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Dewey's Diva
05-26-2006, 12:28 PM
http://www.newsday.com/sports/ny-ufc-hughes,0,2743126.story?coll=ny-sports-headlines

Q & A: UFC champ Matt Hughes

BY JOE FERNANDEZ
Newsday Staff Writer

May 26, 2006

A four-time All-American wrestler at Lincoln Community College and Eastern Illinois University, Matt Hughes' ability to take a fight down to the ground has elevated him to the greatest heights of the UFC.

The 32-year-old two-time and current welterweight champion will face 39-year-old UFC legend Royce Gracie in a three-round non-title bout this Saturday at UFC 60 in Los Angeles' Staples Center.

The fight, which will be live on pay-per view, is a true battle between the UFC's past and present, and possibly a look at its future.

We spoke with Hughes in the days leading up to the fight.

Joe Fernandez: Who approached you for this fight?
Matt Hughes: [UFC President] Dana [White] called me three days before he made the announcement public. He said: 'Hey I got a fight for you.' I said: 'Who is it?' He said: 'Royce Gracie' and I said 'whatever'." That was about the extent of the conversation."

JF: This is a three-round, non-title bout; what do you think will be the difference in this match?
MH: Anything can happen in a fight. A far superior fighter can lose to a novice fighter just because there's so many things going on. I think I have many advantages, most of which the sport has evolved so much since Royce has been in the fight game. I think there's a slight advantage because of my age, for how athletic I am. I'm more of a scrambler than he is. He's more of a slow, methodical fighter. My stand up is a lot better than his, my wrestling is a lot better than his and our submissions are actually pretty equal I think. So I think I have a lot of advantages, but Royce is very deadly on the ground.

JF: Are you working more on certain aspects of your game for this fight?
MH: I've been working my stand up more than anything.

JF: I read in a UFC interview that you wanted to keep the fight standing, and you felt that Royce isn't dangerous on his feet.
MH: I'm not saying he can't hit me or hurt me on his feet, but I think he's uncomfortable on his feet. I think I have more of an advantage on my feet, and as a smart fighter I'm going to keep him on his feet to possibly beat him there; and number two, I think that's going to work against his cardio. Him staying on his feet where he's not used to being.

JF: What are you guys making for this fight?
MH: Royce is making $1.3 million. I'm getting nowhere close to that.

JF: But you're the champ.
MH: I'm happy with what I'm getting. I'm not a greedy person at all. So, the UFC and I get along very well.

JF: What's your biggest fear with Royce? What are you trying to stay away from?
MH: Triangles actually, that's what I'm trying to stay away from. That seems to be my only weakness so to speak. Carlos got me in one. Dennis Hallman submitted me with an armbar from a triangle. That'll be the only thing I stay away from.

JF: Are you going to slam him like you did when Carlos Newton got you in a triangle?
MH: I have no idea, hopefully he doesn't make it that far.

JF: What does this match mean to you? Why Gracie? Why at this time? What do you want to get out of this?
MH: I want to show the world that the sport has evolved. That these older guys that are one-dimensional can't compete with us younger guys that are multi-dimensional. I'm going to show everybody that the Gracie way isn't the best way. They've always prided themselves on saying, if you learn our submissions that's all you need to do, and that's not true.

JF: Your strength is wrestling, you possess vicious slams and takedowns. His strength is Brazilian jiu-jitsu, which is mostly on the ground as well. How does that factor into your strategy when both your strengths are on the mat?
MH: Well, I don't think he can submit me to be honest. I stay on my feet, I have more of an advantage there and I'll wear him out quicker. Whether I'm on top or on bottom on the ground, I'm very comfortable in both places so it won't bother me.

JF: Royce has the entire Gracie family in his corner. You come from Pat Miletich's camp and you've trained with Jeremy Horn. Who's in Matt Hughes' corner for this one?
MH: Well, I think the question is who's in Royce's corner. His family has had a hard time over the last 5-6-7 years of winning fights. I train at a camp where we have five world champions walk in and out that door every day. I think I will by far have the better cornermen than he will.

JF: The second Frank Trigg fight, you took a shot to the groin, you were getting punched with your back against the cage, it looked as if the end was a punch away. You ended up coming back and choking him out for a second time in one of the greatest UFC matches ever.
MH: I know that Dana watches that match once a day. He said it's the greatest comeback in fighting and one of the greatest comebacks in sports history. And that's coming from Dana White.

JF: Who's been the toughest fighter you've faced?
MH: You'd have to go back to one of the guys that beat me. Maybe BJ Penn.

JF: Do you feel you have a tougher time against these black belts like Penn and Gracie?
MH: I'm not worried about Royce being a black belt at all. I think I would be a black belt too if we had a belt system. We don't. So it doesn't really weigh on my mind.

JF: Any predictions for this fight?
MH: I don't think it'll go the whole time, I'll tell you that.

Dewey's Diva
05-26-2006, 12:33 PM
This is one of the more interesting quotes...

"Royce is making $1.3 million. I'm getting nowhere close to that."

What's up with that?

DCBooks
05-26-2006, 02:02 PM
This is one of the more interesting quotes...

"Royce is making $1.3 million. I'm getting nowhere close to that."

What's up with that?

That's been Royce's paycheck for the K1 New Year's eve shows. His contract is still with K-1 so I guess his price tag hasn't changed. This fight will be a big draw, and may pull fans who have drifted away from the sport back to the UFC. If Matt proves his superiority it could make him a household name. It's a lot of cash though.

Dewey's Diva
05-27-2006, 03:43 PM
That's been Royce's paycheck for the K1 New Year's eve shows. His contract is still with K-1 so I guess his price tag hasn't changed. This fight will be a big draw, and may pull fans who have drifted away from the sport back to the UFC. If Matt proves his superiority it could make him a household name. It's a lot of cash though.

Somehow, I think Zuffa will come out okay on this one.