Technique Talk: Stephen Thompson Retrofits Karate for MMA

The mixed martial arts arrival of karate and kickboxing standout Stephen Thompson to the UFC raised eyebrows before he ever set foot in the Octagon. By the time he fought and won his first bout at UFC 143 and walked out of the …

Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

The mixed martial arts arrival of karate and kickboxing standout Stephen Thompson to the UFC raised eyebrows before he ever set foot in the Octagon. By the time he fought and won his first bout at UFC 143 and walked out of the cage, he put the MMA world on notice. A blistering front-leg roundhouse kick – one Thompson has used his entire kickboxing career – sent opponent Dan Stittgen crashing to the mat.

What made me curious was not only why that particular combination worked, but how Thompson planned to leverage his unorthodox skill set against the talent the UFC welterweight division had to offer. Machida made his style of karate work for him, but could Thompson or other karatekas do the same?

I spoke with Thompson a week after his UFC 143 win to understand more about how he won his fight. More specifically, I wanted to know how he planned to stay true to his karate roots and continuing winning. Outside of Lyoto Machida, can the various different styles of karate be retrofitted to deal with the challenges of modern MMA?

In this interview with MMA Fighting, Thompson discusses the fight-ending combination he used on Stittgen at UFC 143, but also the health of the sport of karate, how karate styles differ from one another and the methods he’s used to adapt his game for mixed martial arts.

Full audio and partial transcription below:

Luke Thomas: I want to talk to you about how you actually won and karate if we can. Talk us through the final move. I saw somewhere in another article you had called it “The Moneymaker.” From a technical perspective, imagine you’re talking to your students, how did you execute that final kick?

Stephen Thompson: Well, actually, “The Moneymaker” is a combination of using kickboxing and it’s a very simple combination. It’s a simple jab-cross and you can use the back leg or the front leg round kick or a roundhouse kick. It was actually very simple. I listened to my coaches and sometimes they see stuff outside the cage that I don’t see but I did know that whenever I threw a combination or my punches, after I threw the punch or the combination, he would drop his hands directly after which set up “The Moneymaker” perfectly because 1-2, the jab cross and there’s kind of a delay between the punches and the kick so as his hands started dropping, that’s when the foot came over the shoulder and he didn’t see it. Those are the techniques that hurt, the ones you don’t see.

Luke Thomas: The jab-cross, is that designed to back him up? Is that designed to create timing? What’s the purpose of it?

Stephen Thompson: It’s just, the roundhouse follows the 1-2. I use it as more of a distraction. I don’t try to hit them with it, I just try to throw it in their faces to they don’t see that leg coming over top.

Luke Thomas: Now it looked to me like it’s a very similar kick to a Brazilian kick. Is that a fair characterization?

Stephen Thompson: Yeah, you kind of roll it over. You see a lot of muay Thai throw the kick at a 45 degree angle, but I like to roll the hip over and that’s where the power comes from off that lead leg is just the turning of the hip.

Luke Thomas: What is your opinion about muay Thai? Would you ever study it? Do you feel like you need it to compliment your game at this level?

Stephen Thompson: Oh, definitely. I’ve got a muay Thai coach here. Even though my striking is a little different and my stance is different, it’s good to know all aspects of the game and you’ve got a lot of guys who, their stand-up is muay Thai, which is a lot different than my style. Just the knees and elbows and the clinchwork, that’s just an art in its own. I’ve got a muay Thai coach. We work in the clinch. We work knees, we work elbows, we work defense so it’s different. Actually, I like it because I like to know all aspects of the MMA game.

Luke Thomas: Is there a different ethos to Thai boxing? Thai boxing, if you watch it in real life, especially in the third rounds, it’s very aggressive, like this war of attrition and many times they just stand in front of each other and just go to work. Your striking style seems to be a little bit of “less is more.” Is that a fair characterization as well?

Stephen Thompson: Yeah. You get a lot of the muay Thai guys, they’re so conditioned. The shins, thighs, form, elbows, everything is so conditioned they can just stand there and take those shots. With me, one shot could definitely determine the outcome of the fight so I don’t want to get hit at all. So instead of just standing there in front of somebody taking those shots, I’d rather move a half a step back to where it barely misses me and then counter off of that.

Luke Thomas: When you look at a fight like the first Shogun versus Machida fight, where nobody had figured out Machida and then Shogun went in there and did his Thai boxing right in front of Machida and most people believe obviously that Shogun won and then in the follow-up he won rather handily. What happened there? I heard some people suggesting maybe that Shogun’s style of Thai boxing is maybe better than Machida’s style of karate. What’s your response to that?

Stephen Thompson: I wouldn’t say one style is better than the other. It’s just how you execute it during the fight. Obviously, Shogun definitely showed the conditioning and the strength and whatever Machida threw at him, he was conditioned to take those shots and plant. As Machida came in, he just planted his feet and countered off of Machida. He hit Machida as he came in so his timing was really on that day. I’ve had the privilege to train with Machida. He’s amazing. His movement, his timing, his speed is awesome but I think Shogun had the better day that day.

Luke Thomas: Let’s talk a little more about Machida. What is it about his karate game? Like if you had to describe his karate game to other people who maybe haven’t seen him but had also trained karate, what would you say?

Stephen Thompson: I would say, it’s very similar to mine. He likes to stay on the outside. He likes to blitz. He covers distance very quickly. He stays out of your reach but then he can cover that distance and people don’t expect it and he hits you with it and then he’s back out again before you can hit him. The only thing about that is, I find too that you have to be able to keep that pace up. It’s very tiring having to move in and out and in and out very quickly. Your conditioning has to be on point.

With me, I know Machida now too, our conditioning definitely plays a factor in a fight. He’s very quick and one of the things that makes him so quick is his timing. There’s no telegraph in his technique, none at all. Just like Anderson Silva, I had the privilege to train with him and those two are training partners. He’s not quick, he just has amazing timing and there’s just no telegraph and that makes it appear that he’s very fast.

Luke Thomas: Talk to me about some of the stances that you take in karate. I don’t mean metaphorically, I mean literally. There were times during your fight in the UFC where you were basically perpendicular with him. Do you believe that you can really keep that style of karate and still excel against the better wrestlers in the welterweight division?

Stephen Thompson: Yeah, I’ve also had the privilege of being able to be one of Georges St. Pierre’s training partners and I know up in Tristar, there’s some phenomenal wrestlers. That stance that I have, it makes it a little easier for me to stand against a double leg takedown. I would give a wrestler my front leg because I can defend that and I can counter off him going for my front leg but when they go for both, it’s very difficult to defend against a double. So the reason I stand almost sideways is number one, I use my front leg a lot with the front kick and side kicks. I almost use it as a jab to keep them away and it’s very hard to catch a leg actually coming straight at you like those high kicks and stuff so I use it a lot against wrestlers. It’s very hard to catch. It’s almost like the Frank Shamrock and Cung Le fight. Frank Shamrock was a great wrestler, Cung Le was a former kickboxer and he used his high kicks very well and Frank had a very hard time taking him down. I switch sides which throws a lot of wrestlers off too.

Luke Thomas: Do you believe that that style, that position will be effective against say an ankle pick or a single leg?

Stephen Thompson: You know what? It really depends on who the wrestler is. Georges St. Pierre, if he wants to take you down, you’re going down. He’s trained with the Olympic team and he does a lot of that stuff. Of course I’m finding different way to defend against it. I’ve had people throws those on me a lot and sometimes I’ve been taken down by it and sometimes I defend them. It’s just whether or not I can see it coming or not.

Luke Thomas: Why haven’t other guys who maybe have achieved similar levels to you in kickboxing, is there any desire from them to crossover? Have you talked to them? What’s their opinion about maybe making a move to MMA like you have?

Stephen Thompson: Yeah, actually he kickboxing world back when I first started was very big. Kickboxing is dying out here in the States. Over in Europe, it’s still very big but even with K-1, one of the most popular kickboxing organizations in the world, you don’t it as much just because MMA is overshadowing everything and UFC is one of the fastest growing sports in the world so you’re going to see a lot more kickboxer/strikers move over to the MMA world but the thing is, the question is, can they adapt to it like others? Sometimes, you get kickboxers and all they’ve done is striking and they don’t have the wrestling or jiu-jitsu background that I have had since I was young. It’s just a question or not on if they’re going to be able to adapt to it, but I think you’ll see a lot more kickboxers moving over to MMA.

Luke Thomas: You mentioned one thing over and over again and I just want to make sure I’m clear on it. Do you believe Thai boxers or Thai boxing places a stronger emphasis on physical conditioning than say, the kind of kickboxing we saw that you have practiced historically?

Stephen Thompson: Body conditioning, I would say yes because a lot of those guys, their shins are like metal poles and they condition all of that. I do that to some sort, but in muay Thai, over in Thailand, they’re kicking rubber tires daily. I think they emphasize that more in Thai boxing than American style kickboxing. They want to stand there and take those shots and counter but I want to counter off of when you miss me so it’s a a little bit different. I still my conditioning but not as intense as the muay Thai.

Luke Thomas: Talk to me about Cung Le. He’s a taekwondo black belt and he certainly has his own style, but what would you say is the difference for folks who never trained karate and never trained taekwondo. What is the difference for the kinds of striking he brings from taekwondo that you bring from karate?

Stephen Thompson: Well, the kicks in taekwondo are very similar. We roll the hips over like muay Thai, their kicks, they kick at a 45 degree angle so they get the majority of their shin into their target. I like to roll it over because I get more power in my kicks even though I’m not hitting with all my shin. Taekwondo, those are some major kickers right there. That’s what they bring. That’s all they do is the kicks. They don’t have the punching and the ground but it’s more of a kicking art than anything. Our kicks are very similar. We like to roll our hips over and they like the flashy spins which in MMA can catch an MMA fighter off guard just because they’re not used to seeing it as much, but it’s just the way they set their kicks up. It’s very similar.

Luke Thomas: Talk to me about the different kinds of karate. We hear about all sorts of backgrounds . There’s Shotokan which I believe is the kind that Machida comes from, there’s a kind St. Pierre comes from, kyokushin, and then we hear about kenpo. What separates the different types of karate?

Stephen Thompson: I would say they’re all fairly similar. At one point, they all come from one style and it just kind of branched off from there and then you come up from these many different styles. It’s almost like the Gracies and judo. They branched off from judo and created Brazilian jiu-jitsu. They all have their similarities. My background in karate is a little more, we do our traditional stuff, but from the point-sparring game. You look at Machida as more traditional, his style is more traditional but it’s kind of Americanized a little bit, the point fighting. That’s where we kind of get different in our styles. It’s kind of hard to explain really.

Luke Thomas: I’ve read that the kyokushin tournaments are a little more full contact. Is that true?

Stephen Thompson: Yes, that is true. I’ve done some kyokushin tournaments before and definitely a little more contact in there. They’re pretty much going full contact, they just can’t punch in the face. They’re bare knuckle, bare fist, they can hit to the body. They can kick to the head. They can kick to the leg. They can knee to the body. They can elbow to the body so it’s more of something you would see in MMA striking than point fighting is.

Point fighting, I can compete with a kid just because it wasn’t as rough as kyokushin, but it definitely helps with the movement and speed and accuracy in your techniques because in point fighting, you’ve got to get from point A to point B faster than your opponent. Whoever can cover that distance first will end up winning, getting that strike off or hitting them with that. So we’ve combined that with the full contact.

Luke Thomas: How is the health of the sport in American in terms of karate? Obviously, with the growth of MMA, in some ways it feels like karate got put on the backburner. It was big in the 80s and part of the 90s and now I’m not sure how big it is. How is the health of the sport here in America?

Stephen Thompson: The point karate sport or all karate sports?

Luke Thomas: I guess karate more generally.

Stephen Thompson: It’s been so long that I’ve actually been in the point karate game. Karate is still big in the world just because of the discipline, the self control, self confidence, that’s a big part of what we teach in karate. The kicking and punching is just kind of a bonus. The competitive part of it, I haven’t been in the point fighting game in such a long time so I’m really not sure where that lies. You hear of karate tournaments here and there, but everybody nowadays, they want to compete in MMA. Like I said before, it’s the fastest growing sport in the world.

Luke Thomas: If folks want to learn more about karate and they want to get on YouTube and you could name maybe two or three other guys who have a similar background to yours, maybe not identical but similar. Give me names of some interesting strikers who have a similar background to yours that maybe others should look into.

Stephen Thompson: Of course, you’ve got Lyoto Machida. He’s definitely a karate guy and he’s made a big presence in MMA. I would say look up Lyoto Machida.

There are some other karate guys who are phenomenal at what they do at their karate game, the point fighting game, Raymond Daniels, who is an amazing point fighter and very flashy. He’s done some full contact kickboxing and also fought in the WCL which was where I competed in before I switched to MMA. I would definitely watch Joe Lewis, not the boxer Joe Louis, the kickboxer Joe Lewis. He’s an old school karate guy as well and he was a kickboxing world champion.

