Pro Quality. Fan Perspective.
Login-facebook
Around SBN: Trent Richardson Interviews Fellow Brown Brandon Weeden

Massachusetts Athletic Commission Loses Mind, Pushes Double Weigh-Ins

From a piece on Sherdog:

The newly formed Massachusetts State Athletic Commission has approved placeholder regulations that limit the number of pounds a fighter can gain between a pre-fight weigh-in and fight night.

...

The Massachusetts "double weigh-in" provision calls for a fighter to be weighed in no more than 36 hours before his fight and again on the night of the fight. The fighter cannot weigh more than 1.0625 times his initial weight on the second weigh-in.

The formula means the higher the weight, the higher the allowable weight gain. For example, a fighter contracted to fight at 135 pounds can’t come in higher than 143.4375 pounds on fight night, 170 pounders cannot exceed 180.625, 205 pounders cannot exceed 217.8125 pounds, etc.

According to the regulation, fighters who don’t make weight "shall … forfeit the fight and be subject to further penalties and sanctions, including, but not limited to, forfeiture of their purse, a fine, suspension and/or revocation of their license."

The regulation also gives the commission discretion to give a fighter who comes in heavy the chance to lose no more than one percent of his weight. It does not specify how soon before a fight the second weigh-in takes place.

The article does say that this rule could change following a public hearing and advice by medical professionals.

There is a huge concern here where the danger of weight cutting lies in if a fighter is not able to re-hydrate fully before the fight.  Someone getting in the cage or ring with a dehydrated brain is on the short list of things that could result in a combat sports death.  From Sports Injury Bulletin:

‘Changes in the volume of the brain, the intracranial CSF (especially the subarachnoid space) and the intracranial blood may influence the outcome of closed head injuries,’ the researchers explain. ‘After an impact to the head the brain will travel further within the cranium before it meets the skull if the subarachnoid space is enlarged than in the normally hydrated state. Consequently it will accelerate to higher velocities and this may increase the likelihood of contusion injuries after blows to the head such as those sustained in boxing, football and rugby’.

Although the researchers acknowledge that their study was too small to be definitive, they conclude that dehydration causes changes in the volume of intra-cranial compartments that may put sportsmen and women at increased risk of brain damage from contusion injury (bruising) and internal haemorrhage after head injuries.

‘Some sportsmen and women, eg boxers, rugby players and footballers, are especially vulnerable to serious head injuries whilst dehydrated.’

Basically what that says is that if the brain is dehydrated, there is more room in the skull and the brain will travel farther and gain more momentum prior to meeting with the skull.  This, in turn, leads to a higher likelihood of bruising and hemorrhaging in the brain.

So what we have is an increased likelihood that fighters may not rehydrate fully after a weigh-in, or they may start trying to shed some weight prior to the second weigh-in on the night of the fight and without adequate time to recover they could enter a fight while still partially dehydrated.

Also, the idea that the commission would say that they find it acceptable for a fighter to possibly cut up to 1% of their body weight on the night of a fight is insanity.  I do not want to see someone desperately trying to dry their body of .15-.25 pounds shortly before entering the cage.

Hopefully medical professionals can step up and attempt to prevent this method of double weigh-ins.

Do you like this post?

Comments

Display:

no

Editor - BloodyElbow.com - SBNation's mixed martial arts headquarters.
MMA Editor - SBNation.com

by Brent Brookhouse on Mar 11, 2010 1:22 PM EST up reply actions  

Huh..

I had posted more than just “no.” Don’t know where the rest went.

No, the weight cut is a part of combat sports. And getting rid of guys making cuts means that we have to add weight classes. So we’d probably see

155
162
170
177
185
192-195 (somewhere in there)
205
225
226-265

Editor - BloodyElbow.com - SBNation's mixed martial arts headquarters.
MMA Editor - SBNation.com

by Brent Brookhouse on Mar 11, 2010 3:11 PM EST up reply actions  

I don’t see the need of adding more weight-classes, though i personally might like that idea. Now, if you are 175 (your natural weight), you would have to fight at 185, you would have a weight disadvantage but that is the case today as well (when stepping inside the cage/ring T. Alves probably has a real weight-advantage against a handful of fighters in the division). Some fighters can’t cut much weight because of their body-type.

If you are 175, another option would be to cut to 170 and stay there, and if you did, that would be your natural weight and thus belong in that division.

by mallan on Mar 12, 2010 5:50 AM EST up reply actions  

One day we may see a boxing-like plethora of weight classes – despite many of us not liking it.

Personally (not that anyone will care about what I think) I wish there would be a ‘cruiserweight’ division, somewhere around 225 – simply because the jump from LHW to HW is so huge. LW to WW is 15lbs, ditto for WW to MW. MW to LHW is 20lbs – but the gap to HW is 60lbs! Especially with how many big HWs are surfacing, the ‘small HW’ is becoming extinct. A 225 weight class wouldn’t exactly break the system.

by Monday Morning Martial Artist on Mar 12, 2010 8:05 AM EST up reply actions  

agreed

it’s funny how they allow them to weigh more then the cut-off point to their weight-class, they should just weigh them the same day as the fight and not let them be overweight at all. It should not be a competition to see who can cut and put on the most weight.

by mallan on Mar 11, 2010 1:30 PM EST up reply actions  

Isn’t this the new “standard” for high school wrestling now? I really don’t know if it helped or not, but if it did then this is a good step in the right direction. I realize wrestlers aren’t getting punched in the face, but does apply somewhat.

Non-factor in my opinion, amateur and lower terr pros it shouldn’t matter as if they need that extra edge at that level then they probably aren’t very good in the first place. How often is there an high level event in Mass? Has there ever been one? The Small percentage of the top fighters that this will affect can just fight elsewhere.

Would requiring them to drink a certain amount of water a couple of times a few hours before weigh ins work? 16 ounces of H20 4 hrs out and another 16 ounces 2 hrs out work. And the can urinate all they want/can. I’ve never cut weight and don’t know much about it so probably a stupid idea.

by natyong on Mar 11, 2010 2:13 PM EST reply actions  

The getting punched (and kicked) in the face matters a lot.

Having a dehydrated brain will (not just can, but will) turn concussive blows into fatal blows.

I like using semi-colons; they make me feel smart.

by Llewdor on Mar 11, 2010 2:51 PM EST up reply actions  

That's like the weigh ins I had in highschool

All of our weigh ins were either right after school the day of or right before the meet started. It pretty much forced us to watch/maintain our weight all the time and wrestle at a “natural” weight.

by cheshirewulf on Mar 11, 2010 8:27 PM EST up reply actions  

The reason there hasn’t been a high level event in Mass is because professional MMA and the athletic commission just came into existance. The sport was illegal there until November, 2009. This will just prevent the UFC or Strikeforce or event Bellator from holding an event there… There are plenty other states to chose.

by wdk1985 on Mar 16, 2010 11:21 AM EDT up reply actions  

It sounds like

The intent of Massachusetts is to get people to fight at their natural weight but considering the prevalence in this country of cutting I only see bad things happening if this rule stays

by cheshirewulf on Mar 11, 2010 8:34 PM EST reply actions  

Heavyweights

Now would this mean is, for instance, a heavyweight fighter weighs in at 250 lbs he could not fight at more then 265.625lbs, or would it be based on the weight cap for that division?

by wdk1985 on Mar 16, 2010 11:18 AM EDT reply actions  

from the wording it would be 265.625

but it might be interesting to see if they hold to the weight class’ limit

by cheshirewulf on Mar 22, 2010 9:39 PM EDT up reply actions  

Comments For This Post Are Closed

memorial day memories

Hugs, High-Fives, And Tears: Veterans Share Their Favorite Sports Memories

ryan clark cos

'Give It Your Heart, Give It Your All': Ryan Clark Exemplifies Marine Corps' Honor

145370615_extra_large_small

Spurctacular Start: San Antonio Takes Game 1