(For ten years, Rampage has been haunted by the memory of that brutal photo-bombing. And on November 2nd, he’ll have his revenge. Bellator 106: Bitter Homeboys, only on pay-per-view.)
This, of course, isn’t the case. The UFC has put on several PPVs whose main events rival Rampage-Ortiz in outright shittyness. For some reason, those PPVs didn’t draw the media’s collective derision like Rampage-Ortiz did. (It’s almost as if the mainstream MMA media is being coerced by some powerful, credential-wielding force…) But that’s OK; CagePotato is here to bring those terrible main events to justice.
So just what has the UFC given us to watch on Saturday nights that was as bad as the upcoming Rampage-Ortiz train wreck? Let’s have a look.
People might not agree with this pick, but Ortiz-Griffin II was an awful main event. By 2009, Ortiz wasn’t important enough to pay for — no matter who he was fighting. Going into the fight with Forrest Griffin, he was 1-2-1 in his last four fights, with his only win coming against Ken Shamrock in 2006. Tito’s best days were far behind him. In fact, he hadn’t beaten anyone NOT named Ken Shamrock since 2006 (and, coincidentally, it was Forrest Griffin who he beat).
Griffin, too, had whatever the opposite of “a head of steam” is going into UFC 106. Rashad Evans embarrassed him at UFC 92, taking the light heavyweight belt in the process. But what Evans did to him seemed tame compared to the legendary beat down that Anderson Silva bestowed on Griffin at UFC 101.
Put these ruts together and you get an overpriced PPV — $60 to watch two guys who would never be relevant again.
(For ten years, Rampage has been haunted by the memory of that brutal photo-bombing. And on November 2nd, he’ll have his revenge. Bellator 106: Bitter Homeboys, only on pay-per-view.)
This, of course, isn’t the case. The UFC has put on several PPVs whose main events rival Rampage-Ortiz in outright shittyness. For some reason, those PPVs didn’t draw the media’s collective derision like Rampage-Ortiz did. (It’s almost as if the mainstream MMA media is being coerced by some powerful, credential-wielding force…) But that’s OK; CagePotato is here to bring those terrible main events to justice.
So just what has the UFC given us to watch on Saturday nights that was as bad as the upcoming Rampage-Ortiz train wreck? Let’s have a look.
People might not agree with this pick, but Ortiz-Griffin II was an awful main event. By 2009, Ortiz wasn’t important enough to pay for — no matter who he was fighting. Going into the fight with Forrest Griffin, he was 1-2-1 in his last four fights, with his only win coming against Ken Shamrock in 2006. Tito’s best days were far behind him. In fact, he hadn’t beaten anyone NOT named Ken Shamrock since 2006 (and, coincidentally, it was Forrest Griffin who he beat).
Griffin, too, had whatever the opposite of “a head of steam” is going into UFC 106. Rashad Evans embarrassed him at UFC 92, taking the light heavyweight belt in the process. But what Evans did to him seemed tame compared to the legendary beat down that Anderson Silva bestowed on Griffin at UFC 101.
Put these ruts together and you get an overpriced PPV — $60 to watch two guys who would never be relevant again.
If you ever find yourself in a pro-Zuffa state of mind, remember this: They asked people to pay FULL PRICE for UFC 109: Relentless, a card that featured Randy Couture vs. what fans thought was a real-live White Walker (turns out that it was just ancient, broke Mark Coleman).
Everything involving Mark Coleman’s second UFC run in 2009-2010 was atrocious — save for his win over confirmed cheater Stephan Bonnar, which was hilarious. For real though, bringing Coleman back in 2009 was like bringing Tank Abbott back in 2003, it was a bad idea that damaged the UFC’s product and made them look like idiots. As for Couture, he was coming off a win over Brandon Vera, but at that point being able to beat Brandon Vera wasn’t much of an accomplishment.
This main event belonged in a nursing home. Sensing this fact, the UFC tried to market it as the ULTIMATE WAR OF LEGENDZ!11!! Kind of graceless, if you ask us, it’s also reeks of the same sort of desperate vibe that Bellator’s Rampage-Ortiz does.
In UFC 115’s defense, it could’ve been a lot worse.
