MMA Trash Talk: Why Selling the Fight Pales in Comparison to Winning the Fight

“And but one word with one of us? Couple it with something. Make it a word and a blow.”
—Shakespeare
In the world of MMA, the use of trash talk seems to be growing, and leading the pack is one Chael P. Sonnen.Behind him are countless…

“And but one word with one of us? Couple it with something. Make it a word and a blow.”

—Shakespeare

In the world of MMA, the use of trash talk seems to be growing, and leading the pack is one Chael P. Sonnen.

Behind him are countless others who seem to “get” the idea that hyping a fight is a very important aspect of the promotional side of the business. This is not surprising and certainly not a new discovery. Well before the likes of Sonnen, Michael Bisping, Conor McGregor and others, there was a certain Muhammad Ali, who understood the necessity of incendiary pre-fight trash talk and delivered it all with a style and swagger that has yet to be realized in MMA, Sonnen or no.

But is trash talk really just a promotional tool, or is a path to victory, with the interest it generates, merely an ancillary benefit?

In theory, trash talk is designed to give a psychological advantage to the antagonist by inflaming his opponent to the point that he (or she) loses his mental clarity and falls into error in the fight. In his book, The Art of War, Sun Tzu said: “If your opponent is of choleric temper, irritate him,” the ultimate resolution (end) being victory.

And make no mistake about it, it is the victory that justifies the means to that end.

If no victory is achieved, then there needs to be some other resolution, usually in the form of some kind of admittance or concession that addresses both the pre-fight banter and the outcome of the fight. If the antagonist does not achieve victory and further offers no concession of any meaningful kind, then the trash talk is nothing more than harsh words said for the sake of being harsh.

Many think it was Ali’s delivery and mirth that made him the best in the realm of trash talk, but it was much more than that. It was his understanding of the purpose of trash talk and his understanding and acceptance of the human condition of both his opponent and the fans that made him great.

On March 8, 1971, during a Wide World of Sports program, Ali and Joe Frazier, bitter rivals in every sense of the term, sat alongside moderator and sports luminary Howard Cosell watching a replay of their first ever fight the prior year. It had been a close contest that Frazier won, sealing the deal with a knockdown of Ali in the final frame.

All of this was to serve as a prequel to their rematch, with the winner moving one step closer to a title shot against then-reigning champion George Foreman.

As the viewing went deep into the bout, Frazier began to make some snide comments to Ali—particularly the fact that Ali had gone to the hospital after the fight for X-rays. Ali countered, saying that he had been in and out in 10 minutes and it was Frazier who had been in the hospital much longer (Frazier had suffered flu-like symptoms before and after the fight).

Quickly, things escalated (on national television, no less) based upon Ali asserting that Frazier was ignorant—an accusation Ali had made about Frazier many times. Suddenly, Frazier was standing up, and things quickly got physical.

After their scuffle, Frazier left and Ali and Cosell were left to finish the segment on their own. Ali didn’t act surprised or shocked, because he was neither; he had spent a long time attacking Frazier in the press and the fact that “Smokin’ Joe” had finally gotten fed up did not surprise him, nor did he act unjustly injured.

It was a bad-blood sales pitch, and the actions of Frazier had just set the hook deep in everyone’s mouth, which is what Ali had wanted all along.

Recently, the sport of MMA had a similar moment. Sonnen found himself in a brawl with a man he has been antagonizing (either directly or by proxy, for a very long time) on the set of season 3 of The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil—Wanderlei Silva.

In itself, the case of Sonnen is also a tale of two Silvas: Anderson and Wanderlei. Sonnen began to implement his unique brand of trash talk as a lead-up to his first and second fights with then-champion Anderson. Along the way, Sonnen managed to insult the entire nation of Brazil.

“You know, when I was a little kid, I remember going outside, I’d sit around with my friends; we’d talk about the latest technology in medicine and gaming and American ingenuity,” said Sonnen, pre-UFC 148, “and I look outside and Anderson and the Brazilian kids are sitting outside, playing in the mud.”

