The Indestructible Man

Filed under: StrikeforceSAN JOSE, Calif. — The first kid begins to cry less than an hour into practice. Everyone can see it coming. That trembling lower lip, that frustrated stomp of the feet. When the tears finally start, twisting his face into a lit…

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SAN JOSE, Calif. — The first kid begins to cry less than an hour into practice. Everyone can see it coming. That trembling lower lip, that frustrated stomp of the feet. When the tears finally start, twisting his face into a little ball of anguish, no one seems particularly surprised.

“No crying today,” says his coach, Daniel Cormier. Is there even a hint of sympathy in his voice? There is not. Neither is there anger nor impatience. There is only a sense that this is what we are doing because this is what must be done, and crying never won a single wrestling match.

The kid, who is maybe ten or eleven years old, does his best to stay strong. He sniffs hard, trying to suck all the tears and snot and shame back into his face, but there’s little time to compose himself. Already Cormier is signaling for his next tormentor to step to the center of the mat and resume the storm of takedowns that has brought him to this point. The kid can’t take much more of this. The kid is losing it.

“No crying,” Cormier reminds him before turning his attention to the new opponent who’s just joined the fray, fresh and eager. “Now,” he says to the new boy, motioning him toward his blubbering, red-faced teammate, “Break him!”

And where are the parents? The parents are there. They’re leaning over the back wall of what was once a racquetball court, watching their boys learn to play rough. They knew what they were signing their kids up for. This isn’t Little League. It’s not one of those youth soccer leagues, all orange wedges at halftime and equal playing time for everyone. This is Tuesday night youth wrestling practice at the American Kickboxing Academy’s sprawling two-story gym in the South Bay, and Cormier at the helm, it’s serious business.

This particular drill — one kid in the middle, with fresh opponents cycling in every minute until he can barely stand — is not so much about improving technique as it is about learning how to take your ass-whipping like a man. And who better to teach it than Cormier, a former U.S. Olympic wrestling team captain and current top-ten ranked, undefeated MMA fighter, who sees no apparent contradiction between imploring one kid to keep it together and, in the very next breath, instructing the other to take him apart?

“Okay, okay,” he says once the exhausted crying kid has been planted on his back yet again. “Let him up. Let him up, but stay on him.”

This is one part of the drill all the boys have down by now. As they climb off their foe and watch him stagger to his feet, they shove him away with all the gusto of kids finally getting to do something that’s forbidden everywhere else in their lives. No pushing? In the lunch line at school, maybe. Not here. Here they shove. Here they grab him by the head and fling him around. His fatigue has rendered him almost completely helpless, and they’re loving it.

Until it’s their turn, anyway. And everybody’s turn is coming, as Cormier reminds them when they’re fighting back tears of frustration and exhaustion near the end of the round. Revenge is just around the corner. All you have to do is hold on and wait. All you have to do is not break, even as your 250-pound wrestling coach is standing there, shouting at the other kid to break you.

“That was a huge step forward,” Cormier tells me later, once the exhausted, sweat-soaked ten-year-olds have limped out of the room and into their parents’ waiting minivans outside. “Just getting them not to cry, that’s a huge step.”

The way Cormier sees it, that’s as much a part of what he’s doing with the kids’ wrestling practices as anything else. The techniques they can learn anywhere. But learning the peculiar joy that wrestlers take in breaking an opponent and refusing to be broken themselves? That’s something that the 32-year-old Cormier may be uniquely qualified to teach them.

*****

The temptation in stories like these is to look for the ‘Rosebud’ moment, some defining experience that will explain everything that comes after. More often than not, there isn’t one. For most people, there are several. One piles up on top of another and another and another.

Take Thanksgiving Day, 1986. Cormier is a seven year-old kid growing up in Lafayette, Louisiana, when his father, long since split from Cormier’s mother, is shot and killed by the father of his second wife.

You can almost imagine the way this story goes. Thanksgiving dinner with the in-laws, an argument ensues, things get out of hand. Then bang. You’ve got a tragedy in your living room.

“And the guy walked free,” Cormier says, relating the story now like it happened to somebody else. “I’m sure she was thinking, well, I’ve already lost my husband. I don’t want to lose my father too. Plus, it was his house. You know, self-defense.”

On paper, that seems like the kind of event that would immediately change everything about your life. But really, Cormier says, it was his older brother, who was 19 at the time, who took the brunt of that one, at least for the time being.

“I think I was young enough that I didn’t really know enough to really understand what happened. Then I got older and realized, hey, my dad got murdered. But I was lucky. My parents were divorced, and my stepdad had been there for me since I was about three. He was my father, really. My dad was my dad, but he was my father. He raised me to be the man that I am today.”

As a kid, Cormier was a gifted athlete. Football, basketball — he even won the regional version of the pass, dribble, and shoot competition when he was nine. It was shortly after that when he first discovered wrestling, the sport that would change his life. Back then, however, it was just one of several sports that he excelled at. Not only was Cormier a three-time state champion wrestler in high school, but he was also a standout linebacker on his high school football team. And in Louisiana, football was a religion.

“Our team was terrible, though,” Cormier says. “We’d fight all the time. We were like the Bad News Bears.”

The problem wasn’t so much a lack of talent as a lack of discipline, according to Cormier. Their coach would call one defense and the guys on the defensive line would decide to play another. Everyone led and no one followed.

“I think that left a sour taste in my mouth about football. It was like, man, I have to depend on all these other dudes? Forget this. I’ve never done another team sport after that.”

In wrestling, he didn’t have that problem. He might have been dependent on his teammates in training, but when he walked out on the mats to compete, he was the only one he had to trust. That suited him, and he would end up turning down scholarship offers for football in order to pursue wrestling at Colby Junior College in Kansas.

Soon the awards and the medals began to pile up. He went from a high school state champion to a junior college national champion to an All-American at Oklahoma State. It was more or less a given that he’d wrestle for the U.S. on the international stage, and everything seemed to be going according to plan.

But just as he was gearing up to make the Olympic freestyle squad for the 2004 Athens games, tragedy found its way into his life again. On June 14, 2003, Cormier’s three-month old daughter, Kaedyn, was killed in a car accident after an 18-wheeler slammed into the back of a friend’s car. Kaedyn was strapped into a car seat inside, but it couldn’t save her life during the violent collision that left two others injured.

Cormier was 23 years old at the time. He’d only just gotten a taste of fatherhood, but he loved it. He thought about all the times he’d tried to soothe his crying infant daughter by driving her around the neighborhood, trying to locate a song on the radio that would act as a fitting lullaby. He finally settled on Heather Headley’s R&B ballad, “I Wish I Wasn’t.”

“I don’t know why, maybe the lady’s voice was soothing, but she loved it,” he says. “I’d put it on, drive her around Stillwater, [Oklahoma,] and she’d stop crying, go to sleep.”

After the accident that killed his daughter, Cormier had no choice but to pull it together and get back on the mat. USA Wrestling arranged a special wrestle-off for its world team trials in order to let Cormier grieve. He won it and earned his first spot on the big stage, and again his wrestling career seemed to be the one dependable constant in his life, even as he continued to struggle with the loss of his daughter.

“When she died, I thought, this is the worst thing that can possibly happen,” he says. “Then, the Olympics.”

*****

The people who know Cormier know exactly what he means when he refers to ‘The Olympics.’ Even though he was on two U.S. Olympic wrestling teams, and even though his fourth-place finish in the 2004 games seemed like a heartbreaker at the time, it was nothing compared to 2008 in Beijing.

The important thing to know about what happened in Beijing, Cormier will tell you even now, is that he made the weight. Somehow this gets lost in the telling and re-telling of it, so much so that it still gets brought up by teammates who want to needle him over his diet or physique.

But the fact is that when it came time to step on the scales in Beijing, Cormier made the 211-pound limit. It was what came after that derailed his Olympic dreams.

“I made the weight, and afterwards my body just went insane,” he says. “I was vomiting, cramping. I couldn’t walk. I didn’t know what the hell was going on.”

Cormier collapsed and was taken to the makeshift hospital inside the Olympic village, where doctors put him on IVs all night to treat him for what appeared to be kidney failure. As they explained, it was likely the result of cutting weight the wrong way for so many years, and he was simply unlucky enough to have it catch up with him at the worst possible time. Of course, that explanation didn’t sit well with Cormier.

“I took [the IVs] out and said, ‘I’m going to wrestle.’ It was about eight o’clock. The competition started at nine or ten. The lady from the [United States Olympic Committee] said, ‘Listen, they are not going to let you wrestle. You’ve been on IVs all night. What do you think you’re doing?’ I was all broken up. I was crying. I was a mess. My mom was sitting there crying. My ex[-wife] was crying. Everybody was crying. Everybody was freaking out, because I was just going insane.”

As U.S. wrestling coach Kevin Jackson remembers it, the devastation struck them all at once as they watched Cormier come to grips with the situation.

“I was in the room when they told him he would not be able to wrestle, and the emotions that hit him were overwhelming,” Jackson says. “You know, I teared up. It’s the Olympic Games. Those opportunities don’t come along very often, and he’d had two.”

As Jackson saw it, Cormier had had “a very good chance to wrestle for a gold medal” that year, and now he wouldn’t even make it onto the mat. It was a disappointment not just for Cormier, but for the entire U.S. wrestling community, which wasn’t entirely sympathetic when he returned home.

“It didn’t seem like I got the most support from everybody,” says Cormier. “The USA wrestling people were really mad at me. Kevin Jackson stood by me. He was kind of the only one. He actually lost his job behind all that.”

Jackson resigned his position as head coach after the 2008 games, he says, and the Cormier situation was only part of the reason for it.

“The people he was closest to, who he thought loved and supported him the most, they turned their back on him a little bit,” Jackson says. “They didn’t look at how it affected him; they looked at how it affected them and their program.”

The way they saw it, Cormier had torpedoed their medal hopes with an irresponsible weight-cut.

As Jackson puts it: “The doctor said that eventually it would have happened, and unfortunately it happened at the worst time. It was a consequence of not only losing weight the wrong way, but doing so when he was aware of the right way to do it. That’s the only place I really fault Daniel in this whole situation. He was a professional athlete, an Olympic athlete being paid to wrestle, and he was responsible for being at his best, and this was a part of that. I had been communicating with him about that since 2006, talking about…different things we needed to do, weight-wise. Unfortunately, it came back to haunt us.”

Once he got home, Cormier fell into a deep depression. A few weeks earlier he’d been an Olympic hopeful — one of his country’s best wrestlers. Now the nation’s wrestling apparatus wanted nothing to do with him, and his life suddenly seemed empty and devoid of purpose.

“I felt so alone. It was just me and my family. I had so many breakdowns. My ex would be at work and she’d call me and I’d be crying, so she’d rush home to make sure I didn’t do anything to myself. It was that bad. I just walked around like a zombie. I was taking sleeping pills, pain pills. I just wanted anything to take the pain away. I felt like I’d let everybody down.”

Even now, all you have to do is mention the Olympics to Cormier and you can watch his face fall. At dinner in a hotel a couple nights before his Strikeforce bout against Antonio Silva, AKA teammate Luke Rockhold brought it up to make a point about the futility of Cormier even considering a potential bout at light heavyweight, and that was all it took to get Cormier practically jumping out of his chair.

“It sticks with me to this day,” he says. “I think about it all the time. I mean, the Olympics? I can’t not think about it. And the guys, we can make fun of each other all the time, but when they bring that up it just kills me. It drains me.”

Cormier tried to lead a regular life after that. He had a job selling advertising space at a TV station in Oklahoma. He hated it, because “I felt like a telemarketer,” but it was something. He coached on the side. He thought he would do what every other wrestler did, which was hang around and wait his turn to get a head coaching spot for some college team.

He even tried playing in an adult softball league, just to satisfy the competitive urges. It was no good. Again he was dependent on other people.

“I was dying,” he says. “I was drinking every night after work. I didn’t even leave for lunch anymore. I just stayed in my office and slept.”

Meanwhile, his old wrestling buddy Mo Lawal was in his ear about this MMA stuff, all the money that an elite wrestler could make at it once he learned the basics of the other arts.

“It was crazy. Mo had so much money. He was sending me money. He’s like my little brother, and he’s sending me money. He was fighting every month, and they paid him $48,000 a fight in Japan when he was first starting out.”

Better still, Lawal was getting to compete. He wasn’t dying slowly in an office somewhere. He wasn’t depressed every day, dreading the alarm clock going off the next morning. Dreading tomorrow, next week, next year. Whatever was doing that for him, Cormier had to get a piece. Something had to change.

“You go through so many things, and it’s like one cloudy day after another,” he says. “You think, eventually the sun’s got to shine. A better day has to come. Who deserves to just get beat down into the ground, one bad thing after another?”

*****

You see Cormier these days, and it’s hard to imagine a happier, more well-adjusted person. Not only is he an undefeated heavyweight on the verge of what should be the biggest fight of his career against Josh Barnett in the Strikeforce Grand Prix finals, he’s also AKA’s go-to man when it comes to MMA-specific wrestling — a role he relishes.

Ask AKA head coach Javier Mendez what Cormier changed about the team’s wrestling program, and he’ll tell you: “Everything.”

And though on any given day the training room at AKA includes famous pro fighters who were themselves standout college wrestlers, they all answer to coach Cormier during wrestling practice.

As he takes them through warm-ups just a few days after teammate Cain Velasquez lost his UFC heavyweight title, he’s quick to let everyone know that he’s watching them.

“Why are you walking?” he demands of one teammate who’s strolling from one drill to the next. He might as well be talking to one of his ten-year-olds, but the man isn’t about to argue with Cormier. It goes on like this all afternoon.

Why is Josh Koscheck not doing push-ups with the rest of the team? Why is Todd Duffee taking his time about starting the next round? And Gray Maynard, you can’t really be tired already, can you?

If you’re on the mats at AKA, you’re subject to Cormier’s critical eye. And if you have the misfortune to be close to his weight class, as one unfortunate sparring partner is, you’re about to find out how much he enjoys breaking people even in training.

At first, the guy’s a game opponent. They vie for takedowns and control in the clinch, and he holds his own against Cormier. He even comes close to getting a takedown of his own, which is a sight so rare everyone looks up and stops what they’re doing, as if the London Philharmonic just hit a bad note.

Then the grind starts to get to him. One round after another, this unceasing assault, and you can see it in the way he slowly shuffles over to Cormier to start a new round.

“Stop wasting time,” Cormier shouts before slamming him to the mat. There’s still several minutes on the clock, but this guy is done. He can barely get on his feet long enough to get taken down again, and by the end of practice he’s flat on his back, looking up at Cormier, who’s barely breathing hard.

“I love that,” he says later. “That’s something your wrestling coaches put in you, and you learn that there’s nothing more satisfying than a guy laying on the mat, just done. I’m tired, but when I see him like that, I get a second wind.”

Second winds are coming in many forms for Cormier these days. His MMA career couldn’t be going better, even as he rehabs a broken hand and spends a lot of days sparring with one good hand, “getting blasted” as he learns to make do with a jab and some kicks. He and his girlfriend had a son in February, and he’s now old enough to walk to the door to meet his father when he returns home from practice.

They’ve got another on the way — “Irish twins,” he says with a grin — and even the pain and fear that lingered after his daughter’s death has begun to dissipate, though it hasn’t been easy. When he first drove his son home from the hospital, he says, it hit him harder than he expected.

“I was [expletive] terrified. I didn’t want to go anywhere with him in the car. My girl was in the backseat with him, but I was just so scared. I was driving slow in the rain, people passing me. But guess what song comes on the radio?”

Heather Headley’s “I Wish I Wasn’t,” of course. The same one that used to put his daughter to sleep. The one you almost never hear on the radio in 2011.

“It seemed like it was my daughter saying, ‘It’s going to be okay. I’m going to watch over my little brother.’ That’s when I was like, I think I’m going to do alright by this one. I think it’s going to be okay this time. I’m catching my break.”

And maybe that’s what you learn after all those years in suffocating wrestling rooms, one long grind after another. Besides the double-legs and the duck unders, maybe you really learn the value of simply refusing to be broken. You find out that even when you’re in a terrible position with no clear way out, all you have to do is not give up. You take it. You try and give some back. You keep pushing and you don’t quit, and before you know it you’re on top. You’re winning. The clouds are gone and the sun is shining and the living and the dead are waving you on, telling you to keep going, keep going.

 

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‘Tapped Out’ Author Talks Transformation From Pudgy Writer to Formidable Fighter

The first time I met Matthew Polly he was very, very drunk. I’m sure I’m not the only person who can say this. This was in a hotel restaurant before an IFL event at the Sears Centre in 2007, and I just wanted to eat a chicken caesar salad in peace. Pol…

The first time I met Matthew Polly he was very, very drunk. I’m sure I’m not the only person who can say this. This was in a hotel restaurant before an IFL event at the Sears Centre in 2007, and I just wanted to eat a chicken caesar salad in peace. Polly, however, wanted to talk MMA, which he insisted he was writing a book on (sure you are, pal, I thought), and he wouldn’t take polite silence for an answer.

