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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.