
BROOMFIELD, CO— Knockout artist Duane “Bang”
Ludwig (17-8) capped off an electrifying night of Strikeforce
mixed martial arts (MMA) action, scoring a first round
TKO on Sam “The Squeeze” Morgan (19-12),
in their highly-anticipated rematch at Broomfield, Colorado’s
Broomfield Event Center on Friday, October 3rd. Superstar
Frank “Twinkle Toes” Trigg (18-6) controlled
the action against Falaniko “Niko” Vitale
(26-9) for three consecutive rounds to notch a unanimous
judges’ decision victory.
Morgan, who stopped Ludwig in 52 seconds when they faced
off three years ago, took Ludwig down early in the first.
Ludwig stood up shortly thereafter, though, and began
to find his mark with his left hook and right hand.
A hard left hand to the body from Ludwig staggered Morgan.
Ludwig followed up with a hard right hand to the head
that put Morgan on his knees. Still on his feet, Ludwig
blasted the downed Morgan with a left hand to the midsection.
Ludwig dropped into Morgan’s guard and began tagging
Morgan with a flurry of blows. Morgan turned on to his
side in an effort to escape the barrage, but Ludwig
continued the heavy offensive until Morgan verbally
submitted at the 2:01 mark of the first round.
Trigg, a former NCAA wrestling stud and 2000 Olympic
wrestling trials finalist, showed off his stand-up combat
skills, repeatedly backing Vitale into the cage and
setting up flurries of elbows and right hands with a
straight left hand, followed by a hard knee to the head.
Vitale attempted to counter each time, but Trigg either
controlled Vitale’s arms against the fence or
back pedaled out of harm’s way.
In the third round, Trigg scooped his opponent up and
slammed him, but was unable to make any headway on the
ground.
Michelle “The Karate Hottie” Waterson (5-2)
made good on her promise of an explosive fight and also
made it a short night for Tyra Parker (0-2). After scoring
a straight right hand that stunned Parker, Waterson
backed her opponent into the corner and began unloading
knees to Parker’s face while the two were clinched.
Parker escaped, but made the mistake of turning her
back, which allowed Waterson to latch on and sink in
a choke. With the hold firmly intact, Waterson brought
Parker to the ground and produced a submission at 1:20
of the opening round.
Two-time New York State Metropolitan Boxing Champion
and Muay Thai Champion, Carlos Zevallos (1-0), survived
an early storm at the hands of fellow light heavyweight
(205 lb. limit) Andre “The Silencer” Walker
(1-4) before turning the tides on Walker with a series
of knee strikes in the clinch.
Zevallos took Walker to the ground and quickly transitioned
from side control to mount where he rained down on Walker
with punches until the referee called an end to the
bout at the 4:48 mark of the opening round.
Billy Evangelista (8-0) was dropped twice in the first
round by Luke “Lil’ Hulk” Caudillo
(14-11) in lightweight (155 lb. limit) action, but made
it to his feet after the second knockdown and launched
a fearsome attack that, soon after, put Caudillo on
his knees. An onslaught of punches from inside Caudillo’s
guard forced “Lil’ Hulk” to turn over,
allowing Evangelista to sink in a choke before the bell
sounded.
Evangelista capitalized on the momentum he gained and
controlled the pace of the fight in rounds two and three.
Caudillo’s takedown defense was strong, but Evangelista
managed to score a takedown in the third and final round
and drop punches from both sides.
A slowdown in the action prompted the referee to stand
the fighters up. Evangelista was awarded a unanimous
judges’ decision following the close of the third
round, raising his undefeated record to 8-0.
After keeping the fight standing for the majority of
the first two rounds, Donnie Liles (12-5) decided to
bring his welterweight (170 lb. limit) fight with Pete
“The Secret Weapon” Spratt (18-15) to the
mat, scoring two takedowns in the third. The second
takedown produced dividends as Spratt gave up his back
after being mounted. Liles sunk in a rear naked choke
and, from his back, forced Spratt to tap at 1:59 of
the round.
Tyler Toner (3-1), a 25-year-old upstart from nearby
Aurora, dominated “Relentless” Ricky Johnson
(0-2) with an all-out assault standing up and strong
defense on the ground before finishing Johnson with
a ground and pound offensive at the mark 3:44 of the
second round.
Strikeforce “Payback” was televised live
on HDNet.
Complete Strikeforce “Payback” Results:
Tyler Toner def. “Relentless” Ricky Johnson
– TKO (Strikes) at 3:44, Round 2
Michelle “The Karate Hottie” Waterson def.
Tyra Parker – Submission (Rear Naked Choke) at
1:20, Round 1
Carlos Zevallos def. Andre “The Silencer”
Walker – TKO (Strikes) at 4:48, Round 1
Billy Evangelista def. Luke “Lil’ Hulk”
Caudillo – Unanimous Decision, 3 Rounds (29-28,
29-28, 30-27)
Donnie Liles def. Pete “The Secret” Weapon”
Spratt – Submission (Rear Naked Choke) at 1:59,
Round 3
Frank “Twinkle Toes” Trigg def. Falaniko
“Niko” Vitale – Unanimous Decision,
3 Rounds (29-28, 29-28, 30-27)
Duane “Bang” Ludwig def. Sam “The
Squeeze” Morgan – TKO (Strikes) at 2:01,
Round 1
About Strikeforce:
Strikeforce is a world-class mixed martial arts cage
fight promotion which, on Friday, March 10, 2006, made
history with its “Shamrock vs. Gracie” event,
the first sanctioned mixed martial arts fight card in
California state history. The star-studded extravaganza,
which pitted legendary champion Frank Shamrock against
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt Cesar Gracie at San Jose’s
HP Pavilion, played host to a sold-out, record crowd
of 18,265. Since 1995, Strikeforce has been the exclusive
provider of martial arts programming for ESPN and, after
12 years of success as a leading, world championship
kickboxing promotion, the company unveiled its mixed
martial arts series with “Shamrock vs. Gracie.”
Since then, it has co-produced the first SHOWTIME PPV
mixed martial arts event in history with its world championship
“Shamrock vs. Baroni” card on June 22, 2007
followed by the first-ever mixed martial arts event
at the world-famous Playboy Mansion on September 29,
2007. On April 12th of this year, Strikeforce launched
the first-ever 52 week MMA series on one of the four
major television networks in The U.S. – NBC.
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