UFC on Fuel 9: The Jack Slack Tactical Breakdown

UFC on Fuel 9 was an entertaining enough card, bringing a few good finishes and some excitement as any good event should. While it will not be remembered as anything great, it certainly played out much better than it could have, having lost its main Sw…

UFC on Fuel 9 was an entertaining enough card, bringing a few good finishes and some excitement as any good event should. While it will not be remembered as anything great, it certainly played out much better than it could have, having lost its main Swedish draw, Alexander Gustafsson at the eleventh hour. 

Matt Mitrione picked up an easy knockout victory against the always-over-aggressive Phil De Fries, Brad Pickett picked up a decision victory over Mike Easton, and Diego Brandao submitted the gangly Pablo Garza earlier in the night.

My job is to analyse the more technically expert skills displayed at UFC on Fuel 9, so I will be focusing on Conor McGregor‘s UFC debut, Ross Pearson’s halting of Ryan Couture’s ascendancy and on Gegard Mousasi‘s systematic flattening of Ilir Latifi‘s nose.

 

Ross Pearson vs. Ryan Couture

Couture looked every bit his father’s son when he came out and immediately pressed Pearson against the fence. Couture is—unfortunately for him—nothing like his father in terms of fighting ability along the fence.

Where Randy Couture could make an opponent carry his weight, force them to stumble and have them eating four or five jolting uppercuts and a knee to the midsection as they stumbled to stay upright, Ryan Couture spent the entire first round with Pearson attempting to flatten Pearson to the fence without using any effective offense. 

Pearson, to his credit, did an excellent job of shifting his hips, creating space and stifling Couture’s offense by working to get his head into Couture’s face or under his jaw. 

Pearson, with his back to the fence, was happy to simply stifle Couture’s efforts in this way. Often, it led to Couture getting impatient and giving Pearson the space to escape. 

Pearson’s destruction of Couture in the second round was attributed by many in the media to Pearson “finding his timing,” but in truth, it was more to do with the fact that Couture chose to engage Pearson with single punches and kicks.

A master of the inside slip, Pearson will take his head off line to the left, avoiding strikes and combine the movement with a hard right hook or come back from his crouched position with a beautiful left hook. To stop Pearson doing this, it is necessary to threaten him with high kicks, knees and uppercuts every time he looks to move his head. Couture, on the other hand, opted to run in with punches.

Couture took a step back from that strategy and started throwing low kicks, which did little to stop Pearson moving forward. As Pearson caught one such low kick, he was able to throw Couture to the mat and follow with some ground-and-pound. 

As Couture regained his footing, Pearson swarmed on him against the fence. From here, Pearson took an angle to the right to land his left hook more effectively. Notice how Pearson’s left hook was no longer an attack that entered on Couture’s left side but came straight through the middle of his guard from 12 o’clock. 

Here is Mike Tyson demonstrating his methods for getting to the side of opponents in order to throw his hooks from dominant angles.

To read more about Pearson’s inside slip and boxing game, check out my previous piece:

Best of the Best: Ross Pearson and the Inside Slip.


Conor McGregor vs. Marcus Brimage

For many the breakout fighter of the night was Conor McGregor. Far from the stereotypical scrappy Irish brawler, McGregor seemed every bit the striking technician in his bout.

The wonderful thing about striking as a concept rather than a discipline is that while there is a great list of things not to do—there is no one comprehensive list of things that a fighter should do. One can watch a card like UFC on Fuel 9 and see several wonderfully different but equally effective striking styles.

Where Pearson’s head is always over his forward foot, in anticipation of slipping and coming back with a counter punch, McGregor‘s weight is centered, and he looks to use his footwork more than movement.

Both styles have their own strengths and weaknesses, but the strength of McGregor‘s is the same as that of Gustafsson and Lyoto Machida—it makes back peddling exceptionally easy when a fighter’s weight is not over his lead foot.

While McGregor‘s punches lack the visible movement of a front-foot, heavy fighter like Pearson, they can also carry a good snap because the upright stance keeps the shoulders directly over the hips, making it easier to turn them together.

