Clyde_Style wrote:That's pretty much what it feels like at this point. Sure, they run feel good pieces on the good guys, but at this point it does feel like Dana sheds crocodile tears when dollies go flying while in his mind he immediately is seeing cash registers ring.
Boxing, with its multiple associations each conferring belts from their sparring kingdoms, was born out of filth and corruption. The UFC has a chance to change that, but they may be behaving the way Don King would have if he had had a full monopoly on boxing. There are other promotions of course so it wouldn't surprise me if in 5-10 years the UFC is no longer the only standard bearer just like Facebook may lose a billion users to other platforms or activities.
Man, I feel you 100% on this. The UFC wasn't always the king of the mountain, Japan was kinda the center of the MMA universe for a while with PRIDE. PRIDE actually had a WWE aspect that led to success which was giving fighters opportunities to have over the top walk outs. That's it though...and it was great.
Other than that, it was pure competition. Lots of tournaments still at that point, which I think gave more to the competition aspect. Now it's prize fighting and the prize isn't necessarily based on merit any more. Everyone sees it happening, there's just no way to tell if it'll reverse course (PPV sales have been in the tank this year up until Conor and Khabib so that may help).
Clyde_Style wrote:Fans like me are not presently the UFC's target audience. They don't care if I bail. They are catering to the most passionate fans which can include gentlemen like yourself, but on the whole also includes tons of meatheads. You could have in ten years a whole generation of young adult MMA fans who grew up only knowing the hyped up in-your-face version of rivalries who take it to heart as their own rivalries which is how you got soccer hooligans in other parts of the world.
Fam they're not even catering to me or the hardcores any more. We don't care about belts but they've shifted to having to have a title fight at every PPV. That's how you get Derrick Lewis beat to hell and Cormier with a legitimate hand injury fighting on 3 weeks notice, just 3 days after the beating Lewis took. I feel like the UFC takes fans like me for granted because they know I'm buying virtually anything they put out. Don't get me wrong, Conor vs Khabib was one everyone dug into, but not because of the drama. That's just another aspect of analysis at this point. We just wanted to see best vs best, style vs style.
I'll say this though, the brawl after that fight ruined what was an otherwise really great PPV. Waterson and Herrig was competitive and fast paced; Reyes had a great performance and OSP never let up; Lewis had the best comeback of the year and a post fight interview for the ages; Ferguson and Pettis may have had the fight of the year; and then Khabib cemented himself as the man to beat in dominant fashion...to a fanatic like me, I'm pissed off that they distracted everybody from that. We had the most eyes the UFC has ever drawn and now all anyone wants to talk about or remembers is the mess afterward.
Clyde_Style wrote:It is not our culture that produces this, but the medium. You put enough people into that incubator long enough and you're going to produce more mobs ready to make havoc at the events. So either the UFC wises up and starts to emphasize the sporting aspects over pre-fight beefs or it will get out of hand in the future that turns whole stadiums in brawling thunderdomes.
Absolutely! I don't mind Lewis getting a title shot that he's earned (9-1 in his last 10 mostly by KO) but give him time to heal and a full camp. Let Cormier's hand heal. But Lewis gained 500,000 followers on instagram over the weekend, so this gets thrown together. I see a Conor rematch as a distinct possibility in spite of the one sided nature of the first fight and the melee afterward...because they think it'll sell the most ppv's. Even before he won, Khabib said he'd retire if he doesn't get a superfight. Tony Ferguson isn't a superfight...he's just the guy with the longest winning streak in the history of MMA's deepest division. But Nate's campaigning and Conor is talking rematch, so I'm not confident Tony Ferguson gets the shot he deserves; I feel pretty confident Ferguson wins though (I know people think I'm crazy).