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thedrifter
03-27-08, 10:18 AM
Stann keeps title win in perspective

By Kevin Iole, Yahoo! Sports


LAS VEGAS – There’s probably not a fighter alive who hasn’t referred to an upcoming bout as a war.

But as a guy who not only was in a war but also became one of the country’s greatest heroes, Brian Stann isn’t going to shy away from a little hand-to-hand combat, even against an opponent as intimidating and powerful as Doug Marshall.

Stann, who earned a Silver Star for extraordinary heroism in 2005 in Iraq, staked his claim as one of the elite light heavyweights in mixed martial arts with a violent one-punch knockout Wednesday over Marshall.

Stann connected on a perfect counter left hook to the jaw, knocking Marshall down and out at 1:35 of the first round, to claim the WEC light heavyweight belt at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino.

It was his greatest accomplishment as a fighter, but after running through heavy fire to drag four comrades out of a burning truck and to safety in a battle in Karabilah, Iraq, the knockout of Marshall doesn’t seem all that significant.

Stann, 27, a captain who is now stationed at Camp Lejeune, N.C., reacted emotionally seconds after referee Herb Dean stopped the fight.

He couldn’t help but think of the Marines who had given their lives in defense of their country as he was being handed the WEC belt.

“In the Marine Corps, one of my greatest honors is to be able to live a life of service for my men,” Stann, a former football player at Navy, said. “You can’t put a price on that. You can’t put a belt on it. You can’t put a medal on it. There is no better feeling for me to help these Marines through (things).

“They’re the reason I’m here. That’s why I got emotional in the cage. It was not my plan, but they’re my kids. I consider them my sons.”

Stann prepared so intently for the bout that he watched videos not only of Marshall’s fighting style, but also of how he relaxed in his dressing room prior to his bouts and how he looked at his opponents in the ring just before the bell.

He knew, then, that Marshall would attack and try to bully him. But with the kind of punching power Stann possesses, it wasn’t the smartest move.

“I’m a different person, in the cage and out of the cage,” Stann said. “I want the person I’m fighting to know, not that I’m there to hurt them, but that absolutely everything that is inside of me is coming out. If he wants to win, he’s going to know that he will have to beat me down, beat me unconscious, because no matter what, I’m not going to submit and I will never, ever tap.”

He didn’t need to on Wednesday, though he joked that he was getting manhandled during his training sessions at Team Quest.

But Ryan Parsons, a trainer at Team Quest, said Stann was simply being modest. He said despite the elite fighters in the camp, Stann more than held his own.

The scary thing, though, is that Parsons doesn’t think Stann is anywhere near his potential as an MMA fighter.

“I’d say he’s at about two percent of what he could be,” Parsons said. “Maybe two percent. In this sport now, there are a lot of prima donnas coming into it. They need the perfect gym, they need all their different little specialty coaches and everything needs to be just right. This guy, he’s different. He does his conditioning in (an expletive) hallway. He works a 12-hour day, trains, then goes home to a wife and a 9-month-old kid. I would never put a limit on what that man might be able to accomplish.”

He instantly backed Marshall up Wednesday, stunning the defending champion with a punch and a kick. Marshall is normally the aggressor and typically intimidates his opponents, but looked a bit wide-eyed on Wednesday as this snarling, 204-pound knot of muscle was walking him down.

Stann made a mistake and found his back against the cage, where Marshall unloaded a flurry of punches. He connected with a hard left and a good, sharp right. Stann fought his way off the cage, but as Marshall went to throw a wide left, Stann landed a textbook left hook.

Former heavyweight boxing champion Joe Frazier, who was renowned as one of that sport’s finest left hookers, never threw a better – or more effective – hook.

“Brian has big-time power, and you can see what he does to guys when he hits them,” Parsons said. “If he catches you, I don’t care who you are, I like his chances.”

Stann, who began in MMA as a hobby and says he hopes his fighting career casts a positive image on the Marines, isn’t sure how far his career will take him.

