POPULARITY
Idag har vi med oss fd MMA-fighter, nuvarande thaiboxaren, kommentator, podcaster, John Guidetti/ Jax Teller( Sons of anarchy)- look a like, och all-round kampsports-konnässören Alexander Brodal för att snacka upp inför Superior Academy där han även är kommentator. Vad som såg ut som ett dystert öde för organisationen Superior Challenge kan komma att vända efter i helgen då nytt liv blåses in i organisationen motsvarande affärsvärldens HLR. Vi pratar om vilka matcher vi gillar bäst, och så passar vi även på att prata lite UFC 306 som är ett Saudiarabiskt-sponsrat mexikanskt kort som äger rum inuti en dyr boll i Las Vegas. Rondvilan på sociala medier: Rondvilan YouTube Rondvilan Instagram Rondvilan TikTok (00:00) Intro (01:10) Brodal kommer in (06:00) Hur Brodal är involverad i SC (09:19) Vad Superior Academy har för betydelse (13:20) Hajdarpasic vs Houlton (18:11) Akrami vs Ashirov (23:24) Wallberg vs Söderberg (29:20) Karlsson vs Karlsson (33:19) Petrus vs Larsson (37:20) Castro Gonzalez vs Forsberg (41:07) Larsson vs Amaev (45:31) Akbari vs Pollack (47:12) Brodals picks, Hansen vs Jönsson (50:53) Alis picks, Shamilev vs Tokhirov, Berggren vs Elmer (56:15) Var man ser Superior Academy (56:55) Lyssnarfrågor (57:06) Tankar om Anzor Shamilev? (57:39) Har Brodal sprungit göteborgsvarvet? (58:10) Var äter man största kanelbullen i GBG? (58:18) Ska Brodal kommentera alla galor? (58:54) När ser vi Brodal, Faraj och Vendel-Martinez kommentera tillsammans? (1:00:37) Varför vägrar Linus Jönsson hämta faden? (1:01:00) Tror du galan blir av? (1:01:18) Vilken blir kvällens fight? (1:02:50) UFC 306 (1:04:51) O´Malley vs Dvalishvili (1:09:12) Grasso vs Schevchenko (1:12:09) Ortega vs Lopes (1:16:20) Chiwiwis
Vi gästas av den populära Nermin Hajdarpasic och kollegan Joel Johnsson. Nermin Hajdarpasic kommer att möta Alexander Poppeck på Oktagon 34 den 15 oktober. Poppeck har tävlat i stora organisationer som PFL och Dana Whites Contender Series och är utan tvekan en svår, meriterad motståndare. Hajdarpasic har fullt fokus på Poppeck och gillar möjligheten att slå igenom till en internationell publik, men han tar sig även tiden att besvara rivalernas utmaningar. Vi fick även äran att höra lite mer om Joel Johnsson från Eskilstuna som tog SM guld 2021 och har andra stora framgångar inom boxningen. Programmet leds av ZebbZebba & Andres.
Anton Hellström är på besök i studion och firar med oss avsnitt 200!! Vi snackar lite om hans kommande fight på FCR 12. Vi ringer även upp Nermin som gör comeback mot Fatih Aktas, En returmatch för att tysta ner alla en gång för alla, sägerNermin. Via sitt Intagram-konto har Aktas klargjort att det är tid för hämnd. Enjoy!!
Telefonsamtal med Nermin Hajdarpasic angående Irmans Smajic nya skada samt Kevin Munje call out...
I dagens avsnitt av Kampsportskanalen Podcast pratar vi om följande: Våra tankar ifrån FCR 9 i Västerås. Att SM-mästaren Hajdarpasic chockartat nog blev sänkt!· Varför Hajdarpasic vs. Smajic är en gigantisk match med svenska mått. Det tråkiga slutet på den annars lyckade boxningsgalan i Leeds. Varför Derek Brunson gjorde exakt det Jack Hermansson borde fått göra, när han besegrade Darren Till. Oscars oväntade anbud om en filmroll i höst. Att ännu en boxare ifrån Canelo Alvarez gym blivit tagen för doping. Paddy Pimbletts nya stjärnglans. · Det humoristiska i att de gamla rivalerna George Groves och Carl Froch ska ut på turné. Ni hittar podden här uppe i spelaren men även på bland annat Spotify, Podbean och Itunes.Följ oss på Instagram, Twitter och Facebook! Get on the email list at kampsportskanalen.substack.com
Vi gästas av SM-kungen i boxning och tungviktaren Nermin Hajdarpasic i ett HETSIGT avsnitt! Nermin ska fightas mot Fatih Aktas på FCR 9, men erkänner själv att han knappt är motiverad för den matchen. Han har nämligen siktet inställt på Irman Smajic istället och det bokstavligen kokar i studion när han får höra vad rivalen har att säga. Är det en hatmatch på gång? Detta och mycket mer är temat för dagens podd.
