Jose Aldo VS Urijah Faber It's
On

(PRESS RELEASE) -- In what will
be one of the biggest nights in MMA history, World
Extreme Cagefighting®
presents its most explosive card ever. On Saturday,
April 24, live on Pay-Per-View from the ARCO Arena in
Sacramento, Calif., hometown hero “The California Kid”
Urijah Faber attempts to capture the featherweight title
from feared Brazilian knockout artist and ESPN’s 2009
Fighter of the Year Jose Aldo.
If that wasn’t enough, lightweight champion Ben
Henderson collides with Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone in a
rematch of the 2009 Fight of the Year. Their first bout
featured five grueling rounds of nonstop action and both
promise even more fireworks when they meet again in
April. Plus, former featherweight champion Mike Brown
locks horns with Armenian judo ace and The Ultimate
Fighter™ finalist Manny Gamburyan in one of the most
anticipated fights of 2010.
“We are building the most action-packed card we’ve ever
done for our first Pay-Per-View,” WEC General Manager
Reed Harris said, adding that at least five fights will
make the PPV broadcast. “The Jose Aldo-Urijah Faber
fight is something fans have been talking about for a
long time. When those two step inside the cage, it could
be one of the best fights in the history of the sport.
With the Cerrone-Henderson rematch and the Brown-Gamburyan
fight also scheduled, this guarantees that fans get the
most bang for their buck.”
Tickets for WEC: Aldo vs. Faber go on sale Saturday,
Feb. 6 at 10 a.m. PT and will be priced at $185, $135,
$75, and $40. A special Internet ticket pre-sale will be
available to WEC newsletter subscribers on Friday, Feb.
5 starting at 10 a.m. PT. To access this presale, users
must register for the WEC newsletter through wec.tv.
Tickets may be purchased by calling Ticketmaster
Charge-By-Phone at 1-800-745-3000 or by visiting the
ARCO Arena Box Office. Tickets also are available online
through www.wec.tv or www.ticketmaster.com.
WEC: Aldo vs. Faber will be available live on
pay-per-view on iN DEMAND, DIRECTV, DISH Network, TVN,
BellTV, Shaw Communications and Viewer’s Choice Canada
for a suggested retail price of $44.99 ($49.99/Canada)
for standard definition or high-definition broadcasts
(where available).
Named ESPN MMA Live’s 2009 Fighter of the Year,
featherweight champion Jose Aldo (16-1) has proved to be
one of the most devastating fighters to ever grace the
WEC cage. After scoring consecutive knockouts in his
first five WEC fights, Aldo earned a shot against
then-champion Mike Brown last November. Using blazing
speed and heavy strikes, the 23-year-old Brazilian
upended Brown in two rounds to earn his first world
championship. He now makes his first title defense
against number one contender Urijah Faber and believes a
win could serve as the beginning of one of the most
dominant championship reigns in history.
“Urijah is a good fighter, but he’s not taking my belt,”
Aldo said. “My dream has been to be the world champion.
Now that I have the belt, I am not giving it up.”
Having already completed a two-year run as WEC
featherweight champion in his stellar career,
Sacramento, California’s Urijah Faber (23-3) is poised
to recapture the belt when he takes on Aldo at ARCO
Arena. Riding the momentum of his January victory over
Brazilian Jiu Jitsu black belt Raphael Assuncao, “The
California Kid” believes he can diffuse the champion’s
speed by using his top-notch wrestling and slick
defense. What’s more, Faber has made it clear that when
Aldo brings the belt to Sacramento on April 24, he’s
leaving it at ARCO Arena.
“It’s Jose Aldo’s belt right now – but in my mind,
that’s my belt,” Faber, who owns wins over Dominick
Cruz, Jeff Curran, and Jens Pulver (twice), said. “My
belief is that I should have that belt, and I’m gonna go
in there and try to get it. I’m out here ready to prove
it.”
“I think the guy that poses a threat to Aldo is a guy
that’s just as fast as he is,” Faber continued. “That
guy also has dangerous strikes, but has the advantage of
dictating where the fight goes. That guy might just be
me. I’ve got a proven record of submitting and grounding
and pounding guys and I’m very difficult to knock out.”
