June 1st, 2008 by Jemaleddin Cole

A lot of grumbling is going on in regards to Kimbo Slice’s crappy cardio and his com­plete lack of a ground game. And that’s fair: the man has work to do to live up to his hype. But who’s to blame for that hype? i’d lay that at the feet of Gary Shaw and CBS. Slice is doing his best to sell him­self, but he’s never claimed to be any­thing other than what he is: a good street-fighter who is still learn­ing MMA. Gary Shaw is the one saying that he’d beat Mike Tyson. 

But there’s been a lot of hype for Kaitlin Young as well. The odd thing is that almost none of it came from Eli­teXC: Shaw was too busy hyping Slice and Gina Carano to worry about doing any more than claim­ing that Young was a game oppo­nent for Carano. Blog­gers for sev­eral sites got inter­views with the 22-year-old col­lege stu­dent and pub­lished breath­less reports of her prowess in strik­ing and on the ground. It was reported that she’d knocked 3 oppo­nents out in one night, owing to her exten­sive Muay Thai train­ing, and that she’d be better on the ground than Carano because she’d par­tic­i­pated in some grap­pling tournaments. 

The fact that the three girls she knocked out that night were all par­tic­i­pat­ing in their first event? Or that her 4 KOs were against women who now have a com­bined record of 4-5? Not impor­tant, even though Carano has beaten well-​known fight­ers like Tonya Evinger and Julile Kedzie. What about the fact that her first MMA event was a short 7 months ago? Not an issue, even though Carano has been fight­ing and train­ing MMA with one of the best camps in the world for 2 years. And what about that Muay Thai train­ing? Young is 3-2 in ama­teur com­pe­ti­tion, while Carano was 12-1-1 as a pro­fes­sional and the first Amer­i­can woman to win a Muay Thai cham­pi­onship in Thailand. 

Much was made of a video, cir­cu­lated by Young’s camp, of her flip­ping tires and puling a truck across a park­ing lot, even though she is clearly the smaller and weaker of the two. Not to men­tion that the last mixed mar­tial artist to be fea­tured doing so-​called “caveman” train­ing was Young’s team­mate at the Min­nesota Mar­tial Arts Acad­emy Sean Sherk, who was sub­se­quently stripped of his title for test­ing pos­i­tive for steroids. 

In hind­sight, it’s no sur­prise that Carano dom­i­nated the fight from begin­ning to end. While her shoot­ing sched­ule for Amer­i­can Glad­i­a­tors clearly short­ened her train­ing camp and left her over­weight and out of breath during the fight, she had more than enough strength and skill to take out Young. When fight­ing on the ground, Young attempted one strike and no sub­mis­sion attempts.  Working from her back, Carano on the other hand, quickly brought her leg up to attempt a gogo­plata sub­mis­sion - a rel­a­tively advanced tech­nique. By the fight’s end, the only damage done to Carano was a little smeared mas­cara, while Young looked as though she’d been hit by a truck. But this wasn’t exactly a sur­prise: Carano was up against a smaller oppo­nent with less expe­ri­ence who was facing top com­pe­ti­tion for the first time in her first tele­vised fight. Who can win in that situation?

The blo­gos­phere likes to view itself as free of many of the sins of the main­stream media. But blog­gers are just as likely to fall for a convincing story-line in the face of over­whelm­ing evi­dence as anyone. When a lik­able fighter talks her­self up, we listen with­out ques­tion­ing what she says. We like to be skep­ti­cal of what we hear from the news out­lets, but we must apply that skep­ti­cism to our own work as well.

Orig­i­nally posted on Bloody Elbow. Comments closed for this version.

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