News Archive for Mma

Has The UFC Wounded Itself With Kimbo Slice?

Sunday, December 6th, 2009
The Kimbo Slice Carnival Lives

The Kimbo Slice Carnival Lives

Many questions were in the air in Las Vegas on Saturday, as Kimbo Slice took to the octagon for his first official UFC fight.  While much of the focus was on Slice, the spotlight should have been placed on Dana White.

Once upon a time, Dana White told MMA fans that Kimbo Slice was a joke to the sport and would never see the inside of the octagon unless he won The Ultimate Fighter.  Well, Kimbo didn’t win TUF and was invited into the octagon anyways.  So what’s the deal?

The deal is that the UFC is more about sports entertainment than it is about sport these days.  Built on the foundation of following WWE shows on Spike, UFC sold itself out long ago by appealing to folks that think Vince McMahon’s product is actually real.  The recipe: build story lines, deliver the drama and then send some sensational athletes out there to display their acrobatic skill.

During the TUF 10 Finale last night, UFC came closer to becoming sports entertainment than any time in its history.  Kimbo Slice was matched up with an undersized light heavyweight named Houston Alexander, a huge flop in the UFC that got brought back for a staged feeding.  The story line we were sold was that Alexander was a skilled fighter that was desperately trying to get back into the UFC and that  Slice was his way back in.

In my years of watching MMA, this fight now rates #1 on the worst fights I’ve ever seen.  It made me come away with a feeling like it was staged.  This is not just because of the EliteXC debacle with Slice, its what was displayed in the cage.  Alexander refused to initiate action, circling and running throughout.  He never attempted an aggressive move for 15 minutes.  This was not a guy desperate for his path back in.

Here is my analysis of what went down:

First, Alexander was taken down into a ground-and-pound position with Slice in side control.  As most wrestlers know, you never lay on your hips on the side  without your leg hooks in, otherwise the other guy will step over or roll you.  But here was Slice, lying on the side of his hip with Alexander making no attempt to breakout despite his center of gravity being higher.   Needless to say, a bantamweight could have turned the tide on Slice given his awful positioning.  These are basic you learn during pee wee wrestling.

Second, Alexander was continually attacking with lower leg kicks.  Part of the “story” was that Slice was experiencing serious arthritis in the knee.  At one point in the fight, Slice was chopped down to the mat by a leg kick from Alexander.   Rather than pouncing on the fallen opponent, Alexander hesitated, backed off and then made a half attempt to make it look like he thought about attacking.  It was pathetic.

Finally, in the closing seconds, Alexander clearly rocked Slice with a shot to the head as the fighters brawled.  Slice went stumbling backwards, clearly affected by the shot with less than 10 seconds left.   Given the closeness of the fight, Alexander needed the round to win.  Again, instead of pouncing like a fighter “desperate” for a victory, Alexander hesitated and never tried to go for the kill.

Needless to say, this was one of the most despicable displays of fighting I’ve witnessed in the cage.  More shocking is the commentary on MMA blogs and forums off people discussing the fight that have limited to no knowledge on fighting skills.

The final word.  Kimbo Slice’s skills have not improved at all.  Houston Alexander never attempted to fight him and we’ll all be left puzzled to the answers behind his decision not to aggressively attack.

The UFC will likely continue to promote this carnival sideshow that is Kimbo Slice.  Basically, Kimbo equals dollar signs.  While he seems to be a nice guy, he’s just not a skilled fighter and he hurts the credibility of the sport. He’s become the Mike Tyson sideshow of MMA.

The UFC went back on its word that Slice would never enter the ring and not one media outlet and saying boo.  Where was the media hammering Dana White for not keeping his word?  Why was he not taken to task as a sellout?

Congratulations Dana White, the crown has been passed from Vince McMahon as the greatest promoter of sports entertainment.

Thankfully for sports purists, Strikeforce is making in roads in great strides and Bellator will be back in April with live weekly telecasts.

Is The UFC Talent Pool Drying Up?

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Another UFC event has come and gone leaving a bad taste in the mouth of those shelling out $50 for the pay-per-view fights.  Lets all breath a collective yawn and get ready for the next uninspiring card that will air in three weeks.

UFC 106 was viewed by many as the weakest event of the year due to the cancellation of the main event featuring Brock Lesnar and Shane Carwin.  Even before the original main event was cancelled, not much interest was being generated on what was expected to be a main event mismatch of grand proportions.

