Dana Whiter speaks out

Dana White: Hockey (Your Cool), Soccer (Your Not) And Helmets Are For Pussies

Dana White speaks his mind and lets the world have it as he sees it.

“I’m not a big hockey fan. But I respect how talented you have to be to play hockey. Soccer? That’s a whole other ball. Can’t stand soccer. It’s the least-talented sport on Earth. There’s a reason three-year-olds can play soccer. When you’re playing a game when the net is that big and the score is 3-1 (and that’s a blowout) are you kidding me? You know how untalented you have to be to score three times when the net is that big? Now back to hockey. You have guys on skates with crooked sticks and you have to hit a puck into a net that’s the same size as the goalie. And at any time someone could take your head right off your shoulders and it’s perfectly legal. That’s a real sport that takes real talent, speed and all the things you need to be a real athlete. Now fighting is a part of hockey and has been since Day 1. It’s part of the game. It is what it is. I think we live in a world now where everything has been so pussy-fied. When I grew up we didn’t wear helmets when we rode our bikes. We didn’t have car seats. We didn’t have all this stuff. Now things are safer and we should be safer but let’s not go overboard. Fighting’s a part of hockey. Period.”[Calgary Sun]

Now Dana was in Calgary to announce UFC 149, but in a few weeks he will be in Brazil to promote UFC 147 “Silva vs. Sonnen 2″. What do you think the chances are he will be getting some backlash from this statement as he tries to fill the 80,000 seat Rio de Janeiro soccer stadium in a country where soccer (football) is king.

Gary Goodridge gives a few words

Goodridge, former MMA fighter and kickboxer, offers cautionary tale

Gary Goodridge (top), a veteran of the MMA and kickboxing circuits, most likely suffers from chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
Gary Goodridge (top), a veteran of the MMA and kickboxing circuits, most likely suffers from chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
AP

Two days after Gary Goodridge told me that fighting for a living had broken his brain in tragic and irreversible ways, I found myself standing in the lodge of Montana’s Jackson Hot Springs resort, holding a can of PBR and watching one of his old fights on TV alongside a few barely interested strangers. Two days after I’d interviewed Goodridge and his friends, two days after I’d spent the better part of an afternoon reading about the brain disease that would likely drive him into an early grave, there he was in front of me, doing the very thing that would eventually change him into a person even his own family barely recognized.

It was one of those strange moments in life. A moment where the one thing you’ve been consciously trying not to look at suddenly shoves itself in your face. It was not a nice moment. Not as a fight fan or an MMA writer. Even after the moment had passed, I couldn’t help but think about how many more times I might have to relive it in the years to come as the fighters I’ve watched and wrote about begin to slide into old, or even just middle age.

The fight was Goodridge vs. Igor Vovchanchyn, in case you’re curious. It was the first of two meetings between them, back at Pride 4 in 1998. Goodridge was 32 then, the same age I am now. In the video, he looks clear-eyed and ferocious, trading power shots with that Ukrainian spark plug of a man who made a career out of battling bigger, stronger opponents in cavernous Japanese arenas.

Every time a Vovchanchyn hook caught the side of Goodridge’s big, bald head, I thought about him at home in Barrie, Ont., spending his days in bed, watching TV, popping prescription pills for his memory loss and his depression. When Vovchanchyn sent him wobbling back into the corner, I remembered how Goodridge’s friends told me that sometimes he’d call them on the phone to talk, then call them back 10 minutes later with no memory whatsoever of the conversation they’d just had. When the Pride referee jumped in to wave the fight off I watched Goodridge’s eyes swimming in his head and thought about his best friend since childhood choking up as he told me how he missed the man he used to know, the man who was once so charismatic and brimming with life, the man who now, at 46, is a dim shadow of his former self.

