Jon Jones: Are We Mistaking Confidence for Conceit?

For all intents and purposes, it seems that many MMA fans think Jon Jones is every bit as arrogant as Rashad Evans says he is. When Jones says he believes his own hype, or that he is the best in his division, or that he wants to become better than Ali,…

For all intents and purposes, it seems that many MMA fans think Jon Jones is every bit as arrogant as Rashad Evans says he is.

When Jones says he believes his own hype, or that he is the best in his division, or that he wants to become better than Ali, they’re shocked and appalled.

And if that wasn’t enough, he reportedly won’t sign replica UFC title belts for fans because they were not earned.

Many MMA fans are going to be tuning in on April 21st with the hopes of seeing Jones get knocked off the top of the mountain.

And all of that is fine and just.

But everyone should take a moment to consider the possibility that they are wrong about Jones.

I am not saying they are wrong, I’m saying they might be.

In order to keep things in context, we would have to walk a mile in Jones’ shoes — when he was a skinny kid who had little-to-no athletic aspirations, aside of proving himself to his brothers.

Much of what Jones has achieved is due to plain, simple daring. Instead of saying “I can’t do that,” his modus operandi is “I don’t know I can’t do that until I try.”

Considering the results of his MMA career, Jones has succeeded at what he has tried to do.

Fighters’ lives are based upon seconds. They have to focus all of their energies toward the next step or the next drill.

Most successful fighters can do this because they have some God-given athletic ability that allows them to sail on autopilot through those difficult sessions.

And once again, there is nothing wrong with this.

For Jones, he has not attained any of his acclaim due to athletic grace. Many say he is more like Roy Jones Jr. than Muhammad Ali, but I beg to differ.

Roy Jones Jr. was a freak of nature, athletically speaking. His rise to glory was based on the fact that his physical gifts were so numerous that he didn’t have to work as hard as the next guy.

Jon Jones works twice as hard, like Ali did, because he is not some uber-athlete.

I have no idea what a training camp must be like, but I imagine it is brutal from day one to day whatever. I also imagine that having self-confidence is a must when you are young and defying the odds.

There is nothing wrong with a fighter feeling that he has a destiny, nor is there anything wrong with a fighter being confident, especially when that confidence is well-founded.

Jones is still very young to the game and, having lost much in his life already, he is probably terrified of losing what he has. When people want to hold on to something, they may try just about any kind of philosophy in order to get a better grip.

So what if Jones doesn’t exactly fit what we consider to be the standard of humble? Who are we to say our standard is the right standard?

My point is that the difference between conceit and confidence is usually only seen in hindsight, and Jones is only looking into the future, quite possibly because the past is painful for him.

And as far as not signing a replica UFC championship belt, hell, I don’t think they should even make those. As long as he doesn’t stop signing autographs, he’ll be just fine.

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UFC 145 Fight Card: Will Jon Jones and Rashad Evans Ever Be Friends Again?

Today is Monday, April 16, 2012, and finally it is fight week for UFC 145. At this point, this fight card has been broken down and discussed a million different ways. But, one of the topics that I have not heard addressed is the topic of whether Jon Jo…

Today is Monday, April 16, 2012, and finally it is fight week for UFC 145. At this point, this fight card has been broken down and discussed a million different ways. But, one of the topics that I have not heard addressed is the topic of whether Jon Jones and Rashad Evans can ever repair their friendship.

Rashad Evans had already been training at Jackson-Winklejohn for years when Greg Jackson approached the former UFC light heavyweight champion to get his opinion of Jones joining them in New Mexico. Rashad has voiced that he was apprehensive from the start because both he and current UFC champion Jones fight at 205 pounds.

Evans explained on UFC Primetime that Greg Jackson told him that he would not ever have to fight the younger man.

Up until a little over one year ago, “Bones” Jones and “Suga” Rashad were friends who trained, ate and shared memories together. After an interview last year with Ariel Helwani in which Jon revealed that he would fight Evans if he needed to, their relationship took a drastic downward turn.

Then, shortly after, Jones dismantled Mauricio Rua to win the UFC light heavyweight title and Rashad left the camp for his new home in Florida.

With the two men finally set to square off this Saturday, the tension has only increased. But, even with all of the bad blood and choice words, MMA fans have grown accustomed to fighters having harsh words before a bout and then hugging and squashing their beef after.