Needless to say, I don’t remember that first meeting fondly. I doubt Polly remembers it at all.

It wasn’t until months later that I learned Polly was actually the author of a somewhat famous memoir, American Shaolin, about the two years he spent living with the Shaolin monks in China and learning their brand of kung fu. It’s a wonderful, hilarious book, and it was hard for me to believe that the dude who slurred at me in a Marriott outside of Chicago had written it. It was even harder for me to believe that he could write a book about MMA that I’d actually enjoy reading, and yet, with his new book — Tapped Out — he has done just that.

Polly eventually sobered up enough to spend about two years training in the various disciplines that make up MMA, and he even entered into and — spoiler alert — won an amateur MMA bout in Las Vegas. From Renzo Gracie’s jiu-jitsu academy in Manhattan to the Xtreme Couture gym in Vegas, Polly learned from some of the best in MMA and chronicled his experiences in this funny and insightful new book.

In between throwing up on the subway following training sessions and getting yelled at by Xtreme Couture coaches for his terrible diet, Polly actually learned a great deal about this sport and its denizens, and the book is a must-read for any MMA fan (read an excerpt here, then just buy the damn thing here). Recently, I sat down to talk to Polly about the book, his experiences, and the addictive nature of winning even a low-level MMA bout.

Fowlkes: I’ve heard a lot of people say that a book about MMA is a tough sell because MMA fans don’t buy books, and the general book-buying public doesn’t know or care about MMA. What do you say to that?

Polly: In my mind, I wanted to write a book that guys who love mixed martial arts would actually enjoy, but also one they could give to their girlfriend who doesn’t get it — or even their mother — to explain why they love it. So one of the difficulties was trying to write a book that was for the martial arts audience, but also for the mainstream. I wanted to write a book that appealed to the insiders and the outsiders, and that was an issue of tone.

And I guess you feel like you managed to bridge that gap here?

Well, it’s the same division, and that’s one of the interesting things about mixed martial arts. I’ll get an interview with, you know, Bulldog in the Morning, and he turns out to be a secret MMA fan. He knows everything, and when I’m talking to him he runs through all this information and I’m like, you know more about this than I do. Then, when I spent the afternoon with Slate, there’s this woman who basically says, ‘I wouldn’t have read this except I was required to, but I still found it enjoyable.’ That’s really what I hope to do with the book, but it’s really very difficult.

In the book, you present yourself as this guy who would really rather just write about MMA and is initially resistant to the idea of actually doing it yourself. But I read American Shaolin. You’re the same guy who trained with the monks and challenged some kung fu expert to a fight in a restaurant, so what gives?

Part of that’s a conceit of the book. A certain aspect of it was me wanting to set up an unwilling hero going forth and doing something that he didn’t want to do, but a part of me was also genuinely terrified, because I knew how hard it would be to get back into the kind of shape it would take to get into the ring. I knew I would have to change my behavior and my attitude to get in there and fight, and I was genuinely terrified of that.

On the other hand, I was sort of excited because this was an excuse to take one last shot at glory. I don’t think there’s anyone who’s ever fought, as I did before, who doesn’t want one last chance to do it again. As we see with Wanderlei Silva or Cro Cop, when they come to the end of their careers, they still want one last one. I think there was something in me that wanted that as well.

The guy you fought, did he realize you’d be writing about him in this book that has now been written up in The New York Times?

He did, actually. We talked before. He knew I had written a book already and he knew I was writing a book about this experience. I think, to that degree, I had some sympathy for him, because he would end up being a character in my book. I do know what that’s like, having written about myself, but he’s not the author of it, so I did have some sympathy for him there.

Did you ever consider the advantage you had over him? I mean, you’re getting jiu-jitsu lessons from John Danaher, Muay Thai from Phil Nurse, and basically living at Xtreme Couture for a year. Meanwhile, it sounded like he was just a regular guy training at the Air Force base.

Yes, I think it’s, in many ways, absolutely unfair. But you don’t get to choose your opponent. I had the world’s best trainers because that’s what I was paid to do. I was there to go out and find the world’s best trainers to find out if a middle-aged guy could actually get good enough to get in the ring and fight. And he, of course, didn’t have that. There’s definitely an imbalance there, and the question of who the underdog was in the fight is certainly up for debate. He was younger and more vigorous, and I had better training and a certain sort of background that allowed me to, in the end, win. But the one thing I would say is, he came within a fraction of an inch of knocking me out twice. It wasn’t some putz I was fighting. Literally, if the right hand had been turned just a little bit more, I’d have been done. He put on a good match, but in the end I was just slightly better and slightly better trained.

Do you still train at Renzo Gracie’s?

I’m living in New Haven now, but I do [still train]. There’s a little MMA gym that I go to, and I kick the bags and do jiu-jitsu, but one thing I promised my wife is that I will not get hit in the head anymore. I do only have so many brain cells left, and I spent a few on this book project.

I know that you, as I do, like a drink from time to time. Did this require you to make a lot of changes to your lifestyle, aside from when you thought it would be a good idea to drink an orange soda on the day of your fight?

[Xtreme Couture] striking coach Joey Varner still talks about that one. He couldn’t believe that I would drink an orange soda [on the day of the fight]. But in general, I would say that I got better, but I still wasn’t perfect. I ate better, I drank less, I was healthier and clearly worked out much crazier than I ever had before. I went from about 250 pounds when I started the project to fight at 185, so it was a dramatic change in my physical being. I was, you know, taking heart pills before. Over the course of doing this, I met tons of guys who would say, ‘I was a football player, then I ballooned up to 300 pounds when I stopped playing. Then I started doing MMA and I slimmed down to 215.’ So I think, actually, the MMA diet book might be the best book you could put on the market.

