HEROS
in Seoul 2005
Olympic Gymnastics Arena, Seoul, South Korea
11/5/2005 7,460 in Attendance
HEROS
Lithuania 2005
Siemens Arena, Vilnius, Lithuania
11/26/2005 ??? in Attendance
HEROS
HAS GONE INTERNATIONAL! Akira Maeda's concept of the fighting network
has been resurrected, and K-1's parent company FEG has decided to
organize events globally by utilizing local talent and promoters.
Before we end the year with a bang at DYNAMITE, lets take a well
deserved holiday in South Korea and Lithuania!
Our
event in South Korea sees us at the Olympic Gymnastics Arena in
Seoul. Constructed between 1984 and 1986 for the 88 Olympics, this
self-supporting cable dome (the first of its kind!) arena can fit
15,000. These days it is mostly used for large concerts and sporting
events like this one.
AHH
its already starting! Un Sik Song (9-3) is making his MMA debut here
against Michihisa Asano (6-4-2), a
member of KID Yamamoto's Killer Bee team who is here on his second
ever fight. This one opens with a dick kick (damn) but its quickly
restarted. Song is throwing some cool kicks but none really connect,
and Asano responds by a little boxing and then taking Song down.
After getting up, Song tries for a sikk throw but Asano reverses it.
Song almost hooks the heel as he throws himself back, getting stuck
in up down position till the ref raises them. Asano slams Song but
Song now is working on a triangle choke or arm bar from the bottom,
flips Asano, and just dislocates his wholeeeee shoulder for a Sik win
(get it?). Holy hell that was a good start to this first
international HEROS Fighting Network event!
We
get a fight parade on the massive HEROS stage and ramp! K-1 sparred
no expense here with their production values from the arena dressings
and the dope mid-2000s licensed music.
UP
NEXT is a fight between our biker dude friend Hiroyuki Takaya and Do
Hyung Kim (20-8), a veteran of the early Korean MMA company NEO FIGHT
and was coming into this with a 9 and 1 record.
sikk shirts |
This
fight was good for the blood thirsty as Takaya absolutely nuked
Hyung's face. Takaya busts up Hyung badly and prevents Hyung from
landing any takedown till the second round. Lots of ground and pound
combined with sick clinch knees left blood everywhere and you see in
the replays before the second round that Takaya definitely landed a
(possibly inadvertent) headbutt. I actually totally forgot about this
match until I was watching it again which means it wasn't
particularly memorable but it was ok! It is funny to me that Uno vs
Yamamoto was stopped because of a cut that wasn't that big of a deal
since it was on prime time tv at HEROS 3, but here its no-mans land
still. The crowd eats it up and it goes both rounds as Hiroyuki
Takaya scores an easy win.
Atsushi
Yamamoto (19-12-3), another member of KID's Killer Bee team and a vet
from Pancrase and Shooto, is fighting “SPECIAL FORCE” Jong Man
Kim (23-11) who has an absolutely incredible intro promo video before
the fight. All the Korean fighters get these intros I just cannot do
justice in describing. His features Alien Ant Farm's Smooth Criminal
yet somehow these events have yet to be removed from youtube (please
pray that they continue to not be removed!).
Jong
is quickly taken down by Yamamoto after landing a series of punches.
Jong is getting ground down here and has to defend against multiple
submissions while the entire time eating some stiff ground and pound
from every angle possible. I am a bit surprised the fight wasn't
called when Yamamoto had Jong's back and was just eating so many
punches! Really too many! But the ref has decided “Yea, this is
totally ok!” Jong somehow
lives to see the second round despite eating all the punches possible
while also having to defend from his back for more than half the
round.
Jong is not pleased with how this first round is going |
Before
the start of the second round, Jong doesn't look as bad as I expected
despite spending 2 and a half minutes getting hit while defending
that neck AT ALL COSTS. The Korean is super stoked for this round
(and I am too because I both just noticed both fighters are wearing
all white which is very aesthetically pleasing against the light blue
ring!). Jong, after a timid start from both fighters, flurries with
punches forcing a takedown attempt by Yamamoto that ends up being
caught in a guillotine. Jong is trying soooooo hard but Yamamoto is
able to slip out (guillotines seem to work not out that often or
maybe these MMA geeks just have poor technique). Yamamoto is starting
to land some more ground and pound until Jong sweeps and the crowd
gets so excited. OMG THE HEFT OF THESE STANDING GUARD PUNCHES JESUS.
