Midnight Mania: THIS IS AMERICA!

Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Bringing you the weird and wild from the world of MMA each and every weeknight! Welcome to Midnight Mania!
Times have changed inside the Octagon.
It wasn’t all that long …


UFC 2024 Seasonal Press Conference
Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Bringing you the weird and wild from the world of MMA each and every weeknight!

Welcome to Midnight Mania!

Times have changed inside the Octagon.

It wasn’t all that long ago that UFC and MMA were fighting to be seen as a legitimate sport. Athletes were presented at their best and demanded to uphold a certain level of professionalism. For example: does anyone remember the controversy of transgender fighter Fallon Fox way back in 2013? Heavyweight “Meathead” Matt Mitrione made some aggressive comments on a podcast — not even the actual UFC broadcast — and found himself suspended by the “appalled” organization. Two days later, UFC released a full Code of Conduct for its athletes.

Here’s an excerpt: “Fighters shall conduct themselves in accordance with commonly accepted standards of decency, social convention, and morals, and fighters will not commit any act or become involved in any situation or occurrence or make any statement which will reflect negatively upon or bring disrepute, contempt, scandal, ridicule or disdain to the fighter or the UFC.”

How about a notably banned course of action in the code of conduct? “Derogatory or offensive conduct, including without limitation insulting language, symbols, or actions about a person’s ethnic background, heritage, color, race, national origin, age, religion, disability, gender or sexual orientation.”

In 2011, a former champion was fired for making crappy rape jokes on Twitter. In 2021, Israel Adesanya’s similar comments didn’t get a lick of attention from the promotion, even when the New Zealand government did take notice.

At some point, that code of conduct was thrown the window. Former Middleweight champion Sean Strickland’s anti-LGBT comments prior to UFC 297 have reignited the conversation, and UFC CEO Dana White addressed the situation during an appearance on “The TRUTH Podcast” with Vivek Ramaswamy. Nowadays, UFC is a bastion of free speech … unless you’re hoping to walk out with one specific flag.

“We had a guy early on when the COVID thing started, Tyron Woodley. He came out in Black Lives Matter everything. I think he had Black Lives Matter socks on, covered head to toe in Black Lives Matter,” White began (via MMA Junkie). “At the press conference leading up to his fight, they would ask him a question and he would say, ‘Black Lives Matter.’ They’d ask him another one, (he’d answer) ‘Black Lives Matter.’ I didn’t say s—t to him, knock yourself out …

“This is America. Everybody can have their own opinion. I’m not telling anybody what to do, what to say, what to think, how to feel. We’re human beings in America, do your thing, knock yourself out, I’ve got the platform. People get pissed off, people get offended, people get this and that. We just had it happen with Sean Strickland.

“We’re up in Canada. Sean Strickland said a lot of things. I don’t agree with 95 percent of what this guy says, but it’s his right to say it. And if you don’t like it, tune in on Saturday night, he’s gonna get punched in the face. If you don’t like him, you get to see him get punched in the face, so there you go. Don’t get too upset and don’t take it too serious.”

Strickland ended up coughing up his belt at UFC 297 to Dricus Du Plessis, but the loss has done little to quiet him down. Ultimately, White’s response to the situation clarifies what we mostly already know about the UFC in 2024: anything goes, for better or worse. Although it is pretty weird how the promotion edited Islam Makhachev’s UFC 294 post-fight speech, removing the champion’s call to stop the violence in Palestine before posting his interview on YouTube.

Insomnia

A large skull isn’t the only similarity between Tito Ortiz and Henry Cejudo. Although, there is no other scenario where I would be willingly sharing a Cejudo advertisement, so maybe it’s a thoughtful display of brilliance?

Undefeated 26-year-old boxing champion Shakur Stevenson says he’s retiring from professional competition. Think he fights in the next six months?

I have no way of verifying this, but Twitter says Renato Moicano learned English from Call Of Duty. I’m choosing to believe.

SUMO!

Forget UFC 300, this is the real UFC showcase in April.

There’s no chance Tony Ferguson tore his MCL during David Goggins’ Hell Week, right? No chance at all?

A pair of legendary fighters and their portrait photographs:

Slips, rips, and KO clips

That was … not a great takedown attempt. Slick spinning back kicks though!

Getting calf kicked by an opponent who appears to be 50ish pounds heavier seems f—king terrible.

Great placement on this body shot:

Random Land

Oh nuts.

Midnight Music: A request/submission from my mom.

Sleep well Maniacs! More martial arts madness is always on the way.

Midnight Mania: THIS IS AMERICA!

Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Bringing you the weird and wild from the world of MMA each and every weeknight! Welcome to Midnight Mania!
Times have changed inside the Octagon.
It wasn’t all that long …


UFC 2024 Seasonal Press Conference
Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Bringing you the weird and wild from the world of MMA each and every weeknight!

Welcome to Midnight Mania!

Times have changed inside the Octagon.

It wasn’t all that long ago that UFC and MMA were fighting to be seen as a legitimate sport. Athletes were presented at their best and demanded to uphold a certain level of professionalism. For example: does anyone remember the controversy of transgender fighter Fallon Fox way back in 2013? Heavyweight “Meathead” Matt Mitrione made some aggressive comments on a podcast — not even the actual UFC broadcast — and found himself suspended by the “appalled” organization. Two days later, UFC released a full Code of Conduct for its athletes.

Here’s an excerpt: “Fighters shall conduct themselves in accordance with commonly accepted standards of decency, social convention, and morals, and fighters will not commit any act or become involved in any situation or occurrence or make any statement which will reflect negatively upon or bring disrepute, contempt, scandal, ridicule or disdain to the fighter or the UFC.”

How about a notably banned course of action in the code of conduct? “Derogatory or offensive conduct, including without limitation insulting language, symbols, or actions about a person’s ethnic background, heritage, color, race, national origin, age, religion, disability, gender or sexual orientation.”

In 2011, a former champion was fired for making crappy rape jokes on Twitter. In 2021, Israel Adesanya’s similar comments didn’t get a lick of attention from the promotion, even when the New Zealand government did take notice.

At some point, that code of conduct was thrown the window. Former Middleweight champion Sean Strickland’s anti-LGBT comments prior to UFC 297 have reignited the conversation, and UFC CEO Dana White addressed the situation during an appearance on “The TRUTH Podcast” with Vivek Ramaswamy. Nowadays, UFC is a bastion of free speech … unless you’re hoping to walk out with one specific flag.

“We had a guy early on when the COVID thing started, Tyron Woodley. He came out in Black Lives Matter everything. I think he had Black Lives Matter socks on, covered head to toe in Black Lives Matter,” White began (via MMA Junkie). “At the press conference leading up to his fight, they would ask him a question and he would say, ‘Black Lives Matter.’ They’d ask him another one, (he’d answer) ‘Black Lives Matter.’ I didn’t say s—t to him, knock yourself out …

“This is America. Everybody can have their own opinion. I’m not telling anybody what to do, what to say, what to think, how to feel. We’re human beings in America, do your thing, knock yourself out, I’ve got the platform. People get pissed off, people get offended, people get this and that. We just had it happen with Sean Strickland.

“We’re up in Canada. Sean Strickland said a lot of things. I don’t agree with 95 percent of what this guy says, but it’s his right to say it. And if you don’t like it, tune in on Saturday night, he’s gonna get punched in the face. If you don’t like him, you get to see him get punched in the face, so there you go. Don’t get too upset and don’t take it too serious.”

Strickland ended up coughing up his belt at UFC 297 to Dricus Du Plessis, but the loss has done little to quiet him down. Ultimately, White’s response to the situation clarifies what we mostly already know about the UFC in 2024: anything goes, for better or worse. Although it is pretty weird how the promotion edited Islam Makhachev’s UFC 294 post-fight speech, removing the champion’s call to stop the violence in Palestine before posting his interview on YouTube.

Insomnia

A large skull isn’t the only similarity between Tito Ortiz and Henry Cejudo. Although, there is no other scenario where I would be willingly sharing a Cejudo advertisement, so maybe it’s a thoughtful display of brilliance?

Undefeated 26-year-old boxing champion Shakur Stevenson says he’s retiring from professional competition. Think he fights in the next six months?

I have no way of verifying this, but Twitter says Renato Moicano learned English from Call Of Duty. I’m choosing to believe.

SUMO!

Forget UFC 300, this is the real UFC showcase in April.

There’s no chance Tony Ferguson tore his MCL during David Goggins’ Hell Week, right? No chance at all?

A pair of legendary fighters and their portrait photographs:

Slips, rips, and KO clips

That was … not a great takedown attempt. Slick spinning back kicks though!

Getting calf kicked by an opponent who appears to be 50ish pounds heavier seems f—king terrible.

Great placement on this body shot:

Random Land

Oh nuts.

Midnight Music: A request/submission from my mom.

Sleep well Maniacs! More martial arts madness is always on the way.