Daugaard appoints members of fight commission (updated)
Gov. Dennis Daugaard fiercely resisted a proposal to legalize fighting sports like mixed martial arts earlier this year, but on Friday he moved to implement the law.
The newly created South Dakota Athletic Commission will create rules to regulate fighting sports, cracking down on unregulated bouts going on now but allowing more legitimate events to occur.
On Friday Daugaard appointed three of the five members of the commission, and expects to announce the other two in coming weeks.
The governor picked one fight promoter and two doctors for the commission, and said he expects to pick a second promoter and a layperson with no ties to fighting sports for the final two spots. One of the remaining picks must also be a non-Republican.
"It's a good step forward," said state Rep. Dean Schrempp, D-Lantry, and a major proponent of the athletic commission.
One of the appointees was Mike Kilmer, a Belle Fourche boxing and MMA coach who supported creating the athletic commission. He said they'll work to make those violent sports safer.
"I'm very adamant about doing it properly to minimize the risk," Kilmer said. "I'm not going to say there's not a risk, an inherent risk in any sport, but we can make it as safe as can be, and much safer than if we don't have the commission."
Among the rules expected to be adopted by the commission are blood tests to keep people with blood-borne diseases like AIDS from fighting, and restrictions on how quickly fighters can come back from knockouts or concussions.
But some critics of the law still say it's mistake.
"We gave up the fight too early and shifted the focus off our concern, which was violence, and put it onto safety," said state Rep. Steve Hickey, R-Sioux Falls. "Now we have another layer of unfunded government bureaucracy to save people from themselves."
Both Daugaard and Hickey said the governor shouldn't have tried to sabotage the law by appointing commissioners who wouldn't implement it.
"I think I need to appoint a commission that's going to be responsibly acting as the legislation intends them to act," Daugaard said. "I think they need to give attention to safety, to rules, to the financial liability prospects. But if I don't want this law then I should act to introduce repeal legislation, not to sabotage it and attempt to do by the back door what I can't do by the front door."
Both Daugaard and his predecessor Mike Rounds declined to appoint members of an athletic commission under a previous law. That inaction drew sharp responses from lawmakers this year, and Daugaard promised to implement the law if passed, which it did.
One of Friday's appointees, Michael Bergeron of Sioux Falls, has long been active as a leader in athlete safety, serving as executive director of the National Institute for Athletic Health & Performance. Mark Johnston, the former state senator who championed the successful athletic commission bill this year, called Bergeron an ideal appointment by Daugaard.
"I don't know if I could have throught of a better person to have appointed," Johnston said. "Having Mike's expertise on the commission will be invaluable to protecting athlete."
Once Daugaard appoints the final members of the athletic commission, it will take some time before legitimate fighting bouts can occur. The commission has to approve rules governing these fights. But Kilmer predicted that would take months, not years, because South Dakota can adapt the rules of states such as Wyoming with their own athletic commissions.
After that's done, South Dakota could see some boxing and MMA events both big and small. Even low-level MMA leagues have avoided South Dakota because of its lack of a commission, while the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally has had discussions in the past about hosting a high-profile MMA or boxing bout.
Appointed to the commission Friday:
Michael Bergeron, Ph.D., of Sioux Falls, is the executive director of the National Institute for Athletic Health & Performance and the National Youth Sports Health & Safety Institute, and professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Sanford School of Medicine of the University of South Dakota. He also has an appointment as a senior scientist in Sanford Children’s Health Research Center. Dr. Bergeron is a fellow and past trustee of the American College of Sports Medicine.
Richard M. Little, M.D., of Spearfish, is an orthopedic surgeon, specializing in sports medicine, at Regional Orthopedics in Spearfish.
Michael Kilmer, of Belle Fourche, is chief of internal operations at the Buffalo Chip Campground. Kilmer has 50 plus years of experience in boxing and martial arts as both a participant and a coach. He is licensed as a coach for professional boxing in both Minnesota and North Dakota, served as the president of South Dakota Amateur Boxing for eight years and spent 17 years working as the program director and boxing coach at Sky Ranch for Boys. Kilmer has also been actively involved in boxing events held at the Buffalo Chip.








