Cyborg & Miesha Tate — We Got Screwed … We Should Be …

We Got Screwed We Should Be Fighting Ronda 8/26/2015 12:45 AM PDT BY TMZ STAFF

EXCLUSIVE

Cris "Cyborg" Justino says Ronda Rousey is straight DUCKING HER and has been for years -- and she's now calling out the UFC champ ... saying she wants the next fight.

Cyborg has been out in Philly with fellow MMA badass Miesha Tate to shoot the movie "Fight Valley: Knockaround Girls" ... when we asked how they felt about getting passed over for the main event at UFC 195.

Obviously, they weren't happy about it ... but both Tate andCyborg say they're ready to brawl with Rousey any time, any where.

"It's not my choice, it's her choice," Cyborg said ... "I'm ready. Let's go fight."

As for Tate, she says her rematch is just a matter of time -- "That day will come and we will see that fight again."

Rousey has to get through Holly Holm first ... who happens to be co-starring in the movie with Cyborg and Tate.

Maybe they can strategize together ...

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Cyborg & Miesha Tate -- We Got Screwed ... We Should Be ...

Bootswatch: Cyborg

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Bootswatch: Cyborg

Cyborg – Wookieepedia, the Star Wars Wiki

Cybernetic limbs.

A cyborg was a cybernetic organism; that is, a living organic sentient organism with mechanical prostheses. Often covered in synthflesh/synthskin, these prostheses served one or more of three purposes:

Cyborg also referred to creatures that were half-organic and half-droid. They were generally regarded as "soulless abominations". Cyberneticists were responsible for developing and creating cybernetic components.

Cyborgs with brain implants such as the BioTech Borg Construct Aj^6 were known to suffer from psychosis as a result of their enhancement, and consequently faced fear and prejudice from many beings.

Such cyborgs were not considered citizens under Imperial law, which required surgery to be sponsored by a corporation or government. The cyborg was then indentured to their sponsor. However, this did not seem to affect the cyborg Darth Vader's standing in the Empire. However, this was likely due to the fact that Vader's unique position as Palpatine's lieutenant made him exempt from most Imperial laws. Even the New Republic required them to undergo regular neural scans.

Cyborgs with large-scale enhancements (over half of their body) were faced with outright fear and derision, often forcing them into hiding. On some back-water worlds anti-cyborg sentiment was so strong that attempts at burying deceased "borgs" were often met with outbreaks of violence.

Many beings, especially spacers, had a prejudice against droids which they extended to cyborgs; they referred to cyborgs as "borgs."

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Cyborg - Wookieepedia, the Star Wars Wiki

Cyborg – Terminator Wiki – Terminator Genisys – Genisys …

A common cyborg, or "human-based" cyborg

An android with living tissues

T-888 HUD identifying Cameron Phillips as a cyborg

A cyborg (cybernetic organism) is an organism that is a self-regulating integration of artificial and natural systems.

The Series 8xx and 900 Infiltrators are made up of living tissue over metal endoskeletons, and have referred to themselves as "cybernetic organisms". Both Terminators and Resistance fighters have also occasionally used the phrase "cyborg" interchangeably with "cybernetic organism".[1][2]

Common usage of the term "cyborg" often implies that the biological components are human, although the term is not specifically that limited, a cyborg can consist of biological components of any living origin. Infiltrator models built by Skynet have used enhanced human tissue designed to prevent decay over prolonged missions.

With the exception of human-based cyborgs such as I825.M, the I-950 and the Hybrid, all Terminators are androids. With the addition of living tissue they gain the title of cyborg, despite the fact that models such as the T-800 (disambiguation) are capable of performing operations without their living tissue with no detriment to their performance. (However, keeping in mind that the T-800 series was designed for Infiltration rather than frontline duty.)

The Series 1000 and Series X Terminators, both use mimetic polyalloy rather than living tissue for their exterior (and interior in the case of the T-1000). Therefore, most traditional definitions would make them advanced androids, not cyborgs.

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Cyborg - Terminator Wiki - Terminator Genisys - Genisys ...

Cris Cyborg Fight News – MMA Fighting

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Cris Cyborg Fight News - MMA Fighting

cyborg – University of Chicago

The OED defines a cyborg as "a person whose physical tolerances or capabilities are extended beyond normal human limitations by a machine or other external agency that modifies the body's functions; an integrated man-machine system." The term emerged as a blend of cyb[ernetic] - pertaining to Norman Weiner's cybernetics, "the entire field of control and communications theory, whether in the machine or animal" - ad org[anism] - "an organized body, consisting of mutually connecting and dependent parts constituted to share a common life." The cyborg was a human, but its non-human extensions make it something else entirely. Like Marshall McLuhan's "extensions of man," the cyborg represents the relationship between organic bodies and media technologies that extend either "bodies through space" or the "central nervous system itself" (3).

The figure of the cyborg depends on a systems-based understanding of organisms. The systems model draws an analogy between neural and cellular human physiology and the electronic circuitry of computers. The brain acts like the central processing unit of the body, directing and controlling the operation of its individual parts. A prosthetic can be incorporated into this system and the brain will interact and synthesize with the "machine of other external agency" to form a cyborg. The machine aspect of the cyborg is a medium for the communication of human consciousness and the organic body of the cyborg is a site of synthesis and integration.

As a hybrid creature, the cyborg has no parentage. In "A Cyborg Manifesto," Donna Haraway suggested that "the cyborg has no origin story in the Western sense" (151-52). However, the character of the cyborg originated out of the emergent field of cybernetics in the 1960's. Manfred Clynes and Nathan Kline helped coin the term in 1960 as a concept that would "allow man to optimize his internal regulation to suit the environment he may seek" in outerspace (Clynes, 32). Along this line of history, cyborg creations are positive additions to the human body that improve upon its capabilities. Such instantiations of the cyborg might also include "anyone whose immune system has been programmed through vaccination to recognize the polio virus" (Gray, Mentor, Figueroa-Sarriera, 2-3). Along another line of history, the cyborg takes its origin from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein . Frankenstein's monster is often cited as the first cyborg (Gray, Mentor, Figueroa-Sarriera, 5). Not born of woman, Frankenstein assembled his monster on the operating table. The history of the cyborg as monster evokes modern society's "profound anxiety that we have lost control of, and may even be destroyed by, the technology we have created in the modern age (Gusterson, 109).

