SRC 14 Wrap-Up: Jorge Santiago Outlasts Kazuo Misaki in Epic Rematch (Full Fight Video)
He's a tiger, you know? Like a lion, you know? He has that fire in his eyes and in his heart. I do, too. We're the same. We both feel like we're not going to just give a fight to anybody.
- Jorge Santiago, speaking to Sherdog's Tony Loiseleur.
Two fighters once again proved their lionship on Sunday as Jorge Santiago defended his Sengoku middleweight title against Kazuo Misaki in an unbelievable five-round struggle. SRC 14's main event undoubtedly lived up to the promise put forth by the pair's initial meeting in January 2009, and managed to produce an even more dramatic finish.
After an even and relatively uneventful opening frame dictated by a pair of Misaki takedowns, the 34-year-old challenger set the drama in motion when he seized the neck of an off-balance Santiago in round two. Wrenching what Santiago would later confirm was an extremely tight guillotine, Misaki jumped guard and rolled into mount but was unable to finish off the champion. Santiago briefly threatened with a leglock late in the round, only to be stood up by referee Yoshinori Umeki when Misaki rolled through the ropes.
Santiago surged in the opening minute of round three, felling Misaki with a head kick-straight right combo which nearly ended the contest. As Umeki loomed, the now-bloodied "Hitman" somehow withstood a barrage of ten hard, unanswered punches and made it to the next round, where he would again turn the tables.
Two minutes into the penultimate round, an ill-conceived flying knee put Santiago within range of Misaki's left hook, which sent the Brazilian crumpling to the mat. Misaki tried desperately to finish with punches from mount, knees to the face, an arm-triangle and a rear-naked choke, but Santiago would not be stopped.
The most unfortunate moment of the match came with 40 seconds left in the fourth, when referee Umeki issued an inarguably unwarranted red card to Santiago for rolling through the ropes - a foul which incurred no punishment when Misaki committed it two rounds prior. The card robbed Santiago of what could have been a crucial point, as well as 10% of his fight purse.
Just as in their first encounter, Misaki and Santiago entered the final stanza with Misaki seemingly ahead on the scorecards. Santiago wasted no time in pouring the punishment on his visibly weary opponent, dropping Misaki with combinations and a knee from the clinch almost as soon as the round began. The champion's conditioning proved the difference as Santiago mounted Misaki, threatening with armbars and kata-gatame for the majority of the round. Misaki swept at one point, but Santiago executed a beautiful sweep using a kimura to latch on a rear-naked choke attempt.
Battered, bleeding and with both eyes nearly swollen shut, Misaki could not shake Santiago from his back. The choke attempt was abandoned and Santiago began thumping Misaki with punches from back mount until the Japanese corner was forced to throw in the towel with less than 30 seconds remaining, an action which HDNet color commentator Frank Trigg instantly deemed "the worst thing ever... horrific." Upon replay, it was unclear whether referee Umeki had already decided to dive in for the stop when the towel hit the canvas.
With the way the judges' scores added up entering the fifth round - 38-36, 38-36 and 39-36, all in favor of Misaki - it's not entirely clear what might have happened had the bout not been halted in the waning seconds. The most likely scenario involves Santiago winning a majority "must" decision, which makes me thankful that the match ended the way it did. Today, instead of concerning ourselves with Sengoku's goofy judging system, we can simply enjoy this Fight of the Year candidate for what it was and commend two men for putting their hearts on display and giving us one for the ages.
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I saw Tony’s post about the scorecards last night after watching the fight twice. Absolutely crazy. I dislike SRC’s idea of having a judge pick a winner if they score it a draw, but it would have been super interesting to see which way it went had it got there. Tony thinks it would have gone to Santiago for sure based on the final round, but I’m not so sure.
http://www.instrength.com
And I would be one of those people who didn't add time to the DVR.
Ugh.
"I got a good Christian raising and a 8th grade education / Ain't no need in y'all in treating me this way." - Billy Joe Shaver
I have a question for everyone here
As of yet I’ve never seen any of Jorge Santiago’s matches.
How well would he do in the Middleweight division if he was ever signed by Strikeforce or the UFC?
by devious1 on Aug 23, 2010 11:45 AM EDT via mobile reply actions
He’s already fought for both. Did poorly with the UFC in 2006 – lost two by KO to Alan Belcher and Chris Leben, which led to many questions about his chin. He won a one-night tournament for Strikeforce the following year and has been fighting for Sengoku since then. His only loss since being released by the UFC was against Mamed Khalidov last year. Needless to say, I think he’d fare better in either promotion now.
by Chris Nelson on Aug 23, 2010 11:50 AM EDT up reply actions
He was winning both fights before he got clipped. I always thought he was released a little too quickly.
http://www.instrength.com
He's similar to Jay Hieron in that regard...
both guys had very forgettable UFC runs the first time around but both are much, better now than they were then.
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by Brent Brookhouse on Aug 23, 2010 11:52 AM EDT up reply actions
there was supposed to be a second much there as in "much, much better"
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by Brent Brookhouse on Aug 23, 2010 11:53 AM EDT up reply actions
I always thought Hieron was never given much of a chance in the UFC. Two one-fight deals. Loses to GSP, then gets to come back and loses the bloodiest fight in UFC history controversially. He definitely deserved another chance.
http://www.instrength.com
hopefully he'll get it
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by Nate Wilcox on Aug 23, 2010 12:04 PM EDT up reply actions
Ever since Santiago’s release from the UFC, he has gone on an extremely impressive run. In his 12 bouts since being released by the UFC has gone 11-1, with victories over Mamed Khalidov, Misaki (2x), Trevor Prangley, Nakamura, and Jeremy horn, just to name a few. If Strikeforce were able to sign Misaki, Khalidov, and Santiago, I think Strikeforce’s MW division would come close to rivaling the UFC’s.
This fight blows Jung/Garcia and Akiyama/Leben out of the water. Unless something retarded happens by January, this is the fight of the year and if the dregs that populate this site don’t vote it themselves, I may just appoint it myself.
Twitter: @Mike_Fagan_13
Zombie/Garcia was the best scrap of the year. This is by far the best MMA fight of the year.
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I wouldn't say it blows Jung/Garcia out of the water...
that being said, it did pass it for fight of the year
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by Brent Brookhouse on Aug 23, 2010 12:25 PM EDT up reply actions
I would say it blows Jung-Garcia out of the water and exceeds Akiyama-Leben (but not to a blowing-it-out-of-the-water extent). I think I need to watch it again on mute though to get a more objective view, because I enjoy Michael Schiavello’s work, and as a result his enthusiasm might be a little too infectious.
Sergio Non,
MMA writer, USA TODAY
http://mma.usatoday.com
Don't sleep on Misaki either
In the PRIDE days he was consistently ranked in the top 10 at middleweight — he won one of the GP’s with wins over Dan Henderson, Denis Kang and Phil Baroni (which meant something in 2006). He also was whipping Yoshihiro Akiyama’s ass in a fight that was ruled a NC for an illegal headkick.
He has back to back losses to Santiago and Manhoef, but those are nothing to be ashamed of.
I’d love to see both of these guys get a shot in Strikeforce.
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The Manhoef loss had a questionable stoppage.
And both Santiago and Misaki still have contracts with Strikeforce, yes? Wasn’t Coker talking of putting the winner of this fight in his rumored/planned/announced/cancelled 2/4/8/16 man tournament?
Afghan killa and santiago would be two huge pluses for that tourney
by destructivist on Aug 23, 2010 3:22 PM EDT up reply actions
afghan killa
is too small. he needs to fight at welterweight and strikeforce desperately needs new blood in that division.
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He lost to Santiago about 2 years ago, too.
by mocavious sam on Aug 23, 2010 3:57 PM EDT up reply actions
As much as I like CSJ/Garcia
this fight is absolutely amazing. Definitely my fight of the year. I’d love to see Santiago-Misaki 3 even though Santiago’s taken both fights. Misaki dominated a majority of the other two only to be finished in the end. Maybe pair it up with Sandro-Hioki on a NYE card.