Luke Thomas: You didn’t have any Octagon jitters and if you look at your career, it makes sense. Yes, you’ve only had just barely more than a handful of fights in MMA but you’ve been a competitor at some level of martial arts for quite some time and at some pretty high levels. Would you say that just being an active and high level competitor generally can really help negate any Octagon jitters you might get?

Stephen Thompson: Oh yeah, definitely. I’ve been competing for a very long time and I still get the Octagon jitters or ring jitters because it definitely helps you out. It keeps you sharp because it makes you more body aware. Just as long as you don’t let it overcome you, you get a lot of fighters who just get that adrenaline dump and they tire themselves out in the first round because of the nerves but you’ve got to learn to control it some. How to do that is to keep positive people around you who can give you positive feedback, give you positive energy before you step out in the cage and that’s what helps me out so some of these up and coming fighters, especially amateurs, really think about doing that.

In Technique Talk, we’ll not only explore the techniques that win fights, but where they come from, why they’re used and what they say about the fighters who employ them.

UFC on FUEL Play-By-Play

This is the UFC on FUEL live blog for all the preliminary bouts on Facebook in support of tonight’s FUEL-televised card from the Omaha Civic Auditorium in Omaha.The live blog begins below.

More Coverage: UFC on FUEL Results |…

Vagner Rocha. Photo by Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

This is the UFC on FUEL live blog for all the preliminary bouts on Facebook in support of tonight’s FUEL-televised card from the Omaha Civic Auditorium in Omaha.

The live blog begins below.



Tim Means vs. Bernardo Magalhaes

Round 1: Means taking the center of the cage early. After some slow action in the opening moments, Means lands a hard knee to the face. Magalhaes counters with an overhand right. Means with another knee to the face, this one knocks Magalhaes down. Means attacks with a D’arce but Magalhaes defends it and they go back to their feet. Means takes round 1 on damage, 10-9.

Round 2: Means walks out confidently to start the second. Magalhaes dances around the outside but Means finds his target with long jabs and power punches. Magalhaes has some blood leaking from his nose now. Magalhaes shoots but Means stuffs him easily. Means stalking Magalhaes around and pressing forward. He lands a hard body shot with :20 left. Magalhaes goes down and Means lands hard strikes from the top. Another 10-9 round for Means.

Round 3: Magalhaes fires off an overhand right that misses, then lands a left hook. Magalhaes shoots in for a single leg takedown, but he’s rebuffed by a nice sprawl. Magalhaes’ strategy of taking the fight to the ground has come up empty thus far, and he’s getting tagged in the process. Means with another body shot. Magalhaes goes down, but he might be trying to lure Means down, and Means doesn’t go for it, inviting him back to his feet. Means with another hard right and this time he follows Magalhaes down and punishes him with elbows. Magalhaes is in trouble but Means lets him up again. He controls the standup to the horn, 10-9.

Winner: Tim Means via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-26, 30-26)

Anton Kuivanen vs. Justin Salas

Round 1: Both fighters are UFC newcomers. Salas walks out southpaw while Kuivanen is orthodox. Salas tries an early takedown that fails. Kuivanen landing some early kicks to the body. He backs up Salas with a right hand to the body. Kuivanen stops another takedown. Salas lands a nice lead right hook. Salas scores his first takedown with two minutes left. Salas lands one overhand right but Kuivanen sweeps and gets free and back to his feet. Kuivanen with another kick to the body. He’s the one moving forward. Salas completes another takedown at the final horn. A very close round that MMA Fighting scores for Kuivanen 10-9.

Sean Loeffler vs. Buddy Roberts

Jonathan Brookins vs. Vagner Rocha

UFC on FUEL Sanchez vs. Ellenberger Weigh-In Coverage

All 20 fighters stepping into the Octagon for Wednesday night’s UFC on FUEL event will first step on the scale on Tuesday afternoon at the UFC on FUEL weigh-in, and we’ll carry the live video right here at MMAFighting.com.
In t…

Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

All 20 fighters stepping into the Octagon for Wednesday night’s UFC on FUEL event will first step on the scale on Tuesday afternoon at the UFC on FUEL weigh-in, and we’ll carry the live video right here at MMAFighting.com.

In the main event, welterweights Diego Sanchez and Jake Ellenberger will have to make the 171-pound weight limit. The co-main event features two heavyweights, Stefan Struve and Dave Herman, who should be comfortably below the 265-pound limit.

UFC on Fuel begins on Facebook Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. Eastern, and the FUEL card begins at 8 p.m. Eastern Tuesday’s weigh-in starts at 5 p.m. Eastern. The video is below.