Thus, two dominant types of cyborgs emerge in their history: the cyborg as a reconceptualized post-human body and the cyborg as machine-controlled monster. Because the cyborg is a symbiotic relationship between human and machine and is equally faithful to its organic components and its machine attributes, its manifestations vary according to which aspect is attributed dominance or materiality. At the same time, representations of cyborgs deny clearly defined boundaries between human and machine. Yet, in defining the cyborg as a hybrid entity, the "integrated man-machine system" subsumes issues of control and dependence, communication and connection, hiding these in its technological structure. Thus, the cyborg is fundamentally ironic and contradictory (Haraway, 154). Its character is "a condensed image of both imagination and material reality" (150).

As a utopian fantasy, the cyborg body is an improved and superior body. Perhaps the most significant text in this history of the cyborg is Haraway's "Cyborg Manifesto." Her "ironic political myth faithful to feminism, socialism, and materialism" develops the character of the cyborg as "a creature in a post-gender world; it has no truck with bisexuality, pre-oedipal symbiosis, unalienated labour, or other seductions to organic wholeness through a final appropriation of all the powers of the parts into a higher unity" (150). She conceives of the cyborg as the final end of humanity - the last stage of human evolution as the symbiosis of humans and their creations. For Haraway, the cyborg is an exemplar of the possibilities of creating communities through transcending boundaries and she argues for " pleasure in the confusion of boundaries" (150).

Cyborgs are both political reality and mythical, discursive subjects. As N. Katherine Hayles suggests, "cyborgs are simultaneously entities and metaphors, living beings and narrative constructions" ("The Life Cycle of Cyborgs: Writing the Posthuman," 152). The cyborg functions both really and fictionally as a way of reconfiguring identity in an era of emergent biotechnological possibilities and fractured subjectivities.

As a real body, the cyborg is a kind of posthuman. The posthuman model of the body situates consciousness as a "function of the organism, not an organ [i.e. the brain]" and repudiates the claim that the human has fixed boundaries (Pepperell 13). The cyborg body has the potential to think of the body more holistically. The virtualization of sense perception in a game powered by the human's central nervous system in David Cronenberg's eXistenZ might provide one example of a cyborg. But cyborgs also have the potential to improve the body. Cyborg humans with pacemakers, prostheses, or other "enhancements" have altered the functioning of the human body to restore, modify, or improve their capabilities.

Although real embodiments of the cyborg character certainly exist, theorists like Haraway and Hayles situate the cyborg as a subject position. Furthermore, as writers like Sherry Turkle and Sandy Stone acknowledge, human-machine interactions that articulate new subject positions based on human dependence on the machine interface, qualify as cyborg relations. These writers concentrate in particular on the possibilities of alternative identities on the Internet. Without the surgeries required for physical prostheses, the [screen , (2)] can act as a kind of prosthesis through which race, gender, age, and shape are rendered invisible (Turkle, 1995).

When these attributes are rendered invisible, however, the cyborg identity suffers the problem of disembodiment. Stone considers the problem of the disembodied subjectivity of cyborgs, who like the phone-sex workers in her study, are "everywhere and somewhere and nowhere, but almost never here in the positive sense" (Stone, 398). The manifestations of such a cyborg subject position cross-pollinate with the virtual figures of cyberspace - avatars and textual embodiments. Cyborg can be constructed as a way to reconfigure identity and to extend the possibilities of a human without a body, a body without organs. These cyborgs share a utopian mythology that situates the "human" as dominant in the machine-human relationship. The cyborg is a person with extensions or modifications, but the cyborg still has noticeable human traits.

The cyborg figure has not always been constructed so optimistically however. Ironically, "the cyborg is also the awful apocalyptic telos of the 'West's' escalating dominations of abstract individuation" (Haraway, 151). The cyborg as monster reflects modern terrors of technological power. The possibility of disposing of the body and situating consciousness inside the computer becomes the terror of the ghost in the machine. Automation takes over the machine-human hybrid system with potentially disastrous consequences. In 2001: A Space Odyssey , the computer HAL kills most of his spaceship's crew when he/it malfunctions and begins to think for him/itself. As Friedrich Kittler notes in Gramophone, Film, Typewriter , with only "a simple feedback loop... information machines bypass, their so-called inventors" (258). The dream of Artificial Intelligence and robotics, to create a mechanical body for the human brain, has the potential to liberate the idea of "human," but also has the risk of creating disaster and turning on humans.

Recent incarnations of mythical cyborg characters are often dangerous or violent. The replicants in BladeRunner and the Borg in Star Trek: The Next Generation are examples of cyborgs whose machine/computer half has gone awry. As the cyborg creature is about supplementing human deficiencies, disguising disabilities, and improving flaws, the terror of a cyborg creation that develops its own flaws is the nightmare of cyborg science. The fear of machines that control and destroy stands in opposition to the possibility of machines liberating consciousness from the human body and providing useful, powerful extensions to the body.

Various manifestations of machine-human symbiosis and hybridity have descended from the original Frankenstein monster. But not all cyborg monsters are as destructive as Frankenstein or the Terminator. Other cyborg creations endow humans with superpowers, as in comic books or cartoons, like Swamp-Thing or Spider-Man . Science-fiction writers, like Octavia Butler and William Gibson, have taken up the cyborg character as a way to imagine the possibilities of technologically enhanced human beings. More recent cyborg constructions include the bodies of Stelarc and Orlan, who both use technological systems to alter their physical boundaries. In his performance of the cyborg body Stelarc, sees a need to reposition the body "from the psycho world of the biological to the cyber zone of the interface and extension - from genetic containment to electronic extension" (560).

The character of the cyborg and its presence in contemporary culture reveals a mixture of pleasure and terror from the relationship between man and machine. Essentializing human as body or as mind determines in part how the cyborg character is constructed. Giving dominance to the machine or to the human (body or mind) determines how a particular instantiation of the cyborg will perform. Part utopic fantasy and part apocalyptic monster, part automaton and part autonomy, the cyborg is a synthesis - or perhaps a dialectic, as Hayles proposes in "Virtual Bodies and Flickering Signifiers" - between pattern and randomness. Jessica Santone Winter 2003

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cyborg - University of Chicago

Forget Ronda Rousey: Tate, Holm and ‘Cyborg’ Come Together …

As a UFC champion and A-list celebrity, Ronda Rousey has a huge target on her, and three of the women looking to take her out happen to be getting awfully friendly right now. Check out this photo posted to Instagram on Monday:

The picture features Miesha Tate, Holly Holm and Cris "Cyborg" Justino in front of the famous Rocky statue in Philadelphia and was taken to promote the upcoming filmFight Valley: Knockaround Girls. The revenge-focused action flick will feature all three women, who are taking wildly different paths en route to Rousey.