When crouched over the lead foot, a fighter can become too focused on turning his shoulders around, forgetting his hips because they are not always directly under him.

McGregor‘s A-game seems to be to draw his opponent’s out and counter punch them. This he demonstrated with a beautiful step back to left straight in the opening seconds.

McGregor, as he moves back, routinely swings his lead hand out but keeps his rear hand cocked. This allows him to slap in with a counter right hook or turn his hips into a counter left straight as he sees fit. Whichever hand he uses, McGregor likes his opponents to charge him.

A final neat trick which McGregor showed was a bolo punch. Made famous by Kid Gavilan, this punch is whipped in with the arm after a slight back swing. The arc of the arm makes it a confusing punch to deal with, and the back swing makes it difficult to time.

Many fighters, like Roy Jones Jr. or Ray Leonard, would use a faked bolo punch to keep their opponent confused and to show boat. Here is the great Gavilan talking about the bolo punch. 

 

Gegard Mousasi vs. Ilir Latifi

There isn’t that much to say about this bout, except that Mousasi dealt well with a last-minute change of opponent, especially given how different the two Swedes are. Instead of having to walk down the elusive, rangy and constantly moving Gustafsson, Mousasi was instead charged with fighting a much shorter, stockier wrestler. 

Much has been made of Mousasi‘s flicking jab, but in truth, his success was more to do with Latifi‘s lack of competence on the feet. 

Mousasi would come in with his lead hand low and simply flick it up through the middle of Latifi‘s guard. The difference between the two fighters was Mousasi‘s active right hand.

Mousasi‘s right hand would move to check Latifi‘s as he came in, while Latifi‘s remained nailed to the side of his jaw in anticipation of a left hook which never came.

Mousasi‘s active right hand made it possible for him to move in without fear of a jab from Latifi, leaving the slower, shorter left hook and right hand as Latifi‘s only hope of connecting on Mousasi. Covering Latifi‘s lead hand, Mousasi would snap in a jab and immediately perform a defensive movement such as a step back or a parry.

As the bout progressed, because of Mousasi‘s active right hand, he got caught with a couple of left hooks from Latifi.

Fighters with an active rear hand can often be caught off guard by the left hook—it was the story of Joe Louis’ career. By the end of the second round, however, Mousasi had almost abandoned his backward movement and instead was ducking under punches after his jabs.

Another nice technique which Mousasi used effectively was what I term the “skipping stone” punch. When Latifi switched to a southpaw stance, Mousasi would use his lead hand to tear down Latifi‘s lead hand and immediately jab through the hole presented with the same hand.

While he didn’t pick up the finish and his opponent was clearly overmatched, this was exactly the type of performance which Mousasi should have put on.

In a debut against an unknown, last-minute replacement, too many fighters would have gone all-out because of the expectation that they should finish the opponent easily.

Mousasi showed the patience and efficiency which he is known for and never gave Latifi a chance.

Jack Slack breaks down over 70 striking tactics employed by 20 elite strikers in his first ebookAdvanced Striking and discusses the fundamentals of strategy in his new ebookElementary Striking.

Jack can be found on MMA” target=”_blank”>Twitter, Facebook and at his blog: Fights Gone By.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

[EXCLUSIVE] Ryan Couture Ready For UFC on Fuel TV 9 Battle


(Photo via MMA Junkie)

By Elias Cepeda

UFC Hall of Famer Randy Couture has said that it took him some time to learn to deal with fame and people treating him differently. The multi-weight champ is one of MMA’s most recognizable faces but outside of the cage he has always seemed every bit the every man in the way he talks and interacts with fans.

Randy is well-spoken but quiet. Friendly but far from a social butterfly.

His son, Ryan, seems similar in those regards. The lightweight makes his UFC debut tonight in Stockholm, Sweden against Ross Pearson in the co-main event of the embattled UFC on Fuel TV 9 card today.

He’s following his father in the organization “The Natural” helped build but is now persona non grata in. The younger Ryan has faced extra attention heading into this fight because of the ugly falling out between his dad and UFC President Dana White.

Luckily for him, the young Couture got used to extra attention because of who his dad is, long ago. “I was a little weirded out by it at first,” he tells CagePotato.

“I had my first amateur fight, like a million other guys, but then I started getting interview requests. I didn’t expect that and it was definitely weird to do an interview for an amateur fight.”

Ryan was neither annoyed nor impressed by the attention, however. He saw it for what it was, and saw it as a learning experience. “At least I got used to it and started to learn how to deal with it,” he says.


(Photo via MMA Junkie)

By Elias Cepeda

UFC Hall of Famer Randy Couture has said that it took him some time to learn to deal with fame and people treating him differently. The multi-weight champ is one of MMA’s most recognizable faces but outside of the cage he has always seemed every bit the every man in the way he talks and interacts with fans.

Randy is well-spoken but quiet. Friendly but far from a social butterfly.

His son, Ryan, seems similar in those regards. The lightweight makes his UFC debut tonight in Stockholm, Sweden against Ross Pearson in the co-main event of the embattled UFC on Fuel TV 9 card today.

He’s following his father in the organization “The Natural” helped build but is now persona non grata in. The younger Ryan has faced extra attention heading into this fight because of the ugly falling out between his dad and UFC President Dana White.

Luckily for him, the young Couture got used to extra attention because of who his dad is, long ago. “I was a little weirded out by it at first,” he tells CagePotato.

“I had my first amateur fight, like a million other guys, but then I started getting interview requests. I didn’t expect that and it was definitely weird to do an interview for an amateur fight.”

Ryan was neither annoyed nor impressed by the attention, however. He saw it for what it was, and saw it as a learning experience. “At least I got used to it and started to learn how to deal with it,” he says.

“I’m a pretty quiet guy and am not naturally inclined for interviews and stuff like that. So at least I got practice early on and it isn’t like I had to learn that stuff suddenly later on at the same time I started having bigger fights.”

Today’s fight is his biggest, by virtue not just of the UFC stage but his opponent. Couture had taken steps up in competition recently as a Strikeforce fighter, facing and beating Conor Heun and KJ Noons, for example.

He says he’s treating the former Ultimate Fighter winner Pearson as if he’s the best guy he’s ever faced.

“I definitely think he’s up there with KJ,” Couture says. “Both are high level guys that have power and who have fought other really good guys.”

Many counted Couture out against Heun and Noons, and are quick to say that he’s in over his head against the much more experienced Pearson. Couture sounds dispassionate as he expresses confidence and explains that he just wants to fight the best in the world.

“I didn’t think I would have been ready this quickly [for the UFC] but things have been coming together in training and in my last couple fights,” he says.

“I’ve shown that I can take a shot, stay focused and come back. I work hard and feel that this is what’s out there for me. I feel like I’m really starting to come in to my own. This is a great opportunity. I just can’t wait to get out there and show what I’m capable of.”

Georges St. Pierre’s Next Opponent Will Be Captain America, Confusing Gullible Randy Couture Fans Worldwide


(The face of pure French-Canadian evil. / Image coutesy of MMAWeekly)

By Nathan Smith

*SPOILER ALERT* Georges St. Pierre is guaranteed to lose his next big fight. He will finally meet an opponent that he can not out-wrestle for 25 minutes and his next foe will be able to trade punches with him at will. GSP will positively get his ass handed to him.  Sorry Johny Hendricks, you can stop reading now because this post has nothing to do with you.

The reigning UFC welterweight champion has been cast as a villain in the upcoming Captain America: The Winter Soldier due for release on April 4, 2014. St. Pierre will play the roll of Batroc the Leaper (aka Georges Batroc) and although I embrace my inner geek, I was never much of a comic book guy nor did I ever have a pube mustache or own a set of dice with more than six sides, so I think it would be best to let the Wikipedia link describe GSP’s character.

Batroc has no superhuman abilities, but is in peak physical condition in every respect. He is an Olympic-level weightlifter and has extraordinary agility and reflexes. His leg muscles are particularly well developed enabling him to leap great distances equal to an Olympic athlete. He is an expert hand-to-hand combatant and specializes in savate (French-style kickboxing). He is also a skilled military tactician, having formerly been in the French Foreign Legion.

Batroc is also an experienced thief and smuggler, and can speak both French and English. Although, as a mercenary, he does not hesitate to perform any number of criminal acts for his clients, Batroc has, by his own rights, a strong sense of honor, and he will turn against any client whom he feels has unfairly deceived him into committing crimes to which he might not otherwise have agreed.”


(The face of pure French-Canadian evil. / Image coutesy of MMAWeekly)

By Nathan Smith

*SPOILER ALERT* Georges St. Pierre is guaranteed to lose his next big fight. He will finally meet an opponent that he can not out-wrestle for 25 minutes and his next foe will be able to trade punches with him at will. GSP will positively get his ass handed to him.  Sorry Johny Hendricks, you can stop reading now because this post has nothing to do with you.

The reigning UFC welterweight champion has been cast as a villain in the upcoming Captain America: The Winter Soldier due for release on April 4, 2014. St. Pierre will play the roll of Batroc the Leaper (aka Georges Batroc) and although I embrace my inner geek, I was never much of a comic book guy nor did I ever have a pube mustache or own a set of dice with more than six sides, so I think it would be best to let the Wikipedia link describe GSP’s character.

Batroc has no superhuman abilities, but is in peak physical condition in every respect. He is an Olympic-level weightlifter and has extraordinary agility and reflexes. His leg muscles are particularly well developed enabling him to leap great distances equal to an Olympic athlete. He is an expert hand-to-hand combatant and specializes in savate (French-style kickboxing). He is also a skilled military tactician, having formerly been in the French Foreign Legion.

Batroc is also an experienced thief and smuggler, and can speak both French and English. Although, as a mercenary, he does not hesitate to perform any number of criminal acts for his clients, Batroc has, by his own rights, a strong sense of honor, and he will turn against any client whom he feels has unfairly deceived him into committing crimes to which he might not otherwise have agreed.”

St. Pierre joins Randy Couture (The Expendables and the sequel), Quinton Jackson (The A-Team), and Gina Carano (Haywire) as the latest MMA star to cross over into legitimate big-budget Hollywood films. GSP is the current UFC PPV kingpin and because of his popularity and GQ exterior, it was only a matter of time before he was brought to the silver screen. Couture and Jackson had moderate box office success with their films while Carano’s movie kind of tanked, but with a built-in audience that accompanies a super hero film franchise, Captain America: The Winter Soldier will probably be breaking the bank, considering the previous two movies in which Captain America appeared (The Avengers and Captain America: The First Avenger) raked in a combined $1.8 BILLION worldwide (that is NOT a typo).

Specific details are not known for the size of St. Pierre’s role, but it is assumed that Batroc the Leaper will be an ancillary character. Couture and Rampage were allowed to use their own voices within their films but Carano’s vocal tone was manipulated during the post-production of Haywire to make sure her character was “a completely different entity,” or some such bullshit. Although Batroc hails from France and GSP has a fairly thick French/Canadian accent, one can only wonder if his lines will be given the Carano treatment or completely dubbed like Schwarzenegger in Hercules in New York. There is also no word on what costume GSP will be wearing for the film but we can guess that it will consist of something skin-tight, and hopefully it will not offend Chan Sung Jung.

Captain America is okay but he is way down on the list of this writer’s favorite Captains. There was Captain Stubing, Captain Kangaroo, Captain Kirk and this guy at the very top, but will any of you Taters go see Captain America: The Winter Soldier just because of St. Pierre’s involvement? Conversely, will all the GSP haters boycott the film due to his participation? Sound off below.

Current UFC Champions and Their Hall of Fame Counterparts

Each UFC champion has his own skill set that makes him stand out among other competitors in his respective division. Having analyzed the promotion’s current list of champions, it’s nice to see some of them resembling former fighters that ar…

Each UFC champion has his own skill set that makes him stand out among other competitors in his respective division.

Having analyzed the promotion’s current list of champions, it’s nice to see some of them resembling former fighters that are now included in the UFC Hall of Fame.

The following slides detail the similarities of four of UFC’s current champs with its Hall of Famