‘TUF 18? Episode 9 CRUSHES The Record for Least-Viewed Episode Ever

(I *begged* them to have “Oh Yeah” playing in the background of this scene, but did they listen to me? Nooooooo.)

Yesterday, we mentioned that the Ultimate Fighter 18 mid-season recap episode which aired on October 23rd was the least-viewed episode in the history of the series. To be specific, it received an average of only 476,000 viewers, a 24% drop from the previous low-water mark of 624,000 average viewers, brought in by TUF 16 episode 5. It was a poor showing, without question, but you can’t expect much out of a clip-show, especially since it was competing against the first game of the World Series. Surely, the numbers would bounce back the following week, when there was an all-new episode with a women’s fight on the schedule.

Actually, the numbers sunk even further. On October 30th, TUF 18 episode 9 — which featured the forcible ejection of Cody Bollinger and a savage performance by Sarah Moras — received a viewer average of only 452,000, a 5% drop from the freakin’ clip show. Obviously, the numbers were hurt once again by having to compete with Game 6 of the World Series, but it’s safe to assume that the UFC will never put together a mid-season recap episode for TUF ever again, because that shit is apparently ratings suicide. (By the way, is there really that much crossover between MMA fans and baseball fans? I can’t think of two more dissimilar sports, but I guess a lot of people were watching the MLB post-season this year. I don’t know. I wasn’t one of them.)

The recent TUF ratings news is just the latest in a string of bad viewership numbers for the UFC…


(I *begged* them to have “Oh Yeah” playing in the background of this scene, but did they listen to me? Nooooooo.)

Yesterday, we mentioned that the Ultimate Fighter 18 mid-season recap episode which aired on October 23rd was the least-viewed episode in the history of the series. To be specific, it received an average of only 476,000 viewers, a 24% drop from the previous low-water mark of 624,000 average viewers, brought in by TUF 16 episode 5. It was a poor showing, without question, but you can’t expect much out of a clip-show, especially since it was competing against the first game of the World Series. Surely, the numbers would bounce back the following week, when there was an all-new episode with a women’s fight on the schedule.

Actually, the numbers sunk even further. On October 30th, TUF 18 episode 9 — which featured the forcible ejection of Cody Bollinger and a savage performance by Sarah Moras — received a viewer average of only 452,000, a 5% drop from the freakin’ clip show. Obviously, the numbers were hurt once again by having to compete with Game 6 of the World Series, but it’s safe to assume that the UFC will never put together a mid-season recap episode for TUF ever again, because that shit is apparently ratings suicide. (By the way, is there really that much crossover between MMA fans and baseball fans? I can’t think of two more dissimilar sports, but I guess a lot of people were watching the MLB post-season this year. I don’t know. I wasn’t one of them.)

The recent TUF ratings news is just the latest in a string of bad viewership numbers for the UFC…

According to Dave Meltzer’s most recent pay-per-view buyrate column on MMAFighting, UFC 165: Jones vs. Gustafsson brought in somewhere between 300,000-325,000 PPV buys — by far the lowest tally for a Bones-headlined pay-per-view card — while the early estimates for UFC 166: Velasquez vs. Dos Santos 3 “are in the same range, or very slightly up” from UFC 165.

Yes, UFC 166 had to compete with the MLB post-season, and UFC 165 may have suffered from its proximity to the blockbuster Mayweather/Canelo boxing match. But excuses aside, those are terrible numbers for title fights in the UFC’s two heaviest weight classes. Over on BloodyElbow, Nate Wilcox suggests what the real culprit might be, and adds some interesting historical context to the numbers:

It seems obvious to me that the moves from Spike TV where preview shows for UFC PPVs sometimes drew over a million viewers to FX/Fuel TV and now FS1/FS2 has dramatically reduced the UFC’s promotional reach.

