UFC 184 Results: 3 Fights for Cat Zingano to Take Next

It’s fair to say that Cat Zingano didn’t put on the performance of her career at UFC 184. Hurling herself at Ronda Rousey from the opening bell was a novel strategy, but it turned out to be as effective as all the rest. That is to say, not …

It’s fair to say that Cat Zingano didn’t put on the performance of her career at UFC 184. Hurling herself at Ronda Rousey from the opening bell was a novel strategy, but it turned out to be as effective as all the rest. That is to say, not remotely effective.

Within seconds, the challenger was tied up in the kind of knot that would have left a sailor confused.

Prior to the fight, I had the bizarre notion that Zingano possessed the kind of stubborn personality that would refuse to submit to joint locks. This notion was soon dispelled, of course. And while one couldn’t help but be in awe of Rousey, my eyes were drawn to the crestfallen challenger who had overcome so much adversity to get that opportunity.

Understandably, she was inconsolable. Being submitted in all of 14 seconds doesn’t exactly suggest potential for a rematch. However, the good news for Zingano is that the UFC is starved for options, which means the path to a rematch is much shorter than it could have been.

So let’s take a look at where Zingano’s path to a rematch might begin.

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UFC 184 Rousey vs. Zingano: B/R Main Card Staff Predictions

This coming weekend is something of a celebration for women’s mixed martial arts, with UFC 184 featuring an all-female main and co-main event for the first time in the organisation’s history—not to mention Invicta FC 11 on Friday.
The appea…

This coming weekend is something of a celebration for women’s mixed martial arts, with UFC 184 featuring an all-female main and co-main event for the first time in the organisation’s history—not to mention Invicta FC 11 on Friday.

The appeal of UFC 184 may have taken a slight hit with the loss of Chris Weidman vs. Vitor Belfort for the middleweight title, but Saturday night’s card from the Staples Center still has plenty to offer both hardcores and casuals alike.

The main event features the long-awaited contest between Ronda Rousey and Cat Zingano for the UFC women’s bantamweight title. We can also look forward to Holly Holm making her UFC debut against The Ultimate Fighter veteran Raquel Pennington, Jake Ellenberger vs. Josh Koscheck, Alan Jouban vs. Richard Walsh and Tony Ferguson vs. Gleison Tibau.

As ever, Bleacher Report MMA is on hand to guide you through this weekend’s main attraction. Read on for the views of Scott Harris, Craig Amos, Riley Kontek, Sean Smith and yours truly, James MacDonald.

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On Performance Enhancing Drugs and Cheating in Mixed Martial Arts

“I would prefer even to fail with honor than win by cheating.”—Sophocles
An opposition to cheating and the use of performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) is as uncontroversial a position as one can take within a sporting context.
It is not…

“I would prefer even to fail with honor than win by cheating.”—Sophocles

An opposition to cheating and the use of performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) is as uncontroversial a position as one can take within a sporting context.

It is not uncommon to hear athletes pay lip service to the ethical stance expressed in the above quote, wondering aloud how they could possibly live with having achieved success dishonestly. However, so pithy a statement doesn’t truly capture the nuances of human psychology.

More accurate distillations of this stance are perhaps “I would prefer even to fail with honor than to be caught cheating,” or “I would prefer even to fail with honor than win by cheating as I have defined it.”

Humans are remarkably good at rationalising actions we would readily condemn in others. It is a defense mechanism that lets us have our cake and eat it, too. This element of our psychology is what allows fighters such as Jon Fitch and Anderson Silva to—in good conscience—publicly excoriate PED users, while privately reaping the benefits these substances provide.

The recent spate of high-profile drug-test failures in mixed martial arts has finally brought this conversation front and centre in the MMA community.

Culture has instilled in us strong intuitions about PEDs and cheating that appears to deter further reflection on the subject, but the topic is more complex than you might imagine. What does it actually mean to cheat? Again, we have a strong sense that it can be simply defined as rule-breaking or attaining an unfair competitive advantage.

