UFC destroys the farce that is modern boxing

By Paul Cupitt / Roar Rookie

Last weekend’s fights were the perfect example of why there has been a major shakeup in the hierarchy of combat sports.

With the first big heavyweight boxing fight for the first time since 2002, it was one of the few yearly highlights for most boxing fans, and while UFC 132 was a good card on paper, most of the fights were for entertainment, not to show off the UFC’s best.

The UFC card was headlined by a bantamweight title fight, with the combatants having one fight between the two of them. They weren’t well known by the casual fans.

The UFC basically brought a knife to a gun fight, but they won easily.

Klitschko versus Haye, a fight that was advertised on pay-per-view as a fight between “two of the greatest fighters in heavyweight history,” went as I feared it would.

Klitschko established the jab early while Haye chose to sit on the outside and use his speed.

Haye’s workrate dropped as the rounds wore on, and instead of stepping up the pace and closing the show like you’d expect from the heavyweight champion of the world, Klitschko just kept jabbing.

The fight went 12 rounds with Klitschko throwing about 30 jabs a round and the odd straight right, while Haye occasionally threw a wild haymaker but seemed happier to lose on points and take his payday.

There were no vicious exchanges on the inside like in the Thrilla in Manila, no skills to marvel at like Billy Conn outboxing Joe Louis in their first fight, or the drama of the late come-from-behind knockout like Louis-Conn or Marciano-Walcott.

The fight was a travesty. Anyone who says different needs to go and watch some boxing from the golden age.

The fight was a typical Klitschko fight, with Wladimir take zero chances and not throwing anything meaningful until his opponent was pretty much falling over from exhaustion.

The only difference in this fight was that his opponent was athletic and didn’t get tired from a slow-paced fight like most of his recent opponents have.

Due to the time difference, I got up at five a.m. and paid $40 to watch this farce, and to say I was disappointed would be an understatement.

“Two of the greatest heavyweights of all-time” could only produce a light spar.

The UFC on the other hand produced fireworks.

UFC 132 saw an evenly matched, hard-fought title fight, the end of the career of one champion and the rebirth of another.

The card was awesome from start to finish with the first televised fight, the comeback of George Sotiropolous from his recent defeat, producing a stunning one-punch knockout (unfortunately for us Australian fans, it didn’t end the way we wanted).

Then following a stand-up clinic from Anthony Njoukuani over Andre Winner, we were treated to a typical Melvin Guillard highlight reel knockout.

The main card started with a third candidate for knockout of the night as Carlos Condit scored a spectacular flying knee knockout over Dong Hyun Kim to move himself into title contention. Tito Ortiz, the original poster boy of the UFC since, scored his first win in five years.

Fan favourite Chris Leben effectively ended the career of MMA legend Wanderlei Silva with a 30-second knockout, and Urijah Faber and Dominic Cruz closed the show with an up-tempo back and forth fight that Cruz won but could have been scored either way.

The card was awesome.

The reason it was awesome is that unlike in boxing, MMA fighters come to fight.

Boxing used to do this. Boxers used to have to fight their way to the top. In America, you had to fight four-rounders, then six, then eight, then ten, and against guys who had an equal chance of beating you and who relied on beating you to feed their family. You sometimes had to do it twice in a month.

It was an environment that weaned out the weak and produced the best. You had to learn how to box in every situation, because you couldn’t avoid boxers who might make you look bad.

Today, some promoter builds up the star before he proves himself, with carefully matched opponents that make him look good, and they often fight just a few times a year.

Then when he fights a live opponent, often they find out that he isn’t the star he was.

If you were a boxer from Australia 50 years ago, you had to win the state title, then the Australian title, then the Commonwealth title, then you’d get a shot at the world title.

Now, very few fighters go for the Australian title, choosing instead to fight handpicked imports for regional belts that teach them nothing but get them ranked, and when they step up, they’re shown up.

MMA may not fight as often as the old pro boxers used to, but they fight tough competition and they will fight whenever they can, often taking fights on short notice.

MMA fighters aren’t paid higher because of their bigger name (well, not to the extent that boxers do) with bonuses often given for putting on an exciting fight or scoring an exciting finish.

The records of MMA fighters aren’t as good looking as boxers, with many fighters suffering losses as they learn their craft, but thats how it used to be in boxing as well.

50 years ago, if you went 40-0 like Floyd Mayweather, everyone knew it was because you hadn’t fought anyone.

