UFC Cowboys Up
Jake Rossen Mar 18, 2010
I’ve never been, but people who have attended the 40,000 to 70,000
seat stadiums and vast arenas during the heyday of Japan’s MMA
scene describe it as more religious experience than sporting event.
There’s probably something to the idea that the bigger the crowd,
the better the communal experience -- unless you’re jammed so far
up the nosebleed section that your ears pop.
Despite its popularity in the states, MMA has never entertained the whole ocean-of-humanity thing. That could change with news that the UFC is considering running an event at Cowboys Stadium in 2011. Dana White, who attended last weekend’s Pacquiao/Clottey fight, walked away impressed enough to consider it a possibility. And he’d be doing well to pursue it, for a number of reasons.
While Pacquiao’s popularity is at the upper echelon of boxing, he is by no stretch the kind of crossover athlete that Tyson or De La Hoya were in their primes: a chunk of the 50,000 attendees Saturday bought cheap ($35) tickets based on the novelty of seeing a major boxing match in the sports equivalent of the Grand Canyon. There’s nothing to indicate the UFC wouldn’t get the same reception, if not better: MMA events tend to be more substantial than boxing cards, making the idea of a more sustained spectacle appealing. (This assumes the UFC will be realistic about ticket pricing, no guarantee when StubHub, “the official ticket broker of the UFC,” often waves around seats at a mark-up that would make a loan shark blush.)
That kind of attendance would also serve as a major milestone for MMA’s growth in the States. Some industry types are still clinging to the idea of freestyle prizefighting as a passing fad: attracting a record crowd in a major venue would go a long way in dampening their lack of enthusiasm. Close-ups of hematomas on a 600-ton high-definition screen would only be a bonus.
Despite its popularity in the states, MMA has never entertained the whole ocean-of-humanity thing. That could change with news that the UFC is considering running an event at Cowboys Stadium in 2011. Dana White, who attended last weekend’s Pacquiao/Clottey fight, walked away impressed enough to consider it a possibility. And he’d be doing well to pursue it, for a number of reasons.
While Pacquiao’s popularity is at the upper echelon of boxing, he is by no stretch the kind of crossover athlete that Tyson or De La Hoya were in their primes: a chunk of the 50,000 attendees Saturday bought cheap ($35) tickets based on the novelty of seeing a major boxing match in the sports equivalent of the Grand Canyon. There’s nothing to indicate the UFC wouldn’t get the same reception, if not better: MMA events tend to be more substantial than boxing cards, making the idea of a more sustained spectacle appealing. (This assumes the UFC will be realistic about ticket pricing, no guarantee when StubHub, “the official ticket broker of the UFC,” often waves around seats at a mark-up that would make a loan shark blush.)
That kind of attendance would also serve as a major milestone for MMA’s growth in the States. Some industry types are still clinging to the idea of freestyle prizefighting as a passing fad: attracting a record crowd in a major venue would go a long way in dampening their lack of enthusiasm. Close-ups of hematomas on a 600-ton high-definition screen would only be a bonus.