The 9 Most Pathetic Hooks the UFC Has Used to Draw PPV Buys


(At one point, Jones tried to pull away because he thought the handshake was over, but Chael held on for like a half-second longer. It was, without question, the most challenging moment of Jones’s professional MMA career. / Photo via Getty Images)

By Matt Saccaro

The fight game isn’t just about tatted-up white guys with shaved heads hitting each other in the face. If it were, BodogFIGHT and the IFL would still be alive and kicking. Marketing /Hype/PR is a crucial aspect of the fight business — but it doesn’t always go so well.

There were times when the UFC has had stunning marketing triumphs (the whole “Zuffa created the entire MMA world and if you don’t like it you’re a butthurt Pride fanboy” shtick). But there were also times when the UFC’s efforts fell flat on their face like Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante against Dan Henderson.

What were some of these hyped-up but obviously bullshit moments? Let’s have a look…

1. Watch Che Mills, the Unstoppable Killing Machine!


(Source: Getty)

UFC 145’s main event of Jon Jones vs. Rashad Evans was strong enough to sell a pay-per-view on. Sure, sometimes the promo made the two fighters look like jilted lovers, but we’re not gonna hate on the UFC for hyping up a title fight.

We will, however, hate on them for trying to convince fans that a squash match — Rory MacDonald vs. Che Mills — was some kind of epic duel between two young lions. There was only one prospect in that fight, and it wasn’t Che Mills.

The UFC’s inability to do anything with subtlety ruined the promos for this event, the prelims for this event, and most of the PPV portion of this event. Describing Mills as a “new, dangerous welterweight from the UK” was a gross exaggeration. The British striker was only dangerous if you were a TUF bum or if you suffered an accidental knee injury while fighting him.

During the prelims, Rogan was doing the hard sell. THIS CHE MILLS GUY IS A KILLER. HE’S A MONSTER. HE’S A BADASS. HE BEHEADED NED STARK. HE SHOT BAMBI’S MOTHER. Insane falsehoods like this littered the broadcast. Rogan didn’t stop the bullshit once the main card started, either.

We got treated with pro-wrestling-level fakeness about how Che Mills was on MacDonald’s level up until MacDonald, predictably, ran through Mills.

Thus, the only thing that got killed at UFC 145 was Mills’s career.

Since then, Mills hasn’t legitimately won a fight, unless you count Duane Ludwig’s freak injury as a legit win. Earlier this month, Mills lost via TKO to Irishman Cathal Pendred (never heard of him either) at a CWFC event in Ireland.

2. James Toney, Bane of MMA Fighters.


(At one point, Jones tried to pull away because he thought the handshake was over, but Chael held on for like a half-second longer. It was, without question, the most challenging moment of Jones’s professional MMA career. / Photo via Getty Images)

By Matt Saccaro

The fight game isn’t just about tatted-up white guys with shaved heads hitting each other in the face. If it were, BodogFIGHT and the IFL would still be alive and kicking. Marketing /Hype/PR is a crucial aspect of the fight business — but it doesn’t always go so well.

There were times when the UFC has had stunning marketing triumphs (the whole “Zuffa created the entire MMA world and if you don’t like it you’re a butthurt Pride fanboy” shtick). But there were also times when the UFC’s efforts fell flat on their face like Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante against Dan Henderson.

What were some of these hyped-up but obviously bullshit moments? Let’s have a look…

1. Watch Che Mills, the Unstoppable Killing Machine!


(Source: Getty)

UFC 145’s main event of Jon Jones vs. Rashad Evans was strong enough to sell a pay-per-view on. Sure, sometimes the promo made the two fighters look like jilted lovers, but we’re not gonna hate on the UFC for hyping up a title fight.

We will, however, hate on them for trying to convince fans that a squash match — Rory MacDonald vs. Che Mills — was some kind of epic duel between two young lions. There was only one prospect in that fight, and it wasn’t Che Mills.

The UFC’s inability to do anything with subtlety ruined the promos for this event, the prelims for this event, and most of the PPV portion of this event. Describing Mills as a “new, dangerous welterweight from the UK” was a gross exaggeration. The British striker was only dangerous if you were a TUF bum or if you suffered an accidental knee injury while fighting him.

