Ben Askren
Chael Sonnen on Wrestling
August 15, 2008
Former DI AA Chael Sonnen is a major player in the MMA game. Chael started as a wrestler, now he wants to help wrestling get to next level. He also talks about the University of Oregon dropping wrestling and how we need to promote the sport.
About Ben Askren
| Organization: | Missouri |
| Current School: | University Of Missouri-columbia |
| College: | University Of Missouri-columbia |
| High School: | Arrowhead High |
| Link: | Get Ben Askren Gear Here |
| Bio: | There is no "type" of wrestler that Ben can be catagorized as. He has created a whole new genre that is unique with his rolling and pinning style.
Ben over… ...More about Ben |
They have never won a world level event or dominated their event on a world scene. How can you market an athlete as the face of your sport that just went 0-1 at the Olympic Games and then blamed it on a scale that he did not realize that was 5lbs off. USAW would have came off as a laughingstock.
We know Askren but he is raw internationally. Let's hope he does something this evening and then market it him to the main stream media. They are not going to want him without with some gold around his neck though.
What athletes is NBC promoting as their feature athletes? All WORLD or OLYMPIC CHAMPIONS. Walsh and May, Gay, Johnson, Phelps, Torres, Felix, Women's soccer, Women's softball and etc.
How quickly we forget four years ago in Athens when Gardner was all over the media or in 2000 when Baumgartner carried the Flag for the Opening Ceremonies? What did they two have. Olympic Gold Medals.
People want to market champions and winners. USAW has something with Cejudo now. He has the hardware to back it up with an incredible story behind it.
Add TC Dantzler to your list of personalities that can make wrestling a premiere sport. If USA Wrestling does not know how to attach itself to the growth that MMA is getting it will get passed by the other forms of martial arts that will just do that. The train is leaving the station.
Thanks to Flowrestling for everything positive that you are doing for the sport.
Everyone is so quick to cast the blame and rally around people who repeat the same lines over and over. Sit back and wait for someone to contact you because you have all these ideas? How large of you. This isn't directed specifically at Chael, whom I've only had limited interaction with and the last time that happened was probably 2001 in Battle Creek.
I'm not blinded by the fact things need to change on certain levels, but blanket statements attacking people who work tirelessly for this sport do nothing but splinter our movement. People "in the know" are reluctant to speak out on claims like these and attacks purported on the internet because frankly, any response makes them look bad and opens them up for the "power wash guys" to insert their opinions along with snide remarks.
My comment to Chael is this ... if you have ideas, why not present them to USAW or whomever, instead of patting yourself on the back regarding the MMA events (which I'm sure are great), and expecting them to come to you?
Sure, I never was an All-American, but instead of "throwing stones," how about "throwing solutions" and making them known instead of alluding to ideas IF they come to you first?
Perhaps if everyone that talks up what's wrong with USAW actually made a concerted effort to contact those folks, rather than expect to be contacted out of the blue, we'd be in better shape. There's three sides to every story and I don't understand why everyone will flock to believe anything they hear. The first thing that needs to change is fan apathy. No one wants to be proactive, we expect everyone else to do something and when it doesn't happen, we all say "well, I could have done it better" or "there's problems there."
Solutions? Were there any?
Zeb, could have hit up him up with a couple good follow up questionts but it was easier to paint USAW as the bad guys.
HEY CHAEL...WHY NOT YOU GIVE THEM A CALL AND PRESENT A PLAN INSTEAD OF GOING ON FLO TO COMPLAIN. CALL THESE GROUPS AND OFFER YOUR SOLUTIONS.
I wonder how tough the cut is to 185 after wrestling at 197?
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