
Originally Posted by
rjj tszyu
First of all very good interview, thanks Skel. Secondly Mercer and Toney are bound to say that the training is so much harder now they are in MMA as it is their new sport and they are no longer good enough to fight in boxing! I also remember though when Hatton was training for Mayweather he trained at the UFC headquarters gym in Vegas and in some interviews with some of the UFC fighters they were saying we have never seen training like that from a fighter, Hatton is amazing in the gym. So they must be wrong!
I'm realistic though and I don't think Toney has much chance in the UFC, his footwork is not fast enough to be effective and keep the fight standing (where he will be at an advantage) and he isn't trained at blocking the takedowns! One thing I agree with though is what RJJ said, a boxer could transition to MMA much easier than the other way around. I mean Lesnar won the UFC HW title in his 3rd fight (I think), now if he tried coming over to boxing and after his 3rd fight fought Vitali, I think we all know the outcome. Brutal 1st round KO!
I love boxing first and foremost but I don't mind MMA and I have a lot of respect for them. But if they are trying to rubbish what Jones said about them not being able to transition as easily as a boxer might to MMA then they are just not straight thinking at all. Boxers who reached the top are training in boxing usually for 20 years before they get a world title shot. Someone just trying their hand at it like Anderson Silva did and not taking it 100% serious is going to get what he did, KO'd! Now a boxer in MMA, as long as the fight is stood up (where it starts) IMO has a huge advantage as striking is a big part of MMA and should they land them Heavy hands WILL end the fight as Mercer did to Sylvia.
Since when did Anderson Silva ever get KO'ed in either boxing or MMA ? Never, he has been subbed twice, lost a UD in his first fight and was DQ'ed in another.
As for Brock making the transistion easier to MMA than boxing, well thats a no-brainer. Brock was a highly decorated collegiate wrestler, 106-5, and arguably one of the best ever wresters to enter MMA. The best base to start in MMA is certainly wrestling. Thats a given, and the sheer size of him ensures he was always going to be one hell of a tough Mofo to beat inside the cage. Thats also been proven.
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