Will MMA Ever Have Its Own Floyd Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao?

The most striking thing about the hysteria surrounding Floyd Mayweather’s fight against Manny Pacquiao on Saturday night was the hunger it revealed.
People—millions of them, it seems—were starving for some boxing.
There was a whole wo…

The most striking thing about the hysteria surrounding Floyd Mayweather’s fight against Manny Pacquiao on Saturday night was the hunger it revealed.

People—millions of them, it seems—were starving for some boxing.

There was a whole world out there primed for the sweet science to make a comeback, or at the very least a world craving the glitz and guttural thrill of a single big-ticket fight night. By the time Mayweather accepted Pacquiao’s best shots and spent the rest of their time together scripting another of his patented unanimous decision wins, one thing was clear:

Maybe this didn’t turn out to be a “super” fight—but boxing can still turn out a superfight.

ESPN went on location for it. Hollywood dressed to the nines for it. All over the country, entire extended families so willingly forked over the pay-per-view’s inflated $100 asking price that broadcast providers literally couldn’t take their money fast enough.

As MMA fans, we stood on our tiptoes and gazed across the aisle with equal parts skepticism, longing and—if we’re being honest—jealousy. Mayweather vs. Pacquiao was a bona fide cultural phenomenon, dominating the mainstream news cycle with a ferocity that our own beloved little sport has yet to come close to matching.

As we watched Jamie Foxx stumble through the national anthem and heard the stories about Tom Brady hopping a midafternoon jet from Louisville to Las Vegas because this was a fight he simply couldn’t miss, we wondered: How is this possible? What about us? Will MMA ever hold a fight this big?

The answer to at least that last question seems short and clear enough.

Unfortunately, no, probably not—at least not for a long, long time.

For the astute MMA fan, there were lessons to be learned from last weekend’s extravaganza. As much as we all like to joke about boxing’s demise, when it comes to appealing to a huge, crossover audience, the venerable sport of traditional prizefighting still has a few major advantages over MMA.

For starters, there is history, plain and simple.

Boxing is perhaps our oldest professional sport. It’s as deeply entrenched in our cultural psyche as its modern stick-and-ball counterparts and has arguably been more socially important than any (besides, maybe, baseball). Viewed this way, it makes a certain bit of sense that boxing can still swoop in to set pay-per-view records when it has a matchup that feels halfway historic.

Even if Mayweather vs. Pacquiao is the only boxing match they watch this year, the sport feels familiar and comfortable to today’s fans. To the untrained eye, the whole thing is actually pretty simple. Just two guys trying to punch each other, is all. As long as you don’t spend much time dwelling on the actual physical damage inflicted or the character of the men inflicting it, perhaps there is a sort of cozy nostalgia to it.

By contrast, modern MMA is less than two-and-a-half decades old in America and is still very much finding its legs with the mainstream. If you live and work inside the so-called “MMA bubble,” it’s easy to forget there is a nation of people out there who continue to think of our sport as a weird sideshow.

There’s an entire generation of PPV buyers who still turn away from MMA because, for example, they think it’s wrong to “hit a guy when he’s down.”

The bad news for MMA is, it’s going to take some time for those biases to wear down. The good news—if the sport survives long enough—is that they will indeed wear down.

Yet history can’t be the only answer here. A good bit of boxing’s ongoing ability to stage the occasional megafight must also come down to pure aesthetics.

The UFC has always taken pains to cast itself as fairly lowbrow. While boxing embraces pomp and lavish spectacle, MMA is a stripped-down affair. Where boxing announcers go black-tie, MMA play-by-play guys only recently started wearing sport coats—and looking pretty uncomfortable in them, at that.

While boxing cultivates a sense of over-the-top pageantry, the UFC consciously cut out the smoke and pyrotechnics years ago. In many ways, that more spartan approach helped the sport during its formative stages. It made MMA feel young, hip, maybe a little bit dangerous. Those of us who considered ourselves savvy and cutting-edge enough to tune in were at the forefront of combat sports’ revolutionary new wave. We could feel it.

But today? It’s possible MMA’s lean-and-mean vibe has lost its utility. Maybe at some point we replaced the feeling of underground, DIY cool with just being small-time.

A fight like Mayweather vs. Pacquiao can cast itself as family entertainment. Parents can plant their kids in front of the TV and tell them they are about to see history. Your grandmother can watch it, maybe even in the same room with a few of your college buddies.