It seemed that everyone wanted Bosnia in the late nineteenth century: Serbian and Croatian nationalists; Ottoman, Habsburg, Muslim and Yugoslav movements. At the same time, they all felt frustration with the Bosnian peasants for not living up to their nationalist and political imaginations. In Whose Bosnia? National and Political Imagination in the Balkans (Cornell University Press, 2015),Edin Hajdarpasic makes a number of arguments about how we understand nationalism and political movements in contested spaces. By exploring how these different movements defined Bosnia and Bosnians, crafted narratives of suffering and engaged youth, he argues that nationalism was a productive, open-ended force even in the face of seeming failures to achieve the nationalists’ goals. Hajdarpasic discusses these themes, as well as “nation-compulsion” which he defined as “a set of political and moral imperatives that one grapples with as part of becoming and maintaining oneself as a proper patriot.” Edin Hajdarpasic is Associate Professor of History at Loyola University Chicago, where he teaches courses in Western Civilization; the modern Balkans; nineteenth-century Europe; and the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It seemed that everyone wanted Bosnia in the late nineteenth century: Serbian and Croatian nationalists; Ottoman, Habsburg, Muslim and Yugoslav movements. At the same time, they all felt frustration with the Bosnian peasants for not living up to their nationalist and political imaginations. In Whose Bosnia? National and Political Imagination in the Balkans (Cornell University Press, 2015),Edin Hajdarpasic makes a number of arguments about how we understand nationalism and political movements in contested spaces. By exploring how these different movements defined Bosnia and Bosnians, crafted narratives of suffering and engaged youth, he argues that nationalism was a productive, open-ended force even in the face of seeming failures to achieve the nationalists’ goals. Hajdarpasic discusses these themes, as well as “nation-compulsion” which he defined as “a set of political and moral imperatives that one grapples with as part of becoming and maintaining oneself as a proper patriot.” Edin Hajdarpasic is Associate Professor of History at Loyola University Chicago, where he teaches courses in Western Civilization; the modern Balkans; nineteenth-century Europe; and the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It seemed that everyone wanted Bosnia in the late nineteenth century: Serbian and Croatian nationalists; Ottoman, Habsburg, Muslim and Yugoslav movements. At the same time, they all felt frustration with the Bosnian peasants for not living up to their nationalist and political imaginations. In Whose Bosnia? National and Political Imagination in the Balkans (Cornell University Press, 2015),Edin Hajdarpasic makes a number of arguments about how we understand nationalism and political movements in contested spaces. By exploring how these different movements defined Bosnia and Bosnians, crafted narratives of suffering and engaged youth, he argues that nationalism was a productive, open-ended force even in the face of seeming failures to achieve the nationalists’ goals. Hajdarpasic discusses these themes, as well as “nation-compulsion” which he defined as “a set of political and moral imperatives that one grapples with as part of becoming and maintaining oneself as a proper patriot.” Edin Hajdarpasic is Associate Professor of History at Loyola University Chicago, where he teaches courses in Western Civilization; the modern Balkans; nineteenth-century Europe; and the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It seemed that everyone wanted Bosnia in the late nineteenth century: Serbian and Croatian nationalists; Ottoman, Habsburg, Muslim and Yugoslav movements. At the same time, they all felt frustration with the Bosnian peasants for not living up to their nationalist and political imaginations. In Whose Bosnia? National and Political Imagination in the Balkans (Cornell University Press, 2015),Edin Hajdarpasic makes a number of arguments about how we understand nationalism and political movements in contested spaces. By exploring how these different movements defined Bosnia and Bosnians, crafted narratives of suffering and engaged youth, he argues that nationalism was a productive, open-ended force even in the face of seeming failures to achieve the nationalists’ goals. Hajdarpasic discusses these themes, as well as “nation-compulsion” which he defined as “a set of political and moral imperatives that one grapples with as part of becoming and maintaining oneself as a proper patriot.” Edin Hajdarpasic is Associate Professor of History at Loyola University Chicago, where he teaches courses in Western Civilization; the modern Balkans; nineteenth-century Europe; and the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It seemed that everyone wanted Bosnia in the late nineteenth century: Serbian and Croatian nationalists; Ottoman, Habsburg, Muslim and Yugoslav movements. At the same time, they all felt frustration with the Bosnian peasants for not living up to their nationalist and political imaginations. In Whose Bosnia? National and Political Imagination in the Balkans (Cornell University Press, 2015),Edin Hajdarpasic makes a number of arguments about how we understand nationalism and political movements in contested spaces. By exploring how these different movements defined Bosnia and Bosnians, crafted narratives of suffering and engaged youth, he argues that nationalism was a productive, open-ended force even in the face of seeming failures to achieve the nationalists’ goals. Hajdarpasic discusses these themes, as well as “nation-compulsion” which he defined as “a set of political and moral imperatives that one grapples with as part of becoming and maintaining oneself as a proper patriot.” Edin Hajdarpasic is Associate Professor of History at Loyola University Chicago, where he teaches courses in Western Civilization; the modern Balkans; nineteenth-century Europe; and the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices