Archive for September, 2010

Chael Sonnen’s steroid bust: the fallout

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

By Matt Larkin
Guest Writer

Sigh.

I case you haven’t heard yet, UFC star and former Olympic wrestling alternate Chael Sonnen has been busted for using performance-enhancing drugs. The results came back from a drug test he took before his middleweight title bout versus Anderson Silva: positive for steroids.

This isn’t a Shane Carwin type of bust. In Carwin’s case, his name simply appeared on a list of purchasers from several years ago. For Sonnen, it’s a cold, hard bust in the “now.” The test said he had steroids in his body while fighting Anderson Silva.

Sonnen has a right to appeal and prove his innocence. If he can, all the power to him. But the fact that the sport’s mouthiest fighter hasn’t said a word since the news broke is a very bad sign.

The news really hurts MMA fans – breaks our hearts – for several reasons. First off, Sonnen was perceived as great for the sport. He was a jerk but a hilarious jerk who never minced words and gave dozens of outstanding quotes any time he showed up at a press conference or did an interview. Now, he’s no longer a charismatic fighter who exudes confidence. If his guilt is confirmed, he’ll become a cheater, a fraud, a guy who talked a big game and deceived the fans. As much as Sonnen talked up his own game, he apparently never believed in himself after all if he felt the need to use PEDs.

Secondly, it probably cancels what would’ve been a highly anticipated rematch. Sonnen was expected to face Silva on New Year’s Day in Vegas. Now, he could be suspended from the UFC for a year. That would mean The Spider would likely face the winner of boxing master Vitor Belfort versus Yushin Okami; those two are slated to fight in November.

Lastly, it’s just one more black eye for mixed martial arts’ public image. Every time we take a step forward, it seems something else pushes us backward. The layman fan or detractor is now even more likely to view fighters as juiced-up monsters and compare them to WWE wrestlers.

We can hope Sonnen somehow proves that he didn’t use steroids. But the news feels like a gut punch right now and it’s likely to remain that way.

Is it time for an MMA movie?

Sunday, September 19th, 2010

My mind wandered today and, as an MMA buff and a movie buff, I started wondering about joining the two together.

Is it time for an MMA movie?

I’m not talking about using or exploiting MMA by randomly having characters use various forms of it or overdramatizing it with rapid, bloody battles with weapons in cages. Nothing Hollywood like that.

I’m wondering about a historical drama, a story about the birth of MMA. Maybe about the first UFC tournaments and how Royce Gracie shocked the world with his Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. It could be a fascinating tale to outsiders – one that could increase MMA’s mainstream popularity among the skeptics.

So  which characters would you feature and who could play them?

Perhaps Royce Gracie would be our lead character. We could have a Brazilian play him but we’ll stick with popular actors for argument’s sake. I think Johnny Depp could pull it off. He still looks young but not too young and he could bring a worldly, wise presence to the role.

What about Ken Shamrock? I suspect he’d try to play himself, as he loves the spotlight, but I’d lean toward a guy like Aaron Eckhart. He’s got that chiselled jaw and he showed in the Dark Knight that he can be a mean S.O.B. Mark Whalberg has the stocky, muscular build that could lend to Shamrock too.

Is there a famous actor big enough to play Dan “The Beast” Severn? Tom Selleck is too old but he has height and the moustache in his favor.

I also wonder if, technically, the early UFC era couldn’t be portrayed as “MMA” on film because it was more about style versus style and not about blending skills into mixed martial arts yet. So maybe a different piece of MMA history would make for better cinema?

The birth of the Dana White (Bruce Willis?) and the UFC’s foray into reality television would be pretty interesting. We’d get so see Randy Couture and Chuck Liddell portrayed as TUF coaches and both Forrest Griffin and Stephan Bonnar are such characters that they’d lend well to narratives.

But casting those guys is a discussion for another day…

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How much do steroids help a mixed martial artist?

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

By Matt Larkin
Guest Writer

We’ve had a lot to talk about in MMA of late thanks to the big changes in Ontario sanctioning. As a result, we’ve neglected what was actually a big story that arose last week.

