MMA: The Same Things That Make the Sport Appealing Are What Holds It Back

MMA is a three-syllable acronym that could also be expressed in two words and two syllables: “It hurts!” And playing or even just watching this hurting game is not everyone’s cup of tea. The sight of two athletes trying to beat the ot…

MMA is a three-syllable acronym that could also be expressed in two words and two syllables: “It hurts!”

And playing or even just watching this hurting game is not everyone’s cup of tea. The sight of two athletes trying to beat the other through striking and grappling appeals to sports fans who prefer combat sports.

Others fans prefer watching ball games, or even the less physically demanding sports like chess or bridge.

Well, people have always been divided on the merits and demerits of any given sport. Whether as fans or athletes.

That’s just the way it is, and it’s been like that even in Ancient Greece (if it’s any consolation).

Further stressing the point that the appreciation, or the lack of it, of certain sports over others has always been contentious, the great Greek philosopher Plato was reported to have said about pankration, MMA’s progenitor: “It is devoid of aesthetics.”

Take note that Plato trained in another closely related combat sport: wrestling, of which he was even said to have won in the Pythian, Nemean and Isthmian games.

And there are those who derided any kind of athletic competition as undeserving of patronage, or even practitioners! In short, there were—and still are—those who are absolutely anti-sports in general.

Take the case of the philosopher and founding Cynic Diogenes. Nursing a fever, Diogenes cried out to those who were passing by to watch the ancient games, “Wretches, will you not stay?  But to see the struggle of ruined athletes you go all the way to Olympia; don’t you want to see a struggle between a fever and a human being?”

Jerk.

Moving on to the Roman Empire, the following is an assessment of athletes by Galen, the highly renowned second-century AD medical doctor. In discouraging young men from getting involved in sports, he wrote,

All natural blessings are either mental or physical. . . . Athletes have never even dreamed of anything mental. . . . They are so lacking in reasoning that they don’t even know if they have a brain. . . . They cannot think logically at all – they are as mindless as dumb animals. . . . They lead lives like those of swine; except swine do not exercise to excess nor force food down their throats as athletes do.

Troll.

Speaking of the Roman Empire, it became notorious for holding fight-to-the-death gladiatorial contests. These competitions pitted gladiators against their own kind, or against animals (most probably with the exception of harmless swine) and convicted criminals.

Ultimately, these spectacles ceased in the early 5th century when Christianity was adopted as the state religion.

Presently, many critics of MMA still compare our sport with those lethal gladiatorial contests. They preach that our sport has no place in today’s “civilized” society. (“Civilized” in quotation marks; just read the daily news.)

We know that MMA is the most complete hand-to-hand combat sport, allowing various holds and strikes to beat an opponent—via points or finish. And injuries or worse happen.

 

But its events are now held with equally comprehensive rules in place to make it safer and fairer.

And its athletes join out of personal choice as free individuals and not as soldier-prisoners or slaves of the Roman Empire as herded by its ruling class.

 

Still, for a long time the UFC itself used the image of the gladiator in promoting MMA. Question: How many years did the world’s top MMA promotion used The Gladiator promotional video to usher in its events?

For years the UFC evoked associations with the gladiatorial combat of ancient Rome until it replaced it with its new promo video last February.

Well, with or without that video, there will always be sectors that will voice out contrary opinions against MMA.  

The greater leeway that MMA allows one athlete to win over the other, compared to more “specialized” combat sports like boxing or wrestling, is what its fans ultimately find special and appealing about it.

Unfortunately, this same wide array of moves allowed to inflict pain and potential harm to one’s opponent is what critics find as basis for perceiving MMA as, indeed, the modern-day resurrection of the inhuman Roman gladiatorial fights.

We find it exciting and acceptable; some don’t. But that’s just the way it is.

And to quote from a Latin saying, De gustibus non est disputandum. In English: “In matters of taste there is no dispute.” Ideally, that is.

Meanwhile, MMA continues to grow into “mainstreamhood” (wherever, whenever and whatever that really is). And perhaps, it will someday face a decline.

That’s just the way it goes, and “it” still hurts.

 

Previous article: UFC on Fuel 3 Results: Dustin Poirier Smiled and The Korean Zombie Struck.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on Fuel 3 Results: Dustin Poirier Smiled and The Korean Zombie Struck

Dustin Poirier successfully executed a “lateral and upward movement” of his facial muscles a second before receiving the fateful blow from The Korean Zombie Chang Sung Jung. In short, he smiled and got hit real bad. Jung instantly reacted w…

Dustin Poirier successfully executed a “lateral and upward movement” of his facial muscles a second before receiving the fateful blow from The Korean Zombie Chang Sung Jung.

In short, he smiled and got hit real bad. Jung instantly reacted with his own upward movement, of his right arm; a powerful uppercut that sent Poirier backpedaling involuntarily into the Octagon fence.

Here’s an account of what turned out to be the last round of the last fight of UFC on Fuel TV 3, from Brian Knapp of Sherdog.com:

In the fourth, Jung cracked him with a searing right uppercut and backed it up with another flying knee. Out of desperation, Poirier dove for a takedown, leaving his neck exposed in the process. Jung sprawled, deftly locked in the [brabo] choke and finished it. The crowd erupted with its approval.

And Jung ended up having the last laugh, or smile.

Still, we really can’t blame Poirier for making “a facial expression which may show amusement” when he did it, as he was coming off his most successful round in the third.

Poirier got thrown down and suffered a head cut from Jung’s elbow strike in the first round. In the second, he was struck by a flying knee and a series of uppercuts before barely escaping multiple submission attempts, including a couple of triangle chokes.

In the third round, however, the Korean seemed to live up (or die down?) to his nickname and zombified. Apparently worn out, Jung limited himself to a standup striking mode, and Poirier had the upper hand in landing more punches.

In fact, Jung said post-fight, “He had me in trouble at the beginning of the third round. The thought of giving up was in my head, but I just kept going, and I came out with the win.”

Poirier may have thought he had seen the best—or worst—from a “fading” Jung. After surviving the first two rounds and winning the third, momentum and superior cardio were already seemingly on his side.

Thus, the beaming smile.

Now, smiling during a fight is a known psywar tactic, largely to mock an opponent to throw him off his game.

It could mean, “There’s nothing you can do to hurt me,” or “I’m gonna get you now,” or “That’s your best shot?!”

In Poirier’s case, it could have been his way of saying, “Now it’s my turn…” to sleep.

Some people are blessed with magnetic smiles, and Poirier is one of them.

Unfortunately, it attracted the wrong steel, a weapon spearheaded by four knuckles.

And that missile was far more accurate and formidable than the aerial joke launched by North Korea a month ago.

 

All quoted words used in defining “smile” were taken from “The New Lexicon Webster’s Encyclopedic Dictionary of the English Language (1993 edition),” and I’ve had this book for years and it’s only now that I realize it’s got a long title!

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Anderson Silva on Chael Sonnen: “I Pity Him, the Fight Will Be Sinister”

Anderson Silva, still a man of few words, finally says a small but ominous piece of his mind on the more loquacious Chael Sonnen, who will challenge again for his UFC middleweight throne on July 7, 2012 in UFC 148 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las V…

Anderson Silva, still a man of few words, finally says a small but ominous piece of his mind on the more loquacious Chael Sonnen, who will challenge again for his UFC middleweight throne on July 7, 2012 in UFC 148 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

“I pity him. He is a frustrated man who never won anything, never been first in anything. Man, the fight will be sinister, as they say here,” warned The Spider in his interview with Fantastico, Globo TV.

Volume-wise, Silva’s subtle threat is no match to his challenger’s who has been incessantly mouthing his own threats and braggadocio on the former.

Sonnen has been characteristically vocal with his denigrating opinions on the champion and pound-for-pound king Silva, even proclaiming himself as the real champion.

The controversial fighter has been chest-thumping on his performance in their last encounter, when he unsuccessfully challenged for Silva’s belt at UFC 117 in 2010. The fight saw Sonnen ground-and-pounding the champion for much of their five-round title fight until Silva sneaked in a fight-ending armbar with barely two minutes left in the last round.

Even in the UFC 148 press conference right in the heart of Silva’s home country of Brazil, Sonnen did not mince his words on his opponent, and also took a swipe at his hosts: the people of Brazil.

He said,

…when I was a little kid…I would look outside and Anderson and the Brazilian kids are sitting outside playing in the mud.

…I think it’s disgusting and I think it’s an embarrassment to the sport that he would come around with that fake belt when the entire world watched me defeat him on live TV. He goes and gets himself a fake belt and sits up here and pretends to be champion.

It is still safe to say that everybody else in MMA knows who won their first fight, who the real and still champion is, and who walks around with a “UFC belt” purchased from who knows where.

