After an ill-fated attempt at making a rematch with Josh Koscheck, Bellator MMA
welterweight Paul Daley is ready to move on.
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Rangers Jerseys .?Ive been on his Facebook page and his Dethrone
[Facebook] page and called him all profanities that youd expect, Daley, who lost
to Koscheck in 2010, told ESPN.com. To fight me was like a golden opportunity
for him and he missed the opportunity a few times now. Im not looking to present
him with another opportunity.After Koscheck withdrew from their rematch in June
due to injury, Daley (38-13-2) now has his focus set on Douglas Lima (26-6). The
two will meet in the main event of Saturdays Bellator 158 card at Londons O2
Arena (Spike TV, ESPN Deportes, 9 p.m. ET) with a welterweight title shot in the
balance.The event has faced a multitude of changes, most notably due to the June
6 death of Kimbo Slice, who had agreed to a rematch against James Thompson in
the headliner. Regarding Slice, Daley said,?Im privileged to take his place as
the main event here in London.Daley, 33, enters the bout on a five-fight win
streak, including a first-round knockout of Andy Uhrich in January. He said?a
title shot, should he defeat Lima, was something he asked for and was agreed to
with someone who has a position of power in Bellator.Lima is an opponent that I
picked, said Daley. Hes the toughest guy, hes a former champion, so I am excited
to get such a motivated fight against a dangerous opponent.A native of Brazil,
Lima was bumped from a matchup with Chidi Njokuani at last months Bellator 156
for this bout, his first since dropping the welterweight title to Andrey
Koreshkov last July via unanimous decision.The opponent switch creates what
could be a high-octane bout with the potential for an explosive finish. Daley, a
British kickboxer, has recorded knockouts in 28 of his 38 career wins, while
Lima, 28, has finished 23 of his 26 victories. Despite the credentials, Daley
says that Lima isnt on my level,?and he is very confident heading into the
fight.The only thing that raises his level is that he was the former champion,
said Daley. We really believe that this is going to be a fight where we do a bit
of a Conor McGregor-Nate Diaz and were at the end saying, Im not surprised
m-----f------.Having won nine of his last 10, including eight by stoppage, Daley
is predicting hell win by knockout on Saturday. For his training camp, he has
sparred with several British pro boxers and worked on his wrestling with the
Polish Olympic team, taking part in what he calls mini camps to get prepared for
each test. The results, he believes, will be a well-rounded fighter who is more
mature inside the cage.I think hes still a little bit too sure of himself, Daley
said. You may say that about me, but the way Im humbly putting it is Im just a
little bit faster than he thinks. Im a little bit stronger than he thinks and my
fight IQ is a little bit higher than he thinks.Daley and Koscheck met at UFC 113
in May 2010, with Koscheck winning by unanimous decision. After the final bell,
Daley hit Koscheck in the face, which resulted in Daleys release from the
company later that night in Montreal. But the fortunes of each fighter changed
from that point, with Koscheck finishing his UFC run with a 2-6 mark and Daley
amassing a 14-4 record outside of the Octagon.Koscheck, a veteran of 25 fights
in the Octagon, lost his last five UFC bout and signed with Bellator last June.
His debut was scheduled for January at Bellator 148 in his hometown of Fresno,
California, against Matt Secor?but he pulled out with an undisclosed injury.
This elevated Daley to the main event, with Semtex quickly dispatching Uhrich
just two minutes in with an explosive uppercut, launching a chorus of boos from
the partisan crowd.After Daley called his rival out (referring to him as Crotch
Check), the rematch was set for London until Koscheck was forced to pull out
once again with an undisclosed injury. Daley isnt buying it and claims he was
expecting it to happen.He didnt realize I was so invested in whooping his ass,
said Daley. This was a fight where I intended to put severe beats on him and I
think he got that sense, and he didnt have the same motivation or the same
energy and sometimes you need that.For a combatant who has 53 pro bouts,
Saturday will hold a special significance for Daley. It will be his first fight
in his native land in nearly two years. For someone who is normally booed loudly
in America, especially where Koscheck is supported, Daley is expected to get a
rousing ovation from the home crowd. He compared it to his UFC New Years card
appearance in Las Vegas, a first-round knockout of Dustin Hazelett in the
co-main event on UFC 108.This one could top that being that its in the UK and Im
going to actually have the supporters with me, said Daley. Itll be up there
[and] maybe even surpass the MGM Grand. Im really looking forward to having the
home crowd on such a large scale being behind me.
