Skip to content
Menu
  • MMA Rankings
    • Current MMA Rankings
      • Men’s MMA Ranking
        • Pound for Pound
        • Division Point Dominance
        • Heavyweight+
        • Light Heavyweight
        • Middleweight
        • Welterweight
        • Lightweight
        • Featherweight
        • Bantamweight
        • Flyweight
        • Strawweight
      • Women’s MMA Rankings
        • Women’s Pound for Pound
        • Women’s Division Point Dominance
        • Women’s Featherweight+
        • Women’s Bantamweight
        • Women’s Flyweight
        • Women’s Strawweight
        • Women’s Atomweight
      • Unknown Division
    • All-Time MMA Rankings
      • About All-Time Rankings
      • All-Time Absolute
      • All-Time Womens (Open)
      • All-Time Heavyweight+
      • All-Time LightHeavyweight
      • All-Time Middleweight
      • All-Time Welterweight
      • All-Time Lightweight
      • All-Time Featherweight
      • All-Time Bantamweight
      • All-Time Flyweight
      • All-Time Strawweight
    • Historical MMA Rankings
      • Published Ranking Snapshots
      • Generated Historical Rankings
  • Records & Statistics
    • Unusual Decisions
    • MMA Fight Outcomes by Weight Class
    • MMA Fight Outcomes by Year
    • Most Wins in MMA Bouts
    • Most Losses in MMA Bouts
    • Most Professional MMA Bouts
    • Most Career Wins Without a Loss
    • Longest Undefeated Streak (Active Fighters)
    • Longest Undefeated Streak (Retired Fighters)
    • Shortest Average Fight
    • Shortest Average Win
    • Best (T)KO Win Percentage
    • Best Submission Win Percentage
    • Most weight divisions fought in
    • Most weight divisions with draw or win
    • Longest Career
    • Database Statistics
  • Features
    • Interviews
    • Blogs
      • Boxing
      • MMA
      • Muay Thai
      • Event Previews
      • Fighter Highlights
      • MMA Ranks
      • Historical Ranks
      • MMA Statistics
      • News
    • MMA Promotions Ranking
    • Weekly Ranking Summary
      • Biggest Movers
      • Recently Active
      • Newly Ranked
      • Dropouts
      • Division Changes
      • Inactive Fighters
      • Quality Performance Decay
      • Strength of Schedule
    • Lineal Championship Histories
      • About Lineal Championships
      • Heavyweights
      • Light Heavyweights
      • Middleweights
      • Welterweights
      • Lightweights
      • Featherweights
      • Bantamweights
      • Flyweights
      • Strawweights
      • Women’s Featherweight+
      • Women’s Bantamweight
      • Women’s Flyweight
      • Women’s Strawweight
      • Women’s Atomweight
    • Upcoming Events
      • All Upcoming Events
      • Upcoming UFC Events
      • Upcoming MMA Events by Promotion
      • Upcoming MMA Events by Country
    • Past Events
      • Event Search
      • Past Events by Promotion
      • Past Events by Year
    • MMA Awards
    • Links and Mentions
  • UFC Records
    • About UFC Records
    • Most Wins
    • Most Bouts
    • Consecutive Wins
    • Title Wins
    • Title Bouts
    • Title Defenses
    • Octagon Time
    • UFC ‘Of the Night’ Bonuses
      • All Bonuses
      • Fights of the Night
      • Performances of the Night
      • Knockouts of The Night
      • Submissions of the Night
    • UFC Fight Outcomes by Weight Class
    • UFC Fight Outcomes By Year
  • About Us
    • About MMA Rankings
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
  • Search
    • Fighter Search
    • Event Search
    • Blog Search
  • PolyData
Close Menu
Fight Matrix
Writer's Game PR, LLC - Public Relations Agency
Writer's Game PR, LLC - Public Relations Agency

Is The Michael “Venom” Page Experiment Failing?

Posted on March 22, 2026 by Andrew Carswell

@thewritingprofessor904

UFC Hype Meets Reality, As MVP’s Promise Fades Into Boos And Disillusionment

Michael “Venom” Page was supposed to be must-see television.

Instead, he has become must-avoid viewing.

When the UFC signed the flashy British striker after years of highlight-reel dominance in Bellator, the expectation was clear: Page would bring viral knockouts, unpredictable artistry, and a new audience captivated by his theatrical style. The promotion marketed him as a spectacle, and we expected to see a living highlight reel, in an era increasingly dominated by cautious tactical fighters.

But, reality has not matched the hype.

At UFC London this weekend, Page secured a unanimous decision victory over Sam Patterson. On paper, it was a win. Inside the O2 Arena, it felt like a loss. Fans who initially chanted his nickname quickly turned to sustained boos, as the fight devolved into what many observers described as a low-action stalemate.

