Sonnen puts focus back on fighting for Bisping

Count on Chael Sonnen to subvert expectations in the Ultimate Fighting Championship.
He's ridiculed the jiu-jitsu skills of proven submission experts. Dismissed stars of Pride Fighting Championships as frauds. Described a former titleholder as a champion manufactured by UFC's marketing machine. Derided the most dominant UFC champion of all time as an effeminate coward.


Yet for this weekend's fight against middleweight Michael Bisping, Sonnen offers a different kind of verbal surprise: Respect.

"How you could ever deny Bisping?" Sonnen says. "I'm just not on that bandwagon. I plan to do everything I can do to stop him. But I'm not going to sit here and act as though the guy's not a great fighter. He is."

They'll square off Saturday in the co-main event of UFC on Fox 2 (8 p.m. ET, Fox) in Chicago. Zuffa promises the winner a UFC title fight against 185-pound champion Anderson Silva later this year.

Matchmakers have been trying to put together a rematch between Sonnen and Silva since their dramatic showdown in August 2010, when the champ pulled off a late submission after being dominated by the challenger for most of five rounds. But with a four-fight win streak and a No. 9 spot in the USA TODAY/MMA Nation consensus rankings for middleweights, Bisping has his own case to make for a title shot.

"Chael's widely regarded as probably No. 2 in the division," Bisping says. "People do say that I haven't been fighting the top guys. Well, here we are."

Bisping and Sonnen got only a fraction of the time they would normally dedicate to training for any particular fight, let alone a title eliminator. Sonnen's originally scheduled opponent, Mark Munoz, underwent elbow surgery less than two weeks before the Chicago show; UFC chose Bisping as a replacement.

With such a small window to get ready for each other, they have little time for promotional work outside of UFC's basic requirements and a few relatively mild verbal jabs at each other.

"The fight was only made a few days ago," Bisping says. "I've got to put all my energy into preparing for that fight."

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Macon to Host Georgia's Best Fighters

The Bishop Frank Ray Boxing Arena in downtown Macon turns one this weekend. In celebration of the anniversary, fighters from around the state will put on the gloves in Central Georgia's home for the sweet science.


The arena on sixth street is hosting the Georgia USA Boxing Championships beginning Thursday. The three-day amateur tournament includes boxers of various ages and experience levels. For the first time the bouts will include local female fighters.

The stakes will be high in the Open Division, where seven spots in Nationals are up for grabs. Of the up-and-coming fighters that call the Macon gym home are the Montgomery brothers - Mikhail, Maliek, and Michael - are the star pupils. The lessons they've learned extend beyond the ring.

"It teached me hard work, period," Maliek said. "If you don't work hard at the sport you're not gonna be that good at the sport. You just got to work. You put in the hours in the gym and it pays off."

"People walking around in our schools they don't have no discipline," Michael said. "Then when they come to this they come out a different person."

Michael will have a chance to earn a spot in Nationals this weekend. The fights start Thursday at 6:00 p.m., with championship bouts beginning Saturday at 2:00 p.m.

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