Was Kimbo/Shamrock Fixed? Bellator Commentator Addresses Rumors

By BJPENN.COM News - June 22, 2015

Kimbo Slice Ken Shamrock KO

Kimbo Slice stepped into the cage for the first time since 2010 last Friday and blasted through Ken Shamrock in less than five minutes. By the time the bout ended, some fans on social media and even UFC commentator Joe Rogan questioned the legitimacy of the result. What caused them to think the fight was fixed?

The bout opened with a pro-wrestling esque tie-up. You could tell on the broadcast that the two were talking to each other, but Slice admitted he was simply trash-talking Shamrock. Shamrock easily landed a takedown and went right into a rear naked choke attempt. It looked as if Slice was trapped, but he simply escaped and proceeded to punch Shamrock’s unprotected head into next week.

Bellator’s lead analyst and commentator Jimmy Smith addressed the rumors on the MMA Community Forums in a lengthy response:

I can only speak from the promotional/broadcast side of the equation of course, if Ken and/or Kimbo had some personal (and highly illegal) agreement to fix the fight they certainly didn’t let Bellator in on it. For those who feel that Bellator would fix the fight I offer the following:

To get caught fixing a fight is tantamount to promotional suicide. ANYONE (the UFC, Dana, Coker, the Fertitta’s, etc) who is caught influencing the outcome of a fight will never legally be allowed to promote a fight again (outside of perhaps a bare-knuckle fight on an indian reservation, but even that would be unlikely). The state would pull your promoter’s license so fast it would make you nauseous. With that in mind you have to weigh the “risk vs reward” equation for fixing a fight, especially a televised show of the magnitude of Bellator 138.

MMA, unlike boxing, doesn’t often work on the “undefeated mega-fight” system where there is a TON of money riding on 2 fighters overcoming certain fights to make the “big one” happen. Most fighters in MMA have records that would make them journeymen in boxing, even some of the biggest names in the sport. MMA doesn’t have any title sanctioning bodies like boxing, there are no rival promoters on the opposing sides of 2 fighters, and the national promotions have virtually unlimited discretion in deciding who fights who, when, and for what title. There is no need for a fix to make a certain fight happen, the only thing necessary is the promotion themselves putting the fight together.

That is my general argument against most cries of “fix!!” in the MMA world (like I stated before: from a PROMOTIONAL point of view). Why would Bellator, the UFC, or anyone else take the ASTRONOMICAL risk of fixing a fight when they can make whatever fight they want with a fan base that is fairly forgiving of a loss?

The one question I want to ask people who doubt the veracity of the fight is: What kind of fight did you expect?

Ken has built his reputation on his submission skills, but he has always been a guy who generally forced a submission rather than relied on pure technique. If you recall his fight with Don Frye, he wrenched on leg locks several times and wasn’t able to get the proper angle to finish the fight. It was a technical issue that dogged much of his career. He was squeezing the hell out of Kimbo’s neck as hard as he could but (as some on this thread pointed out) he failed to engage his hips at all and that proved to be the difference. I thought he burned his arms out trying to muscle the choke out of a much bigger fighter. It was fairly clear to me that once Kimbo got out it was only a matter of time. Ken had cardio issues against Fujita and Tito and that was EONS ago in MMA years. He gave everything he had to one choke and it didn’t pan out, as soon as he took a solid one to the chin that was it. Even the most ardent Ken supporter would have conceded that it wouldn’t take many from Kimbo to end the fight and it didn’t.

What we saw at Bellator 138 was, in my opinion, the best effort of a fighter who didn’t have that much left to give. As soon as Ken took a solid shot he turned to Big John and shook his head, he simply wanted no more. Its unfortunate, but a performance like that doesn’t require a fix in MMA, it requires a fighter who sees no merit in going any further and taking more of a beating.

Smith keeps it real and admits the fight played out exactly how you would expect it to play out between two older competitors. What do you think? Was the fight fixed? Share your thoughts in the comment section below!

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