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Monday, December 21, 2009

Status Report on the Evolution of Strikeforce vs. the UFC

Status Report on the Evolution of Strikeforce vs. the UFC

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on December 21, 2009
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Is a successful Strikeforce good for Mixed Martial Arts?

  • Yes
  • No
  • I don't know
  • What's "Mixed Martial Arts?" Is that like Ultimate Fighting?
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The most recent Strikeforce event was a perfect description of what is happening with the promotion today. We are seeing the Evolution of Strikeforce from a glorified regional Mixed Martial Arts promotion into a leading world class promotion.

Strikeforce started out as a kickboxing promotion in 1985 and didn't enter the Mixed Martial Arts world until 2006. From 2006 to 2007, Strikeforce truly was a regional promotion. In the first two years of their existence, Strikeforce never held a single event outside of California. Only one event was ever held outside of the Bay Area of California.

In the promotion's early days, Strikeforce maintained it's existence mostly based upon the fame of a local MMA legend, Frank "The Legend" Shamrock and another renowned local martial artist, Cung Le. They gradually added other legendary fighters, most of whom were well past their prime. Never viewing Strikeforce as a real threat to the UFC, the UFC President Dana White even praised Strikeforce on several occasions.

From 2008 to 2009, the entire landscape of MMA changed rapidly. For the most part, changes came because of what was going on outside of Strikeforce and not because of anything Strikeforce did. Pride FC died and many of its fighters went looking for non-UFC options. The IFL died. Bodog Fights died. Affliction died. Several other promotions died. Elite XC died and Strikeforce agreed to take on many of their contracts and assets.

The mass failure of so many MMA promotions created a very large mass of fighters with nowhere to go. Some were good enough to make it in the UFC but had no desire to fight for them. Some were not good enough for the UFC to seriously consider signing them. Add to that the typical stream of UFC castoffs and UFC malcontents and Strikeforce has seen a rapid influx of world class fighters.

The year of 2009 has been an incredible year for Strikeforce. Fedor Emelianenko, Gegard Mousasi, Antonio Silva, Bobby Lashley, Sokodjou, Dan Henderson, Jason Miller, and Hershel Walker, just to name a few. Strikeforce has added both star power and real talent to it's roster. They also are hoping to add Roger Gracie and Shiya Aoki to their roster in the immediate future, though nothing has been finalized for this.

Whether they intended to or not, Strikeforce has clearly established itself as one of the top five promotions in the world. Arguably, they are second only to the UFC right now, and their star continues to climb rapidly.

So how is Strikeforce doing? To really answer that, we have to have a basis for comparison. The choice is obvious: The UFC.


Name recognition and marketability:

UFC = A
MMA = C
Strikeforce = C-


There is a huge segment of the world's population that hasn't a clue what "MMA" is. Tell them it stands for "Mixed Martial Arts" and they'll continue to stare blankly at you. But virtually all of them will immediately know what you're talking about if you say "Ultimate Fighting."

This puts every other promotion at a significant disadvantage, of course. Making the word "Strikeforce" a household name is a very, very long ways from happening, but Scott Coker and company have a lot of things working in their favor in this department. Broadcast contracts with Showtime and CBS are sure to help.

Talent Acquisition and Retention:

UFC = B+
Strikeforce = A


Again and again, Strikeforce has succeeded where the UFC failed.

Most notably, the UFC failed to sign Gegard Mousasi and Fedor Emelianenko. Strikeforce succeeded. The UFC's negotiations with Dan Henderson failed, and Strikeforce acquired him as a result.

Strikeforce has been extremely busy recruiting fighters, much more so than the UFC. The reason for this is pretty obvious. The UFC is overcrowded in almost every division. Strikeforce has very little depth at every division.

Despite the many missed opportunities, the UFC has continued to draw the best MMA fighters in the world with few exceptions.

Cross promotional relationships:


UFC = D-
Strikeforce = A


Strikeforce has good relations with DREAM and many other non-UFC promotions. It is viewed as perfectly acceptable for Strikeforce fighters to head over to Japan and fight in the DREAM tournaments, something that today's UFC would never tolerate.

In return for this, fighters from DREAM and many other promotions view Strikeforce as a place they can go to fight without locking themselves out of all other promotional competition.

Heavyweight Divison:


UFC = A-
Strikeforce = B-


The acquisition of Fedor Emeilianenko was huge. Unfortunately, Strikeforce has insisted on patiently waiting for their Heavyweight Champion to once again fight for Strikeforce.

Alistair Overeem hasn't fought for Strikeforce for over two years, but has racked up six MMA fights and five K-1 kickboxing fights outside of Strikeforce. Overeem will fight in his seventh non-Strikeforce MMA match on December 31st of this year and is already negotiating for more non-Strikeforce matchups.

Whispers abound that Strikeforce's prodigal champion will return, but nothing definite has been scheduled. To date, Overeem has dropped out of two scheduled title defenses. As long as they retain him as their champion, Overeem will continue to be a huge black eye to Strikeforce's otherwise impressive Heavyweight Division.

Above all else, what Strikeforce's Heavyweight Division has going for it is Fedor Emelianko, the best Heavyweight on the planet until proven otherwise. If Strikeforce can shift the burden of carrying their Heavyweight Division off of the shoulders of Alistair Overeem and onto Fedor Emelianenko's, they will look far more credible at Heavyweight.

Light Heavyweight Division:


UFC = A
Strikeforce = C+


The most important thing that Strikeforce has at Light Heavyweight is Gegard Mousasi. Gegard is not a UFC product in any way, yet he is legitimately in the top five Light Heavyweights on the planet.

What Strikeforce doesn't currently have as a Light Heavyweight is depth. Gegard Mousasi and Renato Sobral are the only notable world-class fighters they have for this weight. However, the presence of Gegard Mousasi should attract talent like iron filings to a magnet.

Middleweight Division:

UFC = A
Strikeforce = B+


While not up to the UFC's standards, the Middleweight Division at Strikeforce is growing in depth and talent. Jake Shields, Jason Miller, Dan Henderson (unless he decides to go Light Heavyweight), Robbie Lawler, Ronald "Jacaré" Souza, Scott Smith, Benji Radach, and Cung Le all together makes up Strikeforce's most stacked division. Several of Strikeforce's Middleweights could probably be very competitive in the UFC.

Welterweight Division:

UFC = A
Strikeforce = D-


The Welterweight Division Title at Strikeforce has remained vacant for the entire history of the promotion. Attempts to create a Welterweight Champion have centered around Nick Diaz. Nick Diaz in turn has consistently tested positive for marijuana and has been unable to fight as a result.

Rather than matching two other Welterweights for the belt, Strikeforce has decided to continue to wait patiently for their uncrowned Welterweight Champ to actually pass a drug test. Without a champion, this division might just be a figment of Strikeforce's imagination. They have fighters at this weight, but it seems pretty pointless if there's no championship for fighters to work towards.

Lightweight Division:

UFC = A
Strikeforce = C

This is actually one of Strikeforce's most active weight classes. Unfortunately, their Lightweight division is thin on talent. The title went from Clay Guida, who beat Josh Thompson to become the first Lightweight champion. Then Gilbert Melendez beat Clay Guida. Clay Guida left for the UFC.

Then Josh Thompson beat Gilbert Melendez for the title. Then Gilbert Melendez beat Josh Thompson to regain the title. All in all, the best fighters Strikeforce has to offer are no better and no worse than Clay Guida, a man who can't even wish for a title shot in the UFC.

