This is a discussion on UFC Hall of Fame within the MMA - Mixed Martial Arts forums, part of the Sports Forums category; I think WWE's most entertaining thing at WrestleMania is the HOF. I think the UFC should do the same thing ...
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I think WWE's most entertaining thing at WrestleMania is the HOF. I think the UFC should do the same thing once a year. Once a year the UFC could induct one or maybe two guys into their HOF and what better show to start this tradition than UFC 100.
Royce Gracie, Ken Shamrock, Dan Severn, Randy Couture and Mark Coleman are the only fighters in, so that means legends like Helio Gracie, Matt Hughes, Frank Shamrock, Bas Rutten, Oleg Taktarov etc are not in yet.
So what you think, should the UFC steal WWE's idea and induct one fighter every year into their HOF or is the UFC still too young to do something like this?
I would like to see Matt hughes into the HOF, I'm not a big fan of his but he deserves to be in there.
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Do you have a reason not to give The Half Boy your vote for the Hall of Fame?
Yeah, I would love to see a WWE style HoF. The guys that go in the HoF deserve more than just a mention in the Octagon and handshake. They should get a special ceremony because MMA isn't exactly the easiest to be good at. Bas should probably be in, and Hughes will get in there next probably. Doesn't Bas hate the UFC though?
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Yeah, I would love to see a WWE style HoF. The guys that go in the HoF deserve more than just a mention in the Octagon and handshake. They should get a special ceremony because MMA isn't exactly the easiest to be good at. Bas should probably be in, and Hughes will get in there next probably. Doesn't Bas hate the UFC though?
One a year wouldn't hurt them to pay tribute to some of th guys who helped build this sport.
Chuck Lidell is another guy who will get in one day and by right Chuck and Hughes should go in at the same time.
Im not sure about the Bas Rutten thing Deuce, never heard anything about it.
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Do you have a reason not to give The Half Boy your vote for the Hall of Fame?
Well there was a big peice on MMA Junkie about a week ago questioning why Matt Hughes isn't in the HOF because all three fighters that are, are still active fighters, not all in the UFC but somewhere.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MMAJunkie
Where's Matt Hughes' Hall of Fame nod?
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The Ultimate Fighting Championship has five members in its Hall of Fame. Each of them – Dan Severn, Mark Coleman, Ken Shamrock, Randy Couture and Royce Gracie – still are active fighters.
And that's why it’s puzzling that Matt Hughes (42-7 MMA, 15-5 UFC), who has contributed as much to the UFC and to mixed martial arts as any of those five, isn't already enshrined.
It appears that Hughes will have to wait until retirement to be inducted, which is as it should have been in the first place.
He was badly beaten and looked like a shell of himself in a drubbing he suffered at the hands of Thiago Alves at UFC 85 in London on June 7. The technical knockout defeat marked his second consecutive loss and third in his last four fights.
But Hughes isn't done.
He'll fight arch-rival Matt Serra on May 23 in the co-main event of UFC 98 at the MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas, and even has raised the possibility of competing at middleweight.
Earlier this month Hughes answered in Columbus, Ohio, the night before UFC 96, taunting Serra while predicting victory and sounding like a man very much intent on continuing his career.
He says he'll evaluate his career once his contract expires after the Serra fight, though he insisted he'd never fight for another promoter. For Hughes, it's either UFC or bust.
That means he will be facing elite fighters like Jon Fitch, Josh Koscheck, Mike Swick, Martin Kampmann, Dustin Hazelett and Carlos Condit if he chooses to remain in the game – and stay at welterweight.
Regardless of his future, Hughes already has a career filled with sensational victories. He beat Hall-of-Famer Gracie at UFC 60 in May 2006 on one of the most memorable nights in UFC history, and he also has victories over future Hall of Famers Georges St. Pierre and B.J. Penn – plus wins over stars such as Sean Sherk, Frank Trigg and Carlos Newton.
Hughes, though, clearly embraces his shot at Serra, who coached against him on Season 6 of the UFC's reality series on Spike TV, "The Ultimate Fighter." Serra didn’t like Hughes coming into the series, and his distaste for Hughes only increased during the taping.
Serra repeatedly referred to Hughes by a vulgar nickname for a part of the male anatomy and reveled in his fighters' victories over Hughes' fighters.
Hughes said he had no feelings toward Serra one way or another prior to the show, but said his dislike for the one-time champion he derisively referred to as a "one-hit wonder" increased with every insult Serra uttered during the taping.
"One of the more common questions I get is, 'Is that real what we see on the reality show?'" Hughes said. "Actually, it is. For some (reason), he did not like me on that show. Because of what he said about me is why I didn't like him. He's the one who started out with the anger. It wasn't me. I'm easy-going, man."
An easy-going guy who already has accomplished plenty.
Hughes is 9-3 in UFC welterweight title fights and competed in at least one championship bout every year from 2001 through 2007. It's a remarkable record of longevity in a sport where the lifespan at the top is about as long as that of your average NFL coach's tenure.
His last two performances, against St. Pierre at UFC 79 and against Alves at UFC 85, were stunning because of how thoroughly he was handled in each of those bouts.
That prompted calls for his retirement, which Hughes began to discuss after the loss to St. Pierre.
But the opportunity to get his hands on a guy he clearly dislikes has motivated Hughes enough to shelve the talk of retirement. He said he can't envision a scenario in which he doesn't win the fight.
"If you take me out of it and let me look from the outside in, I really think I'm going to pick where the fight's going to be at," Hughes said. "I can use my wrestling offensively to take my opponent down or I can use my wrestling defensively to keep my opponent standing."
In other words, Hughes expects to control the fight.
"I'll definitely push the pace on him. I think he'll get tired on me," Hughes said. "When I want to go to the ground, I'll take him down, and when I want to stay on my feet, I'll defend any shots he might have at me. I think it will go my way, to be honest. I've learned from his one-hit wonder on GSP that he is a big slugger.
"My wife tells me it will go all three rounds and he'll be a bloody mess when I get done with him."
This fight could spell the end of Hughes' run at welterweight, but not the end of his remarkable career.
Hughes conceded he had entertained a move to middleweight in the past and said he would have fought the late Evan Tanner for the middleweight belt had Tanner defeated Rich Franklin at UFC 42.
But Hughes says now he'd only go up for a significant fight, specifically mentioning a bout against middleweight champion Anderson Silva.
At this stage of their careers, it seems like a mismatch, but Hughes insists he's serious.
"I'm toying with the idea of moving to 185 (pounds) to fight Silva," Hughes said. "But I have to square away things in my weight class before I do that."
Hughes already belongs in the UFC Hall of Fame, but if he manages to get through that fight in one piece, they should induct him on the spot, as the odds would be huge against him winning.
"This sport is all about testing yourself and what you're capable of," Hughes said.
Hughes doesn't need to throw one more punch or attempt one more takedown to prove what he's capable of doing. He's already done that.
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