If perchance you’re unfamiliar with Russian Roulette, read this or rent this.
When former UFC heavyweight champ Andrei Arlovski looks back on 2009, he probably won’t look back fondly. This is, of course, assuming he survives 2009.
A lot of people will call Fedor Emelianenko a wuss. A lot will call him a fool or a pawn or a coulda-been.

After watching the Brock Lesnar-Frank Mir rematch, it’s clear that there’s a new addition to “Worst person to be at any given moment in all of sports”. That person would be Lesnar’s opponent in the final seconds of a match. In both the Mir and the Randy Couture fights, Lesnar pinned his opponent and began raining punches to their heads.
That would simply suck.
But Lesnar’s antics after Saturday’s fight against Mir are what everyone is talking about. Was that no-class display really Lesnar’s true colors? Or is the UFC trying to turn him into a heel?
Either way, Brock Lesnar shouldn’t be a mouthy, middle-finger pointing bad guy that we saw after UFC 100. He needs to be stoic, menacing and cold. He needs to be Ivan Drago.
Middleweight Lee Murray (8-2-1), best known for beating up light heavyweight Tito Ortiz in a 2002 London street brawl (unsanctioned of course, this ain’t “Rocky V“), has been holed up in a Moroccan prison for over a year on drug charges. For most, that would be the end of a wild story. For Murray, it’s the middle. Last week, the mixed martial artist of five years, was found attempting a jailbreak in what is likely just Murray’s next chapter, not final chapter.