THE REF DOES NOT STOP THIS FOR SO LONG. Jong punches Yamamoto so hard
he looks at the ref for the stop but he says FIGHT so Jong obliges until its very definitely over instead of being just over. The Korean
crowd loves this and I did too despite the barbaric striking. Jong
Man Kim celebrates this victory as Blink 182 bellows across this
grand arena!
he punched him........ so hard |
IT'S
SHUNGO OYAMA TIME!!!! The return of the silver vale tudo shorts and
wow his entrance theme is goooood stuff let me tell you! He is
fighting Yoon Seob Kwak (7-15) who mostly fought in the Korean NEO
FIGHT and Gimme 5 mma companies. He lost his one and only Pancrase
fight before this event so this bodes well for Oyama.
OYAMA
WINS WITH A BELLY TO BELLY WHICH LED TO AN ACHILLES LOCK!
WOW! Oyama again wins in stunning fashion. This arena is silenced by
the brutal loss and gives our silvery friend a polite clap.
NEXT UP is former Pancrase champ at middleweight and welterweight Kiuma Kunioku (34-25-9) fighting Jung Hwan Cho (13-6) in his MMA debut. This seems like a severe mismatch!
Kunioku chocked him out in like 2 minutes lmao! This went as expected as Kiuma Kunioku landed a stiff shot or two, brought Jung Hwan Cho down, and then choked for a quick and easy win.
“The Phenix” Kristof Midoux (6-10) is about to fight “The
Korean Bear” Jun Soo Lim (12-10)! I don't know anything about
either of these guys!
Midoux
knees the bear Soo Lim to an early grave at the 50 second mark!
Whatever!
The
legend Yushin Okami (34-11) (he is still fighting to this day!) is
going to be fighting this guy named Myeon Ju Lee who I literally
cannot find any info on and that again bodes poorly for his
performance here.
LMAO
Okami just gets the mount and beats on Lee for an eternity and forces
the corner to throw in the towel. An ugly display!
ITS
JUDO TIME! Min Soo Kim is facing off against pro-wrestler turned MMA
fighter Sean O'Haire (4-2) who is coming off from a win over Shungo
Oyama a year earlier. Oh, a cool thing, O'Haire was training at BJ
Penn's MMA school. O'Haire sadly passed away in 2014 after committing
suicide after suffering from a years long addiction to alcohol. This
is quite sad as I always enjoyed his work as a pro-wrestler and that
horrid company WWE fucked him around so many times and honestly
ruined his career and spirit (like so many before and after him).
THIS
ONE STARTS AND THEY ARE SWINGING. LOL the technique here is
impeccable. Min is able to get O'Haire in a very tight Guillotine but
he is able to slip out and now is in guard in the top position. He
starts landing some nice ground and pound but Min has newaza on his
side! LOL O'Haire's punches from the top are missing by so much and
its like... man... how are you messing this up so bad when BJ PENN is training you. He even gets
Min's back and doesn't manage to do like anything of worth and Min is
able to like stand right back up. Oh damn O'Haire is busted way up (I really can't tell you how that even occurred)!
He is trying to hit Min with knees in the clinch but they are way
slow. OH YEA The judo player Min Soo Kim wins with a standing
guillotine!
YES!
It's our old friend Hiromitsu Kanehara (19-26-5) from our much
beloved KINGDOM Pro-Wrestling!! Kanehara is sadly coming to HEROS
after a brutal losing streak in PRIDE where he was fed to the top
talent, and this will also sadly be his last HEROS fight. He is
facing the German kickboxer Chalid Arrab (7-3 in MMA), and
interestingly this is also his last fight in HEROS and is also his
final fight in MMA!
Kanehara
is kickboxing a bit but its all aimed at getting a chance to shoot.
He isn't a chump on the stand up but Arrab is mainly a kickboxer, so
Kanehara is looking for a shoot. Kanehara is able to bring Arrab down
but Arrab graps the rope and gets the advantage. The ref breaks it up
and chastises him for the rule break! Back up, Arrab floors Kanehara
with a punch, but it just stalls in the up/down position so its
brought back up. Kanehara shoots in and gets an ankle but loses it.
On a second attempt, he scores and is able to wrestle the kickboxer
down. Now that he has control, Kanehara is putting the pressure on
with strikes, position changes, and simply superior wrestling. OH WOW
Kanehara locks on a mean, fully extended armbar that Arrab is SOMEHOW
able to live through before rolling out of! He gets some shots in and
a knee to Kanehara right before the bell rings.
Round
2 begins and no serious contact occurs for almost two minutes. There
is some prodding strikes and a shoot attempt by Kanehara. After
almost two minutes, Kanehara gets another loowwwwww single leg and
drags Arrab down and begins to smother him once more, but Arrab
manages a big sweep and this is back up. Kanehara is able to score
ANOTHER takedown at the 3 minute mark and lands some ground and pound
from the open guard, but Arrab sweeps again and scores with some
strong strikes. Kanehara's patented “im getting wrecked oH NO” flailing
kicks in and they get tangled in the ropes so they are reset in the
middle. Arrab starts striking before his supposed to, waylaying
Kanehara, so the ref just starts it again anyways! So Kanehara eats a few
more shots before the bell rings and this one is gonna go to
decision! Chalid Arrab gets the majority decision victory, mostly
because of the flurry at the end. In my mind, this was a fairly even
affair and should been a draw (I am biased though because KINGDOM is superior to all so Kanehara is the winner in my heart).
Bob
Sapp kills a guy but I think its a work because those strikes looked
fake as heck ahahahahaahah
LOLOLOLOL
its The Predator (a crappy bruiser brody gimmick who was ALL over
Zero-1 and HUSTLE shows of this era) aka Sylzester Terkay from WWE's
failed ECW reboot. This thing is pretty bad! Lots of pushing into the
corner and swinging, but not the good version of that! This goes both
rounds (of course!).
ITS
THE MAIN EVENT! Another great Judo dude Yoshihiro Akiyama is about to
face Masakatsu Okuda (8-5)! Okuda won a tournament to score his first
4 wins and then fought in Korea's NEO FIGHT and Japan's Pancrase
before this event. Akiyama, as we all expected, has an amazing entrance!
FIGHTING NETWORK |
Akiyama
is the first to land a strike and then quickly tangles up to bring
this down with a short trip. He's hustled to a strong side control
already, controlling Okuda's shoulders. Okuda is able to manage an
armbar attempt as Akiyama is throwing punches down so Akiyama just
picks him up and slams him right onto the side of his head knocking
him unconscious. Yoshihiro Akiyama peppers a few more shots to finish
this fight against Masakatsu Okuda! (MAEDA SIGHTING!)
This
event was full of quick and dominant finishes. The Koreans did not
fair well, so hopefully when we return they won't be as out matched
(or wrongly booked). WE REALLY DONT HAVE TIME TO LINGER as we have to
catch our flight to LITHUANIA!
HEROS
Korea represented the fighting network model in the modern MMA scene
but let me tell you, HEROS Lithuania is a pure throwback to the RINGS
days. The way this is filmed, the warmth and quality of the film
itself, the rowdy European crowd, the announcer, everything feels
like one of the old RINGS HOLLAND events. BUT THERE IS A CHANGE!
Instead of the diabolical tiny ring of RINGS HOLLAND, the promoters
of HEROS Lithuania have somehow found the largest ring east of
Germany for this event and let me tell you it pays dividends as it
allowed the Lithuanian dudes to do some wild stuff in this big blue
ring (it is very very blue). RINGS Japan may have died in 2002 but
the network remained (networks have no central node ya know)!
Promoters in Russia, Lithuania, and Holland kept promoting under the
RINGS name, and this HEROS event marks the reunification of Akira
Maeda with the RINGS network.
This
opening fight is between Erikas
Petraitis (20-10-2) who
mostly fought in Shooto Europe and sporadically in Fighting Network
ZST (another successor to RINGS who seems to have lent a lot of
talent to HEROS and many Lithuanians in the company), and Takayuki
Ohkouchi (7-14-3) who fought in SHOOTO and even one of the RINGS
Lithuania shows in 2002 before this. Ohkouchi comes out to the mortal
kombat theme (a classic choice) and Petraitis comes out to some nice
jungle house wearing a RINGS LITHUANIA BUSHIDO kit that is absolutely
CHOICE ring wear. I also have to make note of the eurotrash ring
girls before the start of every fight and the use of very ominous
music during these breaks before the action. The production of this
event is so sikkkkkkkk.
Story
of this one is that Petraitis uses his RINGS BUSHIDO, specifically
the RINGS BUSHIDO of the great Baltic region (they have many nice
castles), to smother and smash Ohkouchi. He stops nearly every
takedown attempt. Petraitis out works him in the clinch, and is able
to lay the smackdown on in both rounds. There is also a dick shot to
knee combo in the first round (rip). Erikas Petraitis wins this one
by unanimous decision! Another victory for the very aggro bushido of
European RINGS!
Match
two of the night features “The Hebrew Hammer” Ido Pariente (13-6)
going up against Mindaugas Smirnovas (9-9-4) who mostly fought in
Fighting Network RINGS Lithuania and ZST before this (he was coming
off 3 loses and 3 draws here).
Smirnovas
tries to pick up Pariente for the slam but he maintains his balance
and center while mid-pickup so Smirnovas trips him down. Oh shit
Pariente is trying for armlocks immediately by utilizing his legs and
is putting lots of pressure on from the bottom. Smirnovas is landing
some ground and pound but is continually having to fight off strong
submission attempts from the bottom. OH SHIT Pariente has decided
that it is rolling kneebar time. How is Smirnovas not tapping! YIKES.
Ok either he tapped or the ref called the the fight due to technical
submission out of sympathy for that knee.
RINGS
Blog guy, if you are reading this, this will make you cringe!
Our
third match of the night features the Russian fighter “Punisher”
Konstantin Uriadov (4-5-1) against Valdas Pocevicius (34-33-4), a
veteran of Shooto Europe and the Lithuania branch of the RINGS
network. Uriadov is repping the RINGS Russia team (and comes out to a
very kickin' track) while Pocevicius is coming out to some folk metal
(incredibly good choice imo).
Pocevicius
immediately takes Uriadov down and starts landing some heavy punches
and explodes into full mount. Uriadov is able to roll to his back and
buck, gaining top control in the guard and pushing Pocevicius into
the corner. Oh Pocevisius seems to have an armbar on from the bottom and omg just
totally broke the fuck out of Uriadov's arm (you can see it snap in the replays by how his body moves)! The ring doc is just
spraying his elbow with Salonpas and uhhhh nothing else. He is left
to roll around in pain as his team complains to the ref for the late
stoppage. HEROS Lithuania is a brutal place!
There
is a K-1 Rules kickboxing fight here and I honestly am not very
interested in it! Maybe you will like it! I will stick to watching
Lethwei which is better in almost every way :)
Let
us move on from that poor man's serious injury as we have another
fight on our hands! Evert Fyeet (8-19-2) is on a 3 fight losing
streak coming into this match with Tadeushas Cholodinskis (12-5-1)
who has a 4 fight win streak and comes from RINGS Lithuania and
Shooto Europe (which had many of its events in Lithuania).
Cholodinskis
opens this by flooring Fyeet with a heavy right jab and jumps on,
grabbing Fyeet's ankle for control before leaping forward for some
ground and pound. He is trying for a heel hold but Fyeet is able to
kick out of it. After controlling the round for some time then
scoring with a throw, Cholodinskis gets side control with a headlock
and transitions into a kimura and even uses his legs for it but it
slips out and Fyeet gets control. The ref breaks them up and brings
it back up as it began to stall. YOOOO Cholodinskis gets on a standing
guillotine and then rolls while keeping Fyeet in the hold. He stands
back up and Fyeet begins to jump to relieve pressure as Cholodinskis
continues to pull up. They roll once more and Fyeet is able to break
free right before the bell. This fight rocks hard.
