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.

Why Do MMA Fans Want Bellator to Fail?


(“Ay dog, just give it to me straight — am I the father or not?” / Photo via ora.tv)

By Matt Saccaro

Bellator 120 is a day away, but the MMA world doesn’t seem to care…unless of course they’re deriding the Viacom-owned promotion’s PPV endeavors.

People like laughing at Bellator. That goes for both fans and media. MMAJunkie’s Ben Fowlkes noted this phenomenon recently:

You make a fair point about the undercurrent of glee in the response to every new Bellator setback. It reminds me of the late IFL CEO Jay Larkin, who, when convening a conference call to essentially sound the death knell for that organization, bitterly remarked that it seemed to be the most interest the MMA media had ever shown in an IFL announcement. In other words, it’s not just Bellator feeling that sting. As much as MMA seems to recognize the need for a serious competitor to the UFC, it also seems to love to watch those contenders rise and fall. I’m not sure I know why that is, but I do know that, if you are one of those contenders, you don’t help the situation by complaining about it.

So I’m not alone in this; it’s clear that anti-Bellator sentiment is pervasive. But why?

Regarding fans, the sport and the sport’s chief brand—the UFC—are typically conflated. Most casual fans don’t know that MMA and the UFC are two different things. If it’s not UFC, it’s nothing; they’ll believe anything the UFC tells them without question. The UFC’s ability to produce stars might be lacking, but they’re as good at producing ideologues as they ever were.

However, this doesn’t answer why the hardcore fans hate Bellator. Hardcores often have an anti-UFC slant (they’re still mad about Pride and Strikeforce). So it seems only natural they’d be big Bellator supporters, especially since Bellator’s tournament structure purportedly reduces title shot chicanery that the UFC is infamous for. Except it doesn’t. They screwed Attila Vegh because he wasn’t profitable enough. They engineered the season 10 light heavyweight tournament for the most favorable outcome (King Mo vs. Rampage). Bellator went from providing something novel and refreshing to being a second-rate UFC clone. And let’s not even mention pushing an ancient, injury prone Tito Ortiz and a past-his-prime, embarrassingly disinterested Rampage Jackson as superstars.


(“Ay dog, just give it to me straight — am I the father or not?” / Photo via ora.tv)

By Matt Saccaro

Bellator 120 is a day away, but the MMA world doesn’t seem to care…unless of course they’re deriding the Viacom-owned promotion’s PPV endeavors.

People like laughing at Bellator. That goes for both fans and media. MMAJunkie’s Ben Fowlkes noted this phenomenon recently:

You make a fair point about the undercurrent of glee in the response to every new Bellator setback. It reminds me of the late IFL CEO Jay Larkin, who, when convening a conference call to essentially sound the death knell for that organization, bitterly remarked that it seemed to be the most interest the MMA media had ever shown in an IFL announcement. In other words, it’s not just Bellator feeling that sting. As much as MMA seems to recognize the need for a serious competitor to the UFC, it also seems to love to watch those contenders rise and fall. I’m not sure I know why that is, but I do know that, if you are one of those contenders, you don’t help the situation by complaining about it.

So I’m not alone in this; it’s clear that anti-Bellator sentiment is pervasive. But why?

Regarding fans, the sport and the sport’s chief brand—the UFC—are typically conflated. Most casual fans don’t know that MMA and the UFC are two different things. If it’s not UFC, it’s nothing; they’ll believe anything the UFC tells them without question. The UFC’s ability to produce stars might be lacking, but they’re as good at producing ideologues as they ever were.

However, this doesn’t answer why the hardcore fans hate Bellator. Hardcores often have an anti-UFC slant (they’re still mad about Pride and Strikeforce). So it seems only natural they’d be big Bellator supporters, especially since Bellator’s tournament structure purportedly reduces title shot chicanery that the UFC is infamous for. Except it doesn’t. They screwed Attila Vegh because he wasn’t profitable enough. They engineered the season 10 light heavyweight tournament for the most favorable outcome (King Mo vs. Rampage). Bellator went from providing something novel and refreshing to being a second-rate UFC clone. And let’s not even mention pushing an ancient, injury prone Tito Ortiz and a past-his-prime, embarrassingly disinterested Rampage Jackson as superstars.

