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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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  • comment number 10
  • date 06-18-2009 06:50 PM
  • author ssor51 writes:
body These fighters fight with lighing speed and as any magician knows the hand is faster than the eye,but not faster than the camera. It would be better for the fights to have instant replay and prevent fighters from winning by fouls. The sport might be brutal but it should be fair just as in the jousts of the knights.
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body just to sum up what was already said"excellent idea of having refs on the outside to see more. eye poke ,scroyum kick,these things happen and when witnessed the fighter gets time to recoupe.FINE... replay WILL NOT protect the fighters because whats done is done.it will add controversy to an already VERY popular sport.overturned decisions etc...
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  • comment number 12
  • date 06-18-2009 07:33 PM
  • author BigLT writes:
body
I have no idea how the message I wrote ended up in this board.  My mistake


Message Edited by BigLT on 06-19-2009 12:07 PM
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  • comment number 13
  • date 06-18-2009 07:44 PM
  • author Crabstyle writes:
body I saw one of my favorite fighters lose a title due to an eye poke.You can put refs outside,however they will make the same mistakes as the judges do on the scorecards.It took a very long time to get this sport on the tube,and that was due to it's "brutality!" Sorry! I would not want to lose my title, or my career for that matter, because someone else was unprofessional. Therefore instant replay would be fine with me.
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  • comment number 14
  • date 06-18-2009 11:49 PM
  • author GeoQuinIV writes:
body So how exactly would this incident have been avoided by instant replay? Are these people stupid? Yeah, maybe a replay would/could aide in overturning the result, but it's not going to prevent a knockout punch from an eye-poke that was missed. What are they going to do, have some kid with a towel throw something into the octagon if the ref misses something? This is a perfect example of just how stupid and out of proportion things can get and how poorly analyzed a situation is before someone starts **bleep**ing.
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  • comment number 15
  • date 06-19-2009 12:53 AM
  • author Sludgedog writes:
body I go with the extra ref's outside the ring or cage. You are talking about 2 count them, "2" different incidences in how many 100's of fights? Duh!! s@?t happens. The next thing the pansy wansies will want is to have the hands wrapped in cotton 5 or 6 inchs thick. I beleive in protecting the fighters, to an extent. Each one of these guys know what they are getting into when they step into that cage. It's not an easy living, but it pays REAL well.
Just leave them alone.
waktasha
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  • comment number 16
  • date 06-19-2009 02:10 AM
  • author wartman writes:
body It's as GeoQuinIV says, "So how exactly would this incident have been avoided by instant replay?" It's only application is to penalize a fighter after the fact. People need to remember that this isn't boxing, MMA fighters are using open-fingered gloves. That means that accidentally getting poked in the eye happens from time to time. Usually if you get poked in the eye or kicked in the scrote, you can signal the ref and get time to recover and get it checked out. Stopping a fight to review an incident would ruin the sport. If they want to use it, then review tape while the fight goes on as normal and ask the fighter at the end of the round if he want to assess a penalty, if one in fact did occur. ComcastSports posts the dumbest articles.
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  • comment number 17
  • date 06-19-2009 03:10 AM
  • author Mikeee writes:
body These fruits beat each other by day and pork each other at night.
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