Quote:
Originally Posted by dig420
(Post 13197881)
yeah but it takes a few minutes to stand them up. The longest break you get in boxing is 60 seconds between rounds. I can stay in side mount, throw some slappy punches and make it last the whole round and if I'm not getting my cardio back, at least I'm not losing much and I can kill time and save everything for a last surge.
|
True, but what you're doing is still effective as a strategy. Being on bottom sidemount eating punches hurts, whether they're Fedor-esque or Nick Diaz style. You may be recovering, but he isn't. If he didn't come prepared then he's done.
Quote:
yeah it's a money thing, no argument there. Dana won't pay a boxer in his prime a comparable enough prize to make it worth him getting in the cage. He SAYS he will, but when it comes down to signing on the dotted line he makes excuses. Why would Floyd fight MMA when he's making $7 MILLION per fight in his own sport? That's a LOT of money man... and he has nothing to gain by getting in the cage where he knows he's gonna be taken down right away unless he can invest in two or three years of MMA training time first. Kermit would probably fight for 200k, but that's still a ton of money by MMA standards and Dana doesn't think it's worth it.
|
Yea, Dana says he will do a lot of things. He shouldn't be the face of MMA but unfortunately he is. I *think* the last I heard was Dana offering Floyd 2 million and Floyd declined. Kermit stepped up and said he would do it for that and after that I heard nothing about it.
Quote:
It's still valid. How long has it been since you've seen Chuck defending himself on the ground? Technically, all you REALLY need as a boxer in MMA is not to get taken down :)
|
Yea but Chuck's different than a boxer in many ways. Chuck was a wrestler before he was a striker. He was even better than Tito(who beat Matt Hughes in Abu Dhabi - I know, weight difference, but still.) Chuck still gets taken down from time to time, but he can instantly get up. He hasn't had to defend himself on the ground yet. A year or two of wrestling just won't cut it. A boxer's still gonna be a great puncher in MMA, but his abilities will be greatly diminished. And Chuck has been the one fighter who can consistently do this because I'm under the impression that his wrestling is better than his striking. He's just hard as piss to KO, even harder to takedown and keep down, and hits really hard.
I also think the problem with teaching a boxer "just to stop a takedown" is an issue in it's own. These guys like Chuck who are good at takedowns and win by striking, do get taken down sometimes, but it's okay.. They've had many, many years of training in wrestling and jiu-jitsu and are fully prepared if the fight does hit the ground.
Quote:
I'm a BJJ blue belt and like most BJJ guys I've trained throwing hands too, but I'm certainly not a master of either sport... I just have a better acquaintance with them than most people. We'll have to agree to disagree on this point. IMHO boxing is much harder to train, it's far far FAR more painful in the training process and you just about have to insane to make it and I think most top class boxers are, in fact, insane. BJJ is FUN to train once you're in decent shape. Boxing hurts. In fact I won't even train full contact boxing anymore, I get a headache when I get hit and the blunt trauma to the head is too dangerous if you don't plan to make a living from it.
|
When I first started training BJJ, it was at a pure BJJ school and it was really fun. I train under the old head instructor from Sakurai's Mach Dojo now and even the grappling hurts. I went from thinking I was pretty good on the ground and in good shape to totally in shock.
I think boxing probably is harder to train for the casual guy, but these guys love to box which basically means they don't mind getting punched. Same with MMA. Your cardio can be top of the line, but once you start getting hit and it's not something you've been training to take for years, then fuck it, you're done. If you're still breathing fine in a few rounds I'll be surprised.