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nastynate

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Posts posted by nastynate

  1. timy yap- okay lang sana bading eh kaya lang trying hard to be sosyal eh social climber naman.

    richard gomez - nakakatawa kasi isa pang trying to be sosyal and has the gall to call others homo when we know where his money came from.

     

    whoever they are or what they be it really is PATHETIC when you cant be who you want to be but only have illusions that you are one

     

     

    Agree,100%!!!

     

    Then again, was Richard the bitch or the butch in his relationship? :evil:

  2. so ronnie nathanielz!!!!!!

     

    panahon pa ni macoy nandiyan na yan at sabi ng iba dakilang tuta ni madam imedla at ni macoy yan. dapat pinadeport yan sa bansa niya. hindi pinoy yan!!!!!

     

    Ronnie Nathanielz should have been KILLED for the remarks he threw at Ninoy during his interview. This sonofabitch should have been salvaged a long time ago! He contributes nothing to Philippine society, nothing to sports! :grr: :grr: :grr: :grr: :grr:

     

    Mag-Amang Trinidad!!! Pakshet!!! :thumbsdownsmiley:

     

    Chino Trinidad on an NBA All-Star game: "Napakagaling ng crossover move ni Allen Iverson! Kuhang-kuha niya ang galaw ni Johnny Abarrientos!

    :thumbsdownsmiley:

     

    Recah Trinidad, on Lenox Lewis: "Lenox is a great boxer and has a strong right to finish his opponent... pero wala pa ring binatbat iyan sa mga suntok ni Manny Pacquiao!!!

    :thumbsdownsmiley:

     

    The Trinidad tandem is very predictable, they spout nationalism at the expense of logic. Your quotes above are a perfect example.

     

    QUINITO HENSON!!! sa lahat ng madaming alam ito ang walang alam, bwiset!!!

     

    I don't agree...he's not the only empty head in sports casting...are we forgetting the amazingly BORING BILL VELASCO? He's the only man alove who can make the sport of basketball and ORDEAL TO WATCH. Bill, there's a reason as to why you got booted from channel to channel...your shows stink, and you're no authority. JUST QUIT AND SHUT THE HELL UP!

  3. just wondering...

     

    Kung magaling talaga mga Aikido masters... bat walang sumsali sa MMA? Tailor fit sa kanila kung sakali.. puro takedown gusto ng kalaban nila.. sabi kasi nila yung lakas ng kalaban nila ginagamit nila against their opponent.. Hmmmmm...

     

    Aikido is not a combative martial art at all...it really does espouse the idea of its use as a last resort. Besides traditional aikido has limited offensive strikes barehanded, and often uses swords in other times.

     

    Combat Aikido is already watered down Aikido mixed with elements of Kempo.

  4. i've used mac along time ago.. it was with MAC i learned how to use a computer and perhaps understand its inuendos.

     

    now, i mostly use Windows... i didn't change religion though... I am still a staunch believer of Mac... i only have issues on its economics.

     

    Issues with the economics? Macs are actually cheaper than their PC bretheren here in the Philippines (unless you count the Frankenstein computers cobbled together in China)

     

    Toshiba laptops with similar specs to an iBook are around 10-15k more expensive...and don't even ask about the Sony Vaio series.

  5. Ok lang yun bro, that quick loss via stoppage is ok for Wanderlei, he has matured a lot since that fateful night in 1998. Although Vitor was supposed to be the "next big thing" he has since faltered...he's back in Pride now, but he's no longer a top-tier fighter. Wanderlei on the other hand has gone on to win against the best in the biz, beating the likes of Eugene Jackson, Bob Schrijber(Heavyweight), Guy Mezger, Dan Henderson, Kazushi Sakuraba (KO'D 3 TIMES!), Hidehiko Yoshida (2 TIMES!), Quinton Jackson (KO'D 2 TIMES!). and most recently Kazuyuki Fujita (Heavyweight)

     

    He's set to fight Chuck Liddell in a UFC event in November...Quinton beat Liddell in Pride...if he see's how Quinton did it, he may hold both LHW belts.

    post-77890-1153022571.jpg

  6. Speaking of the Ultimate Fighter, they're showing the 1st season here in the Philippines...pucha season 3 or 4 na yata sa US. Tsk.

     

    Babalu is a good fighter, and has shown much improvement. I just don't see him KO'ing Chuck on the feet, and I don't know if he can take Chuck down. I'm by no means a Chuck Liddell fanatic - but I've seen how Liddell has improved by leaps and bounds from the guy who was subbed by Jeremy Horn so many years ago.

     

    Maybe if Babalu catches him in a sub...but if it goes to the judges, Chuck has the advantage.

  7. . when I was in HS grabe ang hilig ko sa isda I had diff types of OSCARs (albhino,tiger,long fin etc.) i actually tried to breed oscar pa nga unfortunately indi nag match kulang kulang ako sa kaalaman that time then nag arrowana rin kmi which is still existing pa more than 3 feet. malaysian arowana to be exact. then suddenly my achis bf gave her a flowerhorn. For me i find it boring. sorry for the flowerhorn fans.

    so evetually it passed away dunnoo weird bsta one day namatay na cya haha.

     

    I also tried to have a salt water tank and guys tan*ina expensive tlga to. I sell al my oscars to bought stuffs for my salt water tank e.g

     

    60 gals tank (coz its advisable to have larger tank the better)

    lamp (for the heat)

    hydrometer (for the salts)

    live rock,corals etc..

    salt water (P8.00 per gallon >_<)

    powerhead filter

    actually meron pa kming isang filter specialized for salwater tanks pra di masama yung salt.

    and other stuffs

    plus the fishes... ang maganda lng sa salwater fishes is its way more cheaper than the normal aquarium fishes.

    but maintainin this kind of hobby is really challenging. mahira kung sa mahira at sobrang gastos talaga. sana balik na ko sa normal fish tank kaya lng sayang naman na invest ko sa mga isdang to haha

     

    Kailangan ba ng heat lamp for salt? I thought that the colder the better unless they're really tropicalfish?

  8. sir nastynate, I was able to watch his last fight in wowow channel (undercard of the royce gracie vs matt hughes fight)... one thing i can say is that he's a kickass fighter :D .... he's got a lot of potential to be a champ and one good thing about this guy he acknowledges his filipino blood :thumbsupsmiley:

     

    Thanks for the feedback Sir Spartan!

     

    Here's UFC 61: Bitter Rivals Results - mula sa Sherdog.com

     

    July 9, 2006

    by Mike Sloan (msloan@sherdog.com)

     

    UFC heavyweight champion Tim Sylvia (Pictures) was able to last the full five allotted rounds en route to capturing a unanimous decision win over challenger Andrei Arlovski (Pictures) Saturday evening inside a sold-out Mandalay Bay Events Center.

     

    Sylvia was able to keep his challenger in check throughout the contest and the end result was a lackluster main event, capping off a relatively uninspiring overall event.

     

    The one bright sport of the night, however, was Tito Ortiz (Pictures)'s dismantling of an overmatched Ken Shamrock (Pictures) in which the former light heavyweight monarch stopped his rival in the first. But even that bout fell under scrutiny, a microcosm of a dud-like and relatively dull evening of action … or lack thereof.

     

    Sylvia and Arlovski squared off in the main event and many mixed martial arts insiders felt that the fight, like the heavyweights’ previous two encounters, would end in the first round, regardless of who would triumph.

     

    Both fighters have weaknesses and each possess enough firepower in his hands to fell an oak tree, but instead of explosive fireworks, the sold-out Las Vegas arena was "treated" to a shower of smoke bombs and sulfur snakes.

     

    Arlovski started off the contest peppering the taller Sylvia with vicious legs kicks, but shockingly tapered off from the effective attacks and in turn allowed "The Maine-iac" to seize control of the action. From that point forward, it was the Iowa-based fighter's battle, as his pesky jab kept the Belarusian at bay.

     

    Questions about Arlovski’s alleged weak chin entering the contest were answered as he took Sylvia's best shots and kept coming. “The Pitbull” was able to fire back with some loopy overhand rights of his own, but he was a bit too passive to really do enough damage to steal the rounds, which were all about as close as they come. Arlovski's eyes were bloody and swollen by fight's end, but he was never in danger of being taken out.

     

    "It looks like he went back and toughened up his chin," a victorious Sylvia joked immediately afterward. "He must have because I hit him with some clean shots. I hope I proved to everybody that I can go five rounds and that I am the best in the world."

     

    Sylvia wound up retaining his title via official tallies of 48-47 (twice) and 49-47. Sherdog.com also had it 48-47 for Sylvia, who will now enjoy some much needed rest and relaxation following his victory over "The Pitbull."

     

    As to where the lurching Sylvia goes from here is anybody's guess, but a rematch with former champ Frank Mir (Pictures) isn't out of the question. Arlovski might have been a little more successful had he employed a more aggressive offense, but his caution and abandonment of the legs kicks cost him.

     

    In the co-main event, popular former 205-pound fighter Tito Ortiz (Pictures) obliterated the aging Ken Shamrock (Pictures), stopping him with a sinister elbow attack at the 1:18 mark of the opening round. Referee Herb Dean (Pictures) jumped in to rescue Shamrock after about five unanswered elbows bounced off his noggin, but the stoppage appeared a bit premature.

     

    “I hit him with an elbow that made him go limp,” Ortiz said afterwards. “I continued to hit him with elbows and he wasn’t answering back.”

     

    Chants of "Bullshit! Bullshit!" echoed throughout the arena, but Dean did the right thing by pulling away Tito before more unnecessary punishment could be rained down.

     

    “He hit me with two elbows and they stop the fight,” an exasperated Shamrock said. “I hit him with three clean shots. I’m not saying he didn’t hit me with clean shots, I’m just saying they stopped the fight early.”

     

    It was an emphatic victory for Ortiz, who hopes to land a rematch with current light heavyweight champion Chuck Liddell (Pictures) early next year. But, Tito said, if Shamrock wants to do it again, he's more than happy to oblige.

     

    And, with the official announcement of Liddell locking horns with PRIDE Fighting Championships' middleweight (205-pound) champion Wanderlei Silva (Pictures) in November, a rematch with Liddell for Ortiz might not happen when he'd like.

     

    Shamrock seemed hopelessly overmatched once the fight began, especially after Ortiz scooped him up and slammed him down for a perfect double-leg takedown. From there, the end was just around the corner as Ortiz's strength and determination were too much the UFC Hall of Famer to overcome. Tito manhandled his arch nemesis with the ease most predicted, leaving little to the imagination in terms of drama and excitement.

     

    Former heavyweight champion Frank Mir (Pictures) was lucky to skate past Dan Christison (Pictures), as he won a controversial unanimous decision that helped keep his sagging career alive. Mir looked lethargic and was gassed as early as the second round, but the bigger Christison couldn't finish his man off.

     

    Mir came out hard in the third and final round and ground-and-pounded his way to easily win the final stanza. The official scores favored Mir with tallies of 29-28 on all three cards, a verdict that elicited a chorus of jeers and boos from the capacity crowd. It's unknown exactly as to where Mir goes from here, but after scoring a victory in such a manner, it's doubtful that the UFC brass will put him in against Sylvia in his next bout.

     

    The Ultimate Fighter season two welterweight champion Joe Stevenson (Pictures) scored easily the biggest win of his career, stopping lightweight warrior Yves Edwards (Pictures) at the end of the second round.

     

    Stevenson, who was making his lightweight debut in the Octagon, opened a nasty laceration on the side of Edwards' head, allowing the blood to cover a few square feet of the canvas. At the conclusion of the second round, the ringside physician saw fit to end the contest due to the severity of the cut, ending the fight before the third round could begin.

     

    Much doubt surrounded Stevenson going into the contest and many felt that Edwards’ experience and deadly striking ability would be too much for "Daddy" to handle, but Stevenson looked better than he ever has.

     

    Stevenson was able to recover quickly from a left head kick/right hook combo from Edwards early in the first, and wound up enforcing a brutal ground-and-pound tactic to score the victory.