But he said he is thrilled simply to be in the sport because of the honor and character among the people he has met in it.

“The reason why MMA is so special and why Americans are grasping it so strongly, is that, unlike other pro sports, we put everything into this,” Stann said. “We put every bit of our hearts and our souls into this. And it’s not only us. It’s our coaches and our team, too.”

His corner celebrated with him in the cage on Wednesday as several dozen Marines who were ringside cheered wildly.

Stann had given them a gift with his win, but said it was nothing compared to what he had been given by them.

“People see guys in the cage or on a football field or in an arena, but what they don’t realize is what it’s like to see these 19- and 20-year-old kids in Iraq doing these unbelievable things,” Stann said. “They come from terrible upbringings and backgrounds, but to watch them sacrifice themselves for other men, sacrifice themselves to save others, that’s what makes me so proud to be a Marine. … They give me so much more than I have ever or could ever give them.”

Ellie

thedrifter
03-27-08, 10:20 AM
03/26/2008
Freedom fighter
BY SCOTT WALSH
STAFF WRITER

When a player hits a game-winning shot, he is labeled a hero.

An athlete who competes while injured is often called a warrior.

“It was war out there,” someone will say about a particularly intense contest.

The military analogies so often used by athletes to describe games bothers Brian Stann.

Having served two tours of duty in Iraq, Stann knows all about what he calls the true heroes and warriors. They are the men he has served with in the Marine Corps, and he tries to honor them every time he steps into the cage as a fighter in World Extreme Cagefighting.

He will do it again tonight, when the 27-year-old Scranton Prep graduate known as “All American” faces champion Doug “The Rhino” Marshall for the WEC light heavyweight title at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. The event will be televised on Versus at 9 p.m.

“All the Marines I’ve had during my time in the Marine Corps and my two tours of Iraq, those guys are like my sons,” said Stann, who has a 5-0 record. “Unfortunately, I’ve lost some very close friends. When you’re that close with guys and you lose them that way in combat, I feel the biggest thing I owe them is to live my life to the fullest. Not just fighting, but everything I do, I do in their memory. It allows me to push myself and go to a point where my opponent won’t go.”

Since returning from Iraq for the second time in February 2007, Stann’s career has skyrocketed.

A former standout on the Cavaliers football team, Stann still holds school records for career rushing (1,332) and passing (2,675) yards by a quarterback. He then went on to the United States Naval Academy, where he also played football, and after graduating in 2003, he was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps and sent to Quantico, Va., for his officer training.

That is where he began to participate in the martial arts that are featured in the WEC.

“I’m a pretty ultra-competitive person,” Stann said. “Football was over and I was looking for something. Knowing that I was going to go to Iraq and lead men into combat, I thought fighting would be a great way to quench the competitive thirst and also help prepare me for combat.”

All five of Stann’s professional fights have ended either by knockout or technical knockout, including a WEC-record 16-second TKO of Miguel Cosio in June 2006.

Now, he’s getting a shot at the title.

“Really, all it was was a hobby — something I did everyday after work to stay in great shape,” he said. “I just kept winning and it turned into a fast track.”

To prepare for the fight, Stann has spent the last 12 weeks training twice a day for 4-6 hours, six days a week.

In the morning, he works on his technique, strength and conditioning. At night, he works some more on his technique and does some intense sparing.

At the same time, he juggles his family and a job as a commanding officer at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. He has been married two years to the former Teressa Ruspi, an ex-Philadelphia Eagles cheerleader to whom he proposed on the 50-yard line following a game. They have a five-month old daughter, Alexandra.

“It’s an up-very-early, home-very-late kind of thing,” Stann said. “I’ll come home for dinner and spend about an hour with my wife and daughter. Then I pass out and wake up and do it all over again.”

The real fight

Long days of training are nothing compared to what Stann endured in May 2005 in Karabilah, Iraq.

