The 95 Theses of MMA


(Advance upon me, my brother.”)

A Disputation on the Sorry-Ass State of Mixed Martial Arts, And Its Potential Improvement, by Ben Goldstein and Matt Saccaro.

Out of love and concern for the truth, and with the object of eliciting it, we humbly offer these 95 suggestions — nay, demands — to repair the sport of MMA, which has been deteriorating and fading from relevance for at least the past two years. One only needs to look at the pair of woeful UFC cards that are being offered today as proof of the over-saturation and plummeting quality that has turned MMA fandom into a depressing chore at times. (As a show of protest, we will not be giving those events any coverage. Unless something really crazy happens, obviously.)

If you support our efforts toward MMA reformation, please print these 95 theses out and nail them to the door of your nearest Buffalo Wild Wings.

1. Now that the UFC has proven it can hold two events on two continents on the same day, it must cease doing so at once. The overwhelming quantity of UFC shows has made every card seem interchangeable and generic, and has sapped our interest in the sport. More is not always better.

2. If the UFC refuses to reduce its frantic schedule, then its promoters must at least acknowledge that not every event is of equally high importance. UFC 172 was not “the most stacked card we’ve ever done in UFC history“; such violations of truth should be condemned.

3. The Lord Almighty did not intend for us to still be hearing STEMM’s “Face the Pain” on a regular basis in the year 2014. Indeed, this atrocious song must be banished from UFC pay-per-view broadcasts immediately.

4. The same goes for “Fallen,” a.k.a. the butt-rock riffage that closes out the UFC pay-per-views, and leaves us all with a headache before bedtime. You probably didn’t even know STEMM was responsible for that one too, but they are, God damn them.

5. Any MMA promotion that holds its events on Indian reservations and doesn’t bother to drug-test its fighters is not a promotion to be taken seriously.

6. In addition, it does not befit an A-list promotion to make a fighter’s purse dependent on ticket sales. If this is part of your business model, cease the charade of pretending to be big-time.

7. If the UFC claims to be a legitimate sports league, it must stop pretending that former champions never existed, simply because the president of the company has beef with them.

8. And: The president of the promotion must never do unflattering impressions of how female fighters look while wearing dresses.

9. And: The credentialed media in attendance must not laugh at those impressions, for the love of Jesus Christ.


(Advance upon me, my brother.”)

A Disputation on the Sorry-Ass State of Mixed Martial Arts, And Its Potential Improvement, by Ben Goldstein and Matt Saccaro.

Out of love and concern for the truth, and with the object of eliciting it, we humbly offer these 95 suggestions — nay, demands — to repair the sport of MMA, which has been deteriorating and fading from relevance for at least the past two years. One only needs to look at the pair of woeful UFC cards that are being offered today as proof of the over-saturation and plummeting quality that has turned MMA fandom into a depressing chore at times. (As a show of protest, we will not be giving those events any coverage. Unless something really crazy happens, obviously.)

If you support our efforts toward MMA reformation, please print these 95 theses out and nail them to the door of your nearest Buffalo Wild Wings.

1. Now that the UFC has proven it can hold two events on two continents on the same day, it must cease doing so at once. The overwhelming quantity of UFC shows has made every card seem interchangeable and generic, and has sapped our interest in the sport. More is not always better.

2. If the UFC refuses to reduce its frantic schedule, then its promoters must at least acknowledge that not every event is of equally high importance. UFC 172 was not “the most stacked card we’ve ever done in UFC history“; such violations of truth should be condemned.

3. The Lord Almighty did not intend for us to still be hearing STEMM’s “Face the Pain” on a regular basis in the year 2014. Indeed, this atrocious song must be banished from UFC pay-per-view broadcasts immediately.

4. The same goes for “Fallen,” a.k.a. the butt-rock riffage that closes out the UFC pay-per-views, and leaves us all with a headache before bedtime. You probably didn’t even know STEMM was responsible for that one too, but they are, God damn them.

5. Any MMA promotion that holds its events on Indian reservations and doesn’t bother to drug-test its fighters is not a promotion to be taken seriously.

6. In addition, it does not befit an A-list promotion to make a fighter’s purse dependent on ticket sales. If this is part of your business model, cease the charade of pretending to be big-time.

7. If the UFC claims to be a legitimate sports league, it must stop pretending that former champions never existed, simply because the president of the company has beef with them.

8. And: The president of the promotion must never do unflattering impressions of how female fighters look while wearing dresses.

9. And: The credentialed media in attendance must not laugh at those impressions, for the love of Jesus Christ.

10. And: The UFC must not cut Top 10-ranked fighters on the basis of their fighting style and/or because their $66k show-money makes them “super f–cking expensive.”

11. Conversely, the UFC must not shut out elite fighters on the basis of their fighting style and/or to make a point that champions of rival organizations haven’t fought anybody relevant.

12. I mean, especially if you’re just going to turn around and sign a 2-0 local nobody like Royston Wee. Zuffa should be raising the bar for what it means to be “UFC caliber,” not constantly dragging that bar into the dirt.

13. If you dare to give yourself the lofty title of “World Series of Fighting,” you must not give cheap-ass Boost Mobile burner phones to the winners of your athletic contests.

14. As for the wealthier MMA promotions: If you find it necessary to contractually ban your fighters from riding motorcycles, you must not give your fighters motorcycles.

15. And certainly, a promoter should not make up a weird technicality in order to justify this hypocrisy.

16. MMA promoters must call freak-show fights what they are: Freak-show fights. Euphemistically referring to them as “cirque du soleil fights” or “high-concept fights” is dishonest and unnecessary. We like a good freak-show fight once in a while. They’re nothing to be ashamed of — unless a promoter tries to pass these bouts off as serious competition.

17. The practice of record-padding by bringing in winless jobbers to dive for a few bucks is unholy, and a sin. It’s a cheap old boxing trick; we’re supposed to be better than that.

18. If such fighters with ill-gotten records are catapulted into main events, may they not be promoted as human buzzsaws who legions of men on the regional circuit were terrified of.

19. And if said fighters — or any fighter — suffers defeat in the main event of a card, they shall not be placed on the preliminary bouts in their next match.

20. The presence of ring girls in MMA is a relic from an age of combat sports in which sexy women were needed to break up the uncomfortable homoeroticism of an arena full of men watching other half-naked men sweat on each other. Now that mixed martial arts boasts a multitude of female fans — as well as female competitors — it is only appropriate that MMA promotions begin adding male round card engineers.

21. We reject the UFC’s insistence that every title fight should be marketed the exact same way. (“_______ is the most dangerous fighter that _______ has ever faced! Order the PPV! *cue STEMM music*”)

22. Whoever was responsible for the UFC 168 “YOOOOOUUUUU AND MEEEEEEEEE” promo should be fired and forced to wander the earth, jobless for all eternity.

23. And the same goes for the UFC design intern who’s been doing the Fight Pass posters.

24. MMA fans must cease their complaints about “spoilers” related to live fight broadcasts. These are athletic competitions, not episodes of Game of Thrones, and should rightly be reported as any other breaking news. Do you half-witted crybabies realize that fans of other sports do not behave this way?

25. If a round is dead-even in terms of overall effectiveness, it shall be scored 10-10. Judges must award these scores when appropriate, and the athletic commissions that discourage such 10-10 scores should be publicly crucified.

26. Furthermore: Intangibles like “Octagon control” must not be used to justify 10-9 scores in rounds that are too close to call. Rounds are never to be awarded to the fighter who made scarier faces while swinging at air.

27. Considering that TUF 20 will introduce the UFC women’s strawweight division and crown the division’s inaugural champion, the season is somewhat relevant to the sport. But after it finishes airing, The Ultimate Fighter should be canceled, because nobody cares about this tired crap anymore.

28. As a promoter, your goal should be to build up your stars — not bury them after dominant performances. It is sacrilege to pass judgment on elite fighters for not brawling enough.

29. In fact, directly rewarding fighters for continuously putting on sloppy brawls — through Fight of the Night bonuses and increased job security — is counter-productive to the quality of the sport and to the long-term health of those fighters.

30. New York State should immediately end its shameful and outdated ban on professional mixed martial arts, which is driven only by union lobbying interests.

31. Now that the validity of random drug tests has been proven in sight of gods and men, the frequency of their use should only be multiplied.

32. MMA fighters should be taught proper PR practices in response to failing a drug test. Claiming that “my trainer put an over-the-counter supplement that just so happens to preserve my testicle size in my water bottle” is sinful—as is blaming your doctor, or any drug test failure excuse uttered by Chael Sonnen.

33. When a promotion books a match between two struggling fighters on losing streaks, it’s generally known as a “win or go home fight.” These are solemn affairs, best reserved for the prelims — not the goddamned main event.

34. The UFC’s size is not commensurate with that of soccer, and never will be. Stating otherwise is blasphemous.

35. Lorenzo Fertitta and Dana White must make their workout regimen known to the masses. The amount of raw eggs and Flintstone’s Vitamins they consume must also be revealed. It is a crime to keep the secret to achieving such muscular proportions locked away.

36. The existing ban against the so-called “renegade” MMA blog CagePotato — as well as any current bans against other, more legitimate MMA media outlets and journalists — must be lifted from now until the end of time.

37. The UFC shall also free the dissident GIF-maker known as Zombie Prophet, for his work aids the UFC’s exposure, not hinders it. In fact, pursuing legal action on any individual or website for creating or posting a GIF is loathsome behavior fitting of only the most greedy and misguided companies, and such actions must cease. Seriously, are you so insecure about your product that you think a 3-second GIF of a KO constitutes theft?

38. MMA referees must actually enforce the rules by deducting points instead of repeatedly issuing warnings. MMA fighters have no incentive not to cheat at least once.

39. And furthermore: If a fight’s ending is directly influenced by an illegal technique — e.g., shots to the back of the head, fence-grabbing to set up a knockout — it should be deemed a disqualification. Referees should not simply award a victory to the guy who’s running around the cage celebrating.

40. MMA fighters who agree to phone interviews must answer their phone when it’s time to do the interview.

41. During pre-fight interviews, MMA fighters must avoid repeating unbearable and meaningless clichés, e.g., that they’re not looking past their opponents, or that they’re bringing back an old version of themselves, or that they’ve become an entirely new fighter since their last fight.

42. Media members who ask fighters about the state of their training camp rank among the laziest curs. A fighter will almost always say that he’s in the best shape of his life, even if he’s been playing Dark Souls II for the duration of his camp.

43. During post-fight interviews, MMA fighters must not respond to the interviewer’s first question by thanking all of their sponsors and/or Jesus Christ, then forgetting what the original question was.

44. And speaking of our Lord and Savior: While Jesus surely appreciates your faith and devotion, and may reward you with eternal life, MMA fighters must understand that He had nothing to do with your victory, and in fact the notion of prize-fighting itself runs counter to several of His teachings.

45. Seriously. Thanking Jesus for helping you beat the shit out of another human being in front of his wife and kids makes you look like a moron. Stop.

46. The unfortunate losers of mixed martial arts contests must also avoid the use of predictable clichés in post-fight interviews, e.g., that they just “got caught,” or that they should have followed their gameplan, or that their opponent was “the better man tonight,” or that — God help us — “it is what it is.”

47. May the Lord strike you down if you blame your loss on the pre-fight consumption of uncooked meat, raw eggs, or “a bunch of candy, dude.” Such excuses will only reflect poorly on your judgment, and the fans will mock you for it without mercy.

48. And let it be known that any fighter who blames a loss on an injury must be derided on all message boards and social media networks. Nearly all combatants enter a contest with one form of nagging injury or another. Using it as an excuse afterwards is a cop out.

49. Asking an MMA fighter to “talk us through the replay” has never resulted in anything insightful, and we call for the abolition of this awkward tradition. Why would you expect coherent analysis from an exhausted, adrenaline-charged, non-native English speaker, who is probably standing there concussed while the microphone is in his face?

50. Similarly, broadcast personalities must refrain from all yip-yapping, gum-bumping, and cutting into a fighter’s ring time.

51. D-list celebrities do not constitute divine authority, nor do they convey the UFC brand’s popularity. Their tweets are not to be broadcast live, and their vaguely recognizable visages are not to be panned to between fights. The aforementioned policy also applies to former A-list celebrity Mel Gibson, who has succumbed to the ways of the wicked.

52. On the issue of tweets and celebrities: Bizarre foot-fetish tweets shall not be officially endorsed by the UFC’s twitter account. That makes MMA look every bit like the grimy spectacle it really is.

53. Disdain for women’s MMA is not to be expressed if it is on the grounds of “I don’t like women seeing get hurt,” “women don’t belong in the cage,” or other such misogynistic bullshit.

54. However, asserting that a women’s fight was poor in quality or technique does not equate with hating women’s MMA.

55. MMA fighters have neither the will nor the power to operate their social media accounts with discretion. This needs to change; rape jokes, and bigoted comments on social media accounts cannot be allowed to see the light of day.

56. MMA fans should be taught that Dana White’s opinion is constantly vacillating between (illogical) extremes and counts for absolutely nothing.

57. Furthermore, let it be understood that Dana White himself cannot create MMA history, but only declare and confirm sections of mythology that meet Zuffa’s needs. It is the duty of the media and those who care about MMA to disallow such actions, and to disseminate the sport’s sacred history.

58. If plenary remission is to be granted to any figure in MMA, let it be granted to Tito Ortiz. To put it less pedantically: LEAVE TITO ALONE. He’s already been made fun of enough. Let’s move on.

59. The same power a fighter exercises in matters of opinion is also exercised by every single fan and media member. That is to say, stating “I’m a fighter, bro” doesn’t necessarily mean your word is worth solid gold, and your one amateur fight where you got tapped out in 20 seconds doesn’t automatically trump the thousands of hours of fighting that a journalist has analyzed.

60. Conversely, MMA media members only embarrass themselves when they try to act like fighters. That includes wearing TapouT t-shirts on press row and bragging about training full contact four days a week.

61. In addition: All those who fight an amateur MMA bout (or engage in other martial pursuits) specifically to change their Facebook photo to a picture of them fighting (or engaging in said martial pursuit) will be eternally damned.

62. There is no divine authority for establishing what paying customers can and cannot say. This includes “You will die” chants, “U-S-A” chants, and booing in general.

63. Before criticism of an MMA-related article can be levied upon the writer or the website’s editorial staff, the article must first be read—especially if you’re the president of the sport’s largest MMA promotion.

64. Similarly, if the UFC president chooses to permanently ban fighter for a rules infraction, it would help if he actually saw the rules infraction in question.

65. We should most carefully guard those fighters who are at risk for long term health issues. They should perhaps be forced into retirement if they choose to keep fighting despite the obvious detriments to their health.

66. If a fighter announces his departure from the sport after a long, fruitful career, he must not immediately unretire in order to make a few bucks, or to chase the elusive thrill of victory. Retirement is one of the sacraments of MMA; it is sinful to invoke it in vain.

67. That being said, if you are an MMA legend who now spends his days being eaten alive by young, unheralded prospects, it may be time to hang up those gloves.

68. No MMA promoter should allow one of his own employees to accuse him of dick-riding on national television, without some sort of harsh public retribution. I mean, come on man, your kids are watching.

69. UFC president Dana White must stop referring to his male fighters as “kid,” and his female fighters (and the occasional female journalist) as “sweetheart.”

70. Any true MMA fan whatsoever, living or dead, must not be legally persecuted by the UFC. Customers are happy to pay for something that’s a good value. Don’t punish them because you’re not offering a product worth paying for.

71. UFC Fight Pass cannot possibly compete with the WWE Network — which contains the entirety of the WWE’s, WCW’s, and ECW’s digital libraries as well as all of the WWE’s current television and PPV offerings — but it should. PPV is clearly dying and web streaming services are ascendant. To become an attractive product, Fight Pass should feature a complete library of Zuffa-owned fights as well as access to PPVs.

72. If Zuffa deems it financially ruinous or otherwise untoward to place PPVs on Fight Pass, then the amount of PPVs they hold a year must be lessened. The wallets of MMA fans are collapsing under the struggle of supporting their loyalty to the sport.

73. It should be stated that no one is sure of the reality of the UFC’s digital security (both on Fight Pass and UFC.com)—not even the UFC itself. Security on these mediums must be prioritized in accordance with legitimate suggestions made by the community.

74. If the UFC can remove fighters from its rankings simply to punish them during contractual disputes, then those rankings are not worthy of being mentioned on television broadcasts.

75. The approved media members who continue to compile these rankings and submit their votes must realize that essentially, they are working as unpaid marketing interns.

76. It is vain, lazy, and ineffective to rely on salvation by three letters to sell a pay-per-view: U, F, and C. While the promotion still maintains that it is the “Superbowl of MMA,” this notion has become a punchline among the learned. UFC PPVs need a sense of gravitas again.

77. Essentially, each PPV event has become a clone of the one before it. The UFC leadership seems perversely proud of this fact, but such hubris will lead to its downfall. Once fans get in the habit of missing pay-per-views, they never come back.

78. Professional fighting is a personality-driven enterprise; from hairstyles to entrance music, stars are built on their unique aesthetics. Conversely, making fighters wear a standardized uniform for walkouts and competition is counter-productive to what makes MMA exciting. Fighters should be given the freedom to express themselves.

79. Indeed, we declare: The UFC must permit fighters to become bigger than the brand, or bigger than the brand’s figurehead.

80. The utterance of “I respect him; he’s a great opponent” is sacrilegious to prize fighting tradition. Rivalries sell. If you don’t have anything mean to say, don’t say anything at all.

81. To all the MMA writers who fancy themselves Nostradamus: Your predictions are always wrong and nobody cares about them in the first place.

82. And to MMA fans, we must state the following: Your “support” had nothing to do with your chosen fighter securing victory. Just wanted to make that clear.

83. Also: You cannot beat a professional fighter up, no matter how bad their performance is on a given night. Never, ever say you can — even if you’re trying to impress a girl and lose your virginity.

84. It is sinful, untoward, idiotic, sordid, and logically bankrupt to say “A fighter is upset they’re only making $60k/$60k? What’s his problem! I’ll take that much money to fight!” and other variants. Heathens uttering these words have no idea about the expenses of being a fighter and how little of that money they actually walk away with.

85. The UFC does poorly when they bring their presence into a market with a clearly deficient MMA ecosystem. If they must lower the bar to sign fighters from such a place, then they’ll have to lower it even further to sign opponents those fighters can actually beat.

86. It is blasphemy to suggest that every single UFC champion is the pound-for-pound best fighter in the world when he or she has a fight coming up.

87. The MMA media who permit assertions of that kind to be made to the people without hindrance will have to answer for it.

88. The “LET ME BANG, BRO” attitude permeating MMA should be discouraged whenever possible. Turning MMA into C-level kickboxing but with more tribal tats and emotionally frustrated bald men won’t do the sport’s image any favors.

89. The UFC should bestow sanctity upon its Hall of Fame by removing corrupt influences and admitting all those who truly belong in it.

90. Since Lorenzo Fertitta is a billionaire and Dana White can afford to import snow to his driveway and tip casino dealers $200,000 during a single hot streak, why does the UFC not pay new prospects more than $8k/$8k?

91. Again: since these fighters are risking their brains to compete in a sport that is definitely not “safer than boxing,” can the UFC establish a minimum payrate of, say, $20k/$20k?

92. It is untoward and discomforting to market all female fighters as sex symbols when not all female fighters can be marketed in such a way.

93. All those who believe entertainment a certainty by means of purchasing a wolf ticket will be eternally damned, along with the promotion that sold the wolf tickets.

94. MMA fighters should be taught that humping, motorboating, or slapping reporters are actions of the most vile sort.

95. Honest, sincere criticism must always be levied upon all entities in MMA — be it fans, media, promoters, fighters, or officials — if the grace and glory of MMA is to be maintained from now until the end of time.

EA Sports UFC Review: No Country for Button-Mashers

By Joshua Vanderwall, EscapistMagazine.com

If you grew up on the likes of Street Fighter and Tekken, then you’re probably accustomed to being able to pick up a controller, sight unseen, and still put up at least a bit of a fight against a more experienced player. Button mashing won’t win you any Street Fighter tournaments, but, unless you’re playing at a professional level, you’ll usually be able to get a few good hits in and not feel too bad about yourself at the end of the match.

That’s not so much the case in EA Sports UFC, where button mashing is punished by the game’s mechanics, and even more so by players that have even a semblance of an idea of what they’re doing. UFC is not a fighting game. It’s a rigorous technical exercise behind an entertaining façade of people beating the pants off each other.

UFC is gorgeous on Xbox One, and ostensibly so on PS4. The fighters look frighteningly realistic while they idle, and even during the action of matches it’s almost eerie how lifelike the characters are. Outside of some hilarious technical glitches during bouts, the physics keeps up with the action impeccably well, making for some almost painful viewing experiences as punches connect and drops of sweat and blood fall to the canvas from the injured fighter. The physics and graphics jive so well together, in fact, that you can almost feel the impact as you land a roundhouse to the temple, or absorb a superman punch.

Where the graphics and physics are generally superb, the controls leave something to be desired for less adroit players. The face buttons on the controller are punches and kicks, which is simple enough to grasp. That’s where the simplicity ends.

By Joshua Vanderwall, EscapistMagazine.com

If you grew up on the likes of Street Fighter and Tekken, then you’re probably accustomed to being able to pick up a controller, sight unseen, and still put up at least a bit of a fight against a more experienced player. Button mashing won’t win you any Street Fighter tournaments, but, unless you’re playing at a professional level, you’ll usually be able to get a few good hits in and not feel too bad about yourself at the end of the match.

That’s not so much the case in EA Sports UFC, where button mashing is punished by the game’s mechanics, and even more so by players that have even a semblance of an idea of what they’re doing. UFC is not a fighting game. It’s a rigorous technical exercise behind an entertaining façade of people beating the pants off each other.

UFC is gorgeous on Xbox One, and ostensibly so on PS4. The fighters look frighteningly realistic while they idle, and even during the action of matches it’s almost eerie how lifelike the characters are. Outside of some hilarious technical glitches during bouts, the physics keeps up with the action impeccably well, making for some almost painful viewing experiences as punches connect and drops of sweat and blood fall to the canvas from the injured fighter. The physics and graphics jive so well together, in fact, that you can almost feel the impact as you land a roundhouse to the temple, or absorb a superman punch.

Where the graphics and physics are generally superb, the controls leave something to be desired for less adroit players. The face buttons on the controller are punches and kicks, which is simple enough to grasp. That’s where the simplicity ends. There are multiple modifier buttons that you can hold to use different strikes, as well as directional inputs changing what attack you make, which means you’re trying to navigate upwards of 20 different stand-up attacks.

Then there’s blocking, dodging, takedowns, clinch, and transitions. Knowing exactly which button or analog stick motion to input at any given moment is crucial in all but the most rudimentary matches in UFC, and it seems set up to allow an experienced player to absolutely dominate a new recruit in all but the luckiest of scenarios. That’s not to say it’s all bad, but it’s far from being accessible, and will take some patience on the part of experienced players not to just choke out friends playing for the first time.

UFC offers the standard fare for game types. You can pick a fighter and go straight to a match, or you can start a career and create your own custom warrior. There are a number of challenges to help hone your skills so you can take on tougher fights, as well as online play so you can test your mettle against other players. Unfortunately, for a game that lends itself so well to serious competition, the online play was a laggy experience throughout. Matchmaking was quick enough, but as soon as the match started, characters started stuttering and inputs were periodically ignored.

Career was significantly more enjoyable, however, since it allows you to create your own fighter and customize their stats and abilities to your liking. If you don’t want to mess around with the whole wrestling thing, you can create a fighter that specializes in striking and just aim to KO your opponent before they get a chance to take you down. Just punching your opponent in the face repeatedly is a lovely respite from struggling with the more technical aspects of submissions, escapes, ground transitions, and all the rest. You might not be able to go all the way in Career mode without being at least marginally well rounded, but a 23-second KO using nothing but punches to the face is surprisingly gratifying after getting submitted repeatedly by more experienced players.

Click here to read the rest of this review on EscapistMagazine, and to take a look at the seriously daunting-looking button-controls.

The Underdog Heel: How Chael Sonnen Became a Sports Entertainment Superstar


(They say Chael is still out there somewhere, working as a real estate agent and speaking with a Hispanic accent. / Photo via Getty)

By Seth Falvo

We know that the UFC is a sports entertainment company, but few fighters have ever embraced sports entertainment as fully as the recently retired Chael Sonnen had. “The Gangster from West Linn” understood the importance of drawing attention outside the cage, and shamelessly promoted himself as one of the most outlandish heels on the planet. But now that his fighting days are behind him, how will the fans remember Sonnen? There’s little doubt that Sonnen was one of MMA’s most infamous personalities, but was Sonnen a truly great sports entertainer?

Before we begin analyzing Sonnen’s smack-talking, fake championship belt wielding antics however, let’s not forget the overwhelming majority of his career: the thirty-plus professional fights (including his initial 1-2 run in the UFC) he had between 1997 and 2008. During this time, Chael Sonnen was a name that only the most hardcore fans had known of. He was a skilled, albeit smothering (and submission-prone) wrestler who could dish out one-liners and give thoughtful interviews, but was mostly known for his part in the unmitigated disaster that was Filho vs. Sonnen II.

If that seemed like a half-assed recap of twelve years of fighting, that’s exactly the point. Despite the best attempts of MMA fans to pretend that they’re above valuing personality over talent, the relative obscurity of Sonnen’s “pre-heel” career proved otherwise. If it weren’t for his ability to give a memorable interview, it isn’t entirely unreasonable to wonder if he would have even been invited back to the promotion when the WEC did away with the middleweight division. It’s even more likely that he would have been cut after getting choked out in the first round by Demian Maia during his Octagon return at UFC 95. The bottom line is, one doesn’t need to be entertained by Sonnen’s attempts to stand out in order to acknowledge their importance; Sonnen pretty much told Thomas Gerbasi just that back in 2010:

“You listen to some of these guys and it’s like hitting ‘play’ on a tape recorder. Whether these guys just aren’t free thinkers or just scared, I truthfully don’t know, but it is pretty annoying. Every now and then you get a guy that appears that he’s read a book or watched a news program and has an autonomous thought, and those are the kind of guys that I would visit with, but it’s pretty hard to find them in a UFC locker room.”


(They say Chael is still out there somewhere, working as a real estate agent and speaking with a Hispanic accent. / Photo via Getty)

By Seth Falvo

We know that the UFC is a sports entertainment company, but few fighters have ever embraced sports entertainment as fully as the recently retired Chael Sonnen had. “The Gangster from West Linn” understood the importance of drawing attention outside the cage, and shamelessly promoted himself as one of the most outlandish heels on the planet. But now that his fighting days are behind him, how will the fans remember Sonnen? There’s little doubt that Sonnen was one of MMA’s most infamous personalities, but was Sonnen a truly great sports entertainer?

Before we begin analyzing Sonnen’s smack-talking, fake championship belt wielding antics however, let’s not forget the overwhelming majority of his career: the thirty-plus professional fights (including his initial 1-2 run in the UFC) he had between 1997 and 2008. During this time, Chael Sonnen was a name that only the most hardcore fans had known of. He was a skilled, albeit smothering (and submission-prone) wrestler who could dish out one-liners and give thoughtful interviews, but was mostly known for his part in the unmitigated disaster that was Filho vs. Sonnen II.

If that seemed like a half-assed recap of twelve years of fighting, that’s exactly the point. Despite the best attempts of MMA fans to pretend that they’re above valuing personality over talent, the relative obscurity of Sonnen’s “pre-heel” career proved otherwise. If it weren’t for his ability to give a memorable interview, it isn’t entirely unreasonable to wonder if he would have even been invited back to the promotion when the WEC did away with the middleweight division. It’s even more likely that he would have been cut after getting choked out in the first round by Demian Maia during his Octagon return at UFC 95. The bottom line is, one doesn’t need to be entertained by Sonnen’s attempts to stand out in order to acknowledge their importance; Sonnen pretty much told Thomas Gerbasi just that back in 2010:

“You listen to some of these guys and it’s like hitting ‘play’ on a tape recorder. Whether these guys just aren’t free thinkers or just scared, I truthfully don’t know, but it is pretty annoying. Every now and then you get a guy that appears that he’s read a book or watched a news program and has an autonomous thought, and those are the kind of guys that I would visit with, but it’s pretty hard to find them in a UFC locker room.”

When Sonnen fully began to embrace the self-promoting heel antics he’s known for, he immediately took the spotlight. What he lacked in innovation — his brash overconfidence, the heat he would generate by insulting Brazil and his willingness to call out other fighters by name are all textbook heel tactics — he made up for in sheer wit and charisma. Any halfwit could have said “Silva sucks and I will beat him.” Sonnen made it interesting and fun. Whether fans tuned in because they believed in Chael’s hype or they tuned in because they believed he’d eat his words, what’s undeniable is that they tuned in when heel Sonnen was fighting.

While certain aspects of his schtick were by the numbers, what was unique about Sonnen was that he managed to be both a heel and an underdog throughout his second stint in the UFC. Heels are almost always dominant to the point where it’s hardly fair to allow them to compete; that’s why the New York Yankees and the Miami Heat have so many haters. Even in professional wrestling, the heel is rarely portrayed as the underdog while leading up to the payoff match. Yet even as an underdog, Sonnen always managed to generate heat from the crowds.

Of course, by now I likely have dozens of readers screaming “BUT MMA IS REAL!” while reading this article. Usually, such a non-observation wouldn’t be worth responding to, but in this case, real life events helped keep Chael Sonnen grounded as a heel to most fans — even while they were laughing their ways through “I am a gangster from America.” There was the (first) failed drug test. There was the UFC middleweight championship replica belt that he’d carry around. There were the money laundering charges. There was his eyeroll-worthy post-fight interview at UFC on Fox 2 where he ripped off a classic “Superstar” Billy Graham promo — which wouldn’t be the last time he’d swagger-jack a pro wrestling legend — and there were more than a few critics who were uncomfortable with Sonnen’s race-baiting antics. In other words, Sonnen wasn’t just a heel because he said outlandish things, Sonnen was a fighter who fans could truly despise if they wanted to.

Though Sonnen would briefly win over the fans by offering to fight Jon Jones on short notice to save UFC 151, the callout can in retrospect be viewed as the “We want the wind!” of his career. Despite his best attempts to hype their eventual fight at UFC 159, no amount of smacktalk could convince fans that Sonnen was any threat to Jones. The fight itself was predictably unspectacular, the pay-per-view numbers were less than impressive, and when all was said and done, Sonnen had lost too many high-profile bouts to be taken seriously as a contender again. He’d stick around for two more fights, but he was far more reserved than he had been during his second UFC run, and fans began to lose interest.

Unfortunately, things weren’t quite over yet for Sonnen. He was booked as a coach for TUF: Brazil 3 alongside his rival, Wanderlei Silva. After years of heated confrontations and a seemingly neverending supply of callouts from both fighters, the payoff ended up being a hilariously awful brawl on the TUF set and Wanderlei Silva literally running from a drug test. This wasn’t just an instance of a feud crumbling under the weight of its own hype — this was a fight years in the making falling apart at the last second in the ugliest manner possible.

So where exactly does this leave Sonnen in the grand scheme of things? He was hardly the most original heel in sports entertainment during the past five years, he was certainly not the first heel in the history of MMA, and possibly wasn’t even the most popular heel in MMA. Yet you could make the argument that Sonnen was the most notorious heel in sports entertainment to have never worked for Vince McMahon. He wasn’t a product of the WWE’s booking and the crossover appeal he had to casual fans — he was an MMA fighter who managed to become a household name through his own self-promotion. When determining the greatest heels in sports entertainment, that has to be worth something.

Interestingly, there’s a rumor going around Twitter that Chael Sonnen was offered the Bellator President position that Scott Coker recently filled. That such a rumor could gain traction is proof of the charisma that Sonnen possesses, and just how eager the fans are to see him promoting fights again. Sonnen did what any great heel should do: He put some butts in the seats. At the end of the day, that’s all that matters.

Is Rousey vs. Carano a Circus Fight or a Money Fight?


(It’s the “Betty and Veronica” matchup that fight-fans have wanted for centuries.)

By Brian J. D’Souza

What Henry Ford did for the automobile, Ronda Rousey has done for women’s MMA (WMMA), popularizing the sport for mass audiences. Furthermore, Rousey was ranked #29 on the Maxim Hot 100—something Henry Ford never achieved. And Rousey’s stock may be on the upswing with a superfight on the horizon against Gina Carano.

UFC president Dana White continues to affirm that the UFC is negotiating for the services of the original “face of women’s MMA,” Strikeforce and EliteXC veteran Gina Carano:

“[Carano’s] lawyers and our lawyers are talking. It’s moving along. It should [happen],” White said at a UFC 174 pre-fight media scrum.

Between 2006 to 2009, Carano racked up a 7-1 record in MMA, losing only to Cristiane Justino (formerly known as Cris Cyborg). Former Strikeforce featherweight champion Justino poses a much more credible threat to Rousey than Carano ever will. However, it’s Carano’s appeal as a pin-up girl rather than her acumen as a fighter that has the UFC scrambling to reach a deal with Gina Carano’s lawyers.

As Dana White tells it, Carano’s representation is playing hardball. “This guy is a Hollywood lawyer and these guys are always a pain in the ass to deal with,” White said. “The shit that he calls back and says everyday is literally comical.”

Even though Carano is coming off a loss and has been inactive for five years, if a deal with the UFC is reached, she’ll be expected to challenge for the bantamweight strap in her very first UFC fight. That might seem counterintuitive, but Carano is perishable goods likely to have her value spoiled by a loss to a lesser-known fighter.


(It’s the “Betty and Veronica” matchup that fight-fans have wanted for centuries.)

By Brian J. D’Souza

What Henry Ford did for the automobile, Ronda Rousey has done for women’s MMA (WMMA), popularizing the sport for mass audiences. Furthermore, Rousey was ranked #29 on the Maxim Hot 100—something Henry Ford never achieved. And Rousey’s stock may be on the upswing with a superfight on the horizon against Gina Carano.

UFC president Dana White continues to affirm that the UFC is negotiating for the services of the original “face of women’s MMA,” Strikeforce and EliteXC veteran Gina Carano:

“[Carano’s] lawyers and our lawyers are talking. It’s moving along. It should [happen],” White said at a UFC 174 pre-fight media scrum.

Between 2006 to 2009, Carano racked up a 7-1 record in MMA, losing only to Cristiane Justino (formerly known as Cris Cyborg). Former Strikeforce featherweight champion Justino poses a much more credible threat to Rousey than Carano ever will. However, it’s Carano’s appeal as a pin-up girl rather than her acumen as a fighter that has the UFC scrambling to reach a deal with Gina Carano’s lawyers.

As Dana White tells it, Carano’s representation is playing hardball. “This guy is a Hollywood lawyer and these guys are always a pain in the ass to deal with,” White said. “The shit that he calls back and says everyday is literally comical.”

Even though Carano is coming off a loss and has been inactive for five years, if a deal with the UFC is reached, she’ll be expected to challenge for the bantamweight strap in her very first UFC fight. That might seem counterintuitive, but Carano is perishable goods likely to have her value spoiled by a loss to a lesser-known fighter.

The UFC has never been a promotion that shied away from obvious mismatches designed more for spectacle than sport. At UFC 118 in August 2010, boxer James Toney was matched up with veteran Randy Couture in Toney’s MMA debut. The match played out like a lamb being led to the slaughter with Couture submitting Toney via arm-triangle choke in the first round. Toney never set foot in the cage again.

UFC pioneer Royce Gracie was 1-1-2 in his last four bouts when he was signed to face reigning UFC welterweight champion Matt Hughes at UFC 60. Royce’s jiu-jitsu pedigree was no match for farmboy wrasslin’, as Hughes stopped Royce in the first round.

Perhaps most notable of all among overhyped and underprepared fighters is Kimbo Slice. Although Slice was exposed by Seth Petruzelli, being knocked out in just 14 seconds at a 2008 EliteXC show, he was picked up by the UFC (where he went 1-1) and rumor has it Slice is now headed for Bellator.

To put all this in perspective, Carano has spent her time away from the sport starring in B-level action movies like Haywire, Fast & Furious 6 and In the Blood. Even if Carano had spent the last five years training at a top camp and taking on top-ranked opposition, the odds would be stacked against her escaping the first round in a fight with Rousey.

