Ian Freeman’s fledgling promotion Kudegra Championship Fighting today announced a TV deal to show all of their events – one a month for ten months – on “the Active Channel” (Sky 281 and www.theactivechannel.com

The press release is as follows:

Kudegra Championship Fighting is pleased to announce that all of our monthly Mixed Martial Arts programmes, including adverts and spin-offs, will be shown on The Active Channel, a free-to-view channel for anyone in the UK with a Sky TV box, and anyone worldwide with a Sky+ box.

The Active Channel currently has 32 million viewers, 27.5 million of that number living in the UK, and their website www.theactivechannel.com attracts 5 million viewers itself. The show is available in 193 countries worldwide, and there are exciting plans in the pipeline that involve expansion into even more massive territories.

This is great news for our Sponsors and Advertisers, who can take advantage of deals that combine Arena signage, TV adverts and on-line ads at ground-floor prices which could put their message in front of million+ people a week

Kudegra kick off their series of events with a great Scotland vs England show to be held on the 18th September at the Meadowbank sports Arena in Edinburgh. The fight card is amazing with one of the highlights being the return of longtime UK Featherweight #1 Danny Batten facing off against Dinky Ninja Fight Teams Graham Turner.

Ian Freeman and the Kudegra team have been working hard since the announcement that Kudegra would be bursting onto the UK scene and securing a TV deal is a fantastic step towards pushing this promotion even further into prominence in the flourishing MMA landscape here in the UK.

September is going to be another huge month for MMA over here with another UCMMA show, Kudegras debut and of course BAMMA 4 all being shown on TV. Great news for UKMMA fans and of course for all the Kudegra team.

If you want more information you can email admin(at)kudgra.com of check the kudegra website

Ian Freeman kindly took some time out of his busy schedule to speak to us about his latest venture in the MMA world. His pedigree as a fighter is well known, he is also a coach and a top MC working on shows up and down the country and around the world. But he has now added promoter as another string to his bow with the announcement that he will be launching the Kudegra Championship Fighting organisation. New and fledgling promotions haven’t fared so well in the UK recently and with a show schedule that promises one event a month for 10 months, we HAD to speak to Ian and find out how he plans to pull off this project. Ian was only too happy to share his vision with us and for our readers.

Ian thanks for talking to us today.
No problem, thanks for having me on!

First of all Ian, for those readers who may not have heard about it, can you tell me about Kudegra and give our readers an idea of the “mission statement” for your event.
Most of the fight events in the UK – and don’t get me wrong they do a great job so I’m not being disrespectful of them – they don’t seem to be FOR the UK fighter. I remembered how it was for me back in the day, travelling by myself, promoting myself, fighting by myself and I just wanted to do something for the UK fighters. This show is all about UK fighters, there will be no European or international names brought in for this for the first season of events, I want the focus to be entirely on the UK guys. We are hoping to build stars with this promotion and send those stars onto bigger and better things in the MMA world with a great kick-start to their careers.

So is that the reason you decided to get into promoting now, because you feel that with your experience in the MMA world you are in a position to rep the fighters better and “fight their corner” so to speak?
Yes definitely! Given the experience I have and also with my name being put to the event, they know they can trust me and therefore trust the brand. Me and my team will be working hard to support all the fighters that fight on our show, helping build them up and nurture their career.

You have announced a show a month for 10 months, starting in September with the Scotland vs. England card and then into the tournaments: Heavyweight in Hull in October, Middleweight in November in Bolton and then the Lightweight in December in Edinburgh. These will then rotate on a month by month basis. This is a pretty ambitious schedule for any promotion, let alone a brand new one and especially in the volatile UKMMA market don’t you think?
Well I’ve got a decent team behind me and we are also working with 21st Century Wrestling Entertainment, who are in partnership with me on this. Following each Saturday night MMA event there will be a Sunday wrestling event in the same venue so this has helped with venue costs. Also we are working with only those 3 venues initially for the first season and will be looking to establish our name in those areas. It is ambitious but we have budgeted for 10 shows and 10 shows are what we’ll be putting on.

Recently we have seen big shows hit problems and even get cancelled. You obviously think that the UKMMA scene is big enough for everyone otherwise you wouldn’t have gone ahead with this. What are your thoughts on the scene?
There is room for everyone, but it depends how big they want to go! What really boils my piss is people seeing MMA on TV and thinking they can make some money out of it so they put on a show. They go and book a massive venue and make a balls up of the whole thing. It’s doing damage to us, because these people put on shambolic shows and then the general public get a bad image of MMA shows thinking they are all the same and it makes the job harder for me and the other promoters.

Another big problem promoters face is from the fans themselves. It is a well known fact that there is a very vocal community of fans on the internet but this community is small and shows often find that they just aren’t getting bums on seats. Is this something that concerns you with your show?
Of course I’m worried; I think it worries every promoter. I’m in this for the fighters but I’m hoping the fans engage with the fighters as well and get behind them and WANT to see the evolution of the next era of UK stars on my shows. If that’s the case then the fans have to get behind us too, buy tickets and come see the shows.

I think that an excellent way to get more people paying for shows who perhaps can’t or won’t actually get out to see them live would be to introduce paid streams over the internet. I think, potentially this is a great outlet that hasn’t really been tapped into in UKMMA yet. What are your thoughts on this?
We’ve actually looked into this, but unfortunately I can’t give you more details than that. We are trying lots of different things and are trying to get different deals sorted to make this show as accessible as possible for the fans. I can’t give away secrets at this early stage but we are working really hard behind the scenes on this!

That’s great news! We’ll look forward to the developments on this. So back to the tournaments, the weight categories aren’t typical MMA weight divisions. You have lightweight at U77k, Middleweight at under 93k and Heavyweight at 93k and over. What are the reasons for not having standard weight divisions?
Well 93k and over is heavyweight anyway so there’s no discrepancy there. But the reason for the weights being split how they are is simply that we offering £30k for the winner of each category. We didn’t want to offer less and to cover every weight category in a season would cost far too much. A £30k contract is a fantastic wage for a UK fighter fighting in England

It’s a fairly decent wage in the normal 9-5 world for a lot of people too!
Well exactly. So in this first season, we wanted to test the water a bit but still be able to offer a decent package to the winner of the tournament. And bear in mind that the wage structure for all competitors is still VERY good. With all tournament participants being paid for each fight they are in, not just winner. All 8 fighters get £1000 in the first round, then the semi-finalists get £1500 each and the finalists receive £2000 each with the winner getting the 4 fight contract, which works out as follows: £3k first fight, £6k second fight, £9k third fight, £12k fourth fight.

And the contract is obviously going to be an exclusive one then if you are signing them for that kind of money?
If a fighter wins and signs to me for 12 months but the UFC come in and say that want him, then we will not hold him back and will release him from the contract, because fighting on the UFC is going to skyrocket their profile and like I keep saying this show is about ultimately launching UK fighters onto the big stage. However if it was a smaller show coming in and wanting my fighter to fight for them then we wouldn’t allow that, after all a smaller show will not increase that fighters career.

So how has the response been for the tournaments then?
The response has been great, but if the fans are expecting to see the top ranked guys in the divisions then they will be surprised. I wanted to get some big names initially and for the Heavyweight division for example I approached people like Neil Grove and Stav Economu etc… But these guys are already signed, then I thought about what I wanted for this show which is to establish the next generation of UK stars. So we have guys in with only a few fights but with great wins, so they still have the potential to be big stars. The lightweight division is full, we are looking for 2 more middleweight and 1 more heavyweights so if anyone is out there reading this and they want to get involved then get in touch. But, as ridiculous as it sounds, I have had guys who have never had an MMA fight before but have “3 years of karate behind them” get in touch because there’s 30k contract on the line and that’s unbelievable! So if you are going to get in touch we insist you have some MMA experience! *laughs*

Well we can understand you perhaps not wanting to put the latest karate star in the cage just yet with no MMA experience *laughs*. Is there anything else at all you can tell us about the show?
OK I’ll give you a scoop! I can announce the main events for the October and November tournament shows. In October in Hull, we have Abdul Mohammed taking on Mick Sinclair at Lightweight and in November in Bolton, we have Stav Economu vs. Oli Thompson at Heavyweight. I can’t tell you the headline fight for the December Lightweight tournament in Edinburgh as one name isn’t confirmed, but I promise it’s huge!

Two great fights there Ian, thanks very much for sharing them with us. Before we let you go is there anyone you’d like to thank?
Massive thanks to everyone who has helped us out, especially my PR Paul “Deathwish” Hartley who has been fantastic sending out emails and doing all my leg work. Our officials: Marc Goddard UFC referee and our head referee, Craig Lawrence from M1 who is our undercard referee Our head judge Aaron Chatfield, Colin Sexton and Trevor Mitchell. Trevor Mitchell is also our third referee, if we ever need one. Mark Woodard, UFC official, is our commissioner and backstage official checking gloves and wraps and will stand in as our fourth judge in case there is a conflict of interests with one of the judges. So thanks to them all too and thanks to everyone who has supported us all so far!

Ian it’s been a pleasure, thanks for talking to us!
No problems mate, thanks very much.


You can keep up with all the latest news and developments with the promotion on their website at www.kudegra.com. Of course, we will also be bringing all the big news right here as well as some more great feature interviews.

OK, OK, I know it’s not over yet and there’s more to come, but wow! What a great year for UKMMA this has been:

There are more Brits than ever before signed up to the big shows and people are starting to sit up and take notice that the Brits are for real and we have some QUALITY fighters.

We have seen the UK team make it all the way to the semi-finals in the M1 Global Challenge. No mean feat when you consider that they did this with very little faith being placed in the team by a large number of “so-called” UK fans on the forums. They had to cope with team changes, injuries, and the logistical nightmare of getting guys – who in some cases still hold down full-time jobs – together from all over the country to train as a squad. All the fighters who gave their all, the coaches and UKMMA kingpin Ian Dean all deserve BIG respect for what they achieved. Onwards and upwards! Let’s hope we can improve on the semi-finals next time out.

There was the first all UK Team in the house for the Ultimate Fighter reality series. They proved to be more dedicated, less whiney and ultimately (and most importantly) superior Mixed Martial Artists to the US team in the house, with the series winners in both weight categories coming from our side. Spare a thought as well for the UK talent that didn’t make it to the show. Che Mills and Jimmy Wallhead particularly stick in the mind and were conspicuous by their absence (more on them later in this article).

Team Roughouse have emerged as a contender to rival AKA’s position as “the” team in the UFC’s welterweight division. Roughhouse standouts Dan “The Outlaw” Hardy and Paul “Semtex” Daley have arrived with a bang: Semtex KO-ing one of the previous contenders for that elusive title shot in Martin Kampmann with some fierce striking in the first round of his UFC debut. Dan Hardy – riding the momentum of blasting through his last few opponents in the Octagon – despatched the other former contender for the shot, Mike Swick, with an excellent decision win and in the process becoming the first british fighter to get a UFC title shot.

A shout-out must go to Brad Pickett who became the first Brit to make it into the (zuffa owned) *thanks MMAlien* WEC and he is sure to make big waves there. This will hopefully pave the way for the other outstanding UK fighters who compete at the lighter weights to make it on the big shows. I fully expect Mark Adams (ok thats a shameless plug for a mate, but tell me I’m wrong!! ) and hopefully one of my favourite UK-based fighters: Paul McVeigh to follow him there sometime in 2010 / 2011 as well as some other promising UK talent.

Although he isn’t British, we can adopt him as one of our own and no-one can deny the British influence provided by his team on Marius Zaromskis, who has been kicking peoples heads off their shoulders in Dream to win the Welterweight grand-prix title. The london-shoot trained Lithuanian striking machine will now try his hand in strikeforce before the UFC no doubt come knocking to add him to their already stacked welterweight rosta.

Domestically we have seen some awesome matchups. Jim Wallhead has cleaned out the UK and european WW’s and needs big international fights, Marshall Zelasnik has previously stated he has his eye on Jimmy and after taking a decision win against Che Mills recently, ‘Judo Jim’ has surely done enough to make Joe Silva and Dana White sit up and take notice and add him to the growing list of Team RoughHouse WW fighters currently on a march in the UFC.

Paul Sass dispatched Rob Sinclair to stake a claim as the best UK lightweight out there right now and surely some bigger european and UK fights beckon for him.

Cage Rage successor Ultimate Challenge have raised their game and recently put on one of their best cards since the glory days of Cage Rage. Jackson MMA trained Tom Watson proved he is the number one UK Middleweight outside the UFC by beating a game Denniston Sutherland and again some bigger matchups will surely come for him. There are plenty of other shows are cropping up and putting on some quality domestic and european match-ups and UK Fans are spoiled for choice with events to go to. Which is a nice change from only a few years ago when there weren’t too many shows at all.

Sadly every silver-lining has a cloud and it has been a shame to see the demise of CageWarriors as a fight promotion. This is the show I “grew up” with in MMA and the first show I ever went to. Hopefully they will be back bigger and better sometime soon but meanwhile they continue to try to drive UKMMA forwards with their Warrior Promotions brand and the tireless work of Ian Dean and the team on behalf of UK fighters.

But the biggest exclamation mark to emphasise the fact that UKMMA is up there with the best in the world is undoubtedly the most recent UFC event, UFC 105, held in Manchester.

What a night for the British Fighters and what a brilliant two-finger gesture to all the haters on t’interweb the world over who said that most if not all the Brits would get killed on that show. I especially love the fact that after saying this on record, Matt Riddle got his face punched in by Nick Osipczak. Awesome!

Ross Pearson proved he really is “The Real Deal” with his destruction of veteran Aaron Riley, who had no answer for the intensity of Pearsons muay thai assault. He looked a real contender that night and proved that he has what it takes to hang with the big boys of the UFC’s lightweight division.

Mike Bisping laid a few demons to rest with his GnP obliteration of a hapless Denis Kang – a BJJ BlackBelt who could not figure out Bispings guard, had no answer to his takedowns and folded under his relentless ground assault in round 2.

Dan Hardy is now the first UK fighter to get a title shot in the UFC (I know I’ve said this once already, but its HUGE so I’ll say it twice!) after outstriking Mike Swick – a feat which many doubters said was impossible but UK fans knew all along. Hardy did eat a few shots but shook them off and rocked Swick with his power several times. I personally felt he should have KO’d swick by going after him when he was shaken but he had a clear gameplan and it paid off. That’s why I’m just an armchair fan and he’s in the cage beating people up.

In the only Brit vs Brit fight of the night, John Hathaway kept his undefeated record intact and proved in the process that he is one of the best wrestlers in UKMMA….who said Brits can’t wrestle!!

Despite their losses on the show Paul Kelly and James Wilks gave a good account of themselves in tough fights against Denis Siver and Matt Brown respectively.

Terry Etim got his second sub of the night bonus in as many fights with his 2nd round Guillotine win and Andre Winner had a good shout for KO of the night with a vicious overhand right that put Roli Delgado out before he even hit the floor. Sure he followed up with a couple of unnecessary shots but the ref was too far from the action to pull him off and in fairness to Dre, Delgado got up from the first one so he had to be sure.

Speaking of Refs – we also had the best UK ref in the game (and one of the best in the UFC right now) Marc Goddard refereeing a UFC main event. A huge honour for him and proof that it isnt just the fighters from the UK who are excelling in the sport right now.

So how do we top this year? Well Dan Hardy winning the Welterweight strap would be a great way to do that – but that is a pretty tall order as I’m sure he is only too well aware. I’m not writing off his chances and he is the rightful challenger – if he can keep it standing who knows what could happen. No-one has truly tested GSP’s chin out, apart from Matt Serra and we all know what happened there. It is fair to say that Dan Hardy is a LOT better on the feet than Serra so this match is certainly not a complete whitewash for GSP, especially when you consider his absence through injury recently and how active Dan has been.

No doubt Dan is spending everyday in the gym concentrating on getting that belt and he knows what he has to do to win. The whole of the UK is behind him.

Starting off 2010 strongly is the EPIC ZT Fight Night – the Tournament. A one night, 8 man, winner takes all, old school tournament for the right to be crowned the no1 UK Heavyweight and take a tidy £15k home in the process. That one will start the year off with a bang for sure.

Finally (and look out for a future article on this) UKMMA legend Ian Freeman has stated his desire to return to the cage and this looks likely for 2010. Will we see him back in the bigshow? I certainly hope so and if the UFC have any sense they’d put any fight he was in on a UK UFC – it would be even bigger than UFC 105 (which incidentally broke all european records for an MMA show).

Many people are saying he should leave his legacy as it is instead of chasing an elusive dream, I say why the hell should he. No-one knows Freeman better than Freeman and he has definitely had his share of comebacks. I don’t think he can hang with the LHW elite in the UFC and to be fair I don’t think he thinks he can judging by this (thanks Aaron and MMA Hitpit), but there are a few great potential matches out there for him, let’s hope they get made and we get a chance to see the Machine ripping it up in the cage once more.

The message to MMA fans over here is simple: The futures bright people, and the future is UKMMA!!

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