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Mixed Martial Arts Continues to Grow in Popularity
There once was a time when boxing ruled the sports landscape. The heavyweight champion was the most feared and famous athlete on the planet. Boxers like Joe Louis, Muhammad Ali, George Foreman and Mike Tyson were household names throughout the world.
However, over the last decade, a sport with history and honor has lost its popularity to upstart sports like Mixed Martial Arts (MMA). The decline of elite fighters in the heavyweight division and the lack of knockouts have led many young men to look for action and excitement in sports like MMA.
Because of the decline of boxing, mixed martial arts has taken over and has become the sport of choice for the age 18-34 demographic and put the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) on course to join the ranks of elite sports leagues like the National Basketball Association and the National Football League.
MMA resounds with 18-34 (year olds) because that age range has a shorter attention span than other age groups. They buy video games, fast cars, cool clothes, all on credit because they want it now. They want instant gratification. In the UFC, the normal bout consists of three five-minute rounds, said long-time fan George Sorrell, 35, of Houston.
MMA is an intense and evolving combat sport in which competitors use interdisciplinary forms of fighting that include jiu-jitsu, judo, karate, boxing, kickboxing, wrestling and other techniques to their strategic and tactical advantage in a supervised match.
The Ultimate Fighting Championship began in 1993, but mixed martial arts dates back to the Olympic Games in Athens, according to the UFC. About 80 years ago, a Brazilian form of MMA known as Vale Tudo (anything goes) sparked local interest in the sport. Now that interest is felt throughout the world as the UFC now offers 12 to 14 live pay-per-view events annually through cable and satellite providers.
Recently, a UFC event in Columbus, Ohio attracted more than 19,000 people, the largest audience in North America to witness a mixed martial arts event. More than 4.7 million viewers tuned in to see UFC 75, the first ever title bout on Spike TV. On a Saturday night, it outdrew college football among young men.
Viewers of UFC 75 saw Quinton Rampage Jackson defeat Dan Henderson to unify the UFC and PRIDE titles in the 205-lb weight-class. Cheick Kong defeated Mirko Cro Cop and Houston Alexander knocked out Alessio Sakara in one minute of the first round. In the title fight, Jackson became the first man to unify a major title with a five-round victory. Judges scored the bout 48-47 and 49-46 twice for Memphis, Tenn. native.
Fans attribute the success of the UFC to clever marketing such as the reality show "The Ultimate Fighter," because fans can become acquainted with the athletes and begin to follow their careers. The million-dollar question is why are violent sports so popular among young men?
I suppose I like it for the same reason you rubber-neck at a traffic accident. You want to see how bad it can get. You want to see how bad the knockout will be or how slick a submission will be. You want to speculate what you might do in a similar circumstance, said Sorrell.
To many fans, mixed martial arts have already surpassed boxing in popularity, and some feel it will not be long before it is on par with mainstays like football, baseball and basketball. Questionable decisions and a lack of star quality have led to the UFC regularly outperforming boxing in its pay-per-view intake. With such quick success, it seems as if the UFC will soon revival the three big sports leagues in popularity and profit.
And for those who have not yet caught the MMA bug, Sorrell asks them to watch the reality show from the beginning. The UFC packages the fights amidst bad blood while living with each other and training with each other. Also going online and watching some of the signature fights helps. I would also ask them to watch a pay-per-view event or a free night on Spike TV.
After watching one fight, the UFC is certain that it will not be the last.
About the Author
After attending the very first UFC event in 1993, Steve Doss became an avid fan of this new sport. He also teaches Mixed Martial Arts, Muay Thai Kickboxing, and Self Defense in Austin, TX at Premier Martial Arts http://www.pmaaustin.com
Martial Arts In Columbia, MD
There is a diverse selection of martial arts schools to choose from in Columbia, Md. This area has schools that focus on everything from traditional arts like Tae Kwon Do and Karate to more cutting-edge disciplines like MMA and Krav Maga.
Columbia, Md. is in the middle of one of the wealthiest areas of the country. Training facilities take a civilized approach to instruction to draw doctors, lawyers and other professionals. They offer programs that will include the whole family so parents and children can train side by side. Columbia is definitely a family-focused martial arts market so most gyms offer after-school programs and summer camps and focus as much on moral lessons and self-discipline as they do on proper punching and kicking technique.
Aspiring students of the martial arts in Columbia, Md., are only limited by what type of fighting they want to learn. If they want to study the flashy kicks and acrobatic attacks of Tae Kwon Do then Victory Martial Arts is the place for them. If they prefer the chess-like battles of groundfighting then Columbia BJJ should be their place of study.
The two hottest fighting systems of the moment, MMA and Krav Maga have recently taken the spotlight of martial arts in Columbia, Md. MMA stands for Mixed Martial Arts and is the type of fighting used in the UFC and other cage-fighting competitions. Ground Control, the pioneer of MMA in Maryland, just opened up a brand new facility complete with a practice cage.
The other "hot" system of the moment is Krav Maga, designed and perfected by the Israeli defense forces to be easy to learn and devastating when used. Krav Maga MD students learn how to defend against unarmed and armed attacks and how to fight standing, on the ground or against multiple attackers. Krav Maga Worldwide has schools all over the country but they consider the Columbia facility the "Taj Mahal" of their training centers.
Whether it’s high kicks and “hi-yah!” or defenses against a machine gun, there is a martial art in Columbia, Md., that will hit your sweet spot.
BOXING .VS. UFC style, mixed martial arts...PROS CONS?
Yea, just got a question about the advantages & disadvantages of boxing to UFC. I am a boxer & got a friend who does mixed martial arts (UFC) What are some arguments that show boxing is actually a better sport than UFC? Or is it not? I know its funner to watch but actually whats involved with them both...what are some good arguments?
I'd rather call it Pugilism vs. Street Fighting, because that's what it is imo. Boxing is more tactical I think, it's ordered, structured, even civilized. MMA, absolute chaos. Whoever can go into Berserker mode faster is going to win. I'm not a fan, it's barbaric.
UFC Sues New York: Fighters Have First Amendment Right to Mixed Martial “Arts” (thepoliticker.observer)
Tell me that's not art.
As we reported last week, New York is one of the few states where the sport of
mixed martial arts is still illegal. The Ultimate Fighting Championship, MMA's
biggest league, has lobbied for years to get this changed so they could hold
lucrative live events at venues like Madison Square Garden. But so far they
have had no luck with politics. So today Zuffa, the league's parent, took a
different tack. The UFC sued New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and
Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. to overturn that state's 1997 law
banning Mixed Martial Arts on the grounds that the ban violates the First
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. "This is mixed martial **arts**, emphasis
on the arts," said Barry Friedman, the Jacob D. Fuchsberg Professor of
Constituional Law at NYU. "The reason these atheletes are suing is because
they have been prevented from their self-expression on some of the biggest
stages in the nation." Prof. Friedman says that this is the first time, to
his knowledge, that an athlete has brought a case to protect his sporting
performance as a first amendment right. "The UFC has tried for years to get
this ...
UFC Fighters Experience Marine Corps Martial Arts
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