Consider the infamous “Hack-a-Shaq” strategy in basketball, which involves repeatedly fouling a dominant player who possesses an exceptionally weak free-throw percentage—most famously used against Shaquille O’Neal. We don’t tend to consider rule violations of this sort cheating, so there is clearly room for exploration here.

“Cheating is a really fuzzy concept,” says Professor Shawn E. Klein, a Sports Ethicist and Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Rockford University. “I don’t think there’s any clear line there. Certainly, it’s typically going to involve rule violations, but not all rule violations are going to be cheating.

“You take your helmet off in American Football and throw it on the ground. That’s unsportsmanlike conduct and you’ve broken the rules, but no one thinks of that as cheating. And then there are strategic fouls in basketball and professional fouls in soccer. These are violations of the rules, but most people don’t want to call those cheating—and I’m with them.

“These violations are on the borderline because the culture of the sport—the athletes, the fans—are going to determine where to draw the line. Determining where to draw that line has a large social component to it. One thing that distinguishes a strategic foul from cheating is that the former is available to both sides and they recognise the penalty that action is going to incur. 

“Even in the case of Lance Armstrong, that does seem like a perverse even playing field, where it’s no secret that everybody is doping at the top level, so there really isn’t a competitive advantage.” 

The use of PEDs resides in its own special category of cheating. Few infractions come with such a harsh social and professional penalty. The reputational cost is often so severe that it can undermine an athlete’s entire body of work. What must it feel like to be Anderson Silva right now?

For so long considered the greatest mixed martial artist of all time, his UFC career is now widely suspected to be a fiction. Our cultural aversion to PEDs is so prejudicial that some fans would happily strike Silva’s accomplishments from the record.

So, what exactly is it about these banned substances that we find so repellent? Beyond the entrenched nature of these attitudes, there are a number of possible explanations.

Sports fans in general seem to have a higher tolerance for rule-breaking that can be observed in real time. We see a rule violation, and the punishment is usually swiftly meted out by an official.

Even when an athlete escapes reprimand for an infraction, we are inclined to apply more culturally acceptable labels such as “unsportsmanlike conduct.” These fouls come with a tacit acceptance of being caught and a perverse honesty that perhaps tempers our indignation to some degree.

Rule breaking that occurs behind closed doors, as in the case of PED use, strikes us as being a more duplicitous act. Unlike transgressions we can observe in real time, there is no tacit acceptance from the athlete that his chicanery will be exposed.

It isn’t merely an attempt to gain a competitive advantage, but it’s also a conscious effort to deceive on a massive scale. One wonders if the collective outrage that follows a positive drug test is less about the act itself than the lengths to which some athletes will go to maintain the appearance of propriety.

If we could somehow put to one side the years of lies, bullying, intimidation and lawsuits, a very different picture of someone such as Lance Armstrong is likely to emerge. Athletes who immediately own their PED use can often salvage some part of their professional reputation, but the more emphatic the denial the more difficult it becomes to reclaim that reputation.

“The public seems quite willing to forgive and move past the story when the athlete comes clean right away,” argues Professor Klein. ”We despise the cover up, the lying, the false indignation at being accused, and so on. When athletes like Andy Pettitte are forthright and don’t hide from their positive tests, we forgive and forget. The Yankees are going to retire his number after all.

“But with the Armstrongs, Brauns, and A-Rods of the world, we seem unwilling to give any quarter. This is more due, I think, to the deception, the false denials, and the pushing of responsibility to others.

“We understand people make mistakes. We know no one is perfect. We accept that people will push boundaries and break rules.   What we cannot abide is the lack of integrity in not quickly admitting and owning up to one’s rule-breaking.” 

Societal attachment to the appeal to nature fallacy has undoubtedly also contributed to our antipathy towards PEDs. This fallacy usually takes the form of either “A is natural; therefore A is good” or “B is artificial; therefore B is bad.” These arguments do not survive even a moment’s reflection, which makes their pervasiveness all the more remarkable. Nature is neither intrinsically good nor fair.

Indeed, nature has created a more uneven playing field than any cocktail of performance enhancers ever could. Consider the athletic gulf that exists between fighters such as Chad Mendes and Cody McKenzie. What possible measures could the latter take to bridge the chasmic genetic gap? The argument that PEDs would offer McKenzie a competitive advantage is almost comically incoherent.

