Archive for February, 2010

UFC 109′s Demian Maia worked

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

in mmajunkie.com

by John Morgan on Feb 05, 2010 at 10:20 am ET
As the old mixed-martial-arts saying goes, “No one stays unbeaten forever.”

But of course, no one likes to get beaten the way top UFC middleweight Demian Maia (11-1 MMA, 5-1 UFC) was in his UFC 102 contest with Nate Marquardt.

Maia doesn’t believe in that other old saying – “That loss was the best thing that could have happened,” he said – but he does believe the lessons learned in that 21-second disaster will have him more than ready for Dan Miller at Saturday night’s UFC 109 event.

“Everybody knows that you always learn from losses,” Maia recently told MMAjunkie.com Radio (www.mmajunkie.com/radio). “When you lose, you always learn; that’s no secret. But it’s never good, of course. It’s terrible when you lose. You keep thinking about that. You keep thinking; you keep thinking.

“Is it good? No. But it’s something that happened. It’s something that will happen with 99.9 percent of all fighters, so I prefer not to put it in a basket like ‘Good,’ or ‘No Good.’ It’s just something that will happen, and you should learn from it.”

Maia’s mistakes included throwing a series of leg kicks against a more potent striker. The initial shots were telegraphed, and Marquardt picked up on the pattern immediately.

Maia was in line for a potential title shot with current champ Anderson Silva prior to the contest, and to lose the opportunity – and the first bout of his career – was a difficult reality to face.

“Right after the fight, it was a big frustration because there was not much of a fight,” Maia said. “But for me, I believe that things are supposed to be like they are supposed to be. I know my mistakes, and I know what I did wrong.

“Even in that 30-something seconds, I made mistakes. I paid for them.”

Maia will get a chance to redeem himself at UFC 109 when he faces a very tough Dan Miller (11-2 MMA, 3-1 UFC) on the evening’s main card. Miller is a scrappy wrestler and while not nearly as decorated as Maia, he’s earned his share of tap-outs.

“He’s a good striker – not the best, but a good striker – and a good grappler,” Maia said. “He’s a good wrestler, too. He can fight in every field.

“He’s a guy who was champion in other organizations, and he’s a tough guy. He’s one of the best, for sure, in the middleweight division.”

Miller received his black belt less than a month ago, and Maia believes he provides a real threat on the canvas.

“He has great, great submissions,” Maia said. “Some people, they get a belt and say, ‘I’m a master,’ and they don’t fight anymore. They say, ‘I can’t do that.’ They know that if you go there and test yourself, anything can happen.”

Maia said he’s been working on his standup extensively since the loss to Marquardt, but in the spirit of lessons learned, don’t expect a repeat performance.

“I’ve been training in boxing,” Maia said. “It’s been great. I think I improved on my hands and everything with my striking. I know in the future, I’m going to be a dangerous fighter, also.

“(But for now) I think it’s safer if I go to the grappling game.”

No longer undefeated, Maia is now just another contender in the UFC’s increasingly deep middleweight division. The Brazilian insists that’s just fine for now, and he promises a better performance this time around.

“I’m not thinking about [the title] at all,” Maia said. “I just want to think about this fight. I’m very focused on this fight.

“I think this has been my hardest training camp – not because of my opponent, but because of myself. I want to do better, and I’m learning how to train harder. You learn with every fight, and I’m learning to go farther. This time I really pushed myself.”

For complete coverage of UFC 109, stay tuned to the UFC Rumors section of MMAjunkie.com.

MMAjunkie.com Radio broadcasts Monday-Friday at noon ET (9 a.m. PT) live from the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino’s Race & Sports Book. The show is hosted by Gorgeous George, MMAjunkie.com lead staff reporter John Morgan and producer Goze. For more information or to download past episodes, go to www.mmajunkie.com/radio.

UFC 109 Preview:

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Can Dan Miller Overcome Demian Maia’s Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Prowess?

798b_tiny by Leland Roling in Blood Yelbow.com

Maia_miller_medium In the second middleweight match-up taking place on the UFC 109 main card, Brazilian jiu-jitsu ace Demian Maia (11-1, 5-1 UFC) makes his return to the Octagon following his twenty-one second knockout loss to Nate Marquardt against the always tough and durable Dan Miller (11-2, 3-1 UFC). Miller enters this contest following a brutal beatdown at the hands of Chael Sonnen at UFC 98 via unanimous decision. Both men will be looking to rebound in a big way in order to keep their names in the mix at the top of the 185 pound weight division.

For most fans looking at this match-up, the winner is clear. Demian Maia’s Brazilian jiu-jitsu wizardry that he’s displayed against opponents such as Chael Sonnen, Nate Quarry, Jason MacDonald, Ed Herman, and Ryan Jensen normally gives fans a one-sided feeling about any opponent with the exception of the top fighters in the division. Sonnen might have slipped his name into that tier of fighters if he had not had a history of deficient submission defense, but Miller’s submission defense is definitely a notch higher.

Submission defense is a huge question in this fight, but the other question that many fans will ask themselves is whether Miller can defeat an opponent who easily submitted Sonnen, Miller’s most recent opponent who crushed him for fifteen straight minutes on his way to an unanimous decision win. While some fans would throw down the MMAth formulas, it’s somewhat a different style match-up.

Miller won’t be having to contend with a better wrestler credential-wise, but Maia’s fluid transitions to submissions and underrated wrestling ability won’t be an easy undertaking for Miller. Miller has stated in a recent interview that he intends to keep Maia away from him by using his wrestling to stuff any takedowns and make the bout  a stand-up battle. Obviously, this is a gameplan that allows Miller to try to make Maia fight his own fight, but Maia has proven in the past that pulling guard can completely change how wrestling is used by his opponents.

Maia’s stand-up will be the most interesting part of his game to watch on Saturday. We don’t know how much face time his newer skills will get during the fight, but from all indications — Maia will be looking for the submission as quickly as he can.

The only truly interesting note is that Miller recently gained his Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt from Renzo Gracie black belt Jamie Cruz over the layoff. Will it be enough to outwit Maia? It’s doubtful as Maia is considered to be light years ahead of the competition when it comes to BJJ for MMA.

Miller’s only chance is to somehow keep Maia away while peppering him with shots. If he can hurt Maia early, we may see a drawn out striking war in which we’ll get a glimpse at Maia’s hard work from the gym. In my mind however, I think we’ll see a standard Maia outing in which he brilliantly baits his opponent into some bad situations and wins via submission.

Entrevista para Univision.com

Demian Maia: The Invisible Man

Friday, February 5th, 2010

ufc87_06_maia_vs_mac10020
(Maia finishes Jason MacDonald. Courtesy of Zuffa, LLC)

Ben Fowlkes’ profile of Demian Maia originally appeared in the Feb. 2009 issue of FIGHT! Magazine. Maia will face Dan Miller at UFC 109 on Feb. 6.

It’s the day before UFC 91 in Las Vegas, and you can’t set foot in the MGM Grand without feeling the energy of an approaching fight night. It reaches out and touches you, like static electricity. A little zap on the surface of your skin. Even the regular tourists who are here by accident feel it. They don’t know who these cauliflower-eared men in the lobby are, all decked out in T-shirts covered with sponsor logos, fist up and posing for pictures with giddy young twenty-somethings. They know only that these men have got to be famous, and as tourists they must obey the laws of fame. They must stand and gawk, even if they aren’t sure who they’re gawking at.

This is where Demian Maia comes in. Or rather, this is where he goes by, almost completely unnoticed. The crowd that has gathered around Junie Browning – a familiar face from reality television, they’d recognize that grenade tattoo anywhere – doesn’t see the Brazilian as he strolls by. The undefeated Jiu-Jitsu phenom who just might be the heir to the UFC’s middleweight throne is not even a blip on their radar. Not yet, anyway. By the end of Saturday night, it could well be a different story.

In many ways, the 31-year-old Maia — the decorated grappler who hardly needs to throw a punch to win a fight — seems like a fighter from a different era. The guy has so many Jiu-Jitsu titles – Abu Dhabi champion, World Cup champion, Pan American champion, etc – that listing them all seems tedious since it only confirms what anyone who has seen one of his few fights in the UFC already knows: the guy is a black hole on the ground who swallows up anyone unlucky enough to get close.

His opponents all know what he wants to do, where he wants the fight to go. In theory at least, game-planning for him should be simple. It begins and ends with one rule, and that rule is to stay on your feet at all costs. Turn the fight into a kickboxing match. So far, no one has been able to do it. Nate Quarry is the next man to try. According to conventional wisdom, he has a decent shot. He has never been submitted in his pro career. This fact seems mildly impressive, though not quite daunting, to Maia,

“I’ve seen a few of his fights on tape. He’s good,” Maia admitted a week before the fight, his voice almost opiate-calm after a hard training session with Wanderlei Silva. “He never quits. He has good stand-up and a strong takedown defense.”

Strong enough to stay on his feet? To force Maia into the kind of stand-up striking battle he’s managed to avoid for the bulk of his 3-year MMA career?

“We’ll see,” he says and chuckles. “Other people have tried that already.”

The fact that no one has succeeded isn’t something he feels the need to point out, just like he doesn’t need to tell you what his strategy is for this next fight. It’s obvious to anyone who’s glanced at his resume. But knowing what’s coming and being able to prevent it are two different things.

Maia’s love affair with fighting began early. The son of a musician who played in popular São Paulo nightclubs, his first inclinations were toward combat. He was 4 years old when he first began studying Judo. After that came Kung Fu and Karate, both of which aided him well growing up in Brazil, where fighting was practically a part of the school curriculum.

“When I was a kid, maybe 12 years old, I discovered that I really liked to fight,” he says. “I wasn’t a mean kid, but when a fight started I liked it. I wanted to hurt the other guy. Martial arts helped me learn some self-control. It helped with my anger and made me focused.”

Unlike many Brazilian youths, Maia was late in discovering Jiu-Jitsu. But at age 19, while working toward a journalism degree in college, he discovered his passion for the sport in a local academy. Almost immediately he was training at every available moment, sometimes three times per day. It was this drive and dedication, he says, that accelerated his development.

“I don’t think I had more talent than the other guys. Maybe slightly more than average. But I think it was my mind that helped me become better. I saw that I was willing to do more than some other guys were. That’s what made the difference.”

Maia’s obsessive training led to a black belt in less than five years, an uncommonly rapid advance through the ranks. Though he’d go on to dazzle the Jiu-Jitsu world with victories in the absolute division of the World Cup in 2002 and 2003, and later an Abu Dhabi championship in 2007, it didn’t prepare him for the unique challenge of becoming a professional MMA fighter.

“The hardest thing is that you must always be prepared for the next fight. Always,” he says. “You can’t ever afford not to be. In Jiu-Jitsu, if you lose a tournament you move on to the next one. It’s no big deal. In MMA, every fight is your most important fight. I think a lot of guys go to MMA from Jiu-Jitsu just for the money. I think this is why many of them are not successful. But this is too hard a life to do only for money. You have to love it.”

And Maia does. Even though it takes him away from his family, from his wife, to far-off places like Finland, Canada, and the United States. The travel is part of the allure. It’s the adventurous life he’s always wanted — going to new places, meeting new people, and getting paid to kick the asses of said people. It has worked out well so far.