The main event was scheduled to be Chuck Liddell-Tito Ortiz III. A third fight between the two men really wasn’t necessary since Liddell had won the previous two in convincing fashion. However, Chuck was in desperate need of a win after suffering two knockouts that were so bad they could’ve been Mortal Kombat fatalities. Therefore, Dana booked a fight that his BFF Chuck had a good chance of winning. He put Chuck and Tito on a new season of TUF and scheduled a faceoff between the two at UFC 115. Unfortunately, one of Tito’s millions of nagging injuries forced him to withdraw from the fight.
In his place, we got a Rich Franklin who’s face had just recovered from having Vitor Belfort’s fists planted into it repeatedly back at UFC 103.
So, at UFC 115 we were supposed to get a fight where neither guy had contended for a title in years and were never going to again but we ended up getting…a fight where neither guy had contended for a title in years and were never going to again — kind of like what we’re gonna see on Bellator’s first PPV.
Wanderlei Silva vs. Rich Franklin wasn’t a great idea for a fight in 2009. It was an even worse one in 2012. It was such a bad idea that, after the fight card was shuffled and the UFC settled on bumping Silva-Franklin II to main event, the UFC offered refunds for people who bought tickets before the card became something that belonged on AXS.tv and not on PPV. This main event was so lackluster that UFC 147 drew the fewest buys of any PPV in the Zuffa era at an estimated 140,000 — pathetic for a promotion the size of the UFC.
Like with Liddell vs. Franklin, Wanderlei Silva-Rich Franklin II was a fight where neither fighter had been relevant in years (like Tito and Rampage) nor were they ever going to be meaningful again (like Rampage and Tito).
Did we leave out your least-favorite UFC pay-per-view headliner? Holler at us in the comments section.
When Anderson Silva steps in the cage this weekend against Chris Weidman, he will look to keep his seven-year title reign intact. Though a Weidman win would hardly be the most shocking in the history of UFC championship fights, it would be an improbabl…
When Anderson Silva steps in the cage this weekend against Chris Weidman, he will look to keep his seven-year title reign intact. Though a Weidman win would hardly be the most shocking in the history of UFC championship fights, it would be an improbable one, considering Silva is (probably) the greatest fighter in the history of the sport.
But Weidman wouldn’t be the first to pick up an unlikely win against a dominant fighter and champion.
Other champions have set foot in the cage with the odds in their favor, only to witness the belt change hands at the end of the night. So here are the top five most improbable title wins in UFC history.
Note: This list will include only upsets which occurred during the Zuffa era, meaning Maurice Smith defeating Mark Coleman is out of the picture.
When Anderson Silva steps in the cage this weekend against Chris Weidman, he will look to keep his seven-year title reign intact. Though a Weidman win would hardly be the most shocking in the history of UFC championship fights, it would be an improbabl…
When Anderson Silva steps in the cage this weekend against Chris Weidman, he will look to keep his seven-year title reign intact. Though a Weidman win would hardly be the most shocking in the history of UFC championship fights, it would be an improbable one, considering Silva is (probably) the greatest fighter in the history of the sport.
But Weidman wouldn’t be the first to pick up an unlikely win against a dominant fighter and champion.
Other champions have set foot in the cage with the odds in their favor, only to witness the belt change hands at the end of the night. So here are the top five most improbable title wins in UFC history.
Note: This list will include only upsets which occurred during the Zuffa era, meaning Maurice Smith defeating Mark Coleman is out of the picture.
Spike TV and Bellator both have high hopes for their new reality show Fight Master: Bellator MMA, but last week’s ratings were not nearly what the network and promotion likely had in mind. Going head-to-head with the NHL Stanley Cup playoffs, the debut…
Spike TV and Bellator both have high hopes for their new reality show Fight Master: BellatorMMA, but last week’s ratings were not nearly what the network and promotion likely had in mind.
Going head-to-head with the NHL Stanley Cup playoffs, the debut episode of the new MMA reality program pulled in 432,000 average viewers over the one-hour broadcast.
The numbers were obviously much, much lower than what Spike TV officials anticipated, but with no major sporting events to battle with on Wednesday nights, episode two fared much better.
