Dear Ronda Rousey: Enough with the Four Horsewomen Stuff—You Don’t Measure Up

Mixed martial arts, the velvet painting of the sports world, is coated with a sheen of the ridiculous. Like its artistic counterpart, it’s something you’re likely to see at a country fair. It’s gaudy and awful and you can’t look away.
But the colors po…

Mixed martial arts, the velvet painting of the sports world, is coated with a sheen of the ridiculous. Like its artistic counterpart, it’s something you’re likely to see at a country fair. It’s gaudy and awful and you can’t look away.

But the colors pop like nothing else, and honestly, who doesn’t love the athletic equivalent of dogs playing poker now and then?

Everything about it is lurid and over the top. Vladimir Putin, a cartoon of a man, is a fan for God’s sake. The violence is absurd, eight limbs competing to bludgeon, choke and twist. The fighters are a cornucopia of tattooed glory, men with a decided lack of father figures and/or aptitude for more prestigious and lucrative sports. 

Even the authority figures, Dana White in the UFC and Bjorn Rebney in Bellator, are living caricatures of an aging bro and sleazy car salesman, respectively. In this sport, the company president can lie with a straight face and then turn around and direct an expletive-ridden tweet at a fan or reporter. And no one will blink.

The only thing more ridiculous than the fighters are the fans who battle an inferiority complex that may never quite disappear. Mixed martial arts is most certainly not serious business.

I lead with this just so you understand that I get it. While I recognize that the consequences can be all too serious, the sport itself is a constant comedy show. I don’t decry tomfoolery. I am all for it! You won’t see me crying crocodile tears about who “deserves” title shots or attempting to stifle fun voices on the fringe like Nick Diaz and Chael Sonnen.

But there has to be a line. Some subjects are simply too sacrosanct to be broached without some significant thought. And that’s why I demand, loudly and publicly, that UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey stop comparing herself and her posse to the iconic Four Horsemen.

Girls just want to have fun. I understand. And what’s not fun about pro wrestling, a fake version of mixed martial arts where the violence and the muscular bodies defy even our wildest imaginations? Pro wrestling is the best. Watch this delightfully deranged Ultimate Warrior video and see if you can stop yourself from smiling.

The Horsemen, however, are no laughing matter. In parts of the South, in the 1980s at least, they were all but a religion. You might, in fact, miss church on Sundays. It was known to happen. But no self-respecting Southerner would ever miss their wrestling fix. 

For decades, it was a tradition we could count on. At 6:05 p.m. on Saturday night, a generation of young men could be found gathered around the boob tube. Powered by Jim Crockett Promotions and the mighty satellite in the sky that beamed Ted Turner’s channel 17 nationwide, wrestling ruled the airwaves.

And the Four Horsemen ruled wrestling.

Ric Flair was the leader. As the world heavyweight champion, it was his right and his place. Bleached blond, masculine yet flamboyant and never at a loss for words, he was the epitome of the cocky villain. 

At his right hand stood Arn Anderson. A storyline cousin, he was the no-nonsense enforcer. You understood, implicitly, that he was a man who would sacrifice body, soul and even his own ambitions to keep Flair safe. A secondary title belt and a seat at the table were more than enough for “Double A.”

To the champion’s left was Tully Blanchard, the poor man’s Flair. Like “The Nature Boy,” Blanchard was a smooth, Scotch-drinking sophisticate. He wined and dined with the best of them. Rocked the sequin robes. Coveted. While Anderson was loyalty, you could practically see Blanchard’s gears turning. He didn’t want to be Flair’s protege forever. He wanted to be Flair.

The fourth man, in the beginning, was Ole Anderson. A gritty veteran with a gift for violence and gab in equal measure, Anderson and his brother Gene owned wrestling in the Carolinas and Georgia throughout the 1970s. Though he never quite fit in conceptually, he was a bridge to wrestling’s past, royalty if misplaced.

There had been factions in wrestling before the Horsemen. But to compare the Heenan Family to the Horsemen is to compare an Oldsmobile to a Ferrari.

