Archive for May, 2009

Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou’s Extra Blows Delivered at Dream 9 Show

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Thierry Sokoudjou pulled out of a two fight losing streak at the Dream.9 show with a stoppage against  353-pound Jan Nortje.  But Sokoudjou’s win was tainted by his failure to obey the referee’s commands, as he continued delivering blows to the downed Nortje from side control despite the refs attempts to shield Nortje from more damage.  To his credit Sokoudjou has maned-up and apologized for his conduct. 

While Dream is a Japanese promotion, this type of thing is a real problem for MMA.  People have a enough trouble with the groundfighting and submission aspects of MMA as it is.  Seeing a fighter out-of-control (even for just a few seconds) and not obeying the referees commands will turn people off  to the sport permanently.  In my opinion, it is also a serious breach of the implicit covenant between fighters to respect submissions and referee stoppages.  If MMA fighters want the recognition they deserve as professional athletes this type of behavior cannot be tolerated, period.

Sokoudjou seems like a decent guy, but at the very least he should be fined and disqualified from the tournament.  I’ve attached the YouTube clip of the fight below. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVjW3Nk79eA

Any opinions?

Good Intent, Bad Results: Title IX and Amateur Wrestling

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

Check out this article about the efforts of the College Sports Council in the area of Title IX reform – http://savingsports.org/newsroom/display_releases.cfm?id=24.  If you are concerned about the future of amateur wrestling, there’s also an online petition attached that I think is worth signing.  Here’s the rundown on Title IX. 

Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, commonly referred to simply as Title IX, prohibits gender discrimination in educational programs that receive federal funding.  One type of discrimination prohibited by Title IX is failure to provide equal opportunity in athletics.  Specifically, Title IX states:

No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.”

Title IX is implemented by the Department of Education’s (DOE) Office of Civil Rights (OCR).  DOE has promulgated implementing regulations at 10 CFR part 36 (http://www.ed.gov/policy/rights/reg/ocr/edlite-34cfr106.html).  While few argue with the underlying purpose of Title IX, implementation of the statute by OCR has resulted in the elimination or curtailment of many collegiate men’s Olympic sports programs, such as track and field, swimming, wrestling, and gymnastics.  Specifically, in 1972 OCR published a Policy Interpretation of the Title IX requirements.  This Policy Interpretation described three specific methods of complying with Title IX in the area of equal athletic opportunity:  

(1) Showing that intercollegiate level participation opportunities for male and female students are provided in numbers substantially proportionate to their respective enrollments; or

(2) Where the members of one sex have been and are underrepresented among intercollegiate athletes, whether the institution can show a history and continuing practice of program expansion which is demonstrably responsive to the developing interest and abilities of the members of that sex; or

(3) Where the members of one sex are underrepresented among intercollegiate athletes, and the institution cannot show a continuing practice of program expansion such as that cited above, whether it can be demonstrated that the interests and abilities of the members of that sex have been fully and effectively accommodated by the present program.

Unsurprisingly, in order to avoid litigation schools have relied most heavily on the first method, known as substantial proportionality.  To comply with the proportionality method, colleges and universities simply ensure that the gender ratio of undergraduate student enrollment is proportional to the gender ratio of the total number of athletes on its varsity sports teams.  In order to make the numbers work out, many colleges and universities have been forced to either cut men’s teams all-together, or reduce their roster sizes.  This has hit sports like wrestling especially hard, with some sources reporting that a total of 171 wrestling teams have been eliminated over the past 30-years due to Title IX (see http://www.athleticscholarships.net/title-ix-college-athletics-6.htm).  Like a lot of other antidiscrimination laws, the underlying purpose of the Title IX statute is laudable.  But the problem is that these important laws often degenerate into pure quota systems when the rubber meets the road during implementation.  One reason this happens is surely the reality of enforcement and compliance – i.e., it is easy to enforce and, conversely, easy to demonstrate compliance with a quota.  It’s much more difficult to demonstrate compliance via methods (2) and (3). 