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. If ever they start actually putting pictures beside words in the dictionary,
the Blue Jays left-handers mug will appear beside “Consistency. Did you grow up
in South Africa wanting to be a professional cricketer, knowing that the country
was out of the world game? Well, growing up one doesnt really fully understand
firstly the politics of the day, and that there was a bigger game in terms of
international cricket. We are pretty much isolated. You knew about it, but I
would say your primary goal was to do well in first-class cricket. There was the
ambition of playing county cricket because that could offer you a living.Growing
up I really enjoyed squash more, but my father said, no, no, you wont make a
living out of playing squash, stick to your cricket. But we always had the
intention to go on and study. So cricket became the means to get to university
and qualify. But international cricket, no, didnt know much about it.Here you
are, a teenager, emerging and starting to catch the eye of coaches. You
obviously had talent and a feel for the game, but you are saying you had no idea
that there existed a higher plane of the game, the highest level of the game? I
grew up in a town called Queenstown. It was named after Queen Victoria. I went
to a school named after her as well, Queens College. We had a really good,
strong cricketing tradition. It was the school of Tony Greig, Kenny McEwan.I had
a longer relationship with professional cricketers from Sussex. So they would
come over and spend the summer with us. Once a year, perhaps, we would see, I
think it was a NatWest final, if it was still called that in those days. So that
was the sum total of what we knew as international cricket, and that wasnt even
Test cricket.I remember our professional, Bob Jones, and he was at one stage
head coach of the Lords indoor school. And he really obviously loved cricket. So
we formed a cricket society, and what he would do is, hed bring over the old VHS
tapes and we paid 50 cents in those days to be a member of the cricket society,
and we sat there and we watched the highlights of whatever Test cricket had been
there that summer. I think we got a cricket monthly at that stage - I think it
would probably be what we know as the Wisden these days, a magazine?So we were
entirely cut off. Black people lived there, white people lived here, and you
went to your own schools. There was no integration. Television only arrived, I
think, in 76, 77, 78, and that was controlled. So we were conditioned to believe
a certain thing. That probably played a role in, you know, doing well at
first-class level and wanting to do well, because that in many ways was all the
cricket someone like me knew. What I aspired to be was a very good first-class
cricketer.In 83, we went to England on a schoolboy tour. Which then would have
been the South African Under-19 side, but we were known as the Albatross XI. We
were not allowed to take any equipment - not even a shirt, nothing. We were just
a group of young students travelling to the UK on a sightseeing, cultural,
educational tour. Jimmy Cook was with us on that trip. It was a good side. We
had Salieg Nackerdien, I think he was the only non-white cricketer we had in
those days, and Shukri Conrad, he was the other one.There was this great South
African team, the last team that played international cricket before the
isolation years began - Graeme Pollock and Ali Bacher and Mike Procter and names
of that kind. As a young man, what were those influences like on your cricket?
