Post#78 » by markdeez33 » Tue Nov 18, 2008 7:58 pm
My opinion on the MMA vs. Boxing topic,
Boxing is and will ALWAYS be the premiere fighting sport. MMA is just starting out and in 10-20 years, it might be as powerful as Boxing or even more powerful, only time will tell, but boxing for now, is the most popular sport and THE BETTER sport. For anyone who saw the Lesnar-Couture card, they have trouble filling up slots for their 3 hour PPV. They began to run prelim fights that took place earlier in the night to make up for this. Now boxing has done this IN THE PAST on many cards, but the thing is, boxing undercards, atleast for pay per views, are normally better. You don't have as much HYPE surrounding the card as you do in MMA, but the fight quality is generally better.
On the last UFC card, you had everything happen that Dana White says only happens in Boxing - short fights, less than a minute KO's, a main event that didn't live up to its hype (lets be serious - Lesnar devastated Couture, who really thought Couture had a chance!?) - we've got a bunch of fighters on the card that NO ONE has ever heard of. Who really wants to see that?
Another thing that the UFC needs to capitalize on is the HEAVYWEIGHT division. I know, I know - the boxing heavyweight division is somewhat down right now - but aside from Brock Lesnar in the UFC, who would I pay to see fight in the Heavyweight division? I'd much rather see a James Toney-Samuel Peter fight or the Klitschko brothers, or hell, I'll even take a 45 year old Holyfield vs. Valuev fight.... the UFC just DOES NOT have a premiere heavyweight division. Thats the one thing they lack.
If the UFC wants to overtake Boxing - yall better call up Fedor, yall better call up Arlofski (sp?) and put some asses in the seats. Everyone knows the premiere division in the sport of fighting is the HEAVYWEIGHT division. If somehow the UFC could put together a decent division of Heavyweights, they could really begin to draw in viewers, because the Boxing heavyweight division is subpar out of the top 5 or 6 in the division (as opposed to the 80s/90s when you had 20-30 guys who were contenders)
Boxing has the bigger names, the better fighters, the better overall card quality. UFC is improving, UFC has finally grown up (leaps and bounds over the simplistic gimmicks of the 90s cards), and I'm excited for the future, but I still think they have a LONG way to go before they can truly compete with boxing.
Outside of my white friends, NOBODY talks about UFC or MMA period. Blacks, Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, etc. all love boxing. IDK I guess I'm just a diehard boxing fan - I was raised in the sport of Boxing - raised around it, raised in the gym, raised in the locker room of small arenas across the South, and to me, there's nothing more manly than standing toe-to-toe with another man throwing hands.
