GSP on Ronda Rousey: ‘I’m Flattered She Says I’m Good Looking’

If Ronda Rousey hoped to get a rise out of Georges St-Pierre, she picked the wrong UFC champ.At the press conference for UFC 158, St-Pierre responded to Rousey’s comments pertaining to him being a “boring champion” who gets by on good looks.”It’s very …

If Ronda Rousey hoped to get a rise out of Georges St-Pierre, she picked the wrong UFC champ.

At the press conference for UFC 158, St-Pierre responded to Rousey‘s comments pertaining to him being a “boring champion” who gets by on good looks.

“It’s very flattering for her to say that I’m a good looking guy, and I want to say she’s a very beautiful woman as well. I feel very flattered.”

While Rousey respects St-Pierre as an athlete, she hasn’t shied away from criticizing his performances inside the Octagon.

In an old interview with BestofMMA.com, she called him a point fighter who has worn out his welcome in the sport.

“I think that fighters that just try to win by points and come away with a win are actually bad for the sport. If you never saw MMA before, and you walked in and you saw GSP and Koscheck, and all this jabbing out the whole time, it looks like a boring boxing match. I don’t think you gain any fans with a fight like that.

GSP was good for the sport for a while. He brought in some big sponsors like Gatorade and Under Armour, but I think he’s done everything he can in a positive way and he needs to step aside and let Nick Diaz kick his ass.”

It’s hard to disagree with Rousey on St-Pierre’s inability to finish fights. His last five title defenses have all ended in lopsided unanimous decisions.

Outside of fighters, no one else is really complaining about St-Pierre’s performances. According to UFC President Dana White, St-Pierre remains by far the biggest draw in the UFC. It isn’t like he’s intentionally dragging fights out for five rounds.

Guys like Carlos Condit, Jake Shields and Josh Koscheck aren’t easy to beat, much less finish.

Despite her disdain for his fighting style, Rousey believes there is one thing she has in common with St-Pierre. She thinks they are both treated as sex symbols, to some degree, by media and fans.

The reigning welterweight champ’s popularity amongst female fans has even led to comparisons to international soccer star, David Beckham.

Rousey strikes a similar chord with male fans. One look at her Twitter page tells the entire story.

In a recent interview with the Las-Vegas Review Journal, Rousey said all of St-Pierre’s popularity stems from him being Canadian and a good looking guy.

“Everybody keeps coming up to me and saying, ‘Oh, do you think if you didn’t look such a way, people would like you so much?’ I’m like, ‘Dude, if GSP was butt ugly, you wouldn’t want to know who he is so much.’

I think he lucked out a lot that he’s Canadian. I love Canadians. They are the coolest, nicest, most patriotic people, and they will support their countrymen no matter what, and I think that’s commendable. But if GSP wasn’t really good-looking, and really Canadian, he would be really unknown.”

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Dana White: No Women Will Be Booked Until After UFC 157

Months ago, the UFC made headlines when Strikeforce women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey was added to the UFC and booked to headline a card opposite Liz Carmouche. That bout, however, is the only fight involving women that the UFC has scheduled t…

Months ago, the UFC made headlines when Strikeforce women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey was added to the UFC and booked to headline a card opposite Liz Carmouche. That bout, however, is the only fight involving women that the UFC has scheduled to this point.

With that in mind, the MMA media has been clamoring for more details on women’s MMA in the UFC and, at long last, Dana White opened up a little bit on the sport’s future. The news is not great.

Dana White, Nick Diaz and Georges St-Pierre are currently in Montreal hyping UFC 158. While no video is up yet, Mike Bohn from MMAMania.com posted a critical note from the festivities on Twitter:

That is big news for a few reasons.

While Ronda Rousey is the only woman booked for a fight, she is not the only woman employed by the UFC. Miesha Tate announced the same day as Rousey that she was now a part of the UFC. This has led many fans to wonder if White was waiting to see how UFC 157 panned out before booking any other fights.

Those rumblings seem to be true.

While UFC 157 has gotten a great deal of hype from the MMA media, there are several hurdles to overcome. In addition to the fact that the general receptiveness of MMA fans to women fighting is still unknown, the venue is not a surefire sellout, either. With this in mind, the text between the lines here is clear.

If Ronda Rousey loses, and/or if UFC 157 flops, it will likely be the end of women’s MMA in the UFC.

