Cormier Wins Strikeforce Debut
Jake Rossen Sep 28, 2009
Whenever Olympic-level grappler Daniel
Cormier tied up with Gary
Frazier on Friday, Frazier looked helpless. When distance
allowed the two to strike, there was plenty of evidence that
Cormier has a long, long way to go.
Cormier’s debut was on the undercard of Strikeforce’s Challenger Series event in Tulsa -- capped by Tim Kennedy defeating Zak Cummings in a gift-wrapped bout -- and Cormier paid for his impatience in getting to the ring by committing to film a fairly haphazard debut: wild, looping strikes from both men and long pauses when you could see the wheels turning. It brings questions over how up-and-coming the up-and-comers celebrated on this show should be. Cormier has a wealth of amateur wrestling experience, but only a few months’ worth of cross-training. Wondering whether a fight like that deserves coverage on a major cable station under a major umbrella is like wondering why no one is showing rough cuts of films on pay television.
Cormier’s debut was on the undercard of Strikeforce’s Challenger Series event in Tulsa -- capped by Tim Kennedy defeating Zak Cummings in a gift-wrapped bout -- and Cormier paid for his impatience in getting to the ring by committing to film a fairly haphazard debut: wild, looping strikes from both men and long pauses when you could see the wheels turning. It brings questions over how up-and-coming the up-and-comers celebrated on this show should be. Cormier has a wealth of amateur wrestling experience, but only a few months’ worth of cross-training. Wondering whether a fight like that deserves coverage on a major cable station under a major umbrella is like wondering why no one is showing rough cuts of films on pay television.
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