Tate and Rousey had a bitter feud in 2012 ahead of their fight for the Strikeforce women's bantamweight title. While Rousey would win the bout in devastating fashion, bending Tate's arm backward, she remained close enough to Rousey to end up facing her again in 2013 following a mixed-gender season ofThe UltimateFighter. While she came up short yet again, a four-fight winning streak seemingly lined her up for a third shot at Rousey, but the UFC threw a huge curveball last week with the announcement that Holm would get the next shot at the title.

Holm has an impressive boxing pedigree, sporting a 33-2-3 record and a slew of titles. In MMA, she owns a perfect 9-0 record but has posted less-than-electrifying performances in the UFC, which has some fans unimpressed by the UFC 195 main event.

And, of course, Cyborg is in attendance. The Invicta FC featherweight champ has been in a war of words with Rousey for years nowand has become the ideal opponent for Rousey. While the UFC, Cyborg and Rousey have never come to terms on making a fight happen, any given contest involving one of them is immediately followed with a swirl of discussion about the whens and hows of a potential superfight.

The aforementioned Fight Valley movie is set to drop on December 7 (you can check out its IMDb page here). Who do you think has the best chance of knocking off Rousey at this point, fight fans?

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Forget Ronda Rousey: Tate, Holm and 'Cyborg' Come Together ...

‘Man of Steel’s Henry Cavill Hopes ‘Cyborg’ Will Be Next …

[Update: DC and Warner Bros. have officially announced aCyborg movie for 2020]

Well, it seems Warner Bros. and DC Comics have decided to shift from relative silence to some serious movie-making, if the buzz surrounding Batman vs. Superman and the Man of Steel Blu-ray release are any indication. And with the release of Zack Snyders first brick in the foundations of DCs universe into homes everywhere, more signs of whats to come are appearing.

It seems that of all the hints and dangling story threads left by Man of Steel, star Henry Cavill sees particular promise in Cyborg a character that could not only add to the shared universe, but act as the star player in the long-demanded Justice League movie.

Cavills comments arent as shocking as, say, confirmation that Flash and Wonder Woman will make cameos in Batman vs. Superman. But for DC fans up to date on the companys fiction, the writing is on the wall. The comments come from a brief clip of the Man of Steel Blu-rays behind-the-scenes content, with Cavill specifically asked which easter eggs from the film are his personal favorites:

On the extras on the Blu-ray, were going to get the opportunity to see Zacks references to other aspects of the DC Universe. Theres one obvious one which is now particularly obvious because of our next installment, which is involving Batman as well. We see Bruce Wayne Enterprises on the satellite in space. We also see some references to LexCorp. I actually have no further knowledge of this next story, but theres a good chance Lex is going to be introduced soon or at some stage.

The Wayne Enterprises satellite Cavill refers to was actually revealed before the movie even hit theaters, and for reasons clear to everyone, no longer needs to be investigated with Batman set to make his appearance in Snyders universe soon enough. Speculation over Lex Luthors presence in Batman vs. Superman is still completely unconfirmed, so fans, like Cavill, will have to wait and see.

But in a film filled to the brim with easter eggs for comic book fans, which one is Cavills personal favorite? The answer will certainly surprise, and could spell big things for the future of DCs movie universe:

What really intrigued me was Dr. Emil Hamiltons connection to S.T.A.R. Labs. Cyborg I think would make a wonderful character and an incredible bridge between both superhumans and humanity in a different way to Batman. So I dont know where hes going to come in or if hes going to come in, but thats one Im particularly excited about. Other references Im not too sure on, but well see where those lead. Those with keen eyes will see them.

It should be immediately pointed out that Cavill makes his ignorance of Zack Snyder and recently-crowned-DC-architect David S. Goyers plans for WBs next superhero movie quite plain. So this namedrop shouldnt be taken as a confirmation that Cyborg casting is underway.

That being said, Cavill has been right in the past, so we can attribute his knack for predicting Snyders intentions to telepathy, or having a sense of where the director is heading. We know Cavills dove headlong into comic books as research for Big Blue, so the fact that he singled out Cyborg in relation to S.T.A.R. Labs a catch-all covert group tied to just about everything else in the DC Universe could be a sign of some back-and-forth with Snyder, at least in passing.

For those unfamiliar, the actor is spot-on with his estimation that the character of Victor Stone a.k.a. Cyborg would bridge the gap between human and superhuman in a new way, and on that would fit quite well within WBs grounded approach.

The character has been a staple of both the Teen Titans and Justice League teams for decades, but as weve pointed out before, his new origin story concocted for DCs New 52 company-wide relaunch sends a clear message that DC is modernizing even their most iconic heroes. Now a high school football star, Vic falls victim to a horrific accident while visiting his father, a scientist at S.T.A.R. Labs (a location, Cavill points out, has already been established on screen).

With his body mutilated and death imminent, Vics father saves his life through radical means: injecting him with nanites, and fitting his broken body with metallic components and just about every piece of experimental technology on hand. The result is Cyborg, a tortured, confused young man terrified beyond belief.

Thats a story thats already straying from much of both Marvel and DCs existing cast, but Cyborg wasnt re-imagined as part of the New 52 for his own standalone series. Instead, DCs Chief Creative Officer (and gatekeeper of all things DC entertainment) Geoff Johns crafted a new origin story for Cyborg as part of the Justice League re-launch. Cyborg didnt just join the superhero team, but helped it form; in other words, helped kick off a story weve continuously pointed to as essentially a paint-by-numbers script treatment for the inevitable Justice League motion picture.

The biggest hurdle facing DC and Warner Bros. has always been pairing the grounded, realistic tone of their films with the more outlandish and beloved aspects of the comic books mythology. Man of Steel dealt with that challenge better than many predicted, but Cyborgs introduction would help bridge the gap even more. Thanks to one particular alien item grafted into his new body: a Father Box from Apokolips, the home of Darkseid.