It remains to be seen if there will be an exchange of belts come July 7th, and who’ll end up making good of his issued threat.

 

Thanks to Mr. Nordic for the heads up on this news!

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Siyar Bahadurzada: Nick Diaz Will "Give You a Reason You Can’t Understand!”

Siyar “Siyar The Great” Bahadurzada also weighs in on the recent Nick Diaz no-show and makes light of the situation. Earlier, the Afghan fighter currently campaigning in the UFC welterweight division tweeted the following: “The Nick Diaz version of ‘I’…

Siyar “Siyar The Great” Bahadurzada also weighs in on the recent Nick Diaz no-show and makes light of the situation.

Earlier, the Afghan fighter currently campaigning in the UFC welterweight division tweeted the following: “The Nick Diaz version of ‘I’m gonna make you an offer you cannot refuse’ will be: ‘I’m gonna give you a reason you cannot understand!'”

The controversial elder brother of UFC lightweight fighter Nate Diaz was a no-show last night for his highly-anticipated grappling match versus multiple-time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu world champion Braulio Estima for the World Jiu-Jitsu Expo in Long Beach, Calif. And what infuriated his opponent (who came all the way from the United Kingdom) and fans more was that Diaz pledged to donate all his winnings as charity to a children’s hospital.

Online MMA forums soon raged on the issue.

Fans posted stories that Diaz supposedly backed out without prior notice from their main event because Estima was overweight the day before the match, during the alleged originally-scheduled weigh-in. This is regardless that seemingly all parties agreed to another weigh-in the following day (yesterday), right before the competition itself.

Estima stated that he eventually made weight. Here is his version and sentiment on what happened, via Twitter:

I weighed in at 180lbs this morning at 10 am as agreed and asked to see nicks weighing too but I was informed by Cesar his Coach that he was 180lbs in the previous night and that he ate and is over 180lbs even though I just let it go an still showed up to fight. What pisses me off the most is that he was telling he was going to give his purse to charity for the childrens hospital and than don’t show up. What kind of person is that. Shame. Ps. I’m sorry for all the ones who stayed up to watch this fight but I’m sure the prelims fights was amazing. Thank u all for the support always.

Diaz also avoided the two press conferences of UFC 137 in 2011, which originally pitted him against the welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre for the main event. Their title fight also did not push through.

More on Siyar the Great

Bahadurzada is coming off a victorious UFC debut fight, an impressive first-round 42-second KO of Brazilian veteran Paulo Thiago on April 14, 2012 at UFC on FUEL TV in Stockholm, Sweden. The finishing win also earned him the Knockout of the Night award.

Bahadurzada will fight Thiago Alves next on July 21, 2012 at UFC 149, as original opponent Yoshihiro Akiyama was replaced due to injury.

The former Shooto middleweight champion who trains out of Team Golden Glory in Deventer, Netherlands, currently holds a 21-4-1 record. He is on a seven-fight winning streak and has won 11 by knockout and six by submission in his entire MMA career.

Bahadurzada’s first 14 MMA fights were all held in the Netherlands, which started with a first-round KO win in March 8, 2002.

His first fight out of Netherlands and Europe was in Tokyo, Japan, wherein he snatched the Shooto middleweight title by beating Shiko Yamashita by unanimous decision on July 15, 2007.             

Of his six fights in the Land of the Rising Sun, he won four and lost two. One of his losses was to Jorge Santiago, by heel hook submission, in Sengoku 6 on November 1, 2008 in Saitama. The other one was due to a guillotine choke in the hands of Kazuo Misaki in Sengoku 1, on March 5, 2008 in Tokyo.

One of the highlights of his career prior to the UFC was stopping by TKO (punches and knees) the veteran Canadian John Alessio, in the first round of their fight for UGlory 13 in Charleroi, Belgium. (Alessio is currently fighting again for the UFC.)

Bahadurzada was born and raised in Kabul, Afghanistan, for 15 years before his family migrated to the Netherlands in 1999. He said he developed his fighter’s instinct and strong character to the war-torn and perilous environment of his country of birth.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Nick Diaz is Better Off Doing Magic Shows Than MMA or Grappling Fights

Nick Diaz is to honoring professional commitments what Bob Sapp is to winning professional fights. (And quoting Anthony K., “…at least Sapp is actually professional enough to show up to fight.”)Whoever thought that grappling for charity last night at…

Nick Diaz is to honoring professional commitments what Bob Sapp is to winning professional fights. (And quoting Anthony K., “…at least Sapp is actually professional enough to show up to fight.”)

