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Boxing seems to be overtaking MMA again now

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    Boxing seems to be overtaking MMA again now

    Despite the irregularly of fights, the Saudi take over and the UFC's stagnation seems to be causing boxing to overtake mma again.

    The UFC have totally gone back on their "best fight the best" ethos, and allowed semi-retired crocked champions and ex champions like Jon Jones and Stipe Miocic to hold up entire divisions for years. all the UFC have now is Alex Pierera The rest of it is a bunch of dagestani wrestlers dominating that is not fan friendly and no one wants to watch. The UFC cards are watered down while boxing's cards, though fairly infrequent, have many ****er fights.

    Boxing is on a serious upswing lads. We just had a top tier contest between two Russians and EVERYONE is talking about it now. The quality of boxing is really top tier atm. Not really many real stars but the match ups are great.
    chaos Chaos likes this.

    #2
    You're a little over-excited from tonight. Might wanna dial that in pal.

    I'm gonna put it simple for you. MMA's been pretty consistent for years, with or without oil sheiks helping them. Boxing has been a steamy turd-fest without the oil sheikhs putting big relevant fights together like Bivol-Betervbiev and Fury-Usyk.

    I think it's pretty funny how Boxing fans used to contest which place was the Mecca of boxing. Now Mecca is the Mecca of boxing.

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      #3
      MMA was only ever ahead in certain regions for certain periods of time. On the global scale boxing never lost its lead.
      Willow The Wisp Willow The Wisp likes this.

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        #4
        MMA is only popular in the US and mainly among the inb_red white tr@sh supporters of Cheeto Mussolini. The cards are garbage with few actual draws.
        pnut901 PNUT901 likes this.

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          #5
          Originally posted by Chaos View Post
          MMA is only popular in the US and mainly among the inb_red white tr@sh supporters of Cheeto Mussolini. The cards are garbage with few actual draws.
          Soon to be President Cheeto Mussolini lol

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            #6
            Originally posted by Chaos View Post
            MMA is only popular in the US and mainly among the inb_red white tr@sh supporters of Cheeto Mussolini. The cards are garbage with few actual draws.
            Lol literally last night there was a none- UFC MMA promotion drawing a crowd of 60k in Germany.

            Your narrative is straight from 2005.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Pac=Duran View Post
              Despite the irregularly of fights, the Saudi take over and the UFC's stagnation seems to be causing boxing to overtake mma again.

              The UFC have totally gone back on their "best fight the best" ethos, and allowed semi-retired crocked champions and ex champions like Jon Jones and Stipe Miocic to hold up entire divisions for years. all the UFC have now is Alex Pierera The rest of it is a bunch of dagestani wrestlers dominating that is not fan friendly and no one wants to watch. The UFC cards are watered down while boxing's cards, though fairly infrequent, have many ****er fights.

              Boxing is on a serious upswing lads. We just had a top tier contest between two Russians and EVERYONE is talking about it now. The quality of boxing is really top tier atm. Not really many real stars but the match ups are great.
              I think boxing has been ahead in terms of main****** buzz and the biggest fights the last couple of years, mainly due to the Saudis pushing big fights to happen more often than they usually do and making cards that are more stacked than boxing cards typically are, but its still fairly infrequent. In terms of overall consistency and entertainment value I dont know how anyone could honestly say boxing is a better product to follow week in, week out. The cards are watered down yeah, relative to old 00s UFC cards, not relative to boxing. The last UFC PPV and the next 3 coming between now and December are better than any cards boxing is serving up including even the Saudi big money cards.

              Dont really get the Dagestani comment either considering theres one Dagi champ out of 12 belt holders and not a single Dagi booked in a main event for the rest of the year. That one Dagi champ is exciting to watch and a decent draw too.
              Last edited by TMLT87; 10-13-2024, 06:07 AM.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by BKM- View Post
                I'm gonna put it simple for you. MMA's been pretty consistent for years, with or without oil sheiks helping them.
                Yep. Its always been built on a different model, namely PPV. Granted as the amount of events grew into oversaturation level it has strayed closer to how boxing works, but even now MMA is still built around promotions and entire cards as much as individual stars. That tends to lead to a more consistent product and also allows them to weather the storm and keep on rolling along fine even when they dont have a Conor level star around. The fact they are obligated to do 12 PPVs a year means every few weeks they have to put out a card that can move the needle a bit. Case in point - Boxing probably has more star power right now but for the rest of the year the UFC has THREE different cards booked that are bigger overall nights of fights than any boxing event coming up including Fury/Usyk, it isnt just based around one fight or star. Even outside of the UFC theres that Ngannou PFL card next weekend, KSW 100 next month and a stadium show in December, a pretty big ACA show etc.

                Good cards regularly > a handful of "mega fights" a year. And lets face it most of the reason fights like Bivol/Beterbiev, Fury/Usyk and Spence/Crawford are considered mega fights in the first place is because they get marinated for years so it feels borderline surprising when it finally happens.
                Last edited by TMLT87; 10-13-2024, 12:25 AM.

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                  #9
                  I like them both. Throw Kickboxing in there as well.
                  When you move the techniques-allowed line around, you create a unique Aesthetic.
                  Plenty of room on the stage for all of the combat sports to flourish.
                  I actually think that they assist each other by keeping sport fighting in the public eye.
                  In terms of which sport is "bigger"; there are a variety of ways to measure.
                  Recent polls do tend to show clearly that boxing is the more followed sport, both inside the U.S. and outside.
                  What the Boxing rules permutation DOES have that the others can't match is it's very old, well documented, international history.

                  Revenue, viewership and ticket sales draw in the component of business architecture and competency.

                  Worldwide fame measures, I'll leave up to you.
                  Which list contains the more widely known athletes?


                  Mixed Martial Arts 30 greatest:

                  1. George St. Pierre, Quebec. 26-2-0
                  2. Fedor Emelianenko, Russia 40-7-0
                  3. Anderson Silva, Brazil. 34-11-0
                  4. Jon Jones, USA. 27-1-0
                  5. Matt Hughes, USA. 45-9-0
                  6. Khabib Nurmagomedov, Russia. 29-0-0
                  7. B.J. Penn, USA. 16-14-2
                  8. Dan Henderson, USA. 32-15-0
                  9. Demetrius Johnson, USA. 25-4-1
                  10. Royce Gracie, Brazil. 15-2-3
                  11. Jose Aldo, Brazil. 32-9-0
                  12. Alexander Volkanovski, Russia. 26-4-0
                  13. Francis Ngannou, Cameroon. 17-3-0
                  14. Randy Couture, USA. 19-11-0
                  15. Wanderlei Silva, Brazil. 35-14-1
                  16. Conor McGregor, Ireland. 22-6-0
                  17. Max Holloway, USA. 26-7-0
                  18. Kamaru Usman, Nigeria. 20-4-0
                  19. Stipe Miocic, USA. 20-4-0
                  20. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Brazil. 34-10-1
                  21. Kazushi Sakuaba, Japan. 26-17-1
                  22. Israel Adesanya, Brazil. 24-4-0
                  23. Daniel Cormier, USA. 22-3-0
                  24. Frankie Edgar, USA. 24-11-1
                  25. Lyoto Machida, Brazil. 26-12-0
                  26. Urijah Faber, USA 35-11-0
                  27. Chris Weidman, USA. 16-7-0
                  28. Islam Makhechev, Russia. 26-1-0
                  29. Chuck Liddell, USA. 21-9-0
                  29. Frank Shamrock, USA. 23-10-0
                  30. Tyron Woodley, USA. 19-7-1




                  Modern Boxing 30 Greatest:

                  1. Sugar Ray Robinson. 175-19-8
                  2. Henry Armstrong. 151-21-9
                  3. Wille Pep. 230-11-1
                  4. Muhammad Ali. 56-5-0
                  5. Harry Greb. 105-8-126
                  6. Joe Louis 68-3-0
                  7. Sam Langford. 167-38-88
                  8. Benny Leonard. 85-5-122
                  9. Roberto Duran. 103-16-0
                  10. Jack Dempsey. 61-6-14
                  11. Jack Johnson. 77-13-33
                  12. Mickey Walker. 93-19-51
                  13. Tony Canzoneri. 137-24-13
                  14. Gene Tunney. 61-1-22
                  15. Rocky Marciano. 49-0-0
                  16. Joe Gans. 120-8-27
                  17. Sugar Ray Leonard. 36-3-1
                  18. Barney Ross 72-4-5
                  19. Floyd Mayweather Jr. 50-0-0
                  20. Jimmy McLarnin. 62-11-4
                  21. Marvin Hagler. 62-3-2
                  22. Julio Cesar Chavez. 107-6-2
                  23. Ezzard Charles. 89-25-1
                  24. Archie Moore. 184-24-11
                  25. Manny Pacquiao. 62-8-2
                  26. Carlos Monzon. 87-3-10
                  27. Marcel Cerdan. 106-4-0
                  28. Barbados Joe Walcott. 92-25-47
                  29. Jimmy Wilde. 131-3-15
                  30. Jose Napoles. 77-7-0
                  TMLT87 TMLT87 likes this.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Willow The Wisp View Post
                    I like them both. Throw Kickboxing in there as well.
                    Its such a shame that kickboxing isnt bigger. Its probably the most consistently exciting ruleset of the three and strikes a good balance between not being as limited as boxing but not being as sloppy and ugly as MMA. Also has always had a big focus on HWs.

                    K-1 in the 90s and 00s was incredible. They're trying to restore its international profile recently and even had Le Banner at 51 fighting on a card a few days ago, but it just isnt the same. For one Glory has most of the top HWs now, and the HW scene in general is not what it was in the old school K-1 days. Theres a lot of good Japanese talent in the lower weight classes, but its just not the same as having a strong international HW scene like they used to.

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