Dana White Is Concerned About Judging, Not Fight Quality

Dana White Is Concerned About Judging, Not Fight Quality

How did Dana White try to fix the hole in the event?  Well, lets sell Ortiz/Griffin as the main event and we’ll plug in Koscheck/Johnson as co-feature even though they will have just 3 weeks of training.   People will drink the koolaid, just got to mix in the sugar.

This is now five straight events that were below the standards of the normal UFC product we’ve come to know.   Uninteresting main events, weak undercards and too much WWE-laden drama.   While UFC 107 stands to offer an interesting set of overall fights for the first time in months, the main event will be an extreme mismatch for the lightweight championship belt.

Which brings forward the question…are there really any true contenders out there for the championship belts?

If you breakdown each weight class, outside of light heavyweight, the gap between the champions and the “#1 Contenders” is widening.  Lesnar, Anderson Silva, George St. Pierre and BJ Penn are all at no immediate risk of losing their belts.  There is nobody coming up the ranks to deliver a challenge, which poses a big problem for the UFC.  Whose the next real contender?

Great fighting events are defined by the main feature.  Nobody goes home remembering the warmup fights.  In fact, people don’t start streaming into the arena until the last couple of fights.  The UFC cannot expect to sustain its dominance if it cannot fix the top of its fight cards.  To fix these problems, here are a few things that the UFC is going to need to address:

  • Reduce the number of events per year
  • Larger win bonuses, lower minimum purse
  • Begin fostering new fighter development
  • Start cross-promoting with other organizations

The biggest problem with the UFC right now is that they are doing too many fights.  When you couple this with not increasing the number of fighters under the promotion, it decreases the quality of the events.  The UFC is clearly going after cash while sacrificing product quality and hording its profits.  This has to stop soon or it is going to come back to bite them.  If you can’t increase the number of fighters in the stable, you cannot put on this many events.

As shown during Season 1 of Bellator, if you hang the money carrot you get better fights.   While Bellator didn’t have many of the big name fighters, just ask anyone that attended an event whether they got their money’s worth on the tickets.   What made for the better fights was the incentive to win and the fighters went for the kill.  In the UFC, the fighters are more worried about their next payday versus their current, and this can only be recitified by lowering their guaranteed purses and making them work for the payout.

Next, please put The Ultimate Fighter out of its misery.  The show has turned into Big Brother inside of a cage.  Its no longer about fighter development, its about tv ratings and advertiser dollars.  How else can you explain the sad sacks on display in TUF 10 or the unbelievable decision to not invite the up-and-comer Tyron Woodley for TUF 9.  Its about finding “personalities”, not fighters.  The UFC needs talent development.  When was the last time an undercard fighter made his debut with the UFC?  I can’t recall.  Reliance on the smaller promotions to build fighters and stealing them is not a long-term strategy for success.

And finally, the time for Dana White to swallow his pride and acknowledge that the other organizations now have equal fighter quality has come.   Nobody wants to see BJ Penn fight anyone in the UFC, they want to see him against Shinya Aoki or Eddie Alvarez.   Do you want to pay $50 to watch Silva slaughter the talentless UFC foes, or would you rather see him fight Jake Shields, Hector Lombard or Gegard Mousasi.  And do I even need to bring up commentary about the heavyweight division…Fedor?

The time is now for the UFC to shore up its product.  No more whiny calf sniveling from Dana White about the poor judging.  This issue with the UFC latest string of fights has nothing to do with judges…it has everything to do with a stale business model that is prepared to get knocked down by the competition if it cannot recognize the error in its current strategy.

Couture Takes Unanimous Decision over Vera at UFC 105

Saturday, November 14th, 2009
Randy Couture Reign Victorious at UFC 105

Randy Couture Reign Victorious at UFC 105

Randy Couture displayed that age is not slowing him down just yet, but is catching up with him.   At 46 years old, the former UFC champion Couture (17-10) was able to score a slim victory over the much younger challenger Brandon Vera (11-4) in a light heavyweight clash at UFC 105 in Manchester, England.

In an uneventful fight with a limited amount action, the two former Greco-Roman wrestlers spent the majority of the fight in the clinch along the cage wall.   Couture was able to maintain control, keeping Vera pinned along the cage wall while delivering surgical blows to the head and body.   The referee was active, breaking the clinches, but Couture imposed his will taking Vera back to the cage with consistency.

Action torqued up a notch midway through round two shortly after a clinch was broken.  Vera was able to keep keep his distance and land a sharp leg kick to the midsection which dropped Couture to the mat.  Vera attacked quickly, landed some blows, but was unable to put Couture away.