Did the strangers in the hot springs lodge have any clue what they were looking at? Did they know that, in some sense, they were watching a ghost at work on the plasma big screen on this lazy Saturday afternoon? I doubt it. To them, it was a passing image of mildly entertaining violence, seen and then quickly forgotten. To Fuel TV, the cable channel that the UFC has now all but commandeered, it was a rerun. Something to fill a weekend programming hole. Expendable and interchangeable scenes from an insignificant past.

To Goodridge, it was one beating among many. It was so long ago that it might as well have happened to someone else. In a way, it did.

According to a brain injury specialist at Toronto’s St. Michael’s hospital, Goodridge most likely has chronic traumatic encephalopathy. As in, the dreaded CTE that researchers are now finding in the brains of deceased NFL and NHL players, as well as in boxers and professional wrestlers. As in, the disease that results from years of head trauma, and which eventually reduced capable young professional athletes to brooding, impulsive, self-destructive wrecks. As in, the same disease that led to former Chicago Bears defensive back Dave Duerson shooting himself in the chest at 50, leaving behind a message to please see that his brain was given to the researchers responsible for slicing it into thin slivers and looking at it under a microscope in order to figure out why he lost control of his emotions, his mind, his life.

No one can tell Goodridge for sure that CTE is the reason why he can remember things he did 30 years ago, but not what he did yesterday They can’t say that it’s why he snapped at his mother for the first time in 46 years just recently, or if it’s why he can’t stand on one foot without falling over. The only way to be certain is to cut open his brain and look for the brown splotches of tau protein that spread out and derail the brain function in a person with CTE. For now, the doctors can only tell him that he probably has it, just like his friends who look up the symptoms on the internet have to admit to each other that the Gary they knew is almost certainly gone for good.

There can be little doubt that fighting did this to Goodridge. Exactly what type of fighting and whose fault it is, that’s a little trickier.

Goodridge will tell you it was all that kickboxing he did. Thirty-eight fights in 11 years, and even though he didn’t win one for his last four-and-a-half years of competition, they kept inviting him back because he was the type who would do his best to deliver a knockout one way or another. More often than not, the knockout he produced was his own.

Sure, his friends say, the kickboxing probably did most of the damage, but he took his share of beatings in MMA as well. There was the night a Gilbert Yvel head kick dropped him lifelessly to the mat. There was the time that Fedor Emelianenko battered him with punches before kicking his face like a soccer ball several times. There were the years worth of beatings he took in small, often wholly unregulated events all over the globe, long after even he knew he should have hung up his gloves.

And make no mistake — he did know. He admitted it in interviews and private conversations many times.

“I should not fight again,” he told me after his late-notice bout with Gegard Mousasi at FEG’s Dynamite!! New Year’s Eve show in Japan in 2009. “I know I shouldn’t.”

But he did. He needed the money, and there always seemed to be some fight promoter dangling 20 or 30 grand in front of him if he’d only board a plane for Tokyo or Bulgaria or Budapest — even Washington D.C. — and take just enough of a beating to make the local crowd happy.

That’s Goodridge’s fault, even if he had some unscrupulous enablers helping him to destroy himself. At the same time, how much can you blame a brain-damaged man for his failure to accurately assess risk and reward? When he can’t remember what he had for breakfast, how much do you criticize him for the inability to come up with a better long-term financial strategy?

Perhaps more importantly, with a disease like CTE — which researchers say has a genetic component that makes some more susceptible to it than others, and which may not result in any clear symptoms for months or even decades after the trauma itself — how do we know we aren’t paying $54.95 to watch it happen to our present-day heroes on pay-per-view each UFC Saturday night?

The answer is, we don’t. We can’t. Neither can the UFC or the athletic commissions or the fighters themselves. When UFC president Dana White forced former light heavyweight champ Chuck Liddell into retirement after his third straight knockout loss at 40, it was hailed as a rare victory for restraint and good sense in the combat sports world. And it was, at least if we compare it to the standard operating procedure in boxing, where legends like Evander Holyfield and James Toney are permitted to continue on far past anything even resembling their primes.

And yet, for all we know even Liddell’s forced retirement came too late. Or maybe he could have taken the hits for a few more years and still been fine. Just as one person can smoke cigarettes for 50 years without getting lung cancer, some people can probably take more concussions without getting CTE. There’s no formula that tells us when a fighter’s brain has taken all it can stand. All we can do is look for the symptoms after the fact, and by then it’s too late.

But I find myself thinking about this more now, after writing Goodridge’s story, and I wonder why I didn’t think about it before. I think about the friend who tried to convince him to retire by sending him a video of an interview he did in 1996, when he was sharp and witty, and then one he did in 2009, when he slurred his words like it was last call.

I think about how you could do this exact same thing with guys like Liddell, who I’ve interviewed recently, and who, I must admit, doesn’t sound great. I think about Wanderlei Silva, who started out in the bare-knuckle days back in Brazil, and who now looks out at the world through a mask of scar tissue. I certainly think about it with “Rampage” Jackson, who has a history of erratic behavior and exceedingly poor impulse control, and yet who recently bragged on Twitter that, thanks to testosterone replacement therapy, he now feels like he could fight for 10 more years.

These are adults with the right to make their own choices. These are men who, along with their friends and families, will have to live with the consequences of those choices, and they have the right to make them even if they might ultimately be making a trade that most people would consider utterly insane. I realize that. At the same time, I don’t know if they realize it. I don’t know if anyone truly can. Certainly, Goodridge didn’t, even if he says now that he’d do it all over again if he had the chance.

Though of course, he doesn’t have that chance. Instead he has pills and TV. He has friends and family and his iPhone to remind him of all the day-to-day things he can’t possibly remember. He has those reruns on a Saturday afternoon. Today’s fighters? They have him to remind them of what’s really at stake in their pursuit of money and glory. Hopefully they’re paying close attention.

Greenman’s UFC 141 Picks

Posted on December 28, 2011 by GC Edit

Greenman’s UFC 141 MMA Picks

From Radio to HDNET, Chris Greenman’s UFC and StrikeForce predictions have racked up the highest win percentage among all known and documented MMA experts. The difference is that when you train among some of MMA’s elite, inside information surfaces that don’t quite make it to ESPN, FOX, Spike, and others.

For the last 3 years he is 429 correct and 68 wrong, that is 86.5% for those of you can’t do the math too well.  We finally will publish as a service to our viewers.

 Chris Greenman’s IFC 141 picks

Sorry guys I went 2-2 this UFC, it happens overall record is still insanely good, so chill

W This was my pick of the year ***** Lesnar – Overeem, Unfortunately I have to bow out and go against the All-American wrestler, Alistair Overeem simply brings in too much diversity

 L Great Fight sorry if you lost money Diaz – Cerrone, I am not a Cerrone fan simply because when I met him at the Arnold Classic behind the exhibitors staff area, he was a punk and I almost had to beat his 150 lb ass.  However, Diaz is even a bigger punk and is no Nick.  Cerrone beats Diaz in this bout.

L This was the surprise like when Sara knocked our GSP, rare very rare –  Fitch – Hendricks, Two world class wrestlers, two great fighters, but experience prevails and Fitch takes home this victory.

W This guy’s style could give Jon Jones some problems  Gustafsson – Matyushenko, Gustafsson 100%, this is a bad matchup for Mr. Henko.

 Assuncao – Pearson, I am actually on the fence on this one, if I had to pick I would take Pearson, but I betting man doesn’t force bets so I will lay low on this.

 Greenman’s latest UFC 140 Predictions results – 4 – 0 “This is a free service I offer anyone that follows my stuff, so if you’re in Vegas you can buy me dinner or something email me ProFightNetworkCEO@gmail.com and ask about my Pick of the year”

UFC 141 Fight Card

WATCH VIDEO HERE

UFC 141 Main event:

265 lbs.: Brock Lesnar vs. Alistair Overeem

UFC 141 Main card

170 lbs / Jon Fitch vs. Johny Hendricks

155 lbs / Nate Diaz vs. Donald Cerrone

145 lbs / Jim Hettes vs. Nam Phan

205 lbs /  Alexander Gustafsson vs. Vladimir Matyushenko

Spike TV Prelims:

145 lbs / Ross Pearson vs. Junior Assuncao

155 lbs / Danny Castillo vs. Anthony Njokuani

Preliminary Facebook

155 lbs / Efrain Escudero vs. Jacob Volkmann

170 lbs / Luis Ramos vs. Matt Riddle

170 lbs / Dong Hyun Kim vs. Sean Pierson

145 lbs /  Manny Gamburyan vs. Diego Nunes

Jon Jones defends belt and looks to get past year one

Jones aims to extend his year-long win streak

Jon 'Bones' Jones

LAS VEGAS, NV – NOVEMBER 30: Mixed martial artist Jon Jones holds the Fighter of the Year award at the Fighters Only World Mixed Martial Arts Awards 2011 at The Pearl concert theater at the Palms Casino Resort November 30, 2011 in Las …
Copyright Getty Images

Posted: 12/09/2011
Last Updated: 14 hours and 18 minutes ago

  • By BOB EMANUEL JR, Scripps Howard News Service

Although his work is not yet done for the year, Ultimate Fighting Championship light heavyweight champion Jon Jones already has turned in one of the most impressive calendar years in the brief history of mixed martial arts.

Jones dispatched a top contender in Ryan Bader in early February via a second-round choke. Just six weeks later, he ran through Mauricio “Shogun” Rua with a third-round TKO to capture his first UFC championship.

A hand injury delayed his next bout until September, when he returned to defeat another former UFC light heavyweight champion, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, with a submission in the fourth round.

Saturday night, Jones will attempt to knock off another former light heavyweight champion when he faces Lyoto “The Dragon” Machida in the main event of UFC 140 in Toronto (Pay-per-view, 9 p.m. Eastern).

“It’s been a great year,” Jones said. “I’m not looking at 2012 yet. I feel I still have this opportunity to do something in 2011 by beating these former champions. That’s my primary goal right now.”

Jones, a native of Rochester, N.Y., said he believes he is ready for Machida, whose only losses in 19 fights came to Rua and Jackson.

“I fought a lot this year,” Jones said. “I learned a lot about myself, about how to train better, how to eat better and all these types of things. I’ve taken all the knowledge that I’ve had from the Ryan Bader training camp, from the Shogun camp, from the Rampage camp. This is the last one of the year. I’ve just been growing so much from all these camps. I think this has been one of my most educating camps. Everything’s in order.”

The card also features several other former champions, including a rematch between former heavyweight champions Frank Mir and Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira. Mir defeated Nogueira via TKO in 2008 to win the UFC interim heavyweight championship.

Mir, who defeated Mirko Filipovic and Roy Nelson in the past 15 months, said he believes he could move back into contention for a potential third title run.

“I think so,” said Mir, 15-5. “The advantage of the heavyweight division is there’s not as deep of a pool. That’s the nature of the business. At that point if I’m victorious (against Nogueira), that’s three wins in a row. I think I’ll be right back up there again.”

The remaining fights on the pay-per-view card include former light heavyweight champion Tito Ortiz vs. Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, welterweights Claude Patrick vs. Brian Ebersole and featherweights Mark Hominick vs. Chan Sung Jung.

Four preliminary fights will air live on Ion Television (7 p.m., Eastern) — light heavyweights Krzysztof Soszynski vs. Igor Pokrajac; middleweights Jared Hamman vs. Constantinos Philippou; lightweights John Makdessi vs. Dennis Hallman; and bantamweights Yves Jabouin vs. Walel Watson.

The remaining preliminaries (www.facebook.com/UFC, 5:45 p.m., Eastern) include: lightweight Mark Bocek vs. Nik Lentz; welterweight Rich Attonito vs. Jake Hecht; and lightweights Mitch Clarke vs. John Cholish.