The numbers told the story: fewer than forty significant strikes landed between the two fighters across three rounds, a startling statistic for someone marketed as one of the sport’s most dynamic strikers.

This was not the first warning sign. But, it may have been the most symbolic.

Page’s entire brand has been built on spectacle. His karate-influenced movement, showmanship, and unconventional approach made him a cult figure long before he entered the UFC. Yet, the very style that once dazzled audiences has increasingly been criticized as evasive, rather than entertaining.

The UFC gambled that Page’s persona would translate seamlessly to its global platform. Instead, his fights have often lacked the visceral urgency that defines the promotion’s most compelling stars.

Even UFC leadership appeared unimpressed. Reports from the event indicated that Dana White left his seat during the bout, later describing the performance bluntly as “a bad fight.”

Such optics matter. In a sport where excitement is currency, perception can determine matchmaking opportunities, promotional push, and long-term viability.

The Problem With Style Over Substance

Page’s critics argue that his approach prioritizes safety and theatrics over engagement. While his defensive movement is undeniably effective, it has frequently resulted in fights that feel strategically sound, but emotionally flat.

This dynamic is particularly problematic in the UFC’s ecosystem. Unlike Bellator, where Page’s mystique was cultivated through selective matchmaking and highlight-friendly opponents, the UFC demands consistent performance against elite competition.

When the spectacle disappears, what remains must still justify the hype.

So far, that justification has been inconsistent.

Fans and fighters alike reacted harshly to the London performance, with social media commentary labeling the bout everything from “boring” to one of the worst fights in recent memory.

For a fighter once touted as a transformative signing, that backlash signals a troubling shift in narrative.

The UFC’s Calculated Risk

The organization’s decision to invest in Page was never purely about wins and losses. It was about brand expansion, marketability, and the ability to generate viral moments in an increasingly crowded combat-sports landscape.

But, the UFC’s business model is uniquely unforgiving. Star power must be reinforced by consistent entertainment value. Fighters who fail to deliver excitement often find themselves drifting toward the margins, regardless of their technical achievements.

Page’s recent performances suggest that he may be caught in this paradox. Winning without thrilling has historically been one of the fastest ways to lose momentum in the UFC’s promotional hierarchy.

What Comes Next

It would be premature to declare Page’s UFC tenure a complete failure. His record remains respectable, and his skill set is undeniably elite. Yet, the central premise of his signing, which was that he would electrify audiences, has not materialized in the way many expected, and at the age of 38, his UFC future is understandably in doubt.

In the unforgiving economics of combat sports, entertainment value is often indistinguishable from success.

Page’s London performance raised an uncomfortable question for the UFC:
Was Michael “Venom” Page ever the superstar they believed he could be, or was he simply a highlight-reel phenomenon in search of the right stage?

The answer may determine whether his UFC journey becomes a redemption arc, or a cautionary tale.

Current MMA Rankings

  • Pound for Pound
  • Division Point Dominance
  • Heavyweight+
  • Light Heavyweight
  • Middleweight
  • Welterweight
  • Lightweight
  • Featherweight
  • Bantamweight
  • Flyweight
  • Strawweight
  • Women’s Pound for Pound
  • Women’s Division Point Dominance
  • Women’s Featherweight+
  • Women’s Bantamweight
  • Women’s Flyweight
  • Women’s Strawweight
  • Women’s Atomweight
  • Unknown Division

jalwa game

91club

ok win

Advertise With Us

Support Fightmatrix.com and reach thousands of MMA fans by advertising with us! Click for more details.

Features

  • Fighter Search
  • All-Time MMA Rankings
  • Historical MMA Rankings
  • Weekly Ranking Summary
  • Upcoming MMA Events
  • Lineal Championship Histories
  • FightMatrix MMA Awards
  • Links and Mentions
  • Past Events

Daman Game Download

Recent Posts

  • Is The Michael “Venom” Page Experiment Failing?
  • Current MMA Rankings Updated (03-22-2026)
  • How Boxing And Martial Arts Have Evolved Over Time
  • UFC London Predictions
  • Mobile Betting Trends in Asia with 1xBet Mongolia

daman game

Categories

  • Boxing
  • Editorials
  • Event Previews
  • Event Reviews
  • Fight Predictions
  • Fighter Highlights
  • Gaming
  • Historical Ranks
  • Interviews
  • Kickboxing
  • MMA
  • MMA Ranks
  • MMA Statistics
  • Muay Thai
  • News
  • Other
  • Sports
  • Submission Grappling
  • Technology
  • Training
  • Trivia
  • Upcoming Events

BDG win

bdg win

55 club login

daman game

Raja Luck Game

Diuwin Login

Mostbet Pakistan

Jeetbuzz

©2026 Fight Matrix    Privacy Policy    Terms and Conditions

Fast Withdrawal Boxing Sites | vn168 | 92 lottery