Fyeet
hits Cholodinskis harddddd with an uppercut (the sweat came off him!)
and gets the Lithuanian down with a nice throw but Cholodinskis is
able to take control and roll into side position. Cholodinskis is
attempting another Kimura so Fyeet rolls into top position as
Cholodinskis maintains the hold, getting caught up in the ropes and
forcing a break. Fyeet leaps for a knee but gets punched midair and
splats on the ground! Cholodinskis leaps on and quickly gets into
full mount, and Fyeet grips tight around him to avoid the potential
punishment. After a period of not much occurring, the ref brings it
back up and after eating a knee, Fyeet clinches and hits a very nice
kosoto gake and his whole weight just slams onto Cholodinskis
(splat!). It's broken up since they were tangled in the ropes (Fyeet
is displeased!) and its started on their feet. Fyeet hits a very
slick side throw but gets caught in a guillotine on his way down. The
fight ends before Fyeet could get out but it seems if this had went
another round he may have had the advantage. Tadeushas Cholodinskis
gets the unanimous decision victory, but I think a split decision or
even a draw would have been more fair to Evert Fyeet (he never won
another fight after this loss sadly). This is the best match overall on the
card I think, it never was boring and since it didn't end in the
first round like most fights at this event the fight was able to
develop into something really special.
It's
the next fight on this absolutely great show (I hope you are enjoying
as much as I did, this show was such a breath of fresh air for some
reason). Jair “Sorriso” Goncalves (10-5) is going to face
Egidijus Valavicius
(29-12). Valavicius has been fighting since 2000 in RINGS Russia,
Japan, Lithuania, and in Shooto Europe so he is thoroughly a European
RINGS-man. From his promo vid he seems to be the type of guy to
continue fighting after the ref calls it off which I enjoy in a
worked environment but not really in MMA if that makes sense? Let's
give him a chance though as any RINGS-man comes with what we would
call in 2018 “hella klout.” (His entrance track is so sikk too,
these Lithuanians sure know how to pick 'em!)
Valavicius
tries to slug it out but Gonclaves is having none of it and uses a
mean driving double leg to bring this down. Jair Gonclaves just
absolutely overwhelms Egidijus Valavicius (who usually does this to
his opponents) and works his way to the back for a rear naked choke
win! Gonclaves is so excited to win this and stomps and yells around! Fun
times in Lithuanian!
ITS
HEAVYWEIGHT TIME! Keigo Takamori (6-6), a certified big boy from
Pancrase, is fighting “The Lithuanian Bear” Tadas Rimkevicius
(20-11) who at this point held an undefeated record of 9 wins
in Shooto Europe. ITS BIG BOY HOURS! Lol Rimkevicius comes out to a
remix of a Linkin Park song.
The
big boys do what big boys do. Tadas Rimkevicius gets knocked down but
he almost gets a leglock on from the up/down position so Takamori backs off and the fight is brought
back up. The Bear chases Keigo Takamori down and just beats the fuck
out of him for the win!
The
next fight is between Hiromitsu Miura (12-7), who would go on to have
a pretty good run in WEC before returning home to Pancrase, is
clashing with Kestutis Smirnovas (24-8-2) who is a judoka who had been
fighting in no holds barred stuff since 2001 in places like RINGS
Lithuania, Russia, and in Shooto Europe racking up an impressive
record.
Miura
is looking to strike but has not landed anything yet, and both
fighters are well-matched and can't get much of anything to stick.
Smirnovas defends well against Miura's attempt at a trip from the
clinch. Afterwards, Smirnovas is able to catch one of Miura's kicks
and is able to finally get this one to the ground but Miura wraps his
legs around Smirnovas' left leg and wants to set in a lock realllllly
badly. Miura can't quite get it on and pulls Smirnovas down, but this
is the end for him as Kestutis Smirnovas is able to get back mount
and pounds Hiromitsu Miura for the ref stoppage. A bit of a slow
start but the scramble after the caught kick was good! LOL Smirnovas
tries to do a backflip to celebrate but almost misses it and looks
like a huge dork.
UP
NEXT is a fight between the Ukranian Jurij “Playboy” Kiseliov
(6-6) and Valentinas Golubovskis (4-1) who is from the Bushido Rings
camp! As you might expect for someone with the nickname playboy,
Kiseliov comes out with models in tight tight jeans as a
hard tech song with sex noises blares over the speakers. Not a fan of this guy tbh!
WELL,
Golubovskis missed with the spinkick so he just kept spinning with
the fist and sent Playboy to hell. Oh, he also sneaked in a little
soccer kick! It's the RINGS way after all.
LOL
so after that morality tale we just witnessed, we have our second to
last fight! Mikhail Iliyukhin
(30-11-1) is a RINGS guy through and through. Whether it was in the
fully worked days, the mixed years, or the twilight of the full MMA
RINGS Japan; Iliyukhin was there doing his sambo thing. He is about
to face Jordanas Poskaitis (11-1) who is a VERY karate dude (he's doing so much karate in his intro video) who has
spent almost all of his fighting career since 2001 in RINGS
Lithuania. He lights some flame paper as he comes out to the ring.
Nothing says MMA like a little magic beforehand!
Holy
shit Iliyukhin is so old man jacked in this its scary. Poskaitis is
not fazed by this as he just keeps spin kicking Iliyukhin to keep him
as far away as possible because he does not want this on the ground.
He is even able to defend a takedown attempt by Iliyukhin, and
scrambles wildly to his feet. The second takedown attempt works for
Iliyukhin however as he gets a single leg, but the ref stopped it for some reason (I am not
sure exactly) but Iliyukhin goes fuckin' nuts and throws the ref
while attacking his opponent further. A huge group of refs have to
run in and stop this very angry and jacked old sambo man, and the fight
is paused while Iliyukhin receives a double yellow card for his
actions. Poskaitis gets a card as well because I guess he hit
Iliyukhin after the ref had stopped them? I guess? Poskaitis lands
more kicks as Iliyukhin moves in closer until one is caught but he is
only brought down for a brief moment. Iliyukhin inches closer and
closer, blocking a big knee and moving closerrrrr. He finally shoots and
drives Poskaitis into the corner as Poskaitis locks on a deep
guillotine from the bottom, but Iliyukhin is able to POP his head
out. This first round ends as Iliyukhin can't manage to pass
Poskaitis' guard.
Round
2 opens and Iliyukhin has already closed the gap on Poskaitis. OH
SHIT ILIYUKHIN CATCHES A KICK, KICKS OUT POSKAITIS' OTHER LEG, and
falls back into a sickening leglock that goes through several stages
of kneebar and half crab. The ref has to shove Mikhail Iliyukhin off
as Jordanas Poskaitis is left hobbling around. This was Mikhail
Iliyukin's last pro fight and that's probably a good thing because oh dear this dude had it (with what I do not know)!
IT
IS OUR MAIN EVENT! The Georgian Jokharidze Ramazi (0-2) up against
HEROS favorite Lithuanian Remigijus Morkevicius! PLEASE WATCH
Morkevicius' entrance here because it is an absolute joy and the
crowd just eats it up. He's got these Lithuanians absolutely hootin'
and hollerin' over it.
LEFT
HIGH KICK (god you can hear the thud it makes!) TO END THIS IN 7
SECONDS! LITHUANIA WINS (mostly) TONIGHT! Big Maeda comes out for a
nice picture with the shoot crew at the end and let me tell you, this
brings back those RINGS Holland memories instantly.
Hey!
So that was a long post (much longer than I expected) but I just had
to include these HEROS International events in our exploration of K-1 HEROS. HEROS Korea exemplified what FEG had planned for their global
expansion into MMA promoting, but HEROS Lithuania was a throwback. It
was an event that celebrated RINGS, both its glorious past and what
it had grown into independently of Maeda while he was disconnected from the
rest of the fighting network. Korea marked the way forward for MMA promotions,
but Lithuania was a playful expression of the days of old. Fighting
Network HEROS is truly born during these two shows, and we will see the
culmination of this first year in our next stop at K-1 DYNAMITE 2005!
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