» Fighter: Jason Day

Jason Day
Name Jason Day
Record 15-6-0 (Wins-Losses-Draws)
Wins 8 (T)KOs (53.33%)
7 Submissions (46.67%)
Losses 3 (T)KOs (50.00%)
3 Submissions (50.00%)
Association Canadian Martial Arts Centre
Height 6'0 (183cm)
Weight 185
City Lethbridge
State Alberta
Country Canada

» Headlines

MacDonald In For Injured Day at UFC 88

Article Posted: August 19th, 2008 | By: Selina "Dead" Wong | Comments: 0 | Comment Now

“Dooms Day” Jason Day (17-7) has pulled out of UFC 88 due to injury; but, fellow Canadian “Athlete” Jason Macdonald (20-10) will take his place opposite “Punisher” Jason Lambert (23-8) in Atlanta 6 September.

According to Sportsnet, Day is suffering from an elbow and bicep injury.

“There is no range of motion in my arm, I can’t rotate it all,” Day said.  “Good news for JayMac though.”

MacDonald was defeated earlier this month by Demain Maia (8-0) by rear naked choke, and sees this as “a chance to erase a loss that just happened.”  He added, “If you fall off the horse you have to get right back on.”

MacDonald photo courtesy of Josh Hedges and Zuffa, LLC.

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Jason v Jason in Atlanta

Article Posted: August 15th, 2008 | By: Selina "Dead" Wong | Comments: 0 | Comment Now

The UFC made a middleweight bout between “Punisher” Jason Lambert (23-8) and “Dooms Day” Jason Day (17-7) official Thursday. They will meet in Atlanta 6 September on UFC 88’s undercard.

Lambert will drop from 205 pounds for this fight after being TKO’d in 2:07 by “Banha” Luis Arthur Cane (8-1) at his last fight in June. It was his second loss in a row.

Alberta’s Day was TKO’d in round one by “Count” Michael Bisping (16-1) at the same event.

Day photo courtesy of Josh Hedges and Zuffa, LLC.

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Alves Amazing, Werdum Top Heavyweight Contender

Article Posted: June 8th, 2008 | By: Chad Edward | Comments: 0 | Comment Now

Watching Fighters.com’s fifth-ranked welterweight Matt Hughes(42-7) TKO’d at 1:02 of the second round by younger, stronger, faster, and more complete (currently) sixth-ranked “Pitbull” Thiago Alves (15-3) last night at UFC 85 in London, I couldn’t help but recall the country boy whoopin’ Hughes put on the original Ultimate Fighter Royce Gracie (14-3-3) two-years ago.

Hughes stalked Alves for a takedown at the first bell, settling for bottom position by pulling guard, but never finding the submission opportunity he thought he could force.

Again, Hughes took the Brazilian to the mat mid-way through the first and smothered the kickboxer; but, Alves utilized butterfly guard to neutralize Hughes’s offense.

The only damage done on the mat in round one was after the confident “Pitbull” bulldogged the veteran to the mat and hammered a crevice in Hughes’s nose with an elbow strike.

Hughes, like Gracie at UFC 60, was impotent. Alves wasn’t falling for the tried and true tricks, wasn’t physically overwhelmed by the stocky farm boy from rural Illinois, and wasn’t intimidated by the future Hall of Famer’s legacy.

The second round was short; the end poignant.

Hughes ducked for the takedown that’s served as a sure-shot for ten years; and, Alves flew the distance between him and Hughes, colliding into Hughes’s right jaw with his left knee.

One punch later and referee Herb Dean waved off the fight, and, officially, the Matt Hughes era.

Alves courtesy of Josh Hedges and Zuffa, LLC

Alves never doubted the outcome, but remained humble while pleading from the Octagon, “Mr. Dana White, I’ve been a good boy, please give me a title shot!”

“He got me, no doubt,” Hughes admitted.

For Hughes, there remains a grudge match with fourth-ranked “Terror” Matt Serra (9-5), then a lot of prayer and consultation with his family for the proudly Christian husband and father of two.

Read More About Alves Amazing, Werdum Top Heavyweight Contender…

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Day Replaces Leben in London

Article Posted: May 9th, 2008 | By: Chad Edward | Comments: 12 | Comment Now

Canadian Middleweight “Dooms” Jason Day (17-5) will fight “The Count” Michael Bisping (15-1) in London 5 June, replacing “Crippler” Chris Leben (18-4).

Day comes off a successful Octagon debut TKOing “The Talent” Alan Belcher (12-5) at UFC 83 in April.

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Adieu Serra, Bienvenue St. Pierre

Article Posted: April 19th, 2008 | By: Chad Edward | Comments: 1 | Comment Now

Canada welcomed in the UFC Saturday night in Montréal; and, the UFC welcomed back in Canada as “Rush” Georges St. Pierre (16-2) avenged his loss to “The Terror” Matt Serra (9-5) by second-round TKO to capture sole possession of the UFC welterweight title before his countrymen and fellow Quebecois.

Former UFC Middleweight Champion and Fighters.com’s second-ranked 185-pounder “Ace” Rich Franklin (23-3) also found the land of maple leaf friendly in a second-round TKO of “The Serial Killer” Travis Lutter (9-5).

TUF Champions “The Count” Michael Bisping (15-1) and Mac Danzig (18-4-1) debuted in new weight classes with stoppages.

Les habitants “The Athlete” Jason MacDonald (20-9), “Dooms” Jason Day (17-5), and Jonathan Goulet (22-9) also had success for the home team, while “The Rock” Nathan Quarry (10-2), Demian Maia (7-0), “No Love” Rich Clementi (31-12-1), and Cain Velasquez (3-0) scored wins as visitors to the true north, strong and free.

Though seven of the 11 duels on 83’s lineup featured St. Pierre’s fellow countrymen, this French-Canadian bon soirwas entirely the Quebecois phenom’s. He entered the Octagon blazing a crimson gi with the strength of 22,000 at the Centre Bell.

Serra had played a clever villain during the event’s promotional tour, but had no quips for “Rush” as St. Pierre packed him into the mat upon stuffing Serra’s initial shot.

St. Pierre mauled “The Terror” with short, sharp elbows as Serra pedaled through guards, all passed by St. Pierre. Serra finally crawled up the cage to his feet.

In the center of the cage, St. Pierre blasted Serra with a Superman punch, setting up a double-leg takedown near the end of round one.

Serra, a mouse puffing beneath his right eye, emptied his tank about 90 seconds into round two as “Rush” tagged “The Terror” with five snapping jabs before planting him back onto the mat with a double-leg takedown.

St. Pierre’s G’n'P onslaught poured on, driving Serra into turtle guard. A series of unanswered rib-rattling knees persuaded referee Steve Mazzagatti to end the fight at 4:45.

“I tired him out,” explained the best 170-pound fighter in the world.

Serra countered, “I ended up coming up short, no pun intended.”

Welterweights Goulet and Kuniyoshi Hironaka (11-5) both pocketed 75 grand for battling the “Fight of the Night” in the card’s opening bout.

Goulet got the worst of it in the punch-up’s first round. Attempting to press his striking advantage, Goulet got tagged with a short Hironaka left hook. The Japanese fighter fell the Canadian and followed with a mix of fists and elbows to close the round.

“He tried to finish me,” Goulet admitted after the fight, “but he got too excited. I was careful because of my experience.”

The two fighters traded evenly to open the second before Hironaka was stunned with a punch that backed him to the cage. Goulet stalked with a flurry that dropped his opponent for a TKO at 2:07.

In the co-main event, Franklin also rebounded from a lost first round in which Lutter took the former champ to the mat and worked his jiu-jitsu juju. Franklin was nearly tapped in an armbar before he countered in a nifty maneuver that rolled him into Lutter’s full guard.

Lutter had worn himself weary by the second round and got caught with head kick as he shot for single-leg takedown. Franklin hammered “The Serial Killer” and motioned for the referee to stand him up. “Ace” picked Lutter apart on their feet with a combination of slick boxing and knees until the referree stopped the fight at 3:01

Danzig predicted to Fighters.com that Mark Bocek (5-2) is susceptible to a knee and the debuting 155-pounder delivered three big knees to set Bocek up for a rear naked choke submission at 3:48 of the third round.

“I paced myself, and I needed that; because, if I didn’t pace myself I wouldn’t have been able to do what I did in the last round,” Danzig said.

His fellow TUF Champion Bisping debuted at 185-pounds with a dominant TKO “W” over “Chainsaw” Charles McCarthy (10-5), who was unable to continue due to an arm injury after round one.

“Charles couldn’t get up,” “The Count” expalined after the fight.

Middleweight Quarry chased down a timid Kalib Starnes (8-3-1), who probably ran himself out of the UFC, for a unanimous decision.

Middleweight MacDonald added $75,000 to his bank balance with a “(T)KO of the Night” versus Joe Doerksen (39-12) at 54 seconds of the second round.

Middleweight Maia also earned 75 grand for “Submission of the Night”, a triangle choke of “Short Fuse” Ed Herman (14-5) at 2:27 of round two.

Middleweight Day made a successful UFC debut with a 3:58 TKO of “The Talent” Alan Belcher (12-5).

Lightweight Clementi ruined Canadian “Hands of Stone” Sam Stout’s (13-4-1) homecoming with a split decision victory.

Finally, touted heavyweight Velasquez only spent 2:10 in his Octagon debut before TKOing Brad Morris (9-3).

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Li'l Nog Debuts Victoriously in Calgary

Article Posted: February 3rd, 2008 | By: Chad Edward | Comments: 0 | Comment Now

Light Heavyweight Li’l Nog, Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, scored a TKO over Canadian Todd Gouwenberg at 4:34 of the second session at the Hardcore Fighting Championships in Calgary, Canada Friday.

The dominant victory marks Nogueira’s first fight since being knocked senseless in 23-seconds by Sokoudjou at PRIDE 33 in February 2007.

Nogueira raises his record to 13-3, 2-2 in his last four, while over-matched challenger Gowenberg falls to 7-3 after a four-fight win streak.

On a fight card filled with familiar faces, Armenian Gegard Mousasi extends his winning streak to six with a controversial TKO of tough journeyman Evangelista Santos at 3:42 of the first.

Mousasi pinned the Brazilian’s arm from side control and pummeled, but “Cyborg” Santos seemed to be defending himself intelligently when the referee waved the affair closed.

Santos disputed the stoppage.

Mousasi improves to 19-2-1 while Santos falls to 15-11.

Former UFC middleweight challenger David Louiseau dropped the fourth fight of his last five in a split decision loss to fellow Canadian Jason Day.

Day adds a 15th win to a record including five losses, while “The Crow” Loiseau flutters to 15-8.

Fresh from fleeing his ProElite contract, Mike Pyle bounced back with a Kimura submission over Croatian Damir Mirenic at 1:24 of the second round.

Pyle posts his 15th “W” against five losses and a single draw, while Mirenic looses his second consecutive to fall to 8-4.

In an HCF lightweight title fight, American Thomas Schulte choked out Canadian Garett Davis in a rear naked after just 1:15.

Also on the card, welterweight Derrick Noble knocked out King of the Cage vet Brendan Seguin.

Undefeated middleweight Andrew Buckland made it five in a row with a Kimura submission of Dan Chambers.

Costa Rican lightweight Ariel Sexton submitted “The Cowboy” Myles Merola in a rear naked choke at 1:08 of round 2.

Heavyweight Miodrag Petkovic split the judges decision with formerly undefeated Tim Hague.

Middleweight Nabil Khatib bounced back from a loss to take a unanimous decision over win-less Lucas Rota.

And the night began with an armbar submission of lightweight Fabian Cortez by Costa Rican Juan Barrantes.

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