Ufc why vaseline face




















So to summarize this post:. In short, fighters put vaseline on their face to prevent cuts while fighting. Vaseline makes the skin slippery and less likely to get cut when getting hit. In turn, a fighter is less likely to lose a fight due to a doctor stoppage from a cut.

I hope this post helped explained why petroleum jelly vaseline is used during boxing and MMA fights. If you enjoyed this post, be sure to check out similar articles on the Martial Arts History page.

Thanks for reading! Fan Questions Martial Arts History. The Zygomatic bone protrudes slightly from the face, making it prone to laceration. Nitin K. Sethi faced threats from angry fans after his stoppage of Nate Diaz vs Jorge Masvidal.

You must have felt so helpless, kind of like a pig walking on ice or like the prince in the fairy tale trying to reach the top of the ice mountain! Well yes, I did read about it in "Rear Naked News", but I thought it was just sour grapes because he blew his reputation as an MMA expert in choosing you to win the fight.

Anyone who uses a picture of Randy "The Natural" Couture to hide behind when reporting news and making his own predictions, which are, incidentally, quite the opposite from the authenticated athlete himself is both a coward and a liar.

Thank God with Grandma Dee using her own picture a reader has no chance of mistaking her for an authentic sports celebrity and knows that they are reading a homely old woman's own opinions, senile though they may be. When you have a dry face and are hit with a punch, your opponent's leather gloves can leave a burning feeling on your skin. With Vaseline on your face, however, the punch is more likely to slide off your face, prevent burns and limit the chances of sustaining a cut.

Many boxers like slightly different applications of Vaseline, but most request it for their nose, lips, cheekbones, jawbone and beneath their eyebrows. Trainers or cutmen typically apply the substance by dabbing it in the desired location with their finger or cotton swabs, and re-apply the Vaseline between each round as needed. Beyond helping lessen the sting from some punches, Vaseline can occasionally help control the amount a boxer bleeds during a fight.

Vaseline itself doesn't typically prevent a cut from bleeding, but trainers and cutmen often mix a coagulant with the Vaseline and apply it to a cut. The coagulant slows the bleeding while the Vaseline protects the affected area.

Placing a dab of Vaseline inside a boxer's bloody nose can limit the amount of blood that runs, but repeated punches will often dislodge the Vaseline and cause the nose to continue bleeding.



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