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09th Feb 2018

IMMAA deliver strong response to Shane Ross’ statement

Patrick McCarry

Strong response here from the Irish Mixed Martial Arts Association.

Following an inquest, on Thursday, into the death of Portuguese fighter Joao Carvalho, Minister for Sport, Shane Ross TD was critical of those involved in MMA regulations and safety standards in Ireland.

Carvalho died after an MMA bout in Dublin, back in April 2016, and efforts have since been undertaken to safely regulate the sport in the country. On Thursday, Minster Ross declared:

“MMA leaders here are deliberately dragging their feet.”

“Sport Ireland stands ready to help,” he added, “but can only help if you are willing to ask, and if you are willing to do the right thing.”

IMMAA president John Kavanagh penned a strong response to Minister Ross and released it on Friday evening.

The statement reads as thus:

‘Today the Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport, Shane Ross publicly accused the Irish Mixed Martial Arts Association of “dragging its feet” in the establishment of appropriate governance and safety standards for the sport of MMA. He asked of IMMAA, what is taking so long?

‘It is therefore in the public’s interest that IMMAA refutes this accusation openly. Unfortunately, the Minister’s remarks can only be the result of misinformation.

‘Indeed, IMMAA proactively fulfils its duties as the national governing body for Irish MMA despite lack of official recognition, the main barrier to recognition being administrative.

‘When IMMAA (formerly IAPA) applied to Sport Ireland for official recognition in 2016, it was informed as per Sport Ireland procedure that it would need three years of financial transactions before it could be recognised. It is beyond IMMAA’s powers to speed up bureaucratic process or to grant itself legal mandate to enforce its regulations. In spite of that, Irish MMA’s 100% voluntary adherence to IMMAA protocol since the organisation’s establishment in April 2016 proves the commitment of Ireland’s MMA leaders to establishing appropriate governance and safety standards in the sport of MMA, against all odds and in the face of opposition.

‘Since the tragic passing of Joao Carvalho, every MMA promoter in Ireland has voluntarily worked to implement IMMAA’s stringent safety protocol, which includes the independent, medical preclearance services of voluntary organisation, Safe MMA. This can be demonstrated by medical records from all those events. In addition, all events have been commissioned and officiated by IMMAA officials to ensure safety standards are adhered to.

‘It is worth noting that IMMAA’s amateur MMA safety standards already far exceed those of any other amateur martial art/combat sport, and our professional requirements are comparable with those of professional boxing. The third party medical preclearance and advisory services implemented by IMMAA are unique in sport; and Irish MMA under IMMAA can reasonably boast the most advanced medical protocols in the world for MMA, which it has sustained for over 18 months without any legal mandate. International promoters holding arena events in Ireland have also complied with the standards set and adopted by the Irish MMA community under IMMAA.

‘Further to this, in line with the IABA (Boxing), the IAWA (wrestling), the IJA (Judo) and Kickboxing Ireland, IMMAA has secured dedicated insurance for its member clubs. IMMAA successfully petitioned the Garda for the mandate to vet its members despite its lack of recognition so that now MMA coaches can be fully vetted. IMMAA members also became the first coaches anywhere in the world to be awarded MMA coaching licenses by our international association, the International Mixed Martial Arts Federation. Self-funding Irish MMA athletes and coaches have won World and Continental Championship medals for their country under IMMAA but remain largely unacknowledged.

‘It has even been asserted that IMMAA is not a legal entity, when this is simply not true. IMMAA is a limited company registered as “NGB IMMAA” with the CRO (Company number: 598102) since February 2017.

‘It is solely the commitment and hard work of IMMAA’s voluntary committee members and the Irish MMA community that has made all of the above possible.
Minister, IMMAA fully agrees with you that the recognition and regulation of MMA should not take so long, and we would welcome a meeting to discuss how the protection and governance of MMA’s participants can be most quickly progressed in Ireland.’

Some good points made by IMMAA there.