Jorge Santiago wins first ever California MMA tournament, Cung Le and Alistair Overeem also win on deep Strikeforce card

Former kickboxing champion Cung Le (5-0) earns a 3rd round TKO over Ultimate Fighter 2 reality show contestant Sam Morgan (19-9) on the Strikeforce MMA card, November 16th at HP Pavilion in San Jose (Photo: Jon Swenson).
American Top Team's Jorge Santiago (16-7) stopped strong collegiate wrestler Sean Salmon (14-5) with a flying knee 24 seconds into his opening fight, before outslugging All-American collegiate wrestler and current BodogFight middleweight champion Trevor Prangley (17-5) to capture the first ever sanctioned single day mixed martial arts tournament held in California. Santiago and Prangley traded toe-to-toe for most of the first round, before a punch/knee combo sent Prangley sprawling to the mat. "I have been studying his game for a while. I knew he was going to try and put me down and drop some bombs. I knew I would meet him sooner or later" Strikeforce Middleweight Tournament champion Jorge Santiago said. It was a high profile pair of wins for the 26-year old, whose last victory came via submission against UFC veteran Jeremy Horn.
Sean Salmon was a late replacement for Yuki Sasaki, who was ruled ineligible for the tournament the day of the event by the California State Athletic Commision. Salmon laid motionless for several minutes after the 24 second KO by Santiago in the first tournament fight. What initially looked like Salmon making an effort to get up off the mat was later labeled by the CSAC as minor convulsions. Salmon previously suffered a brutal knockout loss from a high kick by Rashad Evans in January's UFC Fight Night 8.
The opening round tournament fight between Trevor Prangley and Hawaiian Falaniko Vitale (24-8) was possibly the most evenly matched of the evening. The dominant wrestler Prangley was stuffed on several takedown attempts by Vitale, who showed excellent balance. Falaniko lands a hard knee in the clinch that drew blood from the nose of Prangley. Both fighters are patient, and content to exchange very heavy shots for the remainder of the first. In the second round, Prangley leans Vitale against the cage, and an errant punch to the eye of Vitale causes the referee to stop the fight. The scorecards called for a majority draw (19-19, 19-19, 20-18), but the Strikeforce tournament rules gave the referee the final decision. Referee Marcos Rosales gave Trevor Prangley the win, and a berth in the tournament finale against Jorge Santiago.
In the Strikeforce main event, K-1 and San Shou kickboxing champion Cung Le (5-0)battered Ultimate Fighter 2 reality show contestant Sam "The Squeeze" Morgan (19-9) before Morgan eventually succumbed to a devestating liver kick 1:58 into the third round. Le's entertaining array of kicks and takedowns were again on display against Morgan. "The Squeeze" attempted to close the distance early, but Le was able to land a number of kicks from outside and take down Morgan at will. Cung Le had a difficult time attempting submissions on the ground, and after the fight he acknowledged that it is still an area of his game that he is not comfortable with.
In the semi-main event, Alistair "Demolition Man" Overeem (26-11) faced off against popular San Jose striker Paul "the Headhunter" Buentello (23-10) for the vacant Strikeforce Heavyweight title. It was a step up in weight for Overeem, which led many to suspect he would stand and trade punches with Buentello early. Instead, Overeem took down Buentello at will and took his time trying to sink in several different chokes and submission attempts. Buentello's experience showed on the ground as he was able to work his way out of danger a number of times, but just getting to his feet was a monumental task. In the second round, two hard knees to the body dropped Buentello to the ground where he tapped out. In post-fight interviews with media, Alistair went into great detail about the "Alistene" neck choke he created and tried unsuccessfully to use against Paul Buentello. He also said the competing in San Jose was a good change of pace from fighting in Japan, he previously competed in Japan for K-1 Hero's and the Pride Fighting Championships. In 2006, Alistair Overeem made his San Jose debut with a 5-round decision win over Vitor Belfort on the Strikeforce "Revenge" card.
The Strikeforce/BodogFight "Four men enter, One man Survives" promotion was the second Strikeforce MMA event streamed online for Yahoo Sports. The online stream was blacked out in the Bay Area, but free for those outside of Northern California. The event archive is available for viewing on Yahoo here.
Full Strikeforce results:
Strikeforce/BodogFight "Four men enter, One man survives"
November 16th, 2007
HP Pavilion, San Jose
Attendance: 8,233
Dennis Hallman def Jeremiah Metcalf submission (1-1:39)
Chris Drumm def Evan Esguerra no contest
Alex Crispin def Clint Coronel unanimous decision
Anthony Figueroa def Pete Sabala split decision
Eric Lawson def Josh Neal submission (2-0:20, RNC)
Jorge Santiago def Sean Salmon KO (1-0:24)
Trevor Prangley referee decision Falaniko Vitale (2-2:12)
Luke Stewart def Bryson Kamaka KO (1-0:19,)
Anthony Ruiz def Bobby Southworth TKO (2-0:59, cut)
Lemont Davis def Brian Schwartz unanimous decision
Alistair Overeem def Paul Buentello submission
Jorge Santiago def Trevor Prangley TKO (1-2:31)
Cung Le def Sam Morgan TKO (3-1:58)