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Freak Out
05-22-2007, 11:41 AM
May 22, 2007
Mixed Martial Arts
No Helmet, No Pads, No Escape
By LEE JENKINS

LAKE FOREST, Calif., May 16 — When Johnnie Morton finished playing wide receiver in the National Football League, he carefully reviewed his retirement options: be host of a talk show, expand his real estate profile, maybe work on his golf game.

After much consideration, Morton decided that it would be best to spend his free time being body slammed into a chain-link fence by two men named Joker and Gun.

“Crazy, huh?” Joker said.

Joker’s real name is Mike Guymon. Gun’s real name is Tony Bonello. Together, they are teaching Morton how to compete in mixed martial arts, one of the few sports that may be more violent and more dangerous than professional football.

“I’ve gotten hit a lot in my life,” said Morton, who spent 12 seasons going over the middle against N.F.L. safeties. “But I’ve never gotten hit like this.”

Morton will walk into a ring for the first time June 2 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, beginning his second career. He expects to ask himself the same question that friends, family members and former teammates have been asking him for months: What in the world are you thinking?

Mixed martial arts combines wrestling, boxing and kick boxing with jujitsu, tae kwon do and Muay Thai. Punches to the head and knees to the gut are encouraged. Even the most accomplished fighters get their faces rearranged into cubist paintings.

Two months ago, Morton’s only experience with mixed martial arts was watching the Ultimate Fighting Championship on television. He admired the fighters, mainly because they were the only athletes who seemed more fearless than football players. Morton memorized their names as if they were N.F.L. superstars.

“Some people want to bungee jump,” Morton said. “Others want to jump out of planes. I would never do that. But I want to do this.”

Morton, 35, does not have to fight for a living. He went to the University of Southern California, had a cameo playing himself in the movie “Jerry Maguire,” and was named one of People magazine’s most eligible bachelors. He is rich, handsome, and almost as marketable as Tiki Barber, the former Giants running back who is now a news correspondent for NBC’s “Today” show.

Morton, meanwhile, goes to work at a gym in an Orange County office park. The gym — Joker’s Wild Fighting Academy — includes a ring with a chain-link fence. Japanese and American flags hang from the ceiling, reminding Morton of his mixed heritage.

In Detroit, where Morton spent eight seasons, he was the kind of player who did not get tired even during two-a-days. He can bench press 400 pounds. His body fat is less than 5 percent. But during a sparring session Wednesday, he could not summon the energy to get off his hands and knees. Joker and Gun had to drag him to his feet.

“Let me die in peace,” Morton moaned.

Then he remembered that he was a former professional football player, that his girlfriend was watching, and that Joker and Gun do not believe in peace.

Morton charged at his sparring partner, battering him with a combination of punches and dropping him to the mat with a sweep of his leg. Morton used one hand to grab the man’s neck and the other to pound the side of his face.

If Morton were in the N.F.L., he would have drawn a 15-yard penalty, an automatic ejection, a fine and a possible suspension. But here, he prompted Joker and Gun to do their version of a touchdown dance.

“Look at this guy,” Gun said. “He’s beautiful. He has tons of money. He has an incredibly happy lifestyle. And he’s putting his brain on the line. He’s putting his manhood on the line. It’s hard to say what would make him do it.”

Morton is not the first N.F.L. player to enter the ring, only the most celebrated. Michael Westbrook, a former receiver for the Washington Redskins, won a fight two years ago over Jarrod Bunch, a former running back for the Giants. Bob Sapp, a washout as a N.F.L. lineman, became a formidable competitor in mixed martial arts.

One afternoon last winter, Morton was eating lunch at the Health Emporium when a man named Joey Sakoda approached him. Sakoda first asked Morton if he wanted to go to a mixed martial arts fight. Then Sakoda asked Morton if he wanted to participate.

Sakoda works for Superagent Athletes, a Japanese agency that represents Joker and Gun, both title holders. Sakoda acted quickly, placing Morton on the Dynamite!! U.S.A. fight card, which includes a mixed martial arts star (Royce Gracie) as well as a novelty act (Hong Man Choi, a 7-foot-2 South Korean.)

Morton was afraid to tell his parents. His mother, Katsuko, is Japanese-American. His father, Johnnie Sr., is African-American. Johnnie Sr. was once shot eight times while in his car. Katsuko and Johnnie Sr. did not want their son taking any more risks with his body.

Morton is getting no tuneups. He is fighting in less than two weeks, on Showtime pay-per-view, in the same stadium where he played college football. He will be paid about as much money as he used to earn for a single N.F.L. game.

One of the broadcasters will be Jay Glazer, who has a unique perspective on the bout. Glazer is best known as an N.F.L. analyst, but he also competes in mixed martial arts. When he visits N.F.L. training camps in the summer, players ask him more about fighting than about football.

“Football players are looked at as the biggest and baddest guys on the planet,” Glazer said. “People see them as superheroes. But football players also need someone to look up to. They view mixed martial arts as something even they are unwilling or unable to do. All the guys love Johnnie. But they think he’s nuts.”

N.F.L. players may not want to get into the ring, but they are willing to get in a gym. For years, many players have used boxing as part of their off-season workout regimen. Recently, they have started to turn to mixed martial arts.

According to Glazer, Philadelphia’s Brian Dawkins and Jacksonville’s Donovin Darius have trained at a mixed martial arts gym. So has Barber. This winter, Kansas City’s Jared Allen worked out at Arizona Combat Sports in Tempe.

“Football used to be our only real gladiator sport,” said Trevor Lally, the owner of Arizona Combat Sports gym. “Now, players have M.M.A. to give them a taste of that one-on-one combat. The combat is what they love.”

Morton was never a fighter. Like many receivers, he would try to hit linebackers when they were looking the other way. But Morton said there was only one person in the N.F.L. he would really like to see in the ring — Matt Millen, the Lions’ president. Millen directed a homosexual epithet at Morton after a game between Detroit and Kansas City in 2003, when Morton was playing for the Chiefs.

Morton is not ready to give up football just yet. He was released by the San Francisco 49ers two years ago but said that his agent was talking to a couple of teams. Ideally, he would fight in June and go to a training camp in July.

Morton is trying to shift back and forth, from the mainstream of sports to the fringes, from Tom Brady and Peyton Manning to Joker and Gun. When Morton finished his workout Wednesday, Joker shouted out one more piece of advice, for the road home and the road to retirement.

“Drive fast,” he said. “Take chances.”

KYPack
05-22-2007, 02:43 PM
Morton is too old for the octagon.

He'll be as sucessful at MMA as Michael Jordan was at pro baseball. Or Mark Gastineau was at boxing. There is so much training these guys have missed, there is now way they can catch up at age 35 +.

Maybe all ex-Lions are as dumb as the Lions?

Freak Out
05-22-2007, 04:24 PM
Morton is too old for the octagon.

He'll be as sucessful at MMA as Michael Jordan was at pro baseball. Or Mark Gastineau was at boxing. There is so much training these guys have missed, there is now way they can catch up at age 35 +.

Maybe all ex-Lions are as dumb as the Lions?

My first thought was "He's a dead man"...but you never know until they step in there.

Charles Woodson
06-04-2007, 10:09 AM
Little update

Morton KO'd in MMA debut; suspended after refusing to provide urine sample

ESPN.com news services

Updated: June 3, 2007, 3:13 PM ET

Johnnie Morton's transition from the NFL to Mixed Martial Arts didn't go as planned for the former wide receiver.

Johnnie Morton

Morton

Morton, 35, was knocked out just 38 seconds into the first round of his match against Bernard Ackah on Saturday night and then was suspended by the California State Athletic Commission after refusing to supply a urine sample for drug testing.

Morton wasn't available to comment on the fight or the suspension, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Morton was fighting on a K-1/Elite XC Dynamite!! USA card at the L.A. Memorial Coliseum. He was put in a neck splint and taken to California Hospital in Los Angeles for observation but was able to flash a victory sign to the crowd before leaving the ring on a stretcher.

"How many people who would do what he did, stepping into the NFL of MMA and putting it all on the line," Morton's trainer, Mike Guymon told the Times.

Morton only trained for two months for his MMA debut, but Guymon said Morton was ready for the fight.

"When you want to jump into something, you jump into something," Guymon told the Times. "I've been fighting for 10 years and I still don't feel like I'm prepared."

Ackah, however, doesn't think Morton's ready for the big time yet.

"He needs more experience," he told the Times.

Morton had four 1,000-yard receiving seasons in his 12-year career with the Lions, Chiefs and 49ers. He retired from the NFL after the 2005 season.

lod01
06-04-2007, 03:01 PM
Ouch.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SV1ZS7ebw14

KYPack
06-04-2007, 04:04 PM
Morton is too old for the octagon.

He'll be as sucessful at MMA as Michael Jordan was at pro baseball. Or Mark Gastineau was at boxing. There is so much training these guys have missed, there is now way they can catch up at age 35 +.

Maybe all ex-Lions are as dumb as the Lions?

My first thought was "He's a dead man"...but you never know until they step in there.

I "knew".

Actually, I was surprised he didn't win, like, 10 matches.

MMA matches are worked in situations like this a lot. they put a name in against absolute stiffs to build his credibility. Once they feel the ex-star can draw money, they give him a real match. And our boy retires immediately, after the brutal thumping he gets.

Evidently, they wanted to let Morton down easy. Let him get a real ass kicking right from the jump.

He's probably better off.

Deputy Nutz
06-04-2007, 04:20 PM
This was an absolute joke. His trainers should have been ashamed of themselves putting a guy in the ring with only 2 months of training. From what I gather, he had no combat type experience to mention, he was not a wrestler or boxer before he started his football career. e was a football player and that was it.

Herbert "Whisper" Goodman a former Packer is now training in MMA, hopefully his career goes better than Jonnie Morton's.

KYPack
06-05-2007, 03:59 PM
This was an absolute joke. His trainers should have been ashamed of themselves putting a guy in the ring with only 2 months of training. From what I gather, he had no combat type experience to mention, he was not a wrestler or boxer before he started his football career. e was a football player and that was it.

Herbert "Whisper" Goodman a former Packer is now training in MMA, hopefully his career goes better than Jonnie Morton's.

Yer right, Nutz.

This Morton's trainer, Mike Guymon better get serious if he wants to stay in big league MMA. Training a goof like Morton and tossing him in the ring after two months of training?

That's a serious black eye for any trainer.

Plus think of the other fighters. They've been scuffling around in unheated sheds for gyms, struggling to get enough money to eat and survive. Then, a fool like Morton fights one of 'em? After only two onths of training, trying to leapfrog the system?

Morton is lucky he's alive.

Freak Out
06-05-2007, 05:20 PM
Ouch.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SV1ZS7ebw14

Damn CBS anyway. They took it down before I had a chance to see it.

Freak Out
06-05-2007, 05:30 PM
I found another a had a look....you have to admit he went right at it but left himself wide open for a counter and got his clock cleaned. I you are going to stand there and punch you had better know how to fight and block a few. Who and the hell did his trainers have him sparring with? Lol...