Mir in the Guillotine
Jake Rossen Sep 28, 2010
Frank Mir file photo: Dave Mandel | Sherdog.com
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"Sure [I’d consider cutting him],” White said. “You really, really need to show up and deliver. This is a job. Once ‘Cro Cop’ stuffed his takedown attempt, his heart fell out on the floor.”
And on the subject of respecting athletes who risk their necks: "When people say, 'Hey, these guys put their lives on the line,' that's a crock of sh-t. This sport is so safe. These guys have chosen to be fighters!"
Last thing first: while MMA is far and away the safest of all combat sports -- football included -- that’s not to be confused with “safe.” No activity where your brain is getting bounced around like a ping pong ball is like picking flowers. But White is correct in that it’s a voluntary activity -- and if you volunteer for a dangerous job, it’s on you.
The threat of cutting Mir follows what White said following Anderson Silva’s repugnant performance in Abu Dhabi against Demian Maia in April: the message is that no one is so big or so important that they can’t be clipped for putting on a horrible climax to what was otherwise a solid program. The problem is that Mir’s results -- he remains the only man to beat Brock Lesnar -- and gift for hyping bouts would be of service to competing promotions. The price for White making an example of Mir would be CBS grabbing attention with a Mir/Fedor Emelianenko proposal. Letting fighters loose after a win doesn’t give you a lot of leverage.
Mir had a bad showing. It happens. MMA is a job, and you’re allowed the occasional bad day at the office: prior to “The Ultimate Fighter” boosting business in 2005, the UFC had many of them.
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