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kmr
04-05-2011, 20:13
BARRIE—When Gary (Big Daddy) Goodridge strides into his living room, the hands that once delivered punches now cradle pill bottles.

Fifteen years ago, Goodridge won his Ultimate Fighting Championship debut by knocking his opponent cold with one elbow strike. The other seven were pure adrenaline.

That fight made the Barrie resident a cult hero in a fringe sport — a 260-pound bruiser who mixed martial arts promoters knew would face any fighter anywhere, as long as the cheque cleared.

Five months into his retirement, Goodridge’s massive fists and bulging biceps suggest he can still inflict serious damage, but he grapples with the lifelong effects of countless headshots and concussions.

To navigate life after fighting, the 45-year-old depends on medication.

Levoxyl for his thyroid.

Cipralex for depression.

Aricept for memory.

Still quick with a joke, Goodridge can recall his fights in painstaking detail. But he sometimes stumbles over words, and often repeats himself because he simply forgets what he’s just said.

His drug regimen is suited to an Alzheimer’s patient, and that’s no accident. After 85 combined kickboxing and MMA bouts, many of them poorly regulated, Goodridge at times feels much older than 45.

“My brain,” he says, “doesn’t remember much these days.”

Saturday night, a record 55,000 spectators will pack the Rogers Centre for UFC 129, further evidence that MMA is now mainstream. But beyond the UFC’s glitz lies the unglamorous reality that hounds other contact sports —repeated headshots cause irreversible brain damage.

Mixed martial artists aren’t immune, and as the sport’s first generation of stars hits middle age the issue becomes even more acute. A recent study by the National Athletic Trainers Association found MMA fighters suffer concussions at more than twice the rate of hockey players.

UFC Canada president Tom Wright says later this year the UFC will enter into a three-year Cleveland Clinic study that will track brain trauma in boxers and MMA fighters.

“We don’t know what the answers are going to be . . . but it’s important to establish some empirical data,” he said. “That’s why we’re working with commissions and with physicians to make the sports as safe as possible.”

Goodridge’s case is extreme.

With its focus on high-impact head shots, kickboxing is considered more dangerous than MMA and few fighters shuttle between the two sports as long as Goodridge did. But he’s not unique. He’s just the latest in a growing list of retired contact sport athletes with degenerative brain conditions.

While an autopsy on hockey enforcer Bob Probert showed he suffered from brain damage, Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks Jim McMahon and Terry Bradshaw have each spoken out recently about the concussions that caused the memory loss that haunts them in retirement.

When former Eagles safety Andre Waters committed suicide in 2006, a post-mortem showed the 44-year-old had the brain of a man more than 40 years older, thanks to concussions suffered during his 12-year NFL career.

In Feburary, former Chicago Bear Dave Duerson killed himself after a retirement marred by depression and eroding motor skills — two symptoms of dementia. His suicide note included a plea to preserve and examine his brain for signs of damage.

Because the sport is so new, MMA doesn’t yet have a roll call of brain-damaged retirees, but brain trauma remains an issue.

Hamilton welterweight Jeff Joslin retired in 2007 after suffering a severe concussion while training for a UFC bout, while a string of crushing knockouts forced light-heavyweight legend Chuck Liddell into retirement last year.

“You can’t eliminate risk,” Wright says, “but there are things we’re doing to manage that risk.”

Any fighter knocked out Saturday night will be hospitalized overnight and forced to sit out for up to 90 days by both the UFC and the province.

The low-voltage shows where Goodridge slugged out the final years of his career lacked such safeguards. Goodridge fought until last December because he needed the cash and because small-time promoters needed a big name, even if it meant ignoring glaring signs of cognitive decline. Friends say his speech, memory and co-ordination have deteriorated steadily since at least 2006. Twice weekly, Goodridge attends Brain Injury Services in Barrie, where staff administer tests and memory drills meant to preserve cognitive function as his brain atrophies.

Yet earlier this month his former manager, Steve Rusich, opened an email from an Edmonton promoter with commission approval to host an MMA card with shockingly loose rules, permitting kicks to the head of downed fighters. He wanted to know if Goodridge, who hadn’t won in four years, was available to fight.

“I don’t think they understand the damage there is,” Rusich says. “I don’t know that they would care anyway, but I don’t think they know.”

Goodridge’s Barrie home office doubles as his trophy room, the walls surrounding his computer covered with mementos — T-shirts emblazoned with his image, framed articles from the local newspaper, a pair of boxing gloves signed by Muhammad Ali. They’re symbols of the fame Goodridge gained in a sport he found by accident.

In 1996, Goodridge worked at the Honda factory in Alliston, a world champion arm wrestler who had dabbled in amateur boxing. That winter, he watched a grainy videotape of UFC 3 with some friends, who quickly began pushing Goodridge to try the nearly no-holds-barred form of fighting. Within two weeks, they had located the UFC matchmaker, and a quick conversation earned Goodridge a berth at UFC 8 in Puerto Rico.

Then he realized he would have to back up his bragging.

“I wanted to hide,” Goodridge says. “What the hell was I doing? I didn’t know. I was just talking big because in my mind I didn’t think it would go anywhere.”

Goodridge had no formal martial arts training, but it didn’t matter. He faced a wrestler named Paul Herrera and starched him with those eight quick elbow strikes. The bout remains part of UFC folklore and a lingering regret for renowned referee John McCarthy.

“That’s one fight,” McCarthy says, “I wish I had stopped sooner.”

Goodridge’s career as a full-contact fighter started that night, and after six more UFC bouts he jetted to Japan, where MMA and kickboxing were already filling stadiums. He was learning on the job, but had freakish power and a never-surrender style. While Goodridge didn’t always win, he always entertained.

“He wouldn’t quit, and that’s why the Japanese loved him so much,” says Susie Goodridge, Gary’s younger sister and long-time strength coach. “He wasn’t the best fighter out there, but they loved him because of his heart.”

In Japan, Goodridge delivered devastating knockouts and received some, too.

Like the time in 1997 when he flattened Oleg Taktarov; Goodridge’s right fist arcs like an axe blade toward the Russian grappler’s face before it cracks his chin. Taktarov falls face-first at Goodridge’s feet, unconscious.

Three years later, Goodridge faces Dutch kickboxing ace Gilbert Yvel, and catches a kick on the side of his skull. The blow rattles Goodridge to his teeth, several of which spill out of his mouth as he crumples to the canvas, unconscious.

“That was definitely a concussion. It was the first knockout I ever had in my life,” Goodridge says. “I had a few after that.”

Did that knockout jump-start the degeneration of Goodridge’s brain? It’s tough to tell. Early on the damage can accrue slowly, like interest on a savings account.

UCLA neuropsychologist Dr. Tony Strickland explains that each headshot causes the brain to bounce off the skull’s inner walls, which in turn prompts a disruption in blood flow that jolts the brain’s chemical environment out of equilibrium. Calcium rushes in while brain cells run critically low on glucose, the energy source they need to function properly.

Most times the brain snaps to normal within seconds. But after a heavy blow that imbalance can persist, depriving the brain of the blood and glucose it needs for hours or more. That’s a concussion, with effects — like headaches, fatigue and nausea — that you might feel for days, weeks or months.

Whether or not they cause concussions, repeated headshots diminish an athlete’s ability to recover from head trauma.

In aging fighters, the damage compounds like the interest on a payday loan. As headshots ravage the brain’s delicate circuitry, speech, memory and co-ordination deteriorate quickly.

“People talk about the brain as if it’s a homogenous, undifferentiated mass,” says Strickland, director of the Sports Concussion Institute in Los Angeles. “(It’s more complex) and it will greatly accelerate the decline if you already have the decline (and keep fighting).”

Goodridge’s upcoming biography, Gatekeeper, discusses his brain damage in detail. The author, Mark Dorsey, hasn’t seen photos of Goodridge’s brain, and isn’t sure he wants to.

“It’s one of those silent killers and the evidence builds up slowly,” he says. “But I guarantee that if you look at his brain it’s got major dark spots and looks like an Alzheimer’s patient.”

In Ontario, a fighter in that condition would likely flunk a pre-fight medical exam. In mid-April, the UFC had to scramble to find an opponent for Toronto’s Sean Pierson when a pre-fight MRI revealed a brain hemorrhage in his original UFC 129 opponent, Brian Foster.

But Goodridge spent his late career on the sport’s poorly regulated periphery. In 2008, he lost a sloppy fight on a Six Nations reserve, and his final bout took place in a dingy Bulgarian arena. His sister Susie says those small-time fights often didn’t require a blood test, let alone a brain scan.

After those fights Susie would ask Goodridge questions to test his memory. Then she would cry.

“As much as I enjoyed myself, I’m glad I don’t have to do it anymore,” she says. “I felt anxiety. It’s very hard to watch somebody you love keep getting kicked in the head.”

Though Goodridge moves more slowly than before, he’s far from feeble.

His name still resonates, and he opened a second Facebook profile because he had exceeded the site’s limit of 5,000 friends.

After two failed attempts to open a gym in Barrie, Goodridge recently founded the Big Daddy Fight team, with an eye on opening another fitness centre. But his increasingly garbled speech means color commentary, once his most likely calling, isn’t an option.

Nevertheless, Goodridge says he doesn’t regret the high cost of fighting so long.

“Why retire?” he says. “To hang on to a couple of extra brain cells? All the old people die and all the young people live. We’re just getting ready for the bone yard.”

Scattered on the seat cushion next to Goodridge are the pills he’ll need until then.

Levoxyl for his thyroid.

Cipralex for depression.

Aricept for memory.

The high cost of living dangerously - thestar.com
(http://www.thestar.com/sports/mma/ufc/article/983272--the-high-cost-of-living-dangerously)

Sadix
04-05-2011, 21:26
damn ik begon te lezen en lezen en lezen en dacht toen, hoe lang is dit stuk wel niet?

en ben toen toch maar gestopt..

Lullig voor goodridge, had hem meer en beter gegunt.

Mauro
04-05-2011, 21:43
zit net door een ander topic een jonge Goodridge onze Lloyd van Dams verslaan, volgens mij shockwave/pride 2002.
Klote dat ie zo naar zn eind gaat....

MaartenManaus
04-05-2011, 22:31
ja triest ,... en er zullen er nog velen volgen helaas

micha
04-05-2011, 22:39
ik ken hem persoonlijk. In 2001 heb ik hem voor het eerst ontmoet een echte knokker. Hij won toen van Bob Schreiber vreemd genoeg vertelde hij tegen iedereen dat hij een muay Thai achtergrond had. terwijl ik hem van de UFC kende in een kungfu pak. Het is een aardige sympathieke man die altijd komt om te vechten en jarenlang het publiek heeft getrakteerd op spectaculaire partijen.

Briant
04-05-2011, 23:45
ik ken hem persoonlijk. In 2001 heb ik hem voor het eerst ontmoet een echte knokker. Hij won toen van Bob Schreiber vreemd genoeg vertelde hij tegen iedereen dat hij een muay Thai achtergrond had. terwijl ik hem van de UFC kende in een kungfu pak. Het is een aardige sympathieke man die altijd komt om te vechten en jarenlang het publiek heeft getrakteerd op spectaculaire partijen.

Voor zn UFC gevecht had hij betaalt gekregen om Kook sul won of zo te vertegenwoordigen (een koreaanse sport)

Pahlavan
04-05-2011, 23:49
vind het erg triest voor hem dat dit de gevolgen zijn...
had hem toch een betere leven gegund na jaren lang vechten

marcelt
04-05-2011, 23:57
Wat een triest nieuws. Verbaasd me aan de andere kant ook niet erg.

