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- Mar 28, 2010
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Well I'm not sure what the point is. You said the cards weren't stacked and the numbers are lower than 300K. Makes sense, right?
But if you examine the cards more closely you will notice something all of them do have in common: A HW fight and former champions fighting. And for a shit card that you said isn't stacked, even an event opener between HW's can beat a BW or FLW title fight.
Do you honestly think that if they made a PPV today without a champ headlining that people wouldn't bitch, even if there were former champs headlining? Hell, every PPV now is headlined by a title fight and people still bitch.
The last time a PPV didn't have a title fight was UFC 161: Evans/Henderson. Before that it was UFC 153: Silva/Bonnar, but in that case, even though it wasn't a title fight, one guy was a current champ. UFC 147: Franklin/Wanderlei II. Going back into 2011 you see it a little more.
My point isn't that those cards weren't good. I certainly enjoyed them. It was to show that back in the day when cards were allegedly super stacked, they weren't really as stacked as people seem to recall. Like I said, if we had PPV cards with no title, people would bitch. If we had 3 in a row, people would go apeshit.
I don't necessarily think the events now are better or worse. Though there are twice as many divisions now, which means twice the titles and twice the contenders. With less PPVs, you would think that means an improved PPV main card. But the problem is two-fold, I believe.
First, I think our standards have increased. In addition to having more champs and contenders to put on the PPVs, I truly believe the champs today are better than they were then, and so are the contenders. So what is the problem? Well injuries play a part. But back then, you could put on a card without a title fight, have upper-mid level guys fighting each other, and big name veterans in squash matches against guys people don't care about all on a PPV main card. That wasn't to say people didn't bitch then. They did. They also spoke with their dollars. They didn't buy the PPV. But for some reason, we look at it like the superior product to that of today, even if it isn't, and expect more from today's product. Maybe it's just that things are always better in retrospect. Lesser known up and comers and prospects became known names. But the guys today are still lesser known. Maybe 5 years down the road, people will look back at some of these shows and comment about all of the big names.
Part two, and this feeds into part one, is that some people, for whatever reason, don't like sub-LW and WMMA divisions. So for me, as I said, I see it as twice as many champs, twice as many contenders...twice as many big important fights, but with less PPV fights to fill. But for some people, it means less PPVs, and only half the fights they care about. So rather than being expanded in a good way, it's like the product was cut in half. I get it. But it's not like that for everyone. There are lots of WEC fans and WMMA fans that like what is going on. But for the others, I get it. But it's not because there is less talent on the PPVs, it's because they don't like the content despite how good the fighters/fights are or aren't. It's not about quality, but rather personal preference.
But again, I'm not trying to say it was bad or worse back then, just that it wasn't so much more stacked/loaded than it is now like people seem to believe.