Baroni’s claim to being the “best-eva!”

Murilo Bustamante vs. Masanori Suda

Murilo Bustamante had been unsuccessful in Pride thus far with three major losses; however they were at 205lbs, opposed to his natural 185lbs weight. Suda on the other hand, hasn’t been submitted in the last ten years, which is explained to us by Mauro Renallo before the fight. UFC vet, Bustamante, shatters Suda’s streak and wins with an armbar 3:20 into the first round.

Lightweight Tournament: Alternate Bout

Dokonjonosuke Mishima vs Charles Bennett

There is no doubt that any fight with Bennett is going to be an entertaining one. With Dokonjonosuke Mishima also known for his eccentricity there was no dodging the excitement in this matchup. Mishima exploits Bennett’s lack of ground game by sinking a toehold into a heel hook variation for the submission victory at 4:04 of round 1, leaving Bennett on the mat and later limping back to the locker rooms.

Lightweight Tournament: Quarter Finals

Hayato Sakurai vs. Jens Pulver

To be continued...

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