Why? Presentation. Even if it isn’t, boxing strives to feel classy. Even if it isn’t, it feels safe.

On the other hand, MMA makes most of its money selling itself to young (mostly white) men. While boxing at its highest level at least makes a nod toward the champagne-and-cocktail crowd, the UFC only recently began asking us to embrace Harley Davidson, Monster Energy Drinks and the #BudLightLifestyle.

Where boxing occasionally manages to wake from its slumber, shake off the dust and adopt a kind of classic elegance, MMA feels forever mired in its own nu-metal roots. That look, frankly, is starting to feel as dated as barbed-wire tattoos and foil-skull T-shirts.

To this list of advantages you can add that boxing feels more inclusive and multicultural. In the moments before Mayweather and Pacquiao fought, there were performances of the American, Mexican and Pilipino national anthems (note: Remember what we said earlier about pageantry?).

The UFC doesn’t do any of this. It typically prefaces its live events with a video of its own highlights set to the music of The Who. The video is awesome, but it doesn’t set the same vibe or the same expectations.

In addition to that, boxing’s biggest stars feel like A-list celebrities. Why? They get paid a lot more, for starters, so they seem more like legitimate superstars. Mayweather may well be a despicable human being, but he turned himself into one of his sport’s most polarizing and profitable brands, basically by flaunting his own wealth.

In many ways, boxing’s lack of a strong, centralized power structure has worked against it, preventing the matchups fans wanted to see the most. If it has had any positive effect at all, however, it’s that fighters are left to promote themselves as the sport’s biggest attractions.

The UFC, on the other hand, has always promoted itself and its own brand above any of its athletes. This makes good sense, too, since—as we recently learned—fighters can fall out of the limelight at the drop of a hat, while the company and its executives are in it for the long haul.

But while the UFC has been undeniably effective in engendering a fair amount of brand loyalty, it’s clearly the athletes who drive PPV sales. If the fight company always insists on promoting its own logo above all else, it’s unlikely any UFC fighter will ever rise to the level of notoriety of a Manny Pacquiao or Floyd Mayweather.

To date, the UFC—and, by extension, the sport it largely represents—has been successful in creating a niche for itself. It has, at the risk of exaggeration, changed combat sports forever. It could even be that some of the negative reaction to the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight came from fans who’ve gotten used to the faster pace and highlight-reel finishes common inside the Octagon.

As MMA is currently presented, though, it’s tough to imagine it ever winning the kind of widespread appeal necessary to have a fight of such colossal magnitude. It’s difficult to foresee our sport becoming palatable enough that the Worldwide Leader puts it on par with the Superbowl, or that Robert DeNiro, Beyonce and Louis CK all want to be there. Not within our current identity, anyway.

Perhaps the most pertinent question, then, may be: Is that OK with us?

If it is, if we are happy with who we are and are too set in our ways to change; so be it. If we are not satisfied however, if we want to someday be considered capable of competing with the biggest nights in combat sports history, then perhaps we must realize that a few of the very things that made our sport popular now hold us back.

Maybe a bit more evolution is in order.

If that’s the case, here’s some more good news for you, MMA fans:

We’re young yet, and evolution is what we do best.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Mayweather vs. Pacquiao Backlash Is Not a Win for the UFC

When all is said and done, Saturday night’s boxing megafight between Floyd Mayeather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao will go down as not just the richest combat sports event in history, but one of the most lucrative sporting events to ever take place.
The numbe…

When all is said and done, Saturday night’s boxing megafight between Floyd Mayeather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao will go down as not just the richest combat sports event in history, but one of the most lucrative sporting events to ever take place.

The numbers are mind-boggling. The $100 million check Mayweather showed to ESPN and others after the conclusion of the fight was just the start of the seemingly endless amounts of cash he’ll eventually rake in from the fight.

Pay-per-view numbers are not currently available, but the fact that cable systems were so overwhelmed by people attempting to order the event that the main event was briefly delayed likely indicates an off-the-chart number that will smash the previous record held by Mayweather’s fight against Oscar de la Hoya.

My personal prediction was that the fight would pull in more than 4 million buys, and I feel comfortable with that number. I’d be surprised if it does any less.

When the fight was over, social media exploded with angry fans who have apparently never seen a Mayweather fight. The fight was boring, they said. They paid $100 for Mayweather to defend himself, to clinch and to run away from Pacquiao. He fooled them again, taking their hard-earned money and failing to deliver an actual fight.

Boxing was dead, killed by Mayweather and his greedy, non-fighting ways.

And then came the MMA fans.

This was a win for MMA, they said. UFC owner and CEO Lorenzo Fertitta jumped in on the action, retweeting seemingly every single person who said this was a victory for the UFC and for mixed martial arts.

Mayweather may have bored you to tears, but UFC cards aren’t boring!

Tune in on July 11, because there’s no way Jose Aldo vs. Conor McGregor is as boring as the fight you just watched, and it won’t cost you $100!

On and on it continued, well after the conclusion of the fight.

There are several things to keep in mind here:

1. I consider mixed martial arts to be far more exciting than boxing. The additional techniques and facets of MMA make it far more interesting.

But the UFC is playing a dangerous game trying to capitalize on the perceived boring nature of Saturday’s fight, because not every card it puts on is a barn-burner.

There have been plenty of boring UFC events and even boring champions. Georges St-Pierre, one of the greatest and most marketable stars in UFC history, turned himself into a defensive-minded fighter after losing to Matt Serra at UFC 69. Granted, St-Pierre’s defense involved wrestling, but he did so for the same reason as Mayweather: to control the fight and to avoid taking damage. St-Pierre was a big draw for the promotion, but fans cried “boring” after nearly every one of his fights.

Demetrious Johnson, perhaps the greatest current pound-for-pound fighter in the world with the departure of Jon Jones, is a wrestling-first wizard who also works to minimize the amount of damage he takes. He is incredible at what he does, and yet fans walked out of his UFC 186 title defense last weekend. They missed a last-second armbar win, but the point was made: They weren’t happy with what they were seeing.

2. People seem to be working under the assumption that a boring boxing fight will create new MMA fans. This is not the case. Millions tuned in for Mayweather vs. Pacquiao because it was a once-in-a-lifetime event, not because it was an intriguing boxing matchup.

This was not an event for boxing fans; this was an event for people in general. It’s not as though a large percentage of them, upon the conclusion of the fight, suddenly decided that they would give that mixed martial arts thing a try simply because they’d dropped $100 on a boring fight. That’s not how it works.

The masses tune in for big fights in MMA for the same reason they tune in to big boxing bouts: because they are big events, and because it is the thing to do. Celebrities won’t start turning up in large numbers at UFC events just because they’re unhappy at dropping $10,000 on a ringside ticket for a fight that ended up not living up to expectations.

3. Did anyone really expect anything different from a Mayweather fight? Mayweather, having reached 47-0 through defense and skill and minimizing damage, wasn’t going to suddenly morph into Stephan Bonnar and involve himself in a slugfest just to please the fans. The absurd pay-per-view price wasn’t going to change his style.

The point of all this, I guess, is that it feels a little weird for MMA fans and promoters to pretend like they’re going to benefit from a boxing match that’s considered a dud. Mayweather has been fighting the same way for years. He always draws gigantic numbers on pay-per-view, and viewers are always disappointed and angry.

But the one thing a boring Mayweather fight has never done is create new UFC fans in droves. It just doesn’t work that way. MMA fans are fans because they have, at some point in their lives, tuned in and enjoyed what they saw. They watch because they love it and appreciate it for its many nuances, just as hardcore boxing fans appreciate what Mayweather was able to do on Saturday night.

Saturday night did not kill boxing. It was not a win for the UFC.

Yes, Aldo vs. McGregor will almost assuredly be more exciting than what we saw between Mayweather and Pacquiao.

But I’d like to see the UFC allow its product speak for itself, to stand on its own merit rather than act like a little brother attempting to capitalize on the successes or failings of his older sibling.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Dana White Tells ‘Racist’ Floyd Mayweather, Jr. to Shut Up

Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s constant beleaguering of other athletes has caught the attention of UFC President Dana White.The head of the UFC fired back at the WBC welterweight boxing champion in a recent episode of Fuel TV’s UFC Tonight.”First of all, what …

Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s constant beleaguering of other athletes has caught the attention of UFC President Dana White.

The head of the UFC fired back at the WBC welterweight boxing champion in a recent episode of Fuel TV’s UFC Tonight.

“First of all, what he said I think is racist. He’s made a couple of racist comments, and yes Floyd, you’re racist with the stuff that you said,” White proclaimed, while pointing directly into the camera.