But there is another, more complex, dynamic at work here:  social engineering.  While Title IX simply outlaws discrimination in educational activities, including athletics, the statute has also been interpreted by the courts as a tool to correct the wrongs that society has perpetrated against women athletes in the past.  This idea is explained by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Neal v. Board of Trustees of the California State Universities, 198 F.3d 763 (9th Cir. 1999).   Neal involved a claim that California State University’s decision to reduce the number of spots on its men’s wrestling team, which as undertaken to meet the substantial proportionality guidance described above, violated both Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause of the US Constitution.  The Court disagreed.  Responding to an argument that gender-conscious decisions are appropriate only when necessary to ensure that opportunities are provided to males and females in proportion to their relative levels of interest in sports participation, the court stated:

Title IX is a dynamic statute, not a static one.  It envisions continuing progress toward the goal of equal opportunity for all athletes and recognizes that, where society has conditioned women to expect less than their fair share of the athletic opportunities, women’s interest in participating in sports will not rise to a par with men’s overnight.  The percentage of college athletes who are women rose from 15% in 1972 to 37% in 1998, and Title IX is at least partially responsible for this trend of increased participation by women . . . . Title IX has altered women’s preferences, making them more interested in sports, and more likely to become student athletes.”

This quote starts out badly for textualists like me - whenever a text is described as “dynamic” or “living” it usually means that the interpreter is about to make it say what it does not.  That aside, I think this quote is a great illustration of how the courts have gone wrong with this statute.  The Court rejects the argument that gender-conscious decisions (which are exactly what Title IX is designed to prevent) should be exercised only when necessary based on level of interest because women are not capable of properly expressing their level of interest due to social conditioning.  Instead, the Court (and in the Court’s estimation Congress) has decided that they know what the female population’s level of interest really is:  the level of interest that makes their participation substantially proportionate to their respective enrollment.

I’d prefer to see the playing field leveled by providing gender-neutral athletic opportunity;  individuals deciding whether or not they are interested in participating; and letting the proportion of men to women athletes fall where it may.

A Few Thoughts on UFC 98

Monday, May 25th, 2009

I’ve been on a bit of a pay-per-view hiatus.  But I looked at the card for UFC 98 and decided it would be worth the $45 to see Frankie Edgar fight Sean Sherk, and the match-up between Rashad Evans and Lyoto Machida.  As it turned out, those two fights alone were worth the money. 

First, a big congrats to fellow Jersey-guy Frankie Edgar.  Edgar put on a striking clinic against a very dangerous Sean Sherk.  Edgar proved most of the commentators wrong, using superb head movement, fakes, takedown attempts, and multi-faceted striking to earn a 30-27 unanimous decision.  Edgar has developed a great style, finding the perfect mix of elusiveness and aggression that is really fun to watch.  Also, after getting blasted with a double-leg takedown in the middle of round 3, Edgar also showed great poise working off of his back within seconds, and taking no real damage along the way.  Egdar also showed fantastic presence, when he worked a guillotine attempt in the closing seconds of the last round to seal the deal, instead of just letting the time expire.  Great job Frankie!  

As far as the Machida fight goes, like Joe Rogan said, I think we are seeing the start of a new era.  Machida’s Shotokan karate has frustrated every UFC opponent he’s faced, and turned a very, very tough Rashad Evans off in the second round.    It’s interesting to see some of the more traditional martial arts coming back into the MMA fold, as the practitioners round out their games to cover the wrestling and submission aspects.  I think this will end up raising the caliber of striking in MMA.  Machida is definitely a force to be reckoned with.  

Good stuff!

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Technorati Profile

More on Making MMA Legal In New York

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

For more on the struggle to make MMA legal in NY, check out Beau Dure’s article that was posted on USA Today earlier this month http://content.usatoday.com/communities/mma/post/2009/05/66483151/1l.  The article includes feedback on NY Assemblyman Bob Reilly’s report (see my May 7 blog entry) from John McCarthy, Kenny Florian, Josh Barnett, Keith Kizer (NV Athletic Commission), and Dana White.  The USA Today article also included this helpful map, which it reports came from the UFC.  The green states regulate MMA, the yellow states have legislation legalizing MMA pending, the gray states do not have athletic commissions, and the white states have not yet approved MMA. 

