Battered & Bloody: The 10 Worst Injuries In MMA History

MMA is an inherently dangerous sport, but some injuries stick out more than others. A black eye, busted nose, and oftentimes blood are par for the course, but broken arms and legs are a tad more painful and gruesome. Some fighters have a reputation for causing serious bodily harm like Frank Mir and Rousimar Palhares, […]

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MMA is an inherently dangerous sport, but some injuries stick out more than others.

A black eye, busted nose, and oftentimes blood are par for the course, but broken arms and legs are a tad more painful and gruesome.

Some fighters have a reputation for causing serious bodily harm like Frank Mir and Rousimar Palhares, and other fighters were victim to terrible circumstances.

We took a look back at the 10 worst injuries in MMA history.

10. Frank Mir vs. Tim Sylvia

Mir’s name will pop up a few times on this list, a true adherer to the notion of tap-or-snap.

When Mir took on Tim Sylvia for the vacant heavyweight title back at UFC 53, it didn’t take long for him to exercise that concept. Within a minute of the first round, Mir had a hold of the Mainiac’s arm, and before anyone knew it referee Herb Dean stopped the fight.

Sylvia protested the stoppage, but instant replay showed Mir had snapped his arm like a twig. The crowd gasped in horror as they watched the big screen replay. Sylvia would end up requiring several rods and a multitude of stitches to put his broken arm back together again.

Truly a devastating injury.

The post Battered & Bloody: The 10 Worst Injuries In MMA History appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

The Week in Review: “Oh, F*ck My Life” Edition

(The Johnson vs. Cormier promo for UFC 187. We haven’t watched it yet, but drink if the word “monster” is used at any point.)

Afternoon, Nation. It’s been a hell of a week for our fine little sport, amiright? Some bad things happened, some other bad things happened, and depending on how you feel about Jon Jones, some either earth-shatteringly terrible or world-affirmingly wonderful things happened as well. So join us after the jump as we recap the week that was while trying not to cry into our whiskey drink. What? IT’S FRIDAY AND WE NEED THIS, NATION.

The post The Week in Review: “Oh, F*ck My Life” Edition appeared first on Cagepotato.


(The Johnson vs. Cormier promo for UFC 187. We haven’t watched it yet, but drink if the word “monster” is used at any point.)

Afternoon, Nation. It’s been a hell of a week for our fine little sport, amiright? Some bad things happened, some other bad things happened, and depending on how you feel about Jon Jones, some either earth-shatteringly terrible or world-affirmingly wonderful things happened as well. So join us after the jump as we recap the week that was while trying not to cry into our whiskey drink. What? IT’S FRIDAY AND WE NEED THIS, NATION.

-If the loss of Jones from UFC 187 wasn’t bad enough, the most stacked card since the FOX deal took another huge hit in the form of top lightweight contender Khabib Nurmagomedov — who was forced out of his #1 contender battle with Donald Cerrone due to a torn meniscus in an apparent “freak accident.” The Russian, who has not fought since defeating now-champion Rafael Dos Anjos in April of 2014, now faces another 4-6 month layoff and feels he attempted to come back from his original injury “too soon.” I…I just…

Sometimes it makes me sad, though…[UFC 187] being torn apart. I have to remind myself that some [cards] aren’t meant to be caged. Their [lineups] are just too bright. And when they [fall apart], the part of you that knows it was a sin to [book] them DOES rejoice. But still, the place you live in is that much more drab and empty that they’re gone. I guess I just miss my [sport].

-In slightly less depressing news, Cerrone will now face John Makdessi at UFC 187, who is fresh off a first round TKO over Shane Campbell at UFC 186.

-What else sucked this week? Oh, I guess Alexander Gustafsson being forced out of his Fight Night Berlin main event against Glover Teixeira fits that bill. If you’ll excuse me for a moment…

All better now.

With Gustafsson once again forced out of a Fight Night main event due to an undisclosed injury, women’s strawweight champion Joanna Jedrzejczyk will now face Jessica Penne for her first title defense. Penne was previously scheduled to face Brazilian Juliana De Lima Carneiro at Fight Night 67 next, but I guess a title shot makes just as much sense. Welcome to the show, babay!!!!!

-What else, what else. Well, we learned that Urijah Faber is an anti-vaxxer, so there’s something fun to chew on.