Briant
05-05-2011, 00:06
Dr was een tijd dat Goodridge echt een force to be reckoned was, maar de laatste tijd is hij alleen maar als human punching bag uitgenodigd. Hij heeft zijn kaarten niet goed gespeeld, dan was dit niet nodig geweest.

wrestler_nl
05-05-2011, 02:19
Gary Goodridge en de dodelijke elbows

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsCbhlccP6E&feature=related

fightlove
05-05-2011, 09:55
Beetje stil van dit stuk.Vechters verdienen meer dan deze bak ellende.

D1987
05-05-2011, 11:01
kan iemand het even samenvatten?

Bromios
05-05-2011, 12:29
Big daddy is bringing home the bacon !!

Samenvatting:
Big daddy heeft teveel klappen op zijn hoofd gehad en heeft nu pillen nodig om op de been te blijven en zijn hersens niet verder te laten degeneren.

Kort genoeg ? :)

Lionheart
05-05-2011, 12:38
Dr was een tijd dat Goodridge echt een force to be reckoned was, maar de laatste tijd is hij alleen maar als human punching bag uitgenodigd. Hij heeft zijn kaarten niet goed gespeeld, dan was dit niet nodig geweest.

x2

Biiyen
05-05-2011, 12:48
Zeer jammerlijk maar het verbaasd me niet bij Big Daddy... Ik heb die man jarenlang de meest gruwelijke pakken slaag zien krijgen. Beelden dat hij na de zoveelste zware dreun gewoon als een zoutzak voorover kiept en KO ligt. Denk dat er genoeg hier zijn die hem nog helemaal groggy zien staan met zijn bitje gevuld met voortanden na een kick van Aerts in zijn gezicht.

dirk5
05-05-2011, 13:28
Erg voor Gary maar natuurlijk zijn eigen verantwoordelijkheid, en voor mij in ieder geval geen verassing.....

Gelukkig heeft ie wel zijn geld van k-1 gekregen ;)

Bromios
05-05-2011, 13:35
Er zijn van die figuren die het wel stoer vinden om te laten zien hoeveel ze kunnen incasseren (teveel rocky gekeken denk ik).
En dat breekt je dan op na verloop van tijd.

Zo zijn er wel meer waarvan je weet dat je geen wetenschappelijk betoog meer krijgt na hun carriere...

redjuh
05-05-2011, 13:58
tja... in je hoofd zitten hersenen. hersenen schijnen de shit wel zo'n beetje te regelen...

wrestler_nl
05-05-2011, 14:51
Damn ik lees net op wikipedia dat hij 25 x KO is geslagen in z'n MMA & K1 Carriere!!!

amilster
05-05-2011, 17:11
ik vind het zeer spijtig om dit over gary te lezen, heb wat interviews met de beste man gezien en het is echt een sympatieke gast met zijn hart op de juiste plek, heeft ook altijd voor spektakel in de ring gezorgd maar zoals al eerder gezegt de laate tijd vaker als punching bag dan als waardige tegenstander geboekt.


hoop dattie niet veel verder meer gaat afzakken geestelijk

Anton09
06-05-2011, 00:28
Triest verhaal..
Natuurlijk bestaat er zoiets als eigen verantwoordelijkheid, maar je kan het toch vooral ook organisaties als K1 en UFC kwalijk nemen dat ze hem keer op keer de ring insturen terwijl hij ko na ko incasseert. Dan kun je zeggen dat hij met zijn volle verstand de ring instapt (voorzover je daarover na 25 ko's nog kan spreken), maar je moet mensen ook tegen zichzelf beschermen.

wrestler_nl
06-05-2011, 02:26
Triest verhaal..
Natuurlijk bestaat er zoiets als eigen verantwoordelijkheid, maar je kan het toch vooral ook organisaties als K1 en UFC kwalijk nemen dat ze hem keer op keer de ring insturen terwijl hij ko na ko incasseert. Dan kun je zeggen dat hij met zijn volle verstand de ring instapt (voorzover je daarover na 25 ko's nog kan spreken), maar je moet mensen ook tegen zichzelf beschermen.

De laatste x dat hij voor de UFC vocht was in 1996 en voor de K1 2007 dus daar zal het niet aan liggen denk ik.