top | item 8074075

A man's fighting ability is written in his face

31 points| mvikramaditya | 11 years ago |bps-research-digest.blogspot.com | reply

discuss

order
[+] orasis|11 years ago|reply
A better title for this research would have been "Steroids seem to help people win fights"

As an MMA coach, I think a more likely explanation is the wider faces correlate to high testosterone, including steroid use, which in turn correlates with more wins in the Octagon due to strength and stamina, not necessarily "fighting ability".

If you want to look at raw fighting ability, take a look at any member of the Gracie family, the best family of martial artists this last century and you will find they generally have skinnier faces.

http://www.bjjee.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/rener-ryron....

[+] korzun|11 years ago|reply
Gracies were good by default. They fought inexperienced competition.

As soon as people caught up to BJJ they became irrelevant in MMA. Also when they faced somebody with ground game they had tons of issues (IE: Sakuraba "Gracie Killer")

Matter of fact recent performances by Gracies in MMA were embarrassing.

>http://www.mmamania.com/2010/2/10/1304038/cousin-renzo-rolle...

Etc.

[+] nicholas73|11 years ago|reply
Notice the pattern holds true within the Gracie family. Rickson and Roger are family champions and have wide faces. Royce and Royler have thin faces, but even they have wide jawlines for their size.

It's directly related to testosterone level, but that's an artifact of training hard. Let's not claim it's all steroid use.

[+] incision|11 years ago|reply
>'A better title for this research would have been "Steroids seem to help people win fights"...I think a more likely explanation is the wider faces correlate to high testosterone...'

Pretty much, the article bears this out even.

'The researchers speculated that one causal mechanism may be higher testosterone levels - certainly past research has shown men with higher basal testosterone have wider faces, as well as greater strength and aggression.'

Though it's surely often misapplied, the terms 'gh/steroid/juice jaw' didn't develop out of thin air.

[+] e40|11 years ago|reply
From a survival perspective, there is also research published this month suggesting that a greater face width-length ratio may be part of a facial structure evolved for resistance to punches.

I suspected that might be part of it. It's always amazed me that some people can take incredible punishment (in the form of punches) and not be knocked out. Maurício "Shogun" Rua to name one.

[+] mzarate06|11 years ago|reply
When I read that I immediately thought of BJ Penn. He has a rather wide face for his size. He's never been knocked out, although he was TKO'd by Hughes when held down in the crucifix position in their second fight, but I consider that different than being completely knocked out.
[+] literalusername|11 years ago|reply
It's not mentioned in the article, but Composite A is rotated in a chin-up direction compared to Composite B. The difference is subtle yet distinct. Composite A's head angle appears to project a winning attitude, while Composite B's head angle appears comparatively submissive.
[+] swamp40|11 years ago|reply
My theory is that the more you get hit in the face, the wider your face gets.
[+] mentos|11 years ago|reply
While you're probably joking you make a good point. While improbable, maybe the more experienced fighters started earlier in life while their faces were still growing and were shaped accordingly.
[+] pessimizer|11 years ago|reply
I'd bet wider faces correlate with other things that should be controlled for, like being stubby and short, thus having more muscle than other people in your weight class. Maybe teenage anabolic steroid use both widens your face and leads to steroid abuse as an adult which gives you an advantage in the UFC[1]? This is silly.

In addition, if their fantasy explanation for this correlation is another silly "evolved for punches" theory, why would you pick UFC fighters - who are in a sport where brutal matches can be won and lost with very few punches exchanged? If you still chose to use them, why wouldn't you use the records of their fights to discover how many punches they actually took in the fights that they won or lost?

[1] http://espn.go.com/espn/otl/story/_/id/10500652/therapeutic-...

[+] nicholas73|11 years ago|reply
Anyone who has trained hard (in any sport) would recognize ability just by appearance. There are physical markers that appear, that include facial features. A wider face is indicative of nutritional status growing up - BUT, a wider jaw is something that is earned.

I've trained grappling sports for a long time, and my jaw and neck are one size larger for my weight. This is true of other people who have trained for a long time as well, even small people with skinny faces.

There are other markers as well, some sport specific, but that's another topic.

[+] incision|11 years ago|reply
>'...a wider jaw is something that is earned.'

I have honestly never heard this said or suggested and I'm no newcomer to the sport. A thick yoke, sure - the contour of a jaw used to clenching, OK - the very obvious effects on ears, noses, shins and even toes - asbsolutely.

I have never seen a wide jaw picked out as something to be 'earned'.

[+] snsr|11 years ago|reply
A wider face is indicative of nutritional status growing up

Do you have a source for this?

[+] IgorPartola|11 years ago|reply
So my pet theory is that most skills in life come from a bit of early talent + lots of opportunity to practice. From this perspective, a thin-faced fighter with some natural talent and great resources could break this mold and be extremely successful. This to me looks similar to when people started discovering that left-handed pitchers tend to confuse things in baseball.
[+] flatline|11 years ago|reply
But on average that thin-faced man is going to be at a genetic disadvantage, which I believe is the point of the article. Of course there will be outliers, and of course you can overcome some natural deficiencies with training, but on average they will hit limits that wider-faced men will naturally surpass. The article doesn't go much into the strength of the correlation, so I'm not sure how big a difference it really makes, but it clearly makes a difference. The original paper probably has more on this.
[+] 5partan|11 years ago|reply
This is somehow biased and ufc-specific, as a fight can go with ease over hours, and grapplers are put on a disadvantage with 5min rounds. Also judges like to stand up fighters because it does not look spectacular, even though there is more going on then between two strikers which orbit each other out of respect.
[+] nicholas73|11 years ago|reply
I hate watching strikers trade one-shots at a distance. A sure sign of mediocrity.
[+] jMyles|11 years ago|reply
Seems like they didn't account for weight cutting? Sadly, a lot of efficacy in the ufc today comes down to who can cut more weight and be the bigger fighter. Maybe wide faced people are better at cutting.
[+] korzun|11 years ago|reply
I don't think weight cutting has anything to do with the article.
[+] davidtanner|11 years ago|reply
I've often heard people (in BJJ/MMA culture) say that a relatively large head/hat size makes it harder to get knocked out.
[+] walshemj|11 years ago|reply
so so this help you work out in combat which soldiers shoot and those that don't :-)