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When Worlds Collide

WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE By Ben Miller Email: benjamiller@icloud.com Twitter: @benjamiller UFC 155 is in the books and it showed once again that Raven was right.  About a decade ago the former ECW champion appeared on an audio show with Dave Meltzer and Bryan Alvarez saying that all that matters is the finish.  On a night where three of the five pay-per-view fights were one-sided and uninspiring, nobody is talking about anything except the final fight because it was that damn good. The second Cain Velasquez vs. Junior Dos Santos fight was fantastic to a neutral observer and dramatic as hell to anyone with a rooting interest.  Yours truly was rooting for the Brazillian (blame an overreaching pre-show essay for that) and from the opening bell it was a riveting tale of survival.  Cain was a monster in a perpetual state of attack and Junior kept fighting and fighting to survive the beast.  For supporters of Velasquez some of the drama may have been lacking (drama fund

The Cost of Abandoning Fair Play: Why UFC 155 Won’t Draw

The Cost of Abandoning Fair Play: Why UFC 155 Won’t Draw By Ben Miller Email: benjamiller@icloud.com Twitter:  @benjamiller   The temptation is to blame the mismatch.  A year ago, the striker knocked out the wrestler in a minute.  What has changed?  The wrestler still wants everyone on the ground.  The striker still seems to always be able to stay off the ground.  The striker isn’t getting any shorter and the wrestler isn’t getting any younger. And so maybe the mismatch is the reason that Junior Dos Santos vs. Cain Velasquez for the heavyweight championship at UFC 155 has tepid interest.  No front page headline on ESPN.com a day out.  The sports section of the Los Angeles Times (the newspaper from the nearest major media market to Las Vegas, the site of the fight) has nary a mention.  Deadspin.com has a feature, but even that is a feature about the  bumbled promotion of the challenger . The problem with blaming the mismatch is that the sporting public seems fine with

Why Chael.

"The problem with steroids," Roddy Piper once told yours truly, "was the warning label.  The bottle had a warning label saying all of this stuff about it having no benefit, and then you worked out on it and you saw the benefit." Steroids are bad.  But try telling a young athlete that.  Then try telling a young athlete that after he's been lied to.  Won't work.  Can't work.  Has no chance to work. Why bring up a ten year old conversation about a thirty year old problem the day after Chael Sonnen is rewarded for his 1-1 record in 2012 with the biggest money match of 2013?  Because it's the same dang thing, only different. Booking championship fights for guys who are below the championship level is bad.  But try telling a struggling promoter that.  Then try telling a struggling promoter that after he just saw that sub-championship level fighter talk his way into a million buys.  No.  Chance.  In Hell. Chael Sonnen vs. Jon Jones for the light h

King Mo Does a Proust Questionnaire

Note: I wrote this up for the iMPACT Wrestling web site. In his first fight for Strikeforce, he knocked out an Ultimate Fighter favorite in three minutes. In his second, he became a world champion. Things have often come fast for King Mo, but not easy. He toiled for three years in division II collegiate wrestling before becoming an All-American in his first year in division I. He overcame four high-quality MMA opponents fighting in Japan before getting his chance to fight in America. And now, after making his name as the wildebeest wrestler with the cinder block right hand, King Mo enters the wrestling ring on iMPACT Wrestling. Many wrestling fans and MMA fans already know King Mo, the athlete. But what do we know about King Mo, the person? To solve this conundrum we look to that favorite of Vanity Fair magazine, the Proust Questionnaire. Made famous by early twentieth-century French novelist Marcel Proust, the questionnaire is designed to help the reader understand the p