According to the Nielsen Ratings received by Bleacher Report on Thursday, the second episode of Fight Master averaged 545,000 viewers this week, up 26 percent over last week’s offering.
In the key demographics, Fight Master posted 25 percent higher ratings among males between the ages of 18-49 and got a huge boost in the coveted 18-34 male market with ratings spiking 54 percent higher than last week.
While the numbers certainly aren’t in the same league as The Ultimate Fighter when it was airing on Spike TV, the improvement is a good sign for the future.
Spike TV officials told Bleacher Report last week that while they were not happy with the results for episode one, it wasn’t time to hit the panic button just yet.
Spike TV Senior Vice President of Communications David Schwarz broke it down when last week’s ratings came out.
We feel that a few hundred thousand people went over to watch one of the best hockey games you’d ever seen.We are disappointed, but we feel like people will find the show and like all reality shows it might take a few nights.
Season 14 of the reality show, which was the final year The Ultimate Fighter ran on Spike TV, averaged 1.5 million viewers per episode.
The UFC reality show routinely earned well over one million viewers per episode with certain offerings jumping even higher.
This is Bellator‘s first try in the reality-show game, but with a top-notch coaching staff—including UFC Hall of FamerRandy Couture, Greg Jackson and Frank Shamrock—leading the way, its hope is to continue to build viewership as the season moves forward.
Fight Master: Bellator MMA will be going solo on Wednesday nights until July 31 when Bellator‘s live show returns for another card on the same night.
When Spike TV’s Fight Master debuts tomorrow, on the surface at least, it’s going to look awfully familiar. Thirty two mixed martial arts fighters will attempt to realize a dream, to win a single-elimination tournament and earn their spot alongside the…
When Spike TV’s Fight Master debuts tomorrow, on the surface at least, it’s going to look awfully familiar. Thirty two mixed martial arts fighters will attempt to realize a dream, to win a single-elimination tournament and earn their spot alongside the world’s very best fighters. Leading the way will be iconic coaches, some of MMA‘s biggest and brightest names. They will live together, train together, break bread together and do battle together.
Deja Vu?
That could have been the mission statement for The Ultimate Fighter, a 2005 reality series on Spike that helped put MMA, and industry leader UFC, on the map. Today, a year or so removed from a bitter divorce between the network and its muse, it’s not a comparison Spike TV executive vice president for original programming Sharon Levy is comfortable with.
Levy and Spike’s parent company Viacom replaced the UFC with Bellator, a rising promotion concentrating on developing new talent. But other than being representatives of the same sport, Levy rejects attempts to draw parallels between the UFC and Bellator—or between the competing reality shows.
“I don’t compare Fight Master to TUF,” Levy said, cutting my question off at the pass. “I wouldn’t do a carbon copy of what came before. The world doesn’t need another version of that. It’s a completely unique show.
“Yes, guys are fighting and all elimination concepts work on the same premise. People are going to be eliminated and someone is going to win. I think it’s about taking a fresh perspective. What any great television executive tries to do is take something and make it even better, to make it new. To make it fresh. To make it feel like it belongs.”
Curious about how Spike and Bellator could pull this off, and skeptical that they could create a product in the same genre that would stand out from the wearying The Ultimate Fighter, on its last legs as it enters its eighteenth season, I traveled to New Orleans, Louisiana to see what the new show was all about.
The first thing I can report, as we travel from the swanky Loews Hotel near Harrah’s Casino, is that this show most definitely isn’t in the heart of the city. This is a show filmed in New Orleans, but not of New Orleans. As the GPS attempts three times to take us onto a Ferry boat to nowhere, I learn that the fighters don’t get to partake of the nightlife on Bourbon Street, didn’t enjoy any jazz and ate not a single crawfish.
In fact, their existence is confined to a single giant warehouse. It used to house Mardi Gras floats, at least on the 364 days they weren’t put to good use. Now it houses a giant circular cage, serving as a production facility as New Orleans throws its hat into the ring to compete with Atlanta and other rising southern powerhouses in the new look television industry.
Fight Master may be in New Orleans, but it isn’t a show about the drunken hi-jinks the city, and The Ultimate Fighter, are famous for. Show runner Mark Seliga, who once worked in a similar role on the UFC’s show before graduating to Project Runway and a variety of bad girl shows, says almost all the hi-jinks, pranks and drunken tomfoolery that have come to define MMA television were all but abandoned this time around.