There is a regressive side to sports culture in that it is one of the few cultures that still champions a Social Darwinian ethos. How far do we really want to take this commitment to playing the biological hand we are dealt?

Let’s consider the case of Phil Mickelson, one of the greatest golfers to ever wield a club.

Mickelson suffers from a condition called psoriatic arthritis—he and I have that in common. This disease is degenerative and often crippling if left untreated. The simple act of swinging a golf club is an applause-worthy feat, nevermind competing with the sport’s elite. To say that weekly immunosuppressant injections enhance Mickelson’s golf game is as understated as pointing out that functioning legs make it easier to walk.

In light of an opposition to artificial performance enhancement, why should Mickelson be permitted to take immunosuppressants that contravene nature’s intended course? Any distinction you might be tempted to make between health and athletic performance is necessarily going to be arbitrary because there is no clear line of demarcation between the two.

Putting those points to one side for now, one also has to wonder how we can justify the widespread acceptance of the many unnatural performance enhancers athletes currently rely on, such as cryotherapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, painkillers and so on. The idea that performance enhancement is something we should police has never truly been a coherent concept.

“Everything an athlete does is with an eye to improving his or her performance, whether it’s working out, the diet they’re on, watching extra film, and so on,” points out Professor Klein.

“It’s all geared towards trying to improve their performance, and performance enhancing drugs fall within the same category. So where do we start drawing the line? Why isn’t Substance A allowed, but Substance B is? There are drugs that are performance enhancing that we do allow, like ibuprofen to reduce inflammation or cortisone shots so athletes can continue to perform or work out.

“When I have conversations with my students about [PEDs], I tend to hear things like, ‘Oh, this guy’s doing it naturally, and this other guy’s not.’ They don’t seem to realise that so much of what athletes do is already unnatural. There is plenty of unnatural stuff that we allow and natural stuff, like marijuana, that we don’t allow.

“The idea that an athlete is performing well because he has a better chemist is very simplistic because the athlete still has to engage in training and preparation. The fact that they might have a chemist is no different from having a nutritionist. So, the natural vs. artificial argument doesn’t really resonate.”

The violent nature of MMA means everything that impacts performance becomes much more consequential, and there is an argument to be made that banning PEDs puts principled fighters in jeopardy.

Some number of athletes will always seek an advantage outside the lines, while the rest will be committed to competing within the rules. Depending on whom you ask, the number of fighters on PEDs ranges from almost everyone to almost no one.

Let’s put it at 50 percent for the sake of argument—a conservative number by most estimates. That would mean half of the MMA talent pool is competing with a chemical deficit. How consequential this is will depend on specific matchups. If a PED-using genetic outlier is competing against a rule-abiding average athlete, that’s a significant health and safety concern of our own design.

Giving fighters the freedom to decide what to put in their bodies immediately corrects for this issue. It also allows legitimate healthcare professionals to oversee and advise the athletes, as opposed to the current skeevy paradigm of unprincipled doctors running underground pharmacies.  

“If it’s out in the open, it’s controllable in a better way,” argues Professor Klein. “Fighters can talk to health professionals regarding their use of whatever they are using and can make sure they’re taking a safe but effective dosage rather than using more than they need to, getting bigger than they need to be or using in a way that’s damaging their liver and kidneys.

“So from the point of view of the fighters’ health and safety, if it’s done out in the open, I think it’s better for the athlete. If you ban PEDs, some people will obey the rules, so you’re actually giving an advantage to the rule-breakers. There’s some truth to that.”

Unfortunately, this kind of conversation is likely to be academic at this point. Lobbying for the legalisation of PEDs would be a public-relations disaster for any sport but particularly for a sport like MMA, which is trailing a legacy of perceived barbarism that continues to impede the potential for mainstream acceptance.

The UFC has announced plans to overhaul its drug-testing policy and its desire to see harsher penalties imposed on drug cheats—up to a four-year ban for first-time PED offenders. This is a good thing for the sport, assuming the UFC follows through on its proposed plans. We have been half-pregnant on this issue for many years. A nine-month ban here and a modest fine there simply isn’t disincentive enough.

