WORLD KICKBOXING CHAMP SET
FOR MMA DEBUT AT STRIKEFORCE
For
Immediate Release
October
29, 2007; San Jose, CA….Undefeated World
Light Heavyweight Kickboxing Champion Brian
“The Mad Stork” Schwartz (18-0)
will step in the cage for the first time in
his 16-year professional fighting career to
face Lemont Davis (8-4) in a 175 lb. limit matchup
during the Strikeforce “Four Men Enter,
One Man Survives” mixed martial arts mega-card
at San Jose’s HP Pavilion on Friday, November
16th.
“I’m really loving
training right now, which is good, because,
at the end of my (kickboxing) career, I was
a little burnt out and wasn’t training
like I should. Since I’ve been back, though,
I just got that fire again,” said the
33-year-old Schwartz, who originally closed
the book on his fight career after stopping
New York’s Michael Corleone in the fifth
round of their kickboxing matchup in San Jose
on October 21, 2005.
According to the 6 foot 3
inch Foster City, California native, it was
watching a number of young mixed martial arts
contenders at work in Schwartz’s new Undisputed
Boxing Gym that inspired him to take on a new
challenge in the world’s fastest growing
sport. “I’m training hard in the
gym and my road work has been really good,”
he said. “Everything it should be like
when you train is happening for me right now.”
After taking up Tae Kwon Do at the age of five,
Schwartz went on to join the professional Sport
Karate circuit and, later, became one of the
most dominant superstars in full-contact rules
kickboxing, a hybrid sport combining Karate
and western boxing. With the help of former
world boxing and kickboxing champion, Eddie
Croft, Schwartz finally realized his longtime
dream on November 12, 2004 when he captured
the International Sport Karate Association (ISKA)
World Super Middleweight Full-Contact Kickboxing
Championship by earning a 12 round unanimous
judges’ decision over four-time kickboxing
champion, Tom “The Bee” Bottone,
at San Jose’s Civic Auditorium.
The greatest challenge that
comes with any stand-up fighter’s transition
to mixed martial arts, of course, is the ability
to adapt to the grappling element of the sport.
With this in mind, Team Schwartz has been working
with the likes of UFC veteran, Tim Lajcik. “It’s
very different from what I’m used to,”
admitted Schwartz, “but we spend a lot
of time on takedown defense and, if you get
taken down, how to stand back up.”
Schwartz’s first mixed
martial arts opponent, Davis, also boasts a
rich background in striking, a factor that led
to his recruitment two years ago with Chuck
Norris’s World Combat League (WCL). Still
a competitor in the organization, the 30-year-old
three-time kickboxing champion, who hails from
Greenville, North Carolina, has seen action
in four WCL events to date.
At 5 feet 8 inches tall,
Davis will be at a significant height disadvantage
in the matchup with Schwartz. His experience
in mixed martial arts where he has 12 bouts
under his belt, however, makes Davis a clear-cut
threat to his opponent if the fight goes to
the mat. “When he tries to throw something
long, I’ll try to scoop him and take him
down to the ground,” said Davis.
Schwartz will become the
second world champion from Strikeforce’s
kickboxing roster to cross over to the sport
of mixed martial arts. On March 10th of last
year, World Light Heavyweight San Shou Champion,
Cung Le, made his long-awaited debut in the
cage and stopped rival Mike Altman during a
featured contest on the Strikeforce’s
“Shamrock vs. Gracie” affair, the
first-ever sanctioned mixed martial arts event
in the state of California.
Presented by BodogFIGHT,
Strikeforce “Four Men Enter, One Man Survives”
will be headlined by the first-ever sanctioned
mixed martial arts tournament in the state of
California. Slated to compete in the four-man
middleweight (185 lb. limit) playoff are Trevor
Prangley (16-4), Falaniko Vitale (24-7), Yuki
Sasaki (21-13-1), and Jorge Santiago (14-7).
Each tournament bout will
consist of two, five-minute rounds. Brackets
for the single-elimination event have yet to
be determined.
In other action, heavyweight
superstars Paul “The Headhunter”
Buentello (23-9) and Alistair “The Demolition
Man” Overeem (25-11) will battle to become
the first Strikeforce World Heavyweight Mixed
Martial Arts Champion in history.
Tickets for the Strikeforce
extravaganza are on sale at Ticketmaster (408-998-TIXS)
and Ticketmaster online (www.ticketmaster.com)
as well as at the HP Pavilion box office (408-287-7070).
Ticket prices range from $30 to $200.
HP Pavilion doors will open
for Strikeforce “Four Men Enter, One Man
Survives” at 5:30 PM PST on Friday, November
16th. The first preliminary bout will begin
at 6 PM and the first tournament bout will commence
at 7:30 PM.
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 produced the first SHOWTIME PPV
mixed martial arts event in history with its
world championship “Shamrock vs. Baroni”
card on June 22nd of this year followed by the
first-ever mixed martial arts event at the world-famous
Playboy Mansion on September 29th.