As part of Operation Matador, Stann led 42 men into battle attempting to seize a bridge. Over an eight-day period, the squad faced ambushes, grenade attacks, machine-gun fire and suicide bombers. One of the squad’s tanks was hit and four Marines were injured. Stann rescued the wounded soldiers and had them evacuated.

“We traversed some very tough enemy terrain,” Stann said. “We got into a lot of gunfights, had one tank destroyed and one humvee destroyed. Fortunately, we won every engagement and were able to get all our men out of there safely.”

Indeed, when it was over, all 42 men survived. For his actions and his bravery, Stann was awarded the Silver Star on March 10, 2006. It is the Marine Corps’ third-highest honor.

One, however, gets the impression that Stann grows tired of talking about how he earned the Silver Star. While proud of the honor, he said he simply was doing his job.

“I don’t do it for the medals. I don’t care about them whatsoever,” Stann said. “Certainly, I wear it with pride for my men and my unit. But leading Marines in combat and saving Marines in combat is my job as an officer.”

Military mindset

Having a military background has helped Stann with his WEC career, particularly from a mental standpoint.

“My mindset is how to break down the enemy,” Stann said. “Identify his strengths and weaknesses, attack his weaknesses utilizing my strengths and really seize the initiative and make him react to me. Any time you’re reacting to your opponent, it’s not a positive in your favor.”

Getting Marshall to react to him is something Stann hopes to accomplish tonight.

Marshall (7-2) has more experience and has twice successfully defended his title. Not only has he won by knockout, but also by submission.

“Doug’s a tough guy, but I think there are some things I can capitalize on,” Stann said. “I know I’ll definitely be in better condition. I think I’m more skilled in a couple areas. It’s going in there and imposing my will on him and making him break mentally.”

If that doesn’t happen and Marshall is able to win, Stann will be fine. After everything he has been through, one loss is nothing.

“If I were to lose this fight, it wouldn’t be the end of me,” he said. “I’ll go back and train and work my way up again.

“But, I don’t plan on losing this fight.”

Spoken like a true warrior.

Contact the writer: swalsh@timesshamrock.com

WEC basics
Background
Formed in June 2001, the WEC features mixed martial arts competition where fighters utilize the disciplines of jiu-jitsu, karate, boxing, kickboxing, wrestling, judo, kung fu and tae kwon do.
It is the sister organization to the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) with two main differences.
First, the octagon-shaped steel cage in which WEC fights are held is smaller — 25 feet in diameter, opposed to 32 feet in UFC. The smaller cage leads to more intense, fast-paced action.
Second, WEC focuses on lower weight classes, of which there are six.
Equipment
Fighters use 4-6-ounce gloves designed to protect the hand, but not large enough to improve the striking surface or the weight of the punch.
Shorts and kickboxing trunks are the only uniforms allowed.
Shirts, gis and shoes may not be worn to prevent grabbing. A gi is the two-piece uniform worn in karate and judo.
Bout duration
All nonchampionship bouts are three rounds. Championship bouts are five rounds.
Rounds last five minutes, with a one-minute rest period between each round.
Rules
Mandatory drug testing No head-butting, eye gouging, biting, hair pulling or fish hooking (putting a finger into an orifice of an opponent and pulling, with the intent of tearing the skin).
No groin attacks or throat strikes of any kind.
No strikes to the spine or the back of the head.
No striking downward using the point of the elbow.
No clawing, pinching or twisting flesh.
No kicking or kneeing the head of a grounded opponent.
Also, no stomping on a grounded opponent.
No kicks to the kidney with the heel.
No spiking an opponent to the canvas on his head or neck.
No throwing an opponent out of the cage.
No holding the shorts or gloves of an opponent.
No spitting at an opponent, or using abusive language in the cage.
No timidity, e.g., avoiding contact with an opponent or faking an injury.
Ways to win
Submission by physical or verbal tap out.
Technical knockout by the referee.
Unanimous, split or majority decision.
Unanimous, spilt or majority draw. Technical decision.
Technical draw.
Disqualification.
Forfeit.
No contest.
— SCOTT WALSH

Ellie