In the comics, Earth soon falls under attack from the most villainous of DCs New Gods, forcing the various superheroes to join forces, and discover their strengths (and weaknesses) as a team. Cyborgs Apokoliptian tech helps them take the fight to Darkseid, making the most vulnerable and broken member the most important, and establishing DCs cosmic side.

So while Warner Bros. execs and scriptwriters may struggle to introduce the worlds most famous super-team to modern audiences, Geoff Johns essentially already has. And if Cavill is basing his assumption that Cyborg could be a character to get excited for on anything more than his imagination, WB may have taken note. Its still too early to know what Snyder and Goyer have in mind, but if theres smoke surrounding this character, then the fire may already be sitting on comic book store shelves.

What do you make of Cavills comments? Does it seem like Warner Bros. may have finally decided to follow DCs roadmap, or would you prefer to see Cyborg given the spotlight in one of the studios lower-budget superhero films? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Batman vs. Superman hitstheaters on July 17, 2015.

Follow Andrew on Twitter @andrew_dyce.

Source: Warner Bros

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'Man of Steel's Henry Cavill Hopes 'Cyborg' Will Be Next ...

Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos secures release from Zuffa …

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WESTMINSTER, Calif. -- Former Strikeforce women's featherweight champion Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos has secured her release from Zuffa and plans a return April 5 against Ediane Gomes at Invicta FC 5.

"Cyborg" (10-1, 1 NC) has not fought since November 2011, when a 16-second knockout over Hiroko Yamanaka was overturned by the California State Athletic Commission because she tested positive for the anabolic steroid stanozolol.

The 27-year-old Brazilian is scheduled to fight Gomes (10-2) in a No. 1-contender fight for Invicta at 145 pounds.

"I'm very happy for this opportunity April 5," Santos said during a news conference Friday. "I know her. She's Braziliain. She's a tough girl."

The contest is slated to headline a pay-per-view from the Ameristar Casino Hotel in Kansas City. Invicta FC president Shannon Knapp left the door open to the card being broadcast online, on television, or both.

"We are working out details still," she said.

The winner earns a shot against Invicta FC featherweight champion Marloes Coenen. If "Cyborg" gets past Gomes (a top submission specialist ranked as high as No. 2 at 145), it would be a rematch of a 2010 Strikeforce title defense in which Santos stopped the Dutch fighter in the third round.

Fights with Gomes or Coenen fall flat next to a contest with UFC bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey, who defends her title for the first time Feb. 23 against Liz Carmouche. Santos emphasized that Rousey is the opponent she wants, making the 135-pound limit extremely problematic.

Because UFC isn't planning on extending women's weight classes beyond bantamweight, there is no place for Santos in the UFC if she can't make the weight. That reality and another failed round of negotiations led UFC president Dana White to announce this week that he was done trying to put "Cyborg" in the Octagon.

"'Cyborg' is essentially irrelevant right now," White said. "I mean, she really is. She's irrelevant. Go back, win some fights, get your name back, stay clean, stay off steroids, get your career back on track and we'll talk. But for her to think everybody should move around and jump through hoops for her is insane."

The fighter's new management team, Primetime 360, fronted by retired UFC champion Tito Ortiz and attorneys George Prajin and Anthony Lopez, amplified medical concerns about Santos' long-term health if she pursued Rousey at 135 pounds, and explained the UFC's desire to secure Santos to an eight-fight contract was unacceptable.

Said Santos: "Eight fights is too much."

"They wanted her to fight three fights in Invicta, fight in the UFC, sign an eight-fight contract basically with no direction on where the other four fights would take place," Prajin said. "I'm sorry. I can't let her sign that agreement."

Prajin said White's claim that a letter was sent to Zuffa on Santos' behalf declaring "I will die if I try to make 135" is inaccurate. "No one made a statement to that extent," he said.

Prajin described back-and-forth negotiations with UFC, which Ortiz said he handled personally with White. When Santos' management felt they had a deal lined up for three fights in Invicta leading to a possible super-fight in UFC against Rousey at 140 pounds, Prajin claimed UFC changed the deal the next day, which culminated with Rousey and White haranguing Santos as running scared.

"I'm never running," the fierce featherweight responded.

"I don't think she has to prove herself to anyone," Prajin said. "You can ask Gina Carano. You can ask all of her opponents. She has proven herself in the cage multiple times over and over again."

As far as White's concerned, Santos "wants nothing to do with Ronda."

"Cyborg" suggested that statements about her being afraid to fight Rousey have turned the matchup personal. To prove her point, Santos adorned a T-shirt that said, "Ronda will be my bitch."

"I really want to fight Ronda," Santos said. "The problem is because I can't drop to 135."

Ortiz suggested that Rousey, not his client, is being protected in this scenario. "If not [Zuffa] would have signed the deal we negotiated upon," he said. After thanking Zuffa for allowing Santos to fight outside the Octagon, Ortiz suggested Santos doesn't require a "promotion to push her name."

April's No. 1-contender bout against Gomes is the first of a three-fight deal between Santos and Invicta FC, which her team hopes will lead to a fight with Rousey next year.

Primetime 360 also vigorously defended Santos regarding her positive steroid test in California, labeling it a mistake in judgement because she had a hard time making 145 and the steroid helped with weight cutting. That fact, Ortiz said, indicates they are sincere about her inability to shed another 10 pounds to fight in Rousey's weight class.

"Cyborg" is willing to face random drug testing, according to her management.

"I think the UFC should be happy with our decision," Prajin said. "We didn't go to a competitor. We actually went to a company that's works with the UFC. She left a lot of money on the table by choosing this particular deal. But she chose this deal because of the flexibility."

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Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos secures release from Zuffa ...

Ronda Rousey’s coach rejects catchweight bout with ‘Cyborg …

WhenRonda Rouseybegan fighting MMA just a few years ago, she fought at 145 pounds. Now, of course, she is the UFC's 135-pound champion.

The difference between 145 and 135 pounds (and everything in between) has been hotly debated recently as fans clamor for her to fight Invicta FC 145-pound titleholderCris "Cyborg" Justino.

Justino fights at or around 170 pounds, after cutting to 145 pounds the day before. Rousey insists that there's no reason for her to go up in weight to fight a non-UFC champion with no bargaining power.