Whoever thought that grappling for charity last night at the World Jiu-Jitsu Expo was cool to Diaz must have felt a hard slap in the face.

Those responsible for arranging that much-hyped and now unrealized grappling match must be squirming with wedgies wherever they are now.

Whoever honestly believed that their guy was ever open to possibly losing (a great possibility, by the way) an “innocuous” grappling match versus Braulio Estima must quit whatever they’re smoking.

Estima, after all, is a multi-titled world champion in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

And he has beaten the fighter Joe Rogan calls the “Michael Jordan of grappling,” Marcelo Garcia. That makes Estima the Kobe Bryant…okay, just kidding.

In any case, the case is clear that as far as pure grappling is concerned, Estima belongs to the Los Angeles Lakers while Diaz plays with the Los Angeles D-Fenders, the NBA developmental league team.

And Diaz was right in his esteem of Estima. Must be very scary, homie.

How did his game opponent feel on the empty mat? According to Jake Bratcher of ProMMA, in his live feed on the dead mat, “Estima came from the U.K. for this fight with Diaz and he made weight. He was extremely disappointed Diaz would not fight and addressed the crowd, saying if Nick would not fight him in BJJ, he would fight him in MMA.”*

But Diaz might oblige to an MMA fight, which he and his acolytes seem to define as a “standup toe-to-toe brawl.”

Can Diaz accept a grappling loss—or any other loss—in the spirit of sportsmanship? Next question, please.

And here are more thoughts from our featured columnist Matthew Roth from his oven-fresh article Nick Diaz Does Not Care About Charity People, No-Shows BJJ Match:

This was the final match of a very entertaining online pay per view. The pay per view was priced at $10 and the big story leading into this super fight was that Nick Diaz was going to donate all of his winnings to charity. Seriously, this guy is supposed to compete for charity and doesn’t have the decency to inform the promoters and fans that he had no intention of grappling.

Previously, as if we don’t know it yet, he also did a Harry Houdini for the two press conferences of UFC 137 in 2011, which he headlined against the welterweight champion and better-fighter-than-Condit, Georges St-Pierre.

And yes, that main event also went puff.

Proving once again that he has perfected the disappearing act, Diaz should consider entering another profession.

And move over, Criss Angel.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Bob Sapp: The Thrill Is in Guessing How Fast He’ll Tap

Bob Sapp (11-13-1) does the unsurprising again, treating the ring like a diving pool for the nth time and giving Greg Louganis a run—or dive—for his money. No one is surprised except those who’ve been living under the rock of UFC sinc…

Bob Sapp (11-13-1) does the unsurprising again, treating the ring like a diving pool for the nth time and giving Greg Louganis a run—or dive—for his money.

No one is surprised except those who’ve been living under the rock of UFC since it bought Pride FC, or whose first taste of an MMA spectacle was via Poland’s Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki (KSW) XIX main event last night, which featured a first-round 39-second TKO (punches) of Sapp in the heavy hands of Mariusz Pudzianowski (4-2-1 NC).

Pudzianowski, the hometown fighter, who holds the record for winning the most World’s Strongest Man titles with five, really need not be a strongman in handing his opponent a defeat—the latter’s sixth straight since losing to a certain Stav Economou on March 11, 2011.

The charade goes on, and perhaps the only benefit that fans can gain from further watching “Sapp fight” (which has become synonymous to “entering and leaving the ring”) is pecuniary: winning on bets on when he’s going to tap or flop.

Based on the average of his last six fights, the safest is 1:36.5, and yes, all in the first round.  (I can’t believe I actually computed this.)

You bet on the dot or closest to the time of stoppage, you win. So, ready with the shirt on your back this coming May 18 when Sapp takes on Soa Palelei at Cage Fighting Championship 21 in Sydney.

On a serious note, I’ll end this with some pathos for the pathetic, from my assessment of Sapp in a previous article:

The man-mountain is now nothing more than a big chunk of carcass being fed time and time again to fighters with a little more noble aspiration. The latter are circling vultures, on a glide, hovering and waiting their turn to peck at the ton of semi-animate meat conveniently lain on the canvas.

Vultures, like this scribbler who has nothing else to do on a lazy Sunday morn (PHL time) but to exploit Sapp’s ingenious way of making a living, for the sake of posting an article before going to Mass.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com