Dominance, Thy Name is GSP

Today we release the full stats from the fight between Georges St. Pierre and Jon Fitch. You will rarely see dominance of this sort in a five-round fight, but more impressive is the amount of offensive volume poured on by GSP. St. Pierre sets the new FightMetric record for highest effectiveness score in a fight with a grand total of 814. An average 25-minute fight would see a score closer to 300. That’s nearly triple.

Come back later this week when we’ll have full stats from other fights from UFC 87, including Lesnar vs. Herring and Florian vs. Huerta.

Source:Dominance, Thy Name is GSP

'Page Fought "The Law" and "The Law" Won

Or at least that’s the conclusion one could draw from the report released today with stats from the fight between Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Matt Lindland. The FightMetric system gives the fight to Lindland 29-28 for winning rounds one and three.

But that’s only half the story. The overall scores for the fight are 159-163, which falls within FightMetric’s four-point margin for error. That means the fight overall is a draw, which sounds more than reasonable. While Rampage landed more effective strikes, Lindland stayed busy on the ground and attempted five submissions.

What we’re learning over the course of the FightMetric project is that there probably should be many more draws in MMA than are actually called. In many cases, a controversial decision is controversial because the fight really was too close to call. But the ten-point must system makes fools of us all when judges refuse to call 10-10 rounds. Calling a round even carries the stigma of indecision, as if a better judge should have been able to spot the victor, even when there fairly shouldn’t be one.

Will this change anytime soon? Probably not. The reason seems clear: A close decision disappoints only the fans that thought the losing fighter won; a draw disappoints almost everyone.

Source:'Page Fought "The Law" and "The Law" Won