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Weight cutting is worst in boxing and mma. Because mma likes to copy from boxing. Ditto the crappy scoring system that works fine for boxing, but not so great in mma. The only solution I see is reduction of time between weighting and fighting. I would do it the same day, 2-3 hours before prelims.I think it's allowed because there's no clear solution to fixing it and if there was, which I've never heard of a good idea on the topic in how to stop weight cutting, it would probably bring a bag of new problems.
Nobody wants weight cutting, not even the fuckers doing it. But I heard morons on here saying Islam didn't have a size advantage over Volk because they both weighed the same. I found that hilarious, there's a reason why Islam kills himself to make 155lbs and there's a reason why Volk has fought almost entirely at 145lbs...because there's a very real advantage to size and weight cutting in general.
I think it's allowed because there's no clear solution to fixing it and if there was, which I've never heard of a good idea on the topic in how to stop weight cutting, it would probably bring a bag of new problems.
Nobody wants weight cutting, not even the fuckers doing it. But I heard morons on here saying Islam didn't have a size advantage over Volk because they both weighed the same. I found that hilarious, there's a reason why Islam kills himself to make 155lbs and there's a reason why Volk has fought almost entirely at 145lbs...because there's a very real advantage to size and weight cutting in general.
Weight cutting is worst in boxing and mma. Because mma likes to copy from boxing. Ditto the crappy scoring system that works fine for boxing, but not so great in mma. The only solution I see is reduction of time between weighting and fighting. I would do it the same day, 2-3 hours before prelims.
Imo there is an obvious solution but nobody would like it. Have the usada guy bring a scale to the random checkins and have him post the result online.
I get sick a few times a year and I don't cut any weight at all so...
Seriously, i don't get why so many fighters get "sick" before their fights and in their post interview come up with this "excuse".You don't have any 8-17 job, no time constraint, nothing. The only thing you have to do is train and eat properly. Specially during fight camp till the fight you should be at your peak physical level (at least if you're a pro athlete). I get that cutting weight is taxing on your body and your immune system at that time may not be on his all time high, but its just paying a bit attention for a lilttle amount of time and you should still be in your top physical level since the fight is approaching.
Nah I'm saying that I get sick a few times a year and I cut ZERO weight therefore if I cut weight it'd presumably happen even more often.Anecdotal data.
I'm 57, 10lbs overweight, and the last time I got sick with anything was one 5-day urti in 2015.
My immune system is different than other people's immune system, yours included.
If we both adopted camp lifestyle followed by a severe cut, our immune systems would both be weaker and less effective on weigh-in day.
I'm a bit ambiguous about that.Wrestlers cut less weight but even when they weigh in and then hop onto the mats, they're still cutting. And if you're cutting without the opportunity to rehydrate, you're putting your brain health at serious, immediate risk. It's why in striking sports they do not do this, you must give the athlete time after weighing in. So this isn't a good idea realistically, unless you can find a way to enforce the prevention of weight cutting to go along with it.
...I don't know man, I'm just not sure how you devise this system.
Nah I'm saying that I get sick a few times a year and I cut ZERO weight therefore if I cut weight it'd presumably happen even more often.
Point being, no, it isn't weird that fighters get sick before their fights.
I disagree. Or to be precise, I agree to a point. If you had 5-6 hours to rehydrate, the weight cut would be small in order not to jeopardize the performance. The longest the interval, the more intense the weight cut. Shortening the interval is the only solution. However, there is no incentive for the orgs to do this, this is something that would be good for the sport itself, but would probably cost them money because weight-ins are a clown show as well. Because boxing does it. I would literally make them jump on the scale during walk-ins if it were up to me.Wrestlers cut less weight but even when they weigh in and then hop onto the mats, they're still cutting. And if you're cutting without the opportunity to rehydrate, you're putting your brain health at serious, immediate risk. It's why in striking sports they do not do this, you must give the athlete time after weighing in. So this isn't a good idea realistically, unless you can find a way to enforce the prevention of weight cutting to go along with it.
It takes leadership. A promotion has to step up and set rules. That's it.
The fundamental problem is logistics: how do you eliminate weight-cutting without having half your fights cancelled every card?
The solution isn't that hard: integrate mandatory monthly weigh-ins into the usada program, conducted by bonded 3rd-party agents. If you can trust usada agents to test for peds, you can trust them to conduct weigh-ins with a digital scale that is calibrated with a 50kg calibration weight in front of all parties, at each weigh-in session.
Fight week: mandatory daily weigh-ins.
Written policy: set the rules and make them clear to all fighters, make sure all fighters understand he goals, and set stiff purse penalties for violation of weight rules. Then cancel a few fights until the cheaters get the message. Rule X - two weight violations and you get get suspended for 2 years; three weight violations and you get cut.
The fighters want to stop the weight-cut game. It won't be hard to weed out a few cheaters. Social pressure will help: no fighter will want to endure the massive social media backlash and bad rep from weight-cheating under the new rules.