Fans who don’t know that “UFC” and “MMA” are two different things will always hate the #2 promotion. Meanwhile, nuanced fans (the kinds of people who read CagePotato and spend loads of time on r/MMA) will want the #2 promotion to do something other than attempt to out-UFC the UFC.

But the fans aren’t the only guilty ones. Bellator’s failures elicit weapons-grade snark from MMA media members. MMAFighting’s Luke Thomas speculated as to why on his live chat series earlier this week.

“I think there are some guys in media either cognizantly or just buy accident…who are just gonna have a UFC bias,” he said in response to a lengthy comment about the MMA media’s coverage of Bellator. “I think there are some guys who are openly biased towards UFC and I think there are some guys who are just naturally gonna be drawn that way, naturally drawn to a space where because [the UFC] is so powerful and because so much of their attention is derived around it and because it becomes almost a chore in some ways to cover Bellator they don’t give it proper attention.”

Thomas elaborated further:

“There’s limits about what you can cover and what you can’t cover. And the reality is, with some exception, You have to cover things because it’s journalistically important, and we do. We give every Bellator show coverage…In terms of the return on the investment, insofar as you want to look at it that way, most Bellator shows do not do a tremendous amount of traffic. In terms of allocating resources to cover something, which you have to look at the bottom line, it becomes an issue.”

He’s right, at least as far as return on investment goes. I’ve been with CagePotato for about a year now (and writing about MMA for three years), and I’m typically the one who does Bellator recaps on the site. Regarding the page views on them, let’s just say if page views directly correlate to PPV buys, Bellator 120 will not succeed. Bellator articles are almost always underwhelming traffic-wise. The exceptions are usually the negative articles (their first PPV cancellation, Eddie Alvarez’s recent concussion), or when you’re directly comparing them to the UFC. Still, we cover Bellator shows because we’re an MMA site and not a UFC PR machine like other outlets.

America loves to praise a winner, but enjoys mocking a loser just as much. While we laugh at Bellator sometimes too, that doesn’t mean we don’t recognize Bellator’s importance in the MMA landscape, even when we write/tweet negative things about it. MMA is better off with a strong #2 promotion than without one. Just look at the Gilbert Melendez situation. Bellator’s existence allowed him to make more money. Keep that in mind next time you turn your snark up to 11 or buy into the anti-Bellator hype. They might make a lot of dumb decisions, but the MMA ecosystem benefits from Bellator, shady behaviors notwithstanding.


(Unlike our competitors, Bellator will never rely on cheap subliminal persuasion gimmicks. Either you want to watch this deliciously stacked, top-heavy fight card or you don’t.” / Photo via MMAJunkie)

The 27 Most Persistent Myths in MMA


(“I’m telling you people, this is the most stacked UFC card OF ALL TIME!” / Photo via Getty)

Like price sticker residue on a prized picture frame, these myths refused to be scrubbed away. You’ll encounter them on forums, barroom discussions, and even from the mouths of so-called experts. What myths are these? We’re glad you asked…

By CagePotato.com Staff 

1. MMA wouldn’t exist without Dana White. Wrong. See here.

2. Royce Gracie was a humble, respectful warrior. [Ed’s note: Hopefully there’s been enough recent evidence to put this falsehood to bed until the end of time.]

3. Chuck Liddell in his prime would have destroyed ________.

4. MMA has nothing in common with professional wrestling.

5. [Celebrity with zero combat sports experience] would make a great MMA fighter!

6. Motivated BJ Penn could/still can beat anybody.

7. Healthy Shogun could/still can beat anybody.

8. Brock Lesnar could’ve held the belt forever and a day had it not been for diverticulitis.

9. The UFC is not a sports entertainment company.


(“I’m telling you people, this is the most stacked UFC card OF ALL TIME!” / Photo via Getty)

Like price sticker residue on a prized picture frame, these myths refused to be scrubbed away. You’ll encounter them on forums, barroom discussions, and even from the mouths of so-called experts. What myths are these? We’re glad you asked…

By CagePotato.com Staff 

1. MMA wouldn’t exist without Dana White. Wrong. See here.

2. Royce Gracie was a humble, respectful warrior. [Ed’s note: Hopefully there’s been enough recent evidence to put this falsehood to bed until the end of time.]

3. Chuck Liddell in his prime would have destroyed ________.

4. MMA has nothing in common with professional wrestling.

5. [Celebrity with zero combat sports experience] would make a great MMA fighter!

6. Motivated BJ Penn could/still can beat anybody.

7. Healthy Shogun could/still can beat anybody.

8. Brock Lesnar could’ve held the belt forever and a day had it not been for diverticulitis.

9. The UFC is not a sports entertainment company.

10. MMA wouldn’t exist without Bruce Lee.

11. Tito Ortiz held the most UFC light heavyweight wins of all time (too soon?).

12. _____, _____, and _____ will be the toughest test of [insert headliner of next PPV]‘s career so far.

13. Xyience is a thing people use outside of UFC press conferences, where cans of it are used as paper weights.

14. Michael Bisping won the Matt Hamill fight.

15. Rampage Jackson is funny.

16. Forrest Griffin is funny.

17. The low salaries Zuffa pays the fighters are okay because they all get rich off locker room bonuses.

18. The media isn’t on the take.

19. “I used supplements that must have been tainted.”

20. “I was hacked.”

21. “My phone was stolen.”

22. “My PR firm went rogue.”

23. Brazilian events bring out only respectful, educated fans.

24. Women’s fights are always exciting (and no, we don’t hate WMMA. You can criticize something and still like it. Imagine that…)

25. Dana White isn’t an asshole (this behavior is indefensible, no matter how much snow you have imported into your driveway).

26. Boxing is dead. Did you see how many MMA sites covered Mayweather-Maidana?

27. “Fastest growing sport in the world.”

Rousey vs. Mayweather: The MMA vs. Boxing Debate Finally Hits Rock-Bottom

(Joe Rogan talks Rousey vs. Mayweather on ESPN’s SportsNation, because it’s not like there was an actual event worth discussing or anything.)

By Jared Jones

I must be confused.

You see, when I awoke yesterday morning, I was under the impression that MMA was still a sport with plenty of goings-on worth talking about, not a platform so desolate of intriguing discussion that its only current purpose in this world was to push energy drinks and stir up farcical “Who would win?” scenarios like a goddamn episode of Deadliest Warrior. “There are *two* UFC events alone going down this week,” I said to myself, “Not to mention an *actual* TUF premiere, a Bellator event, and who knows what else. Surely there is plenty of real-life, newsworthy information to be had today.”

So you can imagine my surprise when I awoke to find “Joe Rogan says Ronda Rousey would beat Floyd Mayweather Jr.” as the headline dominating many an MMA site and even some that aren’t. And even worse, nearly all of these articles were flooded with the hundreds of comments from people who actually found it necessary to offer their insight into this absolutely imbecilic piece of non-news. (Rousey vs. a cheetah in sweatpants: Who’s the better dancer?”)

“Every fight starts standing, and we all know Floyd’s not afraid to hit women,” joked a commenter who vehemently expressed his outrage over the idea of allowing Fallon Fox to continue fighting just months earlier. “Floyd’s speed would be no match for Ronda’s armbar,” said another who had chastised his favorite MMA publication for daring to waste his time with a breakdown of the Undertaker’s signature move days prior.

I bit my tongue at first, because I don’t exactly have a foot to stand on when it comes to publishing news items that are ever-so-tangentially related to MMA. But the tipping point occurred during last night’s TUF Nations Finale broadcast, when during yet another time-killing session in the FOX studios, Karyn Bryant posed the same question to Daniel Cormier and Anthony Pettis.

“This is ridiculous,” said Pettis before declaring that Floyd would easily win. Unfortunately, it appeared that the idea of a woman beating a man in a fight was what Pettis found ridiculous, not the question itself as I had hoped.


(Joe Rogan talks Rousey vs. Mayweather on ESPN’s SportsNation, because it’s not like there was an actual event worth discussing or anything.)

By Jared Jones

I must be confused.

You see, when I awoke yesterday morning, I was under the impression that MMA was still a sport with plenty of goings-on worth talking about, not a platform so desolate of intriguing discussion that its only current purpose in this world was to push energy drinks and stir up farcical “Who would win?” scenarios like a goddamn episode of Deadliest Warrior. “There are *two* UFC events alone going down this week,” I said to myself, “Not to mention an *actual* TUF premiere, a Bellator event, and who knows what else. Surely there is plenty of real-life, newsworthy information to be had today.”

So you can imagine my surprise when I awoke to find “Joe Rogan says Ronda Rousey would beat Floyd Mayweather Jr.” as the headline dominating many an MMA site and even some that aren’t. And even worse, nearly all of these articles were flooded with the hundreds of comments from people who actually found it necessary to offer their insight into this absolutely imbecilic piece of non-news. (Rousey vs. a cheetah in sweatpants: Who’s the better dancer?”)

“Every fight starts standing, and we all know Floyd’s not afraid to hit women,” joked a commenter who vehemently expressed his outrage over the idea of allowing Fallon Fox to continue fighting just months earlier. “Floyd’s speed would be no match for Ronda’s armbar,” said another who had chastised his favorite MMA publication for daring to waste his time with a breakdown of the Undertaker’s signature move days prior.

I bit my tongue at first, because I don’t exactly have a foot to stand on when it comes to publishing news items that are ever-so-tangentially related to MMA. But the tipping point occurred during last night’s TUF Nations Finale broadcast, when during yet another time-killing session in the FOX studios, Karyn Bryant posed the same question to Daniel Cormier and Anthony Pettis.

“This is ridiculous,” said Pettis before declaring that Floyd would easily win. Unfortunately, it appeared that the idea of a woman beating a man in a fight was what Pettis found ridiculous, not the question itself as I had hoped.

Despite the vast majority of MMA fans claiming to be “purists of the sport” who will blow a gasket at the slightest mention of the WWE and it’s transparent, lowball, and shamefully fabricated product on an MMA site, the discussion of how Ronda Rousey — a female, MMA fighter, with less than 10 professional contests to her credit — would fare against Floyd Mayweather Jr. — a male, professional boxer, considered to be one of the greatest in the sport’s history — in an MMA contest has somehow managed to infiltrate message boards far and wide and warrant hundreds of comments from these very same people. Baffling, is it not?

Using Gina Carano to continue hyping the Rousey feeding trough that is the women’s bantamweight division is one thing, but now we have to bring in professional boxers to do the job? And not only that, but discuss the idea of man-on-woman violence in the same month we all (rightfully) chastised Will Chope for his past offenses of the very same nature? And when the man being discussed in this fantasy scenario has been convicted of beating the mother of his children, in front of his children? Take this logic, please.

Obviously, one of the things I just described actually happened, whereas the other was dreamed up out of apparent apathy towards the actual fight Ronda Rousey just booked or, you know, the actual female professional boxer who is knocking on her door. But oh, I must have forgot, the UFC is “not interested whatsoever” in pursuing that actual, plausible scenario. Back to playing with these Megaman toys in the bathtub I guess!

I know this piece of absolutely imbecilic (apologies for the repetition, but I find it necessary in this case) non-news is nothing worth flying off the handle over, but this is the Internet after all. My biggest problem with the idea of Rousey vs. Mayweather is why we are so insistent on pushing this impossible fight in a universe where guys like Renan Barao and Jose Aldo exist. You know, guys who are guys and whose names would therefore make more sense as opponents in the ain’t-no-way-never-gonna-happen prospect of Floyd Mayweather becoming an MMA fighter. The downside of being the onlythe biggest star the UFC’s ever had,” perhaps?

It’s all about how much time Floyd has to prepare, because he will really have to work on his takedown defense. That would be the big thing. If Ronda got a clinch on him, it’s not just about worrying about being taken down to the ground, it’s worrying about knees to the body. It is worrying about her manipulating his body in ways that he doesn’t understand.

Those were actual words spoken by the typically sane Joe Rogan when seriously discussing (for all intents and purposes) the idea of Rousey vs. Mayweather. Ronda Rousey, who fights Alexis Davis in a couples months at UFC 175. UFC, the promotion that is putting on two fight cards this week including “the most exciting card in network history” at UFC on FOX 11 tomorrow night.

Look, I’m not asking you to openly express your disapproval with the thought of Rousey vs. Mayweather (I’ve already done it for you!), nor am I asking you to blame the MMA media for validating the half-witted discussion of Rousey vs. Mayweather with a plethora of blog posts. I’m simply asking that the next time you see or hear someone make a comparison between MMA/the UFC/Bellator and the WWE, think about how you reacted to this “news” item before you speak. Think about it and add it to the list.

