Doggy Bag: Searching for Kimbo's Next Slice
Probst Blue Ribbon
Oct 4, 2009
I just read that thing you guys pass off as an article called
the “Doggy Bag,” and the “professional” viewpoint expressed when it
comes to boxing and their procedures. Many, if not all of the
problems mentioned are also applicable to MMA and more
specifically, the UFC (because it seems like you guys forgot every
other org in existence). How many pay-per-views did we suffer
through with a bunch of mediocre fights pitting no names against
the UFC's steady roster, or the superfights of power puncher versus
power puncher for that guaranteed KO? The UFC fares no better tying
up their champions for months and months for their TV show than
boxing does when it comes to sparse fights and challenges. And
belts? It took forever to have a permanent lightweight division and
the wealth of talent in these limited weight classes to ever give
some guys the respect they deserve. How about a super heavyweight
division to keep the Lesnars and Carwins fighting people their own
size? Lesnar, by the way is a perfect example of a watered down
belt.
As an enthusiast, seeing the good fights is pretty much all that matters. Yet, Jason Probst seems to believe that branding, marketing and revenue trumps quality fights. Where did you find this guy? The forum has these Dana White quoting guys on sale for a dime a dozen.
-- André Korol-Paradis
Jason Probst, contributor: The quality
of UFC and MMA pay-per-views cannot be compared to boxing’s, namely
because MMA shows provided five to eight fights, typically, with at
least half of those reasonable betting props on either side.
Whereas in boxing, the undercards seem to, more often than not, be
large sportbook mismatches with the occasional competitive
semi-main bout accompanying a headlining contest of wildly varying
quality.
And yes, my guy-with-the-hyphenated-last-name, marketing, branding and brand building matter a lot in creating and maintaining a promotion. That's why when you hear “IFL” you think of a certain range of talent, etc.
You totally lose on the boxing vs. MMA comparison. Top boxers aren't as active as MMA guys, and the fact that you think otherwise is like a ten year-old kid pissing his shorts to prove his pants won't get wet. Look it up yourself.
And where did Sherdog find me? At a truckstop in Yelm, Wash. I was fine-tuning Google's search algorithm for “Jason Probst” and “awesomeness.” Jeff Sherwood was driving a big rig and I hitched a ride with him to Clueville. We ran over a bunch of dudes with hyphenated names en route...
Please send feedback to [email protected]. Your letter could appear in the next edition of “The Doggy Bag.”
As an enthusiast, seeing the good fights is pretty much all that matters. Yet, Jason Probst seems to believe that branding, marketing and revenue trumps quality fights. Where did you find this guy? The forum has these Dana White quoting guys on sale for a dime a dozen.
-- André Korol-Paradis
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And yes, my guy-with-the-hyphenated-last-name, marketing, branding and brand building matter a lot in creating and maintaining a promotion. That's why when you hear “IFL” you think of a certain range of talent, etc.
You totally lose on the boxing vs. MMA comparison. Top boxers aren't as active as MMA guys, and the fact that you think otherwise is like a ten year-old kid pissing his shorts to prove his pants won't get wet. Look it up yourself.
And where did Sherdog find me? At a truckstop in Yelm, Wash. I was fine-tuning Google's search algorithm for “Jason Probst” and “awesomeness.” Jeff Sherwood was driving a big rig and I hitched a ride with him to Clueville. We ran over a bunch of dudes with hyphenated names en route...
Please send feedback to [email protected]. Your letter could appear in the next edition of “The Doggy Bag.”
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