Punishment Athletics

UFC Puts Boxing Out For The Count

by: DarthMolen 4

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There is something about UFC right now that breathes vitality. Boxing on the other hand smells like Bengay. Seems the critics are finally starting to agree.

I am finding it hard to quantify why boxing bores me so much but maybe I can explain my feelings by the end of this column.

I want to first qualify this editorial by saying that I am not an un-biased opinion. I practice Mixed Martial Arts. Not necessarily the style you see in UFC and I wouldn’t say that I am anywhere near even amateur status, or good for that matter, but I am a practitioner. I will try to draw from my memory though from before I practiced martial arts to bring a more centered opinion to the table.

I used to watch boxing. It was an interesting sport. I would watch the bobbing and weaving and the punches and marvel at the speed and skill of the fighters. I never considered it mine though. Maybe it was the distanced feeling I felt watching these fighters work and comport themselves. Their skillsets were way above anything I could hope to accomplish. There always seemed to be a manager there warding off fans and generally setting up their charges on a pedestal. I can’t quite quantify my feelings but I didn’t belong in that world.

I can very distinctly remember the point that changed my mind forever. I was watching a K1 event back in 2001 on ESPN. It was the usual ones that they show still to this day and I was captivated. You can throw knees AND kicks also when you fight??? Their dance captivated me. The fluidity of the flurries as their whole bodies went into motion was spectacular in my mind. I then began to search out all the kickboxing events on TV that I could find. Back then, they were few and far between but with perseverance, I found them late at night and on the off-channels. I tried to go back to boxing, I really did but I found it boring. Where were the flurry of kicks and knees?

I became so captivated that when I found out a friend was teaching martial arts from his garage, I immediately went out to see if it was possible that I could learn what I saw on TV. From the very first night, they nicknamed me “Mr. Robot” because I was so stiff. I persevered and I grew to love the inward focus that came from physically training all aspects of my body and mind along with the new discipline I found within.

Then along came UFC. I had heard about these underground fights but had spurned them in my own mind because I had heard the rumble that they were just bestial bloodbaths and violence for the sake of violence. But this was 2004 and my mindset had changed. I was comfortable with martial arts and hungry to see it in action in a ring setting. I followed the stories online of the different UFC events but wasn’t in the financial position to watch these expensive events on PPV.

All this changed when they released “UFC Unleashed” and “The Ultimate Fighter” on the brand new channel SPIKE TV in 2005. I had found my soulmate. Here were young men trying to make it in the big times and the UFC was making their dreams come true. They would then show all the classic fights on Unleashed to tease the reality that these young men were fighting for.

Here was something I felt I could “belong” to. The action was intense. I understood the science behind what they were doing. The fans were kept close to the action. The organization that ran the events cared what the fans thought and actually catered to them. The fighters themselves seemed down-to-earth and actually had personality.

Finally, a fighting organization that could combine the marketing of the WWF/WWE with a valid fighting style (or styles since the UFC encompasses a lot of different ones). Marketing, unity, fan catering, fighter accessibility, high entertainment value, unified organization, high value free and paid events. All of these are why boxing will not survive the onslaught that is UFC.

Here is an article in the Baltimore Sun that backs up my steep claim so you know that I am not the only person that feels the same way ;-)

Comments

I agree with you for the most part. While I can be entertained with boxing, I find it’s only when I get to know the boxers. If it’s just guy A vs guy B then I can care less, but with shows like “The Contender” I feel myself caught up in these fighter’s lives...I connect with them, and then when I see them on ESPN I can say “Yeah ___________ is a good fighter. He throws a mean left hook” because I know what I saw on TV.

UFC on the other hand just has me captivated from start to finish. One would argue that it’s the primal urge in all of us to go out and fight, and others would argue that it’s the technical aspect of the fighting.

For me it comes down to the conditioning these guys go thru. I am fascinated with how disciplined these fighters are to put their bodies thru such intense training.

My favorite fighter is hands down Matt Hughes. I admire his discipline, work ethic and pure skill. The man is at the top of the food chain in the UFC and there is a reason for that.

Good article Molen.

Posted by averagejoe  on  08/30  at  01:12 PM

I kind of gave on combat sports period because I am not a participant and I am not entertained by guys beating each other up with their hands until one goes unconscience. But, when I did like boxing, it was because there was a equal match of ability and the ability was at a high level. Those days are gone for boxing. Most great athletes find other ways to use their talents without suffering brain damage from too many blows to the head.

Posted by  on  08/30  at  01:35 PM

that’s the great thing about UFC. These guys won’t experience the brain damage effects that you get from boxing.

The brain damage comes from a lifetime of mini-concussion on top of mini-concussion that the standing 8 count promotes in boxing in one match. Multiply that over and over again and you get brain damage in the long run.

The worst that the UFC fighter has to deal with are broken limbs, lacerations, broken noses, with a single concussion possibility. Brain Damage is very unlikely in that respect. All the other stuff heals over time.

Posted by  on  08/31  at  08:55 AM

I forgot missing teeth :). Karo Parisyan lost a tooth to a knee in his fight between Diego Sanchez and himself. His fault though, he spit out his mouthpiece mid-match.

Posted by  on  09/07  at  11:48 AM
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