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Glory 21 San Diego This Friday

9mm

MuscleChemistry MMA Site Representative
My friends if you are unfamiliar with Glory kickboxing you've got a great opportunity to check out two of the absolute best strikers in the world go at it in the main event, and that is not hyperbole. Simon Marcus and Artem Levin are amazing fighters. The rest of the card isn't too strong in name power but all these dudes bring it every fight. Check this shit out if you have a chance, if nothing else the main event!

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interview to get to know simon

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Quick Artem Levin Highlight

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Chi Lewis Parry Pre Fight Interview

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On this Friday night's GLORY 21 SAN DIEGO card is a four-man ‘Heavyweight Qualification Tournament' which will earn the winner a spot in the division's next Contender Tournament, another four-man affair but one which carries a title shot as its main prize. All four fighters in Friday's tournament are therefore theoretically within four fights and wins of a title shot.

Xavier Vigney vs. Maurice Jackson


This will be Vigney's third GLORY outing. He scored a stoppage win on his GLORY 10 debut and he repeated the feat in his sophomore outing at GLORY 19 earlier this year. A regular sparring partner for Nick Diaz, the former De La Salle football standout has been marked out as one to watch in the heavyweight division.


Some detractors point out the manhandling he received from Zabit Samedov under the K-1 banner in 2012 but that fight doesn't mean a lot to me; Samedov had nearly a hundred fights under his belt at that point and Vigney was brand-new to the professional ranks.


The record provided for Jackson has him at 31-0, though that does seem high for a heavyweight kickboxer who is relatively unknown on the international circuit. Possibly it includes his amateur record as well.


Either way, he is a K-1 veteran and an MMA fighter with Bellator time under his belt. He has good power and good hands. At 34 he is probably edging into the tail end of his professional career, though heavyweights often have a longer lifespan than their lighter-weight equivalents.


Generally people are picking Vigney as the favorite and I don't disagree. He is younger and fresher and he has been active recently whereas Jackson has been struggling to find fights. They both have stopping power and with heavyweights a fight can end at any moment but the longer it goes the more Vigney gains the advantage.


If things pan out to a Vigney/Lewis-Parry final then it gets really interesting as there is some bad blood between them. They were matched for GLORY 20 before Vigney got moved to this card and Lewis-Parry has been baiting Vigney via the fight media ever since. With both of them being new blood in the heavyweight division it would be hard to make a call on a fight between them, but it would be safe to say that the fight would be unlikely to go the distance.


‘Chopper' Chi Lewis vs. Demoreo Dennis

‘Chopper' debuted with a 25-second knockout of the hapless Tae Kwon Do stylist Yongsu Park at GLORY 20 DUBAI. It was the third-fastest KO in GLORY history and instantly put Lewis-Parry on the map, although the South Korean was by no means a tough test relative to what the rest of the division is capable of offering.


Originally he was to face Everett ‘Wolverine' Sims in this match but injury meant a late switch to Demoreo Dennis being the opponent. Sims was coming in as the underdog after being stopped by Xavier Vigney at GLORY 19 earlier this year in what was his professional kickboxing debut following a decent amateur run.


Dennis' last kickboxing fight was a split-decision loss to Pat ‘HD' Barry in January. Many felt the decision should have gone his way and the argument is certainly there. Dennis feels the same and was in no way demoralized by the decision. Instead it has given him confidence in fighting on big platforms.


The size and reach advantage go to Lewis-Perry here. That plus the fact he has had a full training camp gives him the edge and makes the fight and uphill struggle for Dennis.


Dave Walsh, Liverkick
"What is there to say about the tournament? I think that Demoreo Dennis being slotted into the place that Everett Sims held is great and that he deserved it in the first place, but that the story of the tournament is still Vigney and Chi Lewis Parry.

"I think that when push comes to shove Vigney takes it, but there is still so much we don't know about Parry as a kickboxer."

Michael ‘Stets' Steczkowski, MMA Mania
"Let's not pretend that we aren't going to see a Xavier Vigney vs. Chi Lewis-Parry tournament final here. I think they both win their semi-final match-ups over Maurice Jackson and Demoreo Dennis by knockout, barring a freak injury.
"That will set up a fireworks final with the edge going to Vigney based on the level of competition he has faced. Lewis-Parry has looked great, but when we see him against Vigney is when we will truly know if he is for real.
"Not that Vigney is top of the food chain, but he will be first true test for "Chopper." Both fighters are tall and both have a ton of power, it could be a real fun one to watch. I think Lewis-Parry is up for the challenge, but will lose a decision to Vigney."

Andreas Georgiou, MMA Plus
"The tournament took a hit when Everett Sims dropped out, because Chi Lewis-Parry and Sims could of had a great fight.
"The whole premise sets up a Lewis-Parry vs. Xavier Vigney. Bad blood and two of the best prospects and heavyweight. I predict ‘Chopper' advances to the contender tournament later this year."
 
Artem Levin vs. Simon Marcus


Levin has looked almost untouchable in his GLORY run, with only Los Angeles' Joe Schilling able to take a win over him in the course of nine fights. His run in the LAST MAN STANDING eight-man tournament at GLORY 17 last year was a masterpiece of skill and strategy and led him to take the World Middleweight Championship title belt while hardly sustaining a scratch in the process.


Marcus has been the Muay Thai world's dominant force at middleweight for several years. He was undefeated before deciding to cross over into kickboxing last year to test himself in GLORY. His debut was against Joe Schilling in the opening stage of the LAST MAN STANDING tournament.


Holding two previous wins over Schilling, Marcus was felt to be the favorite in some quarters. But others pointed to his lack of experience under kickboxing rules, which require a different style and pace to Muay Thai and also vastly restrict the clinch, one of Marcus' key weapons.


It turned out to be a ‘Fight of the Year' for 2014. They traded back and forth and it went to an extra round before Marcus was stopped with a classic Schilling counter-right. It was a competitive fight but the finish was definitive; had Marcus made a mistake by moving into kickboxing?


A subsequent stoppage loss in China added weight to the argument that he had. Levin talked about the two losses in a recent interview and laughed at what he called a "terrible" performance from Marcus in the latter. That lit a fire under Marcus; he threw Levin's words in his face by winning the GLORY 20 DUBAI tournament and now wants to take the belt from him on Friday.


Realistically, Levin is by far the favorite. He is far more experienced under these rules and has not looked troubled by any opponent he has faced in GLORY bar Joe Schilling, who beat him by decision at GLORY 10. Levin is like Marcus a Muay Thai stylist at heart, but he is a striker where Marcus has been predominantly a clincher, and that favors him under GLORY rules.


Marcus' constant argument has been that he needed a couple of fights to get tuned in to the new rules he is fighting under. He genuinely does not seem bothered about the losses, ascribing them to a learning curve. His recent training camp with Buakaw in Thailand seems to have done him good and has been beneficial in helping him adjust from Muay Thai rules to kickboxing.


He didn't look especially troubled at any point when beating Wayne Barrett and Jason Wilnis at GLORY 20, but Levin is a completely different challenge. His reflexes and defensive mastery make him difficult to score points on, let alone hit cleanly, and he won't provide the kind of forward pressure that Marcus likes to fight against.


Levin has lost to Marcus once under Muay Thai rules but has spat about it being "a clinch fight... not even a real fight", so he is clearly relishing the chance to get even in San Diego. He hasn't fought since June, whereas Marcus fought a few weeks ago and is in full competition mode. Marcus hasn't said if there are any injury niggles from Dubai but Levin certainly has a layer of ring rust on him.


Statistics and recent history alone mean the smart money is on Levin retaining his title via five rounds of defensive shutout punctuated by hard counter-attacks when Marcus is exposed. The GLORY 20 performance did indicate that Marcus is calibrated to his new ruleset though, and that makes things interesting. One hard shot can change the course of the fight instantly. Marcus is certainly not heading to San Diego with any doubt in his mind that he can take the belt from Levin.

Dave Walsh, Liverkick - I'm expecting this to be a different fight than their first one. Not only are the rules different but the circumstances are as well. There are no longer these "what if's" hanging in the air of where everyone stands in the division, it is clear that Levin is the top guy and that everyone else is chasing him. Levin has grown as a fighter and a person over the last few years and without Marcus's ability to utilize the clinch I'm not sure that he's able to handle Levin's slickness.


Andreas Georgiou, MMA Plus - Artem Levin's return is the most exciting fight of GLORY 21. We've not seen him since that triumphant title win during Last Man Standing last June. His first title defense is against Simon Marcus and although Marcus is a good fighter, I feel Levin will use range and technique to score the win. Plus let's not forget the Russian wants revenge for that 2013 loss under Muay Thai rules.


Michael ‘Stets', MMA Mania - While Marcus should not be overlooked, especially after winning the GLORY 20 tournament in Dubai, I just don't see how he defeats Levin. The champion has been on the shelf for a while, but I don't see it being a factor. Levin's striking accuracy and movement will be on full display, while Marcus will looking to bring the fight to him and get inside on him and rough him up.


I think Marcus has a chance to make it interesting, and he showed vast improvements at GLORY 20, but Levin won't let him fight his fight long enough to take the title. "The Lion" knocks him down at least once, but doesn't finish him. I see Levin winning a 30-27 unanimous decision.



Check Spike TV if you have it, this will be on in a matter of hours
 
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both dudes were pretty pissed after the fight, heard simon completely lost his shit backstage after, refused all media and didn't go to the post fight press conference

anybody check this out? the main event wasn't the fight i thought it'd be but i still enjoyed it.
 
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