If fighters are not going to be allowed to decide what to put in their bodies, the UFC’s commitment to imposing prohibitively punitive bans is the only option that remains. In an ideal world, athletes would be granted the autonomy to decide whether to use PEDs. Society isn’t ready for so bold a move just yet. Will it ever be?

 

James MacDonald is a freelance writer and featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted. Follow James on Twitter.

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MMA Is in Better Shape Than Disgruntled Fans Would Have You Believe

There are countless legitimate debates to be had within mixed martial arts. Quarrelling over the particulars of drug testing, fighter safety, oversaturation of the market, fighter pay, etc., is a popular pastime among fans and media alike.
However, MMA…

There are countless legitimate debates to be had within mixed martial arts. Quarrelling over the particulars of drug testing, fighter safety, oversaturation of the market, fighter pay, etc., is a popular pastime among fans and media alike.

However, MMA is arguably unique among sports in the sense that its legitimacy is frequently contested by those who dedicate much of their lives consuming its product. Indeed, a vocal minority of fans give the paradoxical impression that they are emotionally invested in the sport’s ruin.

I have previously written about the rich vein of anti-establishmentarianism that runs through parts of the MMA community. Certain fans and media outlets have long held a peculiar desire to demonize the UFC for any perceived misstep, as though publishing an avalanche of anti-UFC rhetoric demonstrates a freedom from bias.

Perhaps by dint of the fact that the UFC currently is MMA for all intents and purposes, this attitude now extends to the sport as a whole. Said attitude was on full display when UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones recently tested positive for cocaine metabolites.

For the most part, the community responded to the news by posing legitimate questions for the UFC and its star athlete, but there were others gleefully promoting conspiracy theories and declaring the entire sport a farce within five minutes of the story breaking.

It’s an odd feeling taking on the role of MMA apologist in response to the views of purported MMA fans. One almost wishes the sport would succumb to the tide of negativity, if for no other reason than it would render these malcontents mute.

The notion that MMA is in dire straits appears to be a fairly well-subscribed narrative. Given the annus horribilis endured by the UFC in 2014, one could certainly be forgiven for thinking that the sport is on rubber legs.

Pay-per-view numbers and television ratings are down; injuries are so pervasive that the collective fan response to big fight announcements looks like a study on mass prayer; MMA judging is often so egregious that it practically warrants a civil suit; and fighter pay continues to give the sport a black eye. I could go on, but you probably get the point: MMA has its share of problems.

Nothing that follows should be interpreted as a tacit endorsement of everything that is currently happening in the sport, but it has become trivially easy to overstate the extent of MMA’s issues.

Few would argue that MMA is as popular in the United States now as it was from 2008-2010, or that its domestic appeal has dropped off the proverbial cliff. The more cynical among you will doubtless think I’m flirting with sophistry, but the numerical slump can be rationalized to some degree.

From 2007 until the middle of 2012, the baseline buyrate for a UFC pay-per-view was approximately 200,000. The current baseline is much closer to 100,000, with four of the last eight pay-per-views dropping under 200,000—and as low as 115,000 for UFC 174.

This trend is by no means unique to the UFC, though. The current pay-per-view model is archaic, and buyrates are down across the board. Boxing has leaned heavily on Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao in recent years, and the industry is now posting its lowest numbers since 2005, while the WWE currently offers all of its premium content on the WWE Network for a monthly fee.

Most of us are used to getting all of our content for the price of an Internet connection, and downloading or streaming premium programming for free has become a painless process. Is it any surprise, then, that pay-per-view numbers are in free fall?

The downturn in television ratings has been similarly exaggerated. While it’s certainly true that the move from Spike to Fox Sports has led to lower viewing figures for the UFC, the reality is that not all cable networks are created equal.

Spike is in approximately 100 million homes, whereas Fox Sports 1 is in around 90 million. That accounts for a 10 percent drop in viewership. “Where did the rest of the viewers go, James?” I hear you mewl.