Losses make fighters stronger and MMA fighters lose more because they fight opponents who are actually capable of beating them. It’s produced an environment where you have to fight hard to get anywhere in the sport.

Wladimir Klitschko has had 50 professional fights in his career. Out of those he’s won 56, and out of the 59 the Haye fight was probably the first fight he had where he wasn’t overwhelmingly expected to win.

All three of his losses were against fighters who were ridiculously priced underdogs and even his best wins were against fighters who had little chance of beating him.

His fights, especially since he was knocked out by Lamont Brewster, are often boring and frustrating to watch even to Emmanuel Steward (Klitschko’s trainer) who often yells at him between rounds to throw harder punches.

That in a nutshell sums up the state of boxing, when the heavyweight champion of the world is afraid to throw hard punches at his opponent out of fear for getting hit back.

The heavyweight championship of the world in boxing used to be the ultimate prize in sports. If you were the heavyweight champion, you were the toughest man on the planet.

Everyone in the world knew who the heavyweight champion was. That isn’t the case anymore and there’s a very good reason for that.

The heavyweight’s don’t fight like they used to. You’re never going to see a war of the calibre of Ali versus Frazier or Marciano versus Walcott or Louis versus Conn anymore because the heavyweights physically don’t have the conditioning or the toughness to fight a long hard fight, nor the skill level that they used to have.

I love both sports but I’m a boxing fan ahead of MMA. I’ve been following boxing a lot longer and I enjoy watching a great boxing match over a great MMA match.

For a boxing fan like me it’s easy to see why so many people prefer MMA. The first major boxing match I ever watched live was Tyson versus Lewis. That fight certainly wasn’t a classic and there hasn’t been a heavyweight title fight since that would count.

It makes me sad to think that I’ll never get to watch a live boxing match of the magnitude of Ali-Foreman for the heavyweight championship of the world.

The last two UFC heavyweight title fights have not only been fights that I’ve counted the days down to beforehand, but they’ve delivered in the cage.

Klitschko-Haye has all but killed any excitement for any future heavyweight boxing contests I’ll have. I can only imagine how little someone who hadn’t watched much boxing thought of it and that’s the bottom line.

The UFC delivers a lot more then it doesn’t and boxing continues to disappoint.

The Crowd Says:

2011-07-10T12:04:40+00:00

FALCONPUNCH

Roar Rookie


This was a really interesting read and I agree fully. Did anyone else here get a strange email from MIKE suggesting a web cam session?

2011-07-08T09:05:34+00:00

jannerboyuk

Guest


Ah the over serious earnestness of the truly pseudo-religious. The Unbelievers must be made to see the light!

2011-07-07T23:51:49+00:00

brad

Guest


I don't get it. Obviously drawn by someone else who doesn't get it.

2011-07-07T08:34:28+00:00

jannerboyuk

Guest


http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2009/7/15/

2011-07-07T06:44:25+00:00

J

Guest


The people who think that MMA is less tiring than boxing have obviously never done much past watching the sports... I LOL'd when I read about a "true fighter" letting someone back up. Enjoy your stint in hospital when the other guy doesn't extend you the same foolish courtesy.

2011-07-06T23:02:01+00:00

Adam

Guest


You cant compare the two. 12 rounds of Boxing is a war of attrition, with it being a strategic,tactical and physical battle of attrition whilst UFC is all about a quick explosion. Very few fights in the UFC can be called a war. Sunday's Faber-Cruz fight is an exception though

2011-07-06T12:45:34+00:00

matt forge

Guest


i sorta agree and disagree to this article. valid points but still... boxing is a great sport, always has been and always will be. more brutal than ufc (thats right, i went there) because when an opponent has had enough of trying to "stand and bang" with a guy, they can simply take them to the ground and have dry sex with thier opponent.... boxing is a nonstop fist fight, theres alot more tecnical stuff about it than people think to. trying to watch wrestlers use thier hand is also an awkward and sickening thing too. i find boxing more of a gentlemans sport. ufc teaches people that its ok to sit on top of someone punding thier face in until it gets broken up, a true fighter does not attack a man on the ground. i for one will always, no matter what, wait for a man to get back up if he pleases to continue a fight down the street.