I remember reading a newspaper article in Las Vegas about your fight, where the reporter was a little ungenerous in his description of you…

Pudgy, right? He called me ‘pudgy’ like three times, and I remember you wrote asking, ‘Why does he have to keep calling you pudgy?’

Right. But now that you’re putting this book out, and the video of your fight is on the internet, I mean, do you worry about how it’s going to feel to be on the other side of the critical lens, so to speak?

I actually don’t worry about that, because the point wasn’t to turn out to be this great fighter. I mean, there were little moments when I imagined it in the dark closets of my heart, but I knew that my only realistic hope was that I might win one amateur fight. That was my biggest goal, so I wasn’t terrified of people saying, ‘Well, he’s a little overweight.’ That’s kind of the point. I was a very overweight person who became a less overweight person doing this. But you do know, when you put yourself out there, especially in the MMA community, there’s going to be people on the comment boards who will take a swipe at you. Some of them are actually very funny, and then there’s a few that sting a little bit. But overall, it doesn’t bother me.

After you did the fight and you won, did you ever think, well maybe I’ll do another one?

You know, the thing that terrified me the most was that I would lose, because then I would totally want to fight again. I had put myself and also my wife and my family through so much to try and get through this whole book process, that I was scared I might feel like I had to do it again if I didn’t get a win.

That said, the high of winning an MMA fight is unlike the high of winning anything else I’ve ever done. It’s better than any drug. When you’re done, I literally felt like I was walking on air. You’re walking around and women think you’re cute and you’re just the man. It’s this primal thing, and it’s so different from winning a football or basketball game, both of which I’ve done, and they don’t feel the same way at all. I could see the addictiveness of it, and I also know why fighters feel there’s one more in them. You’ll never feel that way again. You’ll never be the center of attention like that once you’re done. Fortunately for me, since it was part of this project, I remember just how horrible the training was, and I’m not tempted to do it again. And the thing with MMA is, every day it’s getting better, so if you win one you should just tuck that in your pocket and go away. Because the next day, there’s the next Jon Jones.

Do you think the things you experienced and felt doing this taught you what fighters felt? Because they seem to be wired differently, in many ways, and what a normal person might go through is not necessarily what they go through.

In the book, one of the things I tried to be was humble. I wasn’t going through what the fighter goes through, because he’s planning a career out of this and I’m just planning a book project. But in the book, there was that one moment where I was getting ready to go out for the fight and the [Nevada State Athletic Commission] official called my name and I stood up and said ‘That’s me,’ and he looked at me and said ‘No [expletive] way. No way you’re fighting.’ And he burst out laughing, and Mike Pyle, who is a tough dude and is nobody’s sympathetic character, but he stood up and said, ‘Hey, that’s a great way to build up our teammate.’ And when he used that word ‘teammate,’ he said it with emphasis. Like, tonight, this guy is fighting for Xtreme Couture, and even though he’s not a pro fighter, not one of us, he’s actually getting in the ring and he’s going to do it.

To me, one of the things I found most wonderful about MMA fighters is, if you’re willing to get in there and do it, you pass a kind of fundamental test. Before, they regarded me as this journalist who was kind of annoying to them and who they’d rather avoid. But when I was going to get in the ring it was different. Like, oh, you’ve got that kind of balls? You’re going to actually do it? Okay, you’re a part of the tribe.

My last question is, how many times would you say you threw up in the subway after a training session at Renzo’s?

[Laughs] That’s my last question? Man, there must have been about five to ten times. I can’t even count them. At least half a dozen, without question. After Renzo’s I’d usually be okay, but coming back from Phil [Nurse] at The Wat, that was the brutal one, because Phil is very cardio-oriented. Then, literally I would just puke my guts out.

When you were puking on the subway did you ever think, man, how many times have I seen somebody doing something gross on the subway and judged them without considering the possibility that they might have a good reason?

Well, many of the times I was dressed in just sweatpants and a shirt, with my head sweaty, and I’m vomiting and I thought, these people must think I’m homeless. Then I realized, I’m a writer; I’m about a half a step away from homeless.

 

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Falling Action: Best and Worst of UFC 139

Filed under: UFCWhat a weekend. If you were one of the people who decided that you’d had enough MMA lately and it was time to get out of the house on Saturday night and go see the new Twilight movie, let’s just say you got what you deserved.

The rest …

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What a weekend. If you were one of the people who decided that you’d had enough MMA lately and it was time to get out of the house on Saturday night and go see the new Twilight movie, let’s just say you got what you deserved.

The rest of us were treated to an amazing UFC event (not to mention a great lightweight battle between Michael Chandler and Eddie Alvarez in Bellator), we didn’t even have to fight through a crowd of pre-teen girls to get a good seat.

Now that it’s all over and we’ve had a chance to clear our heads and think rationally again, it’s time to look at the biggest winners, losers, and everything in between.

Biggest Winner: (tie) Dan Henderson and “Shogun” Rua
Centuries from now, when future generations attempt to learn about our culture by digging through the ruins of our athletic commission offices, the records they discover will only tell them that Hendo won a unanimous decision over Rua at UFC 139. What it won’t tell them is that, honestly, no one really lost that fight. Rua helped make it a classic by battling back from the brink of unconsciousness in almost every round. Hendo just couldn’t put the Brazilian away, and after twenty minutes of trying he barely had enough gas left to sputter across the finish line in the fifth. Personally, I gave Rua a 10-8 in that final round, which would have resulted in a draw. I know, I know — a tie is like making out with your sister while eating non-fat ice cream. Still, I think it would have been a fitting end, not that you can really be upset about any outcome after a scrap like that. Together, Henderson and Rua pushed each other to a new level of greatness. It was a collaborative effort that required both man’s mix of skill, toughness, and almost self-destructive resolve. Neither could have reached this height without the other forcing him to it, and for that the MMA world will forever remember both of them as equal partners in one of the greatest fights the sport has ever known.

Biggest Loser: Brian Bowles
This was his big chance to get back into a title shot, and he was simply outclassed by Faber. You can’t question his toughness. The sound of that uppercut he took was enough to make me reach up and make sure that my own teeth were still there, so I can’t even imagine how he battled through that. But when it came to launching an offense of his own, it was clear very early on that he just didn’t have much to threaten Faber with. It’s not a catastrophic end for the 10-2 Bowles, but it does knock him down the bantamweight ladder, making you wonder if he’ll ever get a meaningful title around his waist again. He’s probably still better than about 90 percent of the guys in the division, but the gap between Bowles and the top two men in the weight class is a chasm of talent that I’m not sure he’ll ever be able to find his way across.

Best, Slightly Troubling Redemption Story: Wanderlei Silva
There were definitely flashes of the old Wand in his TKO win over Cung Le. He took a few hard shots and stayed upright. He attacked with a ferocious, though measured aggression. In general, he proved that he’s not quite ready to be hauled off to the scrap yard just yet, which is a little bit worrisome, to be honest. It’s not that the win wasn’t a great one, or one that he needed in a bad, bad way. And not to get all double-rainbow on you, but what does it mean? Le’s never been known as an especially powerful striker, so it’s tough to tell if Silva’s ability to withstand his blows is necessarily proof that his chin is solid again. It’s not hard to imagine a situation where he interprets this victory as a sign that he’s back in the saddle and ready to brawl again, with the end result being several more bad knockouts before he once again faces the same difficult decisions. In a perfect world, maybe this would be the win that lets him go out on a high note. In the real world, he probably won’t be happy he takes a few more thumps on the skull.

Best Case for a Rubber Match: Urijah Faber
“The California Kid” did all the right things this weekend. Not only did he dispatch Bowles in impressive fashion, he also talked up his rivalry with champion Dominick Cruz. Before their second fight he was content to play the cool kid and let Cruz look like the one driving the animosity. After losing the decision, Faber now seems genuinely irked and hungry for a decisive showdown, which is exactly what the 135-pound division needs right now. Faber likes to make Cruz out to be a point-fighter who’s learned how to game the judges, but that’s a little too dismissive. The champ has real skills, and Faber knows it. What’s still unclear is if he has an answer for those skills, but we should find out soon enough. Faber better make the most of this shot. If he loses, it’s likely the last one he’ll get.

Least Likely to Complete His Full UFC Contract: Cung Le
He told us a few days before the fight that he signed a six-fight deal with the UFC and planned to make the most of it, but I have a hard time imagining that after his performance this weekend. It’s not that he looked bad, but his style and his age are both working against him. Le is 39 years old and this was only his third fight in the last two years. Most of his prior MMA career has been spent out-kicking overmatched opponents, but he won’t get such cozy treatment in the UFC. After showing up on the scales with a physique that’s starting to show its age, then getting his face smashed in by Silva, it’s very possible that he might soon decide he’s better off making his money on the movie set than the Octagon.

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Most Deserving of a Step Up: Michael McDonald
The 20-year-old bantamweight looked flawless in a quick destruction of late fill-in Alex Soto. His striking is crisp, his poise is impressive (especially considering his youth), and the UFC obviously sees the potential in him. I know Dana White probably doesn’t want to rush his development and get him crushed, but at 14-1 and with three UFC bouts under his belt, he’s ready to move up to the next level of competition and take his spot on the main card.

Narrowest Escape: Martin Kampmann
Not that he didn’t deserve to win — he did. But if I’d just been screwed by the judges at least once, maybe even twice in my last two fights, I might have been a little worried about letting them decide my fate a third time. Fortunately for Kampmann, they got it right this time (Dana White claimed that the judge who scored the fight with Story had actually meant to score it for Kampmann) and he’s finally back in the win column. It’s about time.

Worst Display of Professionalism: (tie) Shamar Bailey and Nick Pace
They both came in over the mark at Friday’s weigh-ins, then both ended up on the losing end in Saturday’s fights. As strategies for ensuring some degree of job security in the UFC go, that’s about as bad as it gets. Bailey came in at 158 pounds for a 155-pound fight, while Pace clocked in at 141 for a fight at 135. That smacks of disrespect for your opponent and yourself, and it also costs you a significant chunk of your purse. Making weight is part of being a professional, and it should be a given at this level. If you can’t do it — and if you make things worse by following it up with a loss afterward — then you won’t be at this level for long.

Most Surprising: Stephan Bonnar
It’s not that he dominated Kyle Kingsbury on the mat for most their fight. That was something many people saw coming. But his public apology to Josh Koscheck in his post-fight interview? Now that was a shock. If you don’t know, Koscheck and Bonnar got into it over Bonnar’s decision to use a very Koscheck-like image and design for his Trash Talkin’ Kids t-shirt line. Koscheck didn’t approve, Bonnar didn’t much care, and Koscheck sued him when he went ahead with the plan. Despite the disparity in weight, a feud seemed to be simmering there, but Bonnar squashed it by apologizing in the cage and admitting that Koscheck was right all along. That was the right way to play it, and it proves once again that Bonnar is one of the genuine good guys in this sport. Koscheck? He’s not winning any awards for congeniality, but he’s okay too, I guess.

 

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The MMA Wrap-Up: UFC 139 Edition

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UFC 139 might have been the event that flew under many people’s radar, but the main event delivered in a big, big way. Now the MMA Wrap-Up returns to examine the questions of Dan Henderson and “Shogun” Rua‘s greatness, and ask where it falls among the great achievements of our time. Or, you know, something like that.

 

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UFC 139 might have been the event that flew under many people’s radar, but the main event delivered in a big, big way. Now the MMA Wrap-Up returns to examine the questions of Dan Henderson and “Shogun” Rua‘s greatness, and ask where it falls among the great achievements of our time. Or, you know, something like that.

