Newton Subs Heath at MFC
by Rob King - Sept 27, 2008
EDMONTON, Alberta -- Emanuel Newton used everything in his
arsenal to defeat David Heath Friday in the main event
of Maximum Fighting Championships 18.
After battering Heath around the ring
for the entire fight, Newton finished the fight late in the second round
with a rear-naked choke.
From the opening bell, Newton brought the fight to Heath. Newton went from
one submission attempt to the next and had back control for a good portion
of the round, but Heath made it to the bell.
Newton, 24, was in control for most of the second round. Heath's only real
attempt at any offense came in the form of a footlock, which Newton
countered simultaneously with his own attempt. Newton maneuvered to side
control and rained down blows, securing the choke shortly after at 4:42 into
the round.
With his tenth win in a row, Newton booked himself a shot at the light
heavyweight championship, and will get his chance against titleholder Roger
Hollett at the next
MFC event on Dec. 5.
In the semi-main event, local star Ryan Ford returned to the win column
as he defeated experienced veteran LaVerne Clark with a guillotine choke
2:30 into the second round.
The first round was a very even round with both fighters having their
moments on the ground. Ford connected with some of his trademark slams that
brought the sold-out crowd to their feet each time.
In the second set, Ford took the reigns. Following a break in the action
where Clark was deducted a point for escaping the ring, Ford sensed victory
was at hand and finished with a guillotine choke from top position.
"It was a little bit frustrating with him grabbing the ropes and escaping
the ring but whatever, it's a fight," said Ford, who improves to 7-1 with
the victory. "I give him credit, he was tough. But I saw the opening and I
took it. My ground game is getting slick."
Ford meets Nabil Khatib
on Oct. 25 in Calgary, and is then slated to rematch Pat Healy for the welterweight title
on Dec. 5. Ford succumbed to a third-round armbar during their first bout
last July.
Rob King/Sherdog.com
Jay Whitford surived an early
beating from Aron Lofton (top)
to capture victory in round two.
"I learned from that fight to finish the fight and I won't let him beat me
again," said Ford.
Simon Marini made his
MFC debut a memorable one, as he and Fit NHB's Gerald Lovato went toe-to-toe for
the 15-minute duration. Marini was rewarded with a unanimous decision for
his efforts.
The two exchanged hard, clean blows for the entire fight, only going to the
ground for a minute in the first round. The judges scored the bout 29-28
across the board, a decision that upset Lovato's corner when the scores were
read. Sherdog scored the bout a 29-29 draw.
"It's way more fun to stand up and entertain the crowd so that's what I
did," said the 22-year-old product of Hamilton, Ontario. "I'm more of a
technical boxer and I knew he would be willing to stand so that's what we
did. I knew I would be stronger and my punches were cleaner which won me the
fight."
Tom Vaughn, head trainer to Lovato, expressed his disappointment with the
decision.
"I was shocked when the scores were read. I thought it was going to be 30-27
for us. I thought that there was not one aspect of that fight we didn't win.
Gerald landed the better blows and won the little bit on the ground. Yeah,
it was a great fight, but I though for sure we should have gotten the
decision."
Rob King/Sherdog.com
Ryan Machan submits Gavin Neil
with a rear-naked choke.
Jay Whitford was
getting beaten and bruised by Aron Lofton, but hung in there and
managed to turn the bout around in the second round. After absorbing some
punishing blows from the heavy-handed Lofton, Whitford turned to his ground
game, managing to get in a deep side choke. Lofton tapped out 3:11 into the
second round. The submission won Whitford the "Submission of the Night"
award.
Chris Camozzi picked
up his second win inside the MFC ring, despite suffering an arm injury in
the second round that everyone in the building noticed. Following a break in
the action against Elliott Duff, Camozzi winced in pain
and held his left arm close to his chest. He waived off the referee and
continued to fight, although with limited effectiveness from his left hand
for the rest of the fight. Initial reports were that his shoulder had popped
out early in the second round.
Despite the injury, Camozzi went on to win a unanimous decision with 30-27
scores across the board.
One of Canada's best Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belts in Josh Russell made his MMA debut a
successful one, as he defeated Mike Gates via unanimous decision.
Calgary, Alberta's Russell, who is the jiu-jitsu coach of UFC vet Jason MacDonald, controlled
the fight on the canvas en route to a decision in a fight that was much
closer than the 30-27 (twice) and 29-28 scores would seem to suggest.
In other bouts:
Ryan Machan (Pictures) def. Gavin Neil - Submission (Rear-Naked
Choke) 2:47 R1
Evan Sanguin def. Troy
Sorenson - KO 2:05 R3
Jesse Clarke def. Jason
Zorthian - TKO (Strikes) 2:44 R1
Sheldon Westcott
def. Jeff Kilisolosky
- Submission (Guillotine Choke) 3:33 R1
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