 

Bellator Fighting Championships announced its sixth season debuts March 2, and will run on Fridays throughout the season.

“Our focus was to find the right night, where the largest number of MMA fans could enjoy the show,” Bellator chairman and CEO Bjorn Rebney said. “We’ve been discussing this move with our partners at Viacom for months … we agreed that Fridays provided a great night for us to reach MMA fans with our live, real sport, tournament events every week.”

The tournaments include competition at featherweight, lightweight, welterweight and middleweight. A fifth division will be announced soon.

 

The British Association of Mixed Martial Arts presents its first card on HDNet on Saturday night. BAMMA 8, from Nottingham, England, will air live (4 p.m. Eastern).

Undefeated light heavyweight Jimi Manuwa, who recently signed a four-fight deal with the promotion, will debut versus Antony Rea in the main event. Welterweights Jim Wallhead and Joey Villasenor, lightweights Andre Winner and Diego Gonzalez and bantamweights Paul McVeigh and Erik Perez will also fight on the televised portion of the card.

Winner, the season nine runner-up on The Ultimate Fighter, spent two years with the UFC prior to his BAMMA debut in September. The fight versus Gonzalez will determine the top contender for the promotion’s lightweight title.

UFC’s Junior Dos Santos is the new champion

Junior Dos Santos stopped Cain Velasquez just 64 seconds into their UFC heavyweight title bout Saturday night, claiming Velasquez’s belt and bringing a swift end to the mixed martial arts promotion’s first show before millions of presumptive newcomers to the sport.

The UFC president, Dana White, stood before a bank of cameras and proclaimed the UFC’s first fight on prime-time network television to be an unqualified success, however long it lasted.

“It was a perfect night,” White said. “Nothing went wrong in terms of putting on a live production. It was perfect.”

Junior Dos Santos couldn’t resist chiming in.

“I agree,” the UFC’s new heavyweight champion said, grinning broadly.

 

I just want to say sorry to all my fans, family and friends. I disappointed you. I’m much more than this. I will be back, and I will get that belt back.

- Cain Velasquez

The brief fight was the only event on a one-hour broadcast on Fox, which signed the UFC to a seven-year broadcast deal earlier this year. Any newcomers to the sport who tuned in got a taste of MMA’s violence, but not much else — particularly if they returned late from a commercial break.

Or even if they blinked.

Dos Santos hit Velasquez with an overhand right early in the first round, staggering the previously unbeaten champion to the canvas. The Brazilian challenger jumped onto Velasquez, who defended himself briefly before finally succumbing to Dos Santos’ relentless ground-and-pound blows.

“All of my fights, I look for the knockout,” said Dos Santos, who burst into tears in the cage. “My coach used to tell me I’ve got heavy hands, so I tried to find a time to use them. It’s good to use my power, and that worked today.”

Exactly 18 years to the day after the UFC debuted with an eight-man tournament featuring no weight classes and one-round fights to the finish with almost no rules, MMA’s dominant promotional company kicked off its long-anticipated major television contract with its first live prime-time show. The UFC put spotlights, party tents and a red carpet outside Honda Center, which has hosted several major MMA events in the sport’s relatively short history, and the crowd was filled with celebrities from Fox’s stable of stars and every other corner of Hollywood.

Most of the debut broadcast was taken up by a primer on MMA and profiles of the two fighters — along with more post-fight analysis than expected.

White claimed it’s all part of the larger plan.

“We put on this production and we collaborate and work together, and as soon as those fights start, whatever happens, happens,” White said. “We can’t control the fights.”

White chose these two fearsome fighters for his Fox debut because of the high potential for a stoppage victory — but White openly wondering about Velasquez’s decision to stand and fight with Dos Santos, one of the best boxers in MMA. Dos Santos said he wasn’t 100 percent healthy, and acknowledged being “scared” before the bout.

Nobody could tell — certainly not Velasquez, whose yearlong reign ended in his first title defense.