Were they big heroes in South Africa? Well, my sort of era, its early 70s, we
were young kids, so we knew of them. Graeme Pollock was the icon. Barry
[Richards] had left - he played most of his cricket in Australia and England,
which Graeme never did. So he was the player that everyone looked up to, wanted
to be, and was a true star. And we didnt quite understand and appreciate how
good he was, when I speak of my generation. I played against him and he was at
the end of his career then. Once we had got back into international cricket, you
actually realised and appreciated them.I remember our first tour to England. As
an England tour goes, theres a lot of functions, and the major one was at a
hotel at Piccadilly Circus. Mike Procter was the coach and Graeme had been
following the tour. So they were invited to this luncheon and the team was
introduced, and when Mike Procter was introduced, they stood up, and when Graeme
was introduced, the audience stood up. They obviously knew who Barry was, and
they remembered Graemes innings at Trent Bridge when he got that brilliant
120-odd under those conditions, which was an exceptional knock. But in terms of
influence, in terms of where we were going, not knowing that wed ever get back
into international cricket, it was not something that you believed was going to
happen. It was: well, thats it, thats just our lot, and if you wanted to play
international cricket, you would look elsewhere - either England or New Zealand
or Australia, which I seriously considered.So I think to answer your question,
its not like a kid growing up today, who is growing up with international
cricket. He knows who the superstars are and its a different world.Here you are,
an extremely talented batsman and already comparisons with Graeme Pollock start
to come about. What was that like for a 15- or 16-year-old, to suddenly be
compared to the greatest batsman South Africa has produced? Yes, I think to a
large degree it was because of isolation - they were looking for heroes. I was
16 when I broke his record [South Africas youngest first-class century-maker],
so obviously that caught the attention and comparisons were made, but it didnt
take long to realise that those comparisons were a little bit unfair. It just
was the nature of our cricket, but it kind of made me sit up and say, look,
youve got a future, you can play, so, right, where does it take me? Lets talk a
little bit about apartheid. Were you inherently aware that this is a white mans
sport, divided along those lines, that cricket is a very much what white boys
do, and other members of society are actually kept away from the game? Was that
very much part of the culture of how you grew up in South Africa? Very much part
of the culture. If you looked upon it, thats just the way it was. Being white, I
went to a white school and played cricket at that school, played all our sports.
Black kids grew up in the townships, and thats where they played. We always grew
up with the belief that there was equality in our society, thats what you
thought.You didnt think it was unfair? I didnt know better, to be honest with
you. At school, politics of the day were taught as per the nationalist
government. Even when I got to university and there were rumblings - that was
the middle 80s, when things were really starting to hot up and there was unrest
in the township, and I had friends whod done their military training.It was like
I said to people: I have two halves in my life, two halves in my career - grew
up in that era and now I grew up in this one. And if people ssay, tell me about
your career, Id say, Well its been a very interesting one, but as a young white
South African growing up, no, and we didnt see anything abnormal about that.
Jurickson Profar Jersey. We didnt think we
needed to do something about [apartheid], because around you, what you read,
what you saw, who you interacted with - thats just the way it kind of was.Did
you never play cricket with black kids? Were there any black kids? Never.You
never came across anyone, any coloured kids? None of them came and played
cricket with you? No. I often think about it today. Where I grew up, the public
playing facilities, which are now part of the school that I went to, was called
the recreational ground, and they had two rugby fields. In summer it was a
cricket field and alongside it was a soccer field. It was literally 100 metres
down the road, and with nothing better to do during the holidays, our days were
sport.So you went out and whatever you found, you could play, whether it was
cricket, tennis, squash. And it was winter time, so wed pick up a game of rugby
among a couple of friends and I would have been ten, 11 at that stage. Touch
rugby - wed play for an hour. I remember one holiday, there were about four
black kids who came and played with us. They joined in and we spent an hour or
two playing and then went home and my Mum would have a lunch for us and that
sort of thing. And they were brilliant and their company was great, and we, like
kids, had a fantastic time. And then we would sort of arrange, you know: are you
guys coming the next day? And we would say 10 oclock and they would come at 12,
and I couldnt understand why, so it was very disappointing for us, and [we
thought] perhaps they didnt want to play with us or this and that.But then in
time I got to understand that it was because they would be coming into a white
area. That was a boiling pot of South African politics. There was the ZAPU,
which was the real right wing of the [anti-apartheid] movement. Late 80s they
planted a few bombs. So I understood later that they [the black kids] would be
dodging the police, and if they got caught, theyd be chucked in the back of a
van and maybe given a hiding or driven back to the townships. And there were
times in the afternoon when they said, weve got to go now. We were, Well, come
on, play. No, no, we have to go now. Because there would be a curfew, so they
didnt want to be caught after dark. It left an impression on my mind, and when I
think back on it, you [realise] how shameful it was, how hurtful it would have
been. It was a huge, huge travesty really. And in many ways we lost so much
talent.All these years later that now seems to be a grotesquely unfair time, but
back then, as a 14- or 15-year-old, it was just the way things were - is that
what youre saying? When you tell people that, they say, No, come on. But it was,
you know, it was indoctrination. Thats just the shadow that we grew up under,
not knowing better, not understanding better, your parents not knowing better.