Justino's partisans argue that Rousey is fully capable of fighting and fighting well at 145 pounds, as evidenced by her early MMA career. Rousey's coach Edmond Tarverdyan recently explained toSubmission Radiowhy Ronda used to fight at 145 and why he doesn't have an interest in her moving up past 135 pounds, for "Cyborg" or anyone else.

"Ronda, when she gets in training, she walks around at 148 pounds. So 145, I don't want her to fight at 145. Before when she fought [at a higher weight class] the reason was, one, she was just starting her career in MMA. And number two is that we were ready to fightevery day. Ronda couldn't have fights. It wasn't like Ronda's choice of fighting of 145 or 135; people didn't want to fight Ronda," he began.

"Ronda fought every time undefeated opponents in her amateur career also. Anybody that wanted to fight her, we said [to the] promotional company, 'Hey, one day before, just let us know. We'll jump into the fight.' So that's why we didn't care about the weight, whether it was 150, 148, it didn't really matter because people were not fighting her. It was a problem for us to find people to fight her. She was ready to fight every day. And whenever she was ready to fight every day, if they gave us one day's notice 'Hey, possible opponent, yes this person picked up the fight' you know, we wouldn't be healthy to make 135, but we said, 'No problem.' And those girls did not do what Cyborg has done, those girls did not cheat. Cyborg has cheated. People have to understand that. And now, no f---ing exceptions. I don't want exceptions, I want it at 135."

Tarverdyan's answer seems fair enough. He's not saying that Rousey couldn't be healthy and good at 145 pounds, he simply says that she's best at 135, and that now as UFC champion she has no reason to cater to opponents' needs any longer.

Hypothetically, of course, Rousey and Justino could fight at a catchweight that is, a weight in between their respective classes. The Brazilian has called for a fight at 140 pounds, but Ronda's coach used the same preceding rationale to reject the notion, out of hand.

"I honestly don't understand what she's even talking about. [Justino] needs to make the weight to fight," he insisted.

"I don't understand catchweights. I don't like catchweights. I don't understand what she's talking about [with] catchweights. I don't even like it in boxing. There is a weight division and everybody should follow the weight divisions and fight at that weight for the title . . . Ronda is a champion at 135 right now. [Justino] has done things in her past to put fighters' lives in danger [using banned steroids]."

Tarverdyan echoed Rousey's own idea that if Justino could fight at 145 on steroids at her most well-muscled self, getting off the banned gear could allow her to make the 135-pound division. That implies, of course, that Justino still uses banned steroids, and it is a charge that "Cyborg" has threatened legal action over, since she says she has passed multiple drug tests in recent years.

"If [Justino] is off what she was doing, she should be able to make 135," Tarverdyan said.

"[Bantamweight] is the weight for the UFC title. So, she's been saying 140 or something like that, or 'the fans deserve to see the fight.' Definitely they deserve to see the fight. So, make the weight and the fight will happen. No problem."

If Rousey and Justino ever do fight, most observers will look it largely as a grappler vs. striker type of bout since Rousey's background is in judo and Justino's is in Muay Thai kickboxing.

Tarverdyan disagrees. He claims that Ronda has become a much more technical and truly powerful striker than Justino.

"No. Ronda beats her in striking," he said.

"[Justino] overwhelms people, she pushes her punches and she throws a bit heavy, you know, heavier than some of these opponents, but her opponents give up on her. Ronda's knockout was a knockout this last fight" against Bethe Correia at UFC 190.

Even though Justino has a well-deserved reputation as a dangerous striker, Ronda's coach says that his fighter out-techniques and out-quicks her. "Everybody saw [Ronda's] hand speed, the power. One shot, boom. Out. That's punching," he concluded.

"And Ronda's only going to be punching better from now on, definitely. So I've never been a fan of (Justino). I think she's slow, she just overwhelms people because of what she's been doing, I think. And she can box a bit more than the others, and she's been doing it longer and it doesn't surprise me. Ronda is the better athlete. Ronda is quicker, stronger and faster. That's it."

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Ronda Rousey's coach rejects catchweight bout with 'Cyborg ...

Ronda Rousey AMA on Reddit: ‘Cyborg’ stalling because of …

Jason Silva-USA TODAY Sports

UFC women's bantamweight champion, Ronda Rousey, says the hold up for a fight against Cristiane "Cyborg" Justino comes down to money and not the Invicta featherweight champion making the proposed 135-pound weight limit.

You may as well embrace it, fight fans.

The Ronda Rousey vs. Cristiane Justino conversation is not dying down anytime soon. Whether it be "Cyborg" appearing on ESPN Sportscenter to say the fight "has to happen,"or threatening Rousey withlegal action for comments she made in an interview about steroids, the talk from both sides is ongoing.

The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) bantamweight champion brought forth a new wrinkle to the oft-discussed potential showdown against "Cyborg"on her Reddit earlier this evening (Mon., Aug. 10, 2015) during an "Ask Me Anything" (AMA) session.

But this latest salvo fired at "Cyborg" from "Rowdy" wasn't about steroids or making weight.

It was pertaining to money.

Rousey said the main hold up for the highly-anticipated fight that's been discussed for over two years is due to dollars and cents, and not about Justino -- who is the Invicta featherweight champion -- making the 135-pound weight limit in order to fight for the UFC women's bantamweight title.

"Sincere opinion about Cyborg: she's just waiting to be offered enough money to get her ass kicked ('cuz she knows she'll get her ass kicked)," Rousey wrote. "I know for a fact she can make the weight. She consulted with Mike Dolce (my current nutritionist) before I ever started working with him and after consulting with her he said he could get her in "the best shape of her life" at 135. She then started being represented by Tito Ortiz and all talk stopped.

"The delay is all about money, not her weight. She made 145 pumped full of steroids. She can healthily make 135 without them. Her shows that she headlines lose thousands of dollars, and the majority of the tickets are given away because no one will buy them. She needs me. So pretty much we're waiting for her to realize that she needs to fight me before I retire or she'll never have enough money to retire. I would like me kicking her ass be my retirement fight but whether she steps up or not, I'll walk away undefeated and happily ever after regardless."

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Ronda Rousey AMA on Reddit: 'Cyborg' stalling because of ...