Couture moved the fight back to the cage wall in the third round, dictating the pace and focus of the fight.   Couture again surgical delivered shots with Vera smiling that the blows were not phasing him.  After another re-start in the last minute, Vera attacked quickly landing a shot which stunned Couture.  Vera followed through with a takedown and gained a mount.  Couture was able to tie him up and stop Vera from scoring any major blows, perhaps saving the fight.

Awaiting the decision in the middle of the cage, Vera’s camp looked confident they had taken the fight.  As ring announcer declared all score cards in favor of Couture at 29-28, Vera seemed stunned by the loss.

Vera really has nobody to blame for this loss but himself.  Couture brought very little to the cage on this evening and Vera was happy to oblige, allowing Couture to lay on him and be inactive throughout the fight.  Vera showed way too much respect throughout the fight and really only put forward two offensive attacks over the fifteen minutes in the cage.  His loss to Couture eliminate any future plans Vera had at a potential championship shot or even a fight against the other top contenders in the light heavyweight division.

As for Couture, it appears that it is time for him to seriously consider retirement, regardless of his newly-minted multiple fight contract with the UFC.  Couture will undoubtedly be offered another championship shot at light heavyweight at the expense of more deserving fighters.  On this evening, Couture displayed fading skills against a second-tier fighter in a lower weight class.

As with boxing, the greats of the sport seem to find it hard to call it quits.

Hardy Wins by Decision, Earns Shot at GSP

Saturday, November 14th, 2009
Hardy Defeats Swick, Earns Shot at GSP

Hardy Defeats Swick, Earns Shot at GSP

The tension was clearly visible at the beginning of the matchup between welterweight contenders Dan Hardy and Mike Swick.  With a possible title shot against George St. Pierre, the fighters stared each other down and refused to touch gloves to start the fight.  That early tension carried out through the fight, with Dan Hardy pulling out a hard-fought unanimous decision of 30-27, 30-27 and 29-28.

Swick (14-3), a former middleweight that recently dropped to the welterweight class, dictated the action for most of the first round.  It was clear for early on Swick’s focus was to make the fight a grappling affair, working the clinch and backing Hardy (23-6) into the cage wall.  The fighters spent most of the round trading advantage position along the cage wall without delivering much damage to each other.

Hardy changed the momentum quickly to start the second round, landing a heavy right that stunned Swick and buckled him backward.  Hardy grabbed for a clinch and fired away with a flurry of hard strikes to the head and body.  Hardy landed a snapping uppercut before moving back to the center.  Swick was able to landed some nice counters lefts, but Hardy ended the round with a few solid strikes to win a convincing round.

As the third and final round began, the body blows delivered by Hardy appeared to have taken their toll on Swick.  Hardy outgunned the man known as “Quick”, landing a series of blows that stunned Swick once again.  Hardy then took the fight to the mat and landed some hard blows before being put back on their feet by the referee.  Hardy didn’t let up, going on the offensive with a series of blows to close out the round and take the bout.

With George St. Pierre in attendance, the upcoming championship bout appears set for 2010 as the fighters met in the cage during after fight interviews to begin promoting the fight.

Bisping Sharp, TKOs Kang

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

Michael Bisping of Great Britain (18-2) made a solid return to the cage Saturday night, getting a TKO on punches over Denis Kang (32-12-1) in the second round at UFC 105 held in Manchester, England.  After a lackluster first round with Kang in control, Bisping shifted the momentum, scoring the TKO at 4:24 of the second round.

Bisping Lands Critical Blow En Route to Victory (Sherdog.com)

Bisping Lands Critical Blow En Route to Victory (Sherdog.com)

Bisping, coming off his first loss by stoppage at the hands of Dan Henderson at UFC 100, was the fighter in the spotlight tonight, with his legion of fans waiting to see how he would respond after being viciously knocked out in his last fight.  Kang served as a dangerous fight for a fighter that clearly needed a confidence building affair.

Kang dictated the action throughout most of the first round.  Connecting with a solid blow to the head early in the first round, Bisping hit the mat hard and Kang pounce and delivered extensive ground and pound, connecting to the head and body consistently for almost three minutes.  While Kang was in control, he was unable to land any punishing blows and Bisping displayed some excellent defensive skills as he recovered from the flash knockdown.

During the break between rounds, Bisping seemed dazed and was gathering himself throughout.  Bisping asked his trainers what happened to send him to mat, signaling that Bisping was significantly hurt and may perhaps have been concussed.

The second round started with the fighters trading punches on their feet.  Bisping scored a strong takedown around two minutes into the round, turning the momentum of the fight in his direction.  Posturing up over top of Kang, Bisping unleashed a fury of punches that punished Kang.  Scrambling, Kang was able to flee the assault and get back to his feet while bleeding heavily from the nose.