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UFC 157 Photo Shoot: Behind the Scenes with Ronda Rousey and Liz Carmouche

Although Ronda Rousey had plenty of bad blood with the last challengers to her Strikeforce women’s bantamweight title, Liz Carmouche is all smiles.During a recent photo shoot (via Fight Hub TV) for the upcoming UFC 157: Primetime series, Rousey co…

Although Ronda Rousey had plenty of bad blood with the last challengers to her Strikeforce women’s bantamweight title, Liz Carmouche is all smiles.

During a recent photo shoot (via Fight Hub TV) for the upcoming UFC 157: Primetime series, Rousey could barely keep a straight face when taking pictures with her opponent, as Carmouche disarmed the steely champion with an unusual tactic.

As Carmouche told the Fight Hub TV camera crew, “I was just saying whatever they said, and turning it into something sexual.”

It seemed to work well enough, as Rousey continually cracked up during the session despite trying to maintain a fierce “game face” for the shoot:

She’s a smart chick, dude. She’s smart, because if she was getting in my face it would get me more riled up. [But,] she was making me bust up laughing. She’s smart.

Getting friendly with the champ might be the wisest move that Carmouche could make.

As former Strikeforce fighter Miesha Tate learned the hard way, aggressively getting in Rousey’s face is definitely a bad idea, especially if you don’t want to get your forehead shoved in during a tense stare-down (via Integrated Fitness).

Rousey and Carmouche will headline UFC 157 on Feb. 23 at Anaheim’s Honda Center, with the card highlighted by the upcoming three-part Primetime series. Episode 1 will debut on Friday, Feb. 8 at 9 p.m. PT/12 a.m. ET on Fuel TV.

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Friday Link Dump: Ronda Rousey’s Manager Responds to Sandy Hook Controversy, Nick Newell Argues for ‘Equal Opportunity’ in the UFC, Kimbo’s Next Boxing Match + More

(The Gracie Brothers speak out about the rape case involving Lloyd Irvin students, and explain how an unhealthy training environment could contribute to similar situations. / Props: GracieBreakdown)

Eddie Alvarez Offered UFC 159 Co-Main Event; Will Seek Injunction at Court Hearing on Jan 25 (BleacherReport)

Manager: UFC Champ Ronda Rousey Meant No Disrespect With Sandy Hook Video (MMAJunkie)

Nick Newell to Dana White: ‘I Want My Equal Opportunity’ (MMAFighting)

Why the ‘Frank Mir Curse’ May Spell Doom for Daniel Cormier’s Octagon Career (MMAMania)

Kimbo Slice to Box Shane Tilyard, Jan. 30 in Sydney (TheSweetScience)

– Dan Henderson Won’t Wait For Title Fight (FightDay)

The 25 Greatest Trash-Talkers in Sports History (Complex)

“I Know A Liar When I’m Around One.”: Manti Te’o’s Uncle Comments On Ronaiah Tuiasosopo (Deadspin)

7 Scariest Workout Injuries — And How to Prevent Them (MensFitness)

The Screen Junkies Show: ‘Django’ Toy Review In South Central (ScreenJunkies)

The 30 Most Awkward Childhood Photos Ever (WorldWideInterweb)


(The Gracie Brothers speak out about the rape case involving Lloyd Irvin students, and explain how an unhealthy training environment could contribute to similar situations. / Props: GracieBreakdown)

Eddie Alvarez Offered UFC 159 Co-Main Event; Will Seek Injunction at Court Hearing on Jan 25 (BleacherReport)

Manager: UFC Champ Ronda Rousey Meant No Disrespect With Sandy Hook Video (MMAJunkie)

Nick Newell to Dana White: ‘I Want My Equal Opportunity’ (MMAFighting)

Why the ‘Frank Mir Curse’ May Spell Doom for Daniel Cormier’s Octagon Career (MMAMania)

Kimbo Slice to Box Shane Tilyard, Jan. 30 in Sydney (TheSweetScience)

– Dan Henderson Won’t Wait For Title Fight (FightDay)

The 25 Greatest Trash-Talkers in Sports History (Complex)

“I Know A Liar When I’m Around One.”: Manti Te’o’s Uncle Comments On Ronaiah Tuiasosopo (Deadspin)

7 Scariest Workout Injuries — And How to Prevent Them (MensFitness)

The Screen Junkies Show: ‘Django’ Toy Review In South Central (ScreenJunkies)

