Batista – At the point when Brock Lesnar made his MMA debut, the whole game was buzzing. Lesnar destroyed Olympic judo silver medalist Kim Min-Soo, and however he missed the mark against Blunt Mir in his first UFC session, his speed, toughness and wrestling source had pundits anticipate a title run for the raw wrestler.
Suffice to say, nobody is discussing Lesnar’s star wrestling buddy Dave “Batista” Batista’s potential after his first MMA session at the Dunkin’ Doughnuts Center in Provision, Rhode Island against journeyman Vince Lucero at CES MMA “Pure Agony. While Lesnar began his UFC profession with a previous champion, Batista resembled his exclusive title championship glory came in a hot dog eating contest went up against his opponent.
The overweight Lucero ran wild on Batista, Hulkamania style, styling and profiling like a heavy Ric Flair. He split Batista with a hard punch and played for the group as he pushed the previous WWE champion up against the cage in the secure.
In the long run, Batista figured out how to get the session to the mat. He controlled the activity yet never truly settled a back mount—it showed up he couldn’t effectively wrap his legs the distance around Lucero’s sufficient midriff.
Batista began to work his punches, and with Lucero protesting of punches to the back of the head, thankfully, finally, the referee called a Technical knockout to the session, that can be correctly described as terrible after declaring the WWE star is the winner the fight. It could have just gone awfully if Dave had some way or another figured out how to lose. He had the strength to battle and pulled out a win. For that, my cap is set for him.
Batista, be that as it may, wasn’t exactly done. He kept after Lucero, trash talking and provoking his fallen enemy. Nobody is very certain what happened between the two men.
Guest interviewer Joe Lauzon did little to reveal insight into the circumstance. When he got a chance to chat with Batista after the battle, he got some information about his nerves and whether he would battle once more. The mystery post-battle fighting, oh dear, remains a secret, an awful end to a harsh night of battles.
For the 43-year-old Batista, it was much ado about nothing. He has teased an MMA appearance for years, training with Stephan Bonnar and Cesar Gracie among others, attempting to convince the sports world that his swollen muscles would convert from the world of pro wrestling into a successful career of face punching.
At the point when arrangements with Strikeforce fell through after the advancement was bought by Zuffa (the UFC parent company), it was a dream that appeared to be dead. After watching his debut, we would have been better off if that had indeed been the situation.
Batista didn’t turn out to his trademark WWE signature music. He didn’t wear the awesome white suit that characterized his days as a major aspect of the Advancement posse nearby legends like Triple H and Flair. He didn’t utilize a single powerbomb or even give his rival two thumbs down.
All that advised us this was “Batista” was his ridiculous musculature. That and that alone won’t be sufficient. His post-battle meeting was a drag. His actual fight was wretched. In spite of the fact that he vowed to battle once more, I think about what number of will make the journey with him a second time?
This was Dave Batista’s opportunity to rethink himself. Hopefully despite everything he has Vince McMahon’s number some place because UFC president Dana White isn’t liable to call at any point in the near future.
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