The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom

Last updated
The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom
Genre Reality, Sports
Created byCraig Piligian, Frank Fertitta III, Lorenzo Fertitta, Dana White
Starring Dana White, Michael Bisping, Dan Henderson
Country of originUnited States
Production
Running time60 minutes
Release
Original network Spike, Virgin 1

The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom is the ninth installment of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) produced reality television series The Ultimate Fighter . It began production in January 2009, and began airing on Spike on April 1, 2009. [1] The season featured Lightweight fighters (146–155 lb) and Welterweight fighters (156–170 lb). In order to be considered for the show, a fighter had to have competed in at least three professional bouts prior to the tryouts in October 2008. [2]

Contents

UFC Middleweight fighter and winner of The Ultimate Fighter 3, Michael Bisping served as one of the two coaches. The other coach was Dan Henderson. Henderson earned his place as a coach at UFC 93 by defeating Rich Franklin.

Bisping and Henderson fought each other at UFC 100 on July 11, 2009. [3] Henderson defeated Bisping at the event via second-round knockout.

Cast

Coaches

Fighters

Others

Episodes

Episode 1 – Bangers & Mashers
Episode 2 – Scars & Stripes
Episode 3 – Red, White & Bruised
Episode 4 – Game On
Episode 5 – Wiggity Wack
Episode 6 – $100 a Tooth
Episode 7 – The Bash Room
Episode 8 – Negative Energy
Episode 9 – Battle Royale
Episode 10 – Smiling and Punching
Episode 11 – More Ups, Less Downs
Episode 12 – All American Nightmare

Lightweight Bracket

 
Elimination RoundQuarter-FinalsSemi-FinalsFinals
 
              
 
 
 
 
Santino DeFrancoSUB
 
 
 
Waylon Lowe2
 
Flag of the United States.svg Santino DeFranco1
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Andre WinnerTKO
 
Andre WinnerKO
 
 
 
Gary Kelly1
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Andre WinnerSUB
 
 
 
Flag of the United States.svg Cameron Dollar1
 
Cameron DollarSUB
 
 
 
Tommy Hayden2
 
Flag of the United States.svg Cameron DollarFIN
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Martin Stapleton1
 
Martin StapletonSUB
 
 
 
Dan James1
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Andre Winner3
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Ross PearsonUD
 
Richie WhitsonSUB
 
 
 
Paul Bird1
 
Flag of the United States.svg Richie Whitson1
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Ross PearsonSUB
 
Ross PearsonTKO
 
 
 
A.J. Wenn2
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Ross PearsonUD
 
 
 
Flag of the United States.svg Jason Dent3
 
Jason DentTKO
 
 
 
Robert Browning1
 
Flag of the United States.svg Jason DentSUB
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Jeff Lawson2
 
Jeff LawsonSUB
 
 
James Bryan1
 

Welterweight Bracket

 
Elimination RoundQuarter-FinalsSemi-FinalsFinals
 
              
 
 
 
 
Mark MillerTKO
 
 
 
Kevin Knabjian2
 
Flag of the United States.svg Mark Miller2
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Nick OsipczakKO
 
Nick OsipczakKO
 
 
 
Tommy Maguire1
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Nick Osipczak3
 
 
 
Flag of the United States.svg DaMarques JohnsonUD
 
DaMarques JohnsonTKO
 
 
 
Ray Elbe1
 
Flag of the United States.svg DaMarques JohnsonSUB
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Dean Amasinger1
 
Dean AmasingerUD
 
 
 
Alex Reid3
 
Flag of the United States.svg DaMarques Johnson1
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg James WilksSUB
 
Frank LesterTKO
 
 
 
Kiel Reid1
 
Flag of the United States.svg Frank Lester2
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg James WilksSUB
 
James WilksSUB
 
 
 
Che Mills1
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg James WilksTKO
 
 
 
Flag of the United States.svg Frank Lester3
 
Jason PierceUD
 
 
 
Steve Berger3
 
Flag of the United States.svg Frank Lester [*] TKO
 
 
 
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg David Faulkner2
 
David FaulknerSUB
 
 
James Bateman1
 


^  *: Frank Lester replaced Jason Pierce after Dana White did not allow Pierce to continue in the tournament.