It’s also worth noting that when UFC 99 did 360,000 buys in the summer of 2009 that was considered the “floor” for UFC ppv buys. It was an event taking place in Germany and airing in the U.S. in the mid-afternoon and featuring a non-title fight between Rich Franklin and Wanderlei Silva. If you’d told me in 2009 that four years later the UFC HW and LHW titles would draw comparable PPV numbers I’d have laughed in your face.

In 2013, that “floor” has been re-located to the sub-basement.

In a related story, last Saturday’s UFC Fight Night 30: Machida vs. Munoz show — which aired in the middle of the day on an obscure channel called FOX Sports 2 — brought in just 122,000 viewers, which was even less than the audience generated by the World Series of Fighting 6: Burkman vs. Carl event that aired that night on NBC Sports (161,000 viewers).

Which brings us to a pair of questions we seem to be asking a lot these days: Does anybody even care anymore? And how low can these TUF ratings go?

Jessica Eye Says She Is ‘100 Percent’ Single and Horny

Earlier this month, Jessica Eye made waves in the women’s bantamweight division when she upset former Strikeforce champ Sarah Kaufman with a split decision win at UFC 166 in Houston.
Just 10 days later, “Evil” sent different ripples through the MMA gra…

Earlier this month, Jessica Eye made waves in the women’s bantamweight division when she upset former Strikeforce champ Sarah Kaufman with a split decision win at UFC 166 in Houston.

Just 10 days later, “Evil” sent different ripples through the MMA grapevine by liberally admitting specifics of her sex life on an episode of MMA Roasted.

“No, unfortunately I do not [have a boyfriend]. Boys are scared of me…I think I’m too confident for them, but that’s a whole ‘nother story.”

Eye then delved even deeper into the subject, saying: “I don’t randomly [hook up] outside relationships. [But] I’m not going without my needs being required or met at any point. … Sure! [I’m single and horny], 100 percent. … It’s been a long time.”

Although Eye expanded on some controversial personal issues, the Cleveland-based 27-year-old also made sure to drive home her concrete moral boundaries.

I think that’s what kind of keeps me back from dating because now I feel like I’m in that position when every time a guy talks to me it’s only because of who I am and not really who I am…if that makes sense. Ain’t no man going to have that on me [dude who slept with a UFC fighter]. There is no man running around Cleveland like, ‘Oh, I hit that.’ … No you didn’t, liar, because you ain’t getting none from me.

The seventh-ranked Eye, who got praised by UFC president Dana White following her win over the fifth-ranked Kaufman at the UFC 166 post-fight press conference, is riding an eight-fight winning streak. She suffered her lone career setback in a submission loss [rear-naked choke] to Brazilian jiu-jitsu purple belt Aisling Daly at NAAFS: Fight Night in the Flats 7 in June 2011.

Before nipping Kaufman, Evil submitted Zoila Frausto Gurgel with a standing arm-triangle choke at Bellator 83 in Dec. 2012. Eye then earned a unanimous decision win over Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt Carina Damm at NAAFS: Fight Night in the Flats 9 in June.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Friday Link Dump: Chael Sonnen’s Strange Offer to Anderson Silva, The 7 Greatest Sports Fan Fights, ‘CHUPACOBRA’ + More

(CHUPACOBRA starring Frank Stallone. Your daily dose of ‘WTF?’ via Break.com)

Chael Sonnen Would Like to Reach Out to Anderson Silva to Be Assistant Coach on TUF: Brazil (MMAFighting)

Report: Early Indicators Point to Disappointing Buyrate for UFC 166 (BloodyElbow)

Machida vs. Munoz: Complete Guide to UFC Fight Night 30 Fight Card (BleacherReport)

Pearson Hoping to Avoid Melendez-Sanchez Like Slugfest (MMAConvert)

Throwback Video: Herb Dean’s MMA Debut (CagePotatoMMA.tumblr.com)

7 Most Memorable Sports Fan Fights (MensFitness)

Floyd Mayweather Gives His Lady a 25-Carat Engagement Ring (TerezOwens)

Christina Hendricks Talks Scotch, Moustaches (MadeMan)

10 Reasons Why Your NBA Team Won’t Make the Playoffs This Season (Complex)

‘The Counselor’ Review: Verbosity and Violence (FilmDrunk)

8 Manly Halloween Costume Ideas (DoubleViking)

The Ultimate Scare Prank Freak Out Compilation (WorldwideInterweb)

Butthoven’s 5th Symphony (Michelle L’Amour…kind of NSFW, but awesome)


(CHUPACOBRA starring Frank Stallone. Your daily dose of ‘WTF?’ via Break.com)

Chael Sonnen Would Like to Reach Out to Anderson Silva to Be Assistant Coach on TUF: Brazil (MMAFighting)

Report: Early Indicators Point to Disappointing Buyrate for UFC 166 (BloodyElbow)

Machida vs. Munoz: Complete Guide to UFC Fight Night 30 Fight Card (BleacherReport)

Pearson Hoping to Avoid Melendez-Sanchez Like Slugfest (MMAConvert)

Throwback Video: Herb Dean’s MMA Debut (CagePotatoMMA.tumblr.com)

7 Most Memorable Sports Fan Fights (MensFitness)

Floyd Mayweather Gives His Lady a 25-Carat Engagement Ring (TerezOwens)

Christina Hendricks Talks Scotch, Moustaches (MadeMan)

10 Reasons Why Your NBA Team Won’t Make the Playoffs This Season (Complex)

‘The Counselor’ Review: Verbosity and Violence (FilmDrunk)

8 Manly Halloween Costume Ideas (DoubleViking)

The Ultimate Scare Prank Freak Out Compilation (WorldwideInterweb)

Butthoven’s 5th Symphony (Michelle L’Amour…kind of NSFW, but awesome)

Diego Sanchez, Melvin Guillard Dispute Media Report About Past Sparring Sessions

Former MMA teammates under Greg Jackson, Diego Sanchez and Melvin Guillard, both have a bone to pick with a recent media report where “The Young Assassin” was asked his opinion on the recent thriller between Sanchez and Gilbert Melendez at UFC 166…

Former MMA teammates under Greg Jackson, Diego Sanchez and Melvin Guillard, both have a bone to pick with a recent media report where “The Young Assassin” was asked his opinion on the recent thriller between Sanchez and Gilbert Melendez at UFC 166

Speaking to MMA Junkie, Guillard apparently made a bold statement regarding the front-running “Fight of the Year” candidate and his old friend: 

“I would have dropped either one of them,” Guillard is quoted in the report. “I used to drop Diego Sanchez in practice all the time. When I hit people, I hurt people. That’s just what I do.”

This reporter/fan was intrigued by the statement, so I thought I’d tweet at “The Dream” for his side of the story. The over 11-year fight veteran was not amused by his ex-training partner’s alleged comment.

At a glance, it looked like a new feud was brewing in the UFC’s highly competitive lightweight division. However, Guillard responded early this morning stating he was misquoted in the interview in question. 

Guillard, who is just 2-4 in his past six bouts, has a chance to re-enter the 155-pound division’s top 15 with a decisive win over fellow slugger Ross Pearson this Saturday.

Meanwhile, Sanchez is 3-2 in his past 5 matchups inside the cage, the same record he’s compiled at lightweight, and has already expressed interest in a five-round fight with former UFC title challenger Nate Diaz.  

MMA Junkie did not immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment on the situation, though the story will be updated if a response is given at any point.  

UPDATE: 1:56 P.M. Eastern Time

MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn, a co-author on the original story, said in an e-mail that the quotes were obtained from a pre-UFC Fight Night 30 media scrum, providing an audio clip to back up his claim. 

The audio clip, which was provided to Bleacher Report, accurately reflects what Guillard was quoted as saying in MMA Junkie’s piece about Guillard.  

