Archive for August, 2010

Classless Joe Riggs is wrong about women’s MMA

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Doing his best to perpetuate Strikeforce’s classless reputation, journeyman Joe Riggs spoke out against women’s MMA last week, responding to Sarah Kaufmann’s complaint that she doesn’t get enough exposure despite holding a belt at 135 pounds. I have to include his whole quote:

“I don’t know what that [Sarah Kaufman’] is talking about. She’s lucky to even be on TV. As long as [women fighters] don’t say things like they don’t want to be on the Challengers card and they want to be main events then they’re good. We’re the show. The men are what people are here to see.”

Wow. Nice guy. So – looking past Riggs’ general tackiness, is there any merit to what he said?

For the most part, I answer an emphatic “NO.” I paid good money to watch Gina Carano and Cyborg Santos headline a Strikeforce pay-per-view last year. The fight was a phenomenal display of striking and I felt I got my money’s worth and then some.

Hey, Joe. Guess what?  I would never pay a cent for any card you headline. I don’t think I’d even watch it. You bore me. You’re not even good enough to fight in the UFC.

So I do believe that Riggs is wrong in stating that the men are always the top draw over the women. Simply not true. Die-hard MMA fans hold their breath and count the days until they get to see Cyborg unleash her Muay Thai fury again. I know I do.

On the other hand – Riggs inadvertently touched on one topic I raised a couple months back. Women’s MMA is exciting – at the top of the food chain. Cyborg and Sarah Kaufmann are worth watching. But I do worry that the talent level is thin and some women, like Jan Finney, can get badly hurt matched up with the elite.

Still – all that means is that women’s MMA is a work in progress. It doesn’t mean it’s not worth watching or putting on a nationally televised fight card. The matchmakers just have to work a little harder to keep fighters safe.

Now go back to your hole, Joe Riggs. I didn’t even know you were still alive until you were quoted speaking about a female fighter. You sure you’re a bigger name than Sarah Kaufmann?

MMA Gym North York, Toronto, Brampton, Etobicoke, Markham, Mississauga, Oshawa, Peel Region, Pickering, Richmond Hill, Scarborough, Thornhill, Vaughan, Woodbridge, York, York Region Ontario Canada.

St-Pierre vs Tyson: Why GSP would win

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

A writer named Brian D’Souza wrote an interesting column on the Grant Brothers MMA website this week. It weighed in on a fascinating question: who would win an MMA fight between prime Georges St-Pierre and prime Mike Tyson?

The well-written, carefully thought out article can be read here:

http://grantbrothersmma.com/boxing/brian-dsouza-special-to-tss-st-pierre-vs-tyson-whod-win/

In a nutshell, D’Souza argues that Tyson would beat St-Pierre on the strength of his superior size, speed, punching power and discipline to train hard in submission and takedown defense. It just so happens that I feel the opposite way. I’ll explain myself by counter-arguing D’Souza’s key points.

ARGUMENT #1: Tyson’s size would be too much for St-Pierre.

The initial reaction is to assume Mike Tyson is too big for Georges St-Pierre but that argument neglects two important factors: reach and weight cutting. First off, St-Pierre and Tyson are the same height, each listed at roughly 5’11”. Tyson’s reach is 72 inches; St-Pierre’s is 76. So GSP would have a chance to keep Tyson at bay with his jab.

More importantly, while Tyson fights well north of 200 pounds, he actually wouldn’t be much bigger than the biggest man GSP has faced. Thiago Alves is a beast; St-Pierre told Michael Landsberg on Off the Record that Alves walks around at up to 210 pounds yet cuts all the way down to 170.

That means St-Pierre battled a man almost Tyson’s size at UFC 100 – and one with far better takedown defense than Tyson would have.

ARGUMENT #2: Tyson’s speed would overwhelm St-Pierre

There’s no denying that Tyson’s furious speed added to his terrifying presence at the peak of his boxing career. But we should remember that St-Pierre is known for being one of the top two or three athletes in mixed martial arts. He’s fast as can be – and also a great punch evader. He scores so many takedowns largely because he dodges strikes at the perfect moment right before he shoots.

ARGUMENT #3: St-Pierre couldn’t handle Tyson’s punching power

In MMA, punching power amounts to the law of diminishing returns in my opinion. Sure, Tyson would probably hit harder than anyone in the history of MMA. But as long as you hit hard enough to have devastating one-punch knockout power, registering a 12 out of 10 on the scale won’t help you much more than a 10 out of 10 would.

I think we all agreed that both Thiago Alves and Dan Hardy had major puncher’s chances against St-Pierre. That is, if they caught him with a clean shot, they both absolutely had the ability to put him to sleep instantaneously. Tyson could do the same, yes, but what threat would he bring that Alves and Hardy haven’t already brought? All three guys are simply powerful punchers who can drop an opponent with one swing. Sure, Tyson hits even harder, but they all pose the same threat to a guy like GSP. A knockout is a knockout.

Factoring in those arguments, a prime Mike Tyson would be a faster Thiago Alves with serious KO power. GSP’s strategy wouldn’t change. He’d need to use his reach to keep Tyson at bay and look to shoot for the takedown – only he wouldn’t have to worry about Muay Thai knees or a good sprawl. It doesn’t matter how hard Tyson trained. St-Pierre has taken down MMA’s best wrestlers. Getting Tyson down wouldn’t be a problem.

So there you have it – my take on GSP/Tyson. I think St-Pierre would win because Tyson isn’t nearly as unique a challenge as some people would have you believe. And his lack of versatility would make him even more predictable than GSP’s typical opponents.

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Jon Jones is the Haley’s Comet of MMA

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Mixed martial arts has its own Haley’s Comet — an glorious, awesome force of nature that pops up once in a long while and vanishes just as quickly as it appears.

Jon Jones is Haley’s Comet.

We wait months and months to see “Bones” Jones, who I believe now ranks with Anderson Silva and Fedor as a guy you just can’t wait to see. The moment finally arrives and it’s over in mere seconds. The guy has become so dominant at 205 pounds that we barely even get to glimpse his immense skill set before his fights end.

On Sunday night, in a flash, he used his reach to close the gap quickly on Vladimir Matyushenko, used his strong grappling to score a takedown, showcased vastly improved BJJ to rapidly pass the Janitor’s guard…and the fight was over in a matter of seconds. Jones unleashed a hailstorm of violent elbows and bludgeoned Matyushenko into oblivion, just as he did Brandon Vera and Matt Hamill in his previous two bouts.

It was thrilling to see another virtuoso performance from the unpredictable and well-rounded Jones. At the same time, it was frustrating to see him come and go again so quickly. Enough is enough. This guy has embarrassed the middle-tier of UFC light heavyweight gatekeepers. He needs a top-notch opponent.

Thankfully, Dana White has indicated that Jones will get just that: a “top-eight guy in the world” in his next fight. That would mean one of Shogun Rua, Rashad Evans, Rampage Jackson, Lyoto Machida, Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, Forrest Griffin, Rich Franklin or Ryan Bader, right? The problem is that virtually all those fighters are booked for bouts with each other right now.

The available guys: Griffin and Franklin – are hurt. Franklin’s arm was badly broken in June and Griffin pulled out of his bout with Little Nog. But what about Thiago Silva? The Muay Thai striker ducked Jones earlier this year and pulled out of this weekend’s fight against Tim Boetsch with a back injury.

Silva’s back injury doesn’t seem to be too severe, so maybe he could face Jones next? Maybe whoever is fight-ready first between Silva and Griffin could get the next shot. And I wouldn’t bet against Mr. Jones.

MMA Gym North York, Toronto, Brampton, Etobicoke, Markham, Mississauga, Oshawa, Peel Region, Pickering, Richmond Hill, Scarborough, Thornhill, Vaughan, Woodbridge, York, York Region Ontario Canada.

Daley courtship highlights Strikeforce’s lack of integrity

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Tsk, tsk.

Paul Daley? Really, Strikeforce?

I know the No. 2 fight promotion in MMA is desperate to sign big names after:

(a) Poster girl Gina Carano got knocked into 2012 by Cyborg Santos
(b) Poster boy Fedor Emelianenko lost to Fabricio Werdum
(c) Poster boy No. 2 Dan Henderson lost his Strikeforce debut
(d) The man who beat Henderson, Jake Shields, now fights in the UFC

But Strikeforce and, more specifically, CEO Scott Coker are ready to sell their souls. It doesn’t matter that the rumored six-fight deal with Paul Daley isn’t official, or that Daley is reportedly weighing his options. That Strikeforce has indeed made him an offer shows a serious lack of integrity.

Love him or hate him, Dana White has plenty of integrity. He banned BJJ master Renato Sobral for deliberately holding a submission too long; he threatened to cut his best fighter, Anderson Silva, should The Spider fail to show proper effort in his next bout. And, most recently, he cut Paul Daley after the British welterweight sucker-punched Josh Koscheck following the final bell of their bout. The UFC doesn’t tolerate classless behaviour.

By courting Daley, Strikeforce believes it’s improving its standing, getting closer to the UFC. It’s not. Welcoming a dirty cheap shot artist only confirms that Strikeforce is a second-rate promotion.

Given some of Strikeforce’s other recent incidents, it shouldn’t come as much surprise that it had no problem signing Daley. Look at the dirty brawl that happened between Jake Shields’ camp and Jason “Mayhem” Miller. What about the unsafe, one-sided beatdown between Muay Thai monster Cyborg and Jan Finney that had the fans booing? Or the promotion refusing to give event tickets to Shields while he was their middleweight champion?

The UFC can breathe easy. Strikeforce won’t come anywhere close to challenging it unless it learns some integrity.

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