Wednesday, July 20, 2005 Combat sport in the spotlight |
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The rising popularity of mixed martial arts -- also known by more brutish aliases such as "extreme fighting" -- has states scrambling to regulate a sport termed a human chess match by supporters and sheer violence by critics.
Mixed martial arts features bouts between two trained athletes who use a combination of martial arts holds, chops and kicks, grappling, wrestling and boxing to garner a victory through knockout or submission. Fighters battle for three, five-minute rounds with championship bouts lasting for five, five-minute rounds.
Mixed martial arts has existed since the early 1990s but only since 1996 has it followed a set of unified rules, according to Tim Lueckenhoff, national president of the Association of Boxing Commissions (ABC) and an administrator with the Missouri Boxing Commission. "Before then, there were very few rules that protected the participants from serious injury," he said.
Some states are harnessing the sport's popularity to generate tax revenue, while virtually the same number have taken a "not in my backyard" stance.
Mixed martial arts is a legal, regulated sport in at least 19 states: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Utah and Washington.
The top sanctioned mixed martial-arts events in Nevada, which allows and regulates the sport, have drawn more than 10,000 in paid attendance and gross sales that stretch well into seven figures, according to the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
"Mixed martial arts is one of the fastest-growing sports in the country," said Lueckenhoff. "State and tribal commissions are racing to make sure they can regulate it, because it's another revenue source for them." |