My First Fight: Fighters Discuss the Beginning of Their Careers

No fight fan is in any danger of confusing Miguel Torres for Muhammad Ali. One’s a skinny bantamweight MMA fighter with a mullet, and the other is Muhammad Ali. But even though they might be separated by a few decades and many,…

LAS VEGAS - MAY 28:  UFC fighter Rashad Evans weighs in for his fight against UFC fighter Quinton "Rampage" Jackson at UFC 114: Rampage versus Rashad at the Mandalay Bay Hotel on May 28, 2010 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images)

Miguel TorresNo fight fan is in any danger of confusing Miguel Torres for Muhammad Ali. One’s a skinny bantamweight MMA fighter with a mullet, and the other is Muhammad Ali. But even though they might be separated by a few decades and many, many pounds, both owe the genesis of their fight careers to a specific type of childhood anguish: the stolen bike.

Torres’ bike had been a gift from his uncle. It wasn’t exactly top of the line, but it had the word ‘Ambush’ written across the side, which was undeniably cool for reasons Torres couldn’t quite explain. He’d made it even cooler by covering much of the bike in duct tape.

“You know, so it was camouflaged,” he says.

One Friday afternoon he rode his bike down to a local shrimp joint to get a basket of french fries to split with his friends, but the proprietor wouldn’t let him bring his bike inside. Torres didn’t have a lock, so he left it just outside, where he could see the front tire through the window.

“But this was when [arcade game] Mortal Kombat first came out,” he says with a sigh. “I came in for the food, but all I heard was ‘Finish him!'”

You know where this is going. Torres had some change in his pocket, and what kid in the early 90s could resist the magnetic pull of a good video game — especially Mortal Kombat? Torres tried to keep an eye on that bike tire through the window, but he got absorbed in the game, taking on one challenger after another. When he glanced over his shoulder at the end of it all, no more bike.

“It was the first time I’d ever had anything stolen from me,” he says. “I was crushed. I ran around the whole block screaming, ‘Where’s my bike!?'”

When that didn’t yield the result he was hoping for, Torres went home to “lift weights.” And by weights, he means bricks. It was the closest thing he could find to a weight set in his neighborhood, and all he knew was that he needed to get stronger if he was going to be ready when he finally came face to face with the bike thief. He also convinced his parents to let him take some Taekwondo lessons, “until I found out it was all bulls–t.”

He’d go to school and his friends on the wrestling team would taunt him, calling him ‘karate boy’ and challenging him to show them his stuff.

“Then they’d take me down and get me in just the worst holds you can imagine. It sucked.”

But little by little, Torres was learning different art forms from whatever sources he could find. A little taekwondo here, some wrestling there, even a trip to a local boxing gym where they sparred on bare feet on a concrete floor. During one such session Torres so angered an older sparring partner with his frantic Jeff Speakman routine that the man threw off his gloves and double-legged him onto the concrete floor before choking the teenage Torres with his own t-shirt.

Afterward, “the guy told me, ‘That’s jiu-jitsu.’ I was like, I have to learn that.”

Somewhere along the way Torres became a martial arts junkie. He read all the books, held himself to a rigid diet he didn’t fully understand, took challenge matches wherever he could find them. All that was left was to find a real fight, a pro fight, something that would test him. This is where Finke’s came in.

If you look at Torres’ record, it’ll tell you that his first fight was against Larry Pulliam at Finke’s Full Contact Challenge in March of 2000. That sounds pretty official, at least until you realize that Finke’s was the name of a local bar in Highland, Indiana, and the “Full Contact Challenge” was more or less a gimmick to try and drum up a crowd for those slow Monday nights.

“I had this idea about how it would be, but I walked in that bar and it was almost empty. It was just these shady characters — bikers, gang-bangers. They gave me this form to fill out, and it was basically a cheap contract saying I wouldn’t sue if I got hurt or killed. After that, it was: real name, stage name, height, weight, and age. That was it. There was no scale to check your weight. No athletic commission. You could wrap your hands if you wanted or you could not wrap your hands. All they checked was mouthpiece and cup.”

Even that requirement proved difficult for some of the fighters. Some of them had brought boil-and-bite mouthpieces — the cheap ones that you can form to your teeth after a quick dunk in hot water — but they hadn’t even bothered to take them out of the package before fight night. Maybe it was just as well, because they ended up passing the mouthpieces back and forth, among other things.

