Re: Tyson vs Mirko
Van...calm down :P
You're taking this far too personally. I respect you, Von and Munky all equally highly, and you guys all bring some of the best ideas to this board. You should know better by now than to think Von and I are just boxing nuts who hate MMA. I love the sport, because I feel that Mixed Martial Artists are THE greatest fighters and more importantly, athletes, in the world, bar none. I'll never deny that. But I also don't deny that a TOP level boxer will win the majority of his fights. The whole "puncher's chance" cliche is one phrase that has always bothered me. A puncher is TRYING to knock you out. That's what he does. That's like saying a wrestler has a "GnP'ers chance" or a BJJ practitioner has a "submission artist's chance." It's true that any punch can knock someone out, but to demean their losses to chance is taking away the credit they (generally) deserve.
I don't think you're giving Belfort enough credit :P He was an olympic backup for Brazil or whoever. He was potentially one of the greatest MMAists of all time when he first burst onto the scene. But he turned into one of those wasted talents for some unknown reason. The guy was unstoppable, and then he just kind of lost it and never got it back (kind of like BJ Penn who I honestly feel is THE most talented individual p4p to ever fight EVER, and MANY people agree with me....how he loses is beyond me).
As for Jens, I agree. I guess it is a bit misleading...he has a wrestler's background, and didn't start a boxing career until more recently. But he has always fought like a boxer in the cage. So maybe he's a bad example (or on the other hand, maybe he's the best example of how a boxer should act in MMA?).
As for Couture....maybe you need to watch the fight again :P There is a lot more to boxing than punching...you know that. Did you miss the head movement? The footwork? And last time I checked, the best way to counter a MUCH larger opponent is to either get inside and work the body (and Randy did get inside) or to slip the punches and counter with a big overhand (which he did consistently).
With Tim..."put on his back so many times"? I can think of 3 fights where he's been put on his back. First was with Arlovski where he lost via submission. Second was with Arlovski where he recovered and knocked Arlovski out. Third was against Couture where he ate that first punch with a vengeance. Other than that, he's done VERY well for himself with his boxing (which is still second rate, at best).
Lesse...what else...
The whole "boxer who trains elsewhere isn't a boxer anymore" thing. I think we're just looking at it differently here. To me, Matt Hughes is a wrestler. BJ Penn is a BJJer. St Pierre is a TKD practitioner. I've always viewed a persons background as their default style. Because the sport is in its infancy, VERY few people grew up learning MMA as a whole, but rather learned one martial art and incorporated others years later. This will be, and indeed already is, changing. Kids nowadays are starting to learn "MMA" instead of TKD or BJJ or whatever, and even the TKD and BJJ, etc gyms are beginning to teach MMA with a focus on said art.
Lastly, I've never said that anybody can just pick up any art that isn't boxing. I spent a few months training BJJ and Kyokoushin Karate. I STILL get my ass kicked by those people. I don't doubt that a boxer could NEVER out grapple a BJJ practitioner, just like a BJJ will never outbox a boxer (all within reason...of course it will happen from time to time). Basically, I guess my point on the whole thing is that if a boxer's sprawl fails and he gets taken down, with the current ruleset in MMA, he still has the chance to just hold his opponent to him until they get stood up. That isn't very hard to teach at all. However, if a grapplers standup fails, he can't just hold his opponent until the ref puts them on the ground. So maybe what I'm saying is there's more leeway for a boxer to fail than a grappler to fail at the opposite art. I dunno...hard to explain it, but maybe you can catch what I'm trying to say.
And the real last thing...I don't think Tyson was a good boxer. He was an insane puncher with some okay boxing. But the thing is that he had the power necessary to REALLY make the transition to MMA striking successfully. A guy like Ali would have a MUCH tougher time in MMA than a guy like Tyson, because Ali didn't have that "one hitter quitter" that Tyson did. Ali was more of an accumulation of strikes kind of guy, while Tyson landed that ONE good one and dropped you. The more time Ali spent building up the punishment, the more time a grappler would have to take him down and put him out.
Boxing is like a handjob, and MMA is like a hot sweaty orgy with 5 chicks. I could never say no to a handjob, but which would you rather have?
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