Former Augsburg wrestler Roger "El Matador" Huerta (20-3-1 1NC) returns to the cage and the national spotlight on Thursday night, but not for the UFC where he became a well-known name in the mixed martial arts world.
Huerta, the 26-year-old former St Paul resident is looking to get his career back on track by running through the competition in Bellator Fighting Championships and their upcoming lightweight tournament, where he has the chance to win $100,000 and a shot at Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez (19-2).
"Bellator provided me with a sense of security," Huerta recently told Sherdog.com. "I control my own destiny in the tournament. The winner gets to face one of the best lightweight fighters in the world -- that's the goal. If I lose, then it's my fault. It's on me and I can deal with that."
Bellator's second season of television starts tomorrow night on the Fox Sports Network and will usually air at 7 p.m. central time. Tomorrow's season debut airs locally on Fox Sports North after the Wild game at 11:30 p.m. (Wild are at Calgary, so it is a west coast start).
The main event with feature Huerta taking on undefeated fighter Chad Hinton (6-0), a 38-year-old native of Cincinnati, Ohio. The event takes place live from the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla.
"It's like March Madness," Huerta told Sports Illustrated's Joss Gross. "The best team is going to win. It's perfect for me."
Huerta overcame tremendous personal odds, including being an orphan and homeless at age 11, to become a rising star in UFC in 2008. He has the distinction of being the only mixed martial arts fighter ever to grace the cover of Sports Illustrated. With his good looks and personable demeanor, people expected he would be the key focus of UFC's marketing campaigns as it expanded into the Latin American markets.