Archive for the ‘Assessoria de imprensa’ Category

Demian Maia Comes to Kauai

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

Posted by Jody Valente

I’ve had the privilege of spending the last three days with UFC middleweight Demian Maia and his lovely wife Renata.

They are entranced by Kauai’s beauty and fell in love with Waimea Canyon yesterday afternoon.

I must admit, it’s hard to deny the beauty that is Kauai!

Today Demian Maia will be joining me at Kalapaki Joe’s for UFC 113 where he’ll be signing autographs and giving away UFC and BadBoy MMA gear.

Come down and meet the Brazilian UFC fighter and watch UFC 113: Machida vs Shogun at Kalapaki Joe’s, Kauai’s premier sports bar.

UFC 112 INVINCIBLE – trailler

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

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Maia steps up to face Silva at UFC 112

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

By Thomas Gerbasi UFC

Following a hard-fought three round win over Dan Miller at UFC 109 that showed him to be more than just a submission expert, Demian Maia will jump right back into training camp for the biggest fight of his career – an April 10th meeting with UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva in the main event of UFC 112 at Ferrari World on Yas Island in Abu Dhabi.

Maia replaces countryman Vitor Belfort, who underwent emergency surgery on his left shoulder earlier this week to fix a chronic injury that got worse in his training camp for Silva.

“It’s always tough when a top fighter like Vitor Belfort has to pull out of a big title fight, but we have found a high quality replacement,” said UFC President Dana White. “Top contender Chael Sonnen was not available due to injuries sustained in his fight with Nate Marquardt, so top six middleweight Demian Maia will step in to fight for the title. Maia is an Abu Dhabi grappling champion, a five-time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu world champion, and he is 12-1 in MMA and coming off a win over Dan Miller at UFC 109. Anderson Silva vs Demian Maia will be a matchup between MMA’s best striker and MMA’s best grappler.”

A 32-year old native of Sao Paulo, Brazil who, like Silva, owns a black belt in jiu-jitsu, Maia (12-1) has won six of his seven UFC bouts, including five by submission, with four of those victories earning him Submission of the Night honors. He also holds a 2009 submission win over number one middleweight contender Chael Sonnen. In his most recent bout, at UFC 109 on February 6th, Maia went three rounds with talented New Jersey native Dan Miller and earned a near shutout unanimous decision. Now he will face the pound for pound king in Silva, who is unbeaten in ten UFC bouts and looking to add to his middleweight title defense record when he puts his belt on the line for the sixth time.

In the co-main event of UFC 112, lightweight champion BJ Penn looks to continue his dominant reign when he takes on Frankie Edgar. Also, two legends meet for the first time when future UFC Hall of Famer Matt Hughes battles groundfighting master Renzo Gracie.

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Demian Maia: The Invisible Man

Friday, February 5th, 2010

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(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.

Seminar Demian Maia in San Diego 2/27

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

“I don’t see a chance of fighting Anderson so soon”

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

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by Carlos Eduardo OzórioGracie Mag

Demian Maia did not rest on New Years. On February 6, the Jiu-Jitsu black belt faces Dan Miller at the UFC 109 in Las Vegas.

Working over the holidays is not something new for him, and the next fight is very important, since he is coming from his first defeat after 11 victories in a row. Demian talked to GRACIEMAG.com and commented on how his preparations are going for yet another challenge.

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Are there any difficulties training hard during this holiday season (Christmas and New Years) when most use it to rest up?
It comes with the job. It’s a little hard to find people to train at the end of the year. People are training well here in São Paulo, but it’s not easy to gather everyone together around this time. This is what I wanted to do, so I have nothing to complain about. I have to fight and take my vacation later. When I chose this, I knew I’d have to relinquish many things. This time it was Christmas and New Years, and last year it was the same.

You worked especially hard to improve the striking part, after the knockout by Nathan Marquardt. How was the experience?
I was in Bahia and it was excellent. I also trained Jiu-Jitsu there, but mainly it was boxing and I was able to evolve a lot. I talked to (Rodrigo) Minotauro about the chance of training boxing in Cuba, and he said to work with Luis Dórea. We trained together, and he offered that I stay in his apartment. The guy (Minotauro) is fantastic and I’ve always liked him.

There was some controversy between you and Anderson Silva, with harsh statements made to the media. However, you are still good friends with the Nogueira brothers, who are friends with Anderson. How does that work?

I had trained with Rodrigo and with Rogério for some time, when I was a brown belt. I had a good relationship with them, but ended up distancing myself. They are close friends with Anderson and, as there was the chance of facing him had I won my last fight, I ended up staying away. As I don’t see a possibility of fighting Anderson so soon, this tie was renewed.

I talked to Minotauro about the chance of training boxing in Cuba” Demian Maia

And what about work in the US? Before the fights, you were also going through a training period there with Wanderlei Silva. Is this still going on?
I’m going to the US around two weeks before the fight. I’ll stay a week in San Diego with Minotauro, Minotouro, and Rafael Alejarra, who is my physical trainer and who now lives there. In the last week I’m going to Las Vegas, and there I’ll likely be with Wanderlei, where more maintenance work will be done.

Are you still training in gi for the MMA fights?
I was training in gi once a week, but now I train more without it, also because it’s hard to find people who train in gi this time of year. The people who come are there to help me. So we train without gi.

What lesson did you learn from your first defeat?
All defeats are lessons. I saw some mistakes I was making during training, even some psychological things, and I’m trying to improve.

Demian counterattacks

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

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in GracieMag by Carlos Eduardo Ozório

Demian em foto de seu acervo pessoal. Crédito: Flavio Scorsato.Demian’s photo of his personal collection. Credit: Flavio Scorsato.
Demian Maia faces Dan Miler on February 6, UFC 109, in Las Vegas.
“I was watching some fights and it is perhaps the most dangerous fighter who I faced the floor. He is a complete fighter, because he is also good in standing. I think it will be a quarry, “said GRACIEMAG.com.
While Demian prepares for the challenge, GRACIEMAG.com panned one of his videos on YouTube, where the star of the Ultimate teaches some good tips for you to defend by attacking. Just as he will try to do in the Octagon.

Happy New Year!

Sunday, December 20th, 2009
We hope to Students and Teachers Happy New Year!