(Maia cinches up Ryan Jensen. Courtesy of Zuffa, LLC)

One thing Jiu-Jitsu competition has taught him is how to deal with pressure. The nerves before a fight are almost commonplace now, so when they accompany his last-minute locker room preparations for the bout against Quarry, they feel nothing if not normal. The crowd response is somewhat tepid during his walk to the Octagon. Quarry follows a few moments later to a louder ovation, looking every bit the chiseled athlete Maia’s been preparing for. What he doesn’t know is that the walkouts and introductions will take longer than the fight itself.

Maia wastes no time putting his game plan into action, shooting for a double-leg takedown and then pulling a half-guard, which he uses to trip Quarry once the American tries to pull away. Just that quickly they are already in his world. Quarry’s attempt at staying on his feet has lasted just 30 seconds. A few more ticks of the clock and Maia is in full mount. Then he takes Quarry’s back. The rear naked choke follows like some unavoidable natural progression, the way one moment leads to the next.

It almost seems like a letdown. So much training, travel, and preparation, all for less than 3 minutes of action.

After the fight he mentions Michael Bisping as a potential future opponent, an idea the UFC brass seem amenable to. In the postfight press conference Dana White admits to being very impressed with Maia’s win, saying he and matchmaker Joe Silva talked about how the Brazilian might factor into the “moves” they have planned for the middleweight division.

Does that mean Maia could end up as a coach (and a reality television star in his own right) opposite Bisping on the next Ultimate Fighter, a reporter asks.

“Could be,” White says.

The night is not without one minor letdown, however. For the first time in four UFC fights, Maia does not take home the Submission of the Night award. He shrugs it off. He got a little something extra for his trouble anyway, he hints later. Apparently, there are certain benefits to running through a UFC veteran as if your car was double parked outside the arena.

But beyond the extra cash for his wallet, Maia has earned himself a brief rest and a trip home. As much as he likes to travel, it’s always sweet to return to his wife a winner.

“I love this. Truly, I do,” he says. “It’s hard, the training is intense, and sometimes it’s very difficult, mentally and physically. But it’s a dream job for me.”

At the rate he’s going, it’s hard to imagine the dream coming to an end anytime soon.

Demian Maia: Professor of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Philosophy

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

by E. Spencer Kyte in Bleacherreport.com

When Demian Maia steps into the Octagon, class is in session. The soft-spoken Brazilian is the foremost Brazilian Jiu Jitsu scholar in the UFC, perhaps the sport.

His first five fights with the company ended by submission, with four of the five earning the native of Sao Paulo a hefty bonus check for Submission of the Night. After each victory, the comparisons to Royce Gracie grew.

“It’s a big honor to represent Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and be compared to a guy like Royce,” offers Maia when asked about the pressures of being the latest submission specialist to find success in the UFC. While Maia hasn’t achieved the same level of success as Gracie did when he introduced Brazilian Jiu Jitsu to fight fans in the early ‘90s, the comparison is understandable.

Like Gracie before him, everyone knows where Demain Maia is looking to take the fight. Whether he has to pull guard or utilize a takedown, Maia wants to bring the fight to the floor. Knowing what he wants to do and being able to stop him are two totally different things, just as it was with Gracie more than 15 years ago.

Just as the son of the late Helio Gracie was able to submit opponents like Ken Shamrock, Kimo Leopoldo, Dan Severn despite their knowledge of his lone aim, Maia was able to do the same to each of the first five men he faced in the UFC.

Unlike the first Ultimate Fighting Champion, Maia doesn’t have the element of surprise. When Gracie first dominated the sport in the early days of the UFC, no one knew what Brazilian Jiu Jitsu was or how to defend the onslaught of submissions attempts offered up by the UFC Hall of Famer.

Now, some form of jiu jitsu is an integral part of every fighter’s repertoire. But few, if any, have mastered the art better than Demian Maia.

While Maia may like the fight to hit the canvas as quickly as possible, the last time he entered the ring, it took just 21 seconds before Maia was on the floor.