-Following their featured undercard scrap at UFC 186 which saw Patrick Cote defeat Joe Riggs via unanimous decision, Riggs has now more or less accused Cote of greasing. His exact words:

Ive been DQed for taking an oil bath the night before a fight so that when I started to sweat in the baby oil would slowly started coming out of my pores slowly. But the body is dry when they checked before they fight. Lol not saying he did that. But if he didn’t then he’s normally slippery as a oiled up dong!

“Slippery as a oiled up dong” sounds about as eloquent as I’d expect from a guy who once shot himself while cleaning his gun.

-In slightly more uplifting news, I guess, Melvin Guillard was granted release from his WSOF contract. If you recall, Guillard fought twice for the promotion last year, scoring a TKO over Gesias Cavalcante before dropping a decision to lightweight champion Justin Gaethje and missing weight on both occasions. Despite being blasted by WSOF President Ray Sefo for his unprofessionalism, we fully expect to see him back in the UFC before day’s end, what with their fighters dropping like flies and all.

-But because I believe there’s always a silver lining, I’m going to wrap things up by reminding us all that today marks the 15th anniversary of Kazushi Sakuraba vs. Royce Gracie, the most epic MMA fight of all time. Let’s all watch the entire thing together right now.

The post The Week in Review: “Oh, F*ck My Life” Edition appeared first on Cagepotato.

Dos Anjos, Pettis Each to Miss Time with Injuries After UFC 185 Main Event

Rafael dos Anjos changed the course of his main event title-fight showdown at UFC 185 in Dallas against Anthony Pettis with a single punch.  A straight left from dos Anjos shattered Pettis’ orbital bone early in Round 1, effectively blinding the former lightweight champion for the bout’s duration.  According to a recent report from MMA […]

Rafael dos Anjos changed the course of his main event title-fight showdown at UFC 185 in Dallas against Anthony Pettis with a single punch.  A straight left from dos Anjos shattered Pettis’ orbital bone early in Round 1, effectively blinding the former lightweight champion for the bout’s duration.  According to a recent report from MMA […]

Hot to Not: UFC’s Early 2015 Schedule Soured by Drug Test Failures, Injuries

Maybe we’re all feeling a little bit like Alexander Gustafsson right now. You remember how Gustafsson’s 2015 started, right? The erstwhile light heavyweight No. 1 contender rolled into a Jan. 24 title eliminator against underdog Anthony Johnson with sky-high expectations, only to get flattened—crushed, really—in two minutes, 15 seconds. Gustafsson left the Octagon in tears […]

Maybe we’re all feeling a little bit like Alexander Gustafsson right now. You remember how Gustafsson’s 2015 started, right? The erstwhile light heavyweight No. 1 contender rolled into a Jan. 24 title eliminator against underdog Anthony Johnson with sky-high expectations, only to get flattened—crushed, really—in two minutes, 15 seconds. Gustafsson left the Octagon in tears […]

Why We Can’t Have Nice Things: The Curse of the Injured Champion

(Fact: This is exactly how Matt Serra sounds after consuming an 18-inch hoagie.)

By Rory Daniel 

The prospect of a new year with MMA is always a pleasant one. It won’t be like it was before. We’ve both matured, we know where we went wrong last time and we’re both committed to not repeating our previous mistakes. We’ve been wooed back in by big names – Jones, McGregor, Silva, Diaz, all in January alone – and, what a surprise, just as things looked like they were going to be different, better, lasting…BAM…we’re reduced to tears and calling mom screaming “why can’t anyone love me?” in the rain. Metaphorically speaking.

The news that Chris Weidman has been forced out of his UFC 184 title defence shattered any naïve assumptions that maybe this year would finally see the dastardly injury bug leaving our precious main events alone. Of course, the signs were there before Weidman’s injury…


(Fact: This is exactly how Matt Serra sounds after consuming an 18-inch hoagie.)

By Rory Daniel 

The prospect of a new year with MMA is always a pleasant one. It won’t be like it was before. We’ve both matured, we know where we went wrong last time and we’re both committed to not repeating our previous mistakes. We’ve been wooed back in by big names – Jones, McGregor, Silva, Diaz, all in January alone – and, what a surprise, just as things looked like they were going to be different, better, lasting…BAM…we’re reduced to tears and calling mom screaming “why can’t anyone love me?” in the rain. Metaphorically speaking.

The news that Chris Weidman has been forced out of his UFC 184 title defence shattered any naïve assumptions that maybe this year would finally see the dastardly injury bug leaving our precious main events alone. Of course, the signs were there before Weidman’s injury. The end of last year saw us lose Dominick Cruz AGAIN *and* Raphael Assuncao in just a few hours, just as the bantamweight division threatened to start looking interesting. Cain Velasquez has been out so long that it’s not unrealistic to expect a significantly less impressive version than the wrecking machine we were used to, let alone the one we’ve been dreaming about watching face off against Jon Jones in the only true superfight worth making.

