Cage Warriors Enter the Rough House 7 is arguably the best UK MMA card ever.
(And before I get any pedantic email- obviously the UFC don't count).
Starting at the top- Paul Daley returns from his self imposed exile- hoping to re-establish himself at the very top of the UK pecking order. Semtex was making a big splash with EliteXC and Strikeforce before his shock retirement. On a five fight winning streak, he had smashed everything in front of him.
The first obstacle on the road back is Slovenian Bojan "Zelva" Kosednar. Unbeaten records don't always mean much, but when they belong to Balkan choke artists- you'd better beware. Kosednar has a judo background and is no doubt looking for a big scalp to thrust him onto the international scene. Due to his experience, Daley must be favoured to win- but he's fighting a hungry guy on the way up.
Down the card- the standard of the matches is unbelievable. Matt Thorpe fought at Cage Warriors Strike Force 4: Night of Champions 2005- arguably the previous best UK MMA card ever. That night he pushed soon to be UFC star Dan Hardy to the limit for 5 rounds. Last time out, he looked as sharp as ever and will need to be against Simeon Thoresen. Cage Warriors don't do joke imports and the undefeated Norwegian has names like Chas Jacquier and "The Hands" on his CV.
Wayne Buck's career consists of a series of first round Nottingham demolition jobs. Matteo Minonzio is a huge, brooding hulk with dangerously fascist looking tatt's adding to the aura of menace. Kind of a cross between Paolo Di Canio and the Gruffalo. On his last trip to the UK- he was bombed out in just over a minute by Martin Thompson, but that's only half the story. Recently, "The Ox" Thompson has been making it his business to plough through the cream of the UK heavies. Early on, Minonzio stood and had a good old bang with him and did more than OK. Thompson showed his fighting brain and took the Italian down before pounding him out. Buck could do worse than following this example.
Jim Wallhead is the only person to fight on all six Cage Warriors Rough House shows. He has won the last five of those with performances that have established him as a crowd favourite. His opponent, Fabricio Nascimento, was ranked the 4 welterweight in Europe by Groundandpound as recently as March 2008 and will hope to leapfrog back over Judo Jim in the prestigious ratings (Visit www.groundandpound.de for quality rankings and a generally ace site).
Another home fighter with a difficult night in store is Andre Winner. Winner oozes class- particularly when dispensing trademark Rough House knees in the clinch and his superb conditioning means he has no trouble going the distance. Against Abdul Mohamed- the full fifteen minutes is likely to be needed, but you never know which Abdul you're going to get these days. In his last five fights- he has ground out a couple of dour points wins, lost on an early cut and knocked out Ross Pointon with a spinning backfist. He's also been subbed in the first- but that is unlikely to happen to one of the UK's premier wrestlers on Saturday. It could be stunning- or it could be a yawn fest. Two European top ten fighters- it is a significant match that needs to happen.
The whole show hasn't got an ounce of fat on it. Paul McVeigh, as exciting a fighter as you're going to see, is putting his bantamweight title on the line and the bill is studded with names who you know will deliver. Eddie Podolski, Cliff Hall, Rocci Williams, Chris Cooper and Pete McGurk have all impressed the Nottingham crowd before and have interesting matches.
For me, the fight of the night could be Lee Livingstone v Wayne "Mayhem" Murray. Rough House v Ultimate Force. Both throw crippling leg kicks. Both have the capability to pull of spectacular submissions. A potential classic – and on the card I've seen it's seventh fight down.
If you are a fan of UK MMA- you must be at the Harvey Haddon on Saturday.
It's as simple as that.
Enter the Rough House 7
12th July 2008 6:30pm,
Harvey Hadden Sports Centre,
Wigman Road, Nottingham, NG8 4PB
www.hurtbusiness.com