However, this time Nate Marquardt stood over him, hand cocked-and-ready as the referee stepped in, waving an end to their bout at UFC 102.

For the first time in his career, Demian Maia had tasted defeat.

“Some things just have to happen,” he says of the zero in his personal loss column being replaced by a one. “If I had a very big will to win and desire [before], now I have even more.” He’s also got an all-star team helping him prepare for his upcoming bout with Dan Miller this Saturday.

After spending the past six or seven years as his own coach, Maia brought in help in the form of Wagner Motta. “He’s been in this world for a long time. He has a good vision of jiu jitsu,” he says when asked about the decision, “and it’s very good to have somebody to help you.”

In addition to bring in Motta, Maia, a member of Wanderlei Silva’s Wand Fight Team, also spent time working extensively with heavyweight contender Junior dos Santos and other members of Team Nogueira.

“[The Nogueira Brothers] weren’t there all the time, but Junior was there every time I was there,” Maia explained about his trips to Bahia, where he worked extensively on his boxing with dos Santos and Team Nogueira boxing coach Luiz Dorea. “They have the best boxing in Brazil there. They have Pan-American champions, Brazilian champions there.”

At UFC 109, Maia will begin his climb back up the middleweight ladder against Dan Miller (11-2-0), a fellow grappler and the elder of the New Jersey version of The Fighting Millers along with his brother Jim. Cole and Micah Miller make up the Georgia version.

Like Maia, Miller prefers to fight on the ground, as six of his 11 career wins have come by way of submission. Additionally, he was recently awarded his black belt in BJJ under Jamie Cruz, a Renzo Gracie black belt.

Occasionally, when fighters of similar styles meet, the cage transforms into Bizarro World, where dominant wrestlers eschew their pedigrees and engage in wild slug-fests, and knockout artists get locked in positional battles against the cage and on the mat.

Don’t expect any of that on Saturday, at least not according to Maia, who says he’s “not going to avoid the grappling fight” and believes that while the fight will take place at various levels, it’s both fighters “nature to want to engage in a grappling fight.”

A lot of fighters who are pigeon-holed as a certain type of fighter work diligently to change that perception. Josh Koscheck, an outstanding collegiate wrestler, stopped training wrestling in order to focus on his stand-up game and add a new dimension to his game.

Though Demian Maia admits to working hard to “improve [himself] in all my weaknesses,” the core of his approach remains the same.

“I have a philosophy and believe in that philosophy which is BJJ, so that’s what I want to do.” While some submission artists may want to quiet their critics with a thunderous knockout, Maia has one thing in mind when it comes to winning fights – “I want to keep submitting opponents. I’m training to be ready to go and try to fight striking also, but my desire is always to submit a fighter.”

To some, the idea of watching a grappling match holds little appeal, as evident by the chorus of boos that often accompanies a fight finding the floor for more than a moment.

But while those fans are booing and calling for the fighters to be stood up, they can be missing the beauty and artistry that is Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. If they’re not paying attention Saturday night, they could miss a master class on the subject.

Demian Maia will be inside the Octagon looking to teach another opponent his brand of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Philosophy.

If you pay attention, you just might learn a thing or two.

Training for UFC 109

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Interview talking about next fight at UFC 109

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Maia searches for the path to the UFC belt *Interview*

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010


MMA, mano a mano Demian Maia busca a trilha do cinturão do UFC
by Gustavo Noblat
translation by zé

You bout against Dan Miller was, at first, part of the undercard and later promoted to the main card due to the canceling of another fight. For someone who was one step away from fighting for the belt is it painful to almost see yourself excluded from the main card?

