Forgotten Champion: Tim Sylvia’s Desperate Ploy to Get Back in the UFC Octagon

In some sports, former champions live forever as heroes. Even complete mediocrities—think Super Bowl-winning quarterback Trent Dilfer—spend their days and nights in an alternate universe where they are always the conqueror.Coworkers genu…

In some sports, former champions live forever as heroes. Even complete mediocrities—think Super Bowl-winning quarterback Trent Dilfer—spend their days and nights in an alternate universe where they are always the conqueror.

Coworkers genuflect and look on with awe. Men who were bounced from their jobs, even in disgrace, are always referred to, reverently, as “coach,” even decades after they last held a clipboard.

Nostalgia reigns in the world of sports. But not in the UFC. The sport of MMA, like boxing before it, eats its own. There is no graceful return to glory for the sport’s former champions.

Ask Ken Shamrock, still competing in his 40’s to make ends meet. Ask Don Frye, the UFC tournament winner still waiting for a call welcoming him back to the fold as part of the UFC Hall of Fame.

And ask Tim Sylvia, the former UFC heavyweight champion who wants so desperately to return to the Octagon that it makes me hurt for him.

“I’m sick and tired of watching a bunch of bums fight in the UFC,” the 35-year old Sylvia said. “Guys that I know I can beat… They told [manager Monte Cox], ‘Tim needs to keep winning. Keep putting wins together.’ I’ve done that and nothing happened. And there are guys in there I think are absolutely horrible…Yeah, I’ve got an attitude about it. I’m tired of it. I’ve got to make my own destiny.”

Sylvia has launched a Twitter campaign, hoping to get UFC President Dana White‘s attention. The desperation is palpable as Sylvia begs for fans to write to White, then retweets dozens of the messages—every single one of them.

“I’m very surprised how many fans have supported me through this process. And it won’t be done until it happens,” Sylvia said. Despite literally hundreds of messages, White has been uncharacteristically silent on the matter.

“I don’t expect it right off,” Sylvia continued. “It’s only been a week. I think after this goes on weeks, and weeks, and weeks, and weeks, I think something is going to happen. The fans are speaking right now. If the UFC wants to give the fans what they want, it’s going to happen.”

In some ways, this public cry for help is unseemly. It’s one thing for football player Emmitt Smith to spend his last season with the Arizona Cardinals instead of his beloved Dallas Cowboys. It would be quite another for him to go on Twitter to ask for a shot at a team’s practice squad.

Of course, Smith made millions in his NFL career and has the luxury of a retirement package and benefits. As a fighter, Sylvia has none of that. This is his only chance to make a living in the sport. And the clock is ticking.

“I truly believe if I was given the opportunity, I could go all the way to a title shot. There’s no doubt in my mind,” Sylvia said. “I could put five or six wins together in the UFC right now…But the fans need to keep doing what they are doing. Be on my side.”

Poor Tim Sylvia. He’s always wanted to be loved. In his heyday, he was champion twice between 2003 and 2006. He would often seek out fans in Las Vegas casinos, looking for the same kind of adoration he saw heaped out in huge doses to his contemporaries like Chuck Liddell.

But no one loves Goliath.

Every fighter knows fans are fickle. They will turn on a fighter with alarming speed. For Sylvia, a loss to Fedor Emelianenko in just seconds was the beginning. A weight gain that landed him in the super heavyweight division for several fights made things worse. Soon, a fighter who once ruled the UFC’s heavyweight division became a laughingstock.

There were jokes aplenty on message boards and plenty of funny Photoshops. That hurt. Even White and UFC owner Lorenzo Fertitta—men Sylvia felt he had a good relationship with when he was the company’s world heavyweight champion in the mid-2000’s—have seemingly turned their backs on him.

White, apparently, doesn’t look back on Sylvia’s reign with any nostalgia at all, calling the division at the time “sh*tty.” When the criticism comes from people you know personally, the knife cuts even deeper.

“Absolutely [it hurts]. It’s very irritating. He never said that when I was there…I thought I had a great relationship with everybody in the UFC,” Sylvia said. “It is hurtful. I busted my a** for years in his fights to become champion, not once, but twice…it’s not my fault the UFC didn’t bring in better guys to the division when I was there. That’s got nothing to do with me. I fought who they put in front of me. I never declined anybody.”