Bisping was in control from there, taking Kang down twice more and landing a barrage of punches while posturing up.  The second flurry of unanswered shots rendered Kang helpless, causing the referee to step in and call a stop to the fight.

Fighting in front of his hometown fans, Bisping displayed great heart and grit in getting himself back into the win column.  While he started slow, Bisping delivered one of his best performances in recent memory.  The former TUF 3 champion reminded many why he is still a man to be reckoned with in the middleweight division.

Emelianenko Cements His Status, Flattens Rogers

Sunday, November 8th, 2009
Fedor Emelianenko

Emelianenko Breaks Nose, Flattens Rogers by TKO

A mystique hovers over this man, simply known as Fedor by mixed martial arts fans.  Having fought almost exclusively in Japan, Fedor was an unknown entity to most MMA fans here in the USA, leaving them blood thirsty for a chance to learn more about him.  Last night, the Russian phenom was given his grand stage, a national primetime broadcast audience on CBS, and he didn’t leave the fans disappointed as he pushed his record to 31-1 with a TKO victory over previously unbeaten Brett Rogers (10-1) at the Strikeforce / M-1 Global event.

A matchup between a standup brawler in Rogers and the sambo expert Emelianenko was sure to be electric with action and it started right at the bell.  Rogers was the first to draw blood, literally, with a snapping jab that broke Emelianenko’s nose just seconds into the fight, sending a flow of blood streaming onto the fighters’ bodies and the mat.

Rogers was able dictate the pace early in the first round and place Emelianenko on the defensive.  Rogers even impressed on the ground, Emelianenko’s domain, fending off a quick submission attempt with relative ease.  The nine-year veteran Emelianenko maintained his calm demeanor in the cage and waited for his opening as Rogers continued his aggressive approach.  As the first round wore on, Emelianenko shifted the momentum of the fight, scoring both on his feet and on the ground as the round came to a close.

As the second round began, Emelianenko had the air of confidence as he came to center while Rogers appeared somewhat winded.   Rogers showed hesitancy to keep the fight in a boxing / striking mode given the shots delivered by Emelianenko and changed his strategy to clinchig along the cage wall.  After some inaction, referee “Big” John McCarthy moved the fight back to center and that is where it ended.  With a cat-like pouncing attack, Emelianenko landed a right hook that crumpled Rogers to the canvas and brought the TKO stoppage at 1:48 of the second round.

The six-plus minutes that Emelianenko waged in the cage displayed to Americans that the title of best pound-for-pound MMA fighters is certainly deserved.  Emelianenko brings forward a combination of power, agility, precision, determination and technique that is not present in other fighters within the sport.  He displayed capabilities that showed exactly how far behind his opponents are in the heavyweight division.  It is a rarity to see a man of this size put on an exhibition of skills normally seen in fighters half his size.

So what does Emelianenko’s victory and Strikeforce’s CBS event mean to the sport of MMA?  First, it displayed that the UFC has not cornered the market on talent.  Placing the current UFC champ Brock Lesnar into the cage with Emelianenko would be criminal given Lesnar’s complete lack of martial arts experience.  Strikeforce, along with other burgeoning MMA promotions like DREAM and Bellator, are showing MMA fans that they can look beyond the recent slate of disappointing UFC events.

Second, it has brought a spotlight to the mainstream sports viewing audience that MMA is more sport than carnival atmosphere that has been radiating from UFC’s entanglement with Spike’s pro wrestling audience and the TUF reality show which is more like the TV show Big Brother than a training ground to find the next contender.

For Emelianenko and Strikeforce, the question is what’s next?  With reports circulating at Sherdog that Emelianenko broke his nose and injured his hand, there may be a delay until the next fight as he recuperates from the injury.  Rumors are swirling that his next fight under the Strikeforce banner will come against Fabricio Werdum, a unanimous decision winner on last night’s undercard.  After that, it appears a matchup against Alistair Overeem should he re-dedicate himself to MMA rather than dallying in kickboxing.  But are these the fights we want to see?

Inevitably it comes down to Emelianenko finding a way to come to terms with Dana White and the UFC to end the debate, as it will not cease until Emelianenko figuratively puts a sock in White’s mouth once and for all and dismantles his overhyped champion Brock Lesnar.  Here’s hoping that White will see the light and realize the sport of MMA needs fights across promotions for its long-term success and that Emelianenko can take MMA to the next level of respectability in sports fan eyes.