Fire Burns Bright In Karo (The Heat) Parisyan As He Aims To Regain U

FIRE BURNS BRIGHT IN KARO (THE HEAT) PARISYAN AS HE AIMS TO REGAIN UFC TITLE SHOT

The Canadian Press
Nov 15 2007

Ryo Chonan may not have done himself any favours by calling UFC 78
opponent Karo (The Heat) Parisyan crazy.

"Well I guess he’ll really find out how crazy I am when I get in the
damn cage with him," Parisyan said of his mixed martial arts opponent
Saturday night in Newark, N.J.

In Chonan’s defence, the Japanese fighter prefaced the comment on
the UFC website with a compliment.

"He is a strong fighter with good judo skills. I saw him on the show
‘The Ultimate Fighter’ and thought he was crazy," Chonan was quoted
as saying.

Some might agree with Chonan after seeing the Parisyan meltdown
on Season 5 of the reality TV show. Parisyan, whose cousin Manny
Gamburyan ended up the losing finalist on the show, made a cameo as
a guest coach and was shown in a spat with eventual winner Nate Diaz.

"He tried to show disrespect," Parisyan explained in an interview. "I
guess he had it bottled up inside since I beat his brother (Nate Diaz,
at UFC 49 in August 2004). But I don’t take anything from anybody,
man, especially freaking Nate Diaz. Give me a freaking break."

Parisyan explained the beef started when others on Gamburyan’s team got
in the way of his coaching his cousin against Matt Wiman by getting
in Gamburyan’s ear. Parisyan reckoned it should have been him doing
the talking, reasoning no one knew his cousin like he did and no one
else could speak Armenian.

Diaz suggested he shut it, according to Parisyan. It may have started
as a joke but soon escalated into trash-talking and threats of
violence. Parisyan ended up having to be pulled away.

While he doesn’t consider the incident worth revisiting, he still
has strong opinions about Nate Diaz.

"He’s a little bitch. Just like his brother."

Parisyan, who was six when he came to the U.S. from Armenia via Russia,
is big on respect. He’s also clearly not afraid of confrontation,
although he is as engaging outside the ring as he is dangerous in it.

The 25-year-old welterweight carries a chip on his shoulder and dares
other fighters to knock it off. Not many have managed to do so.

Parisyan’s only losses in nine UFC fights are to Canadian Georges
St. Pierre and Diego Sanchez.

He believes Josh Burkman, his last opponent, took him lightly after
some uninspired Parisyan performances at a shared training camp in
Big Bear, Calif., following his August 2006 loss to Sanchez.

"People sometimes take you very lightly and I love that," Parisyan
said.

Burkman admits he came into their UFC 71 fight thinking he could knock
Parisyan out. Instead it was the judo expert who put on a clinical
striking display en route to a unanimous decision.

"These guys don’t understand when you fight, it’s a whole new ball
game," Parisyan said. "I’m going balls out when I fight. Basically
I just went in there and I just shocked all of them."

Parisyan showed his mettle against Drew Fickett in December 2006.

When Fickett’s elbow opened a ditch-like cut under his eye, Parisyan
just got mad.

Suddenly the fight got personal for Parisyan, who promptly returned
the favour by carving open Fickett’s face.

"’Oh man you have no idea what you just did. You really really pissed
me off,"’ he recalled thinking. "And I love it when guys try to hurt
me and hit me. It just makes me very upset and I just go after them."

Parisyan needed 20 stitches after the win. He has the scar to prove it.

The knock on Parisyan at times is he has not trained as well as he
should. He says he has not had the best training partners in the past,
although he has moved to fix that by spending time at Randy Couture’s
gym in Las Vegas.

"There’s nobody that’s going to touch me at 170, if I’m in shape,"
he says.

Still Parisyan has distractions. He shares his home with family,
for example.

"That is a downfall in a certain way, because there’s so much stuff
going around you that you have to take care of yourself."

Prior to this fight, his schedule included buying a new home. Single,
Parisyan will have four other family members living with him.

Parisyan’s sense of injustice is also fuelled by a title shot against
Matt Hughes that went by the boards because of injury. He points
to the UFC giving St. Pierre time to recover from an injury so a
Hughes-St. Pierre rematch could come off at UFC 65.

"Karo Parisyan got injured, Karo Parisyan had to come back and start
climbing the ladder again." Parisyan said.

Adding to his sense of injustice is the fact that he beat Matt Serra,
the current welterweight champion, at UFC 53 in June 2005. But still
he has to wait behind St. Pierre, who is due to meet the winner of
a Serra-Hughes December bout.

"It is what it is. What can I do? . . . Actions speak louder than
words. I think time will come around and people will figure out that
I need my damn title shot."

Parisyan’s immediate future is Chonan, whose nickname has evolved
from Shark to Piranha over the years.

"I’m expecting a very tough fight and I’m expecting him to come out
and come after me," Parisyan said. "He’s a tough guy, he’s a very
tough guy. He’s good at everything not really great at anything. He’s
a very tricky opponent. Bottom line, he’s a very tough guy."

Chonan, 31, usually fights at 185 pounds, but has moved down to 170
for this fight. His 14-7 record includes a rare win over current UFC
middleweight champion Anderson Silva and former welterweight champion
Carlos Newton of Newmarket, Ont. It also includes a crushing KO at
the hands of Dan Henderson, who took care of Chonan in 22 seconds at
a 2005 Pride show.

Sherdog.com, which tracks fighters’ records, lists Parisyan at 17-5
but he says his record is actually 25-4.

He says he was 14 when he first fought, against a 23-year-old in
Mexico. "I kicked his butt for five rounds." His first 10 fights were
for free – and sometimes he did twice in a day.

"I fought a guy and I fought his coach. Just for the pride," he said.

"Just for my name."

Notes: Cameroon’s Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou will make his UFC debut
against unbeaten light-heavyweight Lyoto Machida at UFC 79 on Dec.

29. Known as The African Assassin, Sokoudjou holds wins over Ricardo
Arona and Antonio Rogerio Nogueira. The 23-year-old, who trains with
Team Quest in California, is 4-1 while Machida is 11-0. The Brazilian
has beaten B.J. Penn, Rich Franklin, and Stephan Bonnar.

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From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://canadianpress.google.com/article/A

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS