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Fight hub? Ice Rink to host MMA brawl

by Courteney Stuart
(434) 295-8700 x236
published 2:54pm Friday Oct 22, 2010
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news-mma-battleWhen Mark Brown purchased the Charlottesville Ice Park this past summer, he said the key to its success would lie in turning it from a single-purpose to a multi-use facility. Brown will put that plan into action— full contact action— on Friday, October 29 with a Mixed Martial Arts tournament.

Dubbed “Battle at the Arena,” the event is put on by a Fredericksburg MMA gym called Barbarian Fight Club and will feature 22 match-ups, according to the Fight Card, ranging from Super Heavy Weight (over 265 pounds) down to Bantamweight (125.1-135 pounds). Two of the fights are between women.

MMA fighters utilize moves from a variety of different martial arts styles, and although the matches are tightly regulated and refereed, they can get rough— as anyone reading the rules might imagine. Among legal moves: strikes using hands, knees, shins and feet, and all judo, jiu jitsu, and wrestling takedowns and throws. The lengthy list of fouls, however, suggests just how wrong things could go if a fighter went rogue. Included on that forbidden list: eye-gouging, clawing, pinching, or twisting of flesh, throat strikes, one or two-handed chokes applied directly to the throat/windpipe, “fish hooks” to eyes, nose, ear, or mouth, and putting a finger into any open orifice including cuts or lacerations.

The sport was deemed so dangerous by a group of Canadian doctors that they called for an outright ban, but other sources claim that it’s no worse than any other contact sport, including Football.

“MMA is the fastest growing sport in the country,” says Brown, who notes that Charlottesville didn’t have an appropriate sized venue before he transformed the Ice Park with a hardcover floor over the ice, and that he expects to host other MMA events in the future. But he also offers reassurance to anyone concerned that the Ice Park is becoming fight central.

“We’re going to be headquarters for VA Film Festival,” notes Brown, also mentioning an art show the weekend after Thanksgiving and a potential New Year’s Eve party.

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18 comments

  • meanwhile.... October 22nd, 2010 | 4:43 pm

    This is TERRIBLE. I am completely opposed to this garbage being staged in Charlottesville.

  • Erstwhile October 22nd, 2010 | 5:13 pm

    Yes we would rather watch people sling mud and yell political rhetoric…then get elected and not do anything….or have another festival that no one cares about..OH wait there are more catastrophic injuries in Football, well at least good football not UVA football.

  • Michael 2 October 22nd, 2010 | 5:29 pm

    I hope Mark Brown hopes enough security guards to deal with the type of crowd this event will attract.

  • DeAnna October 22nd, 2010 | 7:58 pm

    This type of venue is great for Charlottesville and for anyone ignorat person who says that “that type of crowd” clearly has never seen a MMA fight. It is not about the fight it is about technique and disipline. Before people speak on issues they should learn about them.

  • max brando October 22nd, 2010 | 7:58 pm

    Why not bring in ladies roller derby!! I’d show up to watch!

  • Ax Yo Mama October 22nd, 2010 | 10:18 pm

    Nice.

  • for real October 22nd, 2010 | 11:46 pm

    Lets not judge anyone or anything until we actually attend. We feed the other crowds with the bars and the music. I myself would enjoy something different in Charlotesville that isnt based around

  • cookieJar October 23rd, 2010 | 12:35 am

    anyone remember when this was a cool place to live?

  • nicknameoscar October 23rd, 2010 | 9:35 am

    I am not a MMA fan but if this is done correctly and brings jobs and tax revenue to the area then go for it. You people condemning it don’t have to support it. Of course this is a free country and you are free to voice your opinion just like anyone else.

  • Caesonia October 23rd, 2010 | 12:18 pm

    Unfortunately for real, this attracts the same type of crowd boxing would attract, and they will play loud music, and people will drink.

    Bread and Circuses. America has finally reached imperial Rome, where most all in the political spectrum come from an elite class completely detached from the population. Demagogues like Palin are allowed to participate as long as theya re capable of distracting the population from elsewhere.

  • Yes October 23rd, 2010 | 1:33 pm

    Geez, Caesonia, what society hasn’t had wrestling/boxing/martial arts? Ancient Greece? Nope. They were huge fans of wrestling and grappling. Victorian England? Nope. That’s where the rules of modern boxing originated. Imperial China or Japan? Nope. Where do you think that martial arts came from?

  • Me October 23rd, 2010 | 3:15 pm

    Wrestling is an Olympic sport. Judo is an Olympic sport. Tae Kwon Do is an Olympic sport. Those Olympic crowds sure are notorious for fighting, getting drunk, rioting and bringing absolutely nothing good to the host city, right? Wrong. Why would anyone assume that a sport combining all three would be any different?

  • Gasbag Self Ordained Expert October 23rd, 2010 | 8:47 pm

    I can’t believe some of the replies in this thread. The matches are much better regulated than the current muggings that place out on Charlottesville streets nowadays.

  • Caesonia October 24th, 2010 | 1:05 pm

    Yes and Me - I never said anything about being against Judo, Martial Arts, or Wrestling, or even Boxing, perse, so I don’t get where you are coming from. I have always participated in team and individual sports, and I continue to do so.

    I am saying that when commercialized, these events will often play loud music, and people drink, so one cannot always assume peace and plenty.

    Horse racing was around in Ancient Rome as well, but how much of Foxfield is about that, and how much is it about getting plastered and socializing? It’s disgusting.

    Olympic venues are far better moderated.

  • Caesonia October 24th, 2010 | 1:07 pm

    Gasser, in a way that’s my point.

  • Yes October 24th, 2010 | 5:28 pm

    Again, Caesonia, what societies haven’t had their versions of commercialized sports? And do you really think that chariot racing in ancient Rome was a decorous affair? “Ben-Hur” comes to mind. I think that we came safely assume that gambling and alcohol consumption were integral to the appeal.

  • Caesonia October 24th, 2010 | 9:02 pm

    Yes -

    “Again, Caesonia, what societies haven’t had their versions of commercialized sports? And do you really think that chariot racing in ancient Rome was a decorous affair?”

    Why no, I didn’t. Hence my reference to Bread and Circuses. Which you seemed to have a problem with, based on your comment. So what’s your real problem then.

  • Caesonia October 24th, 2010 | 9:05 pm

    Oh, and by the way Yes, Ben Hur is a good Hollywood version of Chariot racing, but the reality is the racing chariots were very small, and very light. They were not the heavy units used in the movie. The tying of the reins about the waist and knives to cut oneself free were not.

    Sadly, the death of chariot driver was all too real for what did happen to drivers in similar circumstances.

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