UFC 2012: Was Pat Barry’s ‘Roaches’ Take on MMA Fans Fair?

Fighters have a sense of entitlement, and why shouldn’t they? They’re tough, athletic men who could crush most other human beings into dust.However, that sometimes leads fighters into saying (or believing) things that are faulty or otherwise execrable&…

Fighters have a sense of entitlement, and why shouldn’t they? They’re tough, athletic men who could crush most other human beings into dust.

However, that sometimes leads fighters into saying (or believing) things that are faulty or otherwise execrable—like UFC heavyweight Pat Barry believing that MMA fans who express their opinions verbally (read: booing) are, as he put it, “Roaches.”

“That’s why I call them roaches,” Barry said on a video he posted on his YouTube channel in response to an incident he had with a booing fan. “There are more of them than us. They’re never going to go away. They’re feeble creatures…They’re just a bunch of [expletive] roaches, running around. They’re everywhere, can’t escape them.”

This view is awful, but what’s worse is that a group of MMA fans actually endorse this belief! Just spend five minutes on the legendary MMA message board, The Underground, to see one poster raise a point only to be shot down by dozens of people going “Well you don’t TRAIN/FIGHT so how could you possibly have anything worthwhile to say?”

Just look at the highest-rated comment of Barry’s video, which is a response to a rant against Barry’s views:

“Oh, I see. You are one of the roaches who hasn’t ever competed in a combat sport,” the comment said. Many of the other 400-odd comments echo this sentiment. 

The notion that only someone who has fought can offer criticism is not only laughable, but it shouldn’t matter in the context of booing a fight. 

Fighters and fighter-worshipping fans might not realize this, but the sport of MMA, as well as the UFC’s popularity, only exists because of fans like the one mentioned in Barry’s video. Casual fans who spend their money on the sport for a night of entertainment, a night where they can forget about political chicanery in the news and workplace politics and just enjoy phantasmagorical displays of violence, symphonies of strikes and submissions.

Look at the sport before The Ultimate Fighter and the emergence of the casual, Spike TV-watching fan; there was a reason those times were called “The Dark Ages.”

Yes, fans may have been more respectable, but the sport as a whole was in a much worse place and money was extremely scarce.

Now, the sport is approaching the mainstream (and some might argue that it is mainstream already) and is therefore being plagued with mainstream problems—the foremost one being that fighters will be criticized and booed at some point in their careers and there is absolutely nothing they can do to stop it.

The sport is driven by money, not a nonexistent warrior code of honor. Being vocally unsatisfied with the results of a fight/event that you spent money on via tickets and travel expenses does not make a fan a roach—it doesn’t make them anything.

When paying customers don’t get what they want, they tend to not be happy about it. There’s no sin in that.

If a football game is a dud, do fans flock to the Internet to decry all those who criticize the game’s lack of excitement as feeble pretenders who don’t deserve to assess a football game because they never suited up and played on the gridiron?

No, because such a notion is absurd.

Fans have every right to boo and to be upset with how fights play out—that is their right as paying customers. I’m all for educating oneself on how the sport works and have trained myself to the point of being sidelined with injury, but what I’m not for is berating the people who helped make the sport successful and who keep a roof over the fighters’ heads—the fans.

 

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UFC 153 Results: Was Erick Silva Just Another Overhyped Prospect?

Too much Internet hype and not enough in-cage ability to back it up—that’s the story of UFC 153 fighter Erick Silva, who was broken by perennial contender and relentless “grinder” Jon Fitch.For some reason, MMA fans (specifically “hardcore” fans …

Too much Internet hype and not enough in-cage ability to back it up—that’s the story of UFC 153 fighter Erick Silva, who was broken by perennial contender and relentless “grinder” Jon Fitch.

For some reason, MMA fans (specifically “hardcore” fans on Internet forums and message boards) love hyping up young, apparently gifted fighters to the nth degree—and nine times out of 10 these fighters don’t live up to the hype. Sometimes they don’t even live up to expectations that non-hyped, forgotten, low-level fighters have.

The list of would-be next big things is a long one.

Fighters like Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou, Brandon Vera, Charles Oliveira, Jimy Hettes, Alex Caceres, Houston Alexander, Denis Kang, Gerald Harris, Gesias Cavalcante, as well as dozens of others were all promised to deliver in a big way, yet most of them only delivered against low-level opponents and were decisively beaten when they faced their first true test. 

And, after this loss, a lot of these overhyped Internet supermen faded away into nothing; they couldn’t handle losing and they, apparently, couldn’t handle winning against a decent opponent either. 

Brandon Vera, for example, started his career off 8-0 against the likes of Justin Eilers and Mike Whitehead. He had a feather in his cap in the form of a TKO victory over an out-of-shape Frank Mir (after Mir had already suffered the consequences of his 2004 motorcycle accident) but faded when he faced former heavyweight champ Tim Sylvia. 

After the loss to Sylvia, Vera never recovered.

After an 8-1 start, his record was a mediocre 4-5 (1 NC), beating the Keith Jardines of the world but losing to any top talent (as well as not-so-top talent like an ancient Randy Couture).

Erick Silva may just be another Brandon Vera—an upstart who looks brilliant against the infamous “guys without Wikipedia pages” but who, on his best day, isn’t capable of beating anyone in the top 10. 

However, we don’t know this for sure yet. Silva is only 28 years old. As such, he has time to re-evaluate, rejuvenate and come back to the cage as a better fighter. It’s that, or join the ignominious list of “next big things” who were only next on the chopping block and were only big on the regional circuit.

 

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UFC on Fuel TV 5 Results: Questions Answered and Lessons Learned

The UFC’s fifth foray onto the Fuel network is over. Stefan Struve has crushed Stipe Miocic, and British slugger Dan Hardy defeated TUF veteran Amir Sadollah.The event seems like it’s one that can easily be written as a “filler” in the history of MMA, …

The UFC’s fifth foray onto the Fuel network is over. Stefan Struve has crushed Stipe Miocic, and British slugger Dan Hardy defeated TUF veteran Amir Sadollah.

The event seems like it’s one that can easily be written as a “filler” in the history of MMA, seeing as it was one that took place on Fuel, as well as a British card stuffed with perceived “lesser” fighters.

This is false.

UFC on Fuel TV 5 taught lessons and answered questions about key fighters and greater principles about MMA.

What are the specifics? Read and find out.

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UFC 2012: Could MMA Survive Without the UFC?

Modern MMA could not survive without the UFC. That’s not opinion—that’s fact.Don’t believe the MMA hipsters who tell you that MMA could flourish without the promotion. Such fools are misguided by ideological baggage and blinded by their hatred of…

Modern MMA could not survive without the UFC. That’s not opinion—that’s fact.

Don’t believe the MMA hipsters who tell you that MMA could flourish without the promotion. Such fools are misguided by ideological baggage and blinded by their hatred of all things UFC.

Zuffa—a company lead by Station Casinos owners Frank and Lorenzo Fertita, and their friend Dana White—purchased the UFC in 2001 and took it from a fringe, borderline-illegal, nearly bankrupt organization to a sports powerhouse that has a deal with FOX.

The sport of MMA, itself, grew as a result of the UFC’s success.

One might think that, if the UFC were to disappear, the sport could still survive because the seeds for MMA’s growth have been planted across the world by the UFC; the UFC expanded existing markets for MMA and created new ones where there weren’t any.

This lead to the rise of regional promotions—such as Sharkfights, Legacy Fighting Championship, Ring of Combat in the US, BAMMA in the UK, MFC in Canada, Jungle Fight in Brazil, Superior Challenge in Sweden and many, many more—as well as larger promotions that some believed could contend with the UFC. 

EliteXC was one such promotion, they even beat the UFC to a network deal, landing a contract with CBS in 2008. Despite this accolade, the promotion failed. Strikeforce in the US and DREAM in Japan were two other would-be claimants to the UFC’s throne. 

However, Strikeforce was ultimately bought by Zuffa and turned into an abysmal, barely-functional monstrosity of a promotion. DREAM, too, failed, declaring that they were shutting down this past June.

The amount of potential competitors to the UFC that have failed have been so numerous that once UFC president Dana White posted a photograph of a tombstone with the failed promotions on it.

Bellator Fighting Championships—a promotion that emphasizes tournaments and how their title shots are earned rather than arbitrarily given—is the last “major” American promotion that has escaped demise and, in fact, grown. 

Bellator was purchased by Viacom in late 2011 and will begin airing events on the UFC’s old long-time TV home, Spike TV.

Amidst malaise over the UFC’s numbers in 2012, it has become posh for fans to deride the promotion and to claim that Bellator‘s eventual arrival on Spike will lead them to the promised land of all upstart MMA promotion—becoming bigger than the UFC and crushing it worse than the NFL’s reputation was crushed this past Monday.

So, if the UFC were to be brought to its knees and destroyed, could MMA survive?

It could survive but it could not thrive. That is, it could not exist in the same capacity it exists today. The sport would lose ground and ultimately be set back years.

MMA has grown to the point that the name of the sport is at least recognized whereas in years past people only knew “UFC.” Even Chris Collinsworth mentioned MMA earlier this week. This seems trivial but a decade ago something like that wouldn’t have happened. 

Thus, if the UFC vanished, the sport would definitely go on. It just would not enjoy the same level of popularity. 

The XFCs, Legacy FCs, and ROCs of the world would always be followed by hardcore fans and would still serve as feeder leagues for the world’s main promotion which, in the absence of the UFC, would be Bellator. But Bellator, itself, would be niche compared to the size and following of the UFC—Bellator‘s shoulders could not bear the weight of the MMA world.

Naysayers diss the UFC’s numbers, (Dana White himself recently blew up at a press conference over an article in the Toronto Sun was critical of the UFC’s perceived lack of success) but Bellator hasn’t impressed much in that department either. 

This is where the same people say that UFC programming on Spike TV has produced better numbers than UFC program on FUEL and FX

That’s true but there are other factors at work. The Ultimate Fighter was, for the most part, a stronger show back in the Spike TV days and it was aired on a more favorable night. Eventually, the Spike and the UFC became synonymous. 

The average viewer still hasn’t gotten the memo, apparently, that and The Ultimate Fighter is in grave need of either a complete overhaul or the Old Yeller treatment.

Furthermore, did these critics not deduce that the UFC’s success on Spike was also because of the UFC’s name value? At the time, the UFC was the sport; hardly anyone knew what “MMA” was. 

More people might know now, but that doesn’t mean Bellator will automatically enjoy prolonged success on Spike. 

Remember Slamball? It was a big thing for five minutes then it fell off the face of the earth. After all, what did “Slamball” really mean to people?

Just so, what does “Bellator” really mean to people? At best, it means “minor-league UFC.” Despite the feeble hopes and dreams of anti-Zuffa hardcore fans, there’s nothing guaranteeing that Bellator won’t have the same fate as Slamball.

Thus, in this parallel world where the UFC fails, MMA cannot grow and cannot stay at its current level of popularity. It does not regress to the dark ages but it doesn’t have the appeal to garner a major network deal either.

Do not think of the UFC as a large redwood that absorbs all sunlight, preventing other saplings from growing. Instead, think of it as the roots and trunk of a vast, global MMA tree, with each promotion being a branch on that tree.

Small promotions do not succeed in spite of the UFC they succeed because of the UFC. 

They would still have life if the UFC were to depart this world, but their existence would be a withered, pathetic one compared to now. 

The fate of MMA is linked with the fate of the UFC, not Bellator, not OneFC. All who deny this are blinded either by nostalgia or their own foolishness.

 

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UFC 152 Results: Do MMA Fans Just Need to Stop Hyping Fighters for a While?

Denis Kang, Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou, Gerald Harris, Houston Alexander, Brandon Vera and now Jimy Hettes and Charles Oliveira. All of these men (and far too many others to list) were once considered next big things or were indisputably the heir-ap…

Denis Kang, Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou, Gerald Harris, Houston Alexander, Brandon Vera and now Jimy Hettes and Charles Oliveira

All of these men (and far too many others to list) were once considered next big things or were indisputably the heir-apparents to their respective weight-class titles. Of course, none of them lived up to expectations. 

They were all exposed at one time or another for what they were—mortal, human. 

The problem with these fighters, or at least most of them, wasn’t that they were bad fighters, it was just that MMA fans (and in some cases UFC marketing) hyped the fighter up to such a degree that nothing they could do in the Octagon, save for a Mortal Kombat-esque “Brutality” finish, could fulfill all the prophecies that were made. 

Sokoudjou was supposed to be the greatest light heavyweight in the world but he had fewer than 10 fights; Brandon Vera was fated to be both the UFC light heavyweight and heavyweight champ. 

Just so, UFC 152 combatants Charles Oliveira and Jimy Hettes were supposed to be the future in their divisions. 

Oliveira‘s Jiu-Jitsu prowess was supposed to carry him to the top, yet after his recent loss to Cub Swanson, he’s only 2-3 (1 NC) in his last six.

Hettes ran through yet another man who deserves to go on the list of overhyped prospects—Alex “Bruce Leroy” Caceres. Hettes then embarrassed a proven commodity in Nam Phan.  

So strong was the Hettes hype that his match against Marcus Brimage was supposed to resemble something along the lines of a pro-wrestling squash match (the Undertaker vs. random jobbers comes to mind).

However, Brimage made Hettes look, well, like a young, inexperienced fighter who hasn’t been tested yet—and that’s what Hettes has been the whole time, but nobody realized it due to the hype machine. 

Hype is a dangerous thing. It gets fans to think fighters are nearing godliness. Then, when the hyped fighter loses, he suffers a tremendous decrease in popularity that he likely never recovers from. 

Therefore, it’d be best if MMA fans (and pundits) just toned it down regarding the hyping of fighters; the future of the sport’s young stars depends on it.

 

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UFC 152 Results: In Light of UFC 152, the UFC Should Not Do a 115-Pound Division

The 125-pound flyweight division is as far down as the UFC should go. The current plans to bring in a 115-pound weight-class need to be aborted ASAP.This isn’t idle naysaying. This is the truth. Flyweights can’t draw a crowd. Nor can they garner t…

The 125-pound flyweight division is as far down as the UFC should go. The current plans to bring in a 115-pound weight-class need to be aborted ASAP.

This isn’t idle naysaying. This is the truth. 

Flyweights can’t draw a crowd. Nor can they garner the interest of an existing crowd drawn in by other bigger fighters. Their fast but ultimately ineffective style is off-putting to the legions of casual fans, as indicated by the chorus of boos heard throughout the 25-minute fight between Demetrious Johnson and Joseph Benavidez.

Bleacher Report’s own Jonathan Snowden explored this phenomenon in detail

“Hardcore” fans and media members might love the flyweights, but the casual fan doesn’t. Ultimately, the money lies with the casual fans, not the hardcore ones—who use any perceived grievance as a justification for illegally streaming pay-per-views.

Furthermore, the flyweight division is the most shallow weight-class in the UFC. How the UFC is going to make regular flyweight fights and keep the division interesting remains to be seen. 

Despite these issues, UFC President Dana White seemed unconcerned at the UFC 152 pre-fight presser, insulting all those who questioned the validity of a flyweight division and the entertainment value of flyweight fights.

If the first title fight in a new division is seen as a cause for fans booing and the promoter being overly defensive, why then should that same promoter create a new weight-class that’s 10 pounds lighter and will therefore have the same problems but even worse? 

There will be fewer fighters at 115 pounds, and fans will be even more disinterested in watching their fights. 

The only possible benefit is that a 115-pound division might aid the UFC’s overseas expansion. White himself noted this in an interview with MMAjunkie. “We’re going into Asia, Mexico, going into South America—and traditionally, they’re all smaller guys,” he said. 

However, starting a half-baked weight class to appease some new fans at the sake of alienating your core market is a mistake. Flyweights were met with great enthusiasm by the media, but the numbers and the boos show that this wasn’t the sentiment amongst the majority of fans.

Thus, the UFC should abandon its plans for 115 pounds lest it winds up with another division which the bulk of fans dread watching.

 

 

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