MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn reacts to Ben Askren retirement news
MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn reacts to Ben Askren retirement news
MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn reacts to Ben Askren retirement news
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn reacts to Ben Askren retirement news
MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn reacts to Ben Askren retirement news
After a lengthy MMA career and titles for Bellator and ONE Championship, UFC welterweight Ben Askren has announced his retirement.
[autotag]Ben Askren[/autotag] has announced his retirement.
After more than 10 years and 21 professional fights, Askren (19-2 MMA) is calling it quits. The former NCAA Division-I wrestler and Olympian made the announcement on “Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show” on ESPN on Monday.
“I’m retiring from the sport of mixed martial arts,” Askren said. “I am retired from everything. I was thinking about it when we had last talked. Obviously, it’s been something I’ve been considering.”
The main factor in his decision, he said, was his health. The 35-year-old welterweight said he has been dealing with significant hip issues for the past few fights. Facing a hip replacement due to limited mobility, Askren decided now is the time.
“I’ve been having hip problems, and I finally had the discussion with my doctor,” Askren said. “I actually got the MRI before my last fight, and I need a hip replacement. Man, that’s it for me. I’ve been thinking about this for a week and what I was going to say. I’ve been filled with gratitude for how great of a career I’ve been able to have, even though obviously in the end, it did not turn out to go my way.”
Coming to grips with a bittersweet decision, Askren took a moment to reflect on all he’s accomplished in wrestling, combat sports and beyond. Overall, Askren said he’s been part of an amazing journey.
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“I got really emotional the other day because I just started thinking about all the great experiences I’ve had,” Askren said. “Man, how lucky I’ve been to have the amount of success that I’ve had. From everywhere, right? From high school state titles, to junior national titles … to everything I did in college, whether it was national titles, the Hodge trophy, to the Olympic team, to a Bellator title, to a ONE title to – even this UFC thing.
“Man, I’m grateful that I had an opportunity to see if I could do it. If I never got that opportunity, that would have eaten at me as I got older.”
While he has no regrets about joining the UFC, Askren has mixed feelings on what he was able to accomplish once he signed with the organization. Askren finished with a 1-2 UFC record. His retirement comes on the heels of his first two professional losses.
“Just because I wasn’t good enough in 2019 doesn’t take away from any of my previous things that I’ve accomplished,” Askren said. “… Listen, I’ve achieved just about everything you can in the sport. But when it came to achieving the two biggest things in the world, the Olympic gold medal and then proving you’re the best fighter in the world, I came up a little bit short.
“Is it hard? Sure. Have I learned great lessons from that that I’m going to apply to the rest of my life? Yes, I am. So a little bit of it sucks, but man, what a life.”
After a successful high school and collegiate wrestling career, Askren competed in the 2008 Olympics. In 2009, Askren competed in his first professional MMA fight. After three wins in his first three fights, Askren was signed by Bellator.
At Bellator 22 in 2010, Askren won the welterweight tournament and was granted a title shot against Lyman Good. At Bellator 33, Askren beat Good to earn the 170-pound title, which he defended four times.
In May 2014, Askren left Bellator and joined ONE Championship. In his second fight under the promotion’s banner, Askren defeated Nobutatsu Suzuki to earn the promotion’s welterweight title. He fought five more times for ONE, going 4-0 with one no contest from 2015-2017.
In early 2019, Askren was traded to the UFC for former UFC flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson – an unprecedented occurrence amongst major MMA promotions.
At UFC 235 in March, Askren made his long-awaited promotional debut against Robbie Lawler. After absorbing a tremendous beating from Lawler in the opening minutes, Askren rallied to pull off a controversial submission victory in the first round.
Askren’s return to the cage a few months later was short-lived. He was on the receiving end of the quickest knockout in UFC history at UFC 239 in July. Taking on rival Jorge Masvidal, Asken was hit with a flying knee off the opening bell and knocked out cold just five seconds into the fight.
In what turned out to be the final fight of his MMA career, Askren returned to headline UFC on ESPN+ 20 in Singapore in late October. Taking on Demian Maia, Askren was submitted late in the third round. The fight earned the duo “Fight of the Night” honors.
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ONE Championship’s VP isn’t concerned about wins and losses in the cage when assessing the trade with the UFC one year later.
The MMA world was taken by surprise last year when former UFC flyweight champion [autotag]Demetrious Johnson[/autotag] was “traded” to ONE Championship for former ONE welterweight titleholder [autotag]Ben Askren[/autotag].
And just over a year later, many have questioned the UFC for giving up one of the greatest mixed martial artists of all time for Askren, who’s had a rough start to his UFC tenure.
Since joining the UFC, Askren (19-2 MMA, 1-2 UFC) picked up a controversial submission win over Robbie Lawler in March, and then was brutally knocked out by Jorge Masvidal in record time at UFC 239, suffering his first career loss as a pro. He then faced Demian Maia in a battle between two of the sport’s best grapplers. Askren lost that fight via fourth round submission last month, suffering his second straight loss.
Johnson (30-3), on the other hand, picked up three wins since departing from the UFC, en route to winning the ONE Championship flyweight grand prix.
But former UFC middleweight champion and current ONE vice president [autotag]Rich Franklin[/autotag] says despite how things have transpired for both fighters, he still views the trade as a win-win situation.
“It was a pretty straight forward trade from the business side,” Franklin told MMA Junkie. “Just kind of flip-flopped from one organization to the next, and so nothing tricky about it. And I’ll say this: Askren goes to the UFC, he’s competing against some of the top level guys obviously with Masvidal and what not, and then DJ comes over to ONE Championship and is competing against some of the top guys. People will make a comment like that based on athlete’s performance, but the reality, what you have to ask yourself: What kind of return on investment did the organization get on the trade?”
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For Johnson, who was never a big UFC pay-per-view draw, he wasn’t given his due for his record number of title defenses and running through the flyweight division. Askren, who came out of retirement, never got a chance to show his true personality, which shined since he joined the UFC, making him one of its biggest stars.
That’s why Franklin sees the trade as beneficial for both parties, regardless of whether they’re winning or losing fights.
“DJ, for us, who maybe didn’t get the respect that he deserved in another organization, is going to do really well over here in ONE Championship,” Franklin said. “There are many fans on this side of the planet that gravitate towards the smaller athletes, and he puts on exciting matches. There’s no doubt about that, so for us, regardless if he’s winning or losing, that’s not as important as he’s a big draw. And likewise for Ben Askren moving to the UFC. Regardless of whether he’s winning or losing, he’s a big draw because people are going to be curious.”
“Even though he lost his last match to Demian Maia, when they find him for another match, people are still going to be interested in seeing how he performs,” Franklin added. “To see if, ‘Oh, maybe he had a rough start out of the gates or whatever,’ so they’re still getting a return on investment in that respect, and I think it was probably smart for both organizations because the UFC wasn’t getting a return on investment in Demetrious.”
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