The truth is that it takes time for a network to establish itself as a regular part of the average viewer’s television diet. Longevity has its privileges, and networks like Spike, Syfy, ESPN, et al. have carved out a spot in the general consciousness of the cable audience.

Those facts aside, the UFC still bears an awful lot of responsibility for its declining viewing figures. Events are so numerous that we rarely get to see the kind of stacked line-up that was once taken for granted.  

There is an unfortunate trend towards the retrograde, main-event-centric approach of boxing promotions, with pay-per-view cards being more top-heavy than the average glamour model. It remains to be seen whether this paradigm shift is merely temporary or a more permanent strategy that is necessary for global expansion.

The good news is that there is some cause for optimism. The recent 750,000-800,000 buyrate for UFC 182 is a return to form of sorts after an injury-plagued 2014. More impressive still, UFC Fight Night 59 pulled in the sport’s biggest cable audience since 2009 with a record-breaking average of 2,751,000 viewers on Fox Sports 1, establishing Conor McGregor as a bona fide star in the process—something the UFC has sorely lacked in recent years.

In addition, Bellator has had a promising start under new president Scott Coker. Unfettered from the stifling tournament format, MMA’s second largest organisation attracted an average of 1,800,000 viewers for Bellator 131 on Spike. Perhaps more importantly, Coker has made it clear that Bellator will go head-to-head with the UFC in pursuit of available talent.

The success of MMA will inevitably be judged by the success of the UFC, but the emergence of Bellator as a viable competitor is a good thing for the sport. Make no mistake, Dana White and Co. realise they are no longer playing tennis without a net. Unless you think the decision to re-sign Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic was based on merit? In which case, I have a 36-year-old professional wrestler with no MMA experience I’d like to sell you.

The prohibitive focus on the health of MMA in the United States means that it is easy to overlook the strides it has taken globally. Even a minor decline in MMA’s most bankable market is a significant issue, but one could easily make the case that the sport is more popular worldwide than it has ever been before.

For many years, the UFC was essentially a North American organisation that staged the occasional international card. A mere 20 events were held in 2009 and, as a consequence, they tended to be stacked from top to bottom. MMA was booming in North America because the UFC hadn’t yet put forth a serious effort to make its mark anywhere else—with the notable exception of UFC 75 in London, England.

As Dana White has often said, establishing a presence in the UK was a no-brainer for the UFC. Even still, it took a long time to gain any traction on this side of the pond. Until BT Sport came along in 2013, UFC coverage was largely restricted to broadcasting live events, most of which were accompanied by little to no media interest

This climate wasn’t exclusive to the UK, either. The same was true for many markets that now do strong business for the UFC—Brazil, anyone? Global domination continues to be at the top of Zuffa’s to-do list. Last year saw the UFC stage events in Mexico, Singapore and New Zealand, and shows in Scotland and Poland have already been announced for 2015. Even Genghis Khan would balk at such ambitious expansionism.

MMA’s potential for growth is up for debate. One suspects the ceiling is significantly lower than the Zuffa brass seem to think. The idea that MMA could surpass the global appeal of soccer should only ever come from the mind of the George R.R. Martins of this world, never from someone who plies his trade in reality.

However, it’s time we cease with the never-ending pessimism. MMA isn’t dying, and its average news cycle is no more farcical than that of every other sport with a significant following. There are many problems that need to be addressed, but be under no illusions: MMA is doing just fine.

James MacDonald is a freelance writer and featured columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow James on Twitter.

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UFC 183 Results: After a Bizarre Main Event, What’s Next for Silva and Diaz?

So, the UFC 183 main event was pretty weird, right? Anderson Silva and Nick Diaz conspired to produce a spectacle that was bizarrely compelling in every sense of the phrase.
In truth, even the buildup to the fight was a little peculiar. Unlike most mix…

So, the UFC 183 main event was pretty weird, right? Anderson Silva and Nick Diaz conspired to produce a spectacle that was bizarrely compelling in every sense of the phrase.