During the prelims, Rogan was doing the hard sell. THIS CHE MILLS GUY IS A KILLER. HE’S A MONSTER. HE’S A BADASS. HE BEHEADED NED STARK. HE SHOT BAMBI’S MOTHER. Insane falsehoods like this littered the broadcast. Rogan didn’t stop the bullshit once the main card started, either.

We got treated with pro-wrestling-level fakeness about how Che Mills was on MacDonald’s level up until MacDonald, predictably, ran through Mills.

Thus, the only thing that got killed at UFC 145 was Mills’s career.

Since then, Mills hasn’t legitimately won a fight, unless you count Duane Ludwig’s freak injury as a legit win. Earlier this month, Mills lost via TKO to Irishman Cathal Pendred (never heard of him either) at a CWFC event in Ireland.

2. James Toney, Bane of MMA Fighters.


(Source: AP)

We at CagePotato have sleepless nights sometimes because James Toney vs. Randy Couture was an actual thing that happened.

This freak show fight — more suited to a Japanese promotion or the backyard that hosted Tank Abbott vs. Scott Ferrozzo — found its way to the UFC’s Octagon due to James Toney’s superlative trolling abilities and Dana White’s spider-sense for money-making.

Couture vs. Toney didn’t headline the UFC 118 PPV — Frankie Edgar vs. BJ Penn had that honor — but it was a large part of the event’s marketing.

Dana/The Zuffa hype machine gave out reasons why the fight wasn’t bullshit and why you should buy the PPV. They cited the statistic that James Toney had more knockouts than Randy Couture had fights and trotted out the tired, near-meaningless phrase “you never know what’s gonna happen in a fight” again and again.

Forget the fact that pure boxers had tried to ply their craft in the UFC twice and had failed, DANA WHITE is telling you James Toney has a chance so it must be right and you better buy the PPV so you can see the upset of a lifetime!

Toney’s ass-crack being visible at the weigh-ins foreshadowed the shittyness to come. The match ended the way everybody thought it would, with Toney having laughably bad MMA skills (he didn’t even know how to tap out correctly) and Couture effortlessly submitting him.

3. Banned in 49 States, 340 Countries, 7 Planets, 340 Trillion Galaxies…

When the UFC was founded, one of the bigger issues was how to market it.

The American public had long been familiar with the typical Asian martial arts bushido bullshit thanks to the wave of interest inspired by movies ranging from Enter the Dragon to The Karate Kid. But the UFC was more than just karate guys and katas. It was the world’s toughest and purest fighting tournament. How, exactly, are you supposed to sell that?

According to Campbell McLaren, as gracelessly as possible.

McLaren was the man in charge of the UFC’s marketing in 1993. His strategy was to make the UFC appear as anything BUT a sport. To McLaren, the UFC had to be presented as Mortal Kombat without the thunder gods and four-armed Shokan princes.

The result of this policy was the enthusiastic yet ultimately self-defeating “BANNED IN 49 STATES. FIGHTS END VIA KNOCKOUT, SUBMISSION, OR DEATH” marketing campaign that piqued the interest of martial arts enthusiasts, street brawlers, and pornography theater owners.

4. Revenge Is a Dish Best Served on a Lackluster PPV Main Event.


(Source: MMAWeekly)

Remember Chuck Liddell’s “fearsome” title reign where he allegedly fought the best light-heavyweights in the world?

Yeah, we’re gonna talk about that for a second.

Riding high off capturing the UFC light heavyweight crown from Randy Couture, Chuck Liddell was pitted against Jeremy Horn. It was a peculiar match to make seeing as Horn hadn’t been in the UFC since a 2001 loss to Elvis Sinosic, of all people.

So why rush Horn to the front of the title-shot line?

Well, one theory is that Horn’s victory over the legendary Spencer Canup impressed Dana White so much that he had no other choice than to give Horn the title shot.

Another, equally likely theory, is that Liddell’s 1999 loss to Horn was a great pretext for a “REVENGE! GRUDGE MATCH!” angle straight out of the WWE’s playbook. Liddell got to avenge his loss, Horn lost some brain cells, and MMA fans lost a few hours and $40.

