Thursday, June 21, 2012

Farewell to Fedor: Retirement tribute to the First Emperor of heavyweight MMA

Farewell to Fedor: Retirement tribute to the First Emperor of heavyweight MMA

"This is the way the world ends / Not with a bang, but a whimper." - T.S. Eliot
When the American poet wrote those words nearly a century ago, there's absolutely no way he could have known of a man who would be born in 1976 in then-USSR whose parents would name Fedor Emelianenko. There's no way Eliot could have foreseen the impact this unassuming character would have on the sport of mixed martial arts (MMA) or how his legendary career would ultimately fizzle out.
The Russian, who once terrorized all manner of opponents inside the squared circle while doing the same to fight promoters outside of it, announced his retirement today (June 21, 2012) following his 90-second shellacking (watch the video here) of a long-past his prime Pedro Rizzo.
It wasn't in a bout promoted by the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), the premier fight promotion in the world. The closest Emelianenko came to stepping foot inside the Octagon was his fight against Dan Henderson in Strikeforce which came after Zuffa purchased the San Jose-based company.
And it wasn't a grand pay-per-view (spectacle) like the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) usually puts on or even the two shows Affliction ran with the Russian as its headliner. It's not expected to rake in millions upon millions of dollars, either.
Fans watched via internet streams of varying quality and legality. And those who did witnessed the end of an era.
They watched one of the greatest fighters in the sport end his career much like he approached it; quiet, reserved and with his faith and family at the forefront of his mind.
Here's to you, "Last Emperor."

For a time, the biggest fight that could possibly ever be made was to pit Emelianenko against then-UFC Heavyweight Champion Brock Lesnar.
The only similarity between the two was the severity in which they dispatched their opponents. In every other way, there were polar opposites.
Lesnar was brash, arrogant and a bully. Emelianenko wore hipster-esque sweaters and loved ice cream.
The WWE Superstar sported a claymore tattoo on his chest and a giant skull was inked across his broad back. The Russian looked more like a delivery truck driver than one of the greatest fighters of all time.
In many ways, Lesnar symbolized the stereotype of MMA fighters and its fans while Emelianenko bucked all preconceptions. It's why many gravitated to him.
And the amazing knockouts and submissions didn't hurt either.
In 14 fights for the defunct-Japanese promotion, PRIDE Fighting Championships, Emelianenko never lost and only went to a decision four times. Once against Semmy Schilt, who would go on to win the K-1 World Grand Prix four times and the other three were against Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira -- twice -- and Mirko Filipovic, heavyweight legends in their own right.
Three technical knockout (TKO) victories and a bevy of submission victories stand as testament to his dominance across the Pacific. When he began fighting stateside for Affliction, he racked up two more wins against Tim Sylvia and Andrei Arlovski, adding them to a hit list including Mark Coleman, Kevin Randleman and Nogueira of men who had or would wear the UFC heavyweight crown.
"The Last Emperor" accomplished all this while being small in stature. At six-foot and 230-some odd pounds, he's larger than your average man but in the world of MMA heavyweights who cut down to reach the 265-pound maximum limit, he might as well have been a welterweight.
Still, he won. And continued to win. It didn't matter if it was Kazuyuki Fujita cracking him across the jaw or Randleman German suplexing him nearly onto his head, Emelianenko always managed to get his arm raised at the end.
It wasn't until he faced off against Fabricio Werdum the Russian tasted defeat for the first time. Caught in the Brazilian's vice-like triangle choke, Emelianenko was forced to submit. And with three quick taps of his hand, a god bled.
By the end of two rounds with Antonio Silva, the last hope of PRIDE was all but dead while a knockout against Dan Henderson nearly six months later only served to shovel more dirt on the grave.
What could now be known as the "Fedor Emelianenko Retirement Tour" started four months later in Moscow with an uninspired decision win over Jeff Monson. A quick knockout over Satoshi Ishii followed six weeks later.
And now, following his victory over Rizzo, "The Last Emperor" has walked away from the sport on his own terms.
His own terms; it's exactly how he approached the sport from day one.

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

MMA Crypt's Prediction Contest 63- UFC 147, Silva vs. Franklin

MMA Crypt's Prediction Contest 63:
UFC 147, Silva vs. Franklin

Date: June 23, 2012
Location: Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Venue: Mineirinho Gymnasium
Broadcast: PPV, FX, Facebook

MAIN CARD:


Wanderlei Silva vs. Rich Franklin
Cezar Ferreira vs. Sergio Moraes
Godofredo Pepey vs. Rony Mariano Bezerra
Fabricio Werdum vs. Mike Russow
Yuri Alcantara vs. Hacran Dias

PRELIMINARY CARD:

Anistavio Medeiros vs. Rodrigo Damm
Delson Heleno vs. Francisco Trinaldo
John Teixeira vs. Hugo Viana
Thiago Perpetuo vs. Leonardo Mafra
Marcos Vinicius vs. Wagner Campos
Felipe Arantes vs. Milton Viera

This "Fantasy MMA Challenge" contest requires that you pick the winning fighters
offered in the events, the method in which they will win and when they will win.

Here is how it works:

4 points to pick the winner.
3 points to pick the style of win : decision, sub or KO
3 points to pick when the fight is over by specific round, if you predict the right winner.

Method:

KO/TKO (votes as KO and TKO count as the same)
Decision (Majority, split and unanimous count as the same)
Submissions (all count as the same)Most points wins.

Tie-Breaker Rule:

If there is a tie, the poster with the most posts wins the tie-breaker.

Prizes:

1st Place: 20,000

2nd Place: 10,000

3rd Place: 5,000

Fight picks must be entered in this thread by June 23rd, 2012 no later than 5:00 PM East Coast Time.


ENTER HERE

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

VOTE FOR YOUR TOP 10 MW's in THE WORLD - JUNE MMA CRYPT RANKINGS

VOTE FOR YOUR TOP 10 MW's in THE WORLD - JUNE MMA CRYPT RANKINGS

Guys and Gals, this is your opportunity to have your say in the MMA CRYPT official top 10 rankings. Instead of only having 2 or 3 Mods telling you who the Crypt top 10's are, we are opening it up to all members.

Please take your time when voting, pay attention, as it is possible to vote for the same fighter in different spots. Try to keep all bias out of your selections, vote with your head, not your heart. Remember the top 10's should be ranked on performance and not popularity, also this isn't just a top 10 UFC fighter list, this includes all of MMA.

REMEMBER....NO BASHING OF OTHER MEMBERS PICKS. QUESTION IF YOU MUST, BUT KEEP IT CIVIL!!!


Have fun with it people.

Your Top 10 Middleweight fighters.

VOTE HERE

Alan Belcher
Vitor Belfort
Michael Bisping
Tim Boetsch
Derek Brunson
Chris Camozzi
Patrick Cote
C.B. Dollaway
Maiquel Falcao
Rich Franklin
Riki Fukuda
Jared Hamman
Gerald Harris
Ed Herman
Anthony Johnson
Tim Kennedy
Mamed Khalidov
Robbie Lawler
Tom Lawlor
Cung Le
Chris Leban
Thales Leites
Hector Lombard
Ronny Markes
Court McGee
Jason Miller
Mark Munoz
Rafael Natal
Antonio Braga Neto
Yushin Okami
Rousimar Palhares
Costa Philippou
Goran Reljic
Nick Ring
Luke Rockhold
Jake Rosholt
Alessio Sakara
Jorge Santiago
Jake Shields
Alexander Shlemenko
Anderson Silva
Wanderlei Silva
Chael Sonnen
Ronaldo Souza
Andreas Spang
Brian Stann
Clifford Starks
Vyacheslav Vasilevsky
Tom Watson
Chris Weidman

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

VOTE FOR YOUR TOP 10 HW's in THE WORLD - JUNE MMA CRYPT RANKINGS

VOTE FOR YOUR TOP 10 HW's in THE WORLD - JUNE MMA CRYPT RANKINGS

Guys and Gals, this is your opportunity to have your say in the MMA CRYPT official top 10 rankings. Instead of only having 2 or 3 Mods telling you who the Crypt top 10's are, we are opening it up to all members.

Please take your time when voting, pay attention, as it is possible to vote for the same fighter in different spots. Try to keep all bias out of your selections, vote with your head, not your heart. Remember the top 10's should be ranked on performance and not popularity, also this isn't just a top 10 UFC fighter list, this includes all of MMA.

REMEMBER....NO BASHING OF OTHER MEMBERS PICKS. QUESTION IF YOU MUST, BUT KEEP IT CIVIL!!!

Have fun with it people.

Your Top 10 Heavyweight Fighters:

VOTE HERE

Andrei Arlovski
Josh Barnett
Pat Barry
Rob Broughton
Travis Browne
Shane Carwin
Daniel Cormier
Shane Del Rosario
Junior Dos Santos
Todd Duffee
Fedor Emelianenko
Gabriel Gonzaga
Dave Herman
Mark Hunt
Blagoi Ivanov
Lavar Johnson
Shawn Jordan
Sergei Kharitonov
Cheick Kongo
Cole Konrad
John Madsen
Frank Mir
Stipe Miocic
Matt Mitrione
Jeff Monson
Roy Nelson
Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
Alistair Overeem
Eric Prindle
Ben Rothwell
Mike Russow
Thiago Santos
Brendan Schaub
Antonio Silva
Ron Sparks
Stefan Struve
Cain Velasquez
Fabricio Werdum

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

VOTE FOR YOUR TOP 10 LHW's in THE WORLD - JUNE MMA CRYPT RANKINGS

VOTE FOR YOUR TOP 10 LHW's in THE WORLD - JUNE MMA CRYPT RANKINGS

Guys and Gals, this is your opportunity to have your say in the MMA CRYPT official top 10 rankings. Instead of only having 2 or 3 Mods telling you who the Crypt top 10's are, we are opening it up to all members.

Please take your time when voting, pay attention, as it is possible to vote for the same fighter in different spots. Try to keep all bias out of your selections, vote with your head, not your heart. Remember the top 10's should be ranked on performance and not popularity, also this isn't just a top 10 UFC fighter list, this includes all of MMA.

REMEMBER....NO BASHING OF OTHER MEMBERS PICKS. QUESTION IF YOU MUST, BUT KEEP IT CIVIL!!!


Have fun with it people.

Your Top 10 Light Heavyweight fighters.

VOTE HERE

Houston Alexander
Ryan Bader
Stephan Bonnar
Rafael Calvacante
Phil Davis
Rashad Evans
Forrest Griffin
Alexander Gustafsson
Dan Henderson
Quinton Jackson
Jon Jones
Mike Kyle
Muhammed Lawal
Lyoto Machida
Fabio Maldonado
Vladimir Matyushenko
Gegard Mousasi
Christian M'Pumbu
Stanislav Nedkov
Antonio Rogerio Nogueira
Tito Ortiz
Igor Pokrajac
Mauricio Rua
Thiago Silva
Krzysztof Soszynski
Ovince St.Preux
Glover Texeira
James Te Huna
Brandon Vera
Travis Wiuff

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

Friday, May 11, 2012

UFC on Fuel TV 3 & Strikeforce 40 Predictions- Kamikaze Overdrive MMA


UFC on Fuel TV 3: Korean Zombie vs Poirier Predictions & Strikeforce: Barnett vs Cormier Predictions- This Episode of the show includes Predictions for: Donald Cerrone vs Jeremy Stephens, Chan Sung Jung vs Dustin Poirier, Josh Thomson vs Gilbert Melendez, and Josh Barnett vs Daniel Cormier. The rest of my predictions will be posted @ kamikazeoverdrive.net throughout the week.

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Mma crypt ***official*** top 10 rankings

Mma crypt ***official*** top 10 rankings

Here are the Official MMA CRYPT top 10 rankings for each of the 7 weight classes as voted on by you the knowledgable MMA CRYPT member.
Every number 1 guy was a unanimous decision EXCEPT for the Lightweight division, which was also the weight class with the highest number of fighters receiving votes.
The Bantamweight division is the only division that also has a unanimous number 2 guy.

Have fun with it guys, debate and voice your feelings, but as usual, keep it respectful.

Without further ado......here are your top 10 rankings:

1/ Junior Dos Santos
2/ Alistair Overeem
3/ Cain Velasquez
4/ Frank Mir
5/ Fabricio Werdum
6/ Josh Barnett
7/ Shane Carwin
8/ Daniel Cormier
9/ Antonio Nogueira
10/Antonio Silva

1/ Jon Jones
2/ Rashad Evans
3/ Dan Henderson
4/ Shogun Rua
5/ Lyoto Machida
6/ Ryan Bader
7/ Phil Davis
8/ Alexander Gustafsson
9/ Quinton Jackson
10/Forrest Griffin

1/ Anderson Silva
2/ Chael Sonnen
3/ Vitor Belfort
4/ Michael Bisping
5/ Mark Munoz
6/ Hector Lombard
7/ Brian Stann
8/ Chris Weidman
9/ Rousimar Palhares
10/Luke Rockhold

1/ Georges St. Pierre
2/ Carlos Condit
3/ Nick Diaz
4/ Jake Ellenberger
5/ Josh Koscheck
6/ Johnny Hendricks
7/ Jon Fitch
8/ Martin Kampmann
9/ Jake Shields
10/Rory Macdonald

1/ Benson Henderson
2/ Frankie Edgar
3/ Gilbert Melendez
4/ Gray Maynard
5/ Nathan Diaz
6/ Jim Miller
7/ Anthony Pettis
8/ Clay Guida
9/ Donald Cerrone
10/Eddie Alvarez

1/ Jose Aldo
2/ Chad Mendes
3/ Hatsu Hioki
4/ Dustin Poirier
5/ Chan Sung Jung
6/ Erik Koch
7/ Mark Hominick
8/ Diego Nunes
9/ Kenny Florian
10/Hiroyuki Takaya

1/ Dominic Cruz
2/ Urijah Faber
3/ Renan Barao
4/ Brian Bowles
5/ Miguel Torres
6/ Scott Jorgensen
7/ Joseph Benavidez
8/ Brad Pickett
9/ Takaya Mizugaki
10/Demitrious Johnson

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Doing site upgrades today, it will be up and down for the next few hours.

Doing site upgrades today, it will be up and down for the next few hours.


Hey guys, the site will be iffy for a while as I do some upgrading. Hopefully its only for an hour or so but you never know with this stuff.

Brian

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

Monday, March 5, 2012

VOTE FOR YOUR TOP 10 LW's in THE WORLD - MARCH MMA CRYPT RANKINGS

VOTE FOR YOUR TOP 10 LW's in THE WORLD - MARCH MMA CRYPT RANKINGS

Guys and Gals, this is your opportunity to have your say in the MMA CRYPT official top 10 rankings. Instead of only having 2 or 3 Mods telling you who the Crypt top 10's are, we are opening it up to all members.

Please take your time when voting, pay attention, as it is possible to vote for the same fighter in different spots. Try to keep all bias out of your selections, vote with your head, not your heart. Remember the top 10's should be ranked on performance and not popularity, also this isn't just a top 10 UFC fighter list, this includes all of MMA.

REMEMBER....NO BASHING OF OTHER MEMBERS PICKS. QUESTION IF YOU MUST, BUT KEEP IT CIVIL!!!


Have fun with it people.

Your Top 10 Lightweight fighters.

VOTE HERE


Eddie Alvarez
Shinya Aoki
Edson Barboza
JZ Cavalcante
Donald Cerrone
Michael Chandler
Pat Curran
Nate Diaz
Rafael Dos Anjos
Evan Dunham
Frankie Edgar
Tony Ferguson
Takanori Gomi
Clay Guida
Melvin Guillard
Ben Henderson
Tatsuya Kawajiri
Joe Lauzon
Jorge Masvidal
Gray Maynard
Gilbert Melendez
Jim Miller
Anthony Njokuani
Anthony Pettis
Sean Sherk
Dennis Siver
George Sotiropoulos
Jeremy Stephens
Sam Stout
Thiago Tavares
Gleison Tibau
Josh Thomson
Matt Wiman

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

Roy Nelson's Bet: He Will Drop to Light Heavyweight If He Can Get 100,000 'Likes' On

Roy Nelson's Bet: He Will Drop to Light Heavyweight If He Can Get 100,000 'Likes' On


Roy Nelson's Bet: He Will Drop to Light Heavyweight If He Can Get 100,000 'Likes' On Facebook

by Anton Tabuena on Mar 5, 2012 3:12 AM EST


Dana White has been nudging Roy Nelson, and trying to convince him to drop to 205 for a while now. Today, "Big Country" suddenly made a pretty smart bet by saying that he will finally drop to light heavyweight, IF he can add 100,000 'likes' in Facebook.
Here's Nelson explaining it in his own words:

The reason is my friend and I had a discussion about what was better? I think twitter just because of use and for fans interaction, but Facebook is 20x bigger. So we decided to bet. I said if it so easy and great I should be able add 100K fans in 2 weeks because I have that on twitter. Facebook is bigger and better so this should be easy. Right?
Bet is I will try to get to 205 if I can add 100k to Facebook.com/RoyNelsonUFC in two weeks. I love to win bets. Plus he will have to give me a part in his next movie.
It is also interesting to take note of a few things:
- A slightly slimmed down Roy Nelson weighed in at 246 lbs. for his last bout against Fabricio Werdum.
- He said he will "try" to get to 205, if he can "add", (not reach) 100,000 likes on Facebook.
- Nelson has again reiterated his belief that heavyweight is the place for him. He also says he will "win" this bet and won't need to drop to 205, simply because it's harder to get likes on Facebook.
As of this writing, he has 234,710 followers on twitter, and just below 32,000 likes on Facebook. I think it's a very good ploy, where Roy Nelson wins regardless of how this bet turns out. Why? He gets more attention, and he also gets more "likes" and "followers" either way.

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

UFC Octagon Girl Brittney Palmer’s Playboy Hits Stands Feb 17

UFC Octagon Girl Brittney Palmer’s Playboy Hits Stands Feb 17


For the third time ever, a UFC Octagon girl will grace the cover of Playboy.
The UFC’s own Brittney Palmer posed for an 8-page pictorial shot by Steve Shaw that hits stands this Friday, Feb 17.
The pictorial will also be available via Playboy’s website.
Palmer took some time off from her duties as a UFC Octagon girl to focus on art school recently, but an out pouring of fan support drew her back to her old job.
She also explained her reasons for doing Playboy, where she joins current Octagon girl Arianny Celeste and former Octagon girl Rachelle Leah, as a fellow cover girl for the popular magazine.
“I take figure-drawing classes every day. Ninety-nine percent of the time there’s a nude model in your class – it’s beautiful and it’s art,” Palmer explained. “I really enjoy drawing nudes. I think women’s bodies are fantastic, and I work my ass off for my body. I have such appreciation for being in Playboy – it’s like being a model for an elite figure-drawing class.”
Palmer is currently on duty in Omaha, Neb for the UFC on Fuel show taking place Wednesday night, but Friday will be the day she officially becomes a Playboy covergirl.

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

UFC on Fuel TV Predictions- Kamikaze Overdrive MMA

UFC on Fuel TV Predictions- Kamikaze Overdrive MMA

UFC on Fuel TV: Ellenberger vs Sanchez Predictions -- UFC on Fuel TV: Ellenberger vs Sanchez predictions for 3 main card fights. The rest of my predictions can be found @ kamikazeoverdrive.net

Check out my MMA Rankings for all 7 UFC divisions; the UFC Champions and top 15 contenders for there respective titles. Please comment and subscribe to my channel: Kamikaze Overdrive MMA Predictions

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

Sunday, January 15, 2012

UFC 142 Bonuses: Barboza Nets $130K in Spectacular Fashion

UFC 142 Bonuses: Barboza Nets $130K in Spectacular Fashion


Saturday, January 14, 2012
39169
Edson Barboza’s spinning wheel kick at UFC 142 was perfectly timed and brutally efficient. While the spectacular finish undoubtedly improved his stock in the ultra-competitive lightweight division, it also helped to earned him an extra $130,000 on the night.

The talented Brazilian, who victimized Terry Etim with the kick inside the HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro on Saturday, was awarded both “Fight of the Night” and “Knockout of the Night” for his efforts. The bonuses were worth $65,000 apiece, as was the “Submission of the Night” bonus collected by Rousimar Palhares, who forced Mike Massenzio to tap to his patented heel hook. Etim took home $65,000 as well for his part in the showdown with Barboza.

Barboza spent much of the lightweight encounter punishing Etim with outside leg kicks, hindering the movement of the Englishman. When Etim attempted to take the fight to the floor, Barboza was able to get back to his feet with ease and continue his assault. In round three, the Brazilian found an opening shortly after a failed shot by Etim. Pivoting off his left leg, Barboza’s heel found its mark on Etim’s jaw, rendering his opponent unconscious in an early candidate for 2012 “Knockout of the Year.” It was also the first knockout of its kind in UFC history.

Protecting one’s legs is always a primary objective for opponents of Palhares, and Massenzio learned that lesson quickly in succumbing to the Brazilian’s submission of choice in round one. “Toquinho” began the frame by cracking Massenzio with leg kicks, one of which caught the Team BombSquad representative in the groin. After a very brief recovery period, Palhares pulled guard and got a firm hold of his opponent’s leg. Massenzio had no choice but to tap at 1:03 of the opening stanza.

It was the third consecutive bonus for Barboza, who has twice previously earned “Fight of the Night” honors: against Anthony Njokuani at UFC 128 and against Ross Pearson at UFC 134. It was the second post-fight bonus earned by Palhares, who also captured “Submission of the Night” for his armbar of Ivan Salaverry at UFC 84.

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Zuffa needs to step up and stomp out cheats

Zuffa needs to step up and stomp out cheats

Dave Mandel/Sherdog.comWhy should fighters stop doping when the risk doesn't come close to outweighing the reward?
This needs to be clear off the top: Zuffa is not responsible for mixed martial artists who dope up.

Athletes make, and will continue to make, decisions to use banned substances regardless of the deterrents and penalties. There will always be someone seeking an edge. Someone who realizes they can't rise to the top without the aid of modern science. Someone willing to play a risky game in order to train harder than his or her body would normally allow.

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That's the reality in the money-rich, winning-is-everything sports world mixed martial arts has joined over the past decade.

This also needs to be clear: Zuffa can, with one move, catalyze a sea change in MMA's widespread performance-enhancing drug culture. The purveyors of Strikeforce and the Ultimate Fighting Championship, the uncontested pinnacle of the sport, could decide that banned substance users aren't welcome at their events. That they won't do business with fighters who dope. They won't make money with 'em. That the risk for using must, for the first time, outweigh the reward -- because it most certainly does not now.

Many will ask: Should it be on Zuffa to do this when the sport it promotes is regulated by state governments, and when it is but one of many promoters?

I'd argue the answer is yes, and for the same reason UFC recently and rightly awarded Duane Ludwig the distinction of owning the 19-year-old organization's fastest knockout, even though the Nevada Athletic Commission refused to correct an error that "officially" said it wasn't. Zuffa is more important than any regulator, and has a vested interest in making sure the sport continues forward, which also means that among young fighters it's considered the place to be. Why do they see it that way now? The spoils. Money, prestige and fame of it all.

There isn't an organization in MMA that offers end-of-the-rainbow possibilities like Zuffa. Of course, there are a few groups with which fighters can sign and make a decent buck. UFC president Dana White is correct when he says his organization isn't a monopoly. There isn't a barrier to entry in the market for competitors. Viacom just purchased Bellator. Fighters can make money in Japan, though they might not get paid so fast. Asia in general is a burgeoning market for the sport, and other areas of the world are soon to follow. So, eviction from the UFC doesn't necessarily equal a death sentence for a fighter's career. But the fact remains, the allure of fighting in MMA's top organization can be a significant incentive to use PEDs. That's why fighters, including several so-called champions, have taken whatever steps they could, including doping, to get to the top. They have done this knowing the potential price.

Fighters must instead face a real choice. Is this thing I'm putting into my body worth the possibility of never fighting in the UFC? That should be a consideration for fighters these days, and it's really not. But more importantly, especially as it pertains to changing the culture that exists in MMA, kids walking into gyms for the first time shouldn't have to consider the possibility of drugs to get ahead.

Until the consensus among competitors shifts to the point it's no longer worth doing, it will be worth doing.

Still, some suggest the cost to the UFC for such a move would be too dramatic.

1. Potential competitors, like Viacom-funded Bellator, could swoop in and take promotable talent.

I guess. But that presupposes many of the fighters driving pay-per-view sales are using, and that they'll be caught. If that's the case, something drastic has to happen regardless. As it is, I think the idea that UFC would lose all its draws is way overblown. Ousted fighters, well, they'd head to a promoter who can live with an immediate reputation for signing steroid users. Don't you think the benefit of fighting in UFC and Strikeforce will actually grow? Most fans already presume a high percentage of fighters are mixed up with this stuff. Whether or not they truly care -- if responses to my Twitter account are an indication, most do, some don't -- that perception will change were Zuffa to draw a line in the sand.

We know fighters will get second chances somewhere else, and maybe some fans will be interested in how they do. But we've seen enough proof that when a fighter leaves the UFC, his stock takes a serious hit. Plus, if promoters go into the business of signing Zuffa's roid-tainted castoffs, that's great PR for the Las Vegas crew, which will only come out looking like a progressive, forward-thinking company.

I don't think it would take more than a year or two for fighters to get a clear sense that this thing was bad news for them. UFC could replenish lost names with new kids coming up, and they could do it fast.

2. Why should this happen in the UFC when the NFL, MLB and NBA don't cast aside talent when they test positive?

Sorry for answering a question with a question, but why should the UFC be like any other league?

It doesn't have a labor union to contend with. Other than being bound to work under various state athletic commission standards, and sometimes acting as its own regulator, Zuffa can operate with as much flexibility as it pleases. Simply relying on each state to get a hold of the problem isn't cutting it.

3. Stop pretending they're not all using something and let them.

The technology of kinesiology has never been more advanced. Some would say this truth represents another way in which athletes maximize their physical ability to compete at a higher level. And in the grand scheme of things, what's the difference between an innovative training technique, creatine, oxygenated water, or a consortium of nutritional supplement manufacturers pumping out new stuff every day, and anabolic steroids? It's just another piece of the puzzle for some.

There's no question competitive fields spur innovation and require determination -- nowhere is that more true than sport. But is an exercise revolution that produces faster, more powerful movements relative to fitness routines of yesteryear equivalent, in results and fair play, to its pharmaceutical equivalent?

How can anyone say "yes" to that? Not all fighters will want to use. The idea that they should be forced into a competitive disadvantage because of this is insane.

But there's a larger point here. Allowing fighters to use if they wanted would mark an even place from which to start. That's at least something.

Regulators and some MMA promoters, especially Zuffa, have made strides in working to end the use of banned substances. Problem is, the battle between drug users and drug enforcement bodies is as competitive as it gets. Lots of innovation and determination happening. No matter how much Nevada or California improve their tests, fighters will find a way around them. And it's clear in a situation as haphazard as MMA's -- standards vary greatly from state to state -- the one thing that can deliver an impact is a universal stance at the top.

A decree by Zuffa is as universal as it gets.

4. Zuffa will lose out on big paydays.

Maybe some. I mean, what happens in Chael Sonnen's case? That's a tough one. He's lined up to participate in one of the biggest fights of 2012 if he gets past Mark Munoz on Jan. 28. It's a lot to risk for the UFC; true moneymakers aren't so easy to come by.

But it's obvious Zuffa has already lost fights. While Cris Santos, the final inspiration for this column, sits out a year, she can't headline Strikeforce cards for Showtime. Champions lost their belts. Divisions were altered. It's dishonest to act like steroids haven't caused major disruptions already.

If the UFC went down this path, there could be some initial pain. But those bad actors, quickly forgotten, will give way to a new crop. Two years from now, how exactly will the UFC suffer because it can claim the strongest substance abuse policy in sports? One that will absolutely trickle down through the lower levels of MMA. One that will force rival, potentially competitive promoters to comply or be stigmatized. One that will grow more meaningful and expansive as cutting-edge testing procedures are put in place -- because that has to happen too for this thing to work over the long term.

On Monday, Zuffa could announce it will refrain from promoting anabolic steroid users, HGH users, EPO users, whatever-the-next-thing-is-called users, and the sport would be better off.

Go ahead, tell me otherwise.

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com

UFC 142 (RIO) Predictions- Kamikaze Overdrive MMA

UFC 142 (RIO) Predictions- Kamikaze Overdrive MMA

Channel: Kamikaze Overdrive MMA

UFC 142 (RIO) Predictions -- My picks for UFC 142 (RIO): Aldo vs Mendes, fight predictions for the 5 main card fights and 6 prelims.

Plus check out my MMA Rankings for all 7 UFC divisions; the UFC Champions and top 15 contenders for there respective titles. Please comment and subscribe to my channel: Kamikaze Overdrive MMA Predictions

Posted via email from MMACrypt.com