The 30 Most Awkward Childhood Photos Ever (WorldWideInterweb)

Ronda Rousey Fiasco Highlights Need for Better UFC Social Media Policy

Back in November 2006, I was covering mixed martial arts, but only on a limited basis. My real job, aside from being a medic in the United States Army, was tech blogging. I mostly covered startups and the Web 2.0 scene, checking out the latest web appl…

Back in November 2006, I was covering mixed martial arts, but only on a limited basis. My real job, aside from being a medic in the United States Army, was tech blogging. I mostly covered startups and the Web 2.0 scene, checking out the latest web applications from tiny little companies around the world who were seeking the angel investments that would help them turn their dreams into reality.

November 2006 is when I discovered Twitter. I signed up on November 20, which makes me an old man when it comes to boiling my thoughts down to 140 characters. I knew the service had promise, because one of the guys behind it had also created Blogger, the service I used while blogging from Iraq. If Evan Williams created Twitter, it had to be good.

Plus, it was just interesting. All of my tech geek friends used it, and it seemed like a pretty good way to interact with people. But there’s no way I, or anyone else using it at the time, could have foreseen just how big Twitter would eventually become.

Nowadays, Twitter is just part of the world. It’s used widely in sports, entertainment and technology; you name it, and there’s probably a hashtag or a Twitter account devoted to it. And the coolest thing about Twitter, to someone who has followed it as long as I have, is that it’s being used to connect celebrities and athletes with the fans who are so devoted to them. 

Never before have regular people had the chance to interact with their heroes the way they can now, because the tools never existed. Twitter changed all of that. There’s no real filter between the athletes or celebrities and fans. They can say what they want, when they want to say it and without a public relations specialist toning down the message.

But that lack of filter isn’t always a good thing, and a recent controversy involving UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey is a perfect example.

On Tuesday, Rousey sent out the following tweet:

@rondarousey: Extremely interesting must watch video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wx9GxXYKx_8

The video, in case you don’t feel like watching it, is a nutjob piece that theorizes that the December shooting of 20 children and six adults was a government conspiracy dreamed up so that President Barack Obama could push his gun control legislation, much like all of the whack-job theories claiming that the 9/11 terrorist attacks were created by the government so that the United States could go to war in Iraq.

In short, it’s a completely ludicrous video with zero basis in reality. And the reaction from MMA fans on Twitter was swift and fierce.

Rousey initially defended herself against the criticism.

“I just figure asking questions and doing research is more patriotic than blindly accepting what you’re told,” she tweeted, but she later deleted the original tweet entirely.

Now, look: I’m not saying that modern media is without bias, because that’s clearly not the case. And I think it’s great that people don’t accept what they’re told by the talking heads on cable television. It’s good to think for yourself, to question what you’re told and to seek the truth out on your own terms.

But there’s a difference between seeking the truth and putting any sort of weight behind nonsense like the video that Rousey tweeted.

This isn’t the first time that a UFC star has found themselves in hot water over something that occurred on Twitter. Miguel Torres was famously fired after tweeting a rape joke; he was brought back a short time later, but released for a second time after another questionable tweet last summer. 

The problem, as I see it, is that the UFC doesn’t have a concrete social media policy in place that applies evenly to the entire roster. In November, Forrest Griffin tweeted the following:

“Rape is the new missionary,” Griffin said. 

If Griffin were being held to the same standard as Torres, he’d be fired. Or at least you would think so. But nothing happened to Griffin, just like nothing happened to Rousey, because they are superstars for the UFC. Torres was not a superstar—at least not on the level of Ronda or Forrest—and so he was fired while Griffin and Rousey get a pass.

I’m fine with meting out punishment for infractions, whether they take place on Twitter or a different space in the public eye. But I’m not fine with fighters being held to differing standards based on how much money they can make the company.

Each year, the UFC holds an event called the Fighter Summit in Las Vegas. Held at the Red Rock Hotel and Casino—a property owned by Lorenzo and Frank Fertitta—the Summit consists of two days filled with classes and conferences on everything from the UFC’s health insurance policy to, yes, the proper usage of social media.

Next time the Summit is held, pay close attention to Twitter. If you follow any amount of fighters on the UFC’s roster, you’ll see tweet after tweet of guys sleeping, joking around and generally passing time while not paying attention. That’s partially because most of them have likely been through the same classes the year before, and it’s partially because the classes just aren’t very exciting.