So, can Rashad and Jon repair their friendship?

It is said that time heals all wounds and I think that same principle applies here. Plenty of men and women have had issues and have eventually been able to resolve them. This situation will be the same. Even though both of these guys have said many choice words to each other, that alone does not mean these men cannot resolve their personal problems after they finally fight each other.

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UFC 145: Fight Card, PPV Info, Predictions and More for Jones vs. Evans

One of the most intense, personal rivalries in mixed martial arts comes to a head at UFC 145, when Jon Jones puts the light heavyweight title on the line against Rashad Evans. Jones has yet to find anyone who can challenge him inside the octagon. …

One of the most intense, personal rivalries in mixed martial arts comes to a head at UFC 145, when Jon Jones puts the light heavyweight title on the line against Rashad Evans. 

Jones has yet to find anyone who can challenge him inside the octagon. In 2011 alone he knocked off four of the best light heavyweight fighters in the world (Ryan Bader, Mauricio Rua, Quinton Jackson and Lyoto Machida).

Evans has been waiting for a title shot since defeating Jackson at UFC 114 in May 2010. Injuries and timing have kept him from this moment, but now he has his chance to shine against the fighter he mentored while the two were in Greg Jackson’s camp. 

 

Where: Phillips Arena in Atlanta, GA

When: Saturday, April 21 at 10:00 p.m. EST

Watch: Facebook undercard fights at 7:00 p.m. EST, preliminary fights at 8:00 p.m. EST on FX, main card fights at 10 p.m. ET on pay-per-view; online pay-per-view streaming (must pay $44.99) at UFC.tv, Yahoo! Sports, UStream, Android or iPhone.

 

Fight Card

Main Card

Light Heavyweight Championship: Jon Jones (c) vs. Rashad Evans

Welterweight Bout: Rory MacDonald vs. Che Mills

Heavyweight Bout: Brendan Schaub vs. Ben Rothwell

Bantamweight Bout: Miguel Torres vs. Michael McDonald

Featherweight Bout: Mark Hominick vs. Eddie Yagin

Lightweight Bout: Mark Bocek vs. John Alessio

 

Preliminary Card (FX)

Heavyweight Bout: Travis Browne vs. Chad Griggs

Welterweight Bout: Matt Brown vs. Stephen Thompson

Lightweight Bout: John Makdessi vs. Anthony Njokuani

Lightweight Bout: Mac Danzig vs. Efrain Escudero

 

Preliminary Card (Facebook)

Welterweight Bout: Keith Wisniewski vs. Chris Clements

Featherweight Bout: Marcus Brimage vs. Maximo Blanco

 

Jones’ Keys to Victory

Use size and length to keep Evans down; don’t try to outwrestle Evans

Everyone knows about the amazing size and length of Jones. He uses his 84.5-inch reach to attack opponents who try to dance around him.

In addition to understanding the advantage Jones has with his size, he uses it to try moves and strikes that no one else can. 

As long as Jones doesn’t try to prove himself as a wrestler against a superb wrestler like Evans, he is going to be difficult to beat. 

 

Evans’ Keys to Victory

Use wrestling to frustrate Jones early; try to time strikes when Jones leaves himself open.

Evans is a smart fighter. He understands that he can’t compete with Jones from a pure athleticism standpoint. 

His best chance to walk away with the light heavyweight championship is to bring back his wrestling, which he has put on the back burner lately to prove himself as a striker, in order to keep Jones at bay. 

When Evans does try to punch, he has to be careful. If he comes out swinging, Jones is going to destroy him. Rashad needs to keep his ego in check. 

 

What They Are Saying

Evans has been handling all the promotion and talking leading up to this fight, though you might not know there has been any since most of it is happening on the little-known Fuel TV network. 

Jones has tried to remain civil, but there have been moments when he appears to be falling into Evans’ trap of trash talk

“I think Rashad took my interview — me saying I’d never want to have to fight him — and he used that to give himself a reason to challenge me for the belt. Our agreement was to not fight each other on any accord, by any means. The only thing I said was I would never want to fight my teammate, and the only way it was possible was if I was absolutely going to lose my job over it. That’s a pretty major extreme. But he took that and found a reason to challenge me for the belt, which totally disrespected everything we stood for, everything our team stood for, everything that me and Rashad agreed to.”

 

Undercard Fight to Watch: Miguel Torres vs. Michael McDonald

While the bantamweight division is very top-heavy with Dominick Cruz and Urijah Faber, the division desperately needs depth to get legitimacy as a drawing card in UFC. 

Torres and McDonald have a great chance to steal this particular show because of their styles and amazing speed inside the octagon. 

Torres has a huge advantage in experience, with 44 professional fights. But McDonald has proven that he is not going to be intimidated by the stage and spectacle of UFC. 

Whoever wins this fight could conceivably be in line for a title shot later on this summer. 

 

Main Event Prediction

Evans needs to win this fight. He is doing a lot of talking leading up to it; he feels slighted by his former best friend, and this is his chance to prove he is still The Man.

Unfortunately, Jones has reached a point where you can’t predict him to lose. It is just something you have to see to believe. 

Jones wins via third-round KO


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UFC 145 Fight Card: 7 Burning Questions Heading into Atlanta

The main event could easily take up this entire article, but this card is stacked and that means there are a lot of questions to ponder coming in. It will be interesting to hear the jawing that comes from Jon Jones and Rashad Evans on the UFC Primetime…

The main event could easily take up this entire article, but this card is stacked and that means there are a lot of questions to ponder coming in. It will be interesting to hear the jawing that comes from Jon Jones and Rashad Evans on the UFC Primetime special before the event, and that is […]

Jon Jones’ Change in Character Shows His Ascension to Arrogance

The feud between Rashad Evans and UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones has been one of the most entertaining rivalries in the sport recently. Remarks from both individuals make it difficult to remember them as teammates.There are too many interview…

The feud between Rashad Evans and UFC light-heavyweight champion Jon Jones has been one of the most entertaining rivalries in the sport recently. Remarks from both individuals make it difficult to remember them as teammates.

There are too many interviews to count of each fighter trash talking each other, and just as many of them praising one another while training together. A heated discussion between the fighters during a recent appearance on Comcast Sports is a perfect example of their lack of respect for one another. Throughout the interview, the two repeatedly interrupted each other and the mood was tense. An observation that Evans made in several interviews —— including this one —— is something I’ve noticed about Jones myself. His demeanor and claimed values have changed drastically from his early days in the league.

Since the beginning of his career, Jones has claimed to be a humble competitor. Until he was offered a championship opportunity against Mauricio Rua in early 2011, he was.

In 2010 he made statements that merit a meek reputation. Here’s an example from ESPN, “I just need to be myself and allow things to happen. If it’s God’s will, good things will happen.” In Sports Illustrated in 2009, Jones referred to himself as “their little brother” when speaking about Evans and other teammates at Jackson’s Mixed Martial Arts. In 2010 he said in an interview “I got that call and had to convince myself to be confident” while discussing his invitation to the UFC. Most fighters early in their UFC careers make statements very similar to these since they are grateful for the opportunity and are careful to deter the interest of possible fans. A truly humble athlete will maintain this attitude —— regardless of experience or accomplishments. While these are words from an up-and-coming fighter —— which Jones is no longer —— the contrast between his language, then and now, is strikingly high. His remarks from the Comcast Sports interview alone show this difference. Here is some of the dialogue.:

“There’s something about being really young and fresh. I haven’t seen the world and I don’t have the riches. I don’t have this and I don’t have that,” Jones said midway through the clip. 

Evans interrupted him and asked, “You got a Bentley don’t you? Or a Rolls-Royce?”  

Jones replied, “I do have a Bentley, a 2012 Bentley… The bottom line really, is that I want more.” 

Jones then discussed his career and that he has a dream that he isn’t far from. He told Ryan Stewart “I’m extremely confident. I do believe my own hype. And I’m working towards making it true” 

“But that’s the worst thing you can ever do,” Evans proclaimed. 

“Well, it’s working for me. I’m not saying it’s an arrogance thing.” 

“It is an arrogance thing.” Evans told him. 

“No, it’s not. I believe that I’m the greatest. Mohammed Ali said that, ‘I said I was the greatest way before I was the greatest. I made the world believe I was the greatest.’ But with his own self conviction, he became the greatest.” 

“Okay, but he also was humbled. He was humbled many times.” 

“I believe I have the attitude of a champion and a winner and I’m not apologetic for it.” 

“You need to be humbled.” 