“That’s the tenant of this show. To really make it about fighting. There’s something that we’re doing here that I used to focus on at The Ultimate Fighter but it never really aired,” he said. “And it’s the pre-fight ritual of getting your hands wrapped and what a fighter does in those given moments. What’s going on in their head the hour before they are about to fight? What a crazy moment in someone’s existence. Some dudes chill, some dudes scream. It’s an individualized thing. So you’re in the moment. You get the sense that the fight is about to happen. And you get these stories of what they were have supposed to have learned during the week infused into that moment.
“What we’re really endeavoring to do here is to have something that is more analytic. We are sharing the hero’s journey as a fighter. Not as a meat-head or an idiot. It was serendipity. There was a lot of really good talent with good drive. Lots of diamonds in the rough. And not a lot of juvenile crap. It’s very clean, very smart.”
As we sit in the Fight Master brain center, plastered wall to wall with reminders to stay the heck off of social media and to keep the show spoiler free, former UFC heavyweight champion Maurice Smith strolls in to grab a drink from the refrigerator. Smith has coached a who’s who of the sport’s best fighters from Ken Shamrock to Randy Couture and everyone in between—but on this show, the kickboxing icon is an assistant.
While Smith is certainly capable and worthy of a spot as the head man in any fighter’s camp, Spike was looking for bigger names to kick off the show—and got them. The headliner is Randy Couture, UFC Hall of Famer and burgeoning movie star. Joining him are the sport’s top trainer Greg Jackson, former UFC light heavyweight champion Frank Shamrock and Bellator tournament winner Joe Warren.
“I had to have them all…it was a dream team of those four. And it took a lot of work to get them, I’m not going to lie,” Levy said diplomatically, before eventually highlighting the biggest coup of them all—signing Couture for this and other television projects.
“We desperately wanted Randy,” she conceded. “Not only because he’s a legend but because he really cares about the future of this sport. He cares about building great fighters.”
Couture, wearing a t-shirt with with his own Xtreme Couture brand prominently displayed, wanted to be sure to clear up confusion about the revival of his role as reality television coach.
“I didn’t come to Bellator, I came to Viacom,” he said. “It’s a common misconception. I signed a two year deal with Viacom. For potential scripted and unscripted television. The first show that we loaded up and that we’re obviously doing right now is Fight Master…obviously Bellator is part of it, but I don’t have any deal with Bellator. I had never even met (Bellator President) Bjorn (Rebney) until we started the process for this show. Never spoke to him.”
Couture was one of the coaches for the inaugural season of The Ultimate Fighter, another call back to the original MMA reality show and a sure talking point in the press. But he maintains this was a very different experience.
“The biggest difference is the focus is a lot more on the fighting and the athletes. And the athletes have a lot more control over their own destiny. It’s laid out differently and has a different feel,” Couture said.
“Bellator wants to build their own stars. It would be easy just to pluck free agents out. And some of those guys have come over. But, on the whole, they’ve used this tournament format to create new stars and give a new outlet to athletes coming up in the sport. This is another opportunity to do that. They’re using that tournament style format in the show. These guys aren’t getting a shot with just one fight. They’re getting a shot in another tournament. They’re fighting to jump out of the frying pan and into the fire, into another tournament with a bunch of seasoned veterans. It’s a unique deal.”
It was a format Frank Shamrock loved. The former Showtime announcer was relaxing at home and considering his next move when Spike President Kevin Kay called him with the idea for Fight Master. He was reluctant at first, but the ability to do things his way, and to get back in the thick of things with hungry young athletes, swayed him.
“One of the unique things that got me on board is that each coach gets to run their own show, their own camp, according to their own method and philosophy,” Shamrock said.
Not only does each coach get to do things his way, they each carved out their own man dens in the facility. The distinctions were fascinating, even to a relative MMA neophyte like Levy.
“The differences and the nuances between how Greg trains and how Frank trains are so interesting,” she said. “You wind up learning so much that you didn’t know, but in a very palatable way.”