“There were guys literally saying, ‘Hey, if you let me use your mouthpiece, I’ll let you use my cup,'” Torres says. “And they’d be there after the fights swapping mouthpieces and cups. Guys who weren’t even wearing jockstraps were just shoving someone else’s cup in their shorts.”

As Torres was warming up backstage, one of his coaches stretched him out while attempting to impart various Eastern philosophies. Ebb and flow. Yin and yang. That sort of stuff. His boxing coach had different advice, and it involved “[expletive]ing this guy up” and then befriending the strippers who’d been hired to serve as ring girls. Only maybe it wasn’t quite so delicately put.

“That was the last thing I heard before I went in there. And in my mind I had this idea of what a fight should be, just this war. I had images of me hitting him and him hurting me and me getting cut and bleeding, but coming back and winning the fight. Like a Rocky movie or a kung fu movie. I thought the whole 15-minute fight would be like that. I was thinking of all the Bruce Lee books I’d read, The Art of War. All that.”

Instead what happened was that Pulliam came forward, was backed off by a Torres head kick attempt — “the worst kick you can imagine,” he says — and then came forward again, straight into a Torres left hook. That was all it took. Pulliam went down, attempted to get back to his feet, then collapsed again. The ref had no choice but to stop it.

“I looked at my corner like, that’s it?” Torres says. “I didn’t want to get out of the ring. I was so upset. I wanted to fight again.”

The crowd loved it. So did his coaches. But Torres left the ring with a disappointed feeling in the pit of his stomach. That disappointment continued when Finke’s employees explained that, while he was old enough to fight in their establishment, he wasn’t old enough to drink there.

“I thought at least I’d get to hang out in the bar. But no, they kicked me out because I was underage. They were all hanging out, drinking with the strippers, but I was outside in the car eating McDonald’s.”

Torres stayed there waiting for his coaches to return for, by his estimation, “about four hours.” Not exactly the victory party you imagine for yourself after your first professional win, but Torres was already hooked. Even though ‘MMA fighter’ wasn’t much of an actual job description in the spring of 2000, Torres “knew right away that this was what I wanted to do.”

He’d go on to fight many more bouts at Finke’s while trying to keep it a secret from his family, but word spread about the skinny Mexican kid who never lost a bout. Not long after, Torres’ father was injured by a crane at a construction site where he was working. When Torres went to see him in the hospital one day he found that his father had had a visit from a work friend who told him all about seeing his son fight down at the sports bar. The secret was out.

“So I told him all about it,” Torres says. “He said, ‘How much are they paying you?’ I was like, I don’t fight for money. I fight for the art, for respect. I was an idealist. And my dad, from his hospital bed, he reached out and smacked me on the back of the neck.”

Torres’ father’s friend had told him all about how the guys from the construction crew loved these fight nights, how they paid $25 a head to get in, how the young Torres was quickly becoming a major draw.

“My dad said, ‘You’ve got to get paid. This guy’s making money off you, and you’re the one getting hurt.’ So I went back and talked to the promoter and told him I wanted to start getting paid.”

And he did. For his next fight, Torres made the princely sum of $100. It was enough to fill his Camaro up with gas and still have enough to take a girl out on a date. Plus, it was money he’d earned with his art, his skills. It was perfect. It was everything he thought he needed at the time, and it was just the beginning.

Check out past installments of My First Fight, featuring “Mayhem” Miller, Rashad Evans, and more.

Why You Should Care About UFC on FUEL TV 1

I’ve heard all the excuses already. I know many of you don’t get FUEL TV. I know many of you don’t get FUEL TV in high definition. And yes, even among you mixed martial arts (MMA) faithful, you haven’t heard about many of the f…

Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

I’ve heard all the excuses already. I know many of you don’t get FUEL TV. I know many of you don’t get FUEL TV in high definition. And yes, even among you mixed martial arts (MMA) faithful, you haven’t heard about many of the fighters competing on Wednesday’s UFC on FUEL TV card.

What’s so great about this card, then? A lot, actually.

I’m not going to pretend this card is can’t-miss UFC action. This isn’t the card of the year even if there is much to admire here. If it were, it wouldn’t be on FUEL TV. But there’s more than enough of the good stuff that if you can find a way to watch, you should.

The obvious elephant in the room is access to Fuel. The channel is only in 35 million homes. However, for many cable packages that carry the channel, standard definition is offered. I’ll admit as a DirecTV subscriber, my enthusiasm being higher for this card is probably directly related to my ability to get the channel in high definition (HD). Either way, this is clearly a problem that’s dampening enthusiasm.