“I just want to say sorry to all my fans, family and friends. I disappointed you,” said Velasquez, who agreed with the referee’s decision to stop the fight. “I’m much more than this. I will be back, and I will get that belt back.”

Velasquez (9-1) said Dos Santos’ only big punch disrupted his equilibrium when it landed behind his ear. The first minute before Dos Santos’ decisive blow included almost no action except a takedown attempt by Velasquez that was thwarted by Dos Santos.

“It was a good shot,” Velasquez said. “He has a lot of power. I waited too much for him. He went in and did what he was supposed to do, so my hat is off to him.”

Velasquez hadn’t fought since October 2010, when he claimed the belt from Brock Lesnar in the same octagon at Honda Center, but tore his rotator cuff in the process.

Dos Santos becomes the UFC’s third Brazilian champion, joining featherweight belt-holder Jose Aldo and longtime middleweight champ Anderson Silva, widely considered the world’s top pound-for-pound fighter.

Dos Santos has been a menacing prospect on the UFC horizon for several years, and he introduced himself to more casual MMA fans by serving as a coach opposite Lesnar on “The Ultimate Fighter,” the UFC’s popular reality show, earlier this year.

Like Velasquez, Dos Santos took up MMA relatively late, turning pro at 21 in 2006. He received his only professional loss in November 2007 when Joaquim Ferreira submitted him in the first round, but Dos Santos has rarely even been in trouble in a fight since.

Dos Santos made a spectacular UFC debut in October 2008, stopping heavily favored Brazilian Fabricio Werdum just 1:20 into the first round of their bout. He climbed the heavyweight ladder with stoppages of veterans Stefan Struve, Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic and Gabriel Gonzaga before winning decisions over Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin to get a title shot.

His next opponent is expected to be the winner of Lesnar’s bout against Alistair Overeem in Las Vegas on Dec. 30 on pay-per-view.

“I don’t have a preference,” Dos Santos said. “I never choose any opponent. Doesn’t matter who’s going to be my next opponent. I’m not thinking about that right now. I want to go back to Brazil and make a big, big barbecue for my family and all my partners.”

Rashad Evans continues to trash talk jon Jones, Why?

Yes, Rashad Evans is still talking about Jon Jones.

That’s mostly a function of his being asked about the light heavyweight champion, though, and that was the case this past weekend. “Suga” was the featured fighter at the UFC 138 Fight Club Q&A in Birmingham, England, and fans wanted to know who would win if Jones fought Middleweight Champion Anderson Silva.

Rashad’s reply:

“Honestly, I think… I would say Anderson would win. I think he would catch Jon standing up because I think Jon does a lot of crazy stuff but, fundamentally, sometimes he does it just to do it. But I think Anderson has a reason, like Anderson, fundamentally and technically, is better in that respect and I think he would catch (Jones) doing something stupid. If the fight was to go a little bit longer and Jon used his wrestling then I think the fight may go to Jon. But for the most part, early on in the fight, Anderson would catch Jon trying to do something crazy.”

Silva’s speed, technique and pinpoint accuracy would be enough to defeat Jones’ superior size, length and unorthodox striking. That’s one way of looking at it.

Another is to say that “Bones” would stifle “The Spider” with a suffocating top game, much like Chael Sonnen did to the middleweight champ back at UFC 117. Of course, Sonnen went on to lose that fight via triangle choke.

This one would be a tough call, no question. Who do you Maniacs think wins?

Evans answered plenty more questions during his near hour long on stage session in front of fans, including more on his feud with Jones and fighters he wishes he could have fought before they retired from MMA.

UFC May Be Subject Of FTC Anti-Trust Investigation

By Chris Howie
MMANEWS.COM Staff Writer

It appears the UFC could be in hot water with the US Government and may possibly be the center of an anti-trust investigation revolving around the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act.