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Mad Catz R.A.T.7 Gaming Mouse for PC and Mac

Cyborg Wikipdia

Un article de Wikipdia, l'encyclopdie libre.

Un cyborg est un tre humain ou la rigueur un autre tre vivant intelligent, en science-fiction qui a reu des greffes de parties mcaniques.

Le terme s'emploie surtout en science-fiction ou en futurologie; utiliser le terme pour des personnes ayant reu des prothses, dans le monde contemporain, peut parfois tre peru comme de mauvais got par les intresss[1].

Cyborg est un mot d'origine anglaise, contraction de cybernetic organism (organisme cyberntique).

Le terme cyborg a t popularis par Manfred Clynes(en) et Nathan S. Kline(en) en 1960 lorsqu'ils se rfraient au concept d'un humain amlior qui pourrait survivre dans des environnements extraterrestres. Ce concept est le rsultat d'une rflexion sur la ncessit d'une relation intime entre l'humain et la machine, l'heure des dbuts de l'exploration spatiale.

Le mot cyborg est devenu une expression courante. Cependant, son sens a largement dvi depuis. Dans le film Terminator, il est employ pour dsigner un robot, non seulement l'apparence humaine, mais dont l'enveloppe extrieure est faite de tissus organiques de synthse ( l'origine faite pour soigner les blessures humaines). Depuis, il est devenu courant d'utiliser cyborg comme synonyme de robot androde.

La cyberntique tant l'tude exclusive des changes, un organisme pourrait tre qualifi de cyberntique ds lors qu'il effectue un change efficace pour une tche donne, mais le terme cyborg sous-entend en plus qu'il ne s'agit pas (uniquement) d'un organisme naturel.

La cyberntique est un principe scientifique formalis par Norbert Wiener en 1948. En 1950, il utilise lui-mme la mtaphore d'un robot communiquant comme un humain pour dissocier le principe d'change efficace des lments communicants[2]. La mme anne, Isaac Asimov publie I, Robot et pose les principes de base de l'change volu robot/humain en science-fiction; il n'est alors pas question de mlange au sein d'un mme organisme.

La Cyborgologie est maintenant un domaine enseign dans de nombreuses universits. En 1964, l'universit de Melbourne a attribu Clynes le diplme de D.Sc (Docteur en Science); diplme suprieur au PH. D et rarement donn par des universits britanniques.

La notion ajoute donc une charge motive, dviant sensiblement du sens initial d'change pour aller vers celui plus inquitant de substitution (o la machine envahit l'humain plus qu'elle n'change avec lui).

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Cyborg Wikipdia

UFC oddsmakers set ‘Rousey vs. Cyborg’ betting line …

Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports

Just because the world is talking about a Ronda Rousey vs. Cristiane Justino "super fight" (guilty as charged), doesn't mean it's any closer to actually happening. Still, it's hard not to wonder if the mainstream exposure (like this) won't be enough to finally get the deal done.

Thechamp goes up, thechallenger comes down, whatever ... let's just make it happen.

With that in mind, the sportsbooks have already set an opening line for "Rousey vs. Cyborg" and not surprisingly -- based on the Brazilian'sconsiderable might -- the line is as close as it has ever been for a "Rowdy" fight. In fact, the last time the Judoka was sporting a gap this narrow was her Strikeforce title fight against Miesha Tate.

Rousey opened at -245 against +197 for Justino, according toBest Fight Odds.

That line has since changed (see the current oddsat Bovada here) but is likely to hold steady until this fight inches closer to becoming a reality. Rousey (12-0) mustfirst face Miesha Tate -- where she's a 10/1 favorite -- while Justino (14-1) needs to finish up her work for Invicta FC.

Until then, all we can do is wait.

The longer we do, the more difficult it will become to make a profit on Rousey. But if you're a "Cyborg" fan with some extra coin, better to let that number balloon up. The bigger she is as an underdog, the more money she'll bring you with an upset victory.

In the meantime, let's wager on the fights that actually are happening,like these.

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UFC oddsmakers set 'Rousey vs. Cyborg' betting line ...

Cyborg threatens Ronda Rousey with lawsuit as talk heats …

Ronda Rousey may never face Cristiane Cyborg Justino in the Octagon, but theyre already squaring off in a heated battle of words.

A Rousey-Cyborg fight has long been talked about, but nothing has materialized, partly because Justino would have to get down to Rouseys 135-pound bantamweight level. Talk about the dream UFC fight was stoked by Rouseys 34-second title win over Bethe Correia over the weekend and Rousey managed to both dampen and increase it by firing a shot at Justino.

Im prepared to deal with anything, thats why Im the champion, Rousey said after her victory in Rio de Janeiro. I fight in the UFC, in the 135-pound division. She can fight at 145 pumped full of steroids or she can make the weight just like everybody else without them.

Thems fightin words for Justino, who did test positive for an anabolic steroid after scoring a knockout win as the Strikeforce featherweight champion in December 2011. Cyborg blamed the result on a diet supplement given to her by a former coach and has not failed random tests lately.

Justino threatened Rousey with legal action, tweeting that she passes the same tests as Rousey.

To be a champion, I think you have to see the big picture, Justino wrote Sunday on Instagram. Its not about winning and losing; its about hard work every day and about thriving on the challenge. Its about embracing the pain that youll experience at the end of the race and not being afraid. I think people think too hard and get afraid of a certain challenge.

Rouseys comment wasnt so much a shot as it was part or a barrage about Justino. In a prefight interview with Yahoo, she said: If [Justino] can make 145 [pounds] all pumped full of steroids, you can get off the juice and fight in the division everybody else is in. I dont see why I should be under pressure to prove something against her when shes the one that has to prove something. Shes the one that has to prove that shes not a fraud.

It might be a popular fight, but it isnt likely to happen soon. For one thing, Justino has never fought at 135; Rousey has competed at 145, but UFC doesnt have that division.

And, after Rouseys victory over Correia, it seemed more likely that Rousey would fight Miesha Tate for the third time in December at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Tex. After that, Rousey has a movie commitment. It is, as UFC President Dana White said over the weekend, not easy.

The Cyborg thing is complicated, because everybody is ready to go, White said. Im ready for Cyborg. Ronda is ready for Cyborg. Everybody is ready for that fight, but Cyborg has to make the weight.

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Cyborg threatens Ronda Rousey with lawsuit as talk heats ...