No two rooms looked alike. The coaches focused on different areas, from philosophy to the hardcore grind every wrestler knows all too well. Even the equipment was different.
“The dynamic of having four camps instead of two is so extreme.This is less about personalities and more about styles. How do these coaches motivate and train their guys? Some dudes train their fighters a lot and hard. Some dudes are very light,” Seliga revealed. “Every coach has their own style—and it doesn’t necessarily work for every fighter. And it goes back to the hero’s journey. Do they listen to their master, that whole sensei theory?”
“The real specificity of training becomes very hush hush,” Seliga continued. “If they’re in the cage it can be viewed by anybody in the space. So there’s some guys who will fake things they are doing in the cage because they know homeboy they are going to fight is watching them. And they’ll do things to try to mislead or manipulate their opponent.”
Though he once trained Smith to UFC gold and helped found the now iconic American Kickboxing Academy’s MMA program, Shamrock hadn’t worked with a fighter on a regular basis in some time. It turned out, he said, to be kind of like riding a bike.
“It was pretty much the same thing it’s always been, which I was kind of surprised by. I thought the general knowledge in the sport had advanced much further. I haven’t taught for years and years, but as soon as I got going on it, it all fell into place. Fighting is fighting. You close your fist and it’s all pretty much the same.”
For trainer of the stars Greg Jackson, rust was not a problem. It was just another day at the office. Among the coaches competing on Fight Master, he is the only one who makes his living training fighters.
“A lot of it is what I’ve been doing for years. Once you figure out who the fighters are, you assess their strengths and weaknesses and try to put plans together for each individual. I’m constantly working with new fighters all the time. I can get a handle on it pretty quickly. I’ve been doing it so long that I have a pretty good sense of a fighter pretty early,” Jackson said.
But as comfortable as he was, the show did present some unique challenges.
“In a way it’s something that is new. How do you do what you do in the confines of this reality TV show? It was a challenge for me and I really enjoyed that it wasn’t something that I do everyday. It’s MMA and it’s combat. But it was in parameters I’ve never worked within and that was very intriguing to me.”
Jackson wasn’t able to spend every day on the set. I know first hand, as several attempts to visit were delayed as he had to jet around the world, coaching some of the top fighters in the business. But, he feels good about the time and effort he managed to spend on the show.
“I had very competent assistant coaches. We’d go over the game plan and I was calling them and bugging them all the time,” Jackson said. “And they would call me. So we stayed in touch. And we have a formula that works well. And that means coaches working synergisticly together. And we do that extremely well on my team. Even that was kind of par for the course. That’s what we do.”
In many ways, he said, it was similar to how he handles business with his own athletes, delegating that he can’t do himself to trusted assistants like former Strikeforce fighter Joey Villasenor.
“The one thing that makes our team so successful is team. Greg Jackson is our head coach,” Villasenor said. “He overlooks everything. He’s there for the fights. But Greg Jackson doesn’t hold pads for a hundred guys. He can’t break down techniques for a hundred guys. He has a group of people and a team of people and a bunch of athletes who understand and buy into this system.”
The wild card was Joe Warren. The former Greco Roman wrestler was a 2006 world champion, but it was a different resume line item that got him the gig—former Bellator champion.
Producers wanted at least some connection to their new promotion and none of the other coaches were closely associated with the brand. And, while Warren doesn’t have the name recognition of some of his big name opponents, that doesn’t mean he didn’t hold his own. The voluble star was made for reality television and his infectious personality won many skeptics over.
“Joe, God bless him, has such an incredible energy level,” Seliga said. “He’s so cool that even in the selection process, he wasn’t slighted. He sold himself well in the chair, his team and his training partners in a really great way. I think he did well, even though Randy and Greg and even Frank are such massive names in the fight game.”
Yet, for all the talk of coaches, this is really, first and foremost, a show about fighters.
“The thing that separates us from Fighter is that this is a fighter destiny show,” Seliga said. “The fighters choose everything. They fight to get into the house in the first round. Once they are in, they choose their coach and keep on choosing their destiny every step of the way.”
Watching this play out is compelling. The 32 fighters duke it out for a spot in the house and, as they go at it, the coaches sit on a stage, relaxing on leather recliners and chatting amongst themselves.
