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Weight-Cutting Implications for Competition Outcomes in Mixed Martial Arts Cage Fighting

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 07:14 authored by Grant Brechney, Eevon Chia, Ashleigh Moreland
Weight cutting is common among amateur and professional mixed martial arts (MMA) competitors because of the belief that it provides an advantage in combat sports. This study aimed to identify whether fight outcome (win vs. loss vs. type of loss) was influenced by magnitudes of body mass (BM) lost through weight cutting and BM regained before the fight after official weigh-in in amateur and professional MMA athletes with previous weight-cutting experience. Body mass data were collected using self-report from 75 MMA athletes (59 amateur and 16 professional) before commencing weight-cutting practices 7 days before weigh-in, by the regulating body at their official weigh-in 24 hours before the fight and through direct measurement immediately before competition. Data were analyzed according to win; loss by technical knockout or knockout (KO); loss by submission; or loss by the judge’s decision. Athletes who lost their fight cut significantly more BM (10.6%) compared with athletes who won (8.6%) (p 5 0.04, d 5 0.48, 95% confidence interval [CI] 5 0.02–0.93), but there were no differences between types of loss. There were no significant differences in recoveredBMbetween athletes who won (6.8%) vs. lost (7.4%), or type of loss. Furthermore, there was a significant relationship between greater magnitudes of BM cut and greater likelihood of losing the fight (B 5 20.12, P 5 0.048), odd ratio 0.89 (95% CI: 0.79–1.00). This study provides the first line of evidence that excessive weight cutting may be detrimental to fight outcome in MMA.

History

Journal

The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research

Volume

35

Issue

12

Start page

3420

End page

3424

Total pages

5

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2019 National Strength and Conditioning Association

Former Identifier

2006095074

Esploro creation date

2022-01-21

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