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UFC 11 and 12 DVD REVIEW

UFC was facing difficulties out of the ring during early 1997 when the federal government tried to make the sport illegal. They released back-to-back cards that brought the worst (UFC 11) and the best (UFC 12) of the UFC.

The Lowdown

UFC 11: The Proving Ground continued with the tried and true tournament style fights but the results continued to prove change was needed. A strong example from the past was UFC 3: The American Dream when both defending tournament champion Royce Gracie and future champion Ken Shamrock had to pull out due to exhaustion and injuries. An athlete’s body cannot take this kind of punishment for prolonged lengths of time. As exciting as tournaments can be, it is not the same when your best fighters can’t make it to the finals. It was even worse at UFC 11 because all the alternates were injured and there was no one left to face Mark Coleman in the finals.

My argument that tournaments can be trouble was proven with UFC 11 and this DVD is not worth the buy because the card was cut so short and wasn’t good at all. Something had to change because more finishes like this would kill the sport. UFC 12: Judgment Day implemented minor changes as the sport continued to evolve. It would be the first UFC event to feature weight classes; heavyweights (200 lbs and over) and lightweights (199 lbs and under) and they were split into two separate smaller tournaments with four competitors in each. The Super Fight also returned and the UFC crowned its first official UFC Heavyweight Champion. The match was supposed to be Mark Coleman (5-0) against Don Frye, but Frye was injured at the previous event and never fought in UFC again. Taking his place was Dan “The Beast” Severn. This event also marked the first UFC appearance of Joe Rogan, who handled backstage interviews for the event.

In a small back story, Senator John McCain found the sport abhorrent and led a campaign to ban Ultimate Fighting. As a result, the UFC was dropped from Viewer’s Choice, a major cable pay-per-view distributor, and a number of smaller cable carriers. Thirty-six states enacted laws that banned “no-holds-barred” fighting including New York, on the eve of UFC 12. The promotion had to move fast to find a new venue and found it in Dothan, Alabama. The UFC continued to air on DirectTV, but at the time their audience was tiny compared to cable. The weight classes were the first step in the UFC’s effort to legitimize the sport.

After a very disappointing UFC 11, the UFC rebounded with UFC 12. It is unfortunate it received so few views thanks to the U.S. Government’s attempts at breaking the sport. The card gave us two great young fighters in Bohlander and Belfort and proved they were ready for the future. There would be a lot more ground to cover over the next year with rule changes but UFC 12 proved they were growing as an organization. UFC 12 is also an important PPV as it crowned its first ever UFC Heavyweight Champion in Mark Coleman. I would say skip UFC 11: The Proving Ground but all real fans should pick up UFC 12: Judgment Day.

The Package

UFC 11: The Proving Ground has two features. The first is Bios & Records and includes Tank Abbott, Mark Coleman, Jerry Bohlander and Scott Ferrozzo. This is a text based feature that includes an up-to-date bio of the athletes and their career fight record up to 2008. There is also an Interview with Mark Coleman (05:21). He talks about his cocky and arrogant attitude going into the event. He talks about how he knew he could have beat Tank Abbott if he could have faced him because Abbott was unmotivated. He was also disappointed there was no final match. This interview was conducted before UFC 87, because Coleman was talking about his upcoming fight with Brock Lesner, a fight that never occurred due to an injury Coleman sustained while training.

UFC 12: Judgment Day has fighter bios & professional records for Dan Severn, Jerry Bohlander, Mark Coleman, Scott Ferrozzo, Tra Tellingman and Vitor Belfort up to 2008. The second feature is Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Basics with Shawn Williams (19:35). In this feature, Williams demonstrates 10 Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu maneuvers from the 5 basic positions. This is a nice training video which shows you the moves and then he takes you through it step-by-step.

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