In 1986, the Horsemen were now. Rocking Rolexes, barely buttoned Armani suits and Italian shoes, they were a small taste of luxury. They talked it and walked it, winning every title belt that mattered.

Women wanted them, and men wanted to be them.

They were bad guys but in name only. Wrestling, so long the domain of black and white, was changing. The Horsemen were the villains—but they were the bad guys that fans couldn’t help but love. Fans started coming to the matches dressed to the nines, their best suit a solid proxy for Flair’s finery.

Yes, they beat the living hell out of Dusty Rhodes, an overweight and overbearing older star hanging onto faded glory. They brutally assaulted the Rock ‘n’ Roll Express, babyfaced pretty boys that your girlfriend likely thought about way too often.

Was that really a bad thing? Wasn’t there a small part of us that reveled in it all? That wanted to raise those four fingers and let out a long, soulful “Woooooo!”

Just thinking about the Four Horsemen makes me happy. I doubt I’m alone. 

Which brings us, ever so slowly, to Rousey. The new queen of the UFC, she is one of the sport’s brightest stars. She combines unspeakable swagger with a killer instinct unlike any we’ve ever seen from a female fighter. Part Flair, part Anderson, she’s in the process of building a legend every bit as bright as her male peers. 

Along the way, like many fighters, she’s found her lifemates on the mat. Marina Shafir is her longtime friend and training partner. Jessamyn Duke is her protege, a young fighter whom she adopted while filming The Ultimate Fighter and decided to keep. Shayna Baszler is the grizzled veteran, a catch-wrestling practitioner who was fighting before the spotlight shined bright.

Baszler, a lifelong wrestling fan, has made WWE Raw a staple of their household.

“Since Shayna moved in, our group activity is that we sit down and watch Raw and all this stuff together,” Rousey told After Buzz TV. “It’s like our little family time…Shayna totally converted our whole house into a super pro wrestling house.

Like all right-thinking people, they’ve gravitated toward the Horsemen. Nearly 30 years after they first came onto the scene, the power of the idea is still that strong.

It’s easy, in fact, to place their Horsemen analogues. Ronda—the blond, bombastic championis Flair. Marina, her rock, is Arn. Jessamyn, young and not quite ready to cede dominance to Ronda forever, is Tully. And Shayna is Ole, the holdover from a previous generation. 

But just because you can make a comparison doesn’t mean you should. What made the Horsemen special was each man’s individual accomplishments and pedigree. It was a special conglomerate because they were all champions in their own right.

The women’s version has just one star—Rousey. The other women merely float in her orbit. Duke has yet to prove herself. Shafir hasn’t even made her professional debut. Baszler, a gutsy and valiant fighter, has never stepped up and proved herself to be a legitimate world-class competitor. 

This isn’t the Four Horsemen. It’s Lady Flair and the Job Squad.

MMA and pro wrestling share a common heritage. In many ways they are mirror images of each other. It makes sense for concepts to float between them, the way Sonnen borrowed Superstar Billy Graham and unleashed him on an unsuspecting populace.

Graham, however, was an archetype. His patter, in turn, was borrowed from Muhammad Ali and Thunderbolt Patterson.

The Horsemen are bigger than that. They are a piece of Americana, among the greatest performance artists of their era. You cannot possibly recreate them. Should you try, you could never succeed. 

Take something else from wrestling. Be silly. Mimic a match before training. Be the next NWO. Carry an oversized cell phone and call yourselves the Dangerous Alliance. But leave the Horsemen out of it. Some shoes are too big to fill.

Wooo!

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The Cult of Nick Diaz: Why Some Fans Are Obsessed with the UFC Star

Sometimes you miss something without even consciously knowing it was gone. It’s a nagging feeling, one that tickles the back of your brain. You sense something isn’t right but can’t always put your finger on exactly what’s been absent from your life, w…

Sometimes you miss something without even consciously knowing it was gone. It’s a nagging feeling, one that tickles the back of your brain. You sense something isn’t right but can’t always put your finger on exactly what’s been absent from your life, what’s made your dark, endless, dreary existence just a smidgen worse than it’s always been.