It was the - in Afrikaans it was the swart gevaar, the black danger. PW Botha
was then the prime minister and there was a war going on in Angola [involving]
our troops, who supported South West Africa, which is Namibia today. And friends
of mine fought in that. You had the swart gevaar, the black danger, and there
was the whole, you know, it was communistic and [there was the idea that] they
were coming in to, like, take over the country. Because things were so tightly
controlled and segregated, there was no violence in those days. But with the
political uprising in the middle 80s, you started to be aware, and at that stage
I was at university. Suddenly it was a whole new world. What was the arrival of
the rebel-tour cricketers like for you? What kind of impression did it leave,
especially because some of them were truly world-class, top-notch players? The
Sri Lankans arrived, Tony Opathas touring squad. He arrived as the manager and
by the third Test was their best bowler, because they really battled. I ran into
guys like [Graeme] Pollock, who were still hungry, and we had a good team around
then. The national broadcaster televised all those games. Then, once the West
Indians arrived, I was in my final year at school and got out to watch quite a
bit of that. It was like, suddenly here are black cricketers so skilled and so
good. Was that an eye-opener? Well, absolutely. We thought, hang on, theres
going to be bombs going off here. These guys are now going to travel around the
country. Where are they going to stay? They cant stay in white hotels. What are
the extremists going to say? So they actually became honorary whites and they
were so loved, but all these sorts of things, it was like guys arriving from
outer space. And Im not exaggerating.But we were so hungry for cricket. I think
that was the huge excitement: come on, lets just play cricket. I mean, guys like
Collis King, he was - in 76, I think, he was a hero - the brand of cricket they
played. I mean [Sylvester] Clarke - in my second season with Border, I batted
against him with half a helmet, not much of a thigh pad, as a kid. I get cold
today when I think about it.They created enormous excitement. We were so hungry.
We could have watched anything. Lawrence Rowe, and the style of cricket they
played…Do you remember that time as being particularly challenging? There was,
of course, a lot of opposition to the idea of playing any kind of cricket
against a regime such as South Africa, but within the country itself? We werent
made aware of that. It wasnt spoken about, certainly not on television and in
the media, because it was state-controlled. The resistance that you saw when
[Mike] Gattings tour came [in 1989-90] and I played in Pietermaritzburg… There
was a huge black crowd, and we can get to that because thats an interesting
story, but again the opportunity or the platform for those who were against
those tours, for that particular tour and the Sri Lankan tour and the first
English tour [to make themselves heard], it wasnt there. With the clampdown it
was just not going to happen.So there was no idea that these guys were risking
their international careers, they were going to get banned in their country… No,
we kind of got that. But it wasnt sort of a struggle between whats right and
wrong, and should we or not. Theyve given us the best cricket present in 25, 27
years, this is fun, lets get going to play cricket, you know. The resistance to
it, we werent aware of it, because it wasnt reported, it wasnt seen. You were
just in that sort of space, not knowing - we werent sort of totally blind to it
but did not really know what was actually happening.Watch and read part two of
the interview hereWatch ESPNcricinfo Talking Cricket at 9.30pm IST on Fridays
and the repeat on 12 noon on Sunday on SONYESPN
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