So let me offer a few reasons why you should find a way – go over to a friend’s house, irately call your cable provider – to watch Wednesday night’s fights:

1. The main event. Jake Ellenberger vs. Diego Sanchez is a fantastic scrap. Ellenberger is one or two wins away from a title shot, a particularly physical fighter and well-rounded, experienced competitor. Diego Sanchez, I suspect, is going to have his hands full with Ellenberger, but is borderline impossible to put away, psychotically driven and supremely experienced against two division’s top talent. This fight has fireworks written all over it. Both also have a lot to lose should they falter and neither is particularly known for retreating when the stakes were high.

2. The co-main event. I’d like to see Stefan Struve exercise better risk management in his fights and expect to see that as he matures in age. Against Dave Herman, though, I suspect he will attempt to joust more than jab. If you’re into wild exchanges, there’s something here for you. And if you’re like me and believe Herman is a terribly underrated heavyweight talent, this is also a good benchmark to evaluate his progress.

3. Free prelims. Even if you don’t have Fuel, you likely have a Facebook account. That means you can catch the prelims as easily as the next guy. No excuses here.

4. Ronny Markes‘ middleweight debut. This Nova Uniao beast holds a win over Paulo Filho and notched a victory in his UFC debut over Karlos Vemola. While he wasn’t wildly impressive, he did show a wide array of talents and poise over three hard-fought rounds. He’s re-tooling now by dropping to middleweight, which is incontestably a thinner division than light heavyweight. He’ll face the talented Aaron Simpson, who despite his age is still a sturdy challenge for any rising prospect. This is one fighter whose growth deserves closer attention.

5. Stipe Miocic returns. Another prospect who just needs some seasoning to show us the true depth of his talents. Miocic is former Division I wrestler and Golden Gloves champion who is undefeated in his MMA run at heavyweight. How far he can go is anyone’s guess, but the Strong Style Fight Team product has many of tools to make a big impact in the heavyweight division.

6. T.J. Dillashaw vs. Walel Watson. When Urijah Faber was in town for UFC on Versus 6 in Washington, D.C., he told me (and could not have been more emphatic) that Dillashaw was a force to be reckoned with. Sure, the Team Alpha Male bantamweight fell short against John Dodson, but there’s no shame in that loss. He’s aggressive, naturally gifted and fights with a mean streak. Watson, on the other hand, has commanded attention in his two UFC bouts. He blasted through Joseph Sandoval at UFC on Versus 6 and lost a very controversial split decision a UFC 140 to Yves Jabouin. Both of these bantamweights fight aggressively and have hugely contrasting styles. It’s an excellent pairing of two noteworthy prospects who need wins over the each other to make the next move up the promotional ladder.

7. Two preliminary card bouts. I’m not going to pretend every fight on this card is a sensational pairing. But there are two that stand out on the preliminary card: Ivan Menjivar vs. John Albert and Jonathan Brookins vs. Vagner Rohca. Menjivar is a bit of an aging veteran, but also a sleeper in the bantamweight division. Albert has his hands full. Brookins vs. Rocha offers a good contrast in styles and another loss for either fighter could be disastrous. Both have to bring it.

8. Wednesday night fights. Listen, Saturday will always be the best night for fights, but I can’t imagine I’m alone in thinking weekday fights with a talented roster of prospects is boatloads of fun. In part, that’s what made WEC fights on Versus such a welcome departure from the typical Saturday night routine. Perhaps most importantly, prospect fight cards like this (the Ellenberger vs. Sanchez fight itself notwithstanding) don’t require the same media churn a UFC 143 does. Sure, the results are meaningful, but they don’t have to be analyzed and over analyzed again. There’s a lot on the line, but not nearly as much. Frankly, that’s a good thing. Throw in the fact the fights also end earlier in the evening and it’s hard to see how any of this could be a bad thing.

No one can know in advance if fights will deliver. All we can ask is that promoters line up a fight card with reasonably meaningful bouts with the appropriate, available talent in match-ups that have likelihood to deliver. If we’re measuring this fight card by that standard, the inaugural UFC fight night on FUEL TV is one not to miss.

Nick Diaz Is to Blame, But So Are Meaningless Commission Marijuana Tests

Let’s establish two facts from the outset. First, Nick Diaz’s use of marijuana to the extent it produced a positive drug test result is irresponsible. Second, the urinalysis test regarding marijuana consumption used by athletic…

Daniel Herbertson, MMA Fighting

Let’s establish two facts from the outset. First, Nick Diaz’s use of marijuana to the extent it produced a positive drug test result is irresponsible. Second, the urinalysis test regarding marijuana consumption used by athletic commissions (ostensibly) designed to protect the health and safety of fighters does neither and is little more than kabuki theater.

