Lucas88 wrote: ↑July 29th, 2022, 9:06 am
Pixel--Dude wrote: ↑July 28th, 2022, 5:23 am
Which martial artists in particular do you guys think have the best skill set and application of those skills in a competitive fight? What do you guys think of Conor McGregor and his deadly left hander?
I don't follow the UFC much anymore and so I'm not too up to date with who are the best fighters today or even who are the current champions. I can only comment on athletes who were active a few years ago back when I still watched UFC events on a semi-regular basis.
George St. Pierre was an excellent all-rounder. He had precise striking and was extremely elusive due to his Kyokushin Karate background, had an uncanny level of wrestling with perfect technique despite having never wrestled even in high school, and was an excellent Jiujitsu blackbelt. George also practiced gymnastics throughout his fight career. Some have speculated that it was his gymnastics training that allowed him to get so good at wrestling in such a short period of time. George is also a man of honor. To this day he carries himself like a true martial artist.
Khabib Nurmagomedov was an excellent exponent of wrestling in the octagon. He would use chain wrestling to perfection in order to get all of his opponents down to the ground and then just smother them with otherworldly levels of pressure and ground control in conjunction with brutal ground 'n' pound and a high-level submission game. He wrecked absolutely everyone including Connor McGregor and various other dangerous competitors. Nobody ever came close to giving him problems. He just walked through everyone taking very little damage in all of his fights. Khabib recently retired with a record of 29-0.
Conor McGregor was unstoppable for a long time but in recent years was exposed as a one-trick pony. He has that left hand with the touch of death but because it relies on fast-twitch muscle contraction he is unable to knock anybody out with it if the fight goes beyond the second round. Fatigue sets in and he is unable to generate the same degree of explosive power. Eventually some fighters caught on to his game and realized that tiring him out with wrestling for the first few rounds was the key to rendering his offense ineffective. That's exactly what Khabib did to Conor. He smothered him with wrestling for the first two rounds, beat an already fatigued Conor on the feet in the third round, and them tapped him out in the fourth round.
Ronda Rousey was also a one-trick pony like Conor. She had that famous Judo hip throw and armbar and put loads of bitches away with it but as soon as she faced women with solid takedown defense and expert-level striking such as Holy Holm and Amanda Nunes her one-trick strategy was neutralized and she got her ass kicked.
@Pixel--Dude that's a great question, but unlike more experienced
@Lucas88 I don't have as much actual competitive experience to be able to say about the best fighters.
But just for fun and by impulse, here are the names I would have thought of first from the old VHS collection of early UFCs as guys I wanted to look into more (so this also shows my age and retro sentiments):
The Predator Don Frye: I noticed he has an old VHS instructional tape set out there. I saw some on youtube but the channel was gone when I went back to post it.
I believe his background was boxing and wrestling like so many American tough guys (and I mean freestyle or Greco Roman wrestling, not just Vince McMahon styled WWF "professional wrestling," LOL), and then he added judo, kickboxing, and later ended up in MMA...
I think Mark the Hammer Coleman and the guys he trained (Kevin Randleman was one of them) also had a freestyle wrestling background and he actually coined the term "ground and pound by saying "I'm going to ground him and pound the goddamn shit out of him" before his fight with Maurice Smith back in the day. (I think that particular fight actually had a controversial Coleman loss to Smith by decision, but nonetheless.)
Bas Rutten has a lot of MMA and street fighting instructional DVDs.
He was a lot of fun to watch all around: I have a DVD set of his early Japanese Pancrase, fights as well as watching him in later competition.
While not the only one, he was also awesome for knowing the power of the liver shot!!
I believe he started with boxing as an elementary school kid, then his parents let him learn some Taekwondo but he got attacked by the worst local bully in his town and used his skills to KO the bully and break his nose with the first punch, after which his parents apparently banned him from any further martial arts until he moved out in his early 20's and started kickin' ass from then onward.
Then he started kickboxing and doing some pro fights I believe here and there, and eventually got picked up by Japanese talent scouts for Pancrase and he got very big in there.
There was also Ken Shamrock, and I believe he too had mostly a wrestling background before going more heavily into other MMA and he was involved in Pancrase even earlier than Bas Rutten... (I didn't actually remember they all had a wrestling background until this trip down memory lane and doing a quick search, but I think we're on pretty firm ground that wrestling is a pretty damn good foundation for grappling.)
I don't know anything about Conor Macgregor because I ran out of time to keep staying on top of the MMA scene back around maybe 2008ish and was only watching Pride at that point, but I posted a thread about my Wavemaster Century BOB where I found an amusing YT vid of Macgregor knocking over BOB, and an even funnier one of an MMA student actually getting KO'ed by the BOB while it was on the rebound from a previous student's attack

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