(From USA Today http://content.usatoday.com/communities/mma/post/2009/05/66483151/1l)

A few interesting points from the USA Today article.  First, it was interesting to see the Union issue raised and explored.  In response to accusations that his opposition had more to due with his support of the Unions than safety or violence prevention, Mr. Reilly responded that the Unions have nothing to do with his opposition.  Further, Reilly stated that he felt such accusations were nothing more than personal attacks.  This is somewhat confusing because Reilly specifically raised the Union issue in his report on MMA.  Specifically, in the section of his report dealing with the economics of MMA he states: 

It is intersting to note that Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta, who own Ultimate Fighting, are billionaire casino owners in Las Vegas yet claim economics do not allow them to have unionized employees in their casinos.  This speaks to what economic develop would result from ultimate fighting.“  Report at 17-18 (for a link to the report see my May 7 post). 

So, based on his own report, it seems that the non-Union status of the Fertitta’s casino employees do have something to do with his opposition. 

Another interesting point raised was the idea that ground-fighting is really what causes such a strong reaction from people viewing MMA for the first time.  I think this hits on a really substantial point and is at the heart of what turns a lot of people off to the sport.  When a fight goes to the ground it conjures up all kinds of really primal fears — things get serious when you go to the ground.  More on ground-fighting soon . . . for now I’m going to enjoy the long weekend with the family.  Have a fun and safe Memorial Day.

Movie Review: The Wrestler

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

 

(Theatrical release poster)

OK, maybe I’m a little behind the curve here, but since my daughter came along I don’t get out much.  Anyway, I just saw The Wrestler on DVD this weekend.  Definitely one of those movies you either love or hate.  My take — probably one of the best movies I’ve seen in the last three or four years.  Forget about the fact that I was, admittedly, a huge pro-wrestling fan growing up.  Forget about the fact that the acting was great (I don’t think they could have pulled this movie off without Mickey Rourke and Marisa Tomei).  What I really like about the movie was that they went after and nailed a theme that most popular films don’t go near:  broken people and relationships tend to stay broken.  And, more than that, just recognizing that you are broken, and even knowing why, is usually not enough to fix the problem.  Unfortunately, fixing yourself and damaged relationships is much harder than that.  It requires you to actually change.  Change the way you think about things, change the way you react to things, change your attitude, etc.  This is what Rourke’s character couldn’t do, and Tomei’s character only decided to do too late.  I suppose it’s difficult to make a successful movie and focus on this type of theme because, unless you have very likable characters, it’s hard to watch people screw up for 90-some-odd minutes.  But that’s exactly what Darren Aronosfsky pulled off with this movie.  While hopelessly flawed, both Rourke’s and Tomei’s characters were also hopelessly likable.  You end up wanting them to pull through . . . to change. 

Not to ruin it for anyone (if there’s anyone else in the universe who hasn’t seen it already), but both characters fall short.  The scenes between Rourke’s character and his estranged daughter are brutal –  I’d definitely choose the “staple gun match” over having some of those conversations with my daughter any day.  But for a while it looked like “the Ram” may untangle the mess he made as a father.  In the end, no such luck.  Like they say, old habits are hard to break.  Same with Tomei’s character who ended up coming around, but just did it too late. 

Although pretty dark, this film had a great message:  If you know you’re broken and want to change, get off your ass and do it.  And don’t wait too long to get started, because the people you care about may not.

This one was worth the price of admission.

South Carolina – Poised to Become the 38th State to Legalize MMA

Friday, May 15th, 2009

A bill to legalize MMA in South Carolina received its third and final reading in the South Carolina Senate on Wednesday (5/13) and was enrolled for ratification on the same day.  Pursuant to the South Carolina legislative process, this means that the bill needs to be written into “Act form” by legislative counsel and ratified by the House (where the Bill originated).  After ratification by the House, the Act will be sent to the Governor who has 5 days to either approve or veto the Act.  The Act becomes effective upon approval by the Governor (See Section 10 of the Act at http://www.scstatehouse.gov/sess118_2009-2010/prever/3042_20090507.htm). 

All that being said, based on the information being reported on most MMA blogs and sites (See, e.g., http://www.mmafightstage.com/2009/05/big-vote-in-south-carolina-today-over-mma-ban/; http://mmamania.com/2009/05/08/south-carolina-to-vote-today-on-lifting-ban-on-mma/), it doesn’t look like there is any major opposition to the law in South Carolina.  Thus, a veto by the Governor seems unlikely. 

Good deal – another state comes to its senses.  Once the Act is ratified, South Carolina will be the 38th state to legalize MMA.

Book Review – A Fighter’s Heart: One Man’s Journey Through the World of Fighting, by Sam Sheridan

Monday, May 11th, 2009

If you are looking for an interesting and insightful book on fighting, then you should check out Sam Sheridan’s “A Fighters Heart.”  Sheridan (a Harvard grad) toured the world training and competing in various fighting arts.  His travels included tours through Brazil, Thailand, Japan, Iowa, and California where he studied jui jitsu, muay Thai, boxing, and MMA.  Sheridan’s book provides its share of technical information about the styles he studied, the training he endured, and the personalities he encountered.  But what  made the book exceptional in my mind was Sheridan’s probing analysis of what makes fighters and the fighting community tick.  Sheridan provides insight into subjects that are often ignored, such as how fighters view and deal with fear,  the importance of “gameness,” and the self-knowledge that all fighters seek and the great ones attain.  He also provides great insight into the most vital ingredient in a fighter’s heart — love. 

Describing his early curiosity with fighting, Sheridan explains:

“When I was in junior high . . . I read a book about John F. Kennedy that said he used to carry an anonymous poem with him in his wallet:

            Bullfight critics, ranked in rows,

            Crowd the enormous plaza full. 

            But only one is there who knows,

            And he’s the man that fights the bull.

I loved that quote . . . To me, the quote wasn’t just about critics and performers and artists.  The man in the ring knows, and not just about that particular bullfight and whether or not he did a good job.  He knows. “ 

“A Fighter’s Heart,” at 4.  Near the end of the book, Sheridan explains the quality he observed in the good fighters that he met.  He explains:

“But there is something else.  There is a quality around these men, the good fighters I’ve met – they are among the best people I know.  [They] are some of the best examples of humanity I can think of.  They’ve been face to face with divinity – they’ve swum the deep waters – and been reborn in the fight.” 

“A Fighter’s Heart,” at 300.   There are certainly disappointing personalities in every sport.  But anyone who’s been around top-notch combat athletes – whether boxers, amateur wrestlers, or martial artists – knows exactly what Sheridan is talking about.  The truly great fighters who have been successful for long periods of time and been through countless wars have the quality that Sheridan describes.  It’s a calmness (and even what some would describe as a gentleness) that’s forged through merciless self-exploration and fed by the self-knowledge that results.  These guys don’t have to walk around wondering what they’re made of because, like the bullfighter, they know

 This book’s a must read for anyone who is a fight fan.  You can check out Sheridan’s myspace page at http://www.myspace.com/fightersheart.

Another Try in New York

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Last weekend on MMA Nation, Luke Thomas (editor-in-chief of www.bloodyelbow.com) interviewed former UFC welterweight champ Matt Serra.  During the interview Thomas asked Serra, a New Yorker, about his contributions to the effort to legalize MMA competitions in NY State.  During the interview Serra mentioned that he didn’t understand the opposition in NY, as all of the legislators he spoke with seemed receptive (or at least not hostile) to the idea of legalized MMA competitions.  After hearing the interview I decided to take a look at the situation in NY. 

Legal Situation in NY:  In a nutshell, MMA is currently illegal in NY State due to a ban on “combative sports” contained in section 5-a of Chapter 912 of  the unconsolidated laws of NY.  The ban was enacted in 1997 with the support of then-Gov. George Pataki.  NY law allows  professional boxing, sparring, wrestling, and “martial arts” matches or exhibitions, but “combative sports” are forbidden.  “Combative sports” are defined as “any professional match or exhibition other than boxing, sparring, wrestling or martial arts wherein the contestants deliver kicks, punches or blows of any kind to the body of an opponent or opponents.”  Chapter 920, section 5-a.  Notably, “martial arts” are defined as professional matches or exhibitions sanctioned by certain organizations (e.g. U.S. Judo Association) that are specifically named in the statute.  On January 15, 2009 a bill was introduced in the NY State Assembly (Bill No. A02009) that would lift the ban, allowing and regulating professional MMA competitions in the Empire State.  As far as I can tell, the Bill is still in the Committee on Tourism, Arts and Sports Development, which will consider the bill and decide whether to refer it to the General Assembly.  A similar bill died in the Committee last year. 

The Opposition:  The main (or at least the most vocal) opponent of legalizing MMA is NY Assemblyman Bob Reilly.  Assemblyman Reilly’s position is explained in a report he prepared, entitled “The Case Against Ultimate Fighting in New York State” (Report).  The Report is available at numerous websites – I turned up a copy at http://www.mmaweekly.com/blog/ReillyMMA.pdf.  Unfortunately, the Report has a fair share of errors ranging from apparent typos (e.g. the report refers to Lorenzo and Frank “Fertilla” instead of Lorenzo and Frank “Fertitta”), to more substantive errors, such as referencing and basing arguments on the rules of the now defunct Pride organization (an MMA organization that was based in Japan, not the US).  But what was most interesting to me (as a legal geek) was the way Assemblyman Reilly kicked off his case against MMA.  Specifically, in a Section entitled “Ultimate Fighting is Violent,” Assemblyman Reilly begins by stating:

“Defining the violence in ultimate fighting in many ways mirrors the observation of Justice Potter Stewart in his attempt to define pornography when he stated “I know it when I see it”.  The Justice was distinguishing between true art and pornography – the same pornography that some people would justify by calling a form of art.  So with ultimate fighting – although some would justify it as a form of athletic art, most people ‘know violence when they see it’ and are appalled by the violence of ultimate fighting.  Proponents often claim that opponents simply aren’t educated about the sport and once they understand it they will approve of it.  This report hopefully dismisses any such claim.”

Report at 6.  It is interesting that Assemblyman Reilly chose to quote Justice Stewart’s concurring opinion in Jacobellis v. Ohio, 378 US 184 (1964).  Jacobellis was a First Amendment obscenity case, where the Supreme Court was tasked with deciding whether the State of Ohio could ban the showing of a film that it deemed obscene.  Contrary to Assemblyman Reilly’s characterization, however, Justice Stewart was not attempting to simply define “pornography” in his concurring opinion.  Rather, he was trying to define a subset of pornography that the government could constitutionally proscribe.  Specifically, Justice Stewart “reached the conclusion [that] under the First and Fourteenth Amendments criminal laws in this area are constitutionally limited to hard-core pornography. . . . I shall not today attempt to further define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so.  But I know it when I see it, and the motion picture involved in this case is not that.”  Jacobellis, 378 US at 197 (Stewart, J., concurring)(emphasis added). 

So, Justice Stewart was not attempting to define simply any old pornography, but rather that narrow subset of pornography (i.e. “hard-core pornography” or obscenity) that was not entitled to constitutional protection.   While legalizing MMA doesn’t involve the same constitutional issues as Jacobellis, it would seem that if any loose analogy to the case can be drawn it is that the appropriate question from a legislative standpoint is not whether MMA is violent.  It is violent.  And so are many other legal sports such as football, boxing, hockey, etc.  Under the reasoning in Jacobellis, the appropriate question would seem to be whether MMA is so uniquely violent that it should be illegal.  This is where Assemblyman Reilly’s analysis falls short.  Specifically, it does not adequately explain why the violence that exists in MMA is unique and distinguishable from the violence that exists in any other contact or combat sport.  Some of Assemblyman Reilly’s arguments are addressed below.

  • “While there exists injuries in virtually every sport, only in ultimate fighting is injury to an opponent an objective of a contestant.”  Report at 6.  Boxing is legal in New York, and the last time I checked the objective of a boxer is to punch his or her opponent.  Punching people causes  injury.  Since punching someone will invariably injure them, isn’t boxing in the same boat as MMA?  Don’t boxers and MMA fighters have exactly the same “objective” when throwing a left hook?
  • “The rules of ultimate fighting which actually promote violence and offer little protection to the fighters are examined in the next section.”  Report at 7.  This was actually a good idea (i.e. attack the rules of MMA), but unfortunately the Assemblyman focused on attacking the wrong rules (i.e. the Pride rules, which don’t apply to professional MMA competitions in the US).
  • “Various studies have concluded that ultimate fighting is more dangerous than boxing.”  Report at 7.  While referring to “various” studies, the Report only describes one study that directly compares injuries in boxing to injuries in MMA.  The study, conducted at Johns Hopkins, apparently reported a higher incidence of “injuries” in MMA when compared to boxing.  But the Report does not provide a definition of what the researchers considered an “injury,” or how much higher the incidence of injury was in MMA when compared to boxing.  As Johnny C. Benjamin (an orthopedic spine surgeon and assistant clinical professor) points out in a recent article, what Assemblyman Reilly failed to mention is that virtually all of the injuries reported in the Hopkins study were minor (cuts, scrapes, bruises and minor fractures).  No major injuries or deaths were reported in the study, with the most serious injuries being eye pokes (no serious impairments of vision were reported).  See http://www.huffingtonpost.com/johnny-c-benjamin/mma-legalization-in-the-s_b_188945.html
  • “[T]he first priority is to award a fighter for his/her effort to knock out and opponent or have an opponent submit rather than a judgement of offensive and defensive skills.  This speaks directly against the argument proponent’s use that ultimate fighting is a demonstration of skills rather than a violent fight.”  Report at 11.  The second sentence seems to assume that executing a knockout or submission, during an admittedly violent struggle, does not entail a demonstration of skill.  A lot of boxing, mauy thai, jiu jitsu,  judo, and sambo practitioners would disagree.  Not sure I need to say much more about that one.
  • And on, and on, and on . . . you catch my drift.

From what I can gather, Assemblyman Reilly thinks MMA should be illegal because . . . well . . . because he doesn’t like it.  While that is a perfectly good reason to change the channel or not buy a ticket, it’s not a good reason to outlaw a sport.

Howdy!

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

Welcome to mmalegalspot.com, my foray into the blogosphere!  The concept of mmalegalspot is to blog about legal issues associated with mixed martial arts, other combat sports, and pretty much anything else that peaks my interest.  This won’t be a ”news-breaking” blog, as life keeps me pretty busy.  There are many other very good MMA blogs that provide hourly updates on what’s going on in the combat sports.  Instead, mmalegalspot will aim to provide less frequent, but more substantive commentary on MMA from the legal and philosophical angle.  I’ll also probably throw in some off topic blogs now and then when the mood strikes.

No site with the word “legal” in it would be complete without a disclaimer.  Please read the full disclaimer by clicking on the “disclaimer” link.  In a nutshell, while I am an attorney, nothing posted on mmalegalspot.com should be construed as legal advice.  I do not practice in the area of sports law and I am licensed to practice law only in the great state of New Jersey.  My posts are simply my opinion and we all know what they say about opinions – they’re like a certain anatomical feature, we all have ‘em and they all stink!

Also, since everyday life can be insulting enough, use your brains when posting comments.  Healthy and spirited disagreement is fine, but please be respectful.  If you go too far I’ll remove your comments and block you from commenting in the future.

With all of that out of the way, happy blogging!