The Econimist breaks down the details of what exactly is going on behind the scenes:

In 2000 the United States Congress passed the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, a law that sought to protect boxers from unscrupulous promoters and sanctioning bodies. Because boxing has no single governing organisation and its fighters are not unionised, promoters used to wield inordinate market power. As the industry’s “matchmakers”, they could refuse to arrange a fight, venue or broadcast deal unless boxers surrendered a disproportionate share of the proceeds and signed a long-term promotion agreement. The act tried to crack down on “coercive contracts” and level the field between fighters and promoters in negotiations.

However, the law only applied to boxing. In the decade since its passage, boxing’s primacy among combat sports in America has been challenged by the rise of mixed martial arts (MMA). MMA has grown in popularity in both the United States and Europe, and has moved from fringe venues and the outer reaches of the cable television dial to snazzier sports arenas and broadcast networks.

In recent years the industry has consolidated under the aegis of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), which has bought up most of its rivals, including Strikeforce this March. In August UFC inked a $100m-a-year deal with the Fox network in the United States to begin broadcasting its fights in November.

As the UFC has grown, it has increasingly found itself under the same scrutiny that boxing promoters once attracted.

The UFC may already be the subject of an FTC antitrust investigation. Although the commission does not acknowledge its investigations until they have been completed, rival fight promoters say they have answered requests from the FTC for information about UFC. The $40m Strikeforce deal fell below the $66m threshold for an FTC investigation. But the commission could have launched one retroactively if it found evidence of abuse of monopoly power. Mr White has ducked questions about antitrust concerns, saying only that “there are a lot of people coming after us and taking shots at us.” (If he were to admit publicly that UFC was being investigated, the FTC would then be able to discuss the case as well).

If UFC’s many rivals fail to weaken it through the executive branch, they can always turn to the legislature. It would take just a slight tweaking of the Muhammad Ali act to expand it to MMA as well, which would give fighters more leverage in dealing with the company. John McCain, the senator who sponsored the Muhammad Ali act, remains in office. He should probably expect a call from anti-UFC lobbyists sometime soon.

Quinton “Rampage” Jackson looks to switch to boxing as MMA is too much for him

Mixed Martial Arts has evolved so much in the last 15 years that now days, there are true athletes that learn the sport right from a young age.  unfortunately for many MMA pioneers, the talent and athletic pool has passed them up and it is difficult to swallow for many former champions.

So what is the best thing to do, switch to a sport that no one watches anymore?

Jackson is on the fence and toying with boxing now,  the 33-year-old is talking about a boxing career. Will he go through with it?

Jackson is annoyed with the direction of MMA. While he’s become a one-dimensional fighter, who’s always looking to land the right hand, he’s seeing the young guns at 205 pounds becoming more and more athletic.

“I hate fighting people who are scared. When you fight somebody who is scared you never know what they’re going to do. They turn and run,” Jackson told the ESPN U.K. podcast. “That’s why I’m gonna go to boxing. I’m gonna try boxing because they’ve got to stand with you. If I get knocked out I don’t care because at least it’s a fight.”

Jackson is coming off a fight where he couldn’t touch UFC light heavyweight champ Jon Jones for 15-plus minutes. Jones used his 84-inch reach and kicks to keep Jackson at long range. When the space closed, Jackson swung away like a maniac, but Jones just scooted out of the pocket.

Jackson became a crossover star with his role in “The A-Team,” but that mean anyone outside of MMA will care if he moves over to boxing?

“I’ve tried a lot of boxing, I’m falling in love with boxing and I know I can put butts on seats over there.” said Jackson.

Keep in mind, Jackson fights at 205 pounds and walks around at anywhere between 225-250 pounds. Boxing’s heavyweight division could use an infusion of American draws, but could a guy with zero pro fights in the sport fill anything bigger than a 2,000 seat arena?

On top of that, Jackson will have to leave the UFC to move over to boxing. Based on previous discussions with Zuffa management, there’s no way a fighter under contract with the UFC would be allowed to potentially scar his reputation by boxing. Long story short, Rampage will “change his mind” about boxing in the next few days.