Daniel Cormier’s pursuit of fairy tale ending arrives at defining UFC 252 trilogy

“I think if I can complete this task, it’s as big as anything I’ve ever done.”

[autotag]Daniel Cormier[/autotag] has left no stone unturned going into the final bout of his storied career.

No matter how his heavyweight title fight trilogy with champion [autotag]Stipe Miocic[/autotag] unfolds at UFC 252, Cormier knows he’ll have done everything right as he closes the door on high-level athletic competition.

Retirement has been a topic of discussion with Cormier (22-2 MMA, 11-2 UFC) for the better part of three years. After taking the heavyweight title from Miocic (19-3 MMA, 13-3 UFC) in their first bout in July 2018 at UFC 226, he viewed the rematch at UFC 241 in August 2019 as the perfect moment to ride off into the sunset.

Then he lost the belt.

Cormier has pushed his retirement timeline back to accommodate one final meeting with Miocic. UFC president Dana White has said the Aug. 15 headliner, which takes place at UFC Apex in Las Vegas, will determine the greatest heavyweight in MMA history.

There’s already talk from the likes of White that Cormier could continue beyond UFC 252 if he so chooses. DC doesn’t deny that notion but said his time has come. Cormier knows a truly special opportunity sits before him, and he won’t allow himself to succumb to any temptation.

“I just believe that, at a point, I have to say money is money, and I’ve made a lot of it, and there’s going to always be more money,” Cormier told MMA Junkie. “If it’s in my heart that this is it then I have to stand firm in that knowing there’s going to be opportunities. You can be the best in the world, and you can always be the best in the world until you’re not. Eventually some time and someone will catch up to you, and I’m just making sure I get the chance to go out on top.

“I’ve won a lot. I’ve been a lucky guy in the sport, and the ability and opportunity to go out on top is unheard of. We see Georges St-Pierre constantly getting asked to come back and just the other day he says, ‘I went out on top. People don’t get that.’ I have that opportunity, and I think if I can complete this task, it’s as big as anything I’ve ever done.”

Renewed focus

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Although the coronavirus pandemic has forced adaptation to the sports world as a whole, Cormier said his preparation for UFC 252 actually has been immaculate. He’s surrounded himself with a combination of familiar coaches and some new faces in the year since he last shared the octagon with Miocic, and that’s allowed him to make the necessary adjustments to win.

Cormier stopped Miocic by first-round knockout in the original meeting, and the rematch was going his way, too. Well, until it wasn’t.

After Cormier controlled the opening three rounds, Miocic made a brilliant adjustment in the fourth and started attacking the body. The strikes quickly added up, and Cormier’s protection of his head weakened. Miocic went upstairs and finished the fight, becoming the first man to beat Cormier in heavyweight competition.

In late 2019, Cormier teamed up with boxing legend George Foreman to address defensive issues. More recently, he’s spent time with noted coach Mark Henry to dissect tactics. Those new relationships only complimented the work Cormier’s longtime coaches at American Kickboxing Academy, such as Javier Mendez, Bob Cook and Rosendo Sanchez, have put into setting him up for success in the trilogy.

At 41, Cormier said he’s well aware his body isn’t what it used to be. He’s far removed from the back surgery he feels hindered him in the rematch and said the goal was to push himself as hard as possible in preparation for UFC 252. If his body failed him along the way, he would take it as a sign.

“When we went into this training camp, I told Bob Cook: ‘If we go into training camp, and the back starts to get tight and I get hurt and I can’t get through this training camp in the way we need it to be, then we just won’t fight,'” Cormier said. “It’s not going to be, ‘Let’s cut back on this, or if it’s hurting let’s stop. Let’s not do that.’ Let’s go and try to do a training camp in the way that we’ve always done, and if the body holds up, the body holds up. If it doesn’t, then it doesn’t. I think things are as good as they’re ever going to be, and it’s the perfect time for a trilogy fight.”

Summer blockbusters

Daniel Cormier (red gloves) and Stipe Miocic at UFC 241.

The trilogy between Cormier and Miocic is truly and uniquely special. For Miocic, he becomes the first fighter in UFC history to face the same opponent in three consecutive bouts. Cormier, meanwhile, is essentially in the same boat, sans a short-notice title defense against Derrick Lewis at UFC 230 in November 2018.

Spending three consecutive years directing physical and mental energy to one person can be both taxing and tricky. Cormier relishes the uncommon elements of it all, though, and he said the in-depth understanding he’s gained about Miocic has changed his perspective on his rival.

“It’s odd,” Cormier said. “I remember when I was first asked about fighting Stipe Miocic I never would’ve thought that it would’ve turned into this. Three straight summers I’ve spent preparing for him. I feel very familiar with Stipe and the things he wants to do. I feel very familiar with his approach and honestly, over the course of three years you gain – I’ve got a bigger level of respect for him and his abilities today opposed to when I first took the fight or going into the second fight.

“You learn a lot about a person when they become your sole focus for so long. I think when you train for someone for three years, and the fights are going the way that they go, obviously your relationship changes. I think Stipe and I before were pretty cordial, maybe even friends. But now it’s a little bit different. I do believe when it’s all said and done I will not harbor any bad emotions toward him.”

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Throughout his career, Cormier has been part of some of the biggest moments in MMA history. The portion of his career involving Jon Jones will go down as one of the most venomous feuds the sport has ever seen, and the trilogy with Miocic is shaping up to stand alongside the greatest three-part series of all time.

The fights with Jones might have been bigger and resonated deeper with fans because of the hatred and talent level of the two athletes. The “competitive animosity” with Miocic runs deeper for Cormier, though, and he expects this series to be the defining period of his career.

“I think (this is career defining),” Cormier said. “We had three fights, and I intend on winning the third fight and the trilogy. It will be difficult for me to ever be completely free of that rivalry with Jones because it was so big. We sold so much pay-per-view, and the rivalry was so nasty. We were so nasty with each other, and the general public paid attention. But competitively this is the one that I love, because I’m fighting a guy that has done and stood for the right things and has competed in the right way. Jones is a fantastic competitor, and I feel like still, he brought the best out of me in terms of my preparation. But I believe Stipe Miocic has done the same thing now.”

The previous fights between Cormier and Miocic have offered two different looks. The first bout ended in a flash, with Cormier surprising Miocic with a massive punch off a clinch break that sent him crashing to the canvas. In the rematch, Cormier struck well and used more wrestling in the early going, but then his conditioning abandoned him, and Miocic tweaked his strategy to capitalize for the knockout.

Cormier said he doesn’t necessarily expect the rubber match to look like either previous bout. He’s vowed to put his wrestling background to use and believes the smaller sized octagon at the UFC Apex plays tremendously to his benefit.

Although closing his career with a spectacular finish would make for something of a fairy tale moment, Cormier said he’s anticipating the most grueling scenario.

“I think it goes 25 minutes if both of us are as prepared as we say we are,” Cormier said. “I’m going to do more things. I think Stipe did a fantastic job making those adjustments, but the reality is I was so tired in that second fight the exhaustion got me. Obviously getting hit by a guy like that does ware on you, but I couldn’t even think to do the correct defenses I was so exhausted, and that’s sad. I just need to do what I’m supposed to do out there, and that’s what I’m going to do.”

What about retirement?

Cormier has made no secret of his plan to retire from MMA. It didn’t unfold under the circumstances he’d originally intended, but it’s finally happening at UFC 252 – win, lose or draw. It’s going to be an emotional night for Cormier, he said, but he’s not thinking about the minutiae of it all.

There’s a strong level of tunnel vision, Cormier said, and anything outside of executing his game plan is trivial. He doesn’t know if he’s going to laugh, cry, leave his gloves in the center of the octagon, hand the belt back to White or any other little moments that could come with retiring in that particular instance.

All Cormier cares about is achieving that final moment of glory that’ll allow him to enter the next stage of his life – as a father, husband, coach, media personality, and more – with complete peace of mind.

“I’m so focused on the fight,” Cormier said. “I’m not thinking about the aftermath. I’m not thinking about the theatrics and all the things that go into making a moment that will play (forever). I’m not thinking about that. I’m just thinking about the most joyous thing, is getting the belt wrapped around my waist. That’s it. The way that I’ve spent so much of my career, I want it to happen one more time, and that’s all I can really think about.

“I’m not really thinking about if my gloves are going to come off. I’ve never even thought about that for a second. It’s just go win the fight and you do that, everything else is just icing on the cake.”

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2020 Schedule Swings: Receiving

Comparing schedule strength for fantasy football receivers – 2020 vs. 2019

The fantasy football strength of schedule is a useful tool, comparing the games for each team against what those defenses allowed the previous season. But what is even more useful is to compare that against 2019.

Below shows the point differential (Swing Pts) between their schedule strength last year, and what they will face this season. Also shown are the calculated schedule strength rankings from 2019 and what 2020 projects to be (1 is best, 32 is worst).

Receivers are the most sensitive to individual matchups. A good cover corner can silence any wideout and there are many other considerations that impact receiver production beyond team schedule strength. Only the most extreme swings are worth noting, and even then – this sort of analysis is always least accurate applied to individual receivers.

Best Swings

Allen Robinson/Anthony Miller (CHI) – The Bears already owned the No. 9 receiving schedule last year, so leaping to No. 1 isn’t as advantageous of a change as it might seem. Robinson is already secure as the No. 1 receiver but this great schedule could help Miller take the next step up from his very average production of 2019. There is a quarterback controversy (or at least should be) in Chicago, and that may help even further.

Courtland Sutton/Jerry Jeudy (DEN) – Drew Lock struggled to find his wideouts in the five games that he started as a rookie but they were out in patterns against the No. 32 receiving schedule. Lock is a bit more experienced and Sutton already impressed last year with his 1,000-yard season. The rookie Jeudy projects to be a difference-maker, but this great schedule may not be enough to make up for starting out in the NFL during the COVID-19 schedule.

Henry Ruggs/Tyrell Williams (LVR) – This is a case of a team that had one of the worst schedules for receiving in 2019, going to just average for this season. There’s plenty of other factors to contend with like a new stadium, a new rookie wideout, and the pandemic fallout impacting any changes more than usual. The Raiders do get a nice bump in schedule strength but it’s still slightly below average.

Terry McLaurin/Steve Sims (WAS) – Rising to the No. 3 receiving schedule from the No. 18 helps, but the jury is still out on quarterback Dwayne Haskins. Throw in all-new coaches, a new team mascot, and a scandal or two and this won’t be enough to counteract everything else that is going on in Washington.

T.Y. Hilton/Michael Pittman (IND) – This is worth noting. The Colts flopped badly in 2019 without Andrew Luck and the No. 22 receiving schedule did them no favors as well. But Philip Rivers is sure to upgrade the quarterback role and Hilton went for 1,270 yards in 2018. Facing the No. 6 receiving schedule with a veteran quarterback will help get Holton back over 1,000 yards. Michael Pittman and Parris Campbell will also benefit.

Davante Adams/Allen Lazard (GB) – The second best receiver for the Packers is a coin flip and didn’t amount to more than 35 catches for 477 yards last year. But Davante Adams recorded 83 catches in just 12 games and the Packers jump up from the No. 21 to the No. 7 receiving schedule this year. Adams is already money so the benefit just makes him an even safer pick as one of the first wideouts taken in any fantasy league draft.

Worst Swings

Mike Evans/Chris Godwin (TB) – Jameis Winston may have completed more interceptions than anyone else last year, but both Evans and Godwin turned in big years in the process. Now Tom Brady will be the pitcher which could impact the deep ball (added bonus, ball placement closer to the wideout than the cornerback). The schedule projects to be average which could cool down the passing game after the No. 1 easiest receiver schedule in 2019. But it is the same offense with two of the top wideouts in the game on either side.

Keenan Allen/Mike Williams (LAC) – This could be troubling. The Bolts receivers went against the No. 5 schedule but fall to the No. 29 in a year where either retread Tyrod Taylor or the rookie Justin Herbert (or both) will start. Both have fallen in fantasy drafts but maybe not far enough.

A.J. Brown/Corey Davis (TEN) – Ryan Tannehill sent Marcus Mariota to the bench last year and A.J. Brown blew up as a rookie. Falling to the No. 31 receiving schedule from the No. 11 won’t help. And the Titans only ranked No. 30 in the NFL with only 171 completions to their wideouts. Brown is safe enough to at least match his fine debut but the schedule and lack of passes will likely prevent any other receivers here from offering fantasy value.

Julio Jones/Calvin Ridley (ATL) – The Falcons had a big passing year in 2019 and Julio Jones turned in a career-best year as the No. 2 best fantasy wideout.  That was facing the No. 2 receiving schedule and they drop to No. 16 for an average strength. Jones and Ridley already combined for 162 catches last year while missing a few games. They remain safe fantasy plays but no other receivers are likely to stand out.

DJ Chark/Dede Westbrook (JAC) – Chark had a break-out season when he gained 1,008 yards and eight touchdowns last year. Dede Westbrook ended with 66 catches for 660 yards. They tumble from the No. 7 to the No. 23 receiving schedule but Gardner Minshew will have NFL-experience for this season. The schedule is not a friend, but it shouldn’t be a major factor in their fantasy fortunes.

Michael Thomas/Emmanuel Sanders (NO) – Falling from the No. 3 to the No. 14 receiving strength of schedule isn’t ideal, but Thomas caught 149 passes last year – 45 more than any other wideout. The schedule is still average at worst but the Saints return with nearly the exact same team intact in a year where any changes will be penalized. Emmanuel Sanders is the only question here but he’ll never have to worry with double coverage anyway.

2020 Schedule Swings: Rushing

Comparing schedule strength – 2020 vs. 2019

The fantasy football strength of schedule is a useful tool, comparing the games for each team against what those defenses allowed the previous season. But what is even more useful is to compare that against 2019.

Simply put – you know what a player did last year. Is he going to have an easier or tougher time?  As always, only the extremes are worth noting given how teams and players change from year to year.

Below shows the point differential (Swing Pts) between their schedule strength last year, and what they will face this season. Also shown are the calculated schedule strength rankings from 2019 and what 2020 projects to be (1 is best, 32 is worst).

Best Swings

Leonard Fournette (JAC) – He enters the final year of his rookie contract with a lot to prove. Fournette has been a Top-10 fantasy running back in years when he was (mostly) healthy. He enjoys the biggest swing of any back, rushing from the No. 26 to the No. 4 schedule. That should help him to gain a bigger payday in 2021. Assuming he is healthy.

Austin Ekeler (LAC) – This could be misleading. Ekeler had a great 2019 season when he ended as the No. 4 fantasy back and the Chargers faced the No. 30 rushing schedule. They improve to No. 18 which is favorable, but Ekeler only ran 132 times for 557 yards and the Chargers ranked No. 18 in rush yards as a backfield. Ekeler caught 92 passes for 993 yards for the source of most of his fantasy points. The Chargers faced the No. 2 easiest passing schedule and now slip down to No. 22 for 2020. That’s more relevant for Ekeler than the rushing schedule impact.

Saquon Barkley (NYG) – Like you needed another reason to draft Barkley. He comes off a down year thanks to injury but going against the No. 28 rushing schedule was no help as well. He’s healthy again and faces a kinder slate of games for this season.

Ezekiel Elliott (DAL) –  Elliott is another elite back that ended up as the No. 3 fantasy value despite facing the No. 25 rushing schedule. Going against the No. 6 rushing schedule should keep him in the Top-3.

D’Andre Swift/Kerryon Johnson (DET) – The Lions backfield has long fallen short of much fantasy value, and there’s extra uncertainty now with the promising but less prepared rookie challenging the one-time promising rookie who cannot stay healthy. There is a healthy shift towards a lighter rushing schedule, but only from facing one of the very worst last year to an average schedule for 2020.

Derrick Henry (TEN) – Henry signed the big post-rookie contract so hopefully he doesn’t succumb to “got mine” disease. He led the NFL with 1,540 rushing yards last year while facing the No. 22 rushing schedule and now is handed the No. 7 just to make things easier. And no back is more sensitive to a rushing strength of schedule than the guy who ran 386 times to only 28 receptions. That’s about 14 carries for each catch.

Worst Swings

Jonathan Taylor/Marlon Mack (IND) – The Colts backfield ranked Top-5 in rushing attempts (399) and rushing yards (1,832) last year going against the No. 2 best rushing schedule. That plummets to the No. 28 rushing schedule and once again, there is a less-prepared rookie vying for carries against last year’s primary back. Bet the rookie Taylor doesn’t match his 320 carries last year at Wisconsin. Or his 2,003 rushing yards.

Melvin Gordon (DEN) – The Broncos were about average with the run last year but they enjoyed the No. 5 rushing schedule as well. Gordon shows up from the Chargers to become the primary back over but he’ll face the No. 26 strength schedule in Denver. That’s oddly the exact same strength as he had last year in Los Angeles when he held out for games and then ran for only 3.8 yards per carry.

Devin Singletary (BUF) – While he enjoyed a 5.1-yard average as a rookie in Buffalo, Singletary drops from the No. 15 rushing schedule clean down to the No. 32. Plus the burly Zack Moss has been added to the backfield leaving the 5-7, 201 lb. Singletary to provide the finesse work that saw him with only 151 rushing attempts in 2019. He’ll add more as a receiver but his rushing totals are not likely to see an appreciable spike.

Josh Jacobs (LVR) – Yet another rookie that benefitted from one of the lightest rushing schedules last season, Jacob’s fine rookie campaign may be hard to just match playing in a new stadium against the No. 23 rushing schedule. He’s a capable back with a 4.8-yard average but the schedule won’t do him any favors this year.

David Johnson (HOU) – Sure, his lone good season was four years and a few choice injuries ago, but Johnson was traded to the Texans to become their primary back. It was a move that surprised everyone and he gets his second chance at a career going against the No. 22 rushing schedule. To his benefit, the offensive line in Houston has been much upgraded. To his detriment, he is the David Johnson that has flopped since 2016.

Alvin Kamara (NO) – This isn’t ideal. Kamara trades the No. 20 rushing schedule for the No. 31 but he played injured most of 2019 when he turned in his third straight 1,200-total-yard season with 81 receptions. His role as a receiver is plenty to keep him churning out the fantasy points.

2020 Schedule Swings: Passing

Comparing schedule strength – 2020 vs. 2019

The fantasy football strength of schedule is a useful tool, comparing the games for each team against what those defenses allowed the previous season. But what is even more useful is to compare that against 2019.

Simply put – you know what a player did last year. Is he going to have an easier or tougher time?  Only the extremes are worth noting given how teams and players change from year to year.

Below are the point differential (Swing Pts) between their schedule strength last year and what they will face this season. Also shown are the calculated schedule strength rankings for 2019  and what 2020 projects to be (1 is best, 32 is worst).

Best Swings

Baker Mayfield (CLE) – This is interesting. Mayfield turned in a very encouraging rookie season but then mostly flopped in 2019. He faced the No. 31 passing schedule, which was at least a contributor (along with receiver injuries). Mayfield owns the best turnaround of a schedule and goes from the second-worst passing schedule to just inside the Top-10.

Mitchell Trubisky/Nick Foles (CHI) – The Bears are tricky this year. Does Trubisky start all year or does Foles step in at any point? Notable is that while they own the second-best swing, they were already had the No. 5 passing schedule last year and ranked No. 25 in passing yards (3,573). So clearly, a favorable schedule wasn’t enough to spark even average production. Maybe it’s Trubisky, maybe it’s the coaching. Whatever the problem is, it hasn’t been the schedule.

Aaron Rodgers (GB) – The Packer’s future Hall-of-Famer was only the No. 12 fantasy quarterback. He ended with one of the worst seasons in his 15-year career. Facing the No. 27 passing schedule did not help, but the Packers under HC Matt LaFleur installed a run-heavy offense that reduced their passing production to only average levels. Rodgers gets a nice bump up to the No. 6 passing schedule strength, but ignoring wideouts in the NFL draft and yet grabbing a first-round quarterback doesn’t bode well for a turnaround in Green Bay.

Derek Carr (LVR) – Here’s a quarterback that ends up around No. 18 every year.  Gruden, no Gruden – so far, it has not mattered. He has a positive swing to be sure, but that’s still just No. 30 to No. 21. Facing the Broncos, Chiefs and Chargers twice each year doesn’t help. Carr should be better with a lighter (relatively) schedule and even new receivers for 2020. But he’s still one of the last fantasy quarterbacks drafted for a good reason.

Dwayne Haskins (WAS) – While Haskins rises to the No. 5 schedule, nothing last year says that big things are a-brewing in Washington (at least not with a quarterback). The Redskins Washington Professional Football Team didn’t rank better than bottom-three in almost all passing categories when they faced the No. 22 passing schedule. Highly unlikely that Haskins merits a fantasy start in most if not all leagues.

Philip Rivers (IND) – While the Colts went with Jacoby Brissett last year after Andrew Luck refused to make that morning commute, they only passed for 3,314 yards. Despite owning the No. 11 passing schedule, no advantage was derived. Rivers shows up at a great time with the No. 2 passing schedule on tap and oddly enough enjoyed the same No. 2 with the Chargers in 2019. This is a bad year for moving around and learning new things, but facing the No. 2 passing schedule last year netted him the No. 13 rank among fantasy quarterbacks. With a less talented offensive line, as well.

Worst Swings

Tyrod Taylor (LAC) – He wasn’t there for the No. 2 passing schedule in 2019, but he will be under center against the No. 22 passing schedule this year. Not to mention he’ll be learning a new offense with new personnel, and oh yes, he’ll likely lose the starting job to Justin Herbert before the season is over.

Tom Brady (TB) – This isn’t as bad as it initially seems. While Brady missed out on going against the No. 1 easiest passing schedule last year for the Buccaneers, he still ends up with the No. 11 passing schedule and will play with the best set of receivers he’s had in many, many years if not ever.

Ryan Tannehill (TEN) – This is more concerning given that the Titans already ranked No. 31 in pass attempts (446) last year. Tannehill drops from the No. 7 down to the No. 29 passing schedule. And their rushing schedule improved (No. 22 to No.7) so they could end up with the No. 32 in pass attempts for 2020.

Matt Ryan (ATL) – Ryan has been a Top-6 fantasy quarterback for the last two years but the hat trick should be a challenge to complete. The Falcons fall from the No. 8 passing schedule down to the No. 28. In their favor, they return all the same players and coaches and that counts bigger this season.

Drew Brees (NO) – This shouldn’t be much of a factor given that they still face the No.13 passing schedule with one of the best quarterbacks of all time. The Saints rushing schedule falls to No. 31 this year, so Brees will have plenty of reasons to air the ball out early and often.

Gardner Minshew (JAC) – This is another instance of a great schedule shifting backward to just an average one. Minshew already has to install a new offensive scheme under OC Jay Gruden but gets his easier matchups all in the first half the season. He could fade late when you need him most.

Read Spencer Hall’s opening chapter from ‘The Sinful Seven: Sci-fi Western Legends of NCAA’

Read an exclusive excerpt from the upcoming novel: The Sinful Seven: Sci-fi Western Legends of the NCAA.

Please enjoy this excerpt of The Sinful Seven: Sci-fi Western Legends of the NCAA, an ebook by Spencer Hall, Richard Johnson, Jason Kirk, Alex Kirshner, and Tyson Whiting. It’s a book about how college sports came to look the way they do today, with non-fiction stories and fiction tales that <shh> tell their own truths about how the NCAA runs.

If you like what you see, you can preorder the ebook here for a minimum of 99 cents (or whatever you want to pay), with 20% of the profits going to Feeding America, the nationwide food bank network. It comes out around August 1. 

1: The Sheriff, by Spencer Hall

The afternoon train was late into the town of Lexington. Mary — stout, graying, and as taciturn as a desert tortoise — waited on the train platform, getting antsy.

The air practically stank with the heat. The sun beat straight down from a hateful sky so blue it looked like the afterglow of a photographer’s flash. This time of afternoon, the dogs wouldn’t even follow the butcher’s wagon down the streets.

Out here, the train came when it came, though. And it was important that she see what kind of a man the Association had sent their way, and that he be greeted properly. She had walked with a battered sun parasol from her home at the edge of town, squinting through the light until she settled herself and waited under the pitiful shingle of a roof the town called a train station.

Someone else — as they usually were, invariably — was late.

Mary checked a brass pocket watch. She sighed, pulled a tiny spyglass from her purse, and focused it on the horizon. The land to the east lay flat as a skillet. The growing black shape in her sight was too big even for the heat waves rising off the desert floor to obscure. Inbound from Indianapolis and other sites east, the Pioneer’s Progress approached, carrying the first official Sheriff of the town of Lexington, crown jewel of the minimally regulated Western territory La Cademia.

As she pocketed the spyglass, she heard light, feathery steps behind her. For the moment she ignored them.

Mary was making a point of meeting the Sheriff at the station for specific business reasons. She’d survived a long time on the frontier. This was in part because she was lucky, yes, but also because she knew more, saw more, and took the time to learn more than the long-dead peers of her youth. Staying above ground in her line of work took effort and study, and even in her golden years, she worked to stay at the head of her class.

Also, as far as the Sheriff knew, she was a pillar of the community. La Cademia had very few other citizens over 40 anyway, much less those who looked like they could claim pillar status. She even had an assistant with her, as all important people did. An assistant, mind you, who was late for work.

Cavallera, standing behind Mary, cleared her throat.

“Fine weather we’re having for the arrival of the Sheriff, don’t you think?”

“If he likes an honest introduction to the town, yes,” said Mary. “You’re late.”

“I was on time. Everyone else was rudely early.”

“This is one of the reasons I don’t do business with you. That, and the time you tried to convince me selling prairie dogs through the post would be a viable enterprise.”

“With some faith and follow-through, it would have been. Would you believe a golden eagle stalked me on the way here? And trying to evade it, I took a particularly indirect route?”

“And lies. Just unprofessional in every way, Cavallera.”

“And yet you call me when it’s time to meet this Sheriff? Curious, Mary.”

“In a drought, sometimes you have to drink whatever’s in the well.”

“Well then. Drink me in.”

Mary then turned to look at Cav for the first time that day. She preened, proud of herself for no reason in particular. Her assistant costume was apparently her idea of a normal ladies’ uniform: A long pioneer’s skirt, white blouse, summer cattleman’s jacket, and the sneaky boots. What irked Mary was Cav’s insistence on pairing this inconspicuous getup with her broad cavalier hat, complete with a riotous orange plume jutting from the band.

Cav met her beady eyes with a broad grin. Mary slowly turned from her and returned to looking down the track at the oncoming train. It was all the comment she felt was necessary.

“You have any advance warning on this man, Mary?”

“Only that he’s never been out here, and is from the Midwest.”

“Ah. A dullard.”

“A dullard with a badge and no experience. That can be dangerous, Cav. Maybe more dangerous than most, actually. Let me talk. You’ll only confuse him.”

“I will try, but the moment does seize me sometimes.”

Mary turned and tried to stare a hole through the back of the Virginian’s skull. As Mary balled her fist and thought about boxing the hat off Cav’s head, something in the younger woman’s countenance changed. If Mary hadn’t had experience with her before, she could have sworn it looked like the expression of someone listening.

“Run interference,” Mary said. “Keep old friends occupied so the Sheriff doesn’t associate us with them. Stay quiet.”

Cav nodded. Mary smoothed the plaits of her own dress, stood as tall as her frame would allow, and attempted to present a picture of respectability for the new arrival.

♠♣♥♦

The train groaned into the station. A short, lithe man who appeared to be around 40 exited the passenger car. He wore long sleeves despite the heat, suspenders, and had a mustache like Teddy Roosevelt’s. He moved with the snippy steps and mannerisms of a man who had been short his entire life, and thus had to substitute energy and vigor for the authority of size.

“Hello. I am your new Sheriff. Are you the Mayor’s wife?”

Mary smiled politely while Cav mostly stifled a giggle.

“I’m afraid not, though he’s a very nice man. Call me Mary, Sheriff, and welcome to Lexington. I’m to give you the tour of the town. This is my assistant, Miss Cavallera.”

The Sheriff inspected both of them and looked vaguely disappointed in both.

“I’m not to receive the grand tour, then?”

A moment of silence. Mary was about to answer when Cav opened her mouth, something she was not supposed to do.

“That would require some grandiosity in Lexington. And we’re a bit short on that at the moment.”

Another awkward silence. The Sheriff sat stone-faced, looking back and forth at both of them. Then he laughed with a high-pitched bark that made Mary’s stomach turn.

“The pioneer’s humor! I have read about that in my files.”

Mary relaxed.

“Yes, forgive us,” she said. “We do have our own unique way of saying things.”

The Sheriff waved his hands.

“Pardon my overeducation, Mary. I’ll speak plainly and slowly for your benefit, then. I would very much like a tour of the territory’s greatest city.”

“Of course. Please follow me. Oh, and Miss Johnston, would you please hold the gentleman’s bag for him?”

“Certainly.”

Cav took the weighty bag no gentleman would ask a lady to tote, and bit her tongue from saying the many kinds of things she was not supposed to say, as she followed the two off the railway platform and onto the filthy streets.

Not a hundred steps from the train station, there was a house labeled “WILDCAT BATHS.” The dirty appearance of the men coming out of the house suggested the business would fail. The horses parked out front and voices hollering from within, however, suggested otherwise.

Mary and Cav led the Sheriff past and instead proudly noted the practicing physician’s office. Doctor Wilson put his patients under with half of the new-fangled ether brought straight off the train into Lexington. The other half of the supply disappeared into the good doctor’s lungs nightly, as frontier surgery was stressful to the provider. Alcohol left even the best doctor feeling poisoned, while ether seemed to only refresh the mind. Mary did not tell the Sheriff this, nor how she herself got a warm feeling from the ether — not from ingesting it, necessarily, but from her markup for smuggling it on the railway.

She pointed out the rundown general store, lauding its many conveniences and virtues, and also highlighted the mountains to the west, the bridge before it, and the town’s two tack shops, both stocked to provide whatever he would need. Mary did not mention she owned one of the tack shops under a long-dead husband’s name, or that it made decent money selling horse tack, but did a bustling trade in small arms and laudanum.

The Sheriff took it all in blankly. He seemed incurious, something confirmed when Mary and Cav walked him straight past the law offices at the end of the main drag, a skinny two-storied building with a placard reading “THE THAUMATURGICAL FIRM OF VILLA AND BALDWIN” hanging out front and a curiously tall fence surrounding its back lot.

While the Sheriff strode along with no questions, listening to Mary’s dry tour of Lexington, Cav drew up her own list of questions about the Sheriff. She wondered why he dressed like an attorney playing cowboy. She wondered why he’d choose to walk Lexington in the polished boots of a show pony rider, shoes that would be no match for the layers of spit, horse shit, and mud blessing the town’s main drag. She wondered how much help he’d have, or whether he’d get shot in the first couple days.

Cav wondered if there were different reasons Mary and the Sheriff both stepped directly over a man sleeping in the street, his face set in an expression of piggish happiness, rather than stepping around. Mary surely did it because a man sleeping in the mud of Lexington did not constitute anything remarkable. She suspected the Sheriff did it because he did not notice enough to recognize the figure as a man.

♠♣♥♦

After 10 minutes of saluting Lexington’s sights and non-attractions, the Sheriff finally asked a question.

“Are you a native Lexingtonian, Miss Mary?”

“I’ve been here since aught-seven, Sheriff. There ain’t much here I didn’t see go up. Used to sleep right over by the tracks myself in a spacious tent for two.”

“Did you have a husband?”

“I did. I lost him to a rattlesnake.”

“Rattlesnake was a better cook,” muttered Cav behind them.

The Sheriff turned around. “Excuse me, did you say something, young lady?”

“I said: Rattlesnakes are a curse! Check your boots for them, sir!”

He gave a dim smile and continued walking. Cav could not see Mary’s face, but did notice her large fist ball up again at her side. The old pro plowed forward anyway. They had turned around, walked all the way back down the street, and now stood in front of a half-painted building on one edge of Lexington’s ramshackle town square.

Mary gestured broadly — a little too broadly, as if introducing the main act of a subpar circus.

“The pride of Lexington! The post office-jail-Mayor’s office. A tripartite convenience, you have to agree.”

“Such vocabulary! Did your departed husband attend a four-year institution?”

Mary smiled through gritted teeth. While she looked for the exact response, Cav again forgot that she was not to speak.

“He did spend four years at an institution, yes.”

Mary need not worry about the Sheriff taking offense to a valet being disrespectful to her betters. Being a man, the question was strictly in service of his own thoughts anyway.

“I attended Northwestern University,” he said. “As you undoubtedly know already, it is very prestigious. I then attended the law school at the University of Chicago, and authored several important articles regarding the overreach of individual rights in property law cases.”

“The Mayor will be very impressed by this,” Mary said. “He keeps office hours here on Tuesdays from 1 to 3 p.m. every other week. But first things first! Let’s get you settled into your official offices.”

The Sheriff’s mustache twitched at the idea of seeing something official. His mustache then drooped when he beheld the sad interior of Lexington’s lone administrative building.

There stood what passed for the city jail, little more than bars stabbed into the wooden floor. Everything the Sheriff saw alarmed him. With the key sitting in the lock, it worked more like a free hostel for those witless enough to get caught by the disorganized posses rounded up occasionally to serve random justice. There was a vault for the city’s treasury — a wide-open vault, kept unlocked to allow whoever needed cash to take it, and with no one to guard it. There was money in it, but not much. A pile of IOUs spilled onto the sawdust floor.

The Mayor’s desk, in the middle of the higgledy-piggledy room, sat like an island of disastrous bureaucracy, full of papers and surrounded by the aromas of a thousand recent cigars. The Mayor’s chair was empty, save for a .45-caliber revolver. The Sheriff picked it up.

“It’s loaded.”

“That makes it a true Lexingtonian, then,” said Cav, heaving the Sheriff’s heavy bag onto the desk.

Mary could not even be bothered to correct Cav. She was pretty certain the Sheriff would not listen to anyone he thought beneath him, especially two unpedigreed women like she and Cav. He surveyed the offices, then turned to the older woman and spoke with the imperious air of someone reading a proclamation.

“I am to speak with Mayor Rutgers. It’s my first official item of business here.”

“We can do that. He’s probably in his summer office.”

“Was that the … baths?”

“No,” said Cav. “Hank prefers to clean himself from the inside out.”

“Take me to him. And, please, hold this.”

The Sheriff held the revolver out, barrel down. Cav took it, weighed it in her hand, and realized that though her first instinct was to put it in her waistband, she had nowhere to stow the gun, as she was dressed to blend in with townswomen who did not prefer the comfort of men’s riding gear. Cav disdained guns anyway, and preferred the civilized heft of a sword.

“I think we might just leave that here, Sheriff,” said Cav, setting the monster back on the desk. “I wouldn’t even know what to do with it!”

Mary’s eyes rolled for an instant, but only an instant.

“Sheriff, my assistant is correct. I know I’d feel better if the man here carried the weapon.”

“Mary, I first want you to know I detest violence,” he said, “and by extension of that principle, guns. But I feel that given my business, I could use some protection. My most trusted man will arrive in Lexington shortly, yes, but until then, I must make requests of people like you. This protection should continue at least until the terms of my business here, and my powers therein, are made clear to the populace.”

Mary arched her eyebrow and looked genuinely curious for once. She spoke.

“Sheriff, you need a sheriff?”

♠♣♥♦

The Sheriff walked over to the cell, tapping the key in the door as he spoke.

“The law should be its own compulsion to live for good, ladies. If men were true in their hearts, they would need no money to sing the day’s work song and plow the fields. The factory would not need to call. There would be no strikes, no anarchists in the shadows. In our beloved sport of the field, our charges would play strictly for the love of the game. The bounty of life would be enough, and gold would gather dust in the vaults of Zurich.”

Cav posted up against the doorframe. Mary assumed she stopped listening at the words “the law.” The Sheriff had started talking to himself. It might be some time before he stopped, so Mary assumed a pose she’d had to practice too frequently: That of someone pretending to listen to a bore in charge.

“It should be enough. But those at the bottom see those with just a bit more and imagine more will make them happy. Thus does Eve’s lust for knowledge deprive the snake of his apple, and thus does Eden fall. He who is a good servant makes a better master. Et cetera.”

Mary nodded along. Nodding along was important in this game, as was responding with words the bore in question might think sounded important.

“Indubitably.”

“Yes. This country, if it is to be civilized, needs to protect its vital organs,” the Sheriff continued still. “The railroad benefits all, so it must run where the shape of the growing body dictates it must run. As the arteries of the system, the pipeline keeps everything warm and replenished. The pipeline must wind where it must so that Lexington — its heart — may beat, and that this office, its brain, may command it to live up to its highest ideals.”

The Sheriff kept going. Mary kept eying him, trying to pry out his weaknesses. The little man remained so focused on his speech — and Mary on him — that they both missed all the noise in the street.

Through the window, Cav watched three figures fly through the saloon doors and into the mud.

The one doling out the most punishment was the man everyone in town simply called “Irish.” He had a terrible problem with authority in every direction, and beat up and stole from everyone equally. Most avoided him completely, both out of fear and a deserved respect for his outlaw status. To her knowledge, Irish was the only man in the territory who’d beaten the hide off a klansman, a wolverine, and reportedly an entire Army squad.

His two opponents were newer in town. Cav still knew them, though. The small, pugnacious blonde woman wrapped around Irish’s considerably sized skull was named Charlie. She came from a military family in South Carolina, fought too frequently for her own good, and had a serious inferiority complex due to her size and the typical reaction to her outsized accent.

The brunette wrapped around Irish’s leg was a shooter named Lexie. Cav knew her to be quieter, but no less dangerous, especially at a distance. She had heard a rumor about Lexie shooting the nose off the commandant of the Virginia Military Institute for daring to take out a warrant on her. In Cav’s mind, checking to see if that was true defeated the chief point of the rumor.

The two ran together and had just started a partnership stealing from wagon trains. Evidently they fought together, too — foolishly, in this case. Irish could take a whole bar by himself, much less two mean but relatively inexperienced banditas.

♠♣♥♦

In the office, next to Mary, the Sheriff droned onward.

“We need our diversions to be pure, Mary. This country needs revelry like the gentleman needs philosophy, but it must be free of the interests of those who would pervert it with too much regulation. The Association and its bylaws provide both without the weighty, clumsy interference of the government.”

Cav watched as Irish picked up the scrapper called Charlie and threw her through the open window of the saloon.

“Do you know what I have been asked to do here, ma’am?”

Mary arched an eyebrow.

“I didn’t hear that, Sheriff.”

“That’s right. I came here by order of the principals. The days of this …”

The Sheriff gestured at the muddy ball of brawlers in the street.

“… and these half-literate banditos out there are over. Fences must be built. A code must be established. Sanity must be protected.”

