Friend of our site


MMA Headlines


UFC HP


Bleacher Report


MMA Fighting


MMA Torch


MMA Weekly


Sherdog (News)


Sherdog (Articles)


Liver Kick


MMA Junkie


MMA Mania


MMA Ratings


Rating Fights


Yahoo MMA Blog


MMA Betting


Search this site



Latest Articles


News Corner


MMA Rising


Audio Corner


Oddscast


Sherdog Radio


Video Corner


Fight Hub


Special thanks to...

Link Rolodex

Site Index


To access our list of posting topics and archives, click here.

Friend of our site


Buy and sell MMA photos at MMA Prints

Site feedback


Fox Sports: "Zach Arnold's Fight Opinion site is one of the best spots on the Web for thought-provoking MMA pieces."

« | Home | »

Report: UFC Light Heavyweight champion Mauricio Shogun having knee surgery

By Zach Arnold | June 10, 2010

Print Friendly and PDF

Was Franklin McNeil right about Mauricio Shogun having a big knee injury going into the UFC 113 fight? Franklin was mercilessly ridiculed by MMA writers and online fans for what he said on the MMA Live show, especially from this guy.

Remember when Franklin McNeil on ESPN’s MMA Live show said before the UFC 113 fight that Mauricio Shogun had a knee injury? Shogun would go on to obliterate Lyoto Machida, only for news to come out shortly thereafter that Shogun had an appendectomy and was not exactly in the best condition to fight in.

Well, now there’s discussion that Shogun is having knee surgery and isn’t talking about whether or not the knee injury was suffered before the UFC 113 fight.

Topics: Media, MMA, UFC, Zach Arnold | 2 Comments » | Permalink | Trackback |

2 Responses to “Report: UFC Light Heavyweight champion Mauricio Shogun having knee surgery”

  1. EJ says:

    Never been big on conspiracies and i’m not going to start now. Shogun didn’t look hampered at all in his fight with Machida so if he says he hurt himself sometime during the fight that’s good enough for me.

  2. Phil says:

    As we learned with Tito, saying the injury happened before the fight will cause the UFC’s insurance providers to refuse to pay for the surgery, so it’s very unlikely that anyone will ever admit that the injury happened before, even if it did.

Comments

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-spam image