5. Anything Ken ShamrockTito Ortiz Related.

The UFC couldn’t survive if Tito Ortiz kept fighting the likes of Elvis Sinosic (that’s two Sinosic mentions in one article, if anyone is keeping count). The UFC needed established names. Ken Shamrock was an established name.

Yes, he was coming off a loss when he was brought in to fight Tito Ortiz for the first time in 2002 but that didn’t matter. Everybody remembered Ken Shamrock thanks to his status as a UFC Legend™ and thanks to his time in the WWE.

“Here are two guys who DON’T LIKE EACH OTHER!” “Watch the DISRESPECTFUL, UPSTART PUNK trash talk the RESPECTFUL VETERAN”

Ironically, the hype around the feud was all real. Shamrock’s Lion’s Den and Tito Ortiz had legitimate beef with one another. Thus, matching up him an Ortiz was an easy sell. But the reason this hook was so terrible was that Shamrock was no match for Ortiz. Shamrock wasn’t a roided-up superman anymore. He was Samson without his hair, Batman without his money, Chael Sonnen without TRT.

Yeah, great they don’t like each other. That doesn’t mean a fight between them made sense because, quite frankly, it didn’t. It was a cash-grab and attention whoring.

And it worked — so well, in fact, that they did it again twice. Shamrock would face Ortiz four years later on another PPV, UFC 61, and on a UFC Fight Night card called “Ortiz vs. Shamrock 3: The Final Chapter” just three months after that. Both of those fights ended in first-round TKO wins for Ortiz.

On the next page: A legend gets executed, “fun fights” (aka “squash matches”) and the absurd bullshit that actually turned out to be true.

Friday Link Dump: The Complete Oral History of Strikeforce, King Mo Wants to Box Kimbo Slice, The 50 Dirtiest Athletes Ever + More


(Seems like oooooold times…” / Photo via allelbows)

The Rise and Fall of the Pepsi to UFC’s Coke: A Strikeforce Oral History (BleacherReport)

Chael Sonnen vs. Jon Jones Official For UFC 159 in New Jersey (FightDay)

– Gegard Mousasi and the Frustration of ‘Overrated’ (MMAFighting)

– King Mo Lawal Has Boxing Clause in His Contract, Would Like a Fight With Kimbo Slice (BloodyElbow)

Cub Swanson Says Fight With Dennis Siver Is #1 Featherweight Contender Match (Fightline)

– The 50 Dirtiest Athletes in Sports History (Complex)

– Review: Brian J. D’Souza’s “Pound for Pound” MMA book Is Top-Class Reading (FightOpinion)

Photo of the day: Ed O’Neill chokes out Royce Gracie on the set of ‘Modern Family’ (Facebook.com/CagePotato)

– Steven Seagal Owns a Bullet-Proof Kimono. This Is Not a Joke. (FilmDrunk)

– If You’ve Never Seen American Psycho, This Rory MacDonald Comic Will Not Make Sense (MiddleEasy)

– 10 Reasons You’re Not Getting Laid (MensFitness)

Honest Trailers: Inception (ScreenJunkies)

– 17 Gifts for People You Hate (EgoTV)

A Gallery of White People Acting Extremely White (WorldWideInterweb)


(Seems like oooooold times…” / Photo via allelbows)

The Rise and Fall of the Pepsi to UFC’s Coke: A Strikeforce Oral History (BleacherReport)

Chael Sonnen vs. Jon Jones Official For UFC 159 in New Jersey (FightDay)

– Gegard Mousasi and the Frustration of ‘Overrated’ (MMAFighting)

– King Mo Lawal Has Boxing Clause in His Contract, Would Like a Fight With Kimbo Slice (BloodyElbow)

Cub Swanson Says Fight With Dennis Siver Is #1 Featherweight Contender Match (Fightline)

– The 50 Dirtiest Athletes in Sports History (Complex)

– Review: Brian J. D’Souza’s “Pound for Pound” MMA book Is Top-Class Reading (FightOpinion)

Photo of the day: Ed O’Neill chokes out Royce Gracie on the set of ‘Modern Family’ (Facebook.com/CagePotato)

– Steven Seagal Owns a Bullet-Proof Kimono. This Is Not a Joke. (FilmDrunk)

– If You’ve Never Seen American Psycho, This Rory MacDonald Comic Will Not Make Sense (MiddleEasy)

– 10 Reasons You’re Not Getting Laid (MensFitness)

Honest Trailers: Inception (ScreenJunkies)

– 17 Gifts for People You Hate (EgoTV)

A Gallery of White People Acting Extremely White (WorldWideInterweb)

MMA: Why the Sport Needs a True HOF and Who Should Be in It

Many years from now, when fans look back on the sport, they will be able to recognize several important men who were celebrated for their contributions and achievements in the sport by way of the UFC Hall of Fame. Sadly, should they content themse…

Many years from now, when fans look back on the sport, they will be able to recognize several important men who were celebrated for their contributions and achievements in the sport by way of the UFC Hall of Fame.

Sadly, should they content themselves with that accounting they will never know such fighters as Frank Shamrock, Fedor Emelianenko, Jeremy Horn, Kazushi Sakuraba and othersmen who either fought for other promotions or who simply weren’t on Dana White’s list of friends.

The UFC Hall of Fame is a great thing, but it will never be a true HOF for the sport because it is totally dependent on the whims of a single man who is not above ignoring the contributions of others if he does not like them.

A true HOF is not dependent upon the selections of one man. The International Boxing Hall of Fame has five categories (Modern, Old-Timer, Pioneer, Non-Participant and Observer). Those inducted are chosen by an international panel of boxing historians and members of the Boxing Writers Association of America. Votes are cast and tabulated, and inductees can become members.

And that is just what the sport of MMA needs: a true HOF that recognizes fighters and other contributors to the sport with no biases for or professional prejudices against. It would be a committee of many minds and sensibilities, not an army of one, and from there, recognition and induction would be the byproduct of a concerned consensus.

Which is how it should be.

As great as the UFC is, the sport is too big to have its HOF members decided upon by a single man.

So, who should be inducted without hesitation or delay once such a HOF is born?

Here are the names of 25 deserving individuals for your consideration.

Begin Slideshow

Gregor Gracie Looking to Bring the Gracie Name Back to Where It Used to Be

If you have been a lifelong fan of mixed martial arts, you know what the name “Gracie” means. You can make an argument that if it wasn’t for the Gracie family, mixed martial arts wouldn’t be around today. The Gracies have fallen off in the last de…

If you have been a lifelong fan of mixed martial arts, you know what the name “Gracie” means. You can make an argument that if it wasn’t for the Gracie family, mixed martial arts wouldn’t be around today.

The Gracies have fallen off in the last decade. Royce tried make a return to the UFC in 2006 and lost to then-welterweight champion Matt Hughes. In 2010, Renzo then made his UFC debut looking to avenge Royces‘ loss to Hughes, but lost to him as well.

The Gracies, though, are starting to make a little noise again with Igor and Rolles fighting in ONE FC, Roger in Strikeforce and Daniel in Bellator. Now another Gracie is looking to make a splash. Gregor Gracie will be fighting tonight as he squares off against Tyson Steele in the inaugural event for The World Series of Fighting.

World Series of Fighting 1 will be taking place from PH Live at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino. The Gracie vs. Steele fight is a part of the main card, which you can watch on the NBC Sports Network starting at 10:30 p.m. ET.

The 25-year-old Gracie would always watch old tapes of his family members fighting, but was met with resistance by his mother. Gracie knew, though, that MMA was meant for him.

“I always wanted to get into MMA since I was a little kid,” Gracie told Bleacher Report. “I remember watching tapes of Royce, Renzo and all of my family members. I loved watching them and always knew I was going to fight. There was a point I even wanted to quit school just to train. My mother wouldn’t let me do that though.”

Gracie, whose last three fights have gone under the ONE FC promotion, originally had a contract with World Series of Fighting and is glad to be fighting for the promotion for a variety of reasons.

“I had a contract with them (World Series) before and then I went to One FC,” Gracie stated. “Then about an hour after my last fight in August, my manager called and said, ‘Hey you want to fight?’ and I’m like, ‘Yeah, for sure.’ He said ‘OK, you’re fighting November 3,’ and I said ‘OK.’