Cav tried to avoid looking openly impressed at Charlie crawling back through the window, visibly gesturing at Irish and asking for more.

“Protected from what?” asked Mary.

“From Mammon. From those who would burden the working person with too much wealth.”

Cav watched Lexie disappear into the saloon, leaving Charlie to fight alone with the wild man. No one dared help. Cav assumed Lexie was probably going to fetch something heavy, to hit Irish over the head. It’s what any sensible person would have done.

“Back to the thrust of my argument here, Miss Mary. I am to peaceably restore the concept of fairness. I am here to rid our frontier of the stain of big money. It is something I believe in deeply.”

Mary nodded her head to affirm the Sheriff’s noble cause. Cav did the same, silently congratulating herself for being right. With a bell-like toll and sickening thud, Lexie had indeed brained Irish with a spittoon. Little could knock Irish out, but staggering him was enough to make the big brute — who had Charlie held at length with one arm like a tantruming child — drop her like a sack of corn in the street. A stunned Irish wobbled towards the saloon doors. The two women, satisfied with a draw, followed.

“Miss Mary, if I may be so bold: Do you believe in my cause?”

“Oh, yes, certainly. It seems to be precisely what this town needs.”

The Sheriff stopped, just like Mary hoped he would. Someone with money didn’t ask questions to hear answers. Someone with more money had already given them the answers. The sooner someone learned how to get men like the Sheriff to stop talking, the sooner someone could get on with the day’s business of stealing something.

“I need to see Mayor Rutgers,” the Sheriff said. “Then, please, take me to my lodgings.”

“Of course,” said Mary. “I must warn you, though. The Mayor might not be as receptive as we have been.”

“Is he an anarchist?”

Mary bade the Sheriff forward through the door.

“No, not at all. He is just a man of leisure most days.”

“Mary means the ones that end in -y,” said Cav.

The Sheriff paused in the door.

“Your assistant does realize … every day ends in -y?”

Mary hustled the Sheriff down the rickety set of steps and into the street.

“Sheriff, he may be found at this bar across the street. The one to the right of the one that spat out Irish and his opponents a minute ago.”

The Sheriff stopped, standing still in the middle of the street under the reddening light of afternoon.

“Mary, did your assistant forget the pistol?”

“No, she didn’t. It’s right on the desk where she left it.”

“In order to do my job—”

Cav cut the Sheriff off. Mary, in this instance, let her.

“Sheriff, this is no job for a lady. We are not as practiced at violence, nor as sure of the law. That is why my superior here, Miss Mary, who has been so kind as to show you our town this afternoon and welcome you, suggested you, as Sheriff, must hold the gun. Should violence occur, we would wish it to be the kind backed by authority. That’s correct, right Miss Mary?”

“Absolutely, Miss Johnston.”

“I abhor violence,” the Sheriff stammered, “and would never …”

Cav cocked her head at the Sheriff, the plume on her hat leaning like a willow in the breeze. She spoke out of turn, again.

“… ask someone else to do it for you.”

The Sheriff looked blankly at Mary. Flummoxed, he stepped back inside the office with a long, huffy sigh.

Mary retreated to the shade of the office’s porch and waited. The sun blasted down.

She thought of all the nice things in La Cademia that had nothing to do with civilization. The mornings when it was cold that turned to middays when it was hot before leveling back to a perfect, cool balance somewhere in between. Watching the kids turn the spigots on to irrigate the great green field at the end of Main. The water running all the way down from the mountains, cold as a well digger’s ass, turning the dirty land into a sprawling polygon of green. The horses grazing on open land without a care. The men and women who came west to work for a few dollars while they could, and maybe dream of owning a tiny piece.

Mary had helped build a lot of this. It wasn’t hers. She had to remind herself all the time of this, because that was the one lesson she learned here. America never let anyone have anything, not even the people who’d been here before America, not even in a place like this one, a place near the edge.

♠♣♥♦

Listening to the Sheriff in the office bored her to the point of pain. But it confirmed what she suspected: The Association had sent the Sheriff in to repossess the West for its new landlords. That angered her, as did the Sheriff trying to justify it. Thieves, she didn’t mind. Look at Cav, thought Mary, watching the Virginian kick rocks in the street out of boredom. Cav was a perfect bandit. She took things without speeches about morality. A bandit would never insult someone by explaining how theft wasn’t wrong. She did you the favor of simply stealing them.

Someone like Mary would do a person the favor of just stealing, and save the victim the insult of turning it into a reflection of the natural order.

Mary peered up into the window. The Sheriff, bent over with his head in the safe, had the gun poking clumsily out of his jacket pocket. She watched him take a stack of bills out of the open safe. What a greedy little swine, Mary thought, watching the Sheriff tiptoe down the stairs and out into the street like nothing had happened at all.

Mary, Cav, and the Sheriff found Mayor Hank Rutgers holding other-office hours across the street. The Mayor worked hard all the time, in his own way. Today’s variation on working hard meant one bottle almost empty on the table and another in transit from the bar.

“Ayyyyyyy, look at these freakin’ guys!”

“Mayor,” said Mary.

“I keep tellin’ you! Call me Hank! Have a seat, lady.”

The Sheriff placed the Mayor’s violent accent as New Jerseyite. He assessed his condition as pisspoor to pissmiddling. The Mayor’s tweed pants were worn at the knees, his red velour jacket rubbing threadbare at the elbows and seams. A yellowed campaign button on his tattered lapel read: THANK HANK!

Mary noted the Mayor’s shoes were on the correct feet this time. She also watched as Cav finagled a shot glass from the bar and poured herself a generous shot from the open bottle on the Mayor’s table. Mary did not worry. The Sheriff, aghast at a bureaucrat in such disrepair, didn’t much hear Mary’s broad introduction of the town’s Mayor.

“Mayor Hank,” she then said, “I’d like you to meet the new man in town.”

The Sheriff was standing stockstill, waiting to sit and Mary thought perhaps he was waiting huffily to be introduced as a man of status.

Mayor Rutgers was too drunk to notice. He gazed off at the spot where the piano had been, before they’d burned it for warmth two years prior, during the Great Snow Bowl.

“Mary, I tell you, I’ve loved a lot of things about being Mayor.”

“Mmhm.”

“But burning a fuckin’ PIANO! That was somethin’, friend,” the Mayor said, his Jersey accent soaring. “I’D DO IT EVERY. FREAKIN’. DAY IF I COULD.”

Mary could feel the Sheriff vibrating with peevish anger. She enjoyed it, frankly, after listening to him talk for more than an hour. Still, she tried to play along.

“I’m sorry, let me try this again, Mayor Hank. This is the new Sheriff.”

“Hey! Sheriff, sit down, you’re gonna draw vultures, standing there like that.”

The Sheriff peered around the room. Cav guessed he was literally scanning for vultures.

“Another bottle for our new Sheriff here.”

“I do not drink, Mr. Mayor.”

“Neither do I. This is medicinal, and I can’t have important people getting sick on me. Armando, my friend! Bottle of your best.”

The Mayor slumped in his chair. The Sheriff thought he looked like a jellyfish.

Mayor Rutgers had no real duties any more. His biggest claim to fame was founding the town with some money he’d won in a craps game on the way out West, building its first sporting field, gambling on the first usage of the field, and thus doubling the town’s treasury. Since then, he’d done mostly nothing and accomplished less, shuffled by barkeeps from one unpaid tab to the next.

The Mayor would tell anyone in the range of his horrific voice how “he was the daddy of this freakin’ town,” and how when he got to Lexington there was nothing but “two trees, four jackrabbits, and only one jackass.” He’d point to himself when he said that and laugh at his own joke. Everyone else had heard it too many times to laugh politely any more.

Mayor Rutgers’ kids rarely visited. They hung in more prestigious circles. He was a well-loved embarrassment to some of his children and just an unqualified embarrassment to others.

Mary thought the Mayor just wanted to be remembered fondly. It didn’t seem like too much on paper, but sitting at the battle-scarred table of Unnamed Bar #2 (the actual name of the bar, according to paperwork Mary had found while filing the deed for her tack shop/smuggling emporium), Mary could see what drove the Mayor to drink. Every other pioneer had blown past him on the way to the future, leaving him with the curse of being first, but not best. The Mayor floated on a flimsy raft of forgotten accomplishments, amid oceans of amnesia.

“Mayor, I hope you’ve been briefed on my duties here,” said the Sheriff, oozing contempt.

“I have!” (He had not.)

“Good. I will be using office space in the … town hall. Petty cash will be provided by your city.”

The Mayor’s lolling head snapped upright when the Sheriff said “cash.”

“Absolutely. Right. Yes, duties, and the cash.”

The Mayor winked. The Sheriff shuddered with undisguised disgust.

“And, as there are no other known authorities in this territory, I will assume all jurisdiction necessary to track down and apprehend subjects of my investigations as necessary, here in Lexington and in the greater environs of La Cademia Territory.”

Mary and Cav cast a quick glance at each other. The Sheriff had just vaguely expanded his jurisdiction on the spot. The Mayor, drunk as a lord, just casually signed off on it. Mary felt a rush of alarm in her limbs. Cav was merely impressed with the hustle.

“Here for it, brother. You want lunch? Cause I’m gonna get lunch. BARKEEP! BOTELLA!”

The Mayor’s head lifted skyward for a second, then fell to the table like a hammer. Mary and Cav picked up the Mayor, each supporting him under one arm, and began toting him out of the back of Unnamed Bar #2.

The Sheriff followed, taking notes on a small pad. As the Sheriff walked on the uneven ruts of Lexington’s back alleys, the butt of the jumbo-sized revolver jutted out of his coat pocket.

“Where are you taking him?”

“To his other office, Sheriff,” Mary said. “He prefers to work late afternoons elsewhere.”

“Please take him somewhere else. I would like to begin clearing that desk out for my work.”

“Not that office,” said Cav.

