
We are happy to announce that Alfonso Rodriguez of Melrose Park, IL, was the first Topps UFC Main Event collector to find the highly sought after card featuring autographs from Chuck Liddell, Tito Ortiz, and Dana White.
Well, season 11 of The Ultimate Fighter is underway on Spike and it looks like this season will be full of action, surprises and great fights.
Topps was once again at the UFC Training Facility for the start of the season for our latest photo shoot with the new competitors and coaches. Everyone seemed to enjoy the process of making what are essentially the 14 fighters’ rookie cards.
TK: Yeah, like in football for example, if you don't get all of the first downs and all of penalties and everything it takes away from your ability to enjoy the game. But a fight is simple. It's easy. If a fight breaks out on the street, you're watching. Hell, if a fight breaks out in the stands at a UFC event, everyone is going to turn their heads and watch.
Do you think MMA will continue to gain popularity over time, or will it eventually level out and remain a niche sport?What is your take on the fights this weekend (UFC 111)?
TK: Well George St. Peirre is a freaking monster. Everybody wonders why Dan Hardy is getting a title shot, but it's because he's been knocking everybody out. He'll have to avoid GSP's takedowns to win.
DC: I don't know if he'll (Hardy) be able to avoid takedowns. He'll probably have to figure out a way to survive on the ground.
TK: And in the Mir/Carwin fight, Mir is going to try to takedown and submit Carwin because I'm not sure Mir can stand up and trade punches with Carwin.
(For Dan) You are a big collector. What are your favorite cards to collect and which cards mean the most to you?
DC: I've always liked the pioneers. Babe Ruth. Ty Cobb. I recently purchased the 1909 American Tobacco Ty Cobb with the red background. I love Jack Johnson. I have just about every single card of his that was ever made. Jackie Robinson. The pioneers. The guys who maybe didn't know it at the time they were doing it, but they paved the way in their sports and made them what they are today. You know, maybe to them they weren't out to change anything, they were just making a living and making something of themselves. It was pure then. That's what I like, the purity of those early guys. To bring it back around to MMA, that's where we are right now in our sport. People will look back on MMA in 100 years and look at the guys who are fighting today the same way we look at Ty Cobb or Jack Johnson. That's why I love where we're at in our sport right now. I'm just trying to soak it all in. This is our sport in it's purist form, and I'm really enjoying it.