The other Silva (Wanderlei) took exception to Sonnen’s words, told him so and in turn got himself caught in Sonnen’s crosshairs. Since then, both men have engaged each other via harsh comments and, in fact, they almost came to blows at Mr. Olympia Expo—an incident that was well before the decision to have Sonnen coach opposite Wanderlei in Brazil.

So, after the brawl on the set, Sonnen and those in his camp acted surprised that Silva went nuclear and things got physical, but should they have been? Of course not—but that is what they are trying to sell.

It confuses the roles, and in truth it seems to have confused Sonnen, who is now acting like the wronged party instead of the black hat, which is what he has claimed was his intent all along (h/t Dave Meltzer via MMAFighting.com). Sonnen said:

I had to explain to him, ‘I’m the bad guy, you’re supposed to be the good guy.’ But when you attempt to jump me, that’s going to turn the people against you and for me, and I don’t want to be the good guy. I had to drop the fourth curtain and explain this to him, and it didn’t register.

Of course, it didn’t register. Like Frazier, Wanderlei isn’t playing a role or reading off a script. Sonnen knew this would be the way it was, as did Dana White and everyone else involved; they knew that if Sonnen accepted the chance to coach opposite Wanderlei in Brazil that he was basically sticking his head in the lion’s mouth and daring it to bite, knowing that it probably would.

So why claim he wanted to be the bad guy when now he is acting the role of injured party? This isn’t espionage and Wanderlei is no deep philosopher; it was all about as simple as possible. Sonnen could have maintained his heel role easily, but instead he spun it around and is looking to fly the sympathy card.

Obviously, the art of trash talk is a fluid mechanism. Perhaps Sonnen thought he saw some new opportunity and decided to change roles then and there. After all, it’s not like American fight fans aren’t a bit biased. Thus far, they seem to have all but forgotten all the harsh things Sonnen said about Brazil and its people, waiving it all away while Sonnen flies the American-in-harms-way-for-the-good-of-MMA flag.

An interesting case of this double standard is one “Prince” Naseem Hamed.

Hamed, an English boxer of Yemeni decent, made a big splash in America by inferring that he was going to come to the land of stars and stripes and teach the Americans how to box. Before the first blow in anger had been thrown against Kevin Kelly, Americans were more than eager to see him fall, and the harder the better.

I shudder to imagine how we would have reacted or what kind of actions we would have condoned against his person had Hamed actually demeaned our culture or people as a whole.

Hamed fought the fight against Kelly (his first bout in America) and overcame some early knockdowns, eventually scoring a knockout of Kelly in Round 4 of a terribly exciting and back-and-forth brawl.

After the fight, Hamed stated to Kelly: “You’re the best I’ve ever fought, and I’m the best you’ve ever fought.” It wasn’t exactly an apology, but it was a concession that showed Hamed understood the importance of balance over post-fight belligerence, or even ignorance.

It’s easy to forget that trash talk is really a kind of dialogue that requires two; if only one person is playing the game, so to speak, it becomes somewhat hollow and loses any true impact, especially promotionally. While one fighter may do enough talking for two (see Dan Hardy in the buildup to his fight with Marcus Davis), trash talk is still an action that really requires a reaction in order to be realized in the realm of the tactical as well as the realm of the promotional.

Of course, in today’s age of social media, trash talk is shared with the public, and it interacts as an audience, which could lead one to believe the only true relationship needed is that between the antagonist and the fans, who either cheer or boo.

But that is far from the case. It all leads up to a fight between two people, and it is the fight that matters above all else. It is, by its design, intended to be the resolution of all. If it is nothing more than an interaction by a single fighter and the fans, then it’s nothing more than bad stand-up comedy, minus the punch line that matters most in combative sport.

They say that might makes right, and in the fight game, that means winning empowers and verifies. From that stage, pre-fight trash talk begins to become appreciated as a kind of art form, but it is only as artistic as the fighter is successful; had Ali not been winning his fights, he would have appeared as nothing but a snake oil salesman.