     

    Josh Neer (Pictures) and Josh Burkman (Pictures) squared off, and it was the slightly better Burkman who had his hand raised at the end of the fight. Both men employed a dazzling array of submission attempts, striking and takedowns, but it was Burkman who seemed to want it more. The fight was about as close as they come, but the three judges favored Burkman 29-28 (twice) and 30-27. The fight was the most exciting bout of the televised card, and it was competitive and action-packed enough to warrant a rematch somewhere down the road.

  9. UFC 61: Bitter Rivals Results

     

    July 9, 2006

    by Mike Sloan (msloan@sherdog.com)

     

    UFC heavyweight champion Tim Sylvia (Pictures) was able to last the full five allotted rounds en route to capturing a unanimous decision win over challenger Andrei Arlovski (Pictures) Saturday evening inside a sold-out Mandalay Bay Events Center.

     

    Sylvia was able to keep his challenger in check throughout the contest and the end result was a lackluster main event, capping off a relatively uninspiring overall event.

     

    The one bright sport of the night, however, was Tito Ortiz (Pictures)'s dismantling of an overmatched Ken Shamrock (Pictures) in which the former light heavyweight monarch stopped his rival in the first. But even that bout fell under scrutiny, a microcosm of a dud-like and relatively dull evening of action … or lack thereof.

     

    Sylvia and Arlovski squared off in the main event and many mixed martial arts insiders felt that the fight, like the heavyweights’ previous two encounters, would end in the first round, regardless of who would triumph.

     

    Both fighters have weaknesses and each possess enough firepower in his hands to fell an oak tree, but instead of explosive fireworks, the sold-out Las Vegas arena was "treated" to a shower of smoke bombs and sulfur snakes.

     

    Arlovski started off the contest peppering the taller Sylvia with vicious legs kicks, but shockingly tapered off from the effective attacks and in turn allowed "The Maine-iac" to seize control of the action. From that point forward, it was the Iowa-based fighter's battle, as his pesky jab kept the Belarusian at bay.

     

    Questions about Arlovski’s alleged weak chin entering the contest were answered as he took Sylvia's best shots and kept coming. “The Pitbull” was able to fire back with some loopy overhand rights of his own, but he was a bit too passive to really do enough damage to steal the rounds, which were all about as close as they come. Arlovski's eyes were bloody and swollen by fight's end, but he was never in danger of being taken out.

     

    "It looks like he went back and toughened up his chin," a victorious Sylvia joked immediately afterward. "He must have because I hit him with some clean shots. I hope I proved to everybody that I can go five rounds and that I am the best in the world."

     

    Sylvia wound up retaining his title via official tallies of 48-47 (twice) and 49-47. Sherdog.com also had it 48-47 for Sylvia, who will now enjoy some much needed rest and relaxation following his victory over "The Pitbull."

     

    As to where the lurching Sylvia goes from here is anybody's guess, but a rematch with former champ Frank Mir (Pictures) isn't out of the question. Arlovski might have been a little more successful had he employed a more aggressive offense, but his caution and abandonment of the legs kicks cost him.

     

    In the co-main event, popular former 205-pound fighter Tito Ortiz (Pictures) obliterated the aging Ken Shamrock (Pictures), stopping him with a sinister elbow attack at the 1:18 mark of the opening round. Referee Herb Dean (Pictures) jumped in to rescue Shamrock after about five unanswered elbows bounced off his noggin, but the stoppage appeared a bit premature.

     

    “I hit him with an elbow that made him go limp,” Ortiz said afterwards. “I continued to hit him with elbows and he wasn’t answering back.”

     

    Chants of "Bullshit! Bullshit!" echoed throughout the arena, but Dean did the right thing by pulling away Tito before more unnecessary punishment could be rained down.

     

    “He hit me with two elbows and they stop the fight,” an exasperated Shamrock said. “I hit him with three clean shots. I’m not saying he didn’t hit me with clean shots, I’m just saying they stopped the fight early.”

     

    It was an emphatic victory for Ortiz, who hopes to land a rematch with current light heavyweight champion Chuck Liddell (Pictures) early next year. But, Tito said, if Shamrock wants to do it again, he's more than happy to oblige.

     

    And, with the official announcement of Liddell locking horns with PRIDE Fighting Championships' middleweight (205-pound) champion Wanderlei Silva (Pictures) in November, a rematch with Liddell for Ortiz might not happen when he'd like.

     

    Shamrock seemed hopelessly overmatched once the fight began, especially after Ortiz scooped him up and slammed him down for a perfect double-leg takedown. From there, the end was just around the corner as Ortiz's strength and determination were too much the UFC Hall of Famer to overcome. Tito manhandled his arch nemesis with the ease most predicted, leaving little to the imagination in terms of drama and excitement.

     

    Former heavyweight champion Frank Mir (Pictures) was lucky to skate past Dan Christison (Pictures), as he won a controversial unanimous decision that helped keep his sagging career alive. Mir looked lethargic and was gassed as early as the second round, but the bigger Christison couldn't finish his man off.

     

    Mir came out hard in the third and final round and ground-and-pounded his way to easily win the final stanza. The official scores favored Mir with tallies of 29-28 on all three cards, a verdict that elicited a chorus of jeers and boos from the capacity crowd. It's unknown exactly as to where Mir goes from here, but after scoring a victory in such a manner, it's doubtful that the UFC brass will put him in against Sylvia in his next bout.

     

    The Ultimate Fighter season two welterweight champion Joe Stevenson (Pictures) scored easily the biggest win of his career, stopping lightweight warrior Yves Edwards (Pictures) at the end of the second round.

     

    Stevenson, who was making his lightweight debut in the Octagon, opened a nasty laceration on the side of Edwards' head, allowing the blood to cover a few square feet of the canvas. At the conclusion of the second round, the ringside physician saw fit to end the contest due to the severity of the cut, ending the fight before the third round could begin.

     

    Much doubt surrounded Stevenson going into the contest and many felt that Edwards’ experience and deadly striking ability would be too much for "Daddy" to handle, but Stevenson looked better than he ever has.

     

    Stevenson was able to recover quickly from a left head kick/right hook combo from Edwards early in the first, and wound up enforcing a brutal ground-and-pound tactic to score the victory.

     

    Josh Neer (Pictures) and Josh Burkman (Pictures) squared off, and it was the slightly better Burkman who had his hand raised at the end of the fight. Both men employed a dazzling array of submission attempts, striking and takedowns, but it was Burkman who seemed to want it more. The fight was about as close as they come, but the three judges favored Burkman 29-28 (twice) and 30-27. The fight was the most exciting bout of the televised card, and it was competitive and action-packed enough to warrant a rematch somewhere down the road.

  10. UFC Champs by weight Division:

     

    HW - Tim Sylvia (beat Andrei Arlovski by TKO in their rematch)

    LHW - Chuck Lidell (won by KO'ing Coutore in their 3rd match)

    MW - Rich Franklin (Unanimous Decision at 5:00 in the 5th)

    Welterweight - Matt Hughes (should be BJ Penn but he was stripped of the title when he fought in Japan) recently beat Royce Gracie in UFC 60.

    LW - no champ

  11. Check by the massage that you get...they hit your balls or stroke your nipples. If you respond with a little suggestive banter, and she does too, ok na, terms na lang. The bad thing about Marco Polo is you can't choose, and if you request by name, management will be suspicious.

  12. ^^ nope sa Pride lang sya.. Lumipat sya recently sa K-1 though.

     

    Sakuraba actually fought in the UFC...TWICE IN THE SAME NIGHT!

    Ultimate Japan yung event and his opponent was Marcus Silveira.

    The first time they fought that night there was a premature stoppage

    in favor of Silveira...galit na galit si Saku kay McCarthy. They fought

    again that night and Sak won by armbar by 3:44 of Round One.

     

    Some people say he doesn't fight in the UFC because of Sak's perception

    that UFC refs are bad...others say it's his fear of flying (which is ridiculous

    since he began training with onetime arch enemy Vanderlei Silva and

    Chute Boxe in Brazil before he fought Ken Shamrock last year)...

     

    Personally, I think it's because the UFC pays much lower than Pride.

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