If Strikeforce can land Shiya Aoki, that would greatly strengthen their reputation at Lightweight. On the other hand, the UFC is looking for a decent challenge for their champion BJ Penn, and Aoki's name keeps coming up. So Strikeforce and the UFC might very well find themselves competing for Aoki.

If Shinya Aoki wants flexibility, he will sign with Strikeforce. If he wants to challenge the consensus number 1 lightweight on the planet, he'll have to sign with the UFC.


Women's MMA Division:

UFC = F
Strikeforce = A


As the only major promotion that actually does women's MMA, Strikeforce is the de facto world's leader in women's MMA. The UFC has expressed no interest in creating a women's MMA division. It's impossible to know whether this will work out to Strikeforce's advantage or not.

Women's sports are very hit or miss. Women's basketball, golf, softball, soccer and others have a small but devoted following. Women's tennis is hugely popular. It's very difficult to say how much interest there will be in women's MMA ten years from now, but Strikeforce is quickly cornering the market on it.

On the whole, the future looks bright for Strikeforce. The biggest lingering question is whether they will suffer the same fate as Pride FC, Affliction, the IFL and Elite XC. Scott Coker seems to be making all the right moves, but it's impossible to know what the future will bring for Strikeforce. Currently, they're nowhere near to equaling the proverbial 800 pound gorilla of MMA, the UFC. Still, as they continue to grow and develop, this might change. It will be interesting to see how it all plays out.

According to the Strikeforce website, they are working on the following matchups for their next CBS broadcast in April 2010:
Fedor Emelianenko vs Fabricio Werdum
Dan Henderson vs Jake Shields
Gilbert Melendez vs Shinya Aoki
Josh Thomson vs Tatsuya Kawajiri or KJ Noons

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Steve Mazzagatti Stikes Again: The Stupid Ref and Dumb Rules Factors

Steve Mazzagatti Stikes Again: The Stupid Ref and Dumb Rules Factors

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on December 09, 2009
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What should have been the outcome of Jones vs Hamill?

  • TKO win for Jon Jones
  • No Contest
  • DQ win for Matt Hamill
  • Don't know
  • Don't care
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The Ultimate Fighter 10 Finale has come and gone.

The most notable fight all night was also the most controversial.

I'll level with you. The Jon Jones Disqualification loss pissed me off like few things in the world can.

Is this because I'm a Jon Jones fan? Yes, but that's only a small part of it.

Even if I were a Jon Jones hater, I'd be mad as hell at the outcome of that fight. Loss by disqualification has been irksome to me for a long, long time.

For starters, there are too many nitpicky rules in this sport, and the purity of MMA as a legitimate combat sport suffers as a result.

Jones vs. Hamill was extremely reminiscent of Yushin Okami beating Anderson Silva by disqualification.

For those who might be unfamiliar, Yushin Okami was getting beat up by Silva, but managed to take the Spider down. So, there you had Yushin Okami in top position and leaning back, ready to unleash a barrage of ground and pound. Then, out of nowhere, Anderson Silva landed a devastating kick to Okami’s face, knocking him out cold.

Then the strike was deemed illegal because Okami's knees were on the mat when the kick landed.

The win was handed to Okami—once he finally came to that is.

Let’s think about this rule for just a moment.

Fine enough to say that a standing opponent cannot kick a grounded opponent. Equally understandable that a fighter in top position can’t knee or kick to the head. But should it be illegal to unload an upkick from flat on your back from inside your own guard?

I’d say if you can actually manage to do it, then go for it!

Bottom position is a significantly disadvantageous place to be. If you can actually upkick, then why not allow it? It offers one more thing for the guy in top position to have to worry about. The maneuver is almost impossible to execute after all.

Enforcement of this rule is just one more disadvantage to a fighter who is flat on his back.

Then we have the "12 to 6" elbow rule.

To tell you the truth, I didn't even know this rule existed until the Jones vs. Hamill fight. So what this rule says is essentially "you can strike with elbows from top position, but you can't strike with certain kinds of elbows."

To comprehend the wrong-headed logic of this, it would pretty much be like banning certain punches to the head in boxing. Imagine for a moment if professional boxing changed their rules to state, "you can throw right crosses and jabs and hooks, but uppercuts are off-limits." Say what?

I know first-hand that elbows can be thrown from many angles and there really isn't an overwhelming "most lethal" elbow strike.

I can generate maximum power with an elbow thrown backwards, personally.

More than anything, it just depends on where your opponent is in relation to you. A 12 to 6 strike is not any more powerful than 9 o'clock to 3 o’clock or any other direction of elbow—it just depends on your posture, build, and technique.

It's pretty effective if you're standing stationary and striking an inanimate object and are free to maximize the downward force of the strike. But that form of 12 o'clock to 6 o'clock elbow strike wouldn't be likely work in a real fight. The strike would be so over-telegraphed that only an unconscious opponent would fail to get the hell out of the way or to block the strike.

In the form used by Jones, it wasn't any more powerful than any other angle of elbow strike.

It really comes down to this: Either elbows to downed opponents are allowed or they are not.

Seriously, how do you expect combatants to be thinking right in the middle of combat, “Wait a second, is this elbow strike going to be at the wrong angle?”

Of course not!

I expect that fighters are going to look for openings in their opponents' defenses and do their level best to attack where there are openings.

That is exactly what Jon Jones did Saturday evening.

Hamill took some sideways elbows and was defending those. Jones altered the angle of his strikes to compensate for Hamill's defense.

I can say this much: Both rules suck!

Neither man was warned before being penalized with an undeserved loss on their record. If Jon Jones and Anderson Silva had not KO'd their opponent, they wouldn't have lost. How screwed up is that? What bad luck that their respective opponents were unable to continue.

Only because their opponents could not continue does a penalty translate into a loss. Both disqualifications translated into, "I kicked the guy's ass. Oh yeah, and I lost the fight, too." Shouldn't you have to earn your victories by actually beating your opponents?

I understand the rules, but, at the very least, these things should go down as No Contest.

The very thought that you can get completely dominated for the entire fight, yet you get a win on your record anyway is just ridiculous.

If we're talking about blatant offenses where the referee warns the offending fighter repeatedly, then I can concede that the loss is deserved.

If you've been warned and continue to "cheat," then you deserve the loss.

But Steve Mazzagatti never warned Jon Jones. He just cavalierly jumped in and took a point away—just like he did to Brock Lesnar against Frank Mir.

That's another fight outcome that was effectively negated by Mr. Mazzagatti. And this time, if you look at the replay, it’s clear as day that Matt Hamill was already finished before the illegal elbow was thrown.

Jones was doing what MMA fighters do—finishing the fight. The ref hadn't stopped the fight yet so Jonny Jones was just pummelling away until the ref stopped it.

Ooops! Jones turned the angle of his barrage of elbows to the wrong angle! Sorry Mr. Jones, you screwed up and as a result, you lose the fight!

If I'm understanding correctly, they banned the 12 o'clock to 6 o'clock elbow because it's a popular strike for breaking boards and ice and crap like that. With that in mind, we might as well add the following to the list:

  • Axe kicks to a downed opponent's body
  • Palm strikes of all types
  • All open hand chopping strikes
  • Hammer fists
  • Front Kicks
  • Back kicks
  • Side kicks
  • All other strikes that anyone ever uses to break a board or ice with. If you can document a case of a highly effective ice/brick/board breaking with any strike, that strike instantly becomes illegal in MMA.

The essential basis for this rule is that, "if any type of strike is demonstratively effective and devastating, it must instantly be made illegal." Give it a couple more decades and the UFC will be nothing more than a pillow fighting league.

As it happens, there are a lot of strikes that can be effective at hurting your opponent. That's kind of the point, isn't it?

I have a better idea: How about dumping this idiotic rule?

How about a very serious re-thinking of every nit-picky rule in the game today? Obviously, whoever came up with this one didn't know what the hell they were talking about.

In my book, Jonny "Bones" Jones is still undefeated. He's better than undefeated; he just completely beat the crap out of Matt Hamill from the start of the fight to the end of it—a feat nobody else has ever accomplished!

This “loss,” such as it is, launches Jones into the top 10 contenders at Light Heavyweight. But will the UFC see it that way? Only the UFC brass know for certain.

The only other thing we really learned from this fight: Steve Mazzagatti is becoming a serious liability to the sport. His legacy of fight ruination is growing and growing.

This makes two fighters that would probably still be undefeated today that racked up a loss because Steve Mazzagatti is so trigger happy on penalization. Other referees, like John McCarthy and Herb Dean, issue warnings before taking points away or penalizing a fighter.

Somebody needs to stop Mazzagatti before he ruins another great fighter's undefeated record.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

A REASONABLE REALIGNMENT OF MMA WEIGHT CLASSES

A REASONABLE REALIGNMENT OF MMA WEIGHT CLASSES

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on November 14, 2009
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Does MMA need a Weight Class Adjustment?

  • Yes and you're idea is brilliant Ed! Sheer genius!!

    48.4%
  • Yes, but it needs different changes. Not these.

    22.6%
  • No, the MMA weight classes are fine, leave them alone!

    29.0%
  • Total votes: 31

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that Mixed Martial Arts weight classes need fixing. There are a number of things that are broken or that simply don’t make any sense at all.

But first of all, I want to assure everyone that this is not another “Poor Randy Couture” rant. I completely disagree with the premise of creating a new weight division just so the fans of one fighter can feel reassured that their man isn’t being picked on. Randy never asked to be babied nor coddled, and everyone who is up in arms over Brock Lesnar overwhelming him by sheer size alone must have missed the rest of Randy’s entire Heavyweight career. He’s always the David to his opponent’s Goliath. The most obvious example was Tim Sylvia, who coincidentally weighs the almost exactly the same as Brock. Tim Sylvia lost, and that fight wasn’t even close.

The most dominant Heavyweights of all time are Fedor Emelianenko (233 lbs—31 wins, 1 loss, 1 no contest), Antonio Nogueira (231 lbs—32 wins, 5 losses, 1 no contest) and Randy Couture (220 lbs—16 wins, 10 losses. 10 of his wins were title fights.) The only giant MMA fighter who could arguably make the list would be Tim Sylvia, and he lost to all three of these men.

My point is simple: Until we see the huge Heavyweights dominate the division year after year, one can hardly make a case that guys like Big-Nog, Randy and Fedor need a new weight class to protect them. As soon as they stop beating the crap out of the giant men of the sport, I’ll be convinced.

Enough said about all that. Let’s focus on the matter at hand:

What’s wrong with MMA weight classes?

The Unified Rules of MMA that are adopted by the UFC, Strikeforce and every other US-based promotion specifies the weight classes that we have currently. Most promotions based in foreign countries do their best to have roughly the same weight classes. At a glance, I suppose they sort of make sense. Here they are in all their glory:

  • Flyweight 125 lb 57 kg
  • Bantamweight 135 lb 61 kg
  • Featherweight 145 lb 66 kg
  • Lightweight 155 lb 70 kg
  • Welterweight 170 lb 77 kg
  • Middleweight 185 lb 84 kg
  • Light Heavyweight 205 lb 93 kg
  • Heavyweight 265 lb 120 kg
  • Super Heavyweight No upper weight limit

Problem Number One: “I cannot Math!! I have the Stupid!!” Starting from the bottom we have the Flyweight Division. Flyweight is capped at 125 lbs. Hey, why bother starting with a round number that’s easy to remember when you can arbitrarily grab 125 lbs out of thin air, right? From there we move by ten pound increments to Bantamweight, then to Featherweight and finally to Lightweight.

Then, for some strange reason, we change to fifteen pound increments, going to Welterweight, then to Middleweight.

Next we jump twenty pounds to make the jump from Middleweight to Light Heavyweight. The reason for this is clear: Every set of twins generally has a total of twenty fingers total. Joking of course.

Then we move up to Heavyweight—traditionally an open-weight class, but not in MMA! For Heavyweight, we shoot up sixty pounds to a weight cap of 265. Why 60 lbs? I’ve got no idea, but it’s probably because 265 is a nice round number in some culture we’ve never heard of. Might have something to do with space aliens having 265 toes or something. Finally, we have our completely useless open-weight division called the Super-Heavyweight Division. This takes us directly to problem two.

Problem Number Two: The Super-Heavyweight Division is a Failed Concept. The UFC doesn’t have this weight class. Neither does Strikeforce. Almost everyone doesn’t bother creating a Super-Heavyweight Division. Why do you think that is? Lets look at a few of the most noteworthy examples of the huge men that Super-Heavyweight was created for:
Bob Sapp (342 lbs)
Paulo César da "The Giant" Silva (385 lbs)
Hong Man-Choi (320 lbs)
Dan Bobish (330 lbs)
Zuluzinho (390 lbs)
Eric "Butterbean" Esch (416 lbs)
Jimmy Ambriz (315 lbs)

Now what all of these men have in common:
A.) They're probably too big to cut down to 265.
B.) Put them in against any top Heavyweight or even Light Heavyweight, and they will lose, guaranteed. Just look at their records if you doubt me.

Meanwhile, notable Super-Heavyweights with real fighting credentials and decent MMA records such as Semmy Schilt, Ron Waterman and Mark Hunt are all close enough in weight to make Heavyweight, no problem.

Super Heavyweight is a bizarre reversal of logic. People don’t fight at Super Heavyweight because they’re too big and too dominant for Heavyweights to handle. They fight at Super Heavyweights because they have no chance of winning against any world-class Heavyweight, or are too big to cut down to Heavyweight. Usually both are true. Life is just easier at Super Heavyweight.

I would suggest we don’t get rid of the Super Heavyweight division entirely. Instead, keep it as an option, but leave it on the back burner. Who knows? Maybe someday we’ll see a sudden influx of dominant 350+ pound fighters. Until that day comes, let’s put this utterly useless division to bed and let’s put your Hong Man-Choi’s and Zuluzinho’s back on the big stage known as the Heavyweight Division. It's certainly a lot of fun watching guys like Fedor and Minowaman systematically destroy giant freaks of nature. Everybody wins!

Problem Number Three: MMA needs more title fights, and the fighters need more opportunities. The UFC is your most obvious promotion that desperately needs more champions. They put on between 10 and 15 Pay Per View events per year, but they only have five champions to spread around amongst those shows.

The average MMA fan wants a title fight for their $50, and they’re not getting it.

Meanwhile, the UFC weight divisions get over-crowded and has to let go of a lot of fighters when they lose two or three fights in a row. This happens largely because a losing streak of two or three fights might drop them out of title contention indefinitely and the UFC needs room for prospects with title-fight potential. Younger promotions like Strikeforce are not in any dire need of more champions yet, but if they grow their business enough to survive, they’ll get there very quickly.

Problem Four: Overcrowded Weight Divisions. The UFC has a little too much depth at in pretty much every division.

