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By Chris Young, Comcast.net Sports

The NFL, NBA, and MLB use it. Even Tennis has “Shot Spot.” And sooner rather than later, the playback gift of modern technology could be headed for mixed martial arts.

At least that’s what Keith Kizer, the director of the Nevada State Athletic Commission, is saying should happen, according to Cagewriter.com

The latest push for cageside replay comes less than a week after Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic’s accidental eye poke led to his first-round stoppage of Mostapha Al-Turk at UFC 99 in Germany. Al-Turk was visibly shaken by the poke, shielding his left eye with his glove when Filipovic moved in and landed a huge right that sent him reeling to the canvas, where the fight was eventually stopped by referee Dan Miragliotta.

The errant shot was missed by Miragliotta who should have brought a temporary halt to the bout to have Al-Turk’s eye examined.

But the shot didn’t escape the big screens at Laxness Arena, nor did it swing wide of Kizer’s gaze here in the States.

Kizer told MMAJunkie Radio that there is a growing need to aid fighters and officials inside the cage and that the accidental shot that incidentally costs Al-Turk the match could have been avoided. He likened the scenario to Anthony Johnson’s loss last July to Kevin Burns at Ultimate Fight Night 14:
Let's say the doctor looked at Mr. Al Turk, or the situation we had with Anthony Johnson, and says, 'He can not continue.' So the fight's over, so it's not going to change the strategy whether the referee changes his mind on the call. In those situations, then the ref can look at it and say, 'You know what, it was an accidental foul. Let's go to the scorecards.' Or in the other situation, 'I thought it was an accidental foul to go to the scorecards, but on instant replay it was actually a legal punch.' Either way, the fighter could not continue, so it wouldn't have mattered, and we can take our time and look at it.
First Anthony Johnson (who was dominating Burns), and now Mostapha Al-Turk. Both fighters were rendered defenseless after their incidents and both lost because of them. The question isn't whether mixed martial arts needs instant replay; the question is how many more fighters will continue to be at risk of serious injury without it?

It's time to get with the times. If Dana White and Co. want to make a statement that UFC cares about the safety of its fighters and the validity of its results, they need to institute replay or some form of supportive judging.

What do you think? Should mixed martial arts implement instant replay? Will it slow the sport down or help it grow? Sound off here.


Message Edited by ComcastSports on 06-18-2009 06:33 PM
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body hell yes it does... as technical as the sport is it needs the innovation of instant replay.. no doubt about it
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body NOOOOOOOO!!!!! it is a sport based off of brutality with rules. its the refs fault and if something happens to the fighter the ref should get in trouble. dont ruin this sport with instant replay. the sport is great and people are trying to soften it up. I say no let the guy get knocked out cause if his eye hurt that bad he couldn't fight he should have said something to the ref. its his own fault and the sport needs innovations at all!
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body no innovations at all!!!
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  • comment number 4
  • date 06-18-2009 05:50 PM
  • author landshark writes:
body Why not instead put seated, alternate refs outside the cage on each fence panel so all view are covered from outside the ring. One of the alternates would have seen the eye polk right? Then he could throw a towel, stand up and call a halt to the inside ref, something to stop the fight momentarily.
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  • comment number 5
  • date 06-18-2009 06:02 PM
  • author jazzkenpo writes:
body This sport is all about rhythm. If you stop a fight , even though it may be warranted, you allow the fighter on the short end of the stick to get his momentum back or at the very least stop the momentum of the fight. You might as well have the fighters call for a "do-over". Instant replay will ruin this sport. Crappy things happen from time to time and that's how life works. Stop destroying sports with all this "fairness" stuff. Real sports are for real men and real men deal with adversity, not whine about it not being fair.
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  • comment number 6
  • date 06-18-2009 06:16 PM
  • author fastmax writes:
body whats gonna be next....pillow fights? instant replay, give me a break.
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  • comment number 7
  • date 06-18-2009 06:24 PM
  • author derrin writes:
body I agree with landshark. Multiple refs with different views outside cage to protect fighters. None of this instant replay bull. This isn't a play-by-play sport like baseball or football.
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  • comment number 8
  • date 06-18-2009 06:31 PM
  • author gutjosgt3 writes:
body NO, and let's drop this stupid subject.
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  • comment number 9
  • date 06-18-2009 06:48 PM
  • author KidCanvas writes:
body Forget about it!! These guys no what can happen in that ring. They are tough guys remember. I agree they will ruin the sport if they do **bleep** like that.
Let them fight dam it!!!!!
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