Don’t worry, though. If you’re a mixed martial arts fan I’ve pinpointed it for you. What’s been missing is an edge. For such a controversial sport, it seems, MMA is awfully staid and traditional. Fighters hug it out, compliment each other for their performance and offer endless platitudes about the “grind” and the value of hard work.

Frankly it can be boring as hell.

MMA needs a spark. It needs its Chael Sonnens, inexplicably confident and voluble in the face of stark reality. It needs its Jon Jones, flashy, cocky and inexpressibly amazing.

And it needs a dose of punk rock, a dangerous vibe that reminds us that this all started with Helio Gracie street fights and Jeremy Horn choking some dude in a warehouse in front of 17 violence-mad lunatics.

This sport needs Nick Diaz.

It’s Diaz we’ve been missing, a presence unlike any other in all of combat sports. It’s what you’ve yearned for, that absence made so stark by his sudden reappearance on the scene, yelling at Johny Hendricks during the UFC 171 weigh-ins, soaking in the adoration of the crowd, bringing the kind of swag the UFC media room hasn’t seen since the height of Ryan Loco’s run.

There’s no denying it whether you love him or love to pretend you hate him. Nick Diaz is a dose of fun all too often missing in a sport so desperate to be more than it is, keen on pretending it’s more than just people letting it all go in a steel cage, civilization and brain cells be damned.

It’s been over a year since we last saw UFC bad boy Nick Diaz grace the Octagon with his unique brand of all-encompassing violence. That’s 12 months with no imminent brawls, 12 months without press conference drama and, most importantly, 12 months without the swarming, volume punching he’s made his trademark.

Yet while Diaz was missing he was never truly gone. He’s built a cult following unlike any we’ve seen in mixed martial arts history, and they never let him fall into obscurity. While Nick himself seemed content just living on that big Georges St-Pierre payday, his fans never stopped advocating. 

Made in his image, his complete and utter lack of self-awareness rubbing off on them like an Internetonly virus, they seem to have no idea where he truly stands in the sport. Reading conversations online, especially on Twitter, it would never occur to you that Diaz actually lost his last two fights, that he hasn’t beaten anyone of significance since 2011.

It doesn’t seemingly occur to him. Here he is telling Fox Sports that he should be plucked down straight into the title picture. His argument, broken down to its most basic message, is that he’s Nick Diaz. What else matters?

“I don’t have to take a warm-up fight,” he said. “Why would I take a warm-up fight? To help somebody out? To bring them to my level? I’ve already been through all that and you still didn’t see me take an ass whipping. I don’t care, I’m talking about a title fight matchup. Bottom line, I’m the only draw here. Bottom line.”

Were this sport, and not glorious spectacle, we’d be talking about Diaz fighting Jake Ellenberger or another mid-tier welterweight. Diaz and his fans, results be damned, don’t see him in that echelon. They live in a world of Anderson Silva superfights and immediate title shots, a world where Carlos Condit and GSP were too scared to fight the mighty Nick and where no one who steps in like a man has any real shot at victory.

It’s a madness that spreads easily. Even I’m not immune. Such is the pure force of their ardor—you can sink under their spell if you just relax and let the insanity flow all around you.

Maybe Condit did run? Maybe St-Pierre’s refusal to stand and trade does mask a coward’s soul? Maybe Diaz does deserve a title shot? 

At the very least it would be fun. Remember fun? Chuck Liddell’s gonzo celebrations, B.J. Penn gorging on his opponent’s blood and the smarmy smirk that made Tito Ortiz so utterly punchable? Diaz has that, the “it” factor that helps you forget that he’s never proven himself to be a top-level UFC fighter, that his success has been mostly illusory, that he talks a better game than he fights.

Suddenly, none of that matters. Because, at its heart, MMA isn’t about finding the best fighter in the world. It’s about finding the best stories, about a fearsome and unthinkably grueling contest between two athletes we care about.

People care about Nick Diaz in a way they’ll never care about Tyron Woodley or Hector Lombard. With all due respect to those gentleman that can only mean one thing—bring on the title shot. Bring on Hendricks. Don’t be scared, homie.

