Hubris, Thy Name Rousey
Rousey's loss to Amanda Nunes was a tragedy. Rousey's dominance was unlike anything the sport had seen. She became an icon - and icons inevitably crumble.
Read MoreRousey's loss to Amanda Nunes was a tragedy. Rousey's dominance was unlike anything the sport had seen. She became an icon - and icons inevitably crumble.
Read MoreThe Chicago Cubs. The Cleveland Cavaliers. Leicester City. We called them all here at IDLM in 2016. Okay, it was after they’d won, but still… so let’s set some sports resolutions for 2017.
Read Morecredit: CBC.ca
The year 2016 was not a great year for aging pop musicians, Democrats or the newspaper business. It was, however, a year for the shaggy dog, the longshot and the raggedy-pants rabble who walk the sporting earth.
Read MoreIt’s time once again for Auston City Limits, our horse-race analysis of the 2016-17 contest for the NHL’s Calder Trophy, symbolic of the rookie of the year. We’re calling it Auston, of course, in honour of the Toronto Maple Leafs wunderkind Auston Matthews, the kid from the desert who sharpened his skills in Switzerland.
Read MoreThere is a joke that goes a little like this: How many Torontonians does it take to screw in a light bulb? One. They just hold the bulb while the world turns around them. Yes, Toronto has a God thing. They act like they were the first to recognize opposable thumbs. What’s theirs is theirs. What's yours is theirs too. But even for those who chafe beneath the unholy yoke of the TIFF city, you had to like what you saw on Saturday night in the MLS Final at BMO Field.
Read MoreTiger Woods is back. And it’s safe to watch the PGA Tour again. At his own tournament this weekend in the Bahamas, the Hero Challenge, Woods showed enough traces of the greatest golfer ever with a sizzling 65 in Round Two and a respectable fifteenth-place finish overall. This after missing almost two full Tour seasons.
Read MoreConor McGregor has been stripped of the Featherweight title, leaving a paper trail of paper titles. With McGregor having left the Featherweights in disarray, its former king, Jose Aldo, has decided to stay in the division. He shouldn't. He should abandon it. McGregor did and on one seemed to care enough to until now.
Read MoreToronto made a significant contribution to Canadian football during this year’s stirring Grey Cup Festival. Okay, it was the only contribution southern Ontarians made this year to the Grey Cup (beside the acres of empty seats that were papered over for Sunday’s game).
Read MoreTalking heads still seem to think the NFL Draft can be gamed. That a smart General Manager can find inefficiencies a la Moneyball. Yet Dak Prescott went in the fourth round because 32 teams -yes, the Cowboys included - felt he was not a 1st, 2nd, or 3rd round player.
Read MoreThe election was fixed.
No, this is not a test of the Donald Trump Emergency Warning System. We are referring to the heist perpetrated in full view last week on Detroit Tigers star Justin Verlander. Verlander, who fashioned a 16-9 record and had the lowest ERA (3.04) for the Tigers, was denied the America League Cy Young Award by a voting scam perpetrated by two voters who failed to put Verlander in their top five selections for the award.
Read MoreBarely an hour removed from removing Eddie Alvarez’s wits, belt, and pride, McGregor made his boldest statement yet. McGregor wants to be set for life. As in, never having to lift a finger until he’s too old to even capably lift a finger. That doesn’t come working hard to make millions of dollars. It comes from making millions of dollars work for him.
Read MoreBack when he was the King of the NBA, Michael Jordan was constantly being sought by political groups to support black and liberal causes. Jordan always demurred. When pressed on his silence, Jordan said simply, “Republicans buy running shoes, too.” A man with a stake in the running-shoe millions through is Air Jordans understood the nature of bipartisanship in a very practical manner.
Read MoreThe defining history of MMA is by who is the best and when. Who was the first best? Whose reign was the shortest? In the beginning, a skinny Brazilian, a Dutchman, and a Japanese superstar all sat on the throne. But reigns are meant to end.
Read MoreA couple of years ago, Canadian author and social behaviour wonk Malcom Gladwell famously remarked that, in 25 years, no one will play football. (He also said no one would eat red meat, but for the moment let’s focus on the dire prediction for the NFL.) In the weeks after making the remark, Gladwell expanded his hypothesis to say that the NFL is living in the past and has no connection to the society it inhabits.
This attention grabber seemed a little far-fetched when Gladwell spoke. The NFL has lapped the field in popularity among team sports and rakes in over six billion dollars a year from TV networks anxious to broadcast the games. If ever there were a lock cinch for security it’s the NFL shield and its attendant communication, marketing and gambling tendrils.
Read MoreAuston Matthews, the rookie star of the Toronto Maple Leafs, has been the talk of the NHL this young season. The first draft pick overall last June in the 2016 amateur draft, he’s shown that the hype about him was justified. For the woebegone Leafs, that is significant.
What’s also significant was the way Matthews got Toronto. The American product did not play in the Canadian Hockey League, the top tier of junior hockey. He did not play in the NCAA for an American college. He instead chose to play his final year before the draft against grown men, not fellow teenagers, in a professional league in Switzerland.
Read MoreLast season the IDLM editorial desk created the Loonie League of Canadian NHL clubs. The idea was to declare a Canadian champion from amongst the seven domestic team. We all know how that went: a big Ofer. As in, zero for seven squads getting into the playoffs.
So we are going in a different direction for the 2016-17 season. We’re calling it Auston City Limits. As in Auston Matthews and the limits of this highly touted rookie class in the NHL. Judging by the major-market effect of Matthews in Toronto alone, this rookie crop could be one they will talk about for a generation. Certainly the NHL can always use an infusion of good news in the star department.
Read MoreIn the current American League Championship Series, it is the nickname that dare not speak its name. At least, not among some prominent members of the media.
Several notable sports announcers— including Toronto Blue Jays radio play-by-play man Jerry Howarth—- are refusing to use the team nickname of the Cleveland Indians as they cover the ALCS. According to figures such as Howarth and Bob Costas of NBC, the team name demeans native Americans. By extension, so do nicknames such as the Braves (Atlanta, MLB), Blackhawks (Chicago, NHL) and Redskins (Washington, NFL).
Read MoreThe King is dead. Long live the King.
The NHL begins the interregnum this week as Connor McDavid commences his takeover of the the NHL’s alpha dog from Sidney Crosby. Yes, Crosby is still a great player. Yes, Crosby led Canada to the World Cup title. Yes, he may yet lead the Pittsburgh Penguins to another Stanley Cup.
But as anyone watching the World Cup knows, hockey lovers wanted McDavid and his NHL invention, Team Under-23, to win the tournament.
Read MoreThe venerable Boston Bruins coach/ GM Harry Sinden used to say that every year there are 30 team owners who think they’ll win the title. And then 29 of them end the season unhappy.
The Major League Baseball regular season wound up Sunday afternoon with 20 very pissed-off owners. The Detroit Tigers might’ve been the most annoyed team had they had to play Monday in a tiebreaker. By gagging like dogs this final weekend against the worst team in MLB, the Atlanta Braves, they were spared a Monday matchup with Cleveland to determine their postseason. Considering they’d only scared up three runs in the final two games, missing Monday was probably a humanitarian gesture.
Read MoreMost observers of the sport of MMA will agree that the fighters are underpaid. Fighting three times a year for 20-grand to show and 20-grand to win ain’t a healthy way to make a living. Would you take 20-grand to put your head in front of a moving vehicle and 20-grand if you survived? I wouldn’t.
But if your name is Phil ‘CM Punk’ Brooks and you’re making 500-grand, you're right you would. Or if you’re Conor McGregor and routinely bring in PPV-smashing numbers, you’re damn right you would – because you’re consistency as a competitor merits larger purses with each subsequent fight. Therein lies the rub.
The UFC has evolved over the last two years into a structure so vastly different than what we saw in the early 90’s it may as well not be on the same planet. The structure isn’t even what it was in the mid-aughts, although you could argue it’s on the same continent. Truth is, over the last two years, MMA has evolved ever so much as the differences between Boston to New York. It's the same language but spoken much differently.
Take for instance this situation: Michael Bisping is defending his title against Dan Henderson. Dan Henderson. To say Henderson isn’t deserving of a title crack based on his own recent history isn’t even the point - it’s that there are at a number of fighters who are more deserving. The UFC is using a blood rivalry that seemingly ended seven years ago to market a fight. Bisping himself wasn’t considered worthy of a title shot until becoming a last moment replacement.
Somehow in the UFC business model, not being a consistent winner gets you a prime cut. It doesn’t matter if a fighter is on an eight-fight winning streak, they could be fighting at 20/20 and make peanuts. The only sensible strategy then for the average fighter is to fight so often, you finish your contract quickly and can renegotiate for more money. But this is a combat sport. Fighting out a contract could take two or three years, depending on your health.
So what’s a fighter to do? Well, as they say about the NFL: if it works, steal it. A host of fighters are looking at what McGregor has accomplished and added their voice to the growing chorus seeking ‘money fights’. Ignoring for a moment that not McGregor doesn’t ask for a money fights, he quite literally creates them, this is a sad development. Watching fighters trying their best to steal the playbook McGregor has written can be difficult. Sometimes, it’s worked (see. Diaz, Nate). Other times, it hasn’t (see. Woodley, Tyrone). Just look at the Jeremy Stephens incident at the 205 presser was. It was painful. Stephens isn’t made for it. Most fighters aren’t made for it.
