Ford gets back on track at MFC 18
By MFC Staff - Sept 27, 2008
Ryan (The Real Deal) Ford earned himself another shot at the welterweight
title in December. (Perry Nelson, MFC)
EDMONTON -- Ryan (The Real Deal) Ford re-established himself as the No. 1
contender for the Maximum Fighting Championship's welterweight title while
Emanuel Newton stepped up to become the top threat to the light heavyweight
crown at MFC 18: Famous.
A sold-out crowd -- the MFC's 11th straight -- at The Venue at River Cree
Resort and Casino witnessed Ford (7-1) bully his way back into the title
picture as he stopped veteran LaVerne Clark (30-17) at 2:30 of the second
round with a one-arm guillotine choke.
Ford pushed the pace on Clark and delivered some of his patented takedowns
and slams in Round 1. Clark tried everything to gain some sort of advantage
including sliding out of the ring and holding the ropes. His trickery did
land him a rear-naked choke attempt late in the first but Ford dominated
from the opening of Round 2 and his steady powerful control and positioning
ultimately led to the tapout.
"Pat Healy is holding onto what's mine and I want it back," said Ford, who
lost the only fight of his career to Healy at MFC 17 in the welterweight
title fight. The two will square off again on Dec. 5 at MFC 19: Long Time
Coming.
MFC 19 is appropriately named as it will not only mark the long-awaited
return of MFC light heavyweight champ Roger (The Hulk) Hollett but also the
first double-title fight night in MFC history as Hollett will put up his
belt.
That championship opportunity will go to Newton (10-3) as he bulled his way
through David Heath (9-4) finishing the bout at 4:42 of Round 2 with a
rear-naked choke. Newton had taken control of the fight in Round 1 and
raised his game in the second. Heath had no answer for Newton's ground and
pound and the bloodied native of Tulsa, Okla., finally had to tap out.
It was a rough night for fighters from Tulsa as Aron Lofton dropped his
first pro fight. Lofton (4-1) was a heavy favorite heading into his bout
with jiu-jitsu specialist Jay Whitford and Lofton did all the damage in
Round 1 with several punishing strikes coming in the standup as well as
ground and pound. But Whitford survived and despite looking gassed went on
the attack in the second and Lofton had little answer for his submission
attempts. After several narrow escapes Lofton finally could not get free of
a slick head-and-arm triangle choke and he was forced to tap out at 3:11 of
Round 2. For the victory, Whitford was awarded the Submission of the Night
honour.
While the night was not a good one for the Oklahoma fighters, it was a
particularly sweet evening for UFC superstar and MFC homegrown talent Jason
(The Athlete) MacDonald. MacDonald watched both his star pupils come away
with victories as Evan Sanguin (6-2) racked up the Knockout of the Night
with a third-round stoppage of Troy Sorenson (4-1) while Ryan Machan (8-2)
moved into the upper echelon of the MFC's stacked lightweight division with
a first-round submission by rear-naked choke of Gavin Neil (4-1).
MacDonald also cornered his own jiu-jitsu trainer Josh "The Gringo" Russel
to a victory in his professional debut. Despite a vast difference in actual
mixed martial arts competition, Russell (1-0) dominated the first two rounds
and pulled away to a unanimous decision over Mike Gates (13-6).
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