Great a fuckin tufferThe Ultimate Fighter 1 got me interested, Griffin saying 'Everyone has a game plan until they get hit in the mouth.' made me laugh & I stole the line. I'd tell co workers that shit if they came into my cubicle bothering me.
Then Tito Ortiz was entertaining. Just grew from there.
This is funny because I asked my brother Why the fuck is Joe Rogan here? He gave my the down low & I was super surprisedI was in elementary school, maybe middle school and I was with my parents and siblings up the street at some family friends house. I had no martial arts background what so ever but the family who's house we were at were all turning side kick experts like @Joe Rogan and they had ordered the ppv for us kids to watch. I had no fucking clue what I was watching but I was hooked and watched the next few with them as well. I sort of kind of not really followed it after that for a few years. Fast forward many years to my time in the military and that's when I really got into the sport.
Dudes legitThis is funny because I asked my brother Why the fuck is Joe Rogan here? He gave my the down low & I was super surprised
Similar to me, I got it on VHS in 1995 after my first student loan hit my bank account.Watched UFC 1 on tape about a year after it happened, and was instantly hooked.
For realsSo all I'm seeing here is that UFC ever got traction due to piracy. Just saying!
Cosign this post except to say that @peter_weyland trained much more consistently than I did from start to finish and it shows. He also got me into all of this stuff so I owe it all to him.I took Karate from an early age and then the first UFC happened when I was in Junior High School. From that point on, @Kneeblock and I trained in no-gi grappling and dabbled in MMA. We actually did challenge matches against our HS wrestling team and low-level local Long Island dojo-storms- this would be like '96 and on. I competed in the second NYC Grappling Challenge in the intermediate division.
Initially I was a Pancrase fan and early UFCs. Not many people into it nowadays know about the stigma attached to guys that trained to fight back then... People tended to think you were weird or sadistic. Then Fight Club came out and it became a joke. At the same time, Pride took off and that's where the titanic fights happened. Until TUF brought it back to the UFC and the advent of the Casual MMA Fan...
I'll always be a fan of fight sports in any form. I can't get into team or ball sports the same way. I feel like throwing a ball in with a bunch of dudes is just civilizing combat. Just let'em fight.
@Leigh is good peopleCosign this post except to say that @peter_weyland trained much more consistently than I did from start to finish and it shows. He also got me into all of this stuff so I owe it all to him.
Shout out also to my pal @RedDragonUK who perhaps unknowingly saved me from losing interest in the sport completely and @Leigh who shepherded me over to this forum.
if it wasnt for a pirated bell expressvu dish i would have missed out on k1 and pride all together as well as king of the cage and so you think you can fightSo all I'm seeing here is that UFC ever got traction due to piracy. Just saying!
It was the consensus in my circle that our thing would never be the same. Everything we had worked for and supported as fans. But it was bitter sweet. Every Tom,Dick,&Harry would now be MMA experts. At one time for a fortunate few of us this whole thing was all ours. (Make sense of this post as you will). Not directed at you splint.TUF saved the UFC and perhaps MMA at the scale in which it currently exists. Don't hate the game...
Star thrower right here brother. Black pajama boy since I was a wee lil' lad.Bruce Lee -> KungFu movies -> Ninjas -> Karate Class -> Karate Kid -> Bloodsport -> UFC 1 -> MMA.