The irony is that MMA appears headed down the same road as boxing. Most boxing historians will point to the 70’s and mid-80’s as the greatest years in the sport. There were generational talents in every weight class, from the ones you know, like Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray, Roberto Duran, Marvin Hagler, George Foreman, and Joe Frazier. Then, as the money grew, those premium matchups began to dry up.
Of the top ten highest purses for a single fight, seven of the fighters spent the prime of their careers after the year 2000 – Oscar De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather, Manny Pacquiao, Wladimir Klitchsko, David Haye, Vitali Klitchko, and Miguel Cotto. The other three had the prime of their careers in the 90’s – Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield, and Lennox Lewis (and Lewis is borderline, his biggest payday came against Tyson in 2001).
So as the sport became less competitive, the purses grew. Was it a lack of talent? Perhaps. Regardless, the best on the best became a more rare sight. Because ‘the best’ knew how much control they had. They knew the less they fought each other, the more they grew their record, the more sustained their earning power became and the higher the purse for that prime fight would be. At it’s most simple, we get the current escapade of Saul Alvarez and Gennedy Golovkin. At its worst, we get eight years of waiting to get Mayweather and Pacquiao.
If the UFC’s new matchmaking pattern is any sign, we may see these days ahead. While it’s fun every once and a while, making it a consistent habit will only undermine the value of the title belts. This could lead to a day where UFC fighters refuse fights that are too competitive and instead push for fights that make them more money. Maybe it leads to fighters collaborating behind the scenes on how to promote a fight together. Maybe this leads to fighters turning down title fights because the title fight offered isn’t as big of a draw. Maybe we see the elite jumping up or down in weight to find that money fight instead. Maybe the elite competing against each other becomes rarer.
Maybe but maybe not. It’s just amusing to see the world that Dana White and the UFC have made for themselves looking so much like the sport they make fun of. In it for a dime, in for a dollar.
Rhys Dowbiggin @Rdowb
Rhys has worked six years in the public relations industry rubbing shoulders with movie stars (who ignored him) to athletes (who tolerated him). He likes tiki-taka football, jelly beans, and arguing with Bruce about everything.