Sylvia has heard the speculation that he’s being used as an object lesson for others in the company. After all, he left the UFC to fight for competing organizations. He cashed some giant checks for fights outside of the promotion—but when Affliction went out of business, Sylvia was left without a home.

Is he part of a broader plan to strike fear into fighters’ hearts? To prevent them from ever considering leaving the UFC to fight elsewhere, knowing they will never be welcomed back? Sylvia doesn’t know for sure, but he does know the UFC has absolute power over whether or not he and others can earn a living in the fight game.

“I don’t know the thought processes of the head honchos at the UFC. But it’s swaying that way,” Sylvia said. “Look at [deposed former UFC champion Josh] Barnett. He’s been top five in the world since he left. Since he beat Randy [Couture]. I don’t think he’s left the top ten. But he hasn’t been in the UFC.”

To Sylvia, the answer to all of these complex problems can be found in 140 characters. Twitter can rescue his career from the fringes of the sport. If only fans will continue to work with him.

“Keep tweeting Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta. They say they aren’t, but I know they are seeing all these tweets,” Sylvia said. “Just keep supporting me. I love you guys. In the past I’ve told fans, ‘If you don’t like me, to hell with you.’ But you know what? If you’re a fan of MMA, I love you no matter what.”

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Tim Sylvia Deserves Another Shot in the Octagon

Tim Sylvia is a former two-time UFC heavyweight champion. He defended his title a total of three times—tied for the most defenses ever—but he hasn’t seen the inside of the Octagon since 2008 when he lost an interim title fight to Antonio Ro…

Tim Sylvia is a former two-time UFC heavyweight champion. He defended his title a total of three times—tied for the most defenses ever—but he hasn’t seen the inside of the Octagon since 2008 when he lost an interim title fight to Antonio Rodrigo “Minotauro” Nogueira.

However, in his last seven fights, Sylvia has gone 6-1 with five finishes, and has launched a campaign to try to get himself back into the UFC.

If you were to look at Sylvia’s Twitter over the past couple of days, it is filled with him re-tweeting fans who want to see him back in the Octagon, and tweets from him about wanting to get back into the UFC.

He even got into a spat with current UFC heavyweight Cheick Kongo to try and drum up interest to propel himself back into the UFC.

Sylvia deserves another shot in the Octagon. He has earned it with his recent performances and his history in the organization.

Throughout his career, Sylvia has had victories over current UFC fighters such as Ben Rothwell and Brandon Vera.

He also claims that he fought when there weren’t that many UFC events each year, but now there are many more, which means many more fighters, and the UFC has to fill up cards. Sylvia claims he can “beat 80 percent of the guys in the UFC.”

Dana White‘s biggest argument against Sylvia is that he was champion when the division was weakest, and when Sylvia and Andrei Arlovski were “knocking each other out every weekend.”

Dana also says that the last time he saw Sylvia was when he was knocked out by Ray Mercer.

In a recent video released by Sylvia, he makes his case to come back to the Octagon.

Dana White has no real reason to keep Sylvia out of the UFC. White told MMAjunkie.com,

“I have no beef with Tim Sylvia. The guy’s out there trying to make a living and doing what he’s doing. But for him to make the claim that he could knock out 80 percent of the heavyweights in the UFC, what I just said before says it all.”

Sylvia can claim whatever he wants, whether or not White agrees with him shouldn’t be a large factor. If White has no issues with Sylvia, then he has no reason to keep him out of the UFC.

White has often given the fans what they want, and there is a large contingent of fans that want to see Sylvia back in the Octagon.

Sylvia is a veteran, can make the 265-pound limit and deserves another shot in the Octagon.

Whether you want to see him in the cage to see him lose, or whether you want to see him win, he deserves to get back into the UFC.

 

Tim McTiernan is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. For the latest news on everything MMA, follow me on twitter @TimMcTiernan.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Fedor Emelianenko: 8 Possible Opponents for His Next Fight

For a long time, Fedor Emelianenko was coveted as the sport’s premier heavyweight, and rightfully so.The stoic Russian had an air of invincibility surrounding him, after having gone undefeated for nearly a decade—an unprecedented run in his or an…

For a long time, Fedor Emelianenko was coveted as the sport’s premier heavyweight, and rightfully so.

The stoic Russian had an air of invincibility surrounding him, after having gone undefeated for nearly a decade—an unprecedented run in his or any other era.

After the former Pride champion had succumbed to a career-worst three fight-skid, Emelianenko came storming back with consecutive victories over former UFC title challenger Jeff Monson and Olympian Satoshi Ishii—knocking out the judoka inside of the first round.

Emelianenko has made every intention to get back into his “Last Emperor” form, and in doing so, the former heavyweight kingpin will look to regain what was once his. Here are some fighters who can help usher him back to prominence. 

Begin Slideshow

Friday Afternoon Link Dump

(Video courtesy of YouTube/RootsofFight)

–  It’s Time for More Thursday TV Captures (WorldWideInterweb)

–  Epic Robbery Fail At Rotterdam Bar (BREAK)

–  19 Sports Illustrated Cover Girls With Hollywood “Careers” (ScreenJunkies)

–  Debriefing: Anonymous (MadeMan)

–  Don King Uses “Wetbacks” To Refer To Mexicans (TuVez)

–  Zdeno Chara Takes a Puck to the Face (BuzzerBeat)

–  Alcohol and the Brain: Become a More Creative Thinker (AskMen)

–  The 6 best MTV Shows Nobody Remembers (Clutch.MTV)

–  Top 5 Reasons Your Twitter Marketing Fails (TheRugged)

–  Gary Busey May Be Bankrup, But He’s Sill Rich in Bull’s Heads, Moccasins and Tambourines (FilmDrunk)

–  Michael Jordan Birthday Tribute Song (TerezOwens)

–  Tim Sylvia on UFC Hopes, Lesnar Bullying, Kongo, Struve and Fatherhood (FightersOnly)

–  The 10 Most Dubious Records in MMA (BleacherReport)

–  Paddy Moore MMA Workout (MuscleProdigy)

– In MMA’s War on Drugs, Some Experts Say We’re Not Fighting the Right Battles (MMAFighting)


(Video courtesy of YouTube/RootsofFight)

–  It’s Time for More Thursday TV Captures (WorldWideInterweb)

–  Epic Robbery Fail At Rotterdam Bar (BREAK)

–  19 Sports Illustrated Cover Girls With Hollywood “Careers” (ScreenJunkies)

–  Debriefing: Anonymous (MadeMan)

–  Don King Uses “Wetbacks” To Refer To Mexicans (TuVez)

–  Zdeno Chara Takes a Puck to the Face (BuzzerBeat)

–  Alcohol and the Brain: Become a More Creative Thinker (AskMen)

–  The 6 best MTV Shows Nobody Remembers (Clutch.MTV)

–  Top 5 Reasons Your Twitter Marketing Fails (TheRugged)

–  Gary Busey May Be Bankrup, But He’s Sill Rich in Bull’s Heads, Moccasins and Tambourines (FilmDrunk)

–  Michael Jordan Birthday Tribute Song (TerezOwens)

–  Tim Sylvia on UFC Hopes, Lesnar Bullying, Kongo, Struve and Fatherhood (FightersOnly)

–  The 10 Most Dubious Records in MMA (BleacherReport)

–  Paddy Moore MMA Workout (MuscleProdigy)

– In MMA’s War on Drugs, Some Experts Say We’re Not Fighting the Right Battles (MMAFighting)

–  Emily Ratajkowski is a Bikini Model to Keep An Eye On (Guyism)

– Switching Camps: Gray Maynard‘s Move From Xtreme Couture to AKA (Yahoo!)

MMA Video Tribute: 9 ‘Falling Tree’ Knockouts

(Igor Vovchanchyn vs. Francisco Bueno @ PRIDE 8, 11/21/99. Josh Barnett makes the tree-analogy at the 0:41 mark.)