 

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Valiant in Defeat: Robbie Lawler Reached His Full Potential and Still Fell Short

Robbie Lawler flashed his pearly whites throughout his UFC title fight with Johny Hendricks. All but forgotten, one foot out the door just two years ago after a loss to Lorenz Larkin in Strikeforce, Lawler had worked his way back into title contention….

Robbie Lawler flashed his pearly whites throughout his UFC title fight with Johny Hendricks. All but forgotten, one foot out the door just two years ago after a loss to Lorenz Larkin in Strikeforce, Lawler had worked his way back into title contention.

That, alone, is something to smile about. But getting punched in the face? Lawler was just so happy to be fighting for the belt that the mere thought of being there was enough to light up his eyes.

Hendricks lands a left hand? Smile.

Hendricks lands a big knee? Smile.

Hendricks buckled Lawler’s leg with a hard kick—you guessed it: Lawler smiled. By the end of 25 minutes of combat, it was almost by rote.

There would be no smiles afterwards, of course, when the judges revealed their scorecards and Lawler learned that, 13 years after bursting onto the MMA scene, he would not be sitting on the throne after all. Post-fight, his glare was hypnotic, his mental daggers piercing everyone who dared meet his eye.

“The thing is, when you leave it up to the judges, those things happen,” he told the press at UFC 171‘s post-fight conference. “I just didn’t do enough tonight, they thought. I need to go back to work, obviously.” 

But during the fight, he was happy, the kind of joy written on his face that only comes when a man is doing what he loves, when he is immersed in his world, among his people and competing to the very best of his abilities. He gave everything he had, walloping Hendricks with a stiff jab and a strong left hand, defending eight of 10 takedowns by the former NCAA champion and generally looking like the best version of himself we have ever seen in the cage.

It wasn’t enough. And that’s okay.

While some tried to shame him for losing steam in the closing minutes of the fifth and final round, Lawler had been clipped by a hard Hendricks left hand. Like many of the blows landed throughout the bout, a normal human would have met his maker, or at the very least the mat. Lawler survived. There’s no penitence required for that.

As is true with many of the greats, his fiercest critic was himself.

“I should’ve done more in the fight and thrown more punches, thrown more kicks and took him out,” Lawler said after the fight. “…I don’t know. It’s easy to look back now and look at the things you should’ve done. I didn’t do it tonight, and he fought a hell of a fight.”

The truth is, Robbie Lawler fought to the best of his abilities. That’s all we can ask for from an athlete. Every man has his physical and psychological limits—Lawler reached his and still finished second. There’s no shame in that.

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UFC 171’s Robbie Lawler Says He’s Finally Ready to Live Up to the Hype

Robbie Lawler, circa 2001, was a fight promoter’s dream. Raw-boned, corn-fed and lily white, the 19-year-old Iowan prodigy appeared to be cut from granite as he laid waste to Saburo Kawakatsu at a long-forgotten extravaganza in Hawaii. 
The w…

Robbie Lawler, circa 2001, was a fight promoter’s dream. Raw-boned, corn-fed and lily white, the 19-year-old Iowan prodigy appeared to be cut from granite as he laid waste to Saburo Kawakatsu at a long-forgotten extravaganza in Hawaii. 

The world wasn’t watching Shogun Fights, but that wasn’t important, at least not for Lawler. One man who mattered was in the front row watching the laser light show and world-class fighters—Dana White, in his first year as UFC president and looking to reinvent the fight game.

White, on his way toward becoming one of America’s most iconic fight promoters, knew what he wanted. And he wanted Lawler, going so far as to compare a kid in his fourth professional fight to the fearsome boxer Mike Tyson, signing him to a UFC contract in what he called “a Christmas present to myself.

At the time fans had a bit of fun with that piece of hyperbole. Though not yet bald and bombastic, White was already developing a reputation as an emotional and compelling interview. This, it was thought, was just an early example of Dana being Dana.  

White saw Lawler as a star in the making and did everything in his power to make that happen. Against fellow Midwestern bangers, Lawler excelled. He knocked the potential right out of fellow prospect Aaron Riley at UFC 37 and just a month later knocked out Steve Berger at UFC 37.5, becoming the first fighter to compete on cable television, hand-selected by White for Fox Sports’ The Best Damn Sports Show Period.

Training at Pat Miletich‘s famed gym in Bettendorf, Iowa, Lawler was put to the test daily in practice sessions with world champions like Jens Pulver and Matt Hughes. Under Miletich‘s guidance, Lawler, a southpaw, developed a stiff right hand and the killer instinct you needed to simply survive in an environment that saw plenty of fighters slink off in the middle of the night, unable to face the prospect of another day at practice. 

“Pat was one of the first guys who could do it all, grapple, wrestle and strike. I just tried to take after him and work on all aspects,” Lawler said. Like all Miletich fighters of that era, he remembers his days in the gym fondly. 

“More than anything, he put us in situations where we made each other better. Jeremy Horn brought a lot to the table. Matt Hughes brought a lot to the table. Lots of guys you never heard of. He made it a grind. It wasn’t easy. If you stuck around for more than a month, that was definitely saying something. Just the mental toughness you get from training in a gym like that was huge.”

The memories come floating to the surface easily. Horn’s patient guidance and pursuit of martial knowledge. Being trash-talked and rag-dolled by Hughes for two solid years, never once yielding or giving up. And being put in with heavyweights when fighters his own size wanted no part of sparring with the fearsome youngster who swung every punch like it was his last.

“When Pat first started fighting there really weren’t that many weight classes. He fought a bunch of heavyweights when he first started so it just didn’t seem odd to me,” Lawler said. “I lifted weights and was strong. I was a tough kid, willing to get after it and I thought I hit just as hard if not harder. And I didn’t have to sit in front of a big guy and let him punch me. It’s not a tough man’s game.”

Lawler, ultimately, wasn’t ready emotionally or athletically to live up to the expectations that he would be Miletich‘s next breakout star. Fighting, at the top level at least, is about more than competing in the cage. There are responsibilities to the promoter and the fans that Lawler says he just wasn’t ready for at the time.

A media nightmare, he quickly developed a reputation as one of the toughest interviews in the sport. Even UFC matchmaker Joe Silva, a genius at drawing out amazing soundbites for the UFC’s pay-per-view soundbites, couldn’t break through Lawler‘s stone wall. 

“I was young,” he explains. “I’m older now.”

In the cage, too, he struggled. Although the right hook and ability to regain his feet after a takedown were already staples of his game, he wasn’t quite sophisticated or patient enough to deliver his best weapons against really good fighters. After that quick start, he bombed out of the UFC in 2004, becoming an MMA ronin, drifting from promotion to promotion, never quite living up to his promise. 

Was it too much too soon? Did White’s high expectations go to a young fighter’s head, stifling growth and development? After all, if you’re already Tyson-esque, what more is there to learn? 

Lawler says it wasn’t so. The once-brash young man, now a brash older man, told Bleacher Report that White didn’t say anything he wasn’t already thinking.

“It really didn’t matter what he said. In my head, even before I started the sport, I was going to be the best ever,” Lawler said. “I was going to knock everyone out. So it didn’t really matter what he said. I already had a belief in myself that I have what it takes to get the job done. That’s why I’ve kept fighting for as long as I have. I always felt I was capable of so much more than I’ve shown. And I’m getting better every day.”

Thirteen years and 29 fights later, White’s then-comical proclamation suddenly doesn’t seem so funny. Now days away from his 32nd birthday, Lawler is fighting for UFC gold for the very first time, perhaps redeeming one of White’s rare missteps in the process. When he meets Johny Hendricks for the UFC welterweight title Saturday in Dallas, Texas, Lawler will finally have a chance to achieve what many thought was his destiny.

Through the years, through stops in Japan, Hawaii, Elite XC and finally Strikeforce, Lawler never gave up hope. While contemporaries and teammates slowly dropped from the MMA scene, he still believed. 

“Stubborn is not giving up and coming back every day when stuff is rough and not easy. I guess I want to be stubborn,Lawler said. “I’m a grinder. You just wake up every day and get after it. I was banged up here and there. There was a time it felt like I just couldn’t get healthy. But I kept learning. It would have been easy to give up and do something else. It would have been easy to give up. To say ‘This is hard. Maybe I shouldn’t do this anymore.’ What I thought was ‘I’m in it. And I’m going to stay in it until I can’t do it anymore.’ Everything I’ve been through, it’s just made me a stronger individual, plain and simple.”

Training today at American Top Team, 1,400 miles and a world away from his Midwestern roots, Lawler brings a slice of home with him, flying in longtime boxing coach Matt Pena to help him fine-tune his game alongside Top Team’s Ricardo Liborio, “Conan” Silveira and Kami Barzini.

It’s a relationship Lawler resisted for some time, despite pleas from manager Monte Cox to give a change of scenery a chance. Eventually Lawler relented and admits he’s a better fighter for it.

“The (Josh) Koscheck fight came up and I was like ‘Man, this is a big fight. I should probably go down there.’ I spent three weeks down there and it worked out well,” he said. “The trainers are great. If I didn’t feel like they wanted me there, I wouldn’t have gone there. But I heard it a few times from my manager, that they really wanted me down there and were asking about me.

“I’m excited to go train every day. I’m excited to be back in the UFC. Fighting on the big stage. And I’m with a really good team. The fighters are awesome and they push me hard. There’s a hundred guys down there and they’re all really good. Even the guys no one has heard of. And the coaches are awesome. Put all those things together, with my mentality and I believe great things are in store for me.”

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American Gladiators Meets MMA in ‘Hip Show: Arena Combat’ on AXS TV

Eldarhan Machukaev, nicknamed “Sniper 95,” attempted to build speed as he scrambled across a series of obstacles, with his flight-or-fight instinct on overload. The young Russian mixed martial arts fighter, sporting three wins to a single loss so far i…

Eldarhan Machukaev, nicknamed “Sniper 95,” attempted to build speed as he scrambled across a series of obstacles, with his flight-or-fight instinct on overload. The young Russian mixed martial arts fighter, sporting three wins to a single loss so far in his professional career, hasn’t likely taken too many backward steps in his life. 

But this was no ordinary fight. This was the Hip Show, a wacky combination of extreme game-show hijinks in the American Gladiators mold and reality combat a la The Ultimate Fighter.

With his partner eliminated, Machukaev had to survive for one minute against the tag team known as Sparta. Rinat Fakhretdinov (aka Gladiator) and Shamsudin Kurbanov (aka Agul) are two skilled fighters who had one goal at that moment—to finish Sniper 95.

Within 10 seconds, they had him on the ground. Then it happened. As Gladiator secured an ankle lock, Agul locked up an armbar. Sniper 95, helpless and alone, had to survive two submission attempts at once.

If he lasted the minute, his team would advance on points. If he tapped, it would be eliminated. As the seconds ticked off, the roar of the crowd, packed into a space in downtown Moscow that is part nightclub and part parkour playground, grew louder and louder.

Whatever else Hip Show: Arena Combat is, it’s certainly not boring.

“This is realistic fighting,” play-by-play announcer Cyrus Fees told Bleacher Report. “If you were going to get in a bar fight or a street fight, realistically it’s often going to be two-on-two or two-on-one situations. We feel it’s a great way for these fighters to test out their martial arts and to create a really entertaining show for the viewers.” 

But when watching a lone man fend off two highly trained martial artists, while all three of them dart around a series of padded obstacles up to 6.5 inches off the ground, questions emerge that each individual viewer will have to answer for him or herself.  

Is this morally OK? Is this competition safe? Is this the kind of spectacle that John McCain and other MMA critics were worried about when they attempted to eliminate the nascent sport from the face of the earth?

Should I be watching this at all? 

AXS TV boss Mark Cuban thinks so. Hip Show: Arena Combat debuts on his network Friday at 10 p.m. ET. The prolific investor, and owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, sees the show as a potential hit despite telling his staff it was one of the craziest pitches he had ever seen.

Or maybe because it was one of the craziest pitches he had ever seen.

“It does look a bit wild,” color commentator and MMA veteran Casey Oxendine admitted. “You see these guys flying off these obstacles. You see the two-on-one situations. But once you delve into the rules you realize what a great sport it is.”

Cuban and his team recognize there will be pushback from some squeamish fans. But, like MMA itself, Hip Show is never going to target for audiences.

“At first I wasn’t sure how traditional MMA audiences would react,” AXS Fights CEO Andrew Simon said. “Hip Show has MMA components, athleticism and frenetic craziness. I showed clips to fight fans, fighters and other TV executives and the reaction was the same. They all thought it was awesome and they wanted to see more. I realize there will be a vocal few that will have issues with the showbut at the end of the day there is also a vocal minority that doesn’t appreciate MMA.”

Hip Show takes a bit of getting used to. The pilot episode is a “best of” featuring lightweight and middleweight tournaments from 2012. Teams start with two competitors each, competing in three two-minute rounds. Points are scored by executing wrestling throws, striking sequences and clean ground-and-pound, or by holding one of the obstacles in an extended game of “king of the mountain” for 10 seconds.

Submissions and knockdowns are worth three points, and eliminating an opponent is worth five. 

I was pleasantly surprised by the quality of athlete and the skills on display in the arena. This was far from tough-man level competition. These were young, professional-class fighters engaging in intense battles.  

“This is taking it to the next level,” Oxendine said. “We’re taking all of the athletic ability and skill from the realm of mixed martial arts and transporting it to a different environment. MMA started an evolution of the martial arts. Now it’s time to continue that evolution.”

The vibe is also different than what you would expect from a traditional cage fight. There are two referees on site who clearly put a premium on fighter safety, breaking the action quickly if things seem to be getting out of hand. And though the athletes are in it to win it, you never get the sense that they are trying to hurt their opponents.

Yes, punches and kicks are thrown full-power. But there are signs of sportsmanship everywhere. While it is ludicrous at first glance, especially to longtime MMA fans who are wary of the sport attracting government regulatory attention, an extended viewing helps explain why Oxendine and Fees are hopeful that Hip Show: Arena Combat is a long-term play and more than a mere spectacle.

“Right now we’re in the process of refining the rule set for an American and international competition. That’s going to involve the unified rules,” Oxendine said. “I’m going on record right now. It’s actually safer than standard mixed martial arts competition. Because of the head gear. Because of the safety precautions. And because it’s a sport. The prime goal is not to do damage like in MMA. It’s to score points.”

“You have to take risks sometimes,” Simon said. “There is nothing like this on television. It is MMA meets Wipeout meets American Gladiators. I was willing to give it a shot.”

Another season has already aired in Russia with a third on the way. And, according to those who have seen it, the action only ramps up. 

“We’re going to show you a preview of the next season and it’s absolutely amazing,” Fees said. “Just when you think you’ve seen it all, we’re going to continue to evolve this product and keep it interesting.”

Jonathan Snowden is Bleacher Report’s lead combat sports writer and the author of Total MMA: Inside Ultimate Fighting. Unless otherwise noted, all quotes were gathered first hand.

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Is UFC Champion Jon Jones Trying to Duck Top Contender Alexander Gustafsson?

Alexander Gustafsson, the recently minted Swedish superstar, doesn’t appear to be going away anytime soon. Six months after he took champion Jon Jones to the limit in 2013’s best fight, Gustafsson dismantled British slugger Jimi Manuwa in compelling fa…

Alexander Gustafsson, the recently minted Swedish superstar, doesn’t appear to be going away anytime soon. Six months after he took champion Jon Jones to the limit in 2013’s best fight, Gustafsson dismantled British slugger Jimi Manuwa in compelling fashion.

Showing no mercy in Manuwa‘s own backyard, Gustafsson managed to knee his opponent in the face while simultaneously propping up the UFC’s new Fight Pass streaming system.

No small feat, that.

After the fight, he took to the microphone. There, the usually soft-spoken Gustafsson minced no words, straight ganking the microphone from UFC analyst Dan Hardy to let his soul flow out.

“Jon Jones, I want my title shot again,” a passionate Gustafsson said. “I’m right here. Whenever you want, man. Whenever you want.”

The problem, according to persistent critics at least, is that “whenever Jones wants” is actually never. That Jones, the longtime champion, is still cowering after Gustafsson‘s surprise showing back in September. In short, that Jones is straight quaking in his custom Nike trainers, too intimidated to accept the challenge of either Gustafsson or Olympic wrestler Daniel Cormier.

To all of this I say, channeling my colleague Chad Dundas, are you freaking kidding me?

You think Jon Jones, the greatest fighter of this or any generation, is ducking a challenger? Any challenger?

The same Jones who once fought a murderers’ row of Ryan Bader, Mauricio Rua, Quinton Jackson and Lyoto Machida in a single calendar year? The same Jon Jones who has spent six short years rewriting what’s possible in his sport, becoming MMA‘s most cerebral fighter as well as its most gifted?

I repeat: Are you kidding me, MMA fans? 

Even Jones’ fellow fighters are getting into the act. Phil Davis, perpetually on the brink of contention, accused Jones of wanting to duck his former training partner Gustafsson.

“Most people would rematch,” Davis told MMA Fighting’s Dave Doyle. “But he said, ‘forget about that, forget about you.’ I find that interesting. Very interesting.”

Davis, of course, has an excuse for his inanity. He’s angling for a title shot of his own, drumming up controversy to put himself in what UFC president Dana White calls “the mix.” And he’s not entirely wrong when he says UFC title shots come with no rhyme or reason.

Glover Teixeira, proud owner of just a single win over a top-10 opponent, will fight Jones in April. Daniel “DC” Cormier is being considered for a shot after a single fight at 205 pounds, a win over a fighter who had been a coffee shop barista just days earlier.

But blaming Jones for the insane world in which he’s found himself is like blaming water for being wet. He’s not in control of the UFC’s famously reactionary matchmaking, though he did take to Twitter in the hours after Gustafsson‘s challenge to try his hand at bringing order to chaos.

“Why not give the winner of Alexander and DC the winner of myself and Glover?” Jones asked in a series of tweets. “Call me what you want but I can’t be the only person who thinks that makes perfect sense. Wouldn’t the world pay to see?”

In a perfect world, a world more sport than spectacle, Jones’ plan to let performance in the cage sort out his next challenger makes sense. Unfortunately, he’s made such mincemeat of the division, defending his title six times in the three years since winning it, that the UFC doesn’t have contenders to spare.

While it would be nice for Cormier and Gustafsson to establish definitively who deserves it more, the UFC needs them both in the mix. White did his best to remove any doubt about what was next for the division, confirming Gustafsson as the challenger in waiting.

“If Jones wins, we have a nasty rematch,” he said at the post-fight press conference. “If he doesn’t, then it’s (Gustafsson) and Glover Teixeira.”

In this, White is right. But Jones being a poor matchmaker is not the same thing as Jones being intimidated by either. Instead, as he pointed out, he’s actually looking to find out which lion is hungrier then volunteering to step in with whomever emerges as the top contender.

“People who don’t like to think are quick to call me afraid,” he wrote on Twitter. “Think about it, I’m asking for the meanest of the two.”

For Jones, it was a another in a series of public relations missteps putting more and more distance between himself and your average MMA fan. In a way, it should come as no surprise. For years, MMA fighters were promoted as being just like us: Regular guys who happened to have that crazy gleam in their eye that propelled them into a locked cage to wreak untold havoc on their unlucky foes.

Jones has always been different.

He’s what we’ve been waiting for, the elite athlete who helps catapult this sport to the mainstream. But now that he’s finally here, the chosen one, fans have been slow to embrace him. The everyman vibe others in the sport pull off so easily is beyond him.

It’s hard for Jones to pretend he’s just another guy. He’s not. He’s been the best fighter in the world for three years. At this point, only the most stubborn refuse to acknowledge his status as our leading light.

It’s this undeniable greatness that makes the accusations against him all the more ludicrous. Jones is not ducking anyone for one very simple reason: He doesn’t have to.

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