UFC: Can Excessive Celebration Cause More Harm Than Good?

UFC featherweight champ Jose Aldo’s celebration in the Rio de Janeiro crowd may have been “excessive” and dangerous, but that’s the name of the game.Yes, there are times when celebrating too much can be legitimately harmful, and Aldo’s antics in Brazil…

UFC featherweight champ Jose Aldo’s celebration in the Rio de Janeiro crowd may have been “excessive” and dangerous, but that’s the name of the game.

Yes, there are times when celebrating too much can be legitimately harmful, and Aldo’s antics in Brazil may have been one of those times (as Jonathan Snowden pointed out), but in most situations, excessive celebration isn’t the least bit excessive.

Sure, when your opponent breaks his leg in a freak accident, parading around the cage and celebrating like it’s VJ day (which was the case in a fight between Duane Ludwig and Darren Elkins) might make the sport look bad, but it also makes the sport look more visceral and real.

Celebrations make the sport (yes, MMA has rules, so it’s a sport) look like a true fight.

After one fighter bests another and leaves his opponent’s body bloody, starched and unconscious on the canvas, or lying there with a destroyed knee or elbow socket, how can he not engage in an emotional celebration that is almost primal in a sense? 

Boasting, puffing out your chest and celebrating are part of MMA and the UFC, just as “real talk” is part of the UFC; fighters are generally encouraged to be who they are and not conform to the—quite frankly—absurd PR standards that other athletes are forced to conform to.

For example, after the New England Patriots bested the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday, Tom Brady admitted he had a less-than-stellar game.

And he didn’t go the Dana White rouse and curse up a storm, mind you. He just told CBS he “sucked pretty bad.” Apparently, “sucked” was too much for the Patriots franchise and the NFL’s PR to handle. 

When the team tweeted what Brady said, it had to alter “sucked” to “stunk.”

Furthermore, San Francisco 49ers receiver Vernon Davis wasn’t even allowed to walk up to the camera stand without being penalized.

Idiotic. Beyond. Belief. 

What does this have to do with celebration and the UFC? 

A lot.

The NFL is chided as being the “No Fun League” because of its ridiculous policies (fining players for wearing improper cleats, fining a player for wishing fans a “Happy New Year,” etc.).

If the UFC puts the lid on excessive celebrations, it’ll just be one step closer to becoming just like the NFL: cold and corporate.

Part of the reason why the UFC has been so successful is because it is real. The fighters don’t sound like they’re being told what to say and by pathetic PR interns and emotionless empty suits. They can act like themselves and celebrate like themselves.

Even UFC president Dana White has an “everyman” appeal to him with the way he acts and dresses; he is an MMA fan running an MMA promotion, not a CEO running a business, and fans love him for it. 

Thus, it’s would actually be banning “excessive” celebrations that would cause more harm than good; it would ultimately cost the UFC its very heart and soul in a time where it needs them the most.

 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Strikeforce: Why Ronda Rousey Is the Savior of Women’s MMA

The outspoken, silver-tongued Ronda Rousey has likely saved women’s MMA due to her antics.Can trash talk really save a sport, you ask?Undeniably.Women’s version of “men’s” sports are almost always less popular and, in the case of WMMA, possibly even ha…

The outspoken, silver-tongued Ronda Rousey has likely saved women’s MMA due to her antics.

Can trash talk really save a sport, you ask?

Undeniably.

Women’s version of “men’s” sports are almost always less popular and, in the case of WMMA, possibly even hated because people—usually chauvinistic men who can’t stand to see strong females (perhaps there’s something Freudian there)—deem it inferior or morally reprehensible.

Thus, the fate of post-Gina Carano, post-Cyborg’s failed drug test WMMA was to eventually fall by the wayside and become something to be ignored, Miesha Tate and Sarah Kaufman notwithstanding.

This is not to the detriment of Tate, Kaufman and the other 135-pound female fighters. They are all talented and great fighters, it’s just that the majority of admittedly bloodthirsty MMA fans won’t tune into a niche promotion (Strikeforce) to watch a niche aspect of a niche sport to see fighters humbly respect one another.

Enter Olympic Judoka Ronda Rousey—four pro MMA fights, four wins, four arm-bars (each in under one minute)—who set the WMMA world ablaze with verbal attacks that would impress even Chael Sonnen.

The MMA community reacted in different ways to Rousey’s antics. Some cherished her words and actions and made her their new MMA sweetheart in place of Carano or Tate, while some thought she was a disrespectful loudmouth.

 

But notice that last sentence, it was the the entire MMA community that reacted, not just the WMMA community.

Through brash words (and good looks), Rousey has saved women’s MMA from a rut of practically infinite stagnation.

Her words and deeds have rekindled people’s interests in women fighting and will even go one step further: they will inspire young girls to start training and perhaps even become future Ronda Rouseys, Miesha Tates, Sarah Kaufmans and Liz Carmouches.

Thus, Rousey saved WMMA not by just getting current fans to watch and become emotionally invested again, but saved it by increasing the chances that the women’s talent pool will continue to grow in the future.

Whether you love Ronda Rousey or hate her, you have to respect what she’s done for WMMA in only four fights and a few interviews.

 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on FX Results: Questions Answered and Lessons Learned

The UFC’s FX debut is in the books. Jim Miller quickly submitted Melvin Guillard and Josh Neer choked Muay Thai phenom Duane “Bang” Ludwig unconscious.There were other fights and happenings throughout the night that answered lingering questions the MMA…

The UFC’s FX debut is in the books. Jim Miller quickly submitted Melvin Guillard and Josh Neer choked Muay Thai phenom Duane “Bang” Ludwig unconscious.

There were other fights and happenings throughout the night that answered lingering questions the MMA world had, and taught an important lesson or two.

What were these circumstances and what did they show us? Read and find out!

Begin Slideshow

Why 2012 Will Be the Most Important Year in UFC History

The year 2012 is one that will forever make or break the UFC. What happens this year will determine the future of the UFC and MMA.What is so special about 2012?There are issues in the MMA/UFC world that will come to a head or otherwise fully play out i…

The year 2012 is one that will forever make or break the UFC. What happens this year will determine the future of the UFC and MMA.

What is so special about 2012?

There are issues in the MMA/UFC world that will come to a head or otherwise fully play out in this particular 365-day period, issues that will change the landscape of MMA in one way or another.

What are these issues and how can they impact the ultimate fate of the UFC and MMA?

Read and find out!

Begin Slideshow

UFC: What Does the UFC Becoming Mainstream Really Mean?

ESPN blasts the UFC because their pay is allegedly lacking in regards to other mainstream organizations, but that’s just it—what does “mainstream” really mean?This is the question MMA fans and pundits should be asking themselves, not whether $6,0…

ESPN blasts the UFC because their pay is allegedly lacking in regards to other mainstream organizations, but that’s just it—what does “mainstream” really mean?

This is the question MMA fans and pundits should be asking themselves, not whether $6,000 to show is enough for undercard fighters, because determining whether or not the sport is mainstream will put fighter pay into a better perspective.

True, the league minimums in the NFL, NBA and MLB are far above the minimum salary in the UFC, but the UFC’s “mainstream” appeal may be far behind that of the other major entities, the deal with FOX notwithstanding.

However, this is because the sports are significantly larger domestically (and internationally in some cases) than the UFC.

Case in point—and something everyone involved in MMA has experienced—go up to the average person and ask if they know what MMA is. You’ll be met with a “no” (or “Metropolitan Museum of Art” if you ask someone cultured) and an awkward look.

And, as we all know, the second you mention those three magic letters, U, F and C, the person you’re talking to will immediately know what you’re talking about.

But does a majority of people knowing that there’s something called the UFC (or just UFC to some people, as if it were its own sport) and that is has to do with “cage fighting” really qualify as mainstream?

Hardly.

Then how is mainstream acceptance to be determined?

Will the the UFC be mainstream when UFC on FOX events regularly beat NFL games in ratings?

Will the UFC be mainstream when guys like Quinton “Rampage” Jackson get in trouble for their questionable antics?

Will the UFC be mainstream when it finally gets a lot of coverage on ESPN?

The truth is, none of these questions can really determine mainstream acceptance.

When the UFC is “mainstream” we won’t have to ask if it is; it’ll be in the hearts and minds of the majority of the population, who will truly understand what it is. At that point, the “mainstream” label will be a superfluous relic of the mid-to-late 2000s and early 2010s.

 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Ronda Rousey to Cyborg: You Don’t Just Have a [expletive], You Are a [expletive]

Famously (or infamously) outspoken female fighter Ronda Rousey has gotten into a verbal row with former Strikeforce women’s featherweight champion Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos over Twitter.After dominating the women’s 145-pound division for years, Cyborg’…

Famously (or infamously) outspoken female fighter Ronda Rousey has gotten into a verbal row with former Strikeforce women’s featherweight champion Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos over Twitter.

After dominating the women’s 145-pound division for years, Cyborg’s secret was finally revealed: She was on performance-enhancing drugs.

This drew the ire of many female MMA fighters, but none quite as much as silver-tongued Olympian Ronda Rousey, who has practically revitalized women’s MMA (WMMA) with her brash attitude, looks and fighting ability.

Rousey went on a tirade against Cyborg in an interview on TapouT Radio, saying, among other things, that “Chris Cyborg was abusing for so long, it changed the bone structure of her face.

“I think it threw a monkey wrench into the credibility of Chris Cyborg, and I think you have to rethink all of her wins before…You know, it’s not like she beat them on technique, and if she wasn’t doping, she wouldn’t have won any of those fights.

She was using, and you know what, if they were using too, it would have been a different ball game. I think women’s MMA is better in general with her gone, because I can’t think of any little girl who would watch her an be like ‘Mommy, I want to be that when I grow up.’ If I was a little girl, and I saw that, I’d be like, ‘Eww is that what you have to be like to be a good fighter? I don’t know if I want to be a fighter.”

Cyborg, not one to take an insult lightly, responded over Twitter by taunting Rousey and posting a picture of Cyborg’s handiwork—a battered Gina Carano.Rousey wasted no time in crafting a fiendish response that set the WMMA world ablaze.

“You don’t just have a dick, you are a dick for posting that picture of Gina, you cheater,” Rousey tweeted earlier this morning.

It’s unlikely that the two will meet in the cage any time soon due to Cyborg’s suspension, but it’s just another interesting tale of how Ronda Rousey has become the Chael Sonnen of women’s MMA—people love it (or hate it) when she talks.

Either way, it gets eyes on the sport and that’s a good thing.

 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com