Now, I don't normally like to cover the same exact topic as one of our other staff members here, especially only one or two posts after theirs but I was planning on writing this before I even read Kid Nate's piece but I had to run out to see my chiropractor (The awesome Dr. Tara Scharich, Inner Balance Chiropractic - Saint Joseph, MI /shoutout) and as I have the exact opposite viewpoint (as well as a different way of looking at the issue) as him I decided to go ahead with my post. Now...on to the article!
I read Jordan Breen's article yesterday and was extremely disappointed by the following line:
It may sound ridiculous, but a couple of perfunctory hammerfists aren't about to jeopardize any fighter’s health.
Replays of the Josh Koscheck fight show that he was unconscious following the uppercut and was "brought to" by his head bouncing off the ground as he landed. As far as I'm concerned there is no arguing the fact that he was out prior to hitting the ground. Even as he is "recovering" while on his back his left leg is slightly quivering as his brain is trying to get back on track.
The quivering leg (and more importantly the fact that he went out completely to begin with) is a sign of the failure in neurotransmission that is a part of being knocked out and concussed. When you are knocked out or concussed your brain undergoes trauma which does include the failure of your brain to be able to transmit messages and your brain does not immediately go back to full function in that split second that you regain consciousness. Furthermore, after undergoing such trauma the victim can undergo changes in blood flow to the brain which can result in increased pressure on the brain. Striking the head of someone who is undergoing an increase of pressure on the brain can result in considerable brain damage and potentially even death.
In March of last year Canadian researchers found that blows to the head that knock someone unconscious can result in the loss of brain tissue:
Levine studied brain scans taken from 69 traumatic brain injury patients whose head injuries ranged from mild to moderate or severe. The researchers used high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging or MRI to study changes in brain volume a year after the injury.
They ran a computer analysis of these images and found that even patients with mild brain injuries with no apparent scarring had less brain volume.
"When you have a blow to the head, it causes a neurochemical reaction in the brain cells that lead to cell death," Levine said in a telephone interview. "The more cells that die, the less tissue you have."
Knowing these facts and thinking that we need to see someone who was just hit in a way that caused him to lose consciousness, even for just a second, take more punches to the head to be able to get a more desirable ending to a sporting event seems relatively selfish to me. Obviously injury, especially concussions and knockouts, are an accepted risk of the sport. But the fact that fights are stopped on the basis of fighter safety has always been something that supporters of MMA have pointed to as a reason that our sport is safer than boxing where a guy who gets rocked and knocked down is given time to recover.
The truth is, the fan in me does like to see more definitive endings to fights than we got with Paulo Thiago vs. Josh Koscheck and like anyone else I get hugely excited by fights where one guy seems out but survives and comes back to make it a fight again. But there needs to be an ability for us to separate the fan from the guy who realizes that for a guy to be knocked out, even for a split second, he has undergone legitimate brain trauma. And asking for a "couple of perfunctory hammerfists" is basically begging for tragedy.
Update: The more I think about hitting a guy after he is unconscious the more I am reminded of Emile Griffith vs. Benny Paret III, in which Griffith knocked Paret out but Benny was held up by the ropes and Griffith unloaded on him with a barage of unanswered shots. Paret died slightly over a week after this happened. So yeah, the idea of needing to see "a couple shots" after a guy goes out? Not for me. Go watch Ring of Fire though, it is a great documentary that tells the story of Emile Griffith and honestly will break your heart.
So fellas what do you's think was the fight stopped to early?