But he did win the big fights, and after, he was more often than not complimentary of his opposition, delivering the resolution the event needed in order to be framed and hung upon the wall.

So far, Sonnen has not won a single big fight, and after his defeats he looks and carries himself like an educated, yet petulant man who will not admit he was wrong when it really matters most. After Sonnen lost the rematch with Anderson at UFC 148, he acted somewhat sullen, never apologized and went on as if he had never said a negative word.

Normally, this could be seen as a simple desire to empower further campaigns against future fighters that could be set off balance by the talk of yesterday. It’s not like you can honestly get all the toothpaste back in the tube, so why apologize for something that you might use in the future against a new opponent?

The difference is not just in the words, but the reality, post-fight. If you coupled harsh commentary with predictions of physical domination, failure to deliver one does not mean you cling to the other in a stubborn mimicry of victory.

You have to live up to the whole of the talk, as often as possible, bottom line.

Also, you need to be realistic about it all; Ali knew Frazier might decide to stand up and take physical exception to his words in front of Cosell (and the nation), which is why he was not only ready at the time, but also paid honest compliment to his adversary after their fights.

If that is digging too far into history, you can also look at Floyd Mayweather Jr. He gets it like no MMA fighter ever. During his first true “stepping out” onto the trash-talking stage, he attacked a certain Arturo Gatti like no one had ever done before, calling him a “paper champion” and a “C+ fighter” who he was going to “crush.”

After their fight, which Mayweather dominated so totally and utterly that Gatti fans were shocked and stunned, Mayweather was honestly complimentary to his felled opponent, and you suddenly knew what the promotional side of boxing was all about.

“That’s Arturo Thunder Gatti,” said Mayweather, post-fight, “he’s a tough guy, strong guy, he always comes to fight, he never lays down and tonight I was just the best man,” and “He’s still tough and could become world champion again.” When pressed further by Larry Merchant to address the pre-fight trash talking he did of Gatti, Mayweather said: “We just talk, that’s what fighters do.”

Mayweather has proven to be so good at the game of trash talk that he doesn’t have to win the way he says he will. Often, he has talked as if he were going to annihilate his opponents, only to come out and fight a safe, tactical bout that ensures his victory. His fans tune in to see his reign continue and his detractors tune in to see him lose, but he fights the way he wants to rather than the way his post-fight talk inferred.

This kind of bait-and-switch has seen his ability to sell a fight bolstered by the most important aspect of combative sports: winning.

A prime example of this was his fight against media darling Oscar De La Hoya.

Prior to the fight, Mayweather fully admitted he was wearing the black hat and did not back down for a second. “There can’t be two good guys; I chose to be the bad guy. F–k it.”

But no two fighters are alike; Sonnen has a way about him that is unique and honestly refreshing when he is of a mind to be so. Sonnen is brilliant when he offers up self-deprecating answers to hard questions, such as the one posed to him after his first tap-out loss to Silva at UFC 117.

Sonnen said, in response: “Well, I gotta plead ignorance on that first fight, and you’re [the reporter] right; I thought that if you tapped, it ended the round. I did not know that the content as a whole would come to a conclusion.”

Laughter erupted, and the joke was well received in typical Sonnen style.

Playing the role of villain is not as easy as most would believe; to try and transition from villain to victim in midstream is even harder. Prior to his convenient (or perhaps desperate) need of a suitable foe, Sonnen was more than happy to wear the black hat and keep selling his fights; then the losses started piling up.

He said he would defeat Anderson Silva twice; he lost both times.

He said he would defeat Jon Jones; he was defeated in Round 1.

Thus, he turned his attention elsewhere, and why shouldn’t he? Just because he lost all of his title attempts does not mean he should retire and he’s no longer a fighter in demand.

A fighter can talk as much trash as he likes, but sooner or later he has to deliver; Sonnen was not able to do this on the championship level, and thus he decided to poke fun at a few fighters well past their prime, specifically Wanderlei.

The problem now is we often don’t know when Sonnen is being serious or when he is just trying to hype the fight. I, for one, have a hard time accepting that a fighter as experienced, well-spoken and intelligent as Sonnen didn’t expect a fighter like Wanderlei to act like he did. If anything, it seems as if Sonnen would have been banking on such a reaction. How often have we heard him refer to himself as “the bad guy?”

More importantly, it’s shocking he didn’t take the ammunition Wanderlei gave him in order to keep promoting himself as the bad guy, coming to Brazil to take the lunch money of one of Brazil’s favorite sons. By all accounts and his own admission, that was his mission in taking the coaching role and the fight to follow. Now suddenly, Wanderlei derails it all by acting in the exact same way he had proven he would throughout his career?

Odds are Sonnen will achieve victory over Wanderlei in their fight. He has the style needed to take the Brazilian down time and again and keep him there for the duration of the fight. But a victory over Wanderlei is not the verification needed to balance out his losses to Anderson, which is where the whole thing began.

Those were title fights and fights Sonnen wanted badly to win. Occasionally, Sonnen drops his guard and speaks from the heart; he did so when talking about his rematch with Anderson during the countdown show for UFC 148.

“And I would give everything I’ve got, everything; I’d give it all back to be world champion for one night,” Sonnen said.

Without the victories that meant the most to him, trash talk now seems like just one of the things he does—one of his duties. As Hemingway was a writer who boxed, Sonnen is a fighter who talks. Without a title on the line, victory or defeat in the actual fight is almost academic by now.

There are others, of course. Conor McGregor, a fighter with just two fights in the UFC, has used trash talk to keep his name in circulation while he mended an injury. While this is to be expected to a certain degree, in the case of McGregor, it is almost anticlimactic.

Many of the fighters he has spoken of are perhaps years away from seeing him earn the chance to face them, especially those in the top five, including the reigning champion, Jose Aldo. As the only true resolution to all the talk is the fights themselves, which could be years away, our reward is to wait, perhaps indefinitely given how often injuries prevent certain fights from being made.

In a situation like McGregor’s, he would have been better served by singling out but one or two names—men within a realistic striking distance—and then gone from there, building it all up, event by event.

In the end, trash talk is, at its center, a bold and vocal prediction of victory that assumes a significant authority over an opponent. But without the victory, trash talk is just talk, and talk alone is not why we watch, or more importantly, why we believe.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

MMA Retrospective: Examining the Career of the Legendary Dan Henderson

After his last victory over Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, via knockout, Dan Henderson seemed like a man who should have been walking back to his dressing room with a UFC belt around his waist.
It was a spirited fight that saw Henderson looking ver…

After his last victory over Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, via knockout, Dan Henderson seemed like a man who should have been walking back to his dressing room with a UFC belt around his waist.

It was a spirited fight that saw Henderson looking very old and very beatable in Rounds 1 and 2, getting knocked down and seriously hurt in both frames. His come-from-behind knockout of the younger Rua seemed like the perfect ending to a storied career; yet in truth, the career of Henderson seems incomplete.

As a fighter who has accomplished so much, the fact that he has not won a UFC belt is the one glaring oddity in his resume of greatness. For a man such as Henderson, who has been fighting some of the very best fighters in the world for over 17 years, it would seem a given that he would have won a UFC title by now (and probably defended it a few times as well).

He’s come close a time or two; he lost a close decision to Quinton “Rampage” Jackson at UFC 75 and later lost via choke to Anderson Silva after winning the first round against the then-pound-for-pound best fighter in the world.

But the simple facts are, he has never won a UFC title of note. The closest he has come was winning the middleweight medal at UFC 17, after defeating Allan Goes and then Carlos Newton on May 15, 1998.

Since then, it’s been many titles in many organizations, save the one promotion that is currently the biggest and best in the world.

Should Henderson retire tomorrow, many a newer fan would dismiss him as nothing more than an old-school fighter who was really never as good as the press made him out to be. This, of course, is a perception that he’s hindered by an appreciation of history that can only be truly known by those who experienced it at the time.

Henderson’s career has been nothing short of incredible, and that fact should not be lost to history just because the sport is growing at a rate that sees countless fighters rise so high that what has come before is often lost in shadow.

Thus, we present a career retrospective of one of the greatest fighters the sport has known: Dan Henderson. He may not have a UFC title, but he has proven himself, despite that, many times over.

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MMA Retrospective: Examining the Career of UFC Champion Jon Jones

This past Saturday night at UFC 172, Jon Jones stepped into the cage to defend his UFC light heavyweight title against Glover Teixeira.
It was his seventh defense of his title, making him the longest reigning champion in the division’s history; t…

This past Saturday night at UFC 172, Jon Jones stepped into the cage to defend his UFC light heavyweight title against Glover Teixeira.

It was his seventh defense of his title, making him the longest reigning champion in the division’s history; the previous record holder was Tito Ortiz, who defended the title five times.

The fight itself was a blend of the expected and the unexpected; Jones dominated via his reach and unorthodox striking, but the grappling skills he demonstrated so early in his UFC career were not so easily applied against his gritty challenger.

Then, there was the question of eye pokes, which will give his detractors no small amount of ammunition by which to criticize his performance, which saw him win via scores of 50-45 on all judges scorecards.

Like many champions, Jones has faced his fair share of criticism, and it looks like it will not stop anytime soon; as long as he keeps winning, some fans of the sport will take exception with his methods while waiting for their chance to cheer when he eventually loses.

Now, his future looks to contain two very tough bouts: a rematch against Alexander Gustafsson and a fight with Daniel Cormier.

And yet, amid it all, there stands a fighter who is closing in on Anderson Silva’s record for title defenses, which stands at 10. Alongside Jose Aldo, Jones is working his way toward that benchmark of greatness; to break that record will be nothing less than a positive testimony of consistency and greatness, no matter how many people question the ways and means by which Jones wins.

Fighters such as Silva, Aldo and Jones are rarities in the sport; they’re men capable of rising to any occasion, using their physical gifts and skills to constantly defeat their opponents. To retain a title in the UFC in any division is a hard task; yet now, Jones has accomplished this feat seven times.

What kind of man is Jones? Clearly, he is more than the some of his greater or lesser parts; indeed, he is the composite whole of a career that has seen him achieve remarkable things.

Despite the eye pokes, Jones looked excellent against Teixeira, dominating from a distance and up close, where Teixeira had his greatest chance to land his power shots.

Jones took some hard shots, going toe-to-toe with the challenger on more than one occasion, and still won the fight in decisive fashion.

When you look at Jones’ career, he has made a habit of making good fighters look average. At UFC 172, he proved it was not a simple byproduct of his incredible reach; it was due to his use of brutal elbows, wrist control and a high fight IQ.

And to think he only started six years ago…

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Metamoris, College Wrestling and 10 Non-MMA Events MMA Fans Should Watch

Not that long ago, MMA fans were relegated to watching VHS copies of the UFC and reading about other “fringe” aspects of the sport, such as submission grappling, in Black Belt magazine.
What a difference 20 or so years and the Internet…

Not that long ago, MMA fans were relegated to watching VHS copies of the UFC and reading about other “fringe” aspects of the sport, such as submission grappling, in Black Belt magazine.

What a difference 20 or so years and the Internet make.

Now, we have the UFC on Fox, UFC Fight Pass, Bellator on Spike TV and so on. Yet for all the exposure the sport is receiving, there is still some programming that fans of the sport may be missing out on.

Some of this of course will be far from new to fans of the combative sports as a whole, but this list is meant to be a fully rounded as possible. What you take from it is wholly up to you, which is how it should be.

These events and programming represent some of the core disciplines of the sport of MMA. These singular sports can be enjoyed by themselves while promoting the sport of MMA as a composite whole.

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MMA Bouts We Would Have Loved to See: Velasquez vs. Fedor

Perhaps one of the main reasons why video games are so popular among fight fans is that it allows them to seamlessly bridge one era with another; pitting the best of yesterday (or yesteryear) against the best of today.
In this digital medium, Muhammad …

Perhaps one of the main reasons why video games are so popular among fight fans is that it allows them to seamlessly bridge one era with another; pitting the best of yesterday (or yesteryear) against the best of today.

In this digital medium, Muhammad Ali can face Mike Tyson, Sugar Ray Robinson can meet Sugar Ray Leonard, and in the world of MMA, the best heavyweight today, Cain Velasquez, could fight the greatest heavyweight ever, Fedor Emelianenko.

Sadly, the prognostication abilities of games still are not so good that we can sit back and watch and learn who really would win between Velasquez and a prime Fedor, but it would have been glorious.

For many, Fedor was hands down the best heavyweight. For those of us that saw him in his prime, year after year, we can understand that point of view. Fedor had so many advantages that during his reign it almost seemed unfair.

He had brutal power in his fists, shocking speed, exceptional grappling and submissions and he seemed utterly indestructible. For nearly a decade Fedor was undefeated. While he was indeed spoon-fed more than a few questionable fighters in Pride, he also defeated some excellent competition in Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira and Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic; two fighters who were constantly rising to the top of the division and stood alone as his closest rivals.

In addition, he bested men like Mark Coleman, Kevin Randleman, Andrei Arlovski and Tim Sylvia. With the exception of the Randleman bout, Fedor made it look terribly easy. While his is not that of a true world beater, the simple fact is that during his prime, he was hands down the best heavyweight in the world, bar none.

Ironically, the best heavyweight of today—which is indeed Velasquez, without question—is suffering the same kind of competitive shortcomings that Fedor did. Aside from Junior Dos Santos, Velasquez has no true rivals and he now rules a division that is desperate for some true contenders.

While Velasquez may not have the same punching power that Fedor enjoyed in his prime, the current UFC heavyweight champion is a hard puncher who is good with his strikes. Above all he possesses an excellent grappling game and is perhaps the best conditioned athlete in the sport today, save for Nick Diaz.

Velasquez has been running over all competition since winning his title back from Dos Santos at UFC 155. Now that he has thoroughly thrashed the only man to defeat him not once but twice, he is poised to become the longest reigning UFC champion in the division’s history.

Imagining a bout where the best Velasquez met the best Fedor is tantalizing for all the right reasons. Both men are humble and reserved outside the cage and monsters when the fight begins and both can end a bout quickly or pound their opposition relentlessly for the duration of the contest.

So, who would have won between these two excellent fighters?

As with all combative sport contests, it is the clash that holds many of the possible answers, and the chief among them revolves around the takedown. It seems clear that the winner of the bout would be decided upon where the fight was fought.

If Velasquez could take Fedor down quickly and continually, odds are he would get a unanimous decision given his incredible work rate, excellent positional grappling and limitless cardio. If Fedor could stop the takedowns, odds are his punching power and speed would allow him to land his heavy punches often, eventually knocking Velasquez out or hurting him bad enough to prompt the referee to stop the bout.

And in truth, neither man would have an easy time implementing their areas of advantage. Fedor was very hard to take down and in his prime he never folded or panicked in pressure situations; he seemed ready for any position. Velasquez, for his part, is good enough with his hands to utilize the striking tools and combinations he’s been taught and knows how to move around the cage in a slugfest.

Neither man suffers the kind of vanity that would see them do anything other than try to attack from their areas of advantage; both would be incredibly wary of the abilities of the other, constantly moving and looking for the moment to strike without lingering too long in dangerous territory.

Fights like this can go one of two ways. They can be incredibly boring with both fighters being overly cautious. Or they can be brutal fights that see both men attack each other relentlessly, knowing their best chance comes from being offensive rather than defensive.

Then, there is the locale of the event. Does it happen in the UFC cage or the Pride ring, where knees and kicks and stomps to the head of a downed opponent are allowed?

To be honest, I believe that if the fight happens in the Octagon, Fedor has the advantage as he is protected from the knees and kicks to the head when he is down. This may sound odd, but imagine Velasquez earning a takedown and securing a cradle on Fedor. In the Pride ring, he would be free to attack with brutal knees to the head, much like Tito Ortiz did in his rematch with Guy Mezger in the UFC, way back when.

Yet even as we dig deeper into the variables, we come back to the question of the takedown. If Velasquez can get it repeatedly, he wins. If he cannot, Fedor wins.

So, would he be able to get the takedown on a prime Fedor? Odds are he would get a few, but he wouldn’t get them all; he’d be doing great if he got half of his attempted takedowns to be honest.

In his third fight with Dos Santos, Velasquez saw many of his takedown attempts thwarted. Fedor has a better takedown defense game and is also closer in size to Velasquez, which would help prevent the UFC champion from lodging his head under the chin in order to help pin the Pride legend against the cage. That is a technique Velasquez has used more than a few times in his career against taller fighters.

In addition, keeping Fedor down would be incredibly hard, as would pounding him out for the stoppage. Fedor was incredibly durable; one need only witness how he recovered from being slammed directly on his head by Kevin Randleman to see this as fact. He was also very fast in transitional scrambles and his submission acumen was shockingly high. A prime Fedor would come close to giving Velasquez the submission nightmares many were expecting him to face against the shopworn Nogueira back at UFC 111.

Velasquez is, as of now, a fighter still growing into his potential. The fact that he is so dogged is one of the things that show him to be a fighter of great promise. Many fighters abandon their game plans when they suffer from a hard shot or many, but not Velasquez.

When he is hit (as he has been by Brad Morris, Cheick Kongo and others), he goes right back to his bread and butter, utilizing his best weapons instead of moving about the Octagon, suddenly unsure of himself or what to do next. He’s an unflappable fighter and that kind of grit and determination cannot be taught. Two years from now he may indeed be the greatest heavyweight the sport has ever seen given his dedication to training and his clear desire.

However, if prime Fedor would have met the current version of Velasquez, eventually Fedor would catch him with enough shots to find his range and from there he would land more and more until he finally stopped Velasquez by KO or TKO. While this may sound incredibly unfair and even implausible for Velasquez fans, the simple facts are that the current UFC champion is a very hittable fighter.

Velasquez has been needlessly caught by many opponents because of his lack of head movement, his tendency to try to force striking techniques and combinations into every situation and his sheer willingness to run headlong into any show of offense, determined to seize any and every opportunity to land the heavier counterpunches. His lack of head movement and his overaggressiveness combine at the moment he chooses to attack or counterattack and the result is that his head floats up like a balloon, waiting to be popped.

In Fedor, Velasquez would be fighting a man with a vast array of skills, each one shockingly high and empowered by a keen mind and an able body. While it is true that Fedor did possess both incredible punching power and a very fast frame, his true strength was how all his advantages came together and how he was able to marshal them into a veritable war ensemble.

His footwork was excellent, his head movement and overall striking defense were equally excellent, his ground-and-pound was the best the sport has ever seen, his timing was very good, he mixed his striking attacks with both head and body shots and he was nearly seamless in his blending of a fast and violent offense with a sound defense.

Like many good strikers, Fedor threw punches in bunches, but there was an underlying science between his flurries. They were not just thrown with the intent to land (or “touch” his opponent), but to set up the next punch or flurry, or the underutilized punch-and-clutch, which would see him lead with a power shot and slide into a body lock via commanding underhooks or strong hip control. Fedor was able to string it all together with a means to and end that saw him employing both an accurate offense and a sound defense without compromising position or giving up an easy takedown.

And when he landed once, more often than not he did significant damage. From there, a whirlwind of strikes would follow, each carefully aimed and delivered with blistering speed and sound footing. He also had an uncanny grasp of his range, knowing just how deep he could step into the pocket and throw with full authority before sacrificing any defensive advantage. His one failing in this area was his bout against Kazuyuki Fujita, when he got caught by a heavy punch that had him stepping into post-holes.

During this moment, Fedor closed the distance quickly and tied up with Fujita, recovering his wits as he was taken down to the ground. Never once did he panic and when he got back to his feet he went back into the fight as if nothing had ever happened.

Fedor’s detractors can say what they will about his competition in Pride or how his reign abruptly ended and thus he was never really all that good to begin with, but that simply doesn’t hold water. When he was in his prime, he was the best in the world, and he would be too much for Velasquez to contain for the duration of a title bout.

But while it lasted, it would be glorious, for sure.

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Georges St-Pierre’s Fight Scene in Captain America: Winter Soldier

Although Georges St-Pierre may not be returning to the Octagon anytime soon, he’s not been totally idle.
He took up the role of Batroc the Leaper for the new movie Captain America: Winter Soldier, which pulled in $37 million on Friday and is on p…

Although Georges St-Pierre may not be returning to the Octagon anytime soon, he’s not been totally idle.

He took up the role of Batroc the Leaper for the new movie Captain America: Winter Soldier, which pulled in $37 million on Friday and is on pace toward a $90 million weekend, according to Chris Barton of the Los Angeles Times.

As seen in the video from Jesse Holland of MMA Mania, St-Pierre utilizes a few recognizable MMA movements, but he doesn’t go for any takedowns in the preview clip of his fight with Captain America. Still, given the early numbers, this is easily the biggest break in GSP’s post-Octagon career.

If nothing else, it serves as a pleasing distraction while Johny Hendricks readies for the first defense of the welterweight title that St-Pierre gave up after defeating “Bigg Rigg” at UFC 167.

For fans of the Marvel Universe, the casting of St-Pierre as Batroc is inspired. Although portrayed in the comics as a kind of cliche Frenchman, complete with an absurd mustache, Batroc was a close match for Captain America in a physical confrontation.

Given that St-Pierre speaks French and is an actual fighter, he brings a kind of gravitas to the role that is not often seen in action movies.

Obviously, he is not the main villain in the movie and thus has limited screen time, but as the clip shows, his physical presence and abilities translate well to the silver screen. Now, if St-Pierre can talk Hollywood into banning those ridiculous leg sweeps from all future fight scenes, we could all be happy.

In the meantime, while St-Pierre’s time in a new spotlight (oblique as it may be) begins, MMA fans are left to wonder if he will ever return to real competition.

Back in early February, one of St-Pierre’s boxing coaches, the famed Freddy Roach, spoke on the topic. He said that if St-Pierre doesn’t return by the end of 2014, he should stay retired, per Jesse Holland at MMA Mania.com:

He told me he wanted to take two years off and I told him two years was retirement. Let’s stick with one year right now and see how you feel and if you feel hungry enough to get back in there, we’ll do it. If not, we’ll call it a day. He has headaches and so forth. You don’t want to hear that.

Now, St-Pierre is scheduled to undergo knee surgery this coming week as reported by Ariel Helwani on Wednesday night’s edition of UFC Tonight (h/t MMA Fighting). Given that he has no ongoing commitments, he could take his time during the rehabilitation stage of his recovery, thus postponing any decisions about a return until after 2014.

Will his recovery also see him find his desire to compete in the world of professional MMA once again, or will he continue to pursue outside interests?

It is rare for professional fighters who have achieved as much as St-Pierre to walk away from their competitive natures for long. For every fighter who has done so, such as Marvin Hagler, scores of others simply found they were not suited to the quiet life of retirement.

Should St-Pierre decide to stay away from MMA, no one can deny that his accomplishments will merit him an induction in the UFC Hall of Fame, and rightfully so.

But if he decides to come back, it should be sooner rather than later. The longer a fighter sits on the shelf, the harder it is to regain the edge that was once taken for granted.

Whatever he decides, we will always remember his reign as champion, and for a very long time, all future champions will be compared to him, whether his detractors like it or not. He is the longest-reigning welterweight champion in UFC history and one of the most dominant champions of any weight class.

And that is a legacy anyone can be proud of.

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