Is the UFC ready for a one-armed fighter?

By Justin Faux / Expert

Nick Newell, a 31-year-old congenital amputee with 15 pro bouts under his belt, is more than worthy of the UFC’s Octagon.

I don’t see how you could even make a case that he isn’t.

After all, the standard of a ‘UFC calibre’ fighter has never been lower. And in all honesty, there are men on this weekend’s UFC London card that I would handily pick Newell to beat.

Not to mention, despite his disability, Newell has proven to be a serviceable fighter, beating respectable opposition en route to a 14-1 record.

The American lightweight won his third-straight fight last weekend, disposing of Sonny Luque at a Legacy Fighting Championships event in Texas.

“I’m one of the best fighters in the world, and I belong in the UFC,” he pleaded after the easy submission win.

“That’s it. That’s final. I gave you 14 reasons why I belong in the UFC. I’m one of the best fighters in the world, and I’ve proved it 14 times.”

He’s not wrong.

The lone blemish on Newell’s record is to balls-to-the-wall action fighter Justin Gaethje, who has skyrocketed to the top of the UFC lightweight rankings after just two fights in the promotion.

So what gives? Why isn’t Newell plying his craft in the big leagues?

If you ask UFC boss Dana White, the promotion’s eight-sided cage is simply no place for a one-armed fighter.

“It’s hard to fight here with two arms,” he snickered when asked about the possibility of Newell joining the promotion in 2012 at a press conference.

“Maybe he can get away with that in some of these other states. I don’t know. Fighting with one arm is just craziness to me.”

If you ask me, though, it’s obvious the promotion is fearful of the backlash that would come if an amputee gets battered on live television.

And, in fairness, World Series of Fighting – the D-level promotion that hosted the Gaethje-Newell title fight – did receive it’s fair share of negative comments when Newell was bloodied and beaten on NBC’s free-to-air television platform.

That’s a risk you take when you host violent fist-fights inside a cage though, regardless of how many limbs the combatants possess.

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What that eight-minute fight between Newell and Gaethje doesn’t show you is that Newell is a serious fighter with more accomplishments as an athlete than most of his contemporaries at 155 pounds.

Six amateur MMA wins, 14 professional MMA wins, a former Xtreme Fighting Championships lightweight titlist, the owner of a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt, and a wrestling pedigree that includes over 300 victories between high school and college.

Tell me again why Newell isn’t UFC ready?

I might accept White’s story that Newell isn’t capable of fighting in the UFC simply because of the way he was born if he didn’t promote pro-wrestler-turned-godawful-fighter Phil ‘CM Punk’ Brooks in 2016.

Not to mention, Brooks, the worst fighter to ever step into the Octagon, is boasting on Twitter that he will get a second crack at competing inside the eight sides of steel in June.

Make no mistake, Newell – even with one arm and giving up at least 30 pounds – would beat Brooks brainless. It wouldn’t even be close.

Oh, and don’t forget this is the same company that once tried to book a fight between commentator Joe Rogan and Wesley friggin’ Snipes.

Yes, that’s right, Blade was UFC-worthy but an actual fighter with almost a dozen stoppage wins isn’t.

Give me a break.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2018-03-14T12:01:12+00:00

Justin Faux

Expert


Cyborg versus a man won't happen in the UFC. Your best hope is that she gets a release, and starts fighting for Rizin in Japan.

2018-03-14T06:52:53+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


I'd watch that. I'd like to see Cyborg fight a male too. Even if the male was in a lower weight class.

AUTHOR

2018-03-14T03:48:04+00:00

Justin Faux

Expert


....Dave Menne won a UFC title whilst legally blind.

2018-03-14T03:29:53+00:00

shirtpants

Roar Guru


That was Telligman who fought the likes of Belfort and Sylvia (thanks google). Falling under diversity would be Matt Hamill. What a bloke he was.

2018-03-14T02:32:54+00:00

BigJ

Roar Guru


With the Ufc being a world leader in sport for equity and diversity, this should not be a problem. Plus this fighter will not be the first one with a disability to fight. I can’t remember his name but I remember a fighter that through a birth defect (I think) had half his chest cavity missing and he still fought. So it would be no surprise if the ufc lets him fight.

AUTHOR

2018-03-14T00:28:35+00:00

Justin Faux

Expert


I think Newell has earned the right to at least try his luck at the UFC level. I don't think he beats the cream-of-the-crop competition, but there's only one way to find out.

2018-03-13T22:56:36+00:00

shirtpants

Roar Guru


I stumbled across Newell the other day and he truly defies what i would have thought to be possible for a congenital amputee. While I haven't seen the Gaethje fight, it's insane to think the guy went toe to toe with a brawler of Gaethje's calibre. The UFC has had a pretty negative past 6-12 months and it doesn't surprise me they don't want the attention. Detractors will speak out very loudly win, lose or draw. I'm not sure of the calibre of opponents, I'm sure his record is far better than others before him. As for Punk; an utter embarrassment for the sport. He must be a big draw for PPV? Sure, tap into the WWE crowd. Lesnar has brought success (despite PEDS and also looking likely to book another fight) but pick people who can fight!

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