Ban Knee Kicks? UFC Fighters Weigh In

Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Khalil Rountree’s nasty TKO (injury) victory over Modestas Bukauskas at UFC Vegas 36 has some UFC fighters calling for a rules change to ban kicks to the knee. There were a lot of great mo…


UFC Fight Night: Bukauskas v Rountree
Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Khalil Rountree’s nasty TKO (injury) victory over Modestas Bukauskas at UFC Vegas 36 has some UFC fighters calling for a rules change to ban kicks to the knee.

There were a lot of great moments during this weekend’s UFC Vegas 36 event, from Paddy “The Baddy” Pimblett’s wild debut to “Meatball” Molly McCann gutsing out a solid Fight of the Night win. Tom Aspinall also upgraded himself from prospect to contender with a first round TKO win. All in all, even with Darren Till losing in the main event, you have to consider this card a major success for the UFC and UK.

On the other side of the equation, it was definitely a bad day for Lithuania’s Modestas Bukauskas, who dropped his third UFC fight in a row. Bukauskas suffered a horrific broken nose at the hands of Khalil Rountree and then an even more horrific knee injury when Rountree hit him with an oblique kick, one of the most controversial moves in the sport (watch the highlights here).

What is the oblique kick? It’s basically when you push kick someone in the knee hoping to blow out the surrounding ligaments. And on Saturday afternoon at the UFC Apex, Rountree landed a perfect oblique kick that did just that: the ringside physician told the UFC broadcasters they believed Bukauskas tore his ACL, MCL, and PCL.

A solitary ACL or MCL tear can keep an athlete out of the cage for a year, so you can imagine the complete nuclear destruction of the entire knee puts some serious fear into the hearts of UFC fighters. Following Rountree’s win, a debate broke out across the internet amongst fans on whether the oblique kick should be illegal. To us, we’re more interested in hearing what other UFC competitors think.

“If this one lands, it’s definitely blowing out your knee,” Alan Joubain said on the ESPN post show. “So I don’t think we need it any more.”

“Dana White, please protect me, change this rule,” Belal Muhammad added. “You gotta protect your stars, here.”

Amongst the UFC roster watching the fights, opinions were varied — although they definitely lean towards having the oblique kick banned.

Interestingly enough, no word on social media from Jon Jones, who is one of the most famous oblique kickers in the game.

What do you think, Maniacs? Should oblique kicks / knee attacks be banned? Or is it just another part of the game fighters need to be ready for?