MMA Thread
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This is a sticky topic.
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Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings
The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game
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Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings
The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game
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yeah mauro can be real cheesy at times but overall hes not that bad (way better than mike goldberg IMO). i preferred gus johnson doing the play by play though. i miss "the fight professor" stephen quadros, i havent heard him announce a fight in a real long time ( he commentated almost all of them Pride events with Bas)Comment
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With enough cross-training, a very good boxer should be able to become a very good MMA fighter. In theory. But that same theory should hold true for any practitioner of any major combat sport that makes up part of MMA - jiu jitsu, muay thai, wrestling, Sambo, etc. It just doesn't always carry over, though. Some guys can't overcome the instincts they've built in for their specific sport. And some just don't have the ability to adapt to different forms of fighting.Last edited by Bigpapa42; 04-13-2009, 01:11 AM.Comment
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This argument will continue as long as nobody makes the jump either way (Arlovski, Sylvia or Roy Jones).
IMO, a good boxer will need to train for a long time before they can be safe in an MMA fight to where they won't be tapped ASAP. Any real MMA fighter worth their salt should be able to take a pro boxer down and make him tap.
In a boxing match, any MMA fighter would probably be blasted by a good pro boxer. There are some exceptions but a pro boxer's footwork and hand speed should be too much for most.
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Yup, agreed. Arlovski has great footwork, hand speed, and good power. He might be the best boxer in MMA, and he's only getting better working with Freddie Roach. His chin would be a question mark, though. I might likes Arlovski's chances against some average pro heavyweights. But against a top guy, I wouldn't be putting my money on him, not matter how much I like the guy.Comment
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Boxing is a part of MMA, but its only a part. Striking in MMA is boxing-influenced, but it is not boxing. There is a lot that that is different, from not being able to protect yourself with the smaller gloves to having to worry about kicks and takedowns. Everything changes.
With enough cross-training, a very good boxer should be able to become a very good MMA fighter. In theory. But that same theory should hold true for any practitioner of any major combat sport that makes up part of MMA - jiu jitsu, muay thai, wrestling, Sambo, etc. It just doesn't always carry over, though. Some guys can't overcome the instincts they've built in for their specific sport. And some just don't have the ability to adapt to different forms of fighting.
I think if you could teach a good boxed to sprawl (ie take down deffence) and he was built in away he could keep separation with jabs, and at the end take into account the 4 oz gloves or what ever they use today a boxer could fuck people up. But not with out training in the other disciplines.
Thinking a MMA guy who has to spread his focus over Wrestling,Striking,JJ ... Ect. could beat a boxer that has focused his whole life on just boxing, in a boxing match seems far fetched to me.Comment
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Ture but you can see more and more guys focusing on it. Rampage comes to mind.
I think if you could teach a good boxed to sprawl (ie take down deffence) and he was built in away he could keep separation with jabs, and at the end take into account the 4 oz gloves or what ever they use today a boxer could fuck people up. But not with out training in the other disciplines.
Thinking a MMA guy who has to spread his focus over Wrestling,Striking,JJ ... Ect. could beat a boxer that has focused his whole life on just boxing, in a boxing match seems far fetched to me.
The problem is that you can't just teach a boxer some rudimentary takedown defense and have that be enough. Maybe if you put them in an MMA fight against someone who is not going to go to ground in at all. They still have to know to check leg kicks and watch for head kicks. They have to know to defend a guy changing levels and coming in for a clinch. The need to know how to defend single leg takedowns, double leg takedowns, trips, judo throws, and even wrestling-based slams.
Most MMA fans seem to realize that a crossover fight would depend on the venue. In an MMA fight, the MMA fighter is going to have a major advantage. And vice versa, in the boxing match, the boxer would more than likely win.Comment
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isnt arvloski in a boxing match fairly soon?
and dont forget big timmy vs mercer straight up boxing ,,, couldnt get sanctioned in NJ so it got moved to alabama lolComment
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