 

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UFC 139 Press Pass: Fight Night News and Notes

Filed under: UFCAmong the MMA media who log serious frequent flier miles following the UFC around the country all year, it takes something major to jar them out of the vague sense that fight night is another day at the office.

That’s not to say that …

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Among the MMA media who log serious frequent flier miles following the UFC around the country all year, it takes something major to jar them out of the vague sense that fight night is another day at the office.

That’s not to say that even the most grizzled road warriors on press row aren’t appreciative of having a job they love following a sport they’re passionate about, but when you start to hear the UFC’s in-arena playlist in your sleep (damn you, techno remix of “Hotel California”!), some of the action can start to feel routine.

Then you get an event like UFC 139, which ended with quite possibly the best fight any of us had ever seen. As Dan Henderson and “Shogun” Rua battled back and forth for five rounds, a sense of baffled astonishment set in. It’s that rare moment where you realize you’re witnessing something amazing, even as that something is still happening. You could look at the faces of the fans in the arena and picture them preparing to tell their grandchildren about this night decades from now.

Afterwards, I tried to compare scorecards with ESPN writer (and fellow University of Montana alum — go Griz) Chad Dundas. Personally, I had the fight a draw, but you could make case for almost any result, and I was curious how Chad scored it.

“Awesome,” he replied. “I scored it ‘awesome.'”

Two things about that: 1) It’s a good thing he isn’t an actual judge, because the phrase, “Judge Chad Dundas scores the bout awesome,” probably wouldn’t go over well with any commission (well, maybe Texas wouldn’t care), and 2) I can’t disagree. That fight was awesome, and it almost doesn’t matter who got the official nod from the judges at the end.

Some more fight night musings, scribbled from 35,000 feet and culled from a brain suffering from severe sleep-deprivation:

– Hendo will likely get a title shot soon, but in which division? Dana White said he was open to letting Henderson challenge for a belt at either middleweight or light heavyweight, depending on which one is available first. The thing about that is, Henderson has made it very clear that he doesn’t want to be a 185-pounder full-time. Even if he won the belt, he told us earlier this week, he might not stick around to defend it. He simply hates the weight cut that much. Don’t tell that to White, however, who said that if Hendo did beat Anderson Silva, a rubber match would only make sense.

“I think Hendo would go back down [to 185 pounds] for that too,” said the UFC prez. “I think these guys will go wherever the big money fights are.”

In other words, White’s betting that Henderson likes money more than he hates dieting. He might have a point.

– Even though both the UFC middleweight and light heavyweight champs have contenders in line to face them, don’t assume that those match-ups are set in stone.
Henderson tweeted from the hospital that he was suffering only from a sprained thumb, which seems almost impossible to believe, but might mean that he won’t need as much time off as you’d expect after a fight like that. That could be important if the UFC finds itself suddenly in need of his services. Talking with UFC matchmaker Joe Silva before the event, he claimed that he’d gone back and crunched the numbers for this year and was slightly amazed to discover that about half his original main events in 2011 had been altered or scuttled entirely by injuries. He seemed to think that the intensity of the sparring in many gyms was to blame, but regardless of the cause, it makes you think twice about assuming that any title shot promises are truly guaranteed. An injury to the champ or the challenger, and the picture could change in a hurry. The show must go on, after all.

Wanderlei Silva‘s win doesn’t automatically extend the life of his career indefinitely.
Even with the dramatic TKO victory over Cung Le, White didn’t seem like he was at all ready to retract his previous statements about wanting to see Silva hang it up. When the knockouts start piling up, he said, it’s time to go — regardless of whether you can still win one here or there.

“People can disagree with me or whatever. Go start your own organization. I’m not doing it,” he added.

As for how Silva will take that message, White sounded an optimistic tone, saying “I think he gets it. It’s pretty clear. I’ve been very open and honest about it.”

So has Silva, and he doesn’t sound like a man who’s ready for the rocking chair just yet. File this little battle under ‘To be continued.’

– If you think the UFC schedule is crazy now, just wait.
White had to sit out from some of the pre-UFC 139 media responsibilities because he was just so worn down after the stress of the first FOX show, which is understandable. But after this emotionally-draining night in San Jose, the UFC is back in Vegas in two weeks, then Toronto the week after that, then Vegas again for the end of the year. In 2012, with the FOX deal starting up and ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ going live, things really get insane.

“The schedule is looking ugly, man. Especially for me,” White admitted. “There’s 26 weeks alone of live television. 26 weeks of live television, every Friday night ends in a live fight, then I have to jump on a plane and fly to wherever we are on Saturday, then start all over again on Monday.”

That’s a travel schedule that even pro wrestlers and Rolling Stones roadies would wince at, and it already appears to be taking a toll on White. What will become of the organization if he runs himself into the ground? He doesn’t sound too worried about it.

“This is McDonald’s, man,” he said. “This thing goes on forever without me. Is it different without me? Yeah maybe it’s a little different without me, but they don’t need me, man.”

– I’m not sure how the UFC so consistently manages to position press row so near to each arena’s foremost striking expert, but it does. This time, media members were treated to several hours worth of one ticket-holding genius shouting for the “2-4” combination. He must have thought it was a flawless attack, since he offered the same advice to nearly every fighter, from Nick Pace to Wanderlei Silva to Dan Henderson. None of them listened to him, of course, but that didn’t dampen his enthusiasm any. A note to those of you who plan on attending a live event: it’s not a damn Lynyrd Skynyrd concert, people. The fighters are not taking your requests, no matter how loudly you shout the MMA equivalent of ‘play Free Bird!’ at them.

– Anybody complaining about an early stoppage in the Cung Le-Silva fight obviously didn’t see Le’s face as he made his way to the locker room. Remember how badly his nose was smashed at the end of his first bout with Scott Smith? It was a lot like that, only with more assorted lumps about the rest of his face to accompany it. You could tell by the way he lunged for that desperate takedown attempt: Le was done. Even if he could have gone on a few more seconds, better to stop it just a tad too soon than to let it go on a punch too far.

Urijah Faber is more willing than ever to be Dominick Cruz’s bantamweight nemesis.
Before their rematch, he was somewhat reluctant to assume that mantle. Now that he’s had some time to stew on that decision loss, however, he’s all about the rivalry. Not only did he call out Cruz in his post-fight remarks, telling him to “throw some gel in that widow’s peak,” but he later insisted that Cruz’s narrow win didn’t prove him to be the better fighter, hence the need for a rubber match.

“We’ll find out who’s the man for the rest of our lives,” Faber said. “That’s important to me.”

No kidding.

Ronda Rousey got the UFC president’s attention with her grisly armbar win at Strikeforce: Challengers. White actually referenced the nasty ending to that fight when lambasting the referee in the Chris Weidman-Tom Lawlor fight for being slow to step in. Weidman claimed he didn’t blame the ref for not believing him that Lawlor had been choked unconscious since “I could be trying to get a cheap victory with that,” for all the ref knew. White disagreed:

“I blame him. I do. You’re referee. You should know when somebody’s out. Get your ass in there and stop the fight. Same thing with the armbar last night in Las Vegas. …I blame him. 100 percent.”

Okay, so he didn’t call out Rousey by name, but we all know who he’s talking about. Just getting him to admit to watching a women’s MMA fight is a step in the right direction, even if he later insisted that his general feeling on the lack of depth in the women’s division is a deal-breaker for him. Baby steps.

– UFC headed to Sao Paulo in June? Magic Eight Ball says, ‘Outlook good.’ I was reluctant to believe White’s claim that Brazil is “our new Canada,” but the regular presence of Brazilian media members at UFC fights lately makes me think otherwise. One Brazilian reporter quizzed White about a newspaper report that the organization was headed for Sao Paulo in June — a question that clearly caught White off-guard.

“How’s this stuff get out?” he said, before changing gears and trying to play it coy, yet gleefully unsubtle. “I don’t know if we’re going to Sao Paulo in June, and if Anderson Silva’s headlining the card. No clue. That would be awesome, though.”

– Unsolicited travel tip:
When you realize that you didn’t pack enough underwear for your excessively long road trip spanning back-to-back MMA events, think twice about trying to wash a pair in your hotel room’s bathroom sink. It takes longer to dry than you’d think, and attempting to wear them while still even a little bit damp will be a decision you immediately regret.

 

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Dana White Wouldn’t Have Wanted Dan Henderson-‘Shogun’ Rua Fight on FOX

Filed under: UFCSAN JOSE, Calif. — Five rounds of bloody, back-and-forth action. That’s what UFC president Dana White got out of Dan Henderson and Mauricio “Shogun” Rua at UFC 139, and what he must have hoped he would get out of Junior dos Santos and …

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SAN JOSE, Calif. — Five rounds of bloody, back-and-forth action. That’s what UFC president Dana White got out of Dan Henderson and Mauricio “Shogun” Rua at UFC 139, and what he must have hoped he would get out of Junior dos Santos and Cain Velasquez for the UFC’s FOX debut last weekend, right?

Not so fast, said White, who admitted that while the 64-second heavyweight scrap on FOX didn’t offer much chance to build up the ratings, a brutal 25-minute fight like the UFC 139 main event would have had some negative consequences for the organization’s network debut.

“If you could have like a [Rua-Henderson] type fight on TV, I mean, imagine what the [ratings] number would get to,” White said. “But that’s not the fight you want for your first time on network television.”

With a peak of 8.8 million viewers, White has reason to be pleased with the first FOX offering. Following the UFC 139 press conference he confirmed rumors that he celebrated the ratings milestone by leaping up on a table in the UFC offices and sending all his employees home early.

“I hear all kinds of rumors about, oh, I heard he was flipping out after the fight and all this [expletive],” White said. “No, I wasn’t flipping out and yes, I did jump on a table and send everybody home. I was pretty excited.”

But as much as hardcore fans might have liked to see something on par with the Henderson-Rua scrap on network TV, White suggested it might have been too violent for mainstream FOX viewers to handle right off the bat.

“I said it before and I’ll say it again: if I could go back in a time machine and do the FOX fight over again, it would be done the same exact way. Exactly the same way. The hardcores can bitch about that fight, I could care less what they think about that fight. I don’t care. And people are like, ‘Oh, you don’t care what the fans think?’ No, I do not care what you think. That fight had to go the way that it went because none of you guys understands what goes on behind the scenes. If that fight that happened tonight went on FOX for the first time ever, let me tell you what, I would not be having a good time these last five or six days.”

That’s because, White said, the UFC is “still in the education process” when it comes to introducing mainstream sports fans to his product. Even with the quick, bloodless debut, White said there were still opponents who didn’t want it on network TV.

“These people come out of nowhere, attacking this sport, literally saying that it should go away, that we shut down the UFC and this thing should go away,” said White. “That’s realistic. But those are the kind of people that come after you. It’s crazy.”

But as White has been repeating ever since the FOX debut, the UFC still needs to “ease into” the mainstream rather than charging in with a bloody battle like Henderson-Rua, which might be hard for the uninitiated viewer to stomach. Just don’t expect that easing process to last very long, according to the UFC president.

“In my opinion, we eased into it already. We did it, we put the first fight on FOX, now we’re going with four fights. And the more fights you do, the more chance you have to have one of these.”

In theory, maybe. In practice, you could put on MMA fights for years and not see anything like what Hendo and Rua produced on Saturday night. That’s what makes it so special, whether the mainstream viewer is ready for it or not.

 

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