The Sheriff looked back down at his notepad and continued scribbling, offering no help to the two ladies carrying the pot-bellied figure of the Mayor. Cav and Mary grunted and dumped the Mayor into his chair in the back of Unnamed Bar #1. He’d wake up around 3 or 4 in the afternoon. The two bars — each a mirror image of the other, sharing a common wall and identical twin brothers serving as barkeeps — looked so much alike, Mayor Rutgers might not even notice the move.

The Sheriff looked up from his pad, studying Unnamed Bar #1, finding it far too crowded for such an hour. As he scanned the bar stools, his mustached mouth fell agape.

♠♣♥♦

Irish and his two opponents from the street stood shoulder to shoulder, laughing. He was shirtless, covered in filth, and drinking something brown and evil straight from the bottle. Each time one slapped another on the back, big clouds of dust spewed from their shoulders. Mary thought it looked like cattle having a hootenanny. The Sheriff saw three golems in a sandstorm.

“Mary, pardon me, but I must exercise some degree of my powers as Sheriff here. I did my reading on the train on the way here, and reviewed my files. That shirtless gentleman’s name? That is George Irish, yes?”

Mary’s eyes widened, and she regretted letting him go back to get the pistol.

“That, Sheriff, is a man named George Irish, yes.”

“Well. It is time to execute my first warrant.”

The Sheriff walked toward the three of them.

“Excuse me. Are you named George Irish?”

Irish whipped his muddy face around, his red hair caked with filth and his green eyes burning through the dirt. The look on Irish said he hated the Sheriff on sight, right down into the marrow. Irish’s whole body coiled up like a snake’s. He radiated with hate, with the whiplike strength of a man made of taut wires.

Cav put a hand on Mary’s shoulder.

“Irish … will … he’ll absolutely kill this man.”

“Oh, Cav. I suspect the Sheriff can’t fight. As in, not at all. This is bad. Perhaps the I-won’t-even-enjoy-it kind of bad.”

“Is one certain about that, Mary? Think before answering.”

The Sheriff, now looking up at a mud-caked demon drunk off brown liquor and adrenaline, somehow showed zero fear. Mary assumed this was because Irish barely looked human. Cav assumed the Sheriff was just achingly oblivious to the certain gory murder in front of him.

“Well?” said Cav.

“No, I am, on second thought, afraid I might enjoy this.”

At that point, the Sheriff did the stupidest thing he could have done. He kept talking.

“George Irish, your record precedes you in the worst of all possible ways. In the name of the Association and its represented institutions, I hereby arrest you for corruption across interstate lines, general mythmaking, and war profiteering. Place your hands on your head.”

Lexie and Charlie fell out laughing. Irish did not.

He led with a headbutt. It caught the Sheriff with such force that the civilized man couldn’t do much but suck air, tottering in his bad shoes on the sawdust-covered floor like a man speaking with only the Lord. Lexie and Charlie continued to laugh. Cav laughed. Against best instincts, even Mary laughed. The whole bar lost it at the sight of the Sheriff, wobbling like a top in the middle of Unnamed Bar #1, bleeding from a split forehead after trying by himself to arrest the most obviously terrifying man in town.

Irish hauled back and swung his skull forward again. The sound of his skull whipping through the air made its own distinct noise. The thwack against the Sheriff’s tiny noggin made another, more sickening sound. The bar erupted with cheers, and several drinkers heaved their beers into the air.

The Sheriff’s bloody face slumped forward. He gave up all resistance to the earth, taking what seemed like minutes to collapse forward, along with a fine mist of lager. Mary saw the revolver jostling out of the Sheriff’s pockets, slipping loose of the coat and dropping toward the floor.

The gun tipped forward with the Sheriff’s falling body, tumbling end over end and landing on its stock. Mary heard the bang first, then watched the recoil spin the weapon in reverse. It was beautiful, a little dance she got to watch, alone in a crowd of people focused on Irish’s head whipping back from a bullet’s impact.

The entire room stood stunned as pieces of Irish’s head hit the saloon ceiling.

Mary had started the day wanting to know what kind of man had been sent to tame the frontier. She now knew. They had sent a man so stupid and loyal to order he would kill those in his way, even if by accident. He would be too stubborn to accept anything else. Knowing the nature of people, she assumed they would be stupid enough to agree with him.

As Mary had the Sheriff taken to Doc Wilson’s office to be bandaged up, she figured she had a choice. She would find a way to live with the new order immediately, or she would fight it as long as she could before, as an unchanged warhorse of the old frontier, surrendering what she had earned out here. She sat in town for a while and then walked home beneath the billion stars of the desert, thinking about whether she would get the privilege of deciding for herself at all.

Cav came to another conclusion entirely. Meeting the Sheriff and watching him attempt the first actual, official arrest in the history of the territory made her want to do the thing that brought her the greatest joy of all.

It made her want to steal.

The first entry in the Legislative Services Database

When the Sheriff woke up on the office cot in the middle of the night with a bandaged head, he first dragged himself to his desk to send a telegram.

He detailed his arrest of Irish: A great success, though the sheer number of agitated bystanders required the careful application of violence. He would need help, and therefore requested the hastened arrival of his trusted subordinate, the promising young Agent Byers, along with funds for the hire of additional agents.

He also requested immediate warrants for the arrest of two outlaws: a tall woman with brown hair named Lexie, and a squat South Carolinian known locally as Charlie Delle. Their crime: failing to assist an officer in the course of applying the law.

The Sheriff then dragged himself back to sleep until the light of dawn awoke him. He arose, opened the back door, and looked out at the warming red doomscape.

He’d heard people talk of magnificent vistas here, about the space and range and colors of the high desert. The Sheriff saw none of that, not on the long train ride into town, and not in the glow of a rising sun on the condemned rocks surrounding him.

In the West, he only saw a constant corruption: Rivers smuggling the earth through canyon wounds one grain of sand at a time, buffalo taking what they like without fences, birds flaunting the impermissible benefit of flight. He came from the Midwest, where all water was marshaled into lakes for supervision. Here even the cacti hoarded water for themselves.

The Sheriff knew the shameless land would be made to repent. The rivers would be dammed. The deserts would bloom. Fences — miles and miles of beautiful, straight fences — would enclose the amoral wilderness into squares. With enough discipline and hard work, the wastes of La Cademia could be as productive and orderly as the fields of Ohio. The West’s detestable people, God willing, could only follow suit. Sanity would be encoded.

Having judged the land and found it reprehensible, the Sheriff walked to begin his day at his desk. There, he found two new items.

One was a telegram response from the Association, congratulating him on his first arrest, and granting all requests made by the Lexington office.

The other: someone had placed the revolver back in the chair where they’d first found it. It was as cold and mean as he remembered it. He held the gun up in a ray of light streaming through the window, eyeing its ivory handle. The Sheriff pulled a pocket knife from his jacket, carefully working a single notch into the white bone of the gun’s grip.

It made him happier than he had ever felt before.

Thanks for reading. Again, you can preorder The Sinful Seven right here.

Here’s a Lakers-themed crossword for you

We admit, the first one a bit difficult, so we decided to go a bit easier on you all this time.

We created two crosswords testing your overall knowledge of basketball earlier this month. This one is solely focused on the most beloved and hated NBA team: the Los Angeles Lakers.

As always, make sure you share your results – whether good or bad.

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We have a new NBA crossword. It’s a little easier than the last one

It’s time for the second NBA crossword puzzle of our brand-new series. We admit, the first one a bit difficult, so we decided to go a bit easier on you all this time. Brownie points if you get the LeBron question right, though, that one isn’t so …

It’s time for the second NBA crossword puzzle of our brand-new series.

We admit, the first one a bit difficult, so we decided to go a bit easier on you all this time.

Brownie points if you get the LeBron question right, though, that one isn’t so easy.

Just like last time, be sure to share your results, no matter how bad (or well) you did. Compete with your fellow basketball-loving friends to find out who the hoops savant of your group really is!

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The greatest defeat of my career

Michael Bisping tells the story of how he rebounded from that devastatingly brutal UFC 100 knockout loss to Dan Henderson.

The following is an abridged excerpt from Michael Bisping’s autobiography “Quitters Never Win: My Life in UFC,” in which Bisping talks about the worst defeat of his career.

Eleven years ago Friday, at UFC 100, Bisping suffered one of the most brutal KO losses in MMA history, courtesy of a Dan Henderson ‘H-Bomb’ right hand. For Bisping’s growing chorus of critics, it was final proof the brash Briton would never be world champion.

“Instead, it was the most important result of my career,” Bisping said.

(Editor’s note: The excerpt combines passages from several chapters to tell the story of the Henderson fight; the original strong language is included.)

****

My foot was in water.

My forehead was laying against something cold. I was standing up. There was a white noise crammed into my ears. I heard voices miles away.

I became aware I was standing in a shower, resting my head against a cool white wall. Probably to help with the headache I’d also just noticed.

It felt like I was about to wake from a dream. When I knocked the shower off the white noise melted and the talking sounded closer. I turned around in the steam. I was in a small bathroom with a box shower in a corner.

I put a towel around myself. I was a little dizzy. I was carrying two headaches, one at the back of my skull and one dangling above my left ear. The white noise changed pitch into a long ringing. My jaw felt funny. I walked through the archway of a door and there was a larger, much brighter room with six men in it. I knew them, somehow. There were bags crammed with stuff on the floor. One of the men gave me a friendly nod as the rest kept talking in muted voices.

My mate – Jacko was his name – was sat on a bench nearest to me. There were people in business attire and wearing ID cards going in and out of the room. Something had happened. I didn’t know what.

Acting as normal as possible, I quietly gestured for Jacko to come closer.

“Hey – what’s going on?” I whispered.

Jacko had a sympathetic look on his face. “It’s alright mate,” he said. “Go get dried and we’ll go.”

“Yeah, yeah, alright,” I said, and turned back into the bathroom. I dried myself and put some clothes on but then I went back to Jacko, confused all over again.

“Hey,” I whispered again. “What did you say was going on?”

He looked concerned. “You’ve just fought. They are taking you to get checked out … you remember, yeah?”

“Oh yeah … ‘course. Gimme a minute.”

I put the rest of my clothes on slowly, buying time. Not enough.

“Tell me again – what are we doing?” I asked Jacko.

“You’ve got to go the hospital, mate.”

“What? Why?”

He turned to the rest of the guys in the room, attracting their attention.

“Do ya remember what happened, Mike?’ one of them said. ‘You got knocked out.”

That made zero sense.

“What you on about?” I asked him. “Knocked out? I’m not fighting for another two months. UFC 100 … Dan Henderson fight in July. Why was I knocked out? Did I take a short notice fight?”

“It is July now, mate,” I was told. “We’re at UFC 100 now. You lost the fight to Dan Henderson.”

It made no sense. I didn’t know where I was other than in a dressing room in some arena. I knew these people but other than Jacko, I couldn’t find their names in my head. It was like typing in a password that you know is correct, only to get an error message over and over no matter how slowly you pushed the keys.

It was embarrassing. I didn’t like the way they were all looking at me, asking me if I was okay, so I said: “Oh, yeah, now I remember… I remember the fight.”

Later, I’d learn this was the third time in twenty minutes that my team had pleaded with me to accept what my brain would never remember.

The euphemism the UFC use for fighters getting taken away in an ambulance is ‘transported’. On 11 July 2009, around 10:15 p.m. Pacific Time, I was transported from the Mandalay Bay Events Center to Sunrise Hospital on South Maryland Parkway, Las Vegas.

As the ambulance turned off the Strip and into the more residential parts of the city something turned a corner inside my head, too. Sat in the back of that ambulance, the floodgates to three months of memories were swung open.

****

Dan Henderson and Michael Bisping at UFC 100.

You can only do as well as you know, and the truth is I didn’t know how to prepare for a championship level fighter in the summer of 2009. In the years that followed, I’d learn it takes confidence to take a day off when preparing for a fight but for the fight at UFC 100, I didn’t have that confidence. That was my fault. I’d spent over half a year with [autotag]Dan Henderson[/autotag] living next door to my thoughts. I’d watched his best fights over and over, witnessing him beat up legends like Wanderlei Silva and Renzo Gracie and even UFC heavyweight champion Minotauro Nogueira.

The worst Henderson could do to me was played on a loop, over and over, when I should have been focused on what I was going to do to him. The huge stage of UFC 100, the high-stakes of a promise of a title shot against Anderson Silva to whoever won, the step up in class against a two-time PRIDE world champion – I responded to these mental pressures by physically training myself into the ground.

When I checked into the site of UFC 100, the golden Mandalay Bay hotel in early July, I was over trained, over tired and over anxious.

My only memory of the first Dan Henderson fight comes from watching it on tape years later. So, I can’t give you any insight into what happened other than what you can see for yourself. We had a close enough first but in the second I was knocked out.

Henderson’s weapon of choice was a right-handed punch thrown in an arch; it raises up before crashing down like an artillery shell. At 3 minutes, 17 seconds of the second round he landed one directly to the left side of my jaw. I was out before my head bounced off the canvas.

I go back and forth on how I feel about the second shot Henderson chose to throw while I was laid out and defenseless. Either way, I’d been knocked out in the most devastating fashion. Eleven years later, Henderson KO 2 Bisping remains one of the top knockouts in the sport’s history.

The doctor at the hospital told me I was fine and to go get some rest. Instead, I went out partying. I felt I had to. When I got back to my hotel room a dozen family and friends were waiting for me, they all cheered and clapped me as I walked in the room. I was hugged and had my shoulders slapped.

These people had travelled to the other side of the world to support me and, for some of them, this was their one holiday of the year. Even though I wanted to crawl into bed and shut off the lights, I owed it to them to suck it up, put on a brave face and spend some time with them.

“Alright, let’s go drown my sorrows!” I announced to cheers.

In hundreds of MMA, kickboxing, BJJ and every other type of fight I’d been in, I’d hardly ever lost and had never once been defeated conclusively.

The Henderson result was something else entirely. I hadn’t just been beaten; I’d been KO’d – massively so – on the biggest show in UFC history. There was no commuting this defeat; I’d trained harder and for longer than for any fight in my life and still didn’t get the win. There were no positives to take away or easy answers to implement.

For me, UFC 100 never ended. The image of Henderson, arched in mid- air, swinging the base of his fist downwards towards my unprotected chin, was everywhere. On T-shirts, banners, posters and every UFC broadcast. The final seconds of the fight were omnipresent on every website, forum and embedded in every nasty tweet I was sent.

It quickly felt like half the world was celebrating the worst moment of my life and so I hid behind self-deprecating humor.

“Who’d circle into his opponent’s best punch?” I asked rhetorically in interviews.

I was smiling as I delivered the line, but inside I was crushed.

Growing up, I felt like I was good at one thing – fighting. All the way to my early twenties, my sense of self-worth was based on being a good fighter. Now it felt like half the world was insisting I wasn’t. The online abuse was insane. My entire career was getting torn apart. It bothered me more than I let on to anyone.

It’s a lonely place to put yourself, hiding what you are really going through. I even kept my wife Rebecca in the dark.

My comeback fight was scheduled for UFC 105 in Manchester in November. I asked for Wanderlei Silva, the Brazilian whose five-year reign of terror as PRIDE FC champion had already made him a legend in the sport, but he was out for the rest of 2009.

Instead, I was matched against another PRIDE standout, Denis Kang. The ‘Super Korean’ had been the runner-up in PRIDE’s 2006 Grand Prix, fighting in the finale despite tearing a bicep in the semi-final earlier than night. Kang was the kind of assignment every fighter faces without an abundance of enthusiasm: a dangerous opponent whose name isn’t well known outside the hardcore fan base. Kang was installed as the odds-on favorite to win the fight on 14 November.

My training for the fight began in late summer. I don’t remember feeling any difference in returning to the gym after the Henderson result than any other first week back. My confidence wasn’t shaken or anything, I wasn’t gun-shy in sparring and there were no doubts or hesitations I needed to address.

Apparently the team around me felt differently. We had several established boxers in the gym with us for a week, and I took the opportunity to spar with them. In one session, one of the pugilists dropped me a couple of times. I could feel an anxiety tighten around the room. Heavy bags went unpunched for a few seconds and Zach Light, who was now coaching at the gym, put both his hands on the ring apron and trained his eyes on me.

Then I touched down a third time and Zach leapt into the boxing ring to wave the sparring off.

“You’re done, Mike,” he said.

It was frustrating – I really was fine – but I can understand my team’s concern. Most of the people in the gym were there in the Mandalay Bay Arena dressing room when I literally couldn’t remember where – or when – I was. But now it seemed like even the people I trained with didn’t believe in me anymore.

One Sunday evening in August, I was in bed at home enjoying Rocky III. I got to the part where Balboa was knocked out by Clubber Lang and had to hide his anguish from Mickey. Sly Stallone’s character was beaten and heartbroken but still trying to pretend everything was okay …

The cover of Michael Bisping’s autobiography.

Just like I was.

I teared up.

Then I broke down.

That’s when Rebecca came up to check on me.

“What’s the matter?” she said, slipping through the door.

I had one hand pressed against my eyes, holding the tears inside, and waved for Rebecca to shut the door with the other. I didn’t want the kids to hear.

“It’s okay,” Rebecca said, holding me. ‘I had no idea, I’m sorry.’

“I’m sorry,” I said. “I didn’t let on …”

That was a big first step.

Slowly, piece by piece, I began to reconstruct myself.

Losing like I sucked. Missing out on the title fight sucked. The abuse I was taking was awful and it sucked. It all sucked but … I wasn’t finished. I’d made some money by that point, enough to propel myself into a different career if I wanted to be done with MMA.

But I wasn’t done. fuck, no, I wasn’t done by a long way. The naysayers were wrong. I was one of the best in the world, and I didn’t care who didn’t believe it. I would fight on and prove it. I’d fight for my respect. I’d beat Henderson next time. I’d get that big fight with Anderson Silva. And – if it was the last thing I did on Earth – I’d fight my way to the UFC world middleweight title.

****

It’s important to realize social media isn’t real life; and that MMA bloggers’ opinions only matter as much as you think they do. I got that message deafeningly loud and crystal clear from the 16,693 fans packing out the Manchester Arena.

The ear-splitting cheers those people gave me at UFC 105 meant everything to me. They didn’t hold back their emotions or hedge their bets until I had the fight won. They put their heart and souls on the line and declared – as loudly as their voice boxes could – that they were with me. All the way!

It wasn’t just the decibels ringing in my ears or the rumble under my feet, it was the outstretched hands, the fists pumping in the air and the expressions on their faces. These were real people – not faceless social media trolls. And none of them had written me off. They still believed in me. The energy surge was intoxicating. I pointed down the TV camera tracking me to the Octagon and screamed at my critics: ‘YOU HEAR THAT, YOU FUCKERS?!?’

On commentary, Joe Rogan mistook my gestures for anger – ‘Man, Bisping is pumped up! Look at him! He looks psychotic!’ but it wasn’t anger. It was determination. Weapons-grade determination. I would not let these people down.

The first round against Kang did not go to plan, though. He caught me with a right hand and I spent the next four minutes grappling from the bottom, defending against his attacks.

When the horn sounded to end the round I turned to all four sides of the arena and mouthed, ‘I’m sorry, I’m sorry.’ I’d promised them that I’d be aggressive and go all out for the first-round finish, and I’d spent most of the first round on my back.

Everything clicked together in the second round. I landed combinations, changed levels, took him down and unleashed an arsenal of punches, elbows and knees. Every success was cheered. I felt like myself once more. Kang got up briefly. I took him down again. I continued to hack away. I felt strong. Then I let him up and landed more strikes from a standing position until he fell for the final time.

Referee Dan Miragliotta waved it off at 4:24 of the second round.

The fans went mental. I was so overcome with emotion that I had to sit down on the canvas for a few seconds to compose myself.

“That answered every single question,” Rogan had to yell into his mic over the noise in the arena. “Every single one of them. Bisping’s back was against the wall, he took on a very tough guy, and – in my opinion – had the performance of his career. He was put in a bad position, he got dropped, he defended on the ground and when it was time to finish – he finished. He beat up Denis Kang and finished him.”

As Rogan took his headset off to walk up the stairs and interview me, my son Callum sprinted across the Octagon. I saw him coming and knelt down to hold him tight.

“I love you,” I told him.

“I love you!” he said.

Joe touched me on the arm to signal the start of the interview but the fans were still cheering.

“You’ve no idea how I felt after the last fight,’ I said into the microphone. “This is my life, I dedicate everything to this and it really hurts me when people don’t give me the respect I think I deserve. I’ve never, ever, turned down an opponent in my life. I’ll fight anyone. I want to go right to the top – but I know I’ve got a long way to go. Bear with me. I’m trying, guys.”

“Quitters Never Win: My Life in UFC” by Michael Bisping with Ant Evans is out now in the U.S. and can be purchased from Amazon. The U.S. edition of the U.K. best seller is fully updated and includes an exclusive new chapter covering Bisping’s retirement, Hall of Fame induction, acting career, and his harrowing escape from would-be kidnappers in South Africa.

How difficult is this NBA crossword?

Starting today, we’ll be creating fun, interactive NBA-related crossword puzzles for your enjoyment. Some of the answers will be current players, others will be former champions and still, others will be about some of the biggest brands related to …

Starting today, we’ll be creating fun, interactive NBA-related crossword puzzles for your enjoyment.

Some of the answers will be current players, others will be former champions and still, others will be about some of the biggest brands related to basketball.

You’ll even be able to share your results on social media and show off how well you did. However, make sure you share your results even if you did poorly!

Below, our very first NBA crossword puzzle.

Enjoy!

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Red tape and ‘rivalry’: IMMAF CEO Densign White on MMA’s fight for Olympic acceptance

CEO of the International Mixed Martial Arts Federation Densign White chats to MMA Junkie’s Simon Head about the ongoing fight for MMA’s recognition as a sport.

The story of the UFC’s fight for acceptance is an oft-told one but, while the biggest promotion in the sport is currently enjoying mainstream acceptance after winning that battle, the amateur side of MMA is facing a global fight every bit as big as the one the Fertitta brothers and Dana White fought with state governance and TV companies back in the early 2000’s.

The global body for MMA, the International Mixed Martial Arts Federation (IMMAF) has been fighting for the sport’s official recognition for the past four years, as they have worked to put MMA in a position to achieve Olympic sport status in the years ahead. The organization runs amateur MMA tournaments around the world, including the IMMAF-WMMAA World Championships, and supports the inception of national MMA federations to help regulate and promote the sport across the world. But while they have successfully expanded their membership to more than 100 member nations, IMMAF’s quest to gain acceptance as a sport from the Olympic movement remains ongoing.

It’s a process that has seen IMMAF hold countless meetings, negotiate bureaucratic red tape and even merge with the similarly-aimed World Mixed Martial Arts Association (WMMAA) in a bid to clear the hurdles placed in their path.

It’s been a long, drawn-out fight against a system that, according to IMMAF CEO Densign White, has stacked the deck against MMA from day one.

White, a three-time judo Olympian for Great Britain and former Commonwealth Games gold medallist for England, has spearheaded the federation’s bid for official recognition from the Global Association of International Sports Federations, (GAISF). But, as he explained to MMA Junkie, the sport has faced opposition at every turn.

IMMAF CEO Densign White

The issue of “rivalry”

On paper, the path to recognition should be a straightforward one. Apply to GAISF to become a member and become a signatory of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) code. Applications were made to achieve both but, due to issues flagged by GAISF, they were unsuccessful. A court case with WADA is in process, but currently on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The dialog with GAISF remains ongoing, but has left White frustrated by the group’s lack of transparency and clarity.

“That (application) was rejected without any explanation and we subsequently had meetings with GAISF and they said there were ‘rivalry’ issues,” he explained. “You cannot be a ‘rival’ to an existing member of their organization. They said there was ‘rivalry’ but without being specific about what the rivalry was or who it was from.”

Eventually, IMMAF learned that the aforementioned rivalry issues didn’t come from within GAISF’s existing membership at all. Instead, they were told there were concerns about the existence of two organizations looking to achieve similar aims.

“What they essentially said was the rivalry that we needed to address wasn’t within GAISF, it was outside, between us and the World Mixed Martial Arts Association, which was the other international MMA body out of Russia led by Vadim Finkelstein,” White explained. “So we met with WMMAA and we agreed that we would merge, and that happened in the summer of 2018.

“We gave all this information to GAISF and let them know we’d now solved the rivalry problem, and there was still no movement from their side and they continued to talk about the rivalry issue. We met with them in Bangkok in 2018 and had a meeting with the (then) president Patrick Baumann and the chairman of the GAISF membership panel Antonio Espinos, who is also the president of the World Karate Federation.”

Hidden agendas

White said the presence of leading administrators from other combat sports in top-ranking positions within GAISF has proved to be a major stumbling block in IMMAF’s fight for MMA’s acceptance.

“This is kind of the problem,” he continued. “A lot of the influential positions within GAISF are controlled by leaders of the combat sports. The vice president of GAISF is the general secretary of the Internation Muay Thai Federation. You’ve got Nenad Lalovic, who is the president of United World Wrestling, who has influence in GAISF. He’s an IOC (International Olympic Committee) executive member and holds some position within WADA as well. So in every direction that we turn we are coming up against these combat sports figures who have a lot of influence.”

With a straightforward path to GAISF membership and official sport status seemingly blocked, White and IMMAF tried to take a different, riskier route, but hit a brick wall once again.

“GAISF has introduced something called ‘observation status’ which is kind of a vetting process for sports that don’t quite meet the criteria to become full members,” White explained. “It’s kind of a holding position which you’re allowed to be in for 12 months and, at their discretion, they can renew for a further 12 months. But if you’re still not ready after that period of time you’re out of the process altogether.

“So, although we felt we met all the criteria to be a full member, we decided to apply for observation status. Even if there was any doubt that we’d achieved all the criteria, we should easily receive observation status. But even that was rejected without reason. So we pushed for explanations for why, and they came back with the same ‘rivalry’ reasons, and they even talked about our commercial relationships – and obviously, they’re talking about our relationship with the UFC, which they don’t like, either.”

IMMAF then reapplied immediately and this time GAISF replied to say that they had given the other member combat sports the opportunity to formally protest IMMAF’s potential membership. Despite no formal protests being lodged in the years prior, in January 2020, IMMAF was informed that other combat sports had protested, and this time a different term was used to justify the denial of IMMAF’s application.

“They dropped the word ‘rivalry’. Now they’ve started talking about ‘compatibility’, whatever the hell that means,” said White. “So we asked them to define what they meant by ‘compatibility’. What are you talking about? Are you making a value judgment about the sport of MMA? Because if you are, you need to look at some of the other sports you’ve already recognized, like muay Thai; and combat sambo, that allows kicks to the groin and head butts. And in their kids’ event, they allow head shots, which we do not. So we set our stall out very rigorously and vigorously. Then the coronavirus happened and everything just stopped. There’s been hardly any communication at all with them and we’re just waiting to see when the decision is going to be made. But it’s looking very unlikely that anything’s going to happen until the back end of this year.”

IMMAF Amateur World Championships

Going public

With the bureaucratic process seemingly at a standstill during the pandemic, White and IMMAF have moved to keep public their push for official sport status. They launched a campaign, titled “#mmaisasport”, that includes an online petition that has already received more than 14,000 signatures.

“We want to highlight our situation and the unfairness and the lack of transparency that’s going on within these umbrella organizations, and if we can bring this to the attention to the IOC even, because GAISF are acting as the gatekeeper,” White explained. “I think that’s how they see their job, to act as gatekeeper, and to keep us as far away as possible from the IOC. We’d like to raise this problem at the IOC level.

“The petition is just to put pressure on and to highlight the unfairness and unequal treatment that MMA is receiving. It’s not transparent, these people are not accountable. It’s supposed to be a democratic organization – the members of GAISF are supposed to decide who can become a full member or not. But you’ve got a couple of individuals who are very powerful within that movement, which are the combat sports, actually acting as gatekeepers within the gatekeeping organization. It’s another wall of defense, and they’re obviously very afraid of the growth of MMA, the power of MMA, because we’re moving very quickly. A lot has happened in five years. We’ve come from virtually nothing to a federation with over 100 members.”

White also revealed that GAISF’s persistent opposition and ever-changing criteria for acceptance have led him and IMMAF to investigate other avenues of progress, which may involve bypassing GAISF altogether and dealing directly with the IOC themselves.

“I’ve been having some interesting conversations this week and the intel has been saying, yes, there is a way, and other sports have managed to bypass GAISF and be recognized by the IOC,” he said. “So we’re exploring that and working out how that might be possible. We’d prefer to go through the front door, but if that’s not possible then we’ll look at the other options.”

In the meantime, White said he hopes fans of the sport will rally behind their cause as they look to help the sport get officially recognized, which in turn will help the push to legalize MMA across the globe and, eventually, see the sport gain Olympic recognition in the years ahead.

“They’ve got to be vocal,” he said. “They’ve got to sign the petition. We’re over 10,000 now, but we want to get it up to 100,000. I think it’ll be very difficult for anybody to ignore a petition with 100,000 signatures to it. I think that would be very powerful.”