MMA System: I Will Be Pound For Pound Goat-Chapter 608: A Niche Sport

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Damon woke early.

He sat on the edge of the hotel bed for a moment, rubbing the back of his neck as sunlight crawled through the curtains. He grabbed his phone, checked the time, and nodded to himself.

He showered quickly, dressed in plain clothes—black joggers, a clean hoodie, and sneakers. Before leaving, he leaned over the bed and gently touched Svetlana's shoulder.

She stirred slightly.

"I'm heading downstairs to grab some breakfast," he said softly. "Take your time, I'll bring something up if you want."

She mumbled something half-coherent and pulled the sheets tighter over her shoulder.

Damon smirked, grabbed his key card, and slipped out the door.

He had a long day ahead of him—Joey's old house, the motel where he and his mom stayed, the broken corners of the city that built him.

And later, a meeting with Victor at a small office where a new fight scene was about to be born.

Damon stepped out of the corner café with a brown bag in one hand and two hot cups balanced carefully in the other.

The morning was crisp, Stockton air carrying a familiar dryness. He popped the trunk, placing the food down before shutting it gently.

"Hey! Yo—Damon Cross?"

He turned, hand still on the door handle.

A guy, early twenties maybe, was walking up with wide eyes and a nervous smile. His arm was draped over a girl who looked just as surprised but a little more shy.

Damon gave a small nod, surprised but relaxed. "Yeah?"

"No way, man! This is crazy," the guy said, stepping forward. "I'm a huge fan. Can I get a picture? Just one—please."

"Sure," Damon said, stepping around the car.

The guy handed his phone to the girl. She raised it nervously, clearly unsure whether to hold it vertically or landscape.

"It's good, just hold it up," Damon said, chuckling lightly.

They posed together. The guy threw up a fist, trying to match Damon's stance.

After the click, the guy turned, still grinning. "Man, this is insane. You really are as chill as people say."

Damon just smiled and nodded. "Appreciate it."

The guy hesitated, then leaned in a little with a grin. "So… be honest. You ever gonna shut Shane Brickland up for good?"

Damon's smile stayed, but his eyes cooled.

He gave a small shrug. "Doubt it," he said simply, voice flat but not rude. "He talks too much."

Then he stepped back toward his car.

"Hey, thanks again, man!" the guy called out.

Damon gave a small wave, opened the door, and climbed in.

As the engine started, he glanced at them one last time before pulling away—another reminder that even here, people were watching.

As Damon drove, the city rolled past his window in slow motion.

The streets of Stockton hadn't changed much—maybe a few new shops here and there—but the rhythm was still the same.

But his mind wasn't on the road. It lingered on that fan encounter.

MMA was a strange place to be famous.

In sports like football or basketball, star athletes couldn't go anywhere without a crowd forming.

Even bench players got recognized in airports and shopping malls. But MMA didn't work like that.

It was niche. Still growing. Still misunderstood by a lot of the public.

Unless you were a name like Collin NcGyver, Desayen, or James Jonas, people could pass you on the street and have no idea you were one of the best fighters on Earth.

Even those three, Damon thought, weren't exactly household names. Collin maybe. His showmanship and crossover appeal made him stand out.

But Desayen? Jonas? You'd have to already be a fan to recognize them.

It wasn't just about the sport—it was about visibility.

Football had decades of media infrastructure, global sponsorships, and childhood memories passed down through generations. It was embedded in culture.

MMA didn't have that yet.

And fighters didn't do much to change that either.

Damon had noticed it—how so many of them stayed in their lane. They fought. They trained. Then they went home.

Very few ventured outside the sport. Nobody was dropping albums. Nobody was starring in movies.

There were no gaming streams, no fashion ventures, no real presence outside of the cage unless you were chasing clout or controversy.

He wasn't judging them. In fact, he respected the discipline. But it also made the sport smaller than it needed to be.

There was potential, but most fighters didn't tap into it.

It made moments like earlier stick out more. That fan didn't just know him—he followed him, supported him, asked for a photo like he mattered. And that meant something.

Maybe that was part of what set people like Collin apart. Not just talent. But making yourself matter outside the cage.

Damon leaned his elbow against the window and kept his eyes on the road.

He didn't care about being famous—but he did want MMA to grow. And part of that meant doing more than just winning.

It meant being seen.

But he also understood why things were the way they were.

At its core, MMA was still fighting. No matter how many rules were put in place, how much technique and discipline it required, or how many athletes treated it like an art form—many people still saw it as violence.

That alone kept a lot of casual audiences away.

It didn't matter that boxing was praised as historic, or that wrestling was an Olympic sport.

Something about MMA rubbed people the wrong way. The gloves, the blood, the finishes that came too suddenly.

Even the terminology—knockout, submission, ground and pound—sounded brutal.

To some, it didn't matter how respectful the fighters were, or how much honor lived behind the scenes.

It was still two people fighting inside a cage. And that cage, that imagery, made it hard for many to see past the surface.

Damon had accepted that.

It was one of the reasons MMA would always grow slower.

One of the reasons fighters like him could be world champions and still walk down the street unnoticed.

But he also knew that would change with time.

The more stories that came out—the more personalities, rivalries, families, and cultures the sport embraced—the more people would pay attention.

Not just to the fight, but to the people inside the cage.

And if he had to be one of the names to help bridge that gap, so be it.