OMG BUT HE GOT FINISHED! THE RESULT IS DECISIVE!
/Anti-Chael Sonnen rematch nonsense.
Twitter: @Mike_Fagan_13
Well...
he did get finished twice. Personally I’d prefer not to see a third fight just since it’s 2-0 and I want to see both men continue on developing their careers.
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by Brent Brookhouse on Aug 23, 2010 12:26 PM EDT up reply actions
One of the main reasons I’d like to see a third fight is because there isn’t a whole lot for them in Sengoku or Japan in general. I just think it’d be nice to try and capture that moment one more time, especially on a NYE card. Plus I think Sengoku needs it badly. Maybe it could be a sendoff from the promotion for both of them. Either of these guys in Strikeforce or the UFC would be great. Hell, even one of them going to fight Hector Lombard for the Bellator title would be a good fight.
by mocavious sam on Aug 23, 2010 12:37 PM EDT up reply actions
It was incredible the way Santiago had Misaki mounted and got swept in the last round, then had the energy to get the kimura sweep straight after that and back to mount
"Ten more seconds is all I ever ask. That's the good thing I learned about being KO'd twice. You don't see it coming -it's like death- you don't plan for it so don't wait for it. So many people are afraid of getting Ko'd that their hands stay home, but not me. I got to go out there and shoot the lights out and fall down" Jens Pulver
Thanks everyone for your responses.
When I get an opportunity I’m going to check out some of his old matches on YouTube to see what he’s capable of.
by devious1 on Aug 23, 2010 12:13 PM EDT via mobile reply actions
watch the fights from the Strikeforce tournament
he really put on a show there.
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Definitely a great fight...
Probably fight of the year.
Also, disappointing beatdown of the year goes to Nick Thompson, who thought he was Sugar Ray Leonard with that right first up, left fist at his waist bullshit.
Follow me on Twitter @lelandroling
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein
That was a great KO. Thompson was out before he hit the ground.
by mocavious sam on Aug 23, 2010 12:37 PM EDT up reply actions
Thompson was just awful.
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"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein
by Leland Roling on Aug 23, 2010 1:08 PM EDT up reply actions
LOL @ the guy in the red shirt
Didn’t notice him the first time.
by William Wilson on Aug 23, 2010 3:29 PM EDT up reply actions
Will never be confused with a religious man
but
Jesus Christ that was a awesome fight.
Rounds 4 and 5 were insane
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Thanks guys for mentioning the Jung/Garcia fight. Just saw it now for the first time. Amazing.
Kendall Grove is my second favorite fighter. Everyone else is my favorite.
by monkeyfightclub on Aug 23, 2010 4:33 PM EDT reply actions
Time for Santiago to get vindication in the UFC.
I’m a big fan of Santiago and right now wins over Leben and Belcher would put him right in the mix, leave enough time to sort out the Silva/Sonnen/Belfort bttleneck, and put him in line for a title shot.
Of course this probably won’t happen but like I said, I’m a big fan.
Kick ass fight btw.
When some wild-eyed, eight-foot-tall maniac grabs your neck, taps the back of your favorite head up against the barroom wall, and he looks you crooked in the eye and he asks you if ya paid your dues, you just stare that big sucker right back in the eye, and you remember what ol' Jack Burton always says at a time like that: "Have ya paid your dues, Jack?" "Yessir, the check is in the mail." - Jack Burton
I agree with Frank Trigg's assessment calling the fight
Misaki was getting his butt kicked…but after enduring all of that pain, it sucks that his corner threw in the towel with 30 secs left. Maybe he would have been knocked out, maybe not. But to be so close and lose…Idk. That’s a tough pill to swallow when you never gave up.
I wonder if those bumps all over Misaki’s chest were a staph infection. If so, it would be even more unbelievable that he would be able to fight like that. They’re huge…you may have to watch on DVR or download from FilesTube.com to be able to notice though.
In any event, good showing and great heart from both of these fighters.

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