Jones declared, “And I think it’s something people in America can learn from. It’s very important to believe in yourself. It’s a cold world out there and this world will pass you by if you give another man anything over yourself. So I will say, yes. I’ll say I’m the best looking. I’ll say I’m the most funny. I’ll say I’m the most charismatic. I’ll say I’m the most main stream. I’ll say everything.” 

Stewart then asked Evans if he believes Jones has earned his fame. He responded, “I definitely think he’s warranted his fame and all the accolades that come along with that. I just think that he’s so arrogant and so full on himself and thinks that he is something to the world that has never been. There ain’t nothing new under the sun. There ain’t no lessons that, you know, that he thinks that he’s going to teach the world that the world hasn’t already seen.” 

“You know but I can try, though,” Jones responded as Evans declared, “Your just a drop in the bucket, bro.”

The two went back and forth as the hosts sat in silence watching the intense war of words.  

Evans stated, “I honestly believe this. You lose a fight, you will change the person who you are. You won’t be the same person.” 

Jones replied simply, “I won’t.” 

Evans snapped back with, “You know why, because your fabric is fake.” He continued to argue with Jones telling him that they’re both aware of how Jones is fake. He claimed to know how Jones truly is and that he should be who he claims to be. In other words, act as he claims to act. 

Next, Evans brought up the time that he held Jones down in practice, spurring emotional responses from Jones, as if Evans had struck a nerve. Jones spoke about the incident, confirming that it truly happened, and explained how irrelevant it was because it was practice. Evans then told the pair of hosts that Jones was on the verge of crying while asking to be let up. 

 

Jones, seemingly annoyed, attempted to put an end to the discussion and said, “I’m trying not to get into this pre-fight stuff too much because right now I have a picture of my foot in Rampage’s mouth. But I never put it online because you got to win with grace. So all this stuff you’re saying right now, after I win the fight, it’s going to be so irrelevant. That’s what I’m saying. My storyline is so much bigger than this fight right here. So I’m trying to keep it classy.” 

Evans then mocked him by closing his hands and saying, “We should all pray to Jon Jones.”

I understand someone as accomplished as Jones becoming self-confident. But, Jones has gone too far. It’s difficult to believe this is the same person that once said, “I think once you start to think that you’re the man, and you know it all, and your style is unbeatable and stuff like that, that’s when you get caught and clipped, and get humbled really fast.” Jones obviously hasn’t maintained his modest attitude regarding his abilities. He’s clearly under the impression that he is indomitable, contrary to the other UFC champions. 

As an experienced UFC fighter and former champion, Evans has undergone the fallacy of invincibility that Jones is currently presuming. Evans’ sharp comments to his opponent are those of a fallen champion, forced into modesty by a humbling condescension. Evans has experienced the egotistic perspective most young, yet accomplished, athletes possess early on. One can imagine the psychological fall Jones may have if he is unseated from his throne, especially if by the hands of his biggest rival. 

Apparently I’m not the only person who believes Jones isn’t genuine. Will Gray, from MMA Valor wrote about the inflation of Jones’ ego after winning the belt and his inability to tolerate the mental pressures of being a champion. He states about Jones: 

“The constant wanking of people “stealing my moment” are opposite of the humble, thankful image Jones pushes in his interviews and press conferences. Stop portraying that you are here for the moment and willing to accept whatever comes your way, only to get upset when someone who wants your title or tell you to your face they are better than you.” 

One may also compare his attitude to that of his fellow champions Anderson Silva or Georges St. Pierre to see the contrast. They’ve been regarded as the best on the planet for years and I couldn’t imagine either of them making statements like these. Silva couldn’t be more humble after bowing at the feet of Chael Sonnen at the end of their first fight, in the midst of their ferocious rivalry. Such brash statements from someone who appeared to be humble at one point in his career makes me wonder if he’s changed over time or if he was like this in the first place and now chooses not to hide it.  

The two will finally end this chapter in their careers on April 21 in Atlanta, Georgia at UFC 145. Jones is the major favorite, but keep in mind that Evans appears to be getting under his skin. Jones has beaten legends, but Evans knows things about Jones that others don’t. Evans knows his tendencies and apparently almost made him cry during practice. Concurrently, Jones is emotionally motivated to silence his former teammate. I don’t have a clue what other fights are on this card, but I can assure you I will not miss it. The main event alone is worth the money, whether it lasts five rounds or five seconds.

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Jon Jones to Defend Light Heavyweight Title in April at UFC 145 in Atlanta

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