Legend
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg
 Team United Kingdom
Flag of the United States.svg
 Team United States
UD
 Unanimous Decision
SUB
 Submission
(T)KO
 (Technical) Knock out

The Ultimate Fighter 9 Finale

The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom Finale
UFCSanchezGuida.jpg
The poster for The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom Finale.
Information
Promotion Ultimate Fighting Championship
DateJune 20, 2009 [4]
Venue Pearl Concert Theater
City Las Vegas, Nevada
Attendance2,217 [5]
Total gate$498,650 [5]
Event chronology
UFC 99: The Comeback The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom Finale UFC 100

The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom Finale (also known as The Ultimate Fighter 9 Finale) was a mixed martial arts event held by the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) on June 20, 2009. [4] Featured were finals from The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom in both the Lightweight and Welterweight divisions as well as a main event between Diego Sanchez and Clay Guida.

Background

A previously announced lightweight bout between Thiago Tavares and Melvin Guillard [6] was called off due to an elbow injury suffered by Tavares. [7] Gleison Tibau would step in as Tavares' replacement. [8]

Eric Schafer was originally scheduled to face Tomasz Drwal at this event, but he injured his rib and was replaced by Mike Ciesnolevicz. [9]

A matchup between Anthony Johnson and Matt Brown was scrapped due to a knee injury suffered by Johnson. [10] A replacement was set to be named, however, due to nagging injuries Brown did not fight on the card. [11]

This was the first time in the organization's history, the UFC handed out three Fight of the Night bonuses. Another first for the UFC came in the form of Kim Winslow, the first female referee to officiate a fight in the organization.

This was the first UFC event to feature five Ultimate Fighter winners on the complete card, including season 9 champions Ross Pearson & James Wilks, and previous season champions Diego Sanchez, Joe Stevenson, and Nate Diaz. Only UFC 114 the following year has had the same number of TUF winners since.

Results

Main card (Spike TV)
Weight classMethodRoundTimeNotes
Lightweight Diego Sanchez def. Clay Guida Decision (split) (28–29, 29–27, 29–28)35:00
Welterweight James Wilks def. DaMarques Johnson Submission (rear-naked choke)14:54 [lower-alpha 1]
Lightweight Ross Pearson def. Andre Winner Decision (unanimous) (29–28, 29–28, 29–28)35:00 [lower-alpha 2]
Welterweight Chris Lytle def. Kevin Burns Decision (unanimous) (29–28, 29–28, 29–28)35:00
Lightweight Joe Stevenson def. Nate Diaz Decision (unanimous) (29–28, 29–28, 29–28)35:00
Preliminary card
Lightweight Melvin Guillard def. Gleison Tibau Decision (split) (29–28, 28–29, 29–28)35:00
Welterweight Brad Blackburn def. Edgar Garcia Decision (split) (28–29, 29–28, 29–28)35:00
Catchweight (208 lb) Tomasz Drwal def.Mike CiesnoleviczTKO (knee and punches)14:48 [lower-alpha 3]
Welterweight Nick Osipczak def. Frank Lester Submission (rear-naked choke)13:40
Lightweight Jason Dent def. Cameron Dollar Submission (anaconda choke)14:46
  1. The Ultimate Fighter 9 Welterweight Final
  2. The Ultimate Fighter 9 Lightweight Final
  3. Ciesnolevicz did not make the 206 pound light heavyweight limit.

Bonus awards

Fighters were awarded $25,000 bonuses. [12]

See also

Related Research Articles

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Nicholas Dominic Osipczak is an English professional mixed martial artist, most famous for his fights and wins in the welterweight division of the UFC. He was also a cast member of Spike TV's The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom. Nick is also known for being one of the first people in history to represent the art of Tai Chi Chuan in Mixed Martial Arts competitions.

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References

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  8. Morgan, John. "Gleison Tibau replaces Thiago Tavares at The Ultimate Fighter 9 Finale". MMAjunkie.com. Archived from the original on 2009-04-27. Retrieved 2009-04-24.
  9. Stupp, Dann. "Eric Schafer injured, replaced by Mike Ciesnolevicz at June's TUF9 Finale". MMAjunkie.com. Archived from the original on 2009-05-09. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  10. "Anthony Johnson injures knee; Withdraws from TUF 9 Finale fight against Matt Brown". Mmamania.com. 19 May 2009. Archived from the original on 2011-08-09. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
  11. Morgan, John. "With Anthony Johnson out of TUF 9 Finale, Matt Brown follows suit". MMAjunkie.com. Archived from the original on 2009-05-25. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  12. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-09-25. Retrieved 2012-07-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)