Jun 062011
 

Dear Dana White,

I like to consider myself an intellectual. Not in a pretentious way but more in the sense that I don’t think being smart or educated is something to be ashamed of or mocked. Early on in high school I was picked on by a couple of jocks. By in large most of them, like most of everyone else didn’t really notice my existence but a couple of jock douchebags decided to pick on me and my indifference to sports became a seething hatred for meathead jocks. Granted, it was unfair of me to judge a whole group of people, namely athletes, by the actions of a couple of assholes but when you’re fifteen you’re generally not blessed with a philosophical and objective perspective. Even to this day, despite being intellectually evolved and more open-minded, that knee-jerk prejudice against jocks is still there. I make a distinction here between “jocks” and athletes, which doesn’t erase my prejudice, just makes it more selective.

When I first became aware of MMA I didn’t know it was MMA. I, like a lot of people saw it for how it was marketed at the time, as a brutal, no rules, barbaric bloodsport. Unfortunately, this angle repulsed me. It seemed to be everything I hated: dumb, meathead, uber-agro jock dicks that thought bashing someone’s face in and sending them to the hospital was cool. If they didn’t market it like that, I likely would’ve become a big fan of Royce Gracie – this little Brazilian beating much bigger and stronger guys with technique, with brains. I would’ve eaten that shit up at the time, if I had known and understood more about the sport; if it was marketed as mixed martial arts and not “No-Rules Cage Fighting”. It was your doing with The Ultimate Fighter that showed me that this was a real sport with athletes who trained. Martial artists rather than blood-thirsty barbarians. Not to say it’s not violent and primal and occasionally brutal and not to deny the visceral appeal of that element but it’s also a lot more.  And we also got to see that most fighters weren’t typical jocks. They’re athletes but most of them had to be a little bit nuts to want to do this for a living. Continue reading »

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Jun 062011
 

"All-American" Brian Stann has quickly climbed the ranks in the UFC's middleweight division. (Photo courtesy of Zuffa, LLC.)

UFC middleweight “All-American” Brian Stann (11-3) made another big splash in the 185lbs. division last Saturday at UFC 130 with his striking clinic win over “Sandman” Jorge Santiago (22-9). Many thought it would be a back-and-forth battle on the feet with the former Sengoku champion, but Stann proved them wrong. The USMC soldier worked angles, mixed up his strikes, and countered the seemingly ineffective advances of Santiago. After a power-counter that dropped the Brazilian in the closing seconds of the first round followed by a rain of bombs up to the closing bell, Stann was already breaking the will of the more experienced Santiago. The second frame was just a continuation of the beating. Then with only thirty seconds left on the clock, Stann dropped “Sandman” again and finished him with a powerful combo.

Having steadily climbed the ranks of the UFC’s middleweight ladder, now the question is: What’s next in the bright future of “All-American”? Continue reading »

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