 

John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA Editor for eDraft.com.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC Cuts Joey Beltran for 2nd Time After UFC 166 Loss

Joey Beltran will have to find a new employer if he wants to continue his MMA career.
On his Twitter account on Wednesday, he thanked Dana White and Joe Silva for the opportunity of fighting in the UFC.
Although his profile still appears on the UF…

Joey Beltran will have to find a new employer if he wants to continue his MMA career.

On his Twitter account on Wednesday, he thanked Dana White and Joe Silva for the opportunity of fighting in the UFC.

Although his profile still appears on the UFC website, it seems that the UFC has cut Beltran for the second time in his career.

This comes on the heels of a split-decision loss to Fabio Maldonaldo on October 9, although Beltran could argue that he won. However, his failed drug test following his win (later overturned to a no-contest) over Igor Pokrajac in December 2012 likely did him no favors. Going winless in his return to the Octagon (0-3) didn’t help, either.

Prior to being re-signed by the UFC to face James Te Huna in July 2012, Beltran made a successful debut at light heavyweight against Anton Talamantes. Beltran had dropped down in weight after losing to Lavar Johnson via KO (his only loss due to KO/TKO) in January 2012, which marked a 1-4 run to finish his initial UFC run.

No disrespect to Beltran, but it’s hard to knock the UFC for cutting him. He is an entertaining fighter, but nobody is pegging him to make a world title run during his career. Considering how many top young prospects are still competing outside the Octagon, it makes more sense for the UFC to sign a younger fighter with a higher ceiling than Beltran.

He likely won’t have a tough time finding a new gig, as exciting fighters aren’t easy to come by. The fact that he’s also competed in the UFC will help his negotiations as well.

Considering the lack of depth in Bellator, I wouldn’t be surprised if the promotion signed Beltran to the roster and allowed him to compete at heavyweight.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 166: Junior Dos Santos’ BJJ Coach ‘Never Considered Throwing in the Towel’

Following UFC 166, one of the hot-button topics has been the toughness of Junior dos Santos. The Brazilian survived another vicious beating at the hands of Cain Velasquez, but for many fans, it should have never gotten that far.
A popular thought is th…

Following UFC 166, one of the hot-button topics has been the toughness of Junior dos Santos. The Brazilian survived another vicious beating at the hands of Cain Velasquez, but for many fans, it should have never gotten that far.

A popular thought is that Dos Santos’ coaches should have called the fight to save some brain cells for their fighter. One man who doesn’t agree is Yuri Carlton, Dos Santos’ Brazilian jiu-jitsu coach. He spoke to MMA Fighting about the controversial bout.

To be honest, I never considered throwing in the towel. If something like that ever happens, Luiz Carlos Dorea (boxing coach) would be the one to decide. I was hoping for the knockout all the time. In the fifth round, “Cigano” went for that choke. Anything can happen. We see a guy lose the whole fight and then win in the last round. It happens all the time. We’re not impressed by blood or anything like that, neither is Cigano. He always fights for the win, no matter what.

Actually, we almost never see a fighter win after being beaten for four rounds. We’ve only seen a fifth-round stoppage in the UFC on five occasions: Randy Couture vs. Ricco Rodriguez at UFC 39, BJ Penn vs. Diego Sanchez at UFC 107, Anderson Silva vs. Chael Sonnen at UFC 117, Demetrious Johnson vs. John Moraga at UFC on Fox: Johnson vs. Moraga and Velasquez vs. Dos Santos at UFC 166.

Everyone could see that Dos Santos was done after the second round. Sure, he still tried to wing knockout punches, but they weren’t working against Velasquez’ perfect game plan. To his credit, JDS was able to land some nice short elbows from the clinch, but outside of the opening minutes of the first round, he offered little resistance to Velasquez’s grinding style.

I understand that Carlton isn’t in a position to toss in the towel because he isn’t the head coach, but at the same time, he still has a responsibility to his fighter to suggest the idea to the other coaches.

Also, considering that the Brazilian’s coaches knew their fighter was on “autopilot” after the second round, it’s clear that the fight should have never made it to the fifth round.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com