Post#148 » by Bernman » Tue May 21, 2013 10:50 pm
Yeah, while I think the theories and reasoning of people like CBR is very interesting and there's logic to them, the reality is you can go back and forth into ways in which one could be safer than the other, and we'll only really know when a good sample of mixed martial artists are elderly and/or dead. Right now it's such a new sport, still. The dinosaurs like Severn, Mo Smith, Tank, Ken, Royce, etc.; are like late 40's to early 50's. Even a guy like Frank Shamrock, who was in it practically since the beginning, is still 40 today. We can only tell so much from eye tests at these ages. And there are lucid boxers around those ages after long careers. Look at Mike Tyson. He's smarter now than when he was fighting. The fighters participating in MMA today are still guinea pigs.
You can bring up how in MMA a typical publicized fight is about half as long as in boxing, and fighters who would be finished in MMA would be allowed to get up and continue in boxing. But the flip side is in MMA because there's ground fighting involved refs will rarely stop fights on the feet (see Warren-Curran) and fighters can take numerous hammer blows post knockout/concussion (see Munoz-Weidman), plus throughout the duration of an MMA fight guys take un-cushioned blows sometimes with as heavy and long of an object as a leg (Cro Cop-Wand), and in boxing there are shorter fights early in careers where in MMA it's basically all 15 but now 25's are becoming much more prevalent too with all UFC main events lasting that long. Then what about mixed martial artists who are choked unconscious, sometimes to the point of seizures. Of course long periods of time without oxygen is known to cause brain damage. How about continual short periods throughout lifetimes to the point of causing unconsciousness? What reason would scientists have for testing it outside MMA/BJJ up until now? Auto-Erotic Asphyxiation freaks? We only know a singular, run of the mill event, doesn't cause long-lasting, obvious neurological symptoms. But that is the case with concussions too, previously leading to false conclusions they don't cause long-term damage in conjunction with other concussions and aging, yet of course they found out that conclusion was false through numerous posthumous brain examinations.
It's impossible to have a whole lot of hard or even compelling anecdotal evidence right now. And we can't use logic to say one combat sport is obviously safer than another, like we can do with a combat sport like MMA vs. a non contact like cheerleading, which is obviously less dangerous unless you use very convenient criteria. Dana keeps on pounding away and pounding away in the media, to portray MMA as relatively safe, until it becomes a well accepted truth, based on the one-sided arguments of a man who stands to gain more from the belief than just about anybody in the world.