The UFC has every right to be disappointed with Nick Diaz. They invested huge sums of money and other promotional resources to push him, his fight and build him as a pay-per-view attraction. As incoherent and insane as some of the rules may be (more on that in a minute), he accepted the handshake. That meant not only fighting Condit, it also included media promotion and some measure of clean living. For him to test positive on the urinalysis – which could’ve resulted in promotional disaster for the UFC had he actually defeated Condit at UFC 143 – is the height of unprofessionalism and represents a total failure as a partner to the UFC.

But it’s also true, and perhaps more important, that the urinalysis test (MMAFighting.com has confirmed Nevada uses urinalyses to test fighters for various banned substances, including marijuana) used by the Nevada State Athletic Commssion (NSAC) to gauge marijuana use does not perform the function it purports to do.

“[Marijuana] is banned because of the damage it does to the person taking it,” said Keith Kizer, Nevada State Athletic Commission Executive Officer to the L.A. Times. “It could make you lethargic, slow your reflexes, and those are dangerous things in a combat sport.”

Kizer’s argument is technically true, but incredibly misleading. In order to have any relevance in the combat sports context – remember, Diaz is medically cleared to use it in his personal life by a licensed medical practitioner – Kizer’s argument has to apply to a fighter’s state during sanctioned competition. After all, it’s fair to argue no fighter should be competing under the euphoric effects of marijuana.

Here’s the problem: urinalysis tests are incapable of determining when a person used. Drug use expert, author and Senior Editor of Reason magazine Jacob Sullum, explains it is scientific fact urinalyses only determine that someone used, not when.

“[The urinalysis] shows that the drug has been consumed at some point,” Sullum told MMAFighting.com, “but it doesn’t pinpoint when and the problem arises mainly with marijuana because there’s a very long detection window for marijuana ranging anywhere from a few days up to a month after somebody has smoked a joint depending on how heavy of a smoker they are, it can be detected for quite a long time after they’re not high anymore so it’s not a measure of intoxication or impairment, it’s an indicator that they have consumed marijuana at some point in the past possibly, quite a time ago.”

“If you’re doing it with urine,” Sullum continued, “it’s not going to be a measurement of current intoxication or impairment simply because what you’re measuring is metabolized after the marijuana is processed. So just by the nature of the test, it’s never going to be the test of somebody’s current condition.”

If a urinalysis can’t determine current levels of impairment, what can? Sullum says no method is perfect, but blood tests (generally, a more expensive proposition) is a significantly more accurate measurement. “[The blood test] is measuring THC levels in the blood so that’s a better indicator, just like with alcohol, you want to know if somebody had a drink recently and how much have they consumed, you can get an idea of that by looking at the alcohol in their blood because that’s what’s affecting them right now. If there’s THC in their blood above a certain cutoff, that’s affecting you right now. If it’s in your urine, it’s not. Your urine is not circulated through your body so the relevant concern is what’s actually affecting you now. Blood is a much more accurate measure of that”.

What’s worse, the urinalysis puts a heavy burden on the marijuana user over other banned substances – like cocaine – that pose greater health risks but have shorter detection windows. “Yeah, it’s a shorter window for other drugs,” said Sullum. “Marijuana is unusual in that it’s such a long window but even with other drugs, it can be a day or two or three depending upon the drug.”

Nick Diaz’s problem isn’t that he used marijuana in too close a proximity to the fight. By the commission’s own perverse enforcement system, it’s that he’s got the wrong drug of choice.

It is more understandable your standard employer would use a urinalysis as a screen for potential hires. All they want is peace of mind you’re not using drugs. They don’t need to know if when you took it you were or weren’t high. That level of specificity is overkill.

Athletic commissions not only have the need, they have the responsibility. When commissions use urinalysis to measure impairment of marijuana and other banned substances, no one’s health is protected, no one’s safety is at issue. In administering these tests, they become less a governing body tasked with regulating the sport and more just vice cops regulating personal behavior unrelated to occupational demands.

Blame Nick Diaz all you like. He knew what he was getting into. The larger issue, however, isn’t about him. It’s a question of the efficacy of athletic commission protocol and the damaging penalties they hand out when fighters run afoul of demonstrably meaningless screens.

Talk about reefer madness.