Light Heavyweight is the most obvious example. Shogun, Rampage, and Rashad could all make a run at the title and stand a decent chance of slaying the Dragon. Then there is Thiago Silva, Brandon Vera, Randy Couture, Jon Jones, Ryan Bader—all looking for future title contention. Look at all the stars, past and present: Gegard Mousasi, Thiago Silva, Forrest Griffin, Tito Ortiz, Little-Nog, Ricardo Arona, Rich Franklin, Keith Jardine, Dan Henderson, Chuck Liddell, Wanderlei Silva. Some are in the UFC, some might be at some future date. Some may go to Strikeforce and swell the ranks of that Light Heavyweight division. The overcrowded Light Heavyweight Division has more than enough talent and star-power to split it in two.

The same could be said of the UFC’s Lightweight, Welterweight and Middleweight divisions. There's room for expansion across the board!


Here is what I would suggest:
1.) Make the increments between weight classes consistent.
2.) Create one or two more weight classes.
3.) Eliminate the upper limit to Heavyweight unless and until we actually see giant men actually begin to dominate there.

  • Strawweight 120 lb 57 kg
  • Flyweight 130 lb 61 kg
  • Bantamweight 140 lb 66 kg
  • Featherweight 150 lb 70 kg
  • Lightweight 160 lb 73 kg
  • Welterweight 170 lb 77 kg
  • Super Welterweight 180 lb 84 kg
  • Middleweight 190 lb 86 kg
  • Super Middleweight 200 lb 91 kg
  • Light Heavyweight 210 lb 95 kg
  • Cruiserweight 220 lb 100 kg
  • Heavyweight No upper weight limit
  • Super-Heavyweight (optional) Over 300 lb 136kg [Note: Super-Heavyweight can be instituted by a promotion if they choose. By so doing, a weight limit of 300 lbs/136 kg goes into effect for that promotions’ Heavyweight Division.]


I think this effectively solves a lot of problems: The weight divisions are easy to keep track of and line up by even ten pound increments. Mixed martial arts fighters would have more opportunities, while their fans would get more title fights. The Heavyweight Division would once again mean what we think it means—it would be an open-weight division for the biggest, baddest fighters on the planet.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

How Do MMA Weight Classes Win Their Fights? Expectation vs. Reality

How Do MMA Weight Classes Win Their Fights? Expectation vs. Reality

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on October 31, 2009
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What is your favorite Mixed Martial Arts Weight Division?

  • Super Heavyweight
  • Heavyweight
  • Light Heavyweight
  • Middleweight
  • Welterweight
  • Lightweight
  • Featherweight
  • Bantamweight
  • Flyweight
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After reading a number of recent articles discussing the UFC heavyweight division, The Ultimate Fighter 10: Heavyweights, and the upcoming fight between Fedor Emelianenko and Brett Rogers, I noticed an interesting trend.

Mixed martial arts fans expect knockouts from heavyweights. Other weight classes have substantially lowered fan expectations for knockouts.

Meanwhile, lighter weight classes are expected to see lots of submissions and a higher number of fights go to the judges.

This made me very curious. How well do the respective weight classes live up to their presumed roles? If MMA fans are thinking accurately, we should see significantly more knockouts at heavyweight and far fewer at in the lighter weight classes.

It was a this point that the insane statistic geek inside me went berserk, took over my body for several hours, and pored over Web sites compiling data on the best MMA fighters from each weight class.

So who are the best MMA fighters ever? To keep it very simple, I used the numbers for every UFC and Pride FC title holder, both past and present. I think these clearly represent the best of the best MMA fighters sorted by weight class. Here’s what I found:

Heavyweight

(Mark Coleman, Maurice Smith, Randy Couture, Bas Rutten, Kevin Randleman, Josh Barnett, Ricco Rodriguez, Tim Sylvia, Frank Mir, Andrei Arlovski, Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira, Brock Lesnar, Fedor Emelianenko)

  • Total Wins = 305
  • Wins by Knockout = 88 (29%)
  • Wins By Submission = 116 (38%)
  • Wins by Decision = 101 (33%)

Light Heavyweight

(Frank Shamrock, Tito Ortiz, Randy Couture, Vitor Belfort, Chuck Liddell, Quinton Jackson, Forrest Griffin, Rashad Evans, Lyoto Machida, Wanderlei Silva, Dan Henderson)

  • Total Wins = 225
  • Wins by Knockout = 103 (46%)
  • Wins by Submission = 44 (20%)
  • Wins by Decision = 78 (35%)

Middleweight

(Dave Menne, Murilo Bustamante, Evan Tanner, Rich Franklin, Anderson Silva, Dan Henderson)

  • Total Wins = 164
  • Wins by Knockout = 60 (37%)
  • Wins by Submission = 57 (35%)
  • Wins by Decision = 47 (29%)

Welterweight

(Pat Miletich, Carlos Newton, Matt Hughes, BJ Penn, George St Pierre, Matt Serra. Note: The equivalent division did not exist in Pride FC.)

  • Total Wins = 129
  • Wins by Knockout = 35 (27%)
  • Wins by Submission = 61 (47%)
  • Wins by Decision = 33 (26%)

Lightweight

(Jens Pulver, Sean Sherk, BJ Penn, Takanori Gomi)

  • Total Wins = 97
  • Wins by Knockout: 36 (37%)
  • Wins by Submission: 27 (28%)
  • Wins by Decision: 34 (35%)


So do the weight classes within mixed martial arts live up to the expectations of their fans? No, they certainly do not!

Case in point, the best divisions to watch for knockout are light heavyweight, middleweight, and lightweight, in that order. Light heavyweight is clearly the king of the knockout. The divisions with the fewest knockouts were welterweight and heavyweight.

And which weight classes are the ones to watch for submissions? Apparently, welterweight and heavyweight are the kings of submissions. And light heavyweight is definitely not the division to watch if you love submissions victories.

What do we learn from this?

1. Unlike some other combat sports, mixed martial arts does not see significantly more knockouts in the heavier divisions.
2. The numbers are all over the map.
3. We should probably throw out all generalizations and expectations based upon weight class. After all, the numbers simply don’t add up.

So where do our expectations come from? Most likely from boxing.

To help demonstrate, this, I’ve compiled the numbers on all current champions, throwing in legendary boxers from the past for good measure. For simplicity sake, I’m not going to include all the weight classes (there’s too damn many of them):

BOXING

Heavyweight

(Nikolay Valuev, Vitali Klitschko, Wladimir Klitschko, Rocky Marciano, Muhammed Ali, Joe Lewis, Mike Tyson)

  • Total Wins = 361
  • Wins by Knockout = 293 (81%)
  • Wins by Decision = 68 (19%)

Light Heavyweight

(Gabriel Campillo, Jean Pascal, Tavoris Cloud, Zsolt Erdei, Juergan Braehmer, Bernard Hopkins, Roy Jones Jr.)

  • Total Wins = 230
  • Wins by Knockout = 157 (68%)
  • Wins by Decision = 73 (32%)

Middleweight

(Felix Sturm, Kelly Pavik, Sebastian Zbik, Sebastian Sylvester, Oscar De La Hoya)

  • Total Wins = 166
  • Wins by Knockout = 100 (60%)
  • Wins by Decision = 66 (39%)

Welterweight

(Shane Mosley, Vyacheslav Senchenko, Andre Berto, Isaac Hlatshwayo, Miguel Cotto, Manny Pacquiao, Sugar Ray Leonard, Sugar Ray Robinson, Floyd Mayweather)

  • Total Wins = 462
  • Wins by Knockout = 310 (67%)
  • Wins by Decision = 152 (33%)

Lightweight

(Juan Manuel Marquez, Paulus Moses, Miguel Acosta, Edwin Valero, Michael Katsidis, Roberto Duran, Benny Leonard, Tony Canzoneri, Henry Armstrong)

  • Total Wins = 626
  • Wins by Knockout = 404 (65%)
  • Wins by Decision = 222 (35%)

In boxing, the heavyweight division is far and away the best place to watch for stunning knockouts, with as much as 21 percent more knockouts than other divisions. Mixed martial arts isn’t just different. It’s very nearly opposite from boxing in this trend.

These numbers probably also explain why the light heavyweight division is considered the most exciting division in MMA. More knockouts equals more happy fight fans.

So now you know.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Rampage Jackson: How Did a Man This Stupid Ever Become a Good Fighter?

Rampage Jackson: How Did a Man This Stupid Ever Become a Good Fighter?

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on October 22, 2009
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Will Team Rampage win any of the first 8 fights?

  • Yes
  • No
  • No Idea
vote to see results

So I got home last night, flipped on my TV and DVR and started playing back yesterday’s The Ultimate Fighter episode, and I must say I'm feeling inspired from it!

This run of The Ultimate Fighter has taught me a number of things:

1.) If there was ever any doubt after his last run on TUF, that doubt has been destroyed: Quinton “Rampage” Jackson is an unbelievable moron!

2.) There is such a thing as being a complete and total failure as an MMA coach. If you go a step worse than that, you’re name is probably Quinton Jackson.

3.) A great pre-fight pep talk should include the word “titties” every third word, and should otherwise make absolutely no sense whatsoever.

4.) Picking fights with the guys on the opposite team is cool if your name is Quinton “Rampage” Jackson.

5.) We're doomed to see the following headline in the future: "Rampage Jackson beats soccer mom into unconsciousness!"

6.) Don’t worry about consoling your fighters when they lose! Rashad’s got your back, man!

7.) When it comes to throwing out insults and talking trash, Rampage can dish it but he can’t take it.

8.) The Ultimate Fighter is all about the fighters competing in the tournament...unless your name is Quinton Jackson. Then it’s all about you, and the fighters are just a pointless side-note.

9.) Kimbo Slice is the most fired up, eager warrior that will ever be a complete and total failure in UFC history.

10.) I have a better nickname for Roy Nelson than “Big Country.” Ladies and gentlemen, introducing “The Fat Kid that Could!”

11.) Kimbo desperately wants to get another chance at failure. This will be an important teaser on every single episode, to ensure that all the Kimbo faithful keep watching. Then we’ll go all the way through the entire Ultimate Fighter season without ever seeing Kimbo fight again.

12.) Kimbo Slice has the worst ground game I’ve seen since Art Jimmerson.

13.) Size doesn’t matter. Skill matters. This is why the comparatively smaller Team Rashad is 6-0. And Team Rampage is 0-6 because "they're all just crappy fighters" and "you can't teach them stuff."

14.) If you sent Rampage to go buy you a good horse, he’d come back with and ostrich.

15.) I’m actually starting to really, really like Rashad Evans. How weird is that? Maybe it’s because anybody looks awesome next to Quinton Jackson.

16.) I’m completely at a loss—why does ANYONE actually like Rampage Jackson?

17.) Rampage Jackson is going to pick at least one fight with every fighter on Team Rashad—one that almost comes to blows, but not quite. Then he’ll start on his own guys. Then he's going after Dana. After that, he's going to punch out the octagon girl.

18.) There’s stupid and then there’s Rampage Jackson stupid.

19.) This season, Rampage Jackson will probably do more damage to the gym than all of the fighters will do to the house combined.

20.) Quinton Jackson likes to throw tantrums and needs a timeout.

21.) I really, really, really feel like YouTube’ing Rampage versus Wanderlei Silva One and Two and Rampage versus Shogun. I just know that watching Quinton Jackson get beat into unconsciousness repeatedly will make me feel happy inside. I wonder why?

More than anything else, I’m scratching my head and trying to figure one thing out: How is a guy this stupid one of the best fighters in the world? Sure some fighters are idiots, but this is reality warping stupidity we’re talking about folks!

Beyond UFC 104: The Future of the Light Heavyweight Division

Beyond UFC 104: The Future of the Light Heavyweight Division

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on October 22, 2009
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After The Dragon and Shogun, who is the next best LHW in the UFC

  • Rashad Evans
  • Forrest Griffin
  • Thiago Silva
  • Rich Franklin
  • Wanderlei Silva
  • Keith Jardine
  • Quinton "Rampage" Jackson
  • Tito Ortiz
  • Randy Couture
  • Anderson Silva
vote to see results

Well, UFC 104 is upon us and everyone is getting more and more excited to see the Light Heavyweight Champion Lyoto “The Dragon” Machida take on legendary brawler Mauricio “Shogun” Rua. Predictions and speculations abound over who will win. I think it will be Machida myself.

But what happens after that?

If Machida wins, it will be the first successful title defense in a long time. Having a little consistency at Light Heavyweight Champion would do worlds of good for the UFC right now. Over the past couple years, the title changes hands so fast that you barely have time to get to know the new champion.

So who would be next for Machida if he beats Shogun? Unfortunately, the answer to this question is complicated. He's already beaten several of your best options: Thiago Silva, Rich Franklin, and Rashad Evans.

The upcoming return of Tito Ortiz, no matter how successful, won't generate a compelling matchup for Machida. Once again, Machida already beat him. If he wins this Saturday, I’m seeing a high chance of rematches in Machida’s future.

If Lyoto "The Dragon" Machida wins:

  1. Quinton Jackson : Undoubtedly, Rampage is the best Top-10 Light Heavyweight to send up against Machida. Two things have to happen before you can make this match though. One: Rampage will have to finish with the “A Team” movie and come back out of retirement. Two: Rampage has an obligation to fight against Rashad Evans. I expect this would be his first fight upon returning. Rampage vs Machida is at least a year off, if it ever happens at all.
  2. Gegard Mousasi : If the UFC can find a way to sign “The Dreamcatcher” this would be a match made in heaven. Both Mousasi and Machida seem to be unbeatable. This would truly be a fight for “Best Light Heavyweight on the Planet.” But how easily can Gegard be lured away from Strikeforce? He is their champion after all. If the UFC can find a way to sign Mousasi, this would be the best fight possible!
  3. Winner of Randy Couture vs. Brandon Vera : This would be a great fight for the fans, whether it’s Vera or Couture. I don’t see either of them really challenging Machida, but it puts recognizable names in the octagon with the champion.
  4. Winner of Matt Hammill vs. Jon Jones : Neither Hammill, nor Jones have beaten a Top-10 Light Heavyweight yet, so throwing one of them a title-shot seems premature. The trouble is, they just might have to step up sooner than everyone thought. I think both of them are extremely under-rated, particularly Jonny “Bones” Jones.
  5. Ryan Bader : If he can beat Shafer, I think it might be high time to put Bader’s undefeated record to the test. Bader is a bit of an unknown. What we do know is that he is a pretty good all-around fighter. He’s undefeated, with four knockouts, three submissions, and two wins by decision. Like Hammill, or Jones, this is asking for a relatively unproven fighter to step up sooner than expected.
  6. Rematch with the winner of Rashad Evans vs Thiago Silva : I don’t foresee this as being an extremely compelling matchup. Machida beat both of them so soundly they looked like amateurs. Still, both of them are legit Top-10 fighters with big wins on their resumes. Your best option just might be a rematch.
  7. Forrest Griffin : I'm not really crazy about this option, but if Forrest beats Tito, then I suppose you could throw him into an upcoming title fight.
  8. Anderson Silva : A fight against the Middleweight Champion is the fight that everyone is clamoring to see. The trouble is, Machida and Silva are friends and training partners. They’ve repeatedly vowed that they won’t fight each other. I don’t foresee this matchup ever happening, at least not anytime soon. But oh what a fight it would be!!

If Mauricio “Shogun” Rua wins: Okay, the “what’s next” picture for Rua is a lot easier. All of the fights above would be options, but with Shogun, you have even more compelling options:

  1. Anderson Silva : There is some question whether Anderson would step up and fight the man that beat his best friend. He might decide not to so that Machida can do it for himself. Still, Anderson Silva would need very little convincing to fight Shogun. There’s some bad blood there stemming from the breakup of Chute Boxe. “The Spider” would love to beat down Shogun, make no mistake about it! And this is a fight that has a very good chance of actually happening!
  2. Winner of Rashad Evans vs Thiago Silva : The winner of this fight should be an obvious number one contender. Either one should be able to give Shogun all he can handle. And unlike Machida, Shogun has never fought either of them.
  3. Winner of Forrest Griffin vs. Tito Ortiz : You can believe that Shogun wants to avenge that rude welcome he got in his UFC debut at the hands of Griffin. If Forrest can beat Tito Ortiz, that might be enough of a winning streak to seal the deal. If Ortiz can win, I say “Why not?” Throw him in with Shogun and see how he does.
  4. Rematch with Quinton “Rampage” Jackson : This would be a very compelling rematch. Rampage getting a shot at revenge against the other Muay Thai brawler that humiliated him back in Pride. Quinton would still have to finish his stint in Hollywood, come out of retirement, and he’d probably have to beat Rashad Evans too.
  5. All of the same things as listed for Machida: Gegard Mousasi, Jon Jones, Matt Hammill, Randy Couture, Brandon Vera, Ryan Bader, etc.

Whatever happens Saturday night, it should be very interesting to see what happens next at Light Heavyweight.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Strikeforce: Fedor Emelianenko Vs Brett Rogers, CBS Is Doing A Better

Strikeforce: Fedor Emelianenko Vs Brett Rogers, CBS Is Doing A Better

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on October 20, 2009
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Will Strikeforce still exist 10 years from now

  • Yes and they'll run the UFC out of business!
  • Yes
  • No
  • No and this next broadcast will be their last!
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This is an update for a prior article .

One of the biggest Mixed Martial Arts events in the history of the sport is coming up on Saturday, Nov. 7. “The Last Emperor,” Fedor Emelianenko makes his Strikeforce cage-fighting debut against undefeated Brett “The Grimm” Rogers.

Fedor Emelianenko has won 26 fights in a row. He has 30 wins in his career, and his only loss was highly controversial. He’s beaten all comers, including well known champions, a host of former UFC champions, towering giants and several fighters that you never have and never will hear of. He is effectively 30-0, a mark that no other Heavyweight has ever attained.

As Randy Couture put it, "I don't think anybody's invincible...but he's probably the closest thing."

Strikeforce: Fedor vs Rogers will air live on CBS. Preliminary fights start at 7:00 PM and the main card begins at 9:00 PM Eastern Time.

The card also includes:

• Strikeforce Light Heavyweight Champion Gegard “The Dreamcatcher” Mousasi vs “The African Assasin” Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou

• Jake Shields vs Jason “Mayhem” Miller for the recently vacated Strikeforce Middleweight Title.

• Fabricio Werdum vs Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva

Considering that this is Strikeforce with its comparatively thin ranks of talented fighters, this card actually looks pretty amazing.

Whether you like Strikeforce or hate them; whether you love Fedor or hate him, this event represents a landmark event in Mixed Martial Arts history. This is the first time that a card this stacked with top fighters has been broadcast by one of the big four networks.

This is the first time that a top-ranked fighter of any weight class has fought on a free live broadcast on one of the big four networks.

So it’s week two of CBS promoting this event. How are they doing now?

Let's take last weeks blip:

“Fedor Emelianenko, the world’s greatest fighter comes to CBS, Saturday, November 7th.”

To this week’s lengthier clip:

"He is a man of mystery.
Who trains in the frozen tundra of Siberia.
Fedor Emelianenko is the number one Heavyweight mixed martial artist fighter in the world.
And he's taking on undefeated knockout artist Brett Rogers.
Live!
Free!
Only on CBS!
November 7th"

Much better! This promotional clip was well delivered. Dramatic pauses with a showman’s flair. It was an excellent teaser that actually gets your attention and holds it.

Unfortunately, CBS stayed true to form and only broadcast it once per football game. Yes they nailed the right target audience for the clip. Football fans enjoy watching grown men batter the hell out of each other, so Mixed Martial Arts ought to be very appealing to them.

But once again, they only ran the clip once per game, and on one game I didn’t even find it once. Compare that with the constant promotions for all of CBS’ regular shows: Repetition 'til you were sick of hearing about it...and that’s exactly the right way to do it.

You need to run the thing more than once or people will forget. One clip per game isn’t going to draw nearly as much interest because people will see it and promptly forget about it. Repetition makes it stick in people's memories.

Other suggestions for improvement:

Like I already said, Fedor Emelianenko looks about as intimidating as a newborn kitten. If you want people to realize what a badass he really is, you can't just tell them. You have to show them.

Here’s how you do it:

• Show the stare-down before the Hong-Man Choi fight to show the size difference between the combatants. Then show Fedor finishing of Choi.

• Show the stare-down before the Tim Sylvia fight. It’s the same idea: Here’s Fedor taking on yet another enormous towering brute. Then show him knocking the crap out of Sylvia. Finally show him choking out Timmy.

• Show the stare-down before the Andrei Arlovski fight. This won’t offer the same “David vs Goliath” feel, but it shows that he’s fighting all sorts. On top of that, Andrei is pretty ripped and Fedor isn’t. Then show the clip of him knocking out Arlovski.

Note: All Pride FC footage is owned by Zuffa LLC, parent company of the UFC. The UFC isn't in the business of helping out their competition, so don't expect to see any Pride FC footage of Fedor.

By taking this approach, your TV audience will begin to catch on: This Fedor guy isn’t all that scary looking, but he can beat the crap out of guys that would give most people nightmares looking at them.

CBS also added this video to their web site.

I’m beginning to get the feeling that CBS is reading the articles here and taking the suggestions offered. So if you’re reading, you’re doing a lot better CBS.

You might want to start mentioning the rest of the fight card in the next week or two. People tuning in for this Live and Free event are going to be rewarded with more than just one fight. Strikeforce is putting on five top-10 fighters into this event. There will be one title fight and one champion fighting in a non-title fight. There’s definitely some promotional material in the rest of the fight card.

Another suggestion: Most people don’t know what “Mixed Martial Arts” means. Most have heard of “Ultimate Fighting” but that’s about it. There is also a lot of bad publicity on the sport. These would actually be very compelling subjects. Remember how Don Frye was fired as both a firefighter and a High School coach for his participation in the Ultimate Fighter tournaments?

Remember John McCain’s self-righteous and misguided crusade attempting to destroy the sport altogether? I think there’s more than enough material in the trouble history of MMA for a run on 60 Minutes or The Late Show .

It would do a lot of good to show how very human Mixed Martial Artists are and demonstrate that the sport is not nearly as barbaric as some people make it out to be.

As I've pointed out so very many times: Since UFC 1, more than 71 boxers have died from injuries sustained in Professional Boxing Matches. The UFC has lost zero. All MMA promotion combined have tallied one fatality. This sport is extremely misunderstood, and far less dangerous than other well-established mainstream sports.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Hey CBS, How Fast Can You Say "Fedor Emelianenko"?

Hey CBS, How Fast Can You Say "Fedor Emelianenko"?

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on October 16, 2009

Emelianenko-rogers_cropped
Vote Now! - Author Poll

How fast can you say “Fedor Emelianenko, the world’s greatest fighter comes to CBS, Saturday, November 7th.”?

  • Under 10 seconds
  • Under 9 seconds
  • Under 8 seconds
  • Under 7 seconds
  • Under 6 seconds
  • Under 5 seconds
  • Under 4 seconds
  • Under 3 seconds
  • Under 2 seconds
  • Under 1 second (LIAR!!)
vote to see results

One of the biggest Mixed Martial Arts events in the history of the sport is coming up on Saturday, November 7th. “The Last Emperor”, Fedor Emelianenko makes his Strikeforce cage-fighting debut in a highly anticipated battle against an undefeated giant of a man, Brett “The Grimm” Rogers. Fedor, is widely considered the best Heavyweight on the planet. Many also consider him the top pound for pound fighter in the world. He has won 26 fights in a row, has 30 wins in his career, and has only one highly controversial loss on his record. He’s beaten all comers, including well known champions, a host of former UFC champions, towering giants and several fighters that you never have and never will hear of. He is effectively 30-0, a mark that no other Heavyweight has ever attained.

Strikeforce: Fedor vs Rogers will air live on CBS. Preliminary fights start at 7:00 PM and the main card begins at 9:00 PM Eastern Time.

So how does the overall card look? Considering that this is Strikeforce with its comparatively thin ranks of talented fighters, it actually looks pretty amazing. Gegard Mousasi, the Light Heavyweight Champion will face Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou, Jake Shields will face Jason Miller for the vacant Strikeforce Middleweight title, and Fabricio Werdum will fight Antonion “Bigfoot” Silva. Every fight on the main card features at least one fighter who is ranked in the top 10 in their respective weight classes. And while Gegard Mousasi, Jake Shields and Fabricio Werdum are likely to easily destroy their opponents, I have to hand it to Strikeforce for coming up with a decent opponent for all three of them.

Whether you like Strikeforce or hate them; whether you love Fedor or hate him, this event represents a landmark event in Mixed Martial Arts history. This is the first time that a card this stacked with top fighters has been broadcast by one of the big four networks.

So what is CBS doing to promote this mammoth night of fights?

Well, not much so far. I remember catching something brief, and cryptic while watching the Denver Broncos vs the New England Patriots game. It was so short I thought I might have imagined it. E Spencer Kyte received a response to his article from CBS Executive VP Kelly Kahl assuring us that CBS had already aired promotional spots during several College and NFL Football games.

Okay so I know I didn’t just imagine it. There really was a promotional clip aired on CBS. Luckily I still had both NFL games saved on my DVR. So I poured through the three-plus hours of the game and sure enough, there it was:

“Fedor Emelianenko, the world’s greatest fighter comes to CBS, Saturday, November 7th.”

Only once per game, CBS aired that clip. It took five seconds maximum. It was a brief clip telling the world that somebody named Fedor Emelianenko “the greatest fighter in the world” would be on CBS on Saturday, November 7th. I had to replay it several times to get all the words down because the guy was talking too fast for me to catch it all.

Okay, so let’s look at this from the perspective of somebody who has never heard of Mixed Martial Arts. If I listened sharply enough, I know that “the greatest fighter in the world” will be on CBS on November 7th. The greatest fighter in the world? It must be a boxer or something like that. And the clip didn’t say anything about what this Fedor person will be doing. Is it a new talk-show? Perhaps a reality television show of some sort? Surely not a fight or they would have said who he was fighting, right? And surely they got the wrong picture. The man pictured in that five second clip certainly didn’t look at all intimidating.

The truth is, Fedor Emelianenko looks about as intimidating as a newborn kitten. I showed one of my coworkers his picture and the first thing that came to his mind was Fedor saying, “I like bunnies.” Then I showed him a few clips of Fedor fighting:

Fedor submitting Hong Man-Choi in the first round.

Fedor pummeling and submitting Tim Sylvia in the first round.

Fedor surviving the ugliest slam in MMA history at the hands of Kevin Randleman, seemingly unfazed. Fedor overpowering and submitting Randleman within the next two minutes.

Then he started to realize that this unassuming, un-intimidating man was actually an incredible fighter, and that there was a lot more than meets the eye to this Fedor Emelianenko fellow.

So here’s the challenge: How fast can you say:

“Fedor Emelianenko, the world’s greatest fighter comes to CBS, Saturday, November 7th.”?

With a bit of practice I can say it intelligibly in just under three seconds. How fast can you say it?

I understand that this is how it’s done: Quick blurbs to let the world know about an upcoming event. That sort of thing is pretty standard. But the clips from this past weekend were less than useless. They did nothing to inform anyone of anything.

If anyone sees more of these stealthy little promotional clips, please post them so we all know about them. If you see something a little more serious about the event, I think we’d all love to hear about it. I do hope that CBS starts taking this Strikeforce event a lot more seriously, and that they promote the hell out of it. This event will offer great exposure for several of the best Mixed Martial Arts fighters in the world. Now if we somebody can convince CBS to go all-out promoting this thing, then we'll really get some attention!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Part Two: Thiago Silva Needs a Good Nickname

Part Two: Thiago Silva Needs a Good Nickname

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on September 02, 2009
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Thiago_silva_cropped
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What is the best nickname for Thiago Silva?

  • "The Brazilian Psycho" Thiago Silva
  • Thiago "The Serial Killer" Silva
  • "The Sao Paulo Assassin" Thiago Silva
  • "The Executioner" Thiago Silva
  • Thiago "The Head Hunter" Silva
  • Thiago "Demônio" Silva (Note: Demônio = Devil or Demon in Portuguese)
  • "The Brazilian Butcher" Thiago Silva
  • Thiago "The Mean Mistreater" Silva
  • Thiago "Killa" Silva
vote to see results

This is Part Two of an ongoing effort to find Thiago Silva a good nickname.

Thiago Silva just finished dispatching Keith Jardine and has proven he is what I always believed him to be: one of the best Light Heavyweights in the world. It took him one minute and 35 seconds to take out "The Dean of Mean."

In typical Thiago Silva fashion, it took less than one round. All tallied, Thiago Silva averages 229 seconds (3.8 minutes) per match. He's seen round two only once in the UFC.

Thiago Silva has proven that he does one thing very well: He destroys his opponents. Be it punches, kicks, ground and pound or submissions, Thiago Silva finishes fights. Thiago Silva is shaping up to be one of the strong contenders at 205.

With a record that is marred only by the loss to the Champion, Lyoto Machida, so far it looks like it takes a virtually unbeatable warrior to stop Thiago Silva.

Here's the problem: Thiago Silva's first and last name are about as common in Brazil as names like John Smith or Jake Jones. Thiago Rockenbach da Silva, Thiago Martinelli da Silva, Tiago Silva dos Santos, and Thiago Emiliano da Silva are all notable soccer players from Brazil. Another soccer player by the name of Thiago Jotta da Silva died in 2008.

Even in the MMA world we have Thiago Alves, Paulo Thiago, Thiago Tavares and about a billion guys in MMA with the last name of Silva. Wanderlei, Anderson, Joe, Jean, Paulo César da Silva, etc.

The trouble with Thiago Silva's name is simple: There's way too many Silvas and quite a few Thiagos besides.

MMA fans need something to help them remember Thiago Silva specifically. More than any other fighter I can think of, he needs catchy nickname that can be used to reference him in the same fashion as Rampage Jackson. Something to help set him apart and describes him. Something that is easy to remember and fits his fighting spirit.

So far, the top choices are as follows:

"The Brazilian Psycho" Thiago Silva
"The Serial Killer" Thiago Silva
"The Sao Paulo Assassin" Thiago Silva
"The Executioner" Thiago Silva
Thiago "The Head Hunter" Silva
Thiago "Demônio" Silva (Note: Demônio = Devil or Demon in Portuguese)
"The Brazilian Butcher" Thiago Silva
Thiago "The Mean Mistreater" Silva
Thiago "Killa" Silva

Note: Since "Killa" is either a current or prior nickname for Thiago, it stays in the vote even though very few people voted for it.

Monday, August 31, 2009

Thiago Silva Needs a Good Nickname, Preferably One With Some Punch To It

Thiago Silva Needs a Good Nickname, Preferably One With Some Punch To It

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on August 31, 2009

Thiago_silva_cropped

Thiago Silva just finished dispatching Keith Jardine and has proven himself against a top rated opponent. It took him one minute and 35 seconds to do so. In typical Thiago Silva fashion, it took less than one round. All tallied, Thiago Silva averages 229 seconds (3.8 minutes) per match. He's seen round two only once in the UFC.

With a record that is marred only by the loss to the Champion, Lyoto Machida, Thiago Silva has proven that he does one thing very well: He destroys his opponents. Be it punches, kicks, ground and pound or submissions, Thiago Silva finishes fights. Sure he wasn't a match for Lyoto Machida.

MMA fans are going to learn soon enough, nobody in the division today is a match for The Dragon. Losing to Lyoto Machida should be no great embarrassment, as Rich Franklin, BJ Penn, Tito Ortiz, Sokoudjou, Vernon White and Stephan Bonnar can all attest to.

The trouble with Thiago Silva's name is simple: There's way too many Silvas and quite a few Thiagos besides. Thiago Silva needs catchy nickname that can be used to reference him in the same fashion as Rampage Jackson.

Something that is memorable and fits his fighting spirit. His first and last name are about as common in Brazil as names like John Smith, Peter Jackson, Robert Simpson, etc. He needs a nickname that helps people remember him specifically.

Things like "Assassin," "Ninja," and "Samurai" are already taken and over-used. I'm inclined to call him "The Wrecking Machine" for his tendency of overwhelming and devastating opponents. His signature victory mimic of cutting the throat might offer some leads, but what? "The Executioner" or "Head Hunter" or "Guillotine" perhaps?

Maybe something particular to where he hails from like "Sao Paulo Assassin." I've learned that he likes to be referred to as "Killa" which is quaint but certainly anything but memorable, and is already drastically overused by the rap music industry.

It would be nice to have something else to call him by. If I say Thiago, people are initially thinking Alves. If I say Silva, they're thinking Wanderlei or Anderson or one of a long list of others before they're thinking of Thiago Silva.

Make a good suggestion and I'll add it to the poll. If you see another commentor with a good suggestion, please second it to make it official. From the looks of it, I'll have to repost this article with the best suggestions included in the new poll.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

“Every Heavyweight Sucks!” MMA's Big Guys and Their Fans

“Every Heavyweight Sucks!” MMA's Big Guys and Their Fans

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on August 15, 2009

Mma_cropped

In every combat sport, it is always the Heavyweights that capture our greatest attention. Weight classes exist to allow smaller fighters to compete. These big guys don't need a weight class.

But in the world of MMA, the Heavyweight division is a convoluted mess, more often than not. A lot of the best big men in the world scatter to the four winds, and are divvied up by all the MMA promotions out there.

So where are the best Heavyweight MMA fighters in the world, and who are they? Virtually every discussion about ANY current promotions Heavyweight fighter and Heavyweight division out there draws the same reactions from your more Hardcore MMA fans.

“They have a shallow talent pool!”

“No good Heavyweight fighters in that promotion!”

“Their Heavyweight talent pool sucks!”

“They need to do something drastic to build up their Heavyweight Division!”

We could be talking about DREAM, Strikeforce, the UFC, K-1, the recently deceased Affliction or any other MMA promotion. No matter which fighters and which promotions we’re talking about, there is always some self-proclaimed MMA expert saying that their Heavyweight division sucks.

In the humble opinion of some MMA “experts,” the missing ingredient is for any promotion to say they’re the best is Fedor Emelianenko. But there’s just as many “experts” who say that Fedor is washed up, over-rated and that he hasn’t fought anyone good since he left PRIDE.

So even at the very top of the heap, we see the same thing. The same broken record:

“Every Heavyweight sucks!!”

I wholeheartedly disagree with that assessment, but that’s where the hardcore MMA fans seem to be at. That’s what they think of the big guys of MMA.

Personally, I think there are a lot of good Heavyweights out there. And yes, most assuredly, there is more than one good Heavyweight in MMA. So why is it so hard to give a few of them the credit they are due?

We can go to the MMA ranking systems. This one is Fight Matrix, but yes there are plenty of others.

http://www.fightmatrix.com/mma-ranks/heavyweight-265-lbs/

1 Fedor Emelianenko (Strikeforce)

2 Brock Lesnar (UFC)

3 Frank Mir (UFC)

4 Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (UFC)

5 Josh Barnett (TEAM STEROIDS)

6 Randy Couture (UFC)

7 Gegard Mousasi (Strikeforce - but currently fighting at Light Heavyweight)

8 Junior dos Santos (UFC)

9 Brett Rogers (Strikeforce)

10 Shane Carwin (UFC)

11 Andrei Arlovski (Strikeforce)

12 Fabricio Werdum (Strikeforce)

13 Cain Velasquez (UFC)

14 Mirko Filipovic (UFC)

15 Jeff Monson (DREAM/independent)

16 Alistair Overeem (Strikeforce)

17 Ray Mercer (Adrenaline)

18 Heath Herring (UFC)

19 Gabriel Gonzaga (UFC)

20 Cheick Kongo (UFC)

Now throwing out Mousasi, who will be fighting for the Strikeforce Light Heavyweight belt this Saturday, the best represented promotion in the top 20 is obviously the UFC with 11 of the top 20 fighters.

This shouldn’t be too surprising, since most other promotions are just too new to have had a chance to build up a strong catalogue of Heavyweight fighters.

After the UFC, we have Strikeforce with 5 of the top 20 fighters, as well as having the No. 1 Heavyweight, and all the bragging rights that go with it.

Here’s the sad part. Just about every single one of the 20 people on that list has no shortage of people saying that they suck.

Some are called “Unproven.”

Others are called “Over-Rated.”

And others are “Washed up” and “Need to Retire.”

But if everyone on that list sucks, then will somebody please point me in the direction of MMA Heavyweights that don’t suck? Perhaps they’re hiding somewhere? We don’t see the same phenomenon in other divisions.

In the end, I’d love to know this much: Why do the big guys get no respect?