In truth, even the buildup to the fight was a little peculiar. Unlike most mixed martial artists, Diaz doesn’t tend to offer his opponents much respect prior to a bout. There are no smiles, fist bumps, handshakes, etc. And brohugs are absolutely out of the question.

It was odd, then, to watch the 31-year-old offer Silva a handshake and a hug during media day. Finally, it seemed, he was up against an opponent who had earned his pre-fight respect. In light of this, I anticipated little in the way of mid-fight trash talk from Stockton’s favourite son.

I should have known better.

Referee “Big” John McCarthy had barely uttered his fight-starting catchphrase before Diaz began barking obscenities at the former UFC middleweight king. Not content with verbally blaspheming the consensus Greatest of All Time, Diaz dropped to the floor and struck a pose that said to Silva: “Draw me like one of your French girls.”

Outclowning The Spider is no mean feat, and it made the fight utterly absorbing despite both men being relatively inactive.

Diaz wasn’t pushing his usual life-altering pace, but he was having moments of real success, landing flush shots time and again. Perhaps owing to his time spent with Joe Schilling and Artem Levin, Diaz also utilized leg kicks consistently for the first time in his career.

For his part, Silva countered nicely and racked up the points during Diaz’s frequent periods of inactivity. The Brazilian at times looked tentative, but who could blame him for harbouring a few doubts? When the 25 minutes were up, there was no question that Silva had earned the decision—despite Diaz’s trademark confusion over how fights are actually scored.

But perhaps the most unusual part of an already-offbeat evening was the reaction to the fight. There seemed to be very little agreement on how to interpret the action inside of the cage. Some optimistic souls felt we had just witnessed the rebirth of the 39-year-old Silva, while others suggested that it might be time for him to hang up the gloves.

There was also some confusion over Diaz’s excessive clowning and his shockingly low output. However, the revelation that he had been dealing with an arm injury that may require surgery certainly goes some way toward explaining his tactics.

What should we make of UFC 183’s main event, then? It’s difficult to say. The calls for Silva’s retirement are probably premature. This would be a nice win for him to go out on, but the performance offered a few glimpses of genius that indicate he might still have something to offer the division.

Another crack at Chris Weidman would, as Ray Longo suggested, probably end badly for the Brazilian. His chin was able to hold up against the shots of the much smaller Diaz, but one should be skeptical of its ability to absorb the kind of power wielded by the likes of Vitor Belfort, Lyoto Machida and Weidman.

Still, if he does choose to continue fighting, it should be interesting to see how competitive Silva can be with the division’s elite, now that he looks vaguely human.

What Diaz chooses to do next is anyone’s guess. His post-fight remarks were encouraging, however. He seemed clear-headed and remarkably upbeat, given his usual demeanour after a loss.

When the decision was read, most of us probably anticipated Diaz retiring on the spot. But surprisingly, he left the door slightly ajar for another fight. This is progress of a sort and might be an indication that his outlook on the sport has matured.

We might not have seen the best of Silva and Diaz at UFC 183, but we saw enough to remind us that MMA is a far less interesting place without them. Let’s just hope they stick around, if only for a little while longer.

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UFC 183 Results: 3 Fights for John Lineker to Take Next

This article would have looked very different had John Lineker managed to make the flyweight limit for his UFC 183 bout with Ian McCall. The Brazilian didn’t just cost himself a shot at Demetrious Johnson’s 125-pound title, but he now finds…

This article would have looked very different had John Lineker managed to make the flyweight limit for his UFC 183 bout with Ian McCall. The Brazilian didn’t just cost himself a shot at Demetrious Johnson’s 125-pound title, but he now finds himself with an entire division’s worth of new opponents, per Steven Marrocco and John Morgan of MMA Junkie.

Despite looking impressive in his win over McCall, one cannot help but feel that Lineker won’t be celebrating too hard. He’s a natural flyweight, so it’s unclear why he is having issues with the weight.

Lineker has enough power to carry up to bantamweight, but he’ll be at a distinct size disadvantage. His best bet is to reel off a few wins at 135 and then hope he can convince the UFC to give him another crack at flyweight.

In the meantime, let’s look at some potential opponents for the Brazilian.

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