Official Olympic Version of Mixed Combat Sports (MCS)
Certainly. We now design the most important stage:
The Official Olympic Version of Mixed Combat Sports (MCS)
A discipline that preserves the excitement of real combat competition while remaining acceptable to the International Olympic Committee (IOC).
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Primary Goal
To create a sport that is:
– Safe
– Professional
– Exciting
– Easy to judge
– Global
– Suitable for both women and men
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Official Name
Olympic Mixed Combat Sports (OMCS)
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Competition Structure
Match Duration
Preliminary Rounds:
– 3 rounds × 3 minutes
Semi-Finals and Finals:
– 3 rounds × 4 minutes
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Competition Area
Best Option:
A small octagonal arena with low padded walls
Why?
– Reduces exits from the contest area
– Improves control and continuity
– Safer than a professional cage
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Mandatory Equipment
For men and women:
– Standard light gloves
– Mouthguard
– Shin guards
– Groin protection
– Chest protection for women
– Official lightweight uniform
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Permitted Techniques
Standing Phase
– Punches
– Kicks to body and legs
– Limited head kicks (adult divisions only)
– Limited knees in clinch
Grappling Phase
– Takedowns
– Controlled throws
– Clinch fighting
Ground Phase
– Positional control
– Submissions
– Limited and controlled strikes
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Prohibited Techniques
For Olympic acceptance:
– Elbows to the head
– Strikes to the back of the head
– Strikes to the spine
– Kicks to a grounded opponent
– Knees to the head of a grounded opponent
– Dangerous neck cranks
– Finger twisting / manipulation
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Scoring System
10-Point Must System Per Round
Judging Criteria:
1. Effective striking
2. Control and dominance
3. Attempts to finish
4. Intelligent defense
5. Organized offensive spirit
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Methods of Victory
– Decision (points)
– Submission
– Technical knockout
– Referee stoppage
– Disqualification
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Weight Classes
Men
– 57 kg
– 65 kg
– 74 kg
– 84 kg
– 96 kg
– +96 kg
Women
– 52 kg
– 57 kg
– 63 kg
– 70 kg
– 78 kg
– +78 kg
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Mixed Team Division
Each country fields:
– 3 men
– 3 women
Combined results determine team ranking.
Why This Matters:
Highly attractive for IOC programming and audience engagement.
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Refereeing and VAR
Major Innovation:
Limited video review system for:
– Fouls
– End-of-round disputes
– Questionable knockdowns
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Medical and Safety Protocols
Mandatory:
– Ringside physician
– Annual medical screening
– Periodic brain health testing
– Suspension period after knockout
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Age Categories
Youth
– No strikes to the head
Junior
– Controlled contact
Adult
– Full Olympic ruleset
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Why the IOC Could Accept It
Because this version is:
– Safer than professional MMA
– More modern than some existing sports
– Attractive to younger audiences
– Equal for women and men
– Global and television-friendly
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Difference from UFC
UFC:
Commercial professional entertainment league
OMCS:
Standardized global amateur sport
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Official Slogans
Skill. Honor. Control.
or
One World, One Combat Sport.
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Final Conclusion
If such a version were created, Mixed Combat Sports would have the strongest historical chance of bringing hybrid combat competition into the Olympic Games.
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Professional Opinion
If implemented today, it could be more exciting and more organized than many current combat sports.
Complete Short Timeline of Martial Arts Evolution to MMA and UFC
Global Combat History Timeline
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3000 Years Ago to 500 BCE
Origins of Human Combat
– Traditional wrestling in ancient civilizations
– Military hand-to-hand combat
– Weapons training systems
Examples:
– Wrestling
– Martial systems of Egypt, Greece, Persia, India, and China
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500 BCE to 1500 CE
Rise of Traditional Martial Arts
– Eastern martial schools developed
– Samurai traditions in Japan
– Kung Fu systems in China
– Regional fighting styles expanded
Examples:
– Kung Fu
– Traditional Jujutsu
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1500 to 1800
From Warfare to Personal Training
Martial systems gradually shifted from battlefield use toward civilian training and personal development.
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1800 to 1900
Beginning of Sportification
Modern rules emerged:
– Boxing became regulated
– Wrestling modernized
1882
Birth of ’s
Traditional combat transformed into modern sport.
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1900 to 1950
Global Expansion of Martial Systems
– Boxing became international
– Judo spread globally
– Karate grew rapidly
– Olympic wrestling became established
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1950 to 1980
Style-vs-Style Era
Global question:
Which style is best?
Limited contests appeared between:
– Karate practitioner vs boxer
– Wrestler vs martial artist
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1920 to 1990 in Brazil
Near-open fighting between styles.
A major foundation for future MMA.
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1985
in
One of the earliest modern mixed systems.
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1993
Birth of
In the .
Beginning of modern global MMA.
Initially had very few rules.
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1997
Birth of
In .
Major rival to UFC.
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2000 to 2010
Regulation of MMA
– Weight classes
– Judging systems
– Athletic commissions
– Unified rules
MMA became more formalized.
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2007
acquired
UFC became the dominant global leader.
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2010 to Today
Global Explosion of MMA
Expansion across:
– Europe
– Asia
– Middle East
– Africa
Global stars emerged.
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Very Short Summary
Stage 1:
Combat for war
Stage 2:
Combat for education
Stage 3:
Combat for sport
Stage 4:
Comparison of styles
Stage 5:
UFC and modern MMA
Stage 6:
Globalization of MMA
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Final Conclusion
MMA was not created suddenly.
It is the result of thousands of years of human combat evolution.
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Final Expert View
did not invent fighting.
It organized and globalized something that had been developing for centuries.
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If you would like, the next fascinating topic could be:
What would MMA look like today if UFC had never been created?
