Disenchanted
evening
It's what happens when UF students go on a blind date

Dating-success
security
The first date went well, find out if there's a future

Crafty
Casanova
Tips on being the right guy just long enough to get laid

Shooting
for the stars
A UF grad tries to push his rock band to a national level

Workin'
on a mystery
The truth about Tom Petty's "American Girl"

Powered-up
soundtracks
Music lineup of your ups and downs and all-arounds
Bodybuilding
obsession
The extremes men take in their quest for perfection
 
Take a lap,
gimme 20
How one student makes money as a stripper

Caged
Animal
In class, Jason Braswell is tame. But in the ring, he's brutal.

Written by Jason Backlund
Photographed by Courtney Harris

Legend
of the fall
Teddy Dupay left the sports pages; not the arena

Tranquility
through shape
Yoga: a stress-relieving activity

Cheerleading
pride
A third-year cheerleader's view on cheering for UF

Klondike
antics
People do attention-grabbing feats for ice cream

No lines, no wait,
no cover
Restaurants and bars you may not know

Past issues
Fall 2001
Spring 2001
Fall 1999
Spring 1999
Fall 1998

Music sites
BMG.com
MTV.com
VirginRecords.com


Health/Nutrition
GNC.com
Eatright.org
Food & Nutrition

Student publications
Florida Alligator
Gator Times
Gator Standard

Search O&B

O&B Staff

Contact Us


It's fight night.

The venue is Desperados.

The night club is a vast space bordered with bars and pool tables. Rows of empty folding chairs surround the cage, all of which are centered on a wooden dance floor. A dormant, mechanical horse sits beside the main entrance. Patrons are beginning to file in through the double doors. They're coming to see the Dixie Rumble, a No-Holds-Barred competition.

Martial artists, wrestlers, and boxers will have the chance to go head-to-head in the controlled chaos that lends itself to names like "Extreme Fighting" and "Ultimate Fighting." The competitors come from all around the Southeast to test their skills against the best in the sport.

Braswell, 22, is competing for the second time.

"I kind of picked this up on a whim," Braswell says. "Now I'm pretty much hooked."

Braswell started training for NHB competition in the summer of 2001. Before that, his focus was primarily his school work. He holds bachelor's degrees in math and philosophy and is working toward a master's degree in math from the University of Florida.

"He's one of the smartest people I know," says Lee, who runs the F2 Arena NHB team. "It's funny because he's this big, intimidating guy, but when you talk to him you see how intelligent and soft spoken he is."

Braswell's intelligence is an asset in the ring. An hour before the first fight, he is tuning his analytical mind to the coming task. At 5 feet 11 inches and 225 pounds, he will be fighting in one of the toughest weight classes.

© Orange & Blue Magazine 2002