Cristiane "Cyborg" Justino MMA Stats, Pictures, News …

Result Fighter Event Method/Referee R Time win Faith Van Duin Invicta FC 13 - Cyborg vs. Van Duin Jul / 09 / 2015 TKO (Knee to the Body and Punches) Steve Mazzagatti 1 0:45 win Charmaine Tweet Invicta FC 11 - Cyborg vs. Tweet Feb / 27 / 2015 TKO (Punches) Herb Dean 1 0:46 win Marloes Coenen Invicta FC 6 - Cyborg vs. Coenen 2 Jul / 13 / 2013 TKO (Punches and Elbows) John McCarthy 4 4:02 win Fiona Muxlow Invicta FC 5 - Penne vs. Waterson Apr / 05 / 2013 TKO (Knees and Punches) John McCarthy 1 3:46 NC Hiroko Yamanaka Strikeforce - Melendez vs. Masvidal Dec / 17 / 2011 No Decision - Overturned by CSAC Luis Cobian 1 0:16 win Jan Finney Strikeforce / M-1 Global - Fedor vs. Werdum Jun / 26 / 2010 KO (Knee to the Body) Kim Winslow 2 2:56 win Marloes Coenen Strikeforce - Miami Jan / 30 / 2010 TKO (Punches) Jorge Ortiz 3 3:40 win Gina Carano Strikeforce - Carano vs. Cyborg Aug / 15 / 2009 TKO (Punches) Josh Rosenthal 1 4:59 win Hitomi Akano Strikeforce - Shamrock vs. Diaz Apr / 11 / 2009 TKO (Punches) Josh Rosenthal 3 0:35 win Yoko Takahashi EliteXC - Heat Oct / 04 / 2008 Decision (Unanimous) N/A 3 3:00 win Shayna Baszler EliteXC - Unfinished Business Jul / 26 / 2008 TKO (Punches) N/A 2 2:48 win Marise Vitoria SS 12 - Storm Samurai 12 Nov / 25 / 2006 TKO (Stomps) N/A 1 1:27 win Elaine Santiago de Lima SS 11 - Storm Samurai 11 May / 21 / 2006 TKO (Corner Stoppage) N/A 1 2:46 win Chris Schroeder SS 10 - Storm Samurai 10 Jan / 28 / 2006 TKO (Punches) N/A 1 0:00 win Vanessa Porto SS 9 - Storm Samurai 9 Nov / 20 / 2005 Decision (Unanimous) N/A 3 5:00 loss Erica Paes SF - Showfight 2 May / 17 / 2005 Submission (Kneebar) N/A 1 1:46

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Cristiane "Cyborg" Justino MMA Stats, Pictures, News ...

Hank Henshaw – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hank Henshaw is a supervillain featured in the DC Comics universe. While originally featured primarily as an enemy of Superman, recent years have repositioned him as one of the main enemies of the Green Lantern Corps. While the character debuted in The Adventures of Superman #465 (April 1990), he was reintroduced as the original Cyborg Superman during the Reign of the Supermen storyline following Superman's death. At times, he is also referred to as The Cyborg (not to be confused with Teen Titans member Victor Stone aka Cyborg).[1]

Hank Henshaw first appeared as a crew member on board the doomed NASA space shuttle Excalibur in Superman #42, and Henshaw and the other crew members were next seen in Adventures of Superman #465.[2][3]

In a pastiche of the origin of the Fantastic Four, Hank and the other three members of the Excalibur crew, including his wife Terri, are part of a LexCorp-designed radiation experiment that is affected by a solar flare, causing their shuttle to crash.[1] As a result of their radiation exposure, the human bodies of two crew members were destroyed. However, their minds survived and they were able to construct new bodies out of cosmic radiation and bits of earth and wreckage from the shuttle, respectively. Initially, Henshaw and his wife suffer no ill effects from the radiation (though Hank's hair turns white), and the crew travels to Metropolis in the hopes of using LexCorp facilities to cure their mutated crew mates. During a brief battle with Superman, the crew member now composed of radiation becomes unhinged and flies into the sun, thereby destroying himself. By this time, Henshaw's body has started to rapidly decay while his wife is beginning to phase into an alternate dimension. With Superman's help, Henshaw is able to use the LexCorp facilities to save Terri. The remaining member of the shuttle crew commits suicide using an MRI booth to tear apart the metallic components of his body.[4]

Though Henshaw's physical body expired, he was able to transfer his consciousness into the LexCorp mainframe. Now able to control technology, Henshaw appears to his wife in a robotic body. The shock of this bizarre rebirth is too much for Terri and in a fit of insanity, she jumps to her death from the nearest window. By this point, Henshaw's electronic consciousness has begun to disrupt Earth's communications networks. Using NASA communications equipment, Henshaw beams his mind into the birthing matrix which had carried Superman from Krypton to Earth as an infant.[1] He creates a small exploration craft from the birthing matrix and departs into outer space alone.[5]

Henshaw spends some time traveling between planets, bonding with local lifeforms to learn about the culture and history of various worlds. Henshaw would later come to believe that Superman was responsible for the tragedy of the Excalibur after learning that around the time of the accident, the Man of Steel had thrown a rogue Kryptonian artificial intelligence (the Eradicator) into the sun. Henshaw believes that this created the solar flare that resulted in the Excalibur crew's transformations (Although Superman had shared this concern with Terri after he saved her life and she had confirmed that the flares would have been triggered before Superman disposed of the Eradicator).[6] Over time, Henshaw becomes delusional and paranoid, believing that the Man of Steel had intentionally caused the deaths of himself, his wife, and his crew, then driven him from the Earth. Arriving on a planet controlled by alien overlord and Superman foe Mongul, Henshaw learns of Warworld and forcibly recruits Mongul as part of a plan for revenge against Superman.[7]

With Superman apparently dead after his battle with Doomsday, Henshaw decides to pose as him in order to destroy his reputation. To that end, the Cyborg claims to be Superman reborn, the result of the hero's body being pieced together and revived with technology. The Cyborg then uses knowledge obtained from Superman's birthing matrix to construct a body that is genetically identical to Superman.[7] When analyzed closely by Professor Hamilton, the Cyborg passes for the real thing due to components within himself that include Kryptonian alloys, combined with the fact that the replaced body parts correspond with those parts of the original Superman's body that were most severely injured in his fight with Doomsday.[8]