“They’re funny. They bust each other’s balls like you can not believe,” Levy said. “We have four legends up there doing running commentary because they can’t stop. And you’re hearing what Frank likes and you’re hearing what Randy likes and you’re hearing Greg’s critiques. And they’re starting to mess with each other’s minds. That was completely fascinating and something I hadn’t even anticipated.”
And then, the moment of truth. On The Ultimate Fighter, the coaches would take turns selecting the fighters who had impressed them. But that’s not the Bellator way. Instead, the cage swings open and each winning fighter gets to grill the coaches and choose who he wants to lead the way.
“It’s The Voice moment,” Seliga said. “Them really having to choose. It was a risk. You worry about fighters. Can they talk? What will they say? But they were so insightful. Once the cage opened, I didn’t have to do anything.”
The coaches, however, aren’t completely out of the game. Each had a limited number of slots to fill. All of them wanted to avoid weak fighters and convince the alpha dogs to join their team. It created an interesting dynamic as coaches tried to subtly control the fighter’s actions.
“There was definitely some strategy involved,” Couture said. “I had to kind of tactfully dissuade some people I thought was maybe going to pick me and my team, to try to hold out and get the guys I really wanted to work with. That had a shot at winning. At the end of the day you’re still here to win. Even as a coach, I want that guy that’s going to walk away with that money and a shot in that tournament.”
Shamrock, a master manipulator and genius fight promoter, was in his element, capable of throwing words as fast as he ever did fists.
“I played that game really hard,” Shamrock admitted. “I could see in the moment that it was pivotal. I did all kinds of cagey stuff. I sang and danced and did every necessary to fill my team up with tough guys. You’re going to be pleasantly surprised at the quality of talent that’s in the show.”
Once the fighters are selected, control again shifts to the coaches. But only for the briefest of moments. They work with Rebney to seed the athletes from top to bottom. And then it’s up to the fighters to, once again, choose their destiny. The top seed is given the choice to decide what comes next for him.
“He could walk up and say ‘I want number three.’ Because they think their best chance is to take him out now,” Seliga said. “Because he’s had a hard weight cut. They could pick internally from their team. They could pick anyone they want. It’s up to the fighter. What are you going to do? The coaches can give them information. But they can’t tell them who to pick. It’s the fighter’s decision. It’s always their journey, their quest. To become the Fight Master.”
Of course, it all comes down to the fights. All the set up and set design in the world can’t make up for a lack of excitement in the cage. The fights on the initial episodes, as they whittle the field down from 32 to 16, are edited for time. From there, Spike executives say they will air in full—and that they are well worth seeing.
“The fights were extraordinary,” Shamrock confirmed. “These guys took advantage of the stage that was provided for them. Living under that kind of pressure creates so much emotion and intensity. When they fought it was amazing.”
The end result is a show bound to delight hardcore fans, abandoning the worst parts of The Ultimate Fighter, the petty arguments, drunken squabbles and rampant property destruction, while maintaining it’s core.
“That’s what’s critical. It’s not just another fight promotion. It’s tournament style. Where the fighters are really empowered,” Levy said. “And the tournament style makes it really user friendly for non-hardcore fans like I was before I came to Spike. I understand the logic behind why that guy is fighting that guy. It’s not a promoter picking it. That’s what makes it different. And as long as you’re different, there’s room for something else.”
Bellator’s new season of fights kicks off at 8 P.M. ET tomorrow night on Spike, followed by the series debit of Fight Master. Jonathan Snowden is Bleacher Report’s lead combat sports writer. All quotes acquired first hand by the author.
You never know with this MMA reality competition show stuff. Sometimes it hits gold (many *cough*mostly early*cough* seasons of The Ultimate Fighter, for example) and sometimes you get The Iron Ring. Major media companies getting behind these reality-show endeavors is never a guarantee of compelling and convincing fight television content and neither is past success – as evidenced by several dud seasons of TUF (Ed note: *makes “watching you” gesture toward TUF 16*.)
That said, we were kind of interested to see what Spike TV was doing with their second go at MMA reality television, especially after the cast was announced. Fight Master is the network’s first foray into post-UFC MMA reality programming and features Randy Couture, Frank Shamrock, Joe Warren, and Greg Jackson coaching aspiring Bellator fighters. The show debuts next week on Spike, but we got a sneak peak at the first episode Wednesday afternoon. After the jump, we’ve provided a little bit more info about the show’s structure, as well as the good and not-so-good aspects of the production, thus far.
You never know with this MMA reality competition show stuff. Sometimes it hits gold (many *cough*mostly early*cough* seasons of The Ultimate Fighter, for example) and sometimes you get The Iron Ring. Major media companies getting behind these reality-show endeavors is never a guarantee of compelling and convincing fight television content and neither is past success – as evidenced by several dud seasons of TUF (Ed note: *makes “watching you” gesture toward TUF 16*.)
That said, we were kind of interested to see what Spike TV was doing with their second go at MMA reality television, especially after the cast was announced. Fight Master is the network’s first foray into post-UFC MMA reality programming and features Randy Couture, Frank Shamrock, Joe Warren, and Greg Jackson coaching aspiring Bellator fighters. The show debuts next week on Spike, but we got a sneak peak at the first episode Wednesday afternoon. After the jump, we’ve provided a little bit more info about the show’s structure, as well as the good and not-so-good aspects of the production, thus far.
The show begins with thirty two welterweight hopefuls; half of them will make it to New Orleans and onto the rest of the show, half of them will also make it to New Orleans but will be immediately hogtied and tossed into a swamp full o’ gators. Supposedly, the winner will receive $100,000 and a spot in a Bellator season tournament.
Each of the four coaches will have teams of four fighters. There’s more background info on the preliminary fighters from application videos and interviews than one might expect, resulting in a more heightened interest level in the guys trying to get into the house than I have, for the most part, experienced with their TUF counterparts on the first episodes of seasons past. Because of this additional footage, however, the elimination round is going to take more than a single episode.
Fight Master offers more twists on the TUF formats we’ve seen over the years in addition to some similarities. Here are a few of our favorites and some that we didn’t dig.
The Good:
The Fighters: To put it lightly, the initial average talent level of Fight Master appeared to be levels above some seasons of TUF. Sure, some were better than others and everyone had weaknesses, but for the most part, everyone looked pretty composed, coordinated, and skilled. At the heart of a good show are good fighters, and Fight Master seems like it could be a clear success in this regard. Think TUF seasons 1 and 5.
Coach Emotion: The four coaches watched the elimination rounds like creeps, sitting in easy chairs and with spot lights on them. But, they wouldn’t stop talking – providing an interesting snap shot of how they watch and analyze fights. What’s more, they really got into the fights. Randy Couture and Joe Warren, especially, seemed to get rowdy in calling out instructions to fighters, celebrating, etc. They seemed genuinely into it, which personally helped me get into it as a viewer.
Camera Work: At times during the fights, the screen was split into threes, allowing us to see both the coaches and multiple simultaneous angles of the match itself. There’s A LOT of cameras along the cage, is what we’re saying. It’s about time a promotion started maximizing their potential in this aspect, if only so we can see the action from multiple angles at once.
Fighter Control – Outside of BJ Penn sticking it to Jens Pulver on TUF 5 and telling fighters to raise their hands if they wanted nothing to do with Jens, we haven’t seen fighters get too much choice on these types of shows. On Fight Master, the winning elimination round fighters interview the coaches and decide whose team they want to be on. In this aspect, Fight Master is kind of like The Voice, if contestants on The Voice spent less time finding their harmonies with one another and more time trying to crush each other’s windpipes. Why the latter hasn’t happened to Adam Levine yet is beyond me.
The Bad
Fights Cut Short: I don’t care if it makes things move along or if it is during elimination rounds; I simply hate trimming fights down to mere highlights. Fights that went more than a few moments in episode one were cut and pasted into highlights. They’d better not get into The Contender type slow motion crap in future episodes.
Adjusted Rules: Making the fights two rounds with a third in the event of a draw is understandable. Taking out elbows isn’t, really. Hopefully that doesn’t continue after the elimination rounds. MMA is watered down enough already. (Ed note: *lights corncob pipe and sits back in rocking chair*)
Fight Master‘s first episode accomplishes this: We now want to watch episode two. Check it out next week and decide for yourself.