Edson Barboza‘s spinning heel-kick knockout of Terry Etim at UFC 142 wasn’t just an instant-classic because of the technique itself — it was also unforgettable because of the devastating effect it had on Etim, who stiffened up and toppled straight to the mat in slow motion like a felled spruce. The “falling tree” knockout is a rare, brutal moment in combat sports that always gets a rise out of fans. Here are nine of our favorite examples from MMA fights, in no particular order.

(Edson Barboza vs. Terry Etim @ UFC 142, 1/14/12)


(Igor Vovchanchyn vs. Francisco Bueno @ PRIDE 8, 11/21/99. Josh Barnett makes the tree-analogy at the 0:41 mark.)

Edson Barboza‘s spinning heel-kick knockout of Terry Etim at UFC 142 wasn’t just an instant-classic because of the technique itself — it was also unforgettable because of the devastating effect it had on Etim, who stiffened up and toppled straight to the mat in slow motion like a felled spruce. The “falling tree” knockout is a rare, brutal moment in combat sports that always gets a rise out of fans. Here are nine of our favorite examples from MMA fights, in no particular order.


(Edson Barboza vs. Terry Etim @ UFC 142, 1/14/12)


(Ray Mercer vs. Tim Sylvia @ Adrenaline MMA 3: Bragging Rights, 6/13/09)


(Rory Markham vs. Brodie Farber @ UFC Fight Night 14, 7/19/08)


(Hayato Sakurai vs. Olaf Alfonso @ PRIDE Bushido Survival 2006, 6/4/06)


(Rashad Evans vs. Sean Salmon @ UFC Fight Night 8, 1/25/07)


(Brad Kohler vs. Steve Judson @ UFC 22, 9/24/99)


(Dan Hornbuckle vs. Akihiro Gono @ Sengoku 9, 8/2/09)


(Aleksander Emelianenko vs. Ricardo Morais @ PRIDE Bushido 6, 4/3/05)


(Honorable mention: Buakaw Por Pramuk vs. actual tree)

Did we leave out any good ones? Let us know in the comments section…

Outside the Lines Investigates UFC Pay, But Questions Remain

Filed under: MMA Media Watch, UFCSunday morning marked the airing of an Outside the Lines segment on ESPN that was denounced by UFC President Dana White before he had even seen it — a show that presented the UFC’s pay model as one that richly rewards …

Filed under: ,

Sunday morning marked the airing of an Outside the Lines segment on ESPN that was denounced by UFC President Dana White before he had even seen it — a show that presented the UFC’s pay model as one that richly rewards a handful of favorite stars while paying the majority of fighters as interchangeable drones.

White has already promised a response, and he’ll surely say that ESPN’s report contained incomplete information about how much the company pays its fighters. And he’ll surely be right, for the simple reason that the UFC, like many private businesses, keeps what it pays its workers confidential. ESPN deserves credit for attempting to uncover the closely guarded secret of how much UFC fighters actually make, but specific dollar amounts were lacking in this report.

For all the work that went into the Outside the Lines report, we still don’t know how much the UFC really pays its fighters.

Outside the Lines has spoken with more than 20 current, former and potential UFC fighters, as well as agents and promoters,” ESPN’s John Barr said as he strolled around a cage in the televised segment. “To a person, they say UFC fighters have not received their fair share of the company’s rapidly increasing revenue. Nearly all of them also refused to speak on camera, for fear the UFC would blackball them.”

But the fact that ESPN couldn’t get any active fighters to speak — and especially to reveal specific dollar amounts — was the biggest flaw in the report. The report did make a strong case that highly paid UFC fighters make far more than low-level fighters make. In that respect the UFC follows a pay model similar to that of Hollywood studios, where a handful of stars make the bulk of the money, and the bit players are left with much less.




And while UFC co-owner Lorenzo Fertitta claimed that the UFC pays its fighters in the neighborhood of 50 percent of all the promotion’s revenues, ESPN’s investigation made a convincing case that the UFC actually pays less than that.


However, there were also some weaknesses of ESPN’s reporting, which pegged the actual amount the UFC pays its fighters as “roughly 10 percent of the revenue.”

ESPN.com initially reported that the median annual income for UFC fighters was $17,000 to $23,000 a year, citing figures compiled by Rob Maysey of the Mixed Martial Arts Fighters Association. ESPN later corrected that report and said the $17,000 to $23,000 figure was actually the median pay per fight, not per year. However, even those corrected numbers do not appear to include sponsorships, bonuses and other forms of income that UFC fighters make.

And median pay per fight isn’t necessarily a particularly telling statistic. Consider a low-level UFC newcomer who signs a contract that guarantees him $6,000 to show, and another $6,000 to win for his first fight, then $8,000 for his second fight and $10,000 for his third. If that fighter fights three times, wins all three fights and earns a $75,000 Knockout of the Night bonus in his third fight, his median pay per fight would only be $16,000. But his total pay for the three fights would be $123,000, for an average of $41,000 a fight.

For an example of an entry-level fighter who has cashed in big time with bonuses, look at Edson Barboza, who signed with the UFC in 2010 after having six pro fights in small regional promotions. Barboza’s “show money” is reportedly just $6,000 a fight. But Barboza has won all four of his fights, meaning he also got a $6,000 win bonus for all four fights, and Barboza has received three Fight of the Night bonuses and one Knockout of the Night bonus (including both Fight of the Night and Knockout of the Night on Saturday at UFC 142). Thanks to the UFC’s bonus-heavy pay structure, Barboza’s total take for his first four UFC fights is at least $348,000, even before any sponsorships or other sources of income.

Even without bonuses, entry-level fighters aren’t necessarily doing too badly. One such fighter is UFC featherweight Jim Hettes. Hettes was an unknown in MMA circles, fighting on the regional scene, until he caught a break in August and signed with the UFC on a deal that paid him $6,000 to show and $6,000 to win on his first fight, and then $8,000 to show and $8,000 to win on his second fight. Hettes won both fights, for a total take of $28,000, and is now looking like one of the brightest young prospects in the featherweight division.

For a 24-year-old like Hettes, making $28,000 in five months while fighting in the UFC, with a good chance of making a lot more than that in the future, is a dream come true. ESPN didn’t quote any active fighters complaining about their pay on the record and indicated that the inability to find such fighters was a sign that fighters were scared to speak out. But maybe the reality is most UFC fighters are OK with what they make.

In fact, when low-level fighters are released from the UFC because of losses they suffer in the Octagon, they almost universally express a desire to win enough fights in other promotions to earn the right to return to the UFC — which strongly suggests that they don’t view the contracts they’ve just been released from as onerous.

The handful of mid-level fighters who have been released from the UFC for reasons having to do with issues outside the Octagon (fighters like Jon Fitch, Nate Marquardt and Miguel Torres) also generally apologize for their transgressions and ask to return to the UFC. Again, that suggests that the contracts they were released from were better than the contracts they could earn in other promotions.

And the few prominent fighters who have become free agents, like Tito Ortiz, have generally decided when the dust settled that the grass was greener inside the Octagon than out of it. UFC Hall of Famer Ken Shamrock appeared in the Outside the Lines report, and it may not have been clear to viewers who aren’t MMA fans that Shamrock made millions of dollars in the UFC, or that Shamrock left the promotion because he wasn’t good enough to win inside the Octagon anymore, not because he objected to the terms of his contract. That was clarified, however, in the panel discussion that took place after Barr’s taped Outside the Lines report.

It is true that a handful of well-known fighters have been able to leave the UFC and make more money elsewhere. That includes former heavyweight champions Andrei Arlovski and Tim Sylvia, who both left the UFC to sign with Affliction in 2008. But Affliction fell apart after putting on just two fight cards, which suggests that its higher-paying business model didn’t work.

ESPN’s report would have been strengthened by addressing other promotions’ business models, including not only Affliction but also Bellator and other smaller American MMA organizations. The UFC is by far the biggest MMA promotion and therefore deserves to have by far the greatest scrutiny, but a comparison of the UFC’s pay scale with other promotions’ pay scales would have provided some valuable context.

Ultimately, as former UFC heavyweight champion Ricco Rodriguez said on Outside the Lines, “The UFC gives you the best opportunity.” It would be great to see more opportunities for more fighters, but at the moment, even if UFC pay is lacking, it beats the alternatives in MMA.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments