USA TODAY US Edition

Our writer weighs in on cutting weight

- A.J. Perez @byajperez USA TODAY Sports

Subsisting on shots of espresso for 18 hours and spending much of the day in a hot tub apparently wasn’t good for my look.

But it was easy to ignore the cracks about my appearance as I arrived for my final weigh-in. Instead I was focused on stepping on the scale to conclude my efforts of losing 20 pounds in three weeks and then finally eating a real meal.

The scale read 154.9 pounds, one-tenth of a pound under the UFC’s championsh­ip fight lightweigh­t division cutoff. The feeling of accomplish­ment of losing 20.9 pounds in 211⁄ days— 13 of 2 those pounds in less than 72 hours — was stifled by a text I received from my diet coach, Mike Dolce.

“Let’s start with rehydratio­n of water only,” Dolce wrote. “We have to slowly turn back on the

digestive process or you’ll feel sick and likely vomit or worse.”

Worse? I didn’t want to ask. Dolce, a leading diet guru for the UFC, hadn’t been wrong so far. The pizza and beer would have to wait.

There’s one question that dozens of people asked throughout the process: Why try to lose the weight?

The last time it was posed was hours before the weigh-in by a medical resident at a children’s hospital as I sat in a hot tub.

“I’m not sure that’d be something I’d recommend,” she said with a look of concern.

The answer: The general public might not fully appreciate the lengths to which mixed martial arts fighters, boxers and wrestlers go to cut weight. Extreme weight loss has led to hospitaliz­ations for a wide range of issues, from dehydratio­n to organ failure, as well as cut short careers and contribute­d to at least two deaths in MMA: Brazilian fighter Leandro Souza in 2013 and Chinese fighter Yang Jian Bing in 2015.

And if you make it through an extreme weight cut without a medical emergency, it can also sap the protective fluid around the brain and lead to a higher likelihood of brain injury.

“I have stories from athletes from their past teams and coaches dragging them in and out of saunas at a 180-plus degrees and 200-plus degrees Fahrenheit packed in plastic bags as sweatsuits,” Dolce said. “The coaches were literally leaning on the door for 30 or 60 minutes, not letting them come out, even with them passing out. The coaches would go in there, slap them in (their) face, lift their legs up to get some blood flow to get their brain functionin­g again. This after they were malnourish­ing them, dehydratin­g them sometimes weeks before competitio­n.”

Not sure Ronda Rousey or the others top fighters Dolce has counseled over the years would be keen to that approach. Nor would I.

As a personal trainer and obstacle race competitor, I was already lean, making this weight cut at least somewhat comparable to what a profession­al fighter goes through. I had a physical before the process and worked closely with Dolce to ensure my safety.

He stressed that weight cuts of this nature should not be attempted without medical supervisio­n.

“It’s going to be rigorous, but in a good way,” Dolce said with a smirk.

Dolce is not a certified dietitian, though his growing business in Las Vegas — which includes nutrition books, online diet coaching and a podcast — does have one on staff. At the start, my diet mimicked his Three Weeks to

Shredded book and consisted of chicken, black coffee and oatmeal to total about 1,800 calories a day.

I’d use a hot tub and not the sauna to shed the copious amounts of water I had ingested.

“I was cutting 14 pounds, and I had about 4 or 5 left,” former Canadian amateur MMA fighter Jer Kornelsen told USA TODAY Sports. “I was sitting in the sauna and was feeling cruddy. I got up and started to walk out of the sauna when I passed out and hit the floor. Lucky for me, an off-duty firefighte­r was in the shower room.”

Kornelsen calls the weight-cut in 2014 that ended his MMA career and nearly his life “the mishap.”

Kornelsen, now 37, regained consciousn­ess about 90 minutes later in the hospital, suffering from dehydratio­n along with kidney and liver damage.

“I was close to having all my organs shut down,” Kornelsen said.

Kornelsen was the middleweig­ht champion of the Battlefiel­d Fight League, an MMA promotion based in Vancouver. The scariest part, he said, wasn’t the organ damage that he would recover from but a staph infection that nearly caused a leg to be amputated two weeks later.

“My immune system was so shot that my body couldn’t fight off the infection,” Kornelsen said.

Why do so many fighters lose 20 pounds or more in a matter of days to get to a lower weight class?

“Everyone in the sport is doing it,” Kornelsen said. “I walk around at 210 pounds. The guys my size were all cutting down to 185. Since they were doing it, I figured I had to.”

That pack mentality permeates the sport and is seen as the biggest challenge to eliminatin­g the dangerous tactics employed to lose weight.

“I really think you have to change the culture,” California State Athletic Commission executive officer Andy Foster said. “Since everybody else is doing these crazy weight cuts, all the fighters feel like they have to do it or they think they’ll be at a disadvanta­ge.”

Fighters losing 30 or more pounds in the weeks leading up to a fight isn’t uncommon. But in a sport in which opportunit­ies, especially on a UFC card, can be fleeting, fighters often take bouts on short notice when a fighter drops out due to injury, which Paul Redmond did two years ago. He had 13 days to drop 36 pounds — and was still 20 pounds over the 145-pound featherwei­ght limit 48 hours before weigh-ins — before he tipped the scales 3 pounds more than the limit in his UFC debut.

“The week and a half leading up to the fight was mentally and physically exhausting,” Redmond told MMAjunkie. “It was horrific.”

Redmond lost the fight, highlighti­ng another side effect to huge weight cuts: diminished performanc­e.

Over the last year the California State Athletic Commission has instituted rules to try to stem extreme weight cuts, including requiring a doctor to check a fighter’s hydration levels before a fight and ban the use of IVs for rehydratio­n.

The UFC also instituted an IV ban, which might seem counterpro­ductive since it’s the most effective way to treat dehydratio­n. The issue is some fighters use IVs to drop water weight to dangerous levels — and, in turn, pounds — in a short period of time.

The UFC also moved weigh-ins to the mornings. The weigh-ins had previously been in the late afternoon, giving fighters several more hours to shed weight.

The changes have resulted in more fighters missing weight.

“Fighters who were losing 6 or 7 pounds (with the later weightin times) could now only lose 3 or 4,” said Jeff Novitzky, the UFC’s vice president of athlete health and performanc­e. “I think it’s a tool. Maybe fighters will realize they are attempting to lose too much weight and should move up a weight class.”

UFC also set a guideline — though not enforced — that suggests fighters be within 8% of the fight weight when they check in four days before the fight. I was 167.1 pounds four days out, just a couple tenths of a pound under the 8% cutoff.

“We reached out to experts in hydration and asked what a safe amount of water weight to lose the last couple days,” Novitzky said. “They said 6%, but we know fighters water load, which is why we made it 8%.”

Foster said there’s been talk among state commission­s to have a doctor evaluate each fighter to determine his or her proper weight class, eliminatin­g massive weight cuts.

The inability to make weight is costly for MMA fighters and boxers, who are docked up to 40% of the purse in some states if they tip the scales above the weight limit. Foster said he’d like to see fighter bonuses that can at least be equal to the purse — not just the purse itself — impacted by a failure to make weight to weed out fighters who intentiona­lly miss weight.

My failure to make weight would just be a knock to my ego mixed with some public humiliatio­n.

The diet plain Dolce laid out called for me to cut my food intake as the program progressed. Meanwhile, my workouts became most reliant on cardio, often ses- sions where I’d hit the gym before eating my allotment of oatmeal mixed with flax and hemp seeds, fruit and a little almond butter.

As my calorie count shrank, my water consumptio­n increased. By day 19, I was drinking 3 gallons of water. The drinking part wasn’t as annoying as the frequent trips to the restroom.

Former UFC fighter Julie Kedzie didn’t have a diet coach when she began her MMA career in 2004, relying on an Internet forum instead.

“I was an idiot and thought all I’d have to do is go on 24-hour fast,” Kedzie said. “So I went out and ate at a Chinese buffet before I had to fast. That was horrible. All that sodium made it really hard to cut weight.”

Novitzky has included nutritioni­sts in recent fighter summits, and UFC’s new headquarte­rs, which will open this year in Las Vegas, will offer in-house nutritioni­sts.

“I’ve learned certain things that work for me and certain things that haven’t,” former UFC champ Holly Holm, who will fight Germaine de Randamie atop the UFC 208 card on Saturday. “I’m an old school girl. Put me in the sauna, and I lose my weight quick in the sauna. I have my routine that I’ve learned through trial and error.”

Dolce kept me in line from afar. While I might have looked malnourish­ed, I didn’t feel that bad in the minutes after the last of my multiple 25-minute stretches in a hot tub.

“What was the reaction?” Dolce asked via text. “Do your peers even grasp what you’ve accomplish­ed?”

I responded: “The ones who are here already thought I was crazy.”

 ?? ETHAN MILLER, GETTY IMAGES ?? Mike Dolce helps UFC fighters cut weight safely.
ETHAN MILLER, GETTY IMAGES Mike Dolce helps UFC fighters cut weight safely.
 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY GREG HESTER ?? Reporter A.J. Perez lost 20.9 pounds in 211⁄ days. 2
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY GREG HESTER Reporter A.J. Perez lost 20.9 pounds in 211⁄ days. 2
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