We’ve already seen main events crashing through with Fight Night 60: Brown vs. Saffiedine Thatch vs. Thompson Thatch vs. Henderson (?!) a prime example of what the UFC promised would not happen. We’ve seen Cowboy Cerrone fight twice and have been deprived of the opportunity to see how he would look at 185lbs in a third fight. Suffice it to say, putting any stock in White’s promise was foolish. They were just empty words, but I they were still real to me DAMMIT.

But now, a fight that was already postponed from its original postponement has once again been postponed, and any hopes the successful January had raised in our foolish hearts have well and truly been doused with concrete. The question remains though: Why can’t we have nice things? We deserve them just as much as fans of other sports, right? Why does it feel like every time the UFC books a true blockbuster main event (something Bellator still cannot manage, despite their improvements), we pessimistically expect it to be snatched from under our nose? Are we just bitter, or has recent history forced us to think this way?

Fortunately for anyone going to UFC 184, there was a second headline worthy fight on the card, but that’s hardly the point. We were promised two title fights. We were promised Weidman vs. post-TRT Belfort, supported by Ronda Rousey‘s latest showcase. And now we have 2015 Josh Koscheck vs. 2015 Jake Ellenberger in the co-main event. Yikes. Is it just bad luck that so many of the UFC’s biggest talents are as breakable as a new Apple product? Well I have a theory, and though I should stress that this is just wild conjecture, but it does make sense (at least in my oddly functioning cranium).

A fight gets the testosterone pumping and the adrenaline running. It forces you to be as competitive as you can, because if you lose it will hurt a lot more than just your pride, unlike other sports. You come in pumped up to training and, look, you get to spar with the champ today, the best guy in the world. Are you just going to let him beat on you? Or are you going to fight extra hard to try and prove to anyone watching, to yourself at least, that you can hang with the best guy in the world? That’s surely something to brag about at Dave & Buster’s on Friday. If, in the heat of the moment, you accidentally injure them, you can’t be blamed for going hard. They’re the champ, they should be able to handle it.

Then again, its often the ego of the trainer and/or the fighter that can get them into trouble. So often you hear fighters bragging that “no one trains harder than I do.” Obviously, this is testicle grabbing bullshit, but the possibility of overtraining and trying to push yourself too hard is very real. It’s the old gunslingers conundrum — as you get to the top of the sport, people start aiming up at you instead of looking past you. You feel like you have to do more than you had previously to stay ahead of these guys, to set an example of how hard someone really can work and to come in better conditioned than whatever opponent you might face. The high intensity, CrossFit-style workouts that many fighters favour are easy to injure yourself in, particularly if you’re only partially instructed when completing them. Pushing the weight your lifting and the reps your getting out are fine if you’re doing them the right way. Too often, however, fighters will focus on pushing through pain rather than listening to it. This is just a fighter’s mindset; pain is nothing.

When training, it is all to easy to ignore pains and expect them to be normal as part of the workout. You don’t want to appear weak by admitting to pain or giving an inch and thus you greatly increase your chance of injury. Personally, I’m a great advocate of CrossFit-style workouts, but you have to be doing things properly. Pushing through injuries is something that is all too common and can often simply lead to the injury deteriorating until pushing through is no longer an option.

These are just theories I have, but for the sake of us at home who still have hope and who still believe that MMA is the right sport for us despite our previous heartbreaks, I would ask anyone in even a decent upcoming fight to please be careful. I’m not sure I can take another long term layoff after a previous injury (looking at you, Pettis). We want and deserve to see the fights we are promised; it’s a simple as that. Here’s to a healthy 2015 from here on out (*manically touches everything wooden within reach*).

AKA Head Javier Mendez Discusses Ways to Lessen Training Camp Injuries

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Daniel Cormier had been training hard for 23 minutes when the accident happened. It was a sparring day, and Cormier was planning on 25 hard minutes in preparation for his January title fight against light heavyweight champion Jon Jones. He’d gone three rounds, and then four. He was tired. But by […]

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Daniel Cormier had been training hard for 23 minutes when the accident happened. It was a sparring day, and Cormier was planning on 25 hard minutes in preparation for his January title fight against light heavyweight champion Jon Jones. He’d gone three rounds, and then four. He was tired. But by […]