After destroying a Superman memorial plaque in front of the Daily Planet, the Cyborg exiles Doomsday into space, prevents a nuclear meltdown, and saves the President of the United States from an assassination attempt. The White House then endorses the Cyborg as the 'true' Superman.[9][10] When confronted by Lois Lane, the Cyborg claims his memory is "blurry" but he can see a "spaceship on a farm and the name Kent", suggesting that Henshaw may be aware of Superman's secret identity.[8]

Henshaw's arrival as Superman, the self-styled Man of Tomorrow, was simultaneous with that of three others: John Henry Irons (the self-styled Man of Steel), Eradicator (the self-styled Last Son of Krypton), and the modern Superboy.[9] The endorsement of the President ensures that the Cyborg eclipses the rest of the heroes claiming to be Superman's heir. During this time, two cults spring up in anticipation of Superman's return from the dead; one which deified the Eradicator and another which venerated the Cyborg. Supporters of both would eventually come to blows over which was the real Superman. This was a foreshadowing of a battle yet to come between the Cyborg and the Eradicator as the Cyborg began to move his plans forward.[1]

When an alien ship appears over Coast City, the Cyborg attacks and severely injures the Eradicator, allowing Mongul's craft to destroy the city. The Cyborg also murders an entire family of vacationers trying to find a way out of the devastated area. [11] The Cyborg was then able to convince the White House and the public that the Eradicator is responsible.[12] After tricking and defeating Superboy, Henshaw prepares to launch a nuclear warhead intended to convert Metropolis into a second Engine City.[12][13]

Superboy is able to escape and warn John Henry Irons, Supergirl, and the resurrected but powerless original Superman of the Cyborg's plans.[7][14] The quartet travels to the site of the former Coast City, and Superman (whose powers are slowly returning), Supergirl, and Steel confront Mongul and the Cyborg while Superboy stops the missile from hitting Metropolis.[15] While Green Lantern defeats Mongul, the Cyborg lures Superman and the Eradicator to the Engine City main reactor and attempts to kill Superman with the kryptonite that powers the engine. When Henshaw tries to kill Superman with a concentrated blast of kryptonite radiation, the Eradicator intercepts the blast at the expense of his own life. As the Kryptonite energy passes through the Eradicator, the radiation is altered and acts to fully restore Superman's powers. Superman is then able to easily defeat the already weakened Cyborg.[16]

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Hank Henshaw - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cristiane Justino – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cristiane "Cyborg" Justino

Cristiane "Cyborg" Justino in 2009.

Cristiane Justino Venancio (formerly as Cristiane Santos) (born July 9, 1985), commonly referred to by her nickname Cyborg, is a Brazilian mixed martial artist and the former Strikeforce Women's Featherweight Champion, the current Invicta FC World Featherweight Champion and currently signed with the UFC. Justino won the Strikeforce title on August 15, 2009, by defeating Gina Carano via first-round TKO.[2][3][4] She lives in San Diego where she trains and teaches at The Arena.

Venancio was a national-level team handball player in Brazil before being discovered by Rudimar Fedrigo, a Chute Boxe Academy trainer.[5]

She made her anticipated United States MMA debut on July 26, 2008 against Shayna Baszler at EliteXC: Unfinished Business.[6] She won the fight by TKO in the second round.[7]

She faced Yoko Takahashi on October 4, 2008 at EliteXC: Heat. She won the fight by unanimous decision.[8]

Justino was scheduled to face Dutch submission specialist Marloes Coenen at XMMA 7 on February 27, 2009, but backed out of the fight after signing a new contract with Strikeforce.[9] Justino earned a BJJ Purple Belt under her jiu-jitsu instructor Cristiano Marcello in 2009.[10]

She later signed to fight for Strikeforce,[9] which greatly increased the chance that a fight with Gina Carano would take place. In her Strikeforce debut, Justino faced Hitomi Akano on April 11, 2009 at Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz. Justino came in six pounds overweight for the fight. Akano originally rejected the fight due to Justino failing to make weight but later accepted the fight.[11] Justino defeated Akano by TKO in the third round.[12]

Before the fight with Carano, Justino was interviewed by mmaworldwide.com's reporter Aaron Tru. When asked how long it would take to submit Carano with a choke hold, Justino choked the interviewer out cold, in a matter of seconds.[13]

Justino fought Gina Carano on August 15, 2009 at Strikeforce: Carano vs. Cyborg for the Women's Featherweight Championship. Justino won via TKO at 4:59 of the 5:00 first round.[14] The card was the first time that a major promotion had featured a main event between women. After the match, Justino hugged Carano, and stated in her interview that she had the utmost respect for Carano, and that it was an honor to fight her.

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Cristiane Justino - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ronda Rousey on ‘Cyborg’ TUF rumor: ‘I’m never doing …

A rumor making the rounds in Brazil in recent days had it that UFC women's bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey and her archrival, Cris "Cyborg" Justino, would appear as coaches on an upcoming season of "The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil."

But Rousey,whose autobiography goes on sale Tuesday, not only shot down the notion, but also forcefully proclaimed she wants nothing to do with The Ultimate Fighter franchise.

"I'm never doing Ultimate Fighter ever again," Rousey said on Monday's edition of The MMA Hour. "Everyone in the UFC, in the Ultimate Fighter, everyone on earth knows I'll never do that show ever again for all the money in the world."

Rousey was a coach alongside Miesha Tate on TUF's 18th season in 2013. She did not enjoy the experience, feeling she was portrayed in a negative light.

"You'd have to hold my little sister at gunpoint to get me to do that show again," she said.

Rousey, however, hasn't slammed the door on fighting Justino. The have been several hangups keeping Rousey and Justino, the former Strikeforce and current Invicta featherweight champ, from fighting one another, chief among them being Justino's reluctance to fight at 135.

But Justino is now under Zuffa contract, with a plan to eventually fight at 135. So Rousey, while still skeptical, is no longer dismissive of the bout, comparing it to the long tease before Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao finally stepped into the ring.

"I mean, Pacquiao-Mayweather had about a five-year buildup," said Rousey. "We're about at three, so I'd say I would keep my hopes up til five, then after that, I'm moving on with my life."

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Ronda Rousey on 'Cyborg' TUF rumor: 'I'm never doing ...