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Thema: MMA - US Army - Spiegel Online

  1. #1
    Toe_Choke Gast

  2. #2
    SeraphiM Gast

    Standard

    an sich nichts neues, aber der spiegel berichtet mal wieder...

    YouTube - U.S Army Sponsors Of Ultimate Combat Experience
    Geändert von SeraphiM (30-05-2008 um 13:47 Uhr)

  3. #3
    davidm025 Gast

    Standard

    Ich find negative Berichterstattung nicht schlimm, aber sie sollte schon fundiert sein. Aber mit so einer Meinung trifft das Magazin wohl die Meinung und den Geschmack 99,99% seiner Kunden.

  4. #4
    Toe_Choke Gast

    Standard

    Zitat Zitat von davidm025 Beitrag anzeigen
    Ich find negative Berichterstattung nicht schlimm, aber sie sollte schon fundiert sein. Aber mit so einer Meinung trifft das Magazin wohl die Meinung und den Geschmack 99,99% seiner Kunden.
    Sind wir hier bei der Bild? Es geht um eine sachliche Berichterstattung, aber davon ist man diesbzgl. wirklich meilenweit entfernt.

  5. #5
    Registrierungsdatum
    26.05.2006
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    Standard

    Nach dem Youtube Clip bin ich froh, dass die so gut wie nie waffenlos in eine Auseinandersetzung gehen.
    Zum Spiegel lässt sich ja sowieso viel schreiben. Nur nicht mehr lesen. Wo wo wo bleibt das Niveau.
    Grapple&Strike
    BJJ//MuayThai//MMA//Boxen//Ringen

  6. #6
    snooze Gast

    Standard die andere seite zu diesem bericht...

    Ultimate Fighting Recruits Military To Its Ranks
    New York Times
    May 30, 2008
    Pg. 1

    Ultimate Fighting Recruits Military To Its Ranks

    By Michael Brick

    FORT BRAGG, N.C. - The United States military is embracing a combat sport
    commonly called ultimate fighting that a decade ago was called human
    cockfighting and largely outlawed.

    The sport, also known as mixed martial arts and involving disciplines like
    jiu-jitsu, boxing and wrestling, adopted safety measures that satisfied most
    state regulators. It is now soaring in popularity, especially among young
    men; on Saturday, an event will be broadcast live in prime time on network
    television for the first time. The armed forces, acknowledging the
    phenomenon and the suitable demographics, are using the sport not only as a
    way to build morale and aid in recruiting, but also as a training aid to
    enhance the skills of soldiers.

    To rally the troops, military leaders have welcomed professional fighters
    with names like Ace and the Huntington Beach Bad Boy. The Army has conducted
    tournaments among soldiers. In an opinion article for Army Times last year,
    Maj. Kelly Crigger urged commanders to field a team of fighters on
    television in the Ultimate Fighting Championship, the dominant pro league.

    "Many of those viewers are eligible recruits," Major Crigger wrote. "The
    U.F.C. provides a great venue to get the Army name into the minds of
    millions of young Americans."

    Across the service, the embrace of mixed martial arts has come with some
    reservations. The sport's emphasis on solitary glory runs counter to the
    Army's recent efforts to shift recruiting themes from individual development
    (Be All That You Can Be; Army of One) to group unity (Army Strong; Go Army).

    But as the sport found its audience on channels aimed at young men,
    recruiters and drill sergeants soon took notice.

    In 2006, officials at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in California invited
    the U.F.C. fighter Tito Ortiz, marketed as the Huntington Beach Bad Boy, to
    attend their birthday ball as a guest of honor. Letters to Marine Times
    protested the invitation, but it was rescinded only after the Bad Boy
    indicated that he planned to take his girlfriend, the porn star Jenna
    Jameson.

    Rich Franklin, the former U.F.C. middleweight champion known as Ace,
    frequently appears on Marine bases. Last year, Matt Hughes, a former U.F.C.
    welterweight champion, was applauded on a visit to Fort Benning, an Army
    base in Georgia.

    Without any formal arrangement, the military has also produced fighters for
    the professional leagues. Brian Stann, the light-heavyweight champion of
    World Extreme Cagefighting, fought in Iraq with the Marines. Last November,
    a Marine named Will Thiery was promoted on the undercard at an event in
    Florida called Salute to Our Armed Forces. Staff Sgt. James Damien Stelly,
    an Army Ranger with three tours in Afghanistan, has gained a following
    through fights for several professional outfits.

    Promoters have sought to capitalize on the common ground. In April, Harrah's
    Casino in Tunica, Miss., promoted a fight night billed as G.I.'s vs. Pros.

    "You have an organization like the United States Army that in our minds best
    personifies the combative sports we're involved in," said C. J. Comu,
    organizer of the event. "This is their demographic, 18-30-year-old males."

    Military officials have sought practical applications. In 2002, the Army
    published a new field manual section on mixed martial arts techniques. Its
    author, Matthew C. Larsen, the director of the Modern Army Combatives
    Program, considered competition a powerful motivator.

    "As long as we're all about our values and upfront about what the Army
    stands for, and that's being warriors, the question is, what kind of
    warriors?" said Mr. Larsen, who served as a young Marine in Tokyo and earned
    several black belts. "The game of mixed martial arts is just that, it's a
    game. But the game can be training for the real thing."

    Mr. Larsen has promoted his program cautiously, acknowledging that too much
    focus on competition could train soldiers to win competitions, not battles.
    But the shifting nature of modern warfare, especially as conducted in the
    cramped corridors of Iraqi homes, has helped make his case.

    "These guys could be in any situation, from a life-and-death battle with a
    bad guy to trying to subdue a citizen who has Stockholm syndrome, and you
    don't even want to hurt that guy," Mr. Larsen said. "But you've got to have
    all these moves for all those different situations."

    Army bases around the country now conduct mixed martial arts tournaments,
    sending the winners to a branchwide championship at Fort Benning. The fourth
    annual championship, set for October, has been planned to incorporate, for
    the first time, advanced rules indistinguishable from mixed martial arts.
    The rules, allowing closed-fisted punches to the head and knee blows, still
    ban moves considered dangerous, ostentatious or ineffective in battle, like
    elbow strikes, biting and eye gouging.

    In January, the Air Force adopted the Combatives program. The Navy has
    trained certain units. The Marine Corps has trained recruits in martial arts
    since 2000, with less emphasis on competition.

    There are several professional mixed martial arts leagues around the world,
    and most have adopted rules since the sport's early no-holds-barred era,
    when bloodshed was common and Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona and
    his party's presumptive candidate for president, called the sport human
    cockfighting. Rules differ from league to league, but most fighters wear
    open-fingered gloves, and gouges and blows to certain body parts are
    forbidden.

    As military mixed martial arts competitions have gained popularity, the
    matches have come to resemble the real thing. Since the first Army-wide
    championship in 2005, commanders at Fort Knox have allowed soldiers to fight
    inside a six-foot-high steel cage. Mr. Larsen has been trying to coordinate
    a tournament in Baghdad for broadcast on ESPN.

    Here in the Cape Fear Valley of North Carolina, the soldiers of the 82nd
    Airborne Division conducted a tournament last week as word of new
    deployments spread across the base. Among the 259 men and 9 women entered,
    many knew they would not be available come October to compete in the
    Army-wide championship.

    The soldiers seemed eager to test themselves. Pfc. Melissa Jenkins, 20, from
    Union City, Ind., chose confronting men in the fighting tournament over
    soccer, running and other competitions. She fought hard but was eliminated
    in the early rounds, in which traditional wrestling rules were in effect.
    The mixed martial arts rules were phased in during the semifinal rounds.

    "I knew it was going to be difficult," Private Jenkins said. "He was a lot
    stronger than I was, so I expected to be the underdog."

    The tournament director, Sgt. Jeff Yurk, who had fought in mixed martial
    arts events in San Diego before joining the Army, strictly enforced rules of
    sportsmanship. He was quick to end matches when fighters failed to defend
    themselves.

    "You get a lot of the just-out-of-high-school guys, they're looking to be
    part of something, that's where M.M.A. and the Army share the same
    demographic," Sergeant Yurk said. But getting in the ring, he said, "is the
    same thing as going up to that door in Iraq, knowing there's a bad guy on
    the other side and still doing it."

    Among those in the tournament was Pfc. Carl Miller, entered as a
    welterweight. He had returned from a tour of Iraq in March, enrolling in
    fight training instead of taking leave. He was aiming to win a berth in the
    All-Army championships, admission to higher-level training classes and a
    path toward becoming a mixed martial arts instructor.

    "It's a mental game," Private Miller said. "If I could do this, I'd stay in
    the Army for 20 years."

    David Isenberg

    Analyst

  7. #7
    Seb Gast

    Standard

    Das Nahkampfprogramm von dem die Rede ist heißt "Modern Army Combatives" nicht Combat....

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