I don’t know what the UFC’s social media curriculum consists of. I’m sure they’re told to behave themselves on Twitter and to use the platform they’ve been afforded wisely. 

But it’s clear that the message just isn’t getting through in an effective manner, and so the UFC must take extra steps to ensure that their fighters understand that what they say on Twitter or Facebook or MySpace (if anyone is still using that service) reflects on the company as a whole. A UFC fighter’s identity is so very closely intertwined with the company that promotes them, because the UFC brand is promoted just as heavily as any fighter on the roster.

It is long past time for the UFC to put a social media/personal conduct policy down on paper. It’s time to tell these fighters what they can and cannot say, even though their Twitter accounts are their own, because it’s clear that some of them still don’t understand how powerful their words can be. And it’s time to create a system of punishing those who break the rules, and it shouldn’t matter if they’re a main event superstar and champion or a fighter that’s appearing in the first preliminary bout on Facebook.

If used correctly, Twitter can be a powerful tool for effectively marketing the sport directly to the fans who follow it religiously. It’s one of the best marketing tools in the world today.

But it also has the potential for pitfalls, and that’s why it’s so important for the UFC to create concise and even-handed social media guidelines that apply to the whole roster. If these kinds of incidents aren’t curtailed, it could be damaging to the sport, to the fighters and to the company that promotes them.

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Ronda Rousey and Her Manager Show How Not to Handle a PR Gaffe

If you have watched any television over the last few years, there’s no doubt that you have been exposed to the “what happens here, stays here” ad campaign for Las Vegas. Some people would be well served if they applied the same theory…

If you have watched any television over the last few years, there’s no doubt that you have been exposed to the “what happens here, stays here” ad campaign for Las Vegas. Some people would be well served if they applied the same theory to their internet browsing habits. Among that group would be UFC women’s champion Ronda Rousey.

On January 15 Rousey tweeted the following:

 Extremely interesting must watch video youtube.com/watch?v=Wx9GxX…— Ronda Rousey (@RondaRousey) Jan. 15.

That was her first mistake. What followed were additional gaffes that showed—to borrow another advertising slogan—“Just do it” is not always the best policy. Sometimes it’s best to keep what you find interesting to yourself, especially if you are a public figure who will have every step you take scrutinized.

Rousey found out pretty quickly that sometimes what is “interesting” to one person is a lot less interesting to another and she deleted the post a few hours after the initial tweet. It was too little, too late, as the ball was already rolling on what was a pretty large public relations faux pas.

Sharing these type of conspiracy theories is usually pretty harmless, but when a public figure does so—even with a disclaimer attached—these things tend to take on a life of their own and once that happens it’s all damage control from that point out.

Team Rousey did a terrible job of controlling the damage in this situation.

The first mistake was Rousey’s manager speaking to MMAJunkie.com and speculating on Rousey’s intent in tweeting the video. You would think a manager would speak to their client before offering a statement on their behalf, especially when that something had caused backlash against that client. Speaking to Rousey and getting her take may have helped clear things up a bit, but that didn’t happen. 

What followed that speculation was a stunning bit of mismanagement.  When Rousey’s manager Darin Harvey said the following:

I don’t think that she did anything so horrible. I think what she was doing is retweeting something that gave a different perspective as to what transpired on that day. I don’t think anything in that video denied that it happened.

I don’t know if it’s the truth or not. I’m not an investigator, but it seemed to me that if that Bushmaster (rifle) really was sitting in the trunk of a car, and the guy killed himself inside the school, how would the gun end up in the trunk of a car? Maybe it’s just bulls— facts. I didn’t investigate it. I think Ronda thought it was interesting and retweeted it, and that was the extent of it. I don’t think she was saying the mainstream press was wrong. It was just a different perspective.

Harvey started off by planting his shovel and then proceeded to dig a deeper hole with each sentence he uttered.

A simple apology would have been the way to go here. Harvey should have acknowledged that the tweet was in bad taste, apologized for any harm and moved on. Instead Harvey came across as the same kind of wingnut his client was portrayed as when she tweeted the video in the first place. His statement read as if he and Rousey were both fitted for tinfoil hats at the same time. No comment would have actually been better than the explanation that was offered.

Other fighters and managers would be well served to look at this entire debacle as the perfect example on how not to handle a public relations slip up. 

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