The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil

The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil
Genre Reality, Sports
Created by Frank Fertitta III, Lorenzo Fertitta, Dana White
Starring Dana White, Vitor Belfort, and Wanderlei Silva
Country of origin Brazil
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Release
Original network Globo, Fuel TV
Original release March 25 June 17, 2012
Chronology
Preceded by The Ultimate Fighter: Live
Followed by The Ultimate Fighter: Team Carwin vs. Team Nelson
Website

The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil is an installment of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC)-produced reality television series The Ultimate Fighter. This season marked the first time the show was filmed, in its entirety, outside of Las Vegas, Nevada, and consisted of 12 episodes and a live finale in Brazil. The season tournament finale appeared on pay-per-view in June 2012.[1] It started filming in February 2012[2] and was in Portuguese. The season was produced by Floresta, a Brazilian production company, and aired in Brazil on Globo.[3] Each episode was broadcast over the Internet at TUF.tv each Sunday night and later aired on Fuel TV in a marathon leading up to the finale.[4]

On December 13, 2011, during the pre-UFC 142 press conference, Dana White announced that the coaches for the season would be Vitor Belfort and Wanderlei Silva.[5] Belfort still faced and defeated Anthony Johnson at UFC 142. This was a departure from past seasons where following the coaches announcement the coaches did not compete against other fighters until facing each other after the conclusion of that season of The Ultimate Fighter.

The UFC held open tryouts on December 14, 2011. The casting call was for Lightweight and Middleweight fighters who are at least 21 years old and have a minimum of two wins in three professional fights.[6] Of those who applied for the tryouts the UFC invited 350 fighters to participate.[7] The fighters in the season were from the Featherweight and Middleweight weight classes.[1]

Cast

Coaches

     Team Vitor[8]
     Team Wanderlei[9]

Fighters

Special Guests

Episodes

Episode 1
Post Episode 1
Episode 2
Coach 1st Pick 2nd Pick 3rd Pick 4th Pick 5th Pick 6th Pick 7th Pick 8th Pick
Wanderlei Rony Mariano Bezerra Delson Heleno John Teixeira Francisco Trinaldo Marcos Vinícius Renee Forte Wagner Campos Leonardo Mafra
Vitor Cezar Ferreira Hugo Viana Daniel Sarafian Rodrigo Damm Thiago Perpétuo Godofredo Castro Sérgio Moraes Anistavio Medeiros
Episode 3
Episode 4
Episode 5
Episode 6
Episode 7
Episode 8
Episode 9
Episode 10
Episode 11
Episode 12
Episode 13
  • Godofredo Castro vs. Rony Mariano Bezerra
  • Daniel Sarafian vs. Cezar Ferreira

Tournament Bracket

Featherweight Bracket

Elimination Round Semi-finals Final
       
      Godofredo Castro  UD
      Wagner Campos  2  
      Godofredo Castro  SUB
          Marcos Vinícius*  2  
      Rodrigo Damm  SD
      John Teixeira  3  
      Godofredo Castro  UD
   
        Rony Jason  3
      Hugo Viana  UD
      Marcos Vinícius  2  
      Hugo Viana  UD
          Rony Jason  3  
      Anistavio Medeiros  SUB
      Rony Jason  1  
 

Middleweight Bracket

Elimination Round Semi-finals Final
       
      Daniel Sarafian  SUB
      Renee Forte  2  
      Daniel Sarafian  KO
          Sérgio Moraes  1  
      Sérgio Moraes  SUB
      Delson Heleno  1  
      Sérgio Moraes*  UD
   
        Cezar Ferreira  3
      Cezar Ferreira  SUB
      Leonardo Mafra  2  
      Cezar Ferreira  KO
          Thiago Perpétuo  1  
      Thiago Perpétuo  TKO
      Francisco Trinaldo  2  
 

* Damm suffered from kidney problems and was replaced with Vinícius.

* Sarafian got injured after the show and was replaced on the finals by Moraes.

Legend
  Team Vitor
  Team Wanderlei
UD
  Unanimous Decision
MD
  Majority Decision
SD
  Split Decision
SUB
  Submission
(T) KO
  (Technical) Knockout

Finale

Main article: UFC 147

The finale was held at UFC 147 in June and featured the featherweight and middleweight tournament finals.[11] The expected match between the coaches was canceled after Belfort sustained a hand injury while preparing for the fight. Wanderlei Silva rematched Rich Franklin as a replacement in the main event.

References

  1. 1 2 Stupp, Dann; Morgan, John (January 12, 2012). "'TUF: Brazil' features featherweights and middleweights, tourney finals on PPV". MMAJunkie.com. Retrieved February 2, 2012.
  2. Stupp, Dan; Morgan, John (January 15, 2012). "'TUF: Brazil' likely to air on FUEL TV on same day as Brazil's broadcasts". MMAJunkie.com. Retrieved February 2, 2012.
  3. Morgan, John (November 22, 2011). "'The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil' hosts tryouts in December, series debuts in 2012". Retrieved December 13, 2011.
  4. "'TUF: Brazil' premiere streams Sunday at 11:30 p.m. ET, elimination-round matchups set". MMAJunkie.com. March 21, 2012. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  5. "Vitor Belfort, Wanderlei Silva named coaches of 'The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil'". MMAJunkie.com. December 13, 2011. Retrieved December 13, 2011.
  6. Holland, Jesse (November 22, 2011). "The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) Brazil open casting call for Dec. 14 in Sao Paulo". MMAMania.com. Retrieved December 13, 2011.
  7. "TUF Application Brazil". UFC. Retrieved February 2, 2012.
  8. Cruz, Guilherme (January 30, 2012). "Vitor Belfort chooses coaches for "TUF Brazil"". TATAME.com. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  9. Ferreira, Eduardo (January 30, 2012). "Wanderlei calls Werdum, Babalu among coaches for "TUF Brazil"". TATAME.com. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  10. Martin, Damon (March 28, 2012). "TUF Brazil debut draws 12 million viewers, UFC President calls out rival network". Yahoo Sports / MMAWeekly.com. Retrieved March 29, 2012.
  11. "'The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil' cast unveiled with 32 featherweights and middleweights". MMAJunkie.com. March 12, 2012. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
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