“I already knew these guys. They came to New York and I met with them. Ray Sefo is a great guy and was always been a big fan of him when he fought in K-1. We spoke and he said in his organization, the fighters are always going to come first and that’s one of the biggest reasons I wanted to sign with them. That’s the way they used to do it in Japan.

“I think that’s the way to go. The fighters are the show, not the other way around.”

Gracie, who has a record of 7-2, will be going into his third fight in a little more than four months. He loves fighting often and feels it won’t be a detriment tonight against Steele. As long as he’s healthy, he wants to fight.

“I love fighting,” Gracie stated. “It’s something I enjoy, being in the ring or the cage. Sometimes the only thing that holds you back is if you have an injury in training camp or if you are really hurt after your fight. But after every fight, I feel good and don’t have any injuries.

“It’s not like I planned to fight three times in four months. After my first loss (to Adam Shahir Kayoom at a One FC show in June), I went straight to the ONE FC owner and said, ‘Put me on the next show, I want to fight again.’

“So I went and fought again and as soon as the fight was over, my manager called and wanted me fight on November 3. I want to stay busy and fight.”

A lot of the new MMA fans don’t know the Gracie name and questions have been raised regarding if the Gracies can once again make their mark in the sport. Gregor feels it can happen with the influx of a younger Gracie clan.

“Of course it can return and for us to make our mark,” Gracie stated. “There was a point when Pride was finishing up that we didn’t have too many guys fighting here in the United States. We went a little while without any of us representing the sport, but that doesn’t mean we stopped. We have been here the whole time.

“We have a lot of guys now. We have myself, my two brothers Igor and Rolles, Roger, Renzo, my cousin Neiman will be making his pro debut in December and Daniel fights in Bellator. We are still here.”

The question among the MMA community is if even with the new influx of Gracies in the sport, can they live up to the standard set by family members before them? Gregor says that’s why he’s here and they will get the Gracie name back to where it used to be.

“That’s what I’m here for,” Gracie said. “I’m going to fight my best to do that and to keep that name on top. My family feels the same way I do. Roger is doing a phenomenal job in Strikeforce. My brothers and I have been fighting in Asia and now I’m here with World Series of Fighting. We have worked very hard for this and we want to make sure we keep it that way.”

 

Unless otherwise noted, all quotes obtained firsthand.

You can follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Top 20 UFC Fighters Competing During the SEG Era

Back before fighters were well rounded the game was a crap shoot. For the UFC, the days of one dimensional fighters came to a close shortly after Zuffa purchased the promotion from Semaphore Entertainment Group in January of 2001. Back then fast hands,…

Back before fighters were well rounded the game was a crap shoot. For the UFC, the days of one dimensional fighters came to a close shortly after Zuffa purchased the promotion from Semaphore Entertainment Group in January of 2001.

Back then fast hands, sinister submissions or wrestling could get a fighter by. And I don’t mean a combination of the three, I mean mastering one single element alone. That seemed to suffice.

As primitive as combat may have been at the time, fans played witness to numerous highly entertaining bouts. A solid handful of men excelled back in the day, and that’s what this piece is all about: examining the golden age of the UFC’s existence.

Here’s a look at 20 of the toughest men to compete for the Ultimate Fighting Championship and their career’s pre-Zuffa. Nothing they’ve accomplished beyond December of 2000 inside the octagon is going to be factored into this list, so refrain from spilling into a rage when Mark Kerr doesn’t top the list!

Begin Slideshow

UFC Power Rankings: The Most Boring Fights in UFC History

While we all love mixed martial arts, we can hardly deny that its premier organisation has had its fair share of mind-numbingly boring fights. Whether we’re talking pre-Zuffa or post-Zuffa UFC, both incarnations have offered up some of the most t…

While we all love mixed martial arts, we can hardly deny that its premier organisation has had its fair share of mind-numbingly boring fights.

Whether we’re talking pre-Zuffa or post-Zuffa UFC, both incarnations have offered up some of the most tediously dull bouts in combat sports history.

So without any further rambling, I present to you the five most boring fights in UFC history.

Begin Slideshow