Gina Carano’s best chance at UFC gold is the hope that a congenital heart defect fells Rousey.

Despite all this, there is a method to the madness of allowing a Carano-Rousey spectacle to unfold in the hallowed UFC Octagon. Every few years, the UFC product becomes stale, and needs a shot in the arm. Gina Carano would bring media attention, fans, and profit that could benefit both the UFC and all other women in the sport.

Ronda Rousey has worked hard to reach the pinnacle of the sport. She’s never ducked a challenger, and has done more than her share of promotion for the UFC including a miserable stint on The Ultimate Fighter and being on the cover of ESPN: The Magazine’s 2012 Body Issue. Facing easy opposition for the good of the sport puts her in the unenviable position of many great champions before her.

For example, former PRIDE heavyweight champion Fedor Emelianenko established himself with two dominant performances over Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira and he cemented his legacy with his 2005 win over Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic. But a slew of circus matches and easy fights with unheralded or undersize opponents like Zuluzinho, Hong-man Choi and Matt Lindland tarnished his luster by giving ammunition to Fedor’s critics.

We shouldn’t criticize UFC management for attempting this farcical match-up in order to drum up interest in the sport. But while Rousey vs. Carano may put some cash in Rousey’s bank account, it will add nothing to her resume. To be a great champion, one must face the best available competition, and there are two active fighters currently unsigned by the UFC who fit that description—Holly Holm and Cristiane Justino.

It’s up to Rousey and the UFC brass to decide what direction they want to go in. If the UFC signs the trio of Carano, Holm, and Justino as Rousey’s next three opponents, they might be able to have their cake and eat it, too.

***

Brian J. D’Souza is the author of the critically acclaimed book Pound for Pound: The Modern Gladiators of Mixed Martial Arts. You can check out an excerpt right here.

The 12 Most Awesome/Terrible ‘EA Sports UFC’ Demo Videos Created by Actual Users

(Nut shots. It’s in the game.™)

By Ryan Harkness

Last week, the much anticipated EA Sports reboot of the UFC video game franchise went live in demo form — those fortunate enough to already own a next gen console got to take control of Jon Jones and Alexander Gustafsson and beat the living piss out of each other for as long as that stayed entertaining. And based on the hundreds of user-uploaded videos, it seems like people are indeed entertained…if not always for the right reasons.

We’ve now dug up the 12 best videos created thus far so you can get a closer look at how the game plays when in the hands of semi-competent gamers. Follow me after the jump to see all the best knockouts, tap-outs, and glitch-outs that EA SPORTS UFC has to offer.

A lot of YouTubers tend to upload knockout videos that are 8 minutes long and feature two to three knockouts. This is terrible. So don’t bother with any other allegedly ‘hilarious’ and / or ‘brutal’ knockout highlight videos. Watch this one, which crams over 25 knockouts into less than two minutes. Some compelling ass-kicking music and 1080p rendering really lets you enjoy watching Alexander Gustafsson recreate such famous KO poses as the Etim, the Salmon, and the Quarry. What, no Schaub trying to catch his soul?


(Nut shots. It’s in the game.™)

By Ryan Harkness

Last week, the much anticipated EA Sports reboot of the UFC video game franchise went live in demo form — those fortunate enough to already own a next gen console got to take control of Jon Jones and Alexander Gustafsson and beat the living piss out of each other for as long as that stayed entertaining. And based on the hundreds of user-uploaded videos, it seems like people are indeed entertained…if not always for the right reasons.

We’ve now dug up the 12 best videos created thus far so you can get a closer look at how the game plays when in the hands of semi-competent gamers. Follow me after the jump to see all the best knockouts, tap-outs, and glitch-outs that EA SPORTS UFC has to offer.

A lot of YouTubers tend to upload knockout videos that are 8 minutes long and feature two to three knockouts. This is terrible. So don’t bother with any other allegedly ‘hilarious’ and / or ‘brutal’ knockout highlight videos. Watch this one, which crams over 25 knockouts into less than two minutes. Some compelling ass-kicking music and 1080p rendering really lets you enjoy watching Alexander Gustafsson recreate such famous KO poses as the Etim, the Salmon, and the Quarry. What, no Schaub trying to catch his soul?

I’m still having a hard time getting my takedown defense up to even British levels of consistency, never mind pulling off fancy submissions on the ground. But others have mastered the system and have created a playlist featuring every sub in the game. There’s some pretty fancy ones like the inverted triangle and Peruvian necktie, but my favorite remains the kimura because of the epic poopface fighters make while going for it.

Question for readers: Does Jon Jones’ use of the Five-Point-Palm Exploding-Heart-Technique make him a dirty fighter? Don’t forget to let everyone know what an asshole you think he is in the comments.

There are a couple of animations that seem to pop up a lot in this demo. There’s that pro wrestling body slam that makes up for 33.33333 percent of all takedowns, and then there’s this super stunned staggering business, which can get a little over the top at times. Never give up hope though — Frankie Edgar looked twice as bad during those Gray Maynard fights and still managed to pull out the win.

Just like in real life, video game Jon Jones is poking everyone in their facenuts. Video game Alexander Gustafsson’s response to this is one of the best delayed reaction performances you’re going to see outside of soccer.

On the next page: Sudden paralysis, heavy petting, and the ONE WEIRD TRICK to winning every time…

Bellator’s New Tournament Rules Are Pretty Simple Until You Try to Explain Them


(Bjorn Rebney: The Art Jimmerson of MMA promoters.)

Bellator announced some changes to its title-contender structure today, and I’m going to do my best to summarize them in one sentence: Basically, if you win a Bellator tournament and receive a title shot, you no longer have to win another tournament in order to get another title shot. Which is weird, because didn’t they already kill that rule a long time ago? I mean, how else did Eddie Alvarez vs. Michael Chandler 2 and 3 get booked? I can think of several instances where Bellator’s vow that “title shots are earned, not given” hasn’t meant a whole lot.

So that’s the short version. Now read the press release that they actually sent out and get the Excedrin ready:

All Bellator Tournament Winners Now In World Title Shot Pool

Newport Beach, Calif. (June 12, 2014) – With Bellator’s 2014 Summer Series having just begun last Friday, Bellator Chairman & CEO Bjorn Rebney announced today that the promotion has made an addition to its real sport, tournament based* format that allows former Bellator Tournament winners the potential to be granted a World Title fight without going back into The Toughest Tournament in Sports.**

“Just like we’ve done since day one, any fighter who wins The Toughest Tournament in Sports will still be guaranteed a World Title*** fight,” Rebney said. “The addition I’m making here, that I’m really excited about, is if you’ve won a tournament, you’ll join an elite group of athletes who we can grant a world title fight to at any time.”


(Bjorn Rebney: The Art Jimmerson of MMA promoters.)

Bellator announced some changes to its title-contender structure today, and I’m going to do my best to summarize them in one sentence: Basically, if you win a Bellator tournament and receive a title shot, you no longer have to win another tournament in order to get another title shot. Which is weird, because didn’t they already kill that rule a long time ago? I mean, how else did Eddie Alvarez vs. Michael Chandler 2 and 3 get booked? I can think of several instances where Bellator’s vow that “title shots are earned, not given” hasn’t meant a whole lot.

So that’s the short version. Now read the press release that they actually sent out and get the Excedrin ready:

All Bellator Tournament Winners Now In World Title Shot Pool

Newport Beach, Calif. (June 12, 2014) – With Bellator’s 2014 Summer Series having just begun last Friday, Bellator Chairman & CEO Bjorn Rebney announced today that the promotion has made an addition to its real sport, tournament based* format that allows former Bellator Tournament winners the potential to be granted a World Title fight without going back into The Toughest Tournament in Sports.**

“Just like we’ve done since day one, any fighter who wins The Toughest Tournament in Sports will still be guaranteed a World Title*** fight,” Rebney said. “The addition I’m making here, that I’m really excited about, is if you’ve won a tournament, you’ll join an elite group of athletes who we can grant a world title fight to at any time.”

“For example, if you win a tournament, fight for the World Title and lose, you forever remain in that elite group of fighters who can be awarded another shot at the title. We will place some fighters back into tournaments, while others may lose a world title fight, win some non-tournament fights and be awarded another shot at the title.**** We won’t be implementing any hard and fast rule as to when a fighter will go back into a tournament and when he’ll fight non-tournament fights and potentially be granted another title shot. What’s great about this addition is that it allows us to stay true to our core format, where title shots can only be earned through a tournament win, while also providing us tremendous flexibility***** to make the great fights fans want to see. And, we can do all this while keeping our fighters busy and battling in meaningful fights on a re-occurring basis.****** This is another step in our constant evolution and most importantly it’s a win for the fighters and the fans.”

“When I heard about this change, I instantly fell in love with it,” Bellator Interim Lightweight Champion Will Brooks said.******* “This is a way to keep guys active after they have proven themselves in a tournament. You always want to stay in the mix as a fighter, and it’s really exciting to me that Bellator is taking the fighters and fans opinions to heart and making decisions to put on the best fights possible. It’s refreshing to see and be a part of, and I can’t wait to see what the future holds.”

“At the end of the day, everyone wants to see guys they know stay busy and active,” Bellator Welterweight Champion Douglas Lima said.******** “As fighters we want to stay busy and keep fighting, and this new change helps keep the talent pool fresh and creates new challengers for us. I know the tournament isn’t going anywhere, it’s how we all came up and got our titles, but now we have a chance to keep staying busy and keep defending our titles.”

* I automatically hear the phrase “real sport, tournament based” in a Russian accent. See also: “I ready fight with light-heavyweight, no problem.”

** Pro tip: Capitalizing the words in something doesn’t necessarily make it accurate.

*** Ditto.

**** It is here that my head began to hurt.

***** “Flexibility” (n.), a euphemism referring to a fight-promoter’s ability to do whatever the fuck he wants at all times without having to justify it.

****** Okay, I actually have no problem with this part.

******* Poor, poor Will. Don’t you understand that they’re only doing this to set up Alvarez/Chandler again?

******** You ever have one of those moments where a fighter is described as a “Bellator Champion,” and you can’t remember how or when he won the title, or even the last time you saw him fight? That’s how I feel about Douglas Lima. Whatever happened to War Machine, anyway?

So that’s the official explanation of the new changes. Now here’s Luke Thomas from MMAFighting trying (and failing) to put this all in layman’s terms:

“For those fighters who’ve already won a tournament at any point in Bellator history, or for those who win any in the future, they move into a position where earning victories outside of the tournament structure enables them to claim a title shot at Bellator’s discretion. Those bouts can be against other fighters in Bellator who belong to this pool, but defeating only them is not essential. Fighters in this pool can face recent acquisitions, and should those previous tournament winners look impressive enough in victory, they can earn a title shot.

“In other words, Michael Chandler could face David Rickels in a non-tournament bout at lightweight as both fighters have won previous lightweight tournaments. However, Chandler or Ricklels could also face any acquisitions who have not competed in a Bellator tournament. If either Chandler or Rickels earn enough victories in this space against other fighters who have won Bellator tournaments or other non-tournament participants, they can earn a title shot without having to re-enter a tournament.

“The one caveat, however, is a fighter must win a tournament before they can enter this pool. Title shots can only be granted to those not actively in the tournament system, if and only if, they’ve already won a previous Bellator tournament.

“In addition, a previous winner of a Bellator tournament is not precluded from entering another tournament if they choose.”

My eyes are about to fall out of my head. The current pool of fighters eligible for title fights without having to win additional tournaments are as follows…

Bantamweight: Eduardo Dantas, Joe Warren, Marcos Galvao, Rafael Silva

Featherweight: Pat Curran, Patricio Pitbull, Daniel Straus, Shahbulat Shamhalaev, “Frodo” Khasbulaev, Daniel Weichel, Joe Warren.

Lightweight: Eddie Alvarez, Will Brooks, Michael Chandler, Pat Curran, Rick Hawn, Dave Jansen, David Rickels

Welterweight: Douglas Lima, Karl Amoussou, Andrey Koreshkov, Rick Hawn

Middleweight: Alexander Shlemenko, Brennan Ward, Doug Marshall

Light Heavyweight: Emanuel Newton, Rampage Jackson, King Mo, Christian M’Pumbu, Atilla Vegh,

Heavyweight: Vitaly Minakov, Alexander Volkov, Cheick Kongo