It always is, you know. It’s always kind of a pain. You see that your value, in reality, is directly connected to your last fight. Your past doesn’t matter, things you’ve done, five fights and five submission wins. It doesn’t make a difference. What matters is always the last fight you had. But I’m a fighter and I know that that’s how it works, there’s no point in lying to myself. At first it’s a pain, but it just fuels your desire to perform even better.
Does your only conqueror Nate Marquardt deserve to fight for the belt?
I think he does. He demonstrated it in his last fight. He’s already had a chance, but in the same way that I want to have another chance to continue fighting and get to the top again, he also has the right to make his way back there and fight for the belt. He earned it.
How far was your career set back on account of the loss to Nate?
I have no way to measure that. Everything is still depending on my next fights and results.
Do you consider Dan Miller one of the top guys in the category?
He isn’t very well known in Brazil, but elsewhere he is. Just like Nate, you know? I talked about Nate here in Brazil and lots of people didn’t know who he was. [Dan] was a champion in the IFL and is an excellent fighter. He’s a good test for me right now.
What did you think about them scheduling a fight against Miller?
He is a tough guy, who was a champion. He’s good on the ground. I think they want to test me since he’s complete, like Nate. Perhaps he isn’t at the same level as Nate, but he’s someone who stands and strikes and has a good ground game. So, I think they want to test me and see who’ll leave the winner to start working on their career again.
Have you watched Miller’s fights from the IFL or did you just get to watching them now?
To tell the truth, I don’t watch MMA fights often, I just watch my friends’. I watch Rogério Minotouro, Rodrigo Minotauro, Júnior Cigano, Wanderlei Silva. Other fights are difficult for me to stop and watch. I watch my opponents’ fights so as to outline a strategy, but I don’t have much patience to watch other athletes’ fights. I’ve been like that for a long time, watching fights for a long time, so I end up really watching the closest people to me, in addition to my opponents.
What should Miller’s strategy be against you?
He’ll try to strike a little, but he is basically a ground fighter. So, the natural thing for him is to want to exchange and then try his jiu-jitsu. There’s no way around it, it’s his instinct. But I think he’ll try to beat me standing.
Do you now prefer to watch MMA fights or jiu-jitsu?
It depends. I like to watch any good fight, jiu-jitsu or MMA. What I don’t care for is going out on a Saturday night to watch fights at 1 in the morning. I’d rather go out and then later watch only the fights that I want to see.
How much do you want to fight Nate again?
I think one day I’ll fight with him again, but it’ll be at the right moment. I don’t think that fight would be interesting for the UFC right now, nor for me or Nate. Farther down the road, one day we’ll face each other again.
Did the loss to Nate show that you need to put more emphasis on your stand up game?
I didn’t start to train stand-up because of him. I always trained, ever since I got into UFC I knew that I had to be professional and improve myself standing up, it’s just that it takes time to evolve in that aspect. I’m still evolving and training stand-up, but I believe that in the fight against Nate my biggest mistake involved strategy and concentration. My concentration slipped and I messed up strategically. Experience was lacking and for that I tried kicking him aimlessly, without being very focused in the beginning of the fight.
You recently said that you were reaching your prime as a fighter. What’s giving you this certainty and how do you behave in the event that you lose to Dan Miller, believing yourself to be in your best form? Would this make a loss even more frustrating?
No. I don’t think about that. I don’t think about the defeat nor the victory. To tell the truth I only think about going there and fighting. Two people get in there and one will have to lose and the other win. So there’s none of that. I’m a fighter and I’m prepared for a victory or for a defeat. Winning or losing will not leave me depressive. I’ll do everything to win. I feel that with every fight I evolve and improve technically. In these two years in the UFC I’ve only evolved. It’s always a climb. I feel better with every fight.
Vitor Belfort vs Anderson Silva, what’s your bet?
No expert that I talk with will risk calling a winner. Lots of people that have trained with both of them don’t know who will win. Vitor has every chance of winning. In that fight he’ll be a 100 meter sprinter and Anderson has to be a marathon runner. For Vitor it’s best to come out quickly, but taking care not to get caught by Anderson’s counters. But it’s a dangerous fight. If it goes the distance it’s better for Anderson.

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