Strikeforce MMA Promtion Folds

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Strikeforce bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey will reportedly become the first female to join the UFC roster, according to TMZ.com.

The report also states that the move will coincide with the end of Strikeforce in the coming year, though parent company Zuffa has released no official statement on the matter. While TMZ reported that Rousey is expected to defend her new UFC title in 2013, neither a date nor an opponent were specified.

Currently, Strikeforce has scheduled a show for Jan. 12 that will feature a trio of title fights, as Gilbert Melendez, Nate Marquardt and Luke Rockhold defend their belts against Pat Healy, Tarec Saffiedine and Lorenz Larkin, respectively. The event takes place at the Chesapeake Energy Arena in Oklahoma City and airs on Showtime.

Rousey, 25, has been perfect as a mixed martial artist thus far, racking up six first-round finishes in as many outings. The 2008 Olympic judo bronze medalist made her Strikeforce debut last year, posting back-to-back wins as a featherweight before winning the bantamweight title from Miesha Tate in her 135-pound debut. Known for her deadly straight armbar, Rousey defended her title for the first time on Aug. 18, submitting former champion Sarah Kaufman with her favorite technique in just 54 seconds
 
- The Fight Network's a good channel here in Canada
- Sarah Davis can get fucked
- The small dude Robin Black on the far right is a former fighter himself (also a rock artist)
- They do a good job covering various promotions
- The eventual folding of Strikeforce was inevitable
- The past 2 shows have been cancelled due to injury disruptions
- The final show in January will be dope
- Too bad there aren't more big-name female fighters who were able to step up and be "UFC-ready" to fight Rousey immediately

Props though to Strikeforce, Bellator ... and especially INVICTA FC (all women's organization) for showcasing women's fights in recent years. Invicta is new as of 2012, but they've done a solid job in putting together legit shows. Hopefully they can continue doing so, and feed the UFC in the years to come for that 135 - 145lb-type range for Rousey and others to compete against. Otherwise Ronda's gonna arm-bar everything in her path.
 
http://vimeo.com/33922944



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Damn, I was hoping they could stay around. Fighters won't have a place to get some shine, except for Bellator.
 
Since Ultimate Fighting Championship parent company Zuffa LLC purchased Strikeforce in 2011, many overlooked public pronouncements and viewed the transaction as little more than a countdown until the number-two promotion’s fighters were absorbed into the UFC. After nearly two years and a history of lukewarm relations with Strikeforce broadcast partner Showtime, divorce proceedings appear to be under way.

The UFC and Showtime are reportedly negotiating the terms of a separation after the cancellation of two consecutive Strikeforce events in September and November due to the loss of main events to injuries. The final Strikeforce event, in January, has also lost its headliners, Luke Rockhold and Gilbert Melendez, due to injury. Showtime’s contract with Strikeforce, still valid after the UFC purchase, was to expire in March, though it contained options to extend.

A TMZ.com report that has not been disputed by the UFC or Showtime stated that top Strikeforce women’s champion Ronda Rousey was coming to the UFC imminently, and that Strikeforce would dissolve after the January event. Later, UFC President Dana White indicated all of the legal details had not been ironed out as it pertains to Rousey coming to the UFC, though she has been anointed the first female UFC champion. The Wrestling Observer reported Rousey’s old contract with Strikeforce and Showtime had several fights left on it. White said the UFC did not have success signing Rousey’s chief foil, Cristiane Santos, but will go forward with a 135-pound women’s division.


Rousey will break the gender barrier.Tellingly, Rousey was not booked on the final Strikeforce event, despite Showtime’s strategy to promote the event as a parade of champions. Rousey and Showtime have been silent about the status of the contracts in play. The Olympic bronze medalist did appear on Jim Rome’s Showtime talk show, which landed her among the top Google searches in the country because she discussed the value of pre-fight sex in the interview.

It is known that Showtime has exclusive rights to Strikeforce fighters so long as the network has a television deal with Zuffa. It is not clear, though, to what degree those rights extend beyond the cessation of a television contract, and it is believed that is at the heart of the ongoing negotiations. Showtime’s rights to Strikeforce talents were strengthened after the UFC scooped up Dan Henderson, Alistair Overeem and Nick Diaz after their contracts expired or were otherwise voided.

The news effectively marks the end of Strikeforce, which dates back the 1990s as a kickboxing promotion based in San Jose, Calif., and promoted the first sanctioned mixed martial arts event in California in 2006. That event, headlined by Frank Shamrock vs. Cesar Gracie, still holds the United States record for paid attendance for an MMA card. Strikeforce purchased the Showtime contract from the defunct EliteXC, the organization that launched MMA on Showtime in February 2007 and dissolved the next year.

Showtime Sports President Stephen Espinoza has said he intends to have MMA on the network in 2013, whether or not it is branded Strikeforce. Espinoza said he may even look to work with more than one promotion. World Series of Fighting, Xtreme Fighting Championships, and all-women’s promotion Invicta Fighting Championships have been bandied about as
 
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