The torn triceps also has to ask a lot of questions. When anabolic steroids made their way into the NFL, there were a couple of new injuries that rarely ever happened before. Even though pro wrestlings wear-and-tear with no off-season and as many as 200 matches a year for some headliners (and far more in some territories during prior eras) is more than football, the kind of single impact collisions at bad angles in an uncontrolled environment that would lead to muscle tears are far greater in football. In football, the key new injuries were torn triceps, torn pecs, torn lats and torn quads. Those injuries rarely happened, and in some cases, were considered completely new injuries as compared to the pre-steroid era of the game. In the NFL, players who suffered those tears (as opposed to torn biceps or torn hamstrings which were frequent on non-steroid users although more frequent with steroid users) were usually figured to be steroid users.
Cena, because of his physique, especially now that hes 36, was always going to have accusations. He has always maintained he has never done any performance enhancing drugs. In Bob Hollys recent book, The Hardcore Truth, he talked of different top stars who were not being tested regularly, if ever, and said, the whole program was a joke. Keep in mind Ive spoken to a number of WWE performers and while there are questions and frequent complaints, and people talk of loopholes, a joke is not the term they use. Several people have made significant lifestyle changes to eliminate things or time certain other things because they take the program seriously. There is always questions about top stars getting preferential treatment, particularly when older guys are so much larger and still cut than younger guys in their physical primes.
Holly in his book claimed Undertaker and Ric Flair refused point blank to take the tests and claimed both made it clear theyd walk out first. He did say that HHH (when he was a full-time active wrestler), Dave Bautista and Cena were all tested, which he said he saw them take personally, but Holly noted he questioned the results because those three didnt shrink like the rest of the guys. It should also be noted that several wrestlers in that era were given testosterone use exemptions like Vitor Belfort and Chael Sonnen in fighting, Chris Benoit being the most notable. Holly himself noted that testosterone, which they gave certain exemptions for, combined with Growth Hormone, which the top guys could afford but the middle and lower level guys without a sponsor couldnt, was a strong PED stack, and there is no WWE testing for GH.
Cena has gone so far as to not only claim to be clean for life, which is something if you look at photos of him before WWE when he was 260 and ripped in UPW, but that he believes all professional athletes who fail drug tests should be brought up on criminal charges.
When it comes to Cena and PEDs, every discussion is going to end with this. If you insinuate hes clean, or even the possibility of it, youll get many wrestlers saying youre hopelessly naive and say there is absolutely no way. Saying anything stronger would leave one open for libel, given there is no evidence out there that Cena isnt telling the truth, even though the dreaded eye test makes one question just based on his physique. And he does train hard, is exceptionally strong, trains heavy when not injured, and does have freaky genetics, and Ive known some genetic freaks who dont take anything and nobody would ever believe it by looking at them. But usually they are smaller than Cena, even if just as much if not more muscular.
But as hard as hes trained, and his training program is built these days on multiple joint movements that are supposed to build strength and protect from injuries, and hes suffered two very unique injuries that are usually considered red flags. Granted, any pro wrestler who works as hard and as often as he does is going to have tons of injuries, and the neck and heel issues that we know of, and likely other issues that we dont, are unavoidable wear-and-tear just from doing so many main events for so long.
But whatever the truth in this story is, well likely never know for sure, even though everyone has their opinion and few will be convinced from whatever it is.
The debut of Fox Sports 1, the new home of UFC, had both good and bad over the past week.
First, the bad. FS 1 was asking for increases from 23 cents per subscriber per month from cable and dish companies carriage charge that The Speed Channel was getting, to 80 cents. DirecTV, The Dish Network and Time Warner cable all stood firm against the new price, which was a gigantic story within television.
Faced with opening with about 45 million potential homes instead of the 90 million that FOX had promised advertisers and stockholders, FOX caved in the end, and made a deal that the carriage charges at the start would be the same 23 cents from the original deal. The difference is about $600 million per year in revenue to the station, which is enormous. The feeling is once the station is established, perhaps when they get more high profile big five sporting events such as their Major League Baseball games next season, that they will have more leverage to get the price they wanted. The deal they settled for was less than the 33 cents NBC Sports Network, which doesnt have nearly the level of sports, is getting, let alone the $5.54 per subscriber per month that ESPN gets. The goal of FS 1 is to be competition to ESPN.
The good news is that on the first day of a new station that people didnt know where it was on the dial, that with UFC anchoring the night, they not only beat ESPN, which very few thought was possible, but FS 1 was the highest rated station on either broadcast or cable in Males 18-34, Males 18-49, Overall 18-34 and 18-49, which are the key demos they were after, including beating a national gymnastics championship on NBC.
The good news for FS 1 is even though they didnt get a good carriage fee to start, they were placed by DirecTV and many cable companies in a strong position on the dial, which makes a big difference to channel surfers when youre with the ESPNs of the world instead of the Fuel, now FS 2, and AXS locations.
Its nothing short of amazing that three weeks after drawing a 1.5 rating on FOX for a two-plus hour show with a show that had a Countdown show produced, that, even being a stronger card, being on a new station on its first day of existence with an 8/17 show from the TD Garden in Boston, the UFCs nearly three hour main card did a 1.38 rating, beating the 0.9 that ESPN did for the Little League World Series.
Because FS 1 is in nine percent less homes than FX, the rating was actually the highest for a UFC event on cable since they left Spike. The 1.78 million viewers for the main card from 8 to 10:45 p.m. was behind only the 1/19 show headlined by Vitor Belfort vs. Michael Bisping (1.86 million) being the most-watched cable main card since leaving Spike. Even more impressive were the demo numbers, a 2.02 in Males 18-34 and 2.30 in Males 35-49.
The show peaked at 2.27 million viewers for the Chael Sonnen vs. Shogun Rua main event.
The two hour prelims from 6-8 p.m. did a 0.72 rating and 881,000 viewers.
The growth was impressive because the main card at 8 p.m. started at 1.20 million viewers, and nearly doubled by the time of the main event. The strongest actual growth looked to be in the Urijah Faber vs. Iuri Alcantara fight, which had 1.74 million viewers. The Alistair Overeem vs. Travis Browne fight grew to 1.99 million viewers.
Whats key is that the examples of UFC on Fuel and FX made it appear that it would be a long growing process when it came to the new station. The feeling is eventually it would be the best thing, with most of UFCs key programming including the UFC Tonight news show and big show Countdown programming on what the hope was would eventually be the No. 2 sports station in the country. And while this was a far better than usual TV card and there was publicity regarding the launch, it showed that they may be starting off a lot stronger than even the most optimistic projections could have been.
The show drew a near sellout of 12,539 fans, with about 11,000 paid and a gate of $1.53 million, strong numbers for a non-PPV event. Although from a quality and marquee standpoint, this was really a bigger and more looked forward to show than two of the past three PPV events.
The show was really about four key fights. Chael Sonnen beat Shogun Rua via choke at 4:47 of the first round. The result was something of an upset, but when it was over, the question was whether Sonnen was really that good, or Rua, a legend of the sport, was shot at 31.
The one thing from the early career declines Shogun, Wanderlei Silva and Murilo Ninja Rua, is that brutal all out sparring where knockouts were frequent at the Chute Boxe Academy may have taken guys to the top quickly, but it also appeared to burn their bodies out young.
Travis Browne, a 6-foot-7 former college basketball player, survived the early onslaught from Alistair Overeem, before knocking a gassed out Overeem out with a front kick in 4:08. With two straight knockout losses and a high contract, one wonders what the future is for Overeem.
In this case, he came out fast and had Browne in real trouble early, nearly finishing him. But a ref that let it go and going against a fighter who wouldnt quit, and suddenly, Overeem was out of gas. Browne kept landing the front kick to the body before landing the one to the jaw that ended the fight.
Urijah Faber continued his streak of never losing a non-championship fight with a strong decision win over Iuri Alcantara. Earlier in the show, Michael McDonald beat Brad Pickett in a battle of top bantamweight contenders, and it would seem too set up Faber vs. McDonald to determine who should get a title shot. The title picture is always in a state of confusion because nobody knows when Dominick Cruz will be back, but the latest is they are hoping for early next year.
Interim champion Renan Barao faces Eddie Wineland on 2/21. If Cruz is ready early in the year, Barao or Wineland vs. Cruz would be next, and Faber or McDonald should be the next contender. The problem is if Barao emerges from all this, Barao beat both Faber and McDonald conclusively in the type of fights that left the feeling a rematch wouldnt go much differently.
The fourth big match concerned the American debut of Conor McGregor. After the huge reaction he got in his UFC debut in Europe, he was pushed heavily, particularly in Boston with the strong Irish market. The push paid off when it came to the crowd reaction, as he got an enormous reaction, probably at the level of a B.J. Penn or GSP level star. McGregor suffered what is now believed to have been a sprained lateral collateral ligament in the second round, and wasnt feeling steady standing. He was good enough to take Max Holloway down the rest of the fight and win an easy decision, but it was not the blow away performance. The crowd still liked him at the end, but not with the fervor at the start because they were expecting something spectacular. The way I see it, he wasnt hurt significantly since he didnt lose. He has the legit excuse of the knee injury. But if he doesnt look great in his next fight, hes going to be a guy in the pack in the U.S., even if he may be Irelands answer to a Michael Bisping of several years ago.
UFC officials were so thrilled with how the night went, and this was before any indication of any ratings were out, that they gave seven bonuses instead of the usual five. The show, with the exception of the John Howard vs. Uriah Hall fight, was very good. All the key winners looked great in their own way, in particular Sonnen, who badly needed the win over a big name after losses to Anderson Silva and Jon Jones. He probably would have still gotten a fight with Wanderlei Silva with a loss. He played what appeared to be an insurance game by probably hyping a Silva fight more than the Rua fight the week of the show. A loss to Silva will derail him, but its a fight hell be favored in. But if Chris Weidman beats Anderson Silva, with a couple of wins, could see Sonnen challenging Weidman. Both are big ifs.
Sonnen and McDonald both got $50,000 best submission bonuses. McDonald picked up $100,000 in bonus money since he and Brad Pickett also got fight of the night honors. Travis Browne and Matt Brown each got $50,000 best knockout bonuses.
The 8/3 UFC 163 PPV from Brazil headlined by Jose Aldo Jr. vs. Chan Sung Jung is estimated at doing 170,000 buys at this point. Its not a good number, but weve already seen the shows without a marquee main event are falling and thats just natural with so many shows on free television. I dont think anyone expected much different. The initial estimate was 35,000 more than for Rashad Evans vs. Dan Henderson, who are both far bigger names, so it tells you that even though the featherweight title used to mean at least 200,000 buys and it was Aldos lowest number (including the Urijah Faber fight which was a WEC show), it still means something as far as getting people to buy and its not rock bottom. Plus Brazil shows are harder sells because you have so much less media the week of the show. Benson Henderson vs. Anthony Pettis on 8/31 should beat it, but I dont expect anywhere near 300,000 for that one either. 9/21 is a real test because youve got Jon Jones, who is a draw, but hes against Alexander Gustafsson, who is not a draw. They need to hit 400,000 for that show or else that would be a bad sign since Jones hasnt fallen below that number since winning the title .
Dana White pretty much blew off any ideas of investigating the idea of any Biogenesis links to UFC talent. There was a Miami Herald report that there is a government investigation into the clinic, which, if true, may reveal some of the names of the athletes involved past the baseball players that have already been named like Ryan Braun and Alex Rodriguez. Porter Fischer, who was paid by Major League Baseball to reveal names and details, said athletes in a number of major sports had PED programs set up by the clinic, and one of the sports mentioned was MMA. With the exception of baseball, none of the other sports were aggressive in trying to find who was involved. Dana White said he didnt have time to investigate and said he hadnt heard one word about any of his guys being involved. White said that any fallout in his mind is an athletic commission issue. These guys get tested by the government. I dont give a shit about Biogenesis. Ive got so much shit to do, I can barely keep up with what Im doing now. Im not going to fly down there or get on the phone with these guys. Its a weird deal because there are fighters who believe UFC doesnt care about steroid use as much as they are mad when somebody fails a test. Thats not unlike a lot of sports where athletes believe that people running the sports know whats going on, and dont care about PED usage, but dont like it when it comes out or people get caught. But White has always pointed out the difference is that in fighting, they allow people to punch harder and he believes use is, because of that, worse for the sport than baseball. But he gives mixed messages. When Georges St-Pierre and Johny Hendricks both agreed to more extensive VADA testing before their 11/16 fight, White asked why they were doing it and has not been outwardly supportive or encouraging of top fighters to do so to remove suspicion as a lot of boxers have been doing. In boxing, it seems to be protocol to congratulate the guys who will submit to the testing and ask questions about those who refuse, although boxing had its own issues with fighters who failed tests, still fought and the fact they failed wasnt revealed until after the fights were over, but that was with USADA, and not VADA, which thus far hasnt had any issues that weve heard with its credibility. Were regulated by the government, the government comes in and does all the drug testing, White said. Georges St-Pierre is one of those guys that people have been talking about (frequent accusations of him using PEDs from Nick Diaz and B.J. Penn). B.J. Penn said he was on steroids. Somebody else said he was on steroids. And he said, `Ill pay for my own VADA testing, which isnt cheap and its a pain in the ass. He doesnt have to do it, but I guess he wants to do it. GSP told MMAFighting, For me, when they accuse me, I take that as a compliment. I believe they are complement my athleticism. I want to prove also that its possible to be champion without using drugs, and I know VADA is the most professional. As long as White pushes the idea of government testing as being the gold standard, the fighters are going to see it as a message to simply not get caught as opposed to not use, because beating the day of the fight testing is pretty easy and except for the top main eventers in a few states (such as Nevada), there is no risk of being tested at any time out of competition unless one has applied for a TUE for TRT, as in that case, the fighters have to pay for their own regular testing. Its hard for White to push the VADA testing publicly because in doing so, you pretty much bring up that the current testing methods are substandard. The issue here is that the guy with the info is looking for a payoff from the various leagues to reveal his info, and then you start getting into legal proceedings. With baseball, they really are vigilant about wanting a clean product and they were willing to take the extra step. No other sport would do it. But I do wish UFC would do it, if nothing else than to end all speculation as to what their real goal is when it comes to PEDs. If they really did care a lot about finding out if anyone on their roster went to that clinic, theyd have at least opened those channels and done an internal investigation to find out, as opposed to publicly basically blowing it off.