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Help FIGHT CHURCH Fight the Good Fight!!!

Our one of a kind FIGHT CHURCH sports chaplaincy/church plant project’s 2013 budget is ONLY $28,200…
 
That breaks down to JUST $2,350 per month…
 
Right now, we have raised right at about $1,000 per month…
 
PLEASE consider helping out with a one-time donation and/or becoming a monthly supporter so we can continue to
Fight the Good Fight and minister to practical & spiritual needs of people here in Las Vegas that would otherwise be unreached! Just go to www.fightchurch.com/donate-2
 
It is quick, easy, safe, greatly appreciated and 100% tax deductible!!!
 
THANK YOU!!!

Who is MMA Chaplain Josh Boyd?

You can further connect with Josh Boyd on Facebook at www.facebook.com/pjoshboyd and/or following him on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pjoshboyd…

FIGHT CHURCH and The Rock Men’s Fellowship have joined forces!!!

Big announcement… It’s official! FIGHT CHURCH and THE ROCK Men’s Fellowship are now ministry partners!
Check them out at www.therock52.org, see us featured at http://therock52.org/?page_id=1165 and “LIKE” them on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Rock-Mens-Fellowship/193453097350013?fref=ts

Please contact us if you would like more info about partnering with us and Fighting the Good Fight!

Videos

I am going to work hard at getting more videos out there…

Check this one out and give me your feedback. I would love to know what other questions I could answer for you in future videos!

Interview with Pro MMA Fighter Sidney Silva…

MMA and Claude Monet… the Art of Judging Mixed Martial Arts By Josh Boyd

MMA and Claude Monet… the Art of Judging Mixed Martial Arts By Josh Boyd

There has been a lot of talking, crying, complaining, ranting, and whining about the judging system in MMA. The general consensus is that the current system is horribly flawed and although almost everyone has a different idea of what to change, everyone agrees that something must change.

As a fan, I hate when fights go to decision. Not because all fights that do are bad fights, because there are many great fights that have gone to decision. The problem is that once a fight goes into the judge’s hands, anything can happen – and I mean anything! Like most fans of MMA, there have been a ton of decisions that I have disagreed with, but there have been a ton I thought were right on the money!

So, how can it be fixed? Well, this is where my opinion probably differs from many. Where I agree that there can be and should be improvements. The judges could at least be highly educated about MMA specifically not just boxing, wrestling or a particular discipline of martial art. However, beyond that, I’m not so sure that it can be “fixed”. They are called “judges” for a reason. What they do is “judge”.

Think about this. The sport is called mixed martial arts, right? “Art” by definition is completely subjective. What is amazing to one person is an offensive waste of space to another. While MMA is not watercolor painting or freeform dance, there are some similarities. There are different styles, strategies and techniques and what works in one situation will be an epic fail in another. This is what makes the sport so exciting. This is also the part that requires judging.

How do you give value to one thing over another? For example, are submission attempts or submission escapes worth more? If a fighter is showing aggression and keeping busy attempting subs, does that trump the skill and business it takes to escape them? Should one’s effort be rewarded over someone else’s success? What is more valuable: the number of strikes thrown or the effectiveness of strikes? Who is to say that the cumulative effect of multiple body shots is less effective or impressive than a few strategic elbows that open a cut on a fighter’s forehead? Quantity or Quality?

What about takedowns? If a fighter is able to take another fighter to the mat, but is unable to do anything significant once he gets his opponent there, should his takedown skills be rewarded even if they are obviously his only skills? What is the fighter on his back is attempting submissions?

How about takedown defense? Who do you give the edge to when a fighter is showing aggression with multiple takedown attempts, but his opponent shuts him down time and time again with a great sprawl? Offense or Deffense?
What if a fighter pushes forward for three whole rounds keeping his opponent on their heels? Sounds good, but what if while on their heels, the opponent is delivering devastating defensive strikes? Aggression or strategy?

My point is that there are a million different scenarios. It is called “mixed” martial arts for a reason, scoring one technique/style over another every time gives an undo advantage to one discipline/style over another. If that happens, the sport, the art, will stop developing. Fighters will begin to focus only on the rigid expectations of the scorecard. Any incentive for development and innovation will stop. We can already see these trends with the current system with fighters utilizing the “lay and pray” strategy.

Other than making sure that MMA judges are qualified (have a good understanding of the sport and grasp the guidelines laid out), there is probably little else that we can expect to be done. Fighters will simply have to do their best to finish fights and we will have to do our best to live with the decisions handed down by the judges. Otherwise, I guess the alternative is to do what my wife suggests and declare all fights that go the distance, “To be continued!”

This is a fun little video that FIGHT CHURCH helped with…