WEC lightweight champion Ben “Smooth” Henderson (11-1)
has defeated a Who’s Who of elite lightweights since
joining the division in 2009. Owning wins over Anthony
Njokuani, Shane Roller, Donald Cerrone, and most
recently Jamie Varner, the 26-year-old has relied on his
tremendous grappling and precision striking en route to
capturing lightweight gold. The Glendale, Ariz. resident
now turns his attention to a fight with Cerrone, who he
battled for five grueling rounds last October.
“I expect another great fight and hopefully I’ll be able
to end it this time, like I do with most of my fights,”
Henderson, who unified the lightweight titles with a win
over Varner at ARCO Arena in January, said. “Call me
crazy, but I’m ready for another five-round war with
Cerrone. Let’s have the exact same five-round, hard,
all-out war. I love that, I’m not going to lie. But at
the end, I want to finish it. I don’t want it to go to a
judges’ decision, I don’t want any controversy; I don’t
want any ifs, ands or buts. I want to end it.”
Fan favorite Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone is blunt when he
speaks of his upcoming rematch with champion Ben
Henderson. When the 26-year-old meets Henderson on April
24, he plans to pick up where the two left off last
fall. Except this time, Cerrone doesn’t believe the
fight will make it to the judges’ scorecards.
“What’s different this time is that I know what he has,”
Cerrone, who scored a victory over Ed Ratcliff in his
last fight in December, said. “He gave me everything he
had last time. I know what I did wrong and what I need
to fix. I feel like Ben can be finished and I’m ready to
show the world that he can be put away.”
Former featherweight champion Mike Brown (23-5) believes
a win over Manny Gamburyan in April will put him first
in line for a crack at the winner of the Jose Aldo-Urijah
Faber bout. With that said, the 34-year-old, who owns
wins over Jeff Curran, Urijah Faber (twice), Leonard
Garcia, and Anthony Morrison, plans to make a big
statement when he fights the Armenian judo ace.
“It’s the perfect step for me right now to make my way
back to the title,” Brown, who returns to scene of his
last victory in Sacramento,” said. “We’re both solid
takedown guys with solid jiu-jitsu, but I’m the bigger,
harder puncher. I just have to crack him hard. If I hit
him hard, I think he won’t want any part of it.”
Unbeaten since dropping to featherweight last year,
Manny Gamburyan (12-5) considers himself among the best
145-pounders in the sport. Thanks to a dominant
performance against Leonard Garcia in his last fight in
November, “The Anvil” finds himself facing former
champion Brown in a pivotal fight. The significance of
the bout is not lost on the 28-year-old, and he believes
fans will see the best Gamburyan ever on April 24.
“He’s a former world champion and I give him props,”
Gamburyan said. “But I’m going to find his weaknesses
and beat him. It’s going to be a good fight. I can’t
wait for this fight.”
Remaining bouts for WEC: Aldo vs. Faber will be
announced at a later date. For more information, visit
www.wec.tv. Follow WEC at http://twitter.com/WEConVERSUS.
About World Extreme Cagefighting®
The WEC brand is recognized as one of the premier mixed
martial arts organizations in the United States. WEC,
founded in 2001, is the sister organization of the
Ultimate Fighting Championship® and today features the
most prominent light weight fighters in the world. Owned
and operated by WEC Holdings LLC., and headquartered in
Las Vegas, Nev., the WEC produces live and taped events
annually that are distributed through the Versus
network.WEC programming is also available on Fox Sports
en Espanol. In addition to its U.S distribution, WEC
programming is shown on the TSN network in Canada,
Setanta Sports in Australia, Globosat in Brazil, and
Cadena Tres in Mexico. For more information and current
WEC fight news, visit wec.tv. World Extreme Cagefighting®
and WEC® are registered trademarks, trademarks, trade
dress or service marks owned exclusively by WEC
Holdings, LLC in the United States and other
jurisdictions and are licensed to WEC Productions, LLC.
About Maloof Sports & Entertainment
Maloof Sports & Entertainment includes the Sacramento
Kings (NBA) and ARCO Arena. Led by Joe and Gavin Maloof,
and owned by the Maloof family with long-term, local
partners, the organization is committed to the community
in Sacramento and to making a positive, meaningful
difference in the lives of families in need in the
Sacramento region. Maloof Sports & Entertainment has
donated more than $17 million to charities in 10 years
of Maloof family ownership. For more information about
Maloof Sports & Entertainment, please visit kings.com
and arcoarena.com or call 916-928-0000.