Mayweather has taken heat lately for his racy remarks on Twitter about Asian basketball star Jeremy Lin. A point guard for the New York Knicks, Lin has captured Tim Tebow-like drama in the world of professional basketball, which has recently been dubbed “Linsanity.”

Jeremy Lin is a good player but all the hype is because he’s Asian. Black players do what he does every night and don’t get the same praise. Other countries get to support/cheer their athletes and everything is fine.”

As soon as I support Black athletes, I get criticized.”

Wow, what a country.”

I’m speaking my mind on behalf of other NBA players. They are programmed to be politically correct and will be penalized if they speak up.”

White doesn’t see “Linsanity” as some phenomenon overlooking black athletes. He believes the craze revolves around the fact that Lin is an Asian American succeeding in the NBA, which is certainly a rare sight throughout the history of the sport.

“Jeremy Lin gets all this credit because he’s an Asian player in the NBA that African Americans never get? Yeah, he’s getting all this praise because he’s an Asian guy playing in the NBA,” said White. “And you say that African Americans don’t get it? Really, Kobe Bryant doesn’t get any praise? Michael Jordan never got any praise? The list goes on and on.

“Not only can he compete and make it in the NBA, the guy is tearing it up and breaking records you knucklehead.”

White didn’t stop there. He also addressed an old video Mayweather posted of himself going on a rather offensive rant about WBO welterweight boxing champion Manny Pacquiao.

“You said Manny Pacquiao should go make some sushi somewhere. Sushi is from Japan. He’s from the Philippines, dummy,” said White. “Don’t worry about what all these other guys are doing. You shoot your big mouth off on Twitter. What you should worry about is getting in there and making the fight that all the boxing fans want to see. Get in there and fight Manny Pacquiao.

“You don’t deserve more of the purse. If there was ever a fight in history that should be split 50-50, it’s the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight. Shut up, both of you split the money up and put on the fight that everybody, including me, wants to see.”

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UFC News: Manny Pacquiao’s Coach Sides with Dana White Against Bob Arum

Alex Ariza, strength and condition coach of WBO welterweight champ Manny Pacquiao, agrees with UFC President Dana White’s assertion that boxing promoter Bob Arum is a “greedy pig.”In a recent interview with Fight Hype, Ariza absolutely tore Arum apart….

Alex Ariza, strength and condition coach of WBO welterweight champ Manny Pacquiao, agrees with UFC President Dana White‘s assertion that boxing promoter Bob Arum is a “greedy pig.”

In a recent interview with Fight Hype, Ariza absolutely tore Arum apart. For starters, Ariza said Arum will be solely responsible for “Pac-Man” never having a super fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr. 

“I think that’s the fight that everybody wants to see,” Ariza said, in regards to Pacquiao vs. Mayweather.

“Here’s the thing, Dana White is 100 percent absolutely correct. Bob Arum is a greedy pig. Now I see. That’s exactly why Dana White has been so successful and Bob Arum sees him as such a threat, because he puts the fights together that the people want to see. It’s about putting the best fights on,” Ariza added.

Ariza went on to praise White for his business savvy and matchmaking skills, while he slammed Arum for allowing personal bias to get in the way.

“Even though he had the biggest fight with Nick Diaz and they went back and forth at each other, Dana did the right thing by the sport and he still put him and B.J. Penn together and made them fight,” Ariza said. 

“Arum hates Floyd Mayweather, can’t stand him, doesn’t want to see him make a dollar, can’t stand Golden Boy, doesn’t want to do business with them, but instead of doing what’s best for the sport, what’s best for the fans, and what’s best for the fighters because they’ll get the payday of a lifetime, no, it’s all about him.”

As angry as Ariza seemed up to this point, he really began to lose his cool after further thinking about boxing’s fantasy showdown that may never be. 

“‘I don’t like him, so f**k him!’ I mean, right or wrong?,” Ariza said, talking about Arum’s attitude towards Mayweather.

“Unless you can tell me and convince me otherwise, because I’m thoroughly convinced and believe that Floyd really does want to have this fight. I think he really wants to have this fight. As far as he knows, he’s right. He’s right. Bob is the one interfering and f**king s**t up,” Ariza noted.

All this hate for Arum is a little puzzling, considering that Ariza was calling for a fourth bout between Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez just two days after the controversial Pac-Man victory.

So fight fans: did Ariza hit the nail on the head? Or is he oversimplifying the matter at hand?

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com