J. Jones

UFC Fight Night 37 Results: Dana White Needs to Respond to Criticism, Not Mock It


(Photo via Getty)

By Matt Saccaro

Even though the likes of Alexander Gustafsson, Jimi Manuwa, Michael Johnson, and Melvin Guillard all met in the cage in a Fight Pass card in London today, the biggest fight of the weekend wasn’t contested in a cage. It happened over twitter.

MMA Fighting’s Luke Thomas tweeted the following yesterday:

A reasonable sentiment, especially in an age where the UFC is going to put on two events in the same day, though the tweet was not specifically directed at the UFC. It was tweeted two minutes after a jape at Bellator’s expense. Dana White ignored such nuances. He took the tweet personally, and responded with 140-character artillery fire this morning:


(Photo via Getty)

By Matt Saccaro

Even though the likes of Alexander Gustafsson, Jimi Manuwa, Michael Johnson, and Melvin Guillard all met in the cage in a Fight Pass card in London today, the biggest fight of the weekend wasn’t contested in a cage. It happened over twitter.

MMA Fighting’s Luke Thomas tweeted the following yesterday:

A reasonable sentiment, especially in an age where the UFC is going to put on two events in the same day, though the tweet was not specifically directed at the UFC. It was tweeted two minutes after a jape at Bellator’s expense. Dana White ignored such nuances. He took the tweet personally, and responded with 140-character artillery fire this morning:

Hilariously, Dana White didn’t know Luke Thomas—one of the most well-known figures in the MMA media—was a media member. Once White found out how accomplished Thomas was, specifically that he was on an episode of UFC Countdown, White brought the hammer down. But there’s something more concerning about White’s behavior. He doesn’t care about legitimate criticism that’s offered politely and eloquently. White’s intransigence in the face of disagreement is nothing new, however, but it’s starting to wear thin; he’s been more churlish than usual lately. He went mental when the always-reasonable Georges St-Pierre announced his retirement. More recently, he behaved questionably at a media luncheon, and buried Alistair Overeem and Jose Aldo after fantastic performances.

“Dana is gonna Dana” is no longer a valid excuse for such behavior. Lorenzo Fertitta has proven that you can respond to criticism courteously while maintaining the UFC’s “as real as it gets” image. Dana White needs to do the same or be yanked off stage with a Vaudeville hook. We understand he’s used to hearing whatever he wants from the media, but acting in a hyper-emotional, immature manner when writers offer their take on issues in the sport (which is their job) is unacceptable. More unacceptable than that is intentionally telling fans not to watch your product and disregarding their opinions, as White did on twitter this morning too.

The UFC’s product is clearly diminishing in value. Fans are getting restless. While White is to be commended for his accessibility on social media, hurling insults that read like they were written by a 14-year-old as well as telling fans to not watch the UFC’s product is harmful. Instructing potential customers to not buy what you’re selling is a terrible practice, but to Dana White it’s business as usual. In case you don’t understand why that’s a bad idea, check out this exchange between MMA firebrand Front Row Brian and famed MMA historian Jonathan Snowden. Telling fans to ignore your product has disastrous results. Words of apathy become acts of apathy. There are fights on tonight? Meh, who cares? Instead of fostering behavior like that, Dana White should be trying to demolish it root and stem. But White will do no such thing. If you don’t watch every single card, and shell out more cash than any other sports fan, your’e not a real fan, dummy!

By the way, here are the complete results for UFC Fight Night 37, a card some of you might not been real enough fans for:

Main Card

Alexander Gustafsson def. Jimi Manuwa via TKO (knee, punches) – Round 2, 1:18
Michael Johnson def. Melvin Guillard via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)
Brad Pickett def. Neil Seery via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)
Gunnar Nelson def. Omari Akhmedov via submission (guillotine) – Round 1, 4:36

Preliminary Card

Ilir Latifi def. Cyrille Diabate via submission (neck crank) – Round 1, 3:02
Luke Barnatt def. Mats Nilsson via TKO (strikes) – Round 1, 4:24
Claudio Henrique da Silva def. Brad Scott via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
Igor Araujo def. Danny Mitchell via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
Louis Gaudinot def. Phil Harris via submission (guillotine choke) – Round 1, 1:13

 

The Unsupportable Opinion: MMA/The UFC Is NOT Slowly Swirling Down the Shitter


(MMA’s heyday, according to at least one guy.)

“The night is always darkest before the dawn.” — Two-Face, quoting Plato or some shit.

MMA is facing a crisis, Nation. Or so we’re being told. Not one of irrelevance, a lack of funding, or societal ignorance like it faced during the so-called “Dark Ages,” but one of complacency, of apathy. Over the past several years, we have seen the sport rise to a level of popularity we previously thought unattainable. With more major network deals, cross-promotion with major brands, and movies featuring UFC stars popping up by the day, it’s hard to argue that MMA is exactly struggling to generate interest amongst fans.

But somewhere between the death of Strikeforce and the Fight Pass subscriptions, MMA (or at least, its premiere organization) reached a tipping point. Despite an ever-burgeoning roster, the quality of the average card started to slip. Viewership began to decline. Truly “stacked” cards started to come further and further between, as did the number of marketable stars present on them.

While the UFC was busy making efforts to dominate the fucking world, its stateside presence slowly began to diminish with each lackluster “Fight Night” card, the majority of which have been spread across three channels and subscriptions-only networks. It isn’t helping that the UFC is now nickel and diming those of us hoping to watch their international events and prelims, adding to the growing “UFC is in trouble” sentiment among fans. The UFC has gotten greedy, and our view of the sport has slowly begun to shift from optimistic to apathetic as a result.

Is it simply a case of the UFC expanding too fast and oversaturating it’s niche market, as many followers of the sport will tell you? Or have fans simply lost interest in the sport now that it has become a globally recognized, increasingly expensive commodity?

Actually, the answer is a firm “no” to both of those questions. MMA is NOT rapidly descending into the watered-down, passionless, corporate-sponsored hellscape we all think it is, and everyone needs to man (or woman) the fuck up and stop acting like the sport is a lost cause.


(MMA’s heyday, according to at least one guy.)

“The night is always darkest before the dawn.” — Two-Face, quoting Plato or some shit.

MMA is facing a crisis, Nation. Or so we’re being told. Not one of irrelevance, a lack of funding, or societal ignorance like it faced during the so-called “Dark Ages,” but one of complacency, of apathy. Over the past several years, we have seen the sport rise to a level of popularity we previously thought unattainable. With more major network deals, cross-promotion with major brands, and movies featuring UFC stars popping up by the day, it’s hard to argue that MMA is exactly struggling to generate interest amongst fans.

But somewhere between the death of Strikeforce and the Fight Pass subscriptions, MMA (or at least, its premiere organization) reached a tipping point. Despite an ever-burgeoning roster, the quality of the average card started to slip. Viewership began to decline. Truly “stacked” cards started to come further and further between, as did the number of marketable stars present on them.

While the UFC was busy making efforts to dominate the fucking world, its stateside presence slowly began to diminish with each lackluster “Fight Night” card, the majority of which have been spread across three channels and subscriptions-only networks. It isn’t helping that the UFC is now nickel and diming those of us hoping to watch their international events and prelims, adding to the growing “UFC is in trouble” sentiment among fans. The UFC has gotten greedy, and our view of the sport has slowly begun to shift from optimistic to apathetic as a result.

Is it simply a case of the UFC expanding too fast and oversaturating it’s niche market, as many followers of the sport will tell you? Or have fans simply lost interest in the sport now that it has become a globally recognized, increasingly expensive commodity?

Actually, the answer is a firm “no” to both of those questions. MMA is NOT rapidly descending into the watered-down, passionless, corporate-sponsored hellscape we all think it is, and everyone needs to man (or woman) the fuck up and stop acting like the sport is a lost cause.

As CP reader Mike Grant asked us in a somewhat heated email (entitled “Screw you guys”):

Is the UFC really ruining this sport so completely? I mean, I know that they seem to think they are short in the “marketable fighters” department, but I don’t think that’s true at all. Maybe if the UFC and the shills who cover it would get their heads out of Ronda Rousey’s ass for some fresh air, they would see they have an All-American champion (and a pretty fucking good guy) in Chris Weidman. What about Carlos Condit? He’s a fucking machine. I know he has lost to the top guys in his division but you cannot deny that he is the embodiment of will and toughness. Johny Hendricks is another good guy/soon-to-be-champion. He’s a family man and a great spokesperson for MMA.

