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Two Staters debuted in mixed martial arts card fights

April 5 fights brought in largest crowd ever, making the experience 'indescribable.'

Katie Wiles

Issue date: 4/9/08 Section: News
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Cody Nehl (top), a 2006 SDSU graduate, lands a punch across the face of Chris Felderman during the first round of their 230 pound weight match in the Ultimate Cage Fight held at the Swiftel Center on Saturday, April 5. Nehl won the fight by tapout, 37 seconds into the second round.
Media Credit: Stephen Brua
Cody Nehl (top), a 2006 SDSU graduate, lands a punch across the face of Chris Felderman during the first round of their 230 pound weight match in the Ultimate Cage Fight held at the Swiftel Center on Saturday, April 5. Nehl won the fight by tapout, 37 seconds into the second round.

Over 800 amateur mixed martial arts fans flooded the Swiftel Center April 5 to watch 13 card fights, a championship match and a card girl contest during FURY Ultimate Cage Fighting's fourth appearance in Brookings.

The main event featured Chuck Parmelee defending his welterweight title as he defeated Adam Borgen. Parmelee is most famous for his fight against Ultimate Fighting Championship's Houston Alexander.

SDSU senior Justin Hoflock, a microbiology major, said the title fight was the fight he came to see.

"When someone has a big win like that under his belt, you have to go watch them in action to see what they can do," he said. "A win like that can help move a fighter from the amateur circle into the professional field."

Former SDSU student Cody Nehl, a former Jackrabbit wrestler, made his debut in the octagon Saturday as he defeated Brookings' Chris Felderman in two rounds in the 230-weight class.

Nehl said he is a fan of the fighting and needed to prove to himself that he could compete.

"I've always had it in my head that I could do exactly what I've been watching on TV, but for me, to truly believe something, I need proof, physical proof. That's why I did it," Nehl said.

Nehl's physical training consisted of running and heavy lifting but said mentally training was difficult.

"Mentally, [I] was telling myself I'm fine. Reassurance is the key word; it's 99 percent mental," he said.

Junior economics major Matt Grimlie also made his firstĀ appearance in the octagon. Grimlie, a former Jackrabbit football player, beat Preston Walls in the 205-weight class.

"It's something I've always wanted to give a shot. I love to compete," Grimlie said." I've always been a fan of the UFC, and the opportunity to train for it presented itself at the right time."
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watch-street-fights

posted 6/18/08 @ 2:05 AM CST

Hi all great information here and good thread to comment on.

Can I ask though - how did you get this picked up and into google news?

Very impressive that this blog is syndicated through Google and is it something that is just up to Google or you actively created?

Obviously this is a popular blog with great data so well done on your seo success. (Continued…)

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