Perhaps here's the part that Campbell didn't realize. The Olympics, well, they kind of like to run a clean business. Read more...

Read up to find out why a finalist on The Next Food Network Star was interviewed by a martial arts site.

At UFC 81, Brock Lesnar got a little careless with his ground and pound and was submitted by Frank Mir. Not this time folks!
Perhaps here's the part that Campbell didn't realize. The Olympics, well, they kind of like to run a clean business. Read more...
Oh, how times have changed.
"Talk all the [bleep] you want now!" Lesnar said to a bloodied and battered Mir after defeating him, indicating that perhaps he doesn't subscribe to all of that MMA respect stuff that people talk about. In the post fight interview with Joe Rogan he went even further, citing, ""Frank Mir, he had a horseshoe up his ass. I told him that a year ago. I pulled that sumbitch out and I beat him over the head with it! Wooooooo!"
Fans booed him. Lesnar flipped them off. He just doesn't seem to care what people think of him. Whether it's bravado or not, he appears to have embraced the villain role. So get ready for some different behavior after championship fights in the heavyweight division. The champ is a villain and he's a darned good fighter. Let's face it: Whether it's a good thing or not, we haven't had a champion play the role of a villain this good in a long time, if ever.
St. Pierre managed numerous takedowns on the night. He took Alves' back to no avail on multiple occasions. And in the third round, a St. Pierre left-right combination floored his adversary. In the end, despite the fact that Alves fought with honor, the Canadian fighter pretty much won every round on his way to a unanimous decision UFC 100 victory.
By the way, St. Pierre managed the victory with a reportedly pulled groin that he started feeling in round three. It's time for Anderson Silva now, don't you think?
The first round saw the man they call "Hollywood" stun his opponent with some big punches as he chased him around the cage, looking to connect with that vicious right hand of his. Later in the stanza, Bisping did begin to stick and move better, even if the power differential between the two (in Henderson's favor) was quite obvious. But in the second round, Henderson finally connected with that one big right hand he'd been looking for all night. Bisping was out cold immediately, but still sustained another tough shot from Henderson on the ground before the referee stepped in.
Dan Henderson wins by KO at 3:20 of round two. It took Bisping awhile to get up. Thankfully, he finally did.
Strike out the competition with these step-by-step pictorials. More >
Learning Pilates fundamentals can help you get the most out of your exercise regime. More >
©2009 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company.
All rights reserved.