Can you write something a bit more uplifting about the future of MMA?

And you know what, he’s right. True, it is becoming more and more expensive (not to mention time-consuming) to be a “diehard” fan of MMA/the UFC these days, and our recent headlines haven’t exactly been comforting to the average MMA fan. But not all is lost, Nation.

You say the UFC is failing to generate new stars? Johny Hendrick’s Reebok deal surely seems to dispute that. As does the first co-ed season of The Ultimate Fighter, TUF 20, and truly, the rise of women’s MMA in general. The UFC may not be pushing Jon Jones like they are Ronda Rousey, but he’s still a bonafide star among anyone who follows the sport. The same goes for Cain Velasquez, the face of Metro PCS, and Conor McGregor, Heineken’s latest brand rep and the star of his own upcoming feature-length RTE documentary.

And besides, major stars aren’t what drives the sport. They never have been. Great fights are what drives the sport, and thanks to the UFC’s (and Bellator’s, I guess) ever-expanding roster, the potential for witnessing amazing fights is at an all-time high. Question: What has been the most exciting card of 2014 so far? Did you say the TUF China Finale? Because the correct answer is the TUF China Finale, which featured fuck-all in terms of star power. As MMAFighting’s Dave Meltzer wrote:

The reality is before every UFC event, every consumer will decide, based on the lineup, whether the show is worth their time to either pay for, or watch for free. But a lineup that doesn’t look interesting can, and often is, a better show that a lineup that going in looks like it can’t miss.

The show was filled with unknown debuting fighters, including names only familiar to those who watched TUF China. Given that the show didn’t air anywhere in North America, and even those who were able to find it on the Internet had to watch a show mostly in Chinese, there wasn’t exactly a ground swell of interest in whether Wang Sai or Zhang Lipeng would win a UFC contract, let alone people salivating at the prospect of Kazuki Tokudome and Yui Chul Nam.

It ended up being UFC’s most entertaining show of a year that has had its share of lackluster nights. There were only eight fights, the least of any UFC show in recent memory. But there was nothing remotely close to a bad fight, and the presentation on Fight Pass, with no commercials except for UFC events and shows between fights, seemed to almost breeze by. And even the commercials were highlights on this night, in particular a lengthy preview to the upcoming TUF Brazil featuring Chael Sonnen and Wanderlei Silva. An edited version of that commercial on YouTube was at just under 1.3 million views over the next 48 hours.

While it’s undoubtedly true that MMA/the UFC will always need its Chuck Liddells and Anderson Silvas to really drive up fan interest and pay-per-view numbers, let’s not act like a few lackluster cards and minorly increased pay-per-view prices are the end of the world. The UFC has a long way to go before it reaches the level of the NBA or NFL, regardless of what Dana White tells you, and maybe I’m just being optimistic here, but I’d like to think that our hard-earned cash is helping build a brand and a sport we love until it can one day compete with those other sports through the same mediums, relatively free of charge. International TUF events and “Fight Night” cards are appetizers. They’re opening bands that get you excited for the main act. Whether you choose to indulge in them is entirely up to you, and most of the time, you can catch the highlights from said events (again, free of charge) through the all-encompassing power of the Internet within minutes of the events themselves.

Despite the sport’s immense rise over the years, there are still many kinks in need of being worked out. But if the Gilbert Melendez contract fiasco taught us anything, it’s that the UFC might not have the stronghold on the sport we once thought it did. MMA is here to stay, and where one organization drops the ball, the other will hopefully be there to pick it up. Entire divisions are being added to the UFC. Female fighters are not only headlining pay-per-views, but generating heaps of fan interest at the mere mention of a “huge announcement.” Previously unknown fighters among casual fans like Demetrious Johnson and Renan Barao are well on their way to becoming household names. It is an exciting, if transitional time to be an MMA fan to say the least.

So let’s all hold hands, take a deep breath, and repeat after me, “Everything is going to be fine. *MMA* is going to be fine.”

J. Jones