What we know: Michael Bennett of Applied Pharmacies services was just found guilty for supplying steroids to 22 athletes. Among the recipients: a mixed martial artist with the initials S.C. Bennett sent Trenbolone, Testosterone, Stanozol injectable and Nandrolone to S.C. in Colorado.

Mixed martial artist Shane Carwin trains out of Colorado. Gulp. It also doesn’t help that he has a massive and strangely chiselled physique for a heavyweight. Did Carwin use steroids? The evidence certainly suggests it. It doesn’t help that he’s refraining from making any detailed public statements about the accusations.

Until Carwin or the UFC speak up, we can’t fully decide how we feel about Carwin. But the news raises another question on my mind. How much do steroids really help a mixed martial artist?

The natural reaction is that it’s silly to even ask that question. After all, they enhance athletes’ brute strength and few sports reward brute strength like MMA.

But perhaps a guy like George St-Pierre would disagree. He regularly insists that “technique always beats strength” and he’s proven that time and again by using his wrestling to dominate larger opponents. We’ve also seen plenty of brutes beaten by superior technical fighters. Many of Fedor’s fights played out that way, as did Royce Gracie’s in the day thanks to his wily BJJ.

However, I’d argue that the modern “brute” in MMA is much more versed in the technical aspect of fighting. Even a big, potentially steroid-boosted monster like Carwin brings an accomplished collegiate wrestling pedigree to the Octagon. So fighters today arguably gain more from the strength advantage that steroids provide than they did, say, a decade ago.

Another aspect of steroids that makes me question how much they help fighters, however, is that of fatigue. Carwin visibly has a muscled-up body that looks too big for his frame, unlike Brock Lesnar, who is a huge man no matter how you look at him. It’s thus no wonder that he gasses easily with that body struggling to get oxygen everywhere. Is it possible that a steroids-enhanced body tires quicker? Given the bulked-up Bobby Lashley’s showing at Strikeforce last week, I wonder if he should be tested, too.

In the end, it’s ludicrous to assume a mixed martial artist doesn’t gain an unfair advantage from using steroids. But I’m just saying – the edge may not be as big as some people think.

Canadian Submission Expo taps on Toronto’s door this September

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Everyone has his or her own favorite discipline in martial arts. Some prefer the speed and explosiveness of striking; others like the power and endurance displayed by wrestlers.

For the fan who gravitates toward the strategy and artistry of submission fighting, there’s a can’t-miss date to mark on calendar next month. On September 19, the Canadian Submission Expo arrives in Toronto.

The Expo runs from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. at Martingove Collegiate on Wintern Drive and features an exciting main event. Canadian Shane Rice, a Rickson Gracie Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt, will battle Brazil’s Rubens “Cobrinha” Charles.

Rice, a mixed martial artist, enters the bout on a hot streak. He won his last three bouts via first-round submission.

Landing Charles for the main event is a huge coup for the Canadian Submission expo. Charles is a six-time world BJJ champion and considered by most to be the best featherweight submission grappler of the past decade. He’s not down and out if he winds up on his back; fellow world champions voted his guard the best of the last 10 years.

Advance tickets are available for $20 each. Other action at the Canadian Submission Expo includes Absolute Finals from Bravado Open in the male blue belt, male open belt and female open belt classes. Some no-gi matches will also appear on the card. In total, fans can expect to see 10 matches.

Don’t be surprised if some internationally renowned grapplers pop up in the crowd. Fighters like the UFC’s Mark Bocek have been known to attend the event in the past.

Anxious to test your own submission skills and compete at the Expo? Prospective competitors can have their coach or instructor e-mail bjjfighter@rogers.com.

BJJ Toronto,  North York, Brampton, Etobicoke, Markham, Mississauga, Oshawa, Peel Region, Pickering, Richmond Hill, Scarborough, Thornhill, Vaughan, Woodbridge, York, York Region Ontario Canada.