As an aside, this development is perhaps the most nefarious. The gravitational force that McGregor has become is crushing fighters who get caught in his orbit. It is legitimately hurting their images and reputations like collateral damage. Stephens was laughed at in front of a stadium full of people and by a stage full of his peers. Donald Cerrone, who was in McGregor’s cross-hairs last year at the UFC's Go Big presser, looked forlorn under his trademark Stetson on stage. Frankie Edgar, Jose Aldo; whether you like these fighters or not, it’s genuinely difficult to not pity them. And pity is not a good filter through which to view a fighter (it ain't the same as when they're flat on their back after a hellacious knockout). Furthermore, watching these fighters try to handle the demands of promoting a ‘money fight’ and failing is no different than watching them fall on their face in the cage.
“Aldo’s resume reads like a President but he’s taking Vice President gigs – and the President is absent, drinking fine-ass whiskey somewhere.”
So what is an MMA fighter to do if they choose not to play that game? The next logical step is likely litigation. Jose Aldo’s coach, Andre Pederneiras, has already hinted that Aldo may take the UFC to court to enforce his release request. And why shouldn’t he? If his income ceiling is dependent on being the champion by letting McGregor not defend that belt, the UFC is ensuring Aldo loses money. Aldo’s resume reads like a President but he’s taking Vice President gigs – and the President is absent, drinking fine-ass whiskey somewhere.
Many will contend that the UFC is a private company and owes Aldo no obligation. Sure, if that’s the way you think the world should work. Except in this case, the UFC is not an equal opportunity employer. They are not giving the opportunities to fighters who have the resume to warrant it.
Imagine If you were unequivocally the best at your job. No one else in the office has ever come close. Your boss hires some charismatic newbie. The newbie blazes a trail of good work to the point your bosses, smitten with the newbie, put you together on a project. The newbie spends the whole time talking shit about you to coworkers, the bosses, anyone that will listen. You get rattled and don’t do you best work. The bosses reward the newbie with every project you once would have worked – for the next year. You’d be pissed. You’d wanna quit. Then you’d probably wanna sue.
It should also be noted that it doesn’t feel like too much of a coincidence that the Fertitta’s are getting out of the MMA business at this juncture. Just the same way the NFL began changing the rules to make their game safer and ‘protect the players’ began shortly before it was revealed they spent years ignoring the issue of CTE, perhaps the previous owners of the UFC were distancing themselves from the sport before things got worse.
The fighters in the UFC are trying to make what money they can because the UFC has created a structure that demands it. It’s hard to argue against it when a fighter like McGregor is involved. Bu for every McGregor, who is at least entertaining true challenges by jumping up in weight, you get Bisping entertaining a challenge of a lesser variety.
“The irony is that MMA appears headed down the same road as boxing. ”
The irony is that MMA appears headed down the same road as boxing. Most boxing historians will point to the 70’s and mid-80’s as the greatest years in the sport. There were generational talents in every weight class, from the ones you know, like Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray, Roberto Duran, Marvin Hagler, George Foreman, and Joe Frazier. Then, as the money grew, those premium matchups began to dry up.
Of the top ten highest purses for a single fight, seven of the fighters spent the prime of their careers after the year 2000 – Oscar De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather, Manny Pacquiao, Wladimir Klitchsko, David Haye, Vitali Klitchko, and Miguel Cotto. The other three had the prime of their careers in the 90’s – Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield, and Lennox Lewis (and Lewis is borderline, his biggest payday came against Tyson in 2001).
So as the sport became less competitive, the purses grew. Was it a lack of talent? Perhaps. Regardless, the best on the best became a more rare sight. Because ‘the best’ knew how much control they had. They knew the less they fought each other, the more they grew their record, the more sustained their earning power became and the higher the purse for that prime fight would be. At it’s most simple, we get the current escapade of Saul Alvarez and Gennedy Golovkin. At its worst, we get eight years of waiting to get Mayweather and Pacquiao.
If the UFC’s new matchmaking pattern is any sign, we may see these days ahead. While it’s fun every once and a while, making it a consistent habit will only undermine the value of the title belts. This could lead to a day where UFC fighters refuse fights that are too competitive and instead push for fights that make them more money. Maybe it leads to fighters collaborating behind the scenes on how to promote a fight together. Maybe this leads to fighters turning down title fights because the title fight offered isn’t as big of a draw. Maybe we see the elite jumping up or down in weight to find that money fight instead. Maybe the elite competing against each other becomes rarer.
Maybe but maybe not. It’s just amusing to see the world that Dana White and the UFC have made for themselves looking so much like the sport they make fun of. In it for a dime, in for a dollar.
Rhys Dowbiggin @Rdowb
Rhys has worked six years in the public relations industry rubbing shoulders with movie stars (who ignored him) to athletes (who tolerated him). He likes tiki-taka football, jelly beans, and arguing with Bruce about everything.