The Great Champion: A killer for Mixed Martial Arts

MMA

With Kamaru Usman’s victory over Colby Covington, he has pushed himself into contention for being named the greatest fighter of all time or simply the G.O.A.T. of violence. He’s currently 20-1 as a professional, undefeated in his UFC career and holds five consecutive title defense victories. He’s being argued as the greatest welterweight of all time with only the UFC Hall of Famer Georges St-Pierre as competition. Quite frankly, Usman is king and with the retirement of Khabib Nurmagomedov, Usman is the number one ranked male pound for pound fighter in the UFC. However this leads to an issue that we see time and time again in the sport. The UFC has done a good job lining up the best fights possible, however that hasn’t stopped long title reigns in the sport. We’ve seen it with as mentioned GSP, Ronda Rousey, Anderson Silva and Jon Jones. We currently see it with Amanda Nunes, Valentina Shevchenko, Israel Adesanya and now Kamaru Usman. Long time champions kill the popularity of the division.

We like champions, we like winners. What we hate is stagnation. Fighting is best when it is unpredictable. At a moments notice, a fight can turn, a fight can change and it can end. It is the only sport in which time is only an outline and a finish can happen at any time. In boxing, there’s a ten count and every other sport has a predetermined amount of time or time parameters a match must complete before it can be considered final and written into the record books. When we have stagnant champions, it makes the division unwatchable. It is a conclusion already written, an ending with no pizazz. For all my fighting fans out there, can you name the next threat to Nunes’ or Shevchenko’s titles? What about Adesanya’s or Usman’s? Quite frankly, only rematches and no names are the only options left. Who wants to see that many rematches, that many fights where the action and stylistic matchups are the same? Quite frankly, Jones’ and Silva’s title reigns stalled their respective divisions for a long time. There was no excitement, no interest. Sure we had some incredible moments like Jones vs. Cromier or Jones vs Gustafsson but there were many more fights in which we did not care about or let drain from memory. Jones personal and legal troubles became front page news as the rest of the light heavyweight division was left to wither away. Yet when Jones vacated his belt, the division reignited with the same fire which dominated the early 2000’s. Names like Ortiz, Liddell, Belfort, Rua, Couture, Machida, Evans, Griffin and Jackson fueled a heart stopping moment of fighting back in the day. The title was up for grabs and when you thought someone who start their ever-lasting reign, there came someone to kick them off the mountain. It was part sport, part theater that kept you and your wallet tuning in for more. Same thing in the aftermath of Anderson Silva’s loss to Chris Weidman. The belt kept transferring hands where in this crazy world, Michael Bisping became a champion. Fans both diehard and casual shared in these moments of intense debate of what could happen next. Now they just ask who’s next to be served up on a silver platter. This is not a criticism of those long reigning champions. If you can be the best, be it but their success comes at a price that the fans have to pay heavily for.

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