2011-07-06T09:37:51+00:00

Tooze

Guest


I loved watching Tyson, Fenech & Tszyu back in the day. I was actually looking up "The Contender" boxing series a few years ago when I stumbled across "The Ultimate Fighter" series. Once I watched these athletes compete (with no knowledge of the ground game) I was intrigued, and now am a "hardcore" MMA follower. I watched the Klitschko versus Haye bout and was sadly bored. Whilst MMA has ordinary head line fights too from time to time, you can fall back on the entire fight card. Note that the writer only mentions the title boxing fight, but mentions numerous UFC 132 bouts. I wouldn't have a clue who was on the undercard for Klitschko versus Haye? HBO only broadcast the title fight didn't they?At first I never understood what was going on when the fight was being played out on the ground. MMA is only a complex combat sport if you don't want to learn the intricate details of BJJ or wrestling. The Boxing vs MMA is getting old. Both are too different sports. I still love a great boxing match but for me there are too few of them to follow boxing closely. A lot of MMA fans are boxing fans, but many boxing fans are not MMA fans. Hopefully both can prosper together.

2011-07-06T08:01:49+00:00

Wagga Magpie

Guest


Eating up without even trying? Boxing is inadvertently doing all it can to shoot itself in the foot and is still keeping its head above water. MMA has a huge marketing machine and a solid product and is struggling to break out of its niche market. Will it continue to grow exponentially? Not a chance. It has already reached saturation point and the fact that it is still competing with boxing - and not leaving it in its wake - is indicative of how limited it actually is in its appeal. As soon as boxing pulls its head out of its own arse and simplifies the organisations and divisions it will improve. As jannerboyuk highlights above it is the complexity of the sport which restricts its growth. Sports generally succeed on the simplicity of viewing and participating, and because of this MMA will never fully penetrate the sporting landscape. I agree it is a great success, however a weekly blog on the Daily Telegraph and a glossy feature magazine shouldn't be the barometer of success. This isn't a pot shot at the sport, just an educated and unbiased observation of the sporting landscape. MMA has so many aspects that are currently far superior to boxing in general and boxing definitely has something to learn from the MMA management, but to say that boxing is dead and buried is a gross overstatement.

2011-07-06T04:05:31+00:00

Peter

Guest


Use this link to find where UFC airs closest to you: http://www.foxsports.com.au/venues/fox-sports-venue-finder

2011-07-06T01:13:19+00:00

LeftArmSpinner

Roar Guru


i agree. sadLy, i could not find a place to watch it so will have to wait until it gets to FTA.

2011-07-06T01:00:56+00:00

Al from ctown

Guest


Totally agree with your article.... The only decent boxer Australia has left is Daniel geale.. And as much as I want him to succeed , boxing is all but dead and buried... Pfft badminton? Your kidding... The UFC is a juggernaut and it's eating up boxing without even trying... People like mundine are to blame ,in this country anyway... Too many mundines in boxing in general and that means its all a farce... On track with wwf these days.. You dont pick and choose who you fight in UFC, Dana white chooses and you fight, no chance of hiding. -- Comment left via The Roar's iPhone app. Download The Roar's iPhone App in the App Store here.

2011-07-05T18:46:57+00:00

Jack

Guest


Very nice article. I enjoyed the read.

2011-07-05T17:11:46+00:00

jannerboyuk

Guest


You UFC heads can convince yourself all you like but the complexity of MMA means you will never break out of your ghetto, although to be fair to the sport they are very good at maximising the potential of that hardcore. In the UK for example the coverage of the recent haye versus his own toe fight would eclipse the coverage the ufc has ever got in its entire history by a hundred. Badminton has a better chance of eclipsing boxing.

2011-07-05T16:43:00+00:00

MIKE

Guest


Klitschko Haye was a great fight between two highly skilled boxers. Haye, with the size and speed of Muhammed Ali, was quick, slick, and has much more power than Ali ever had. Klitschko is similar to Lennox Lewis in size and style and Lennox would kill any of the american champs of the past. Some of them he did beat. Foreman Ali, Ha. Ali spent half the fight covered up on the ropes while Foreman threw windmill punches at him. I watched Klitscho Haye on SKY sports, the english ppv. The coverage was great and exciting. And with the KO rates of both men both better than Foreman or Ali a KO was possible at any time. In contrast I saw the fight later on the HBO broadcast. The HBO commentators spent half the fight whining complaining, telling stories about fighter 40-80 years ago, and then missiing the action as it occurred. I hope the Klitschos never allow HBO to broadcast their fights again. Let SKY hook up with FOX and take over in America. They do a 1000% better job.

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