Mixed martial arts is hugely popular now. It is as popular as wrestling was in the Seventies and Eighties. The difference is that everyone knew that wrestling was choreographed, whereas mixed martial arts (some fans call it cage fighting) is not. Mixed martial arts is for real and for very high stakes similar to those of world championship weighty weight boxing championships.
Mixed martial arts or MMA used to be completely unregulated and that put a lot of people off in the late Eighties and Nineties, but now that there are safety rules (some, anyway), this extreme sport has become more popular. There are now two styles of MMA though, sport and street. The former is more governed than the latter where almost anything goes.
Despite the growing popularity of mixed martial arts, there is still no real controlling body for the sport, although there are quite a number of organizations vying for the privilege on both sides of the Atlantic. Britain has at least three companies attempting to be the regulator of MMA in the UK. The USA roughly the same.
One of the top organizers of MMA bouts, if not the top organizer, is Ultimate Fighting Championship or UFC. They put on pay-per-view bouts on cable TV which can pay top fighters nearly a million dollars a fight! This merely goes to show how popular mixed martial arts has gotten.
Apart from revenue from pay-per-view and national TV, there is a colossal amount being made from spin-offs like videos, DVD’s and T-shirts. There are also collectibles, dolls and board games to say nothing of documentaries and books. Web sites on mixed martial arts abound as do blogs and forums. Most contestants also have Twitter and Facebook sites.
This has encouraged young people of both sexes to join a gym and take up martial arts. This can only be a good thing. Training regularly will counter the trend in Western children towards obesity and will also help confront bullying and street violence. Trained fighters hardly ever turn into bullies or muggers.
The fad for MMA appears to be fairly recent, but that is not a fact. Inter-disciplinary martial arts fighting was well-liked in the 1890’s in Europe. Then there was the documentary film ‘Kings of the Square Ring’ featuring Muhammad Ali in about 1980. The modern craze took off in the early Nineties, but it is in full swing now.
Mixed martial arts, or pankration, was an Olympic sport 2,000 years ago and fans tried to reinstate it as such in 2004, although the movement failed, but who knows what the future will bring about? Many powerful legislators believe that the sport is too violent and that it ought to be regulated more closely. The fans and the fighters disagree, so we will have to wait and see which faction wins out.
Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a range of subjects, but is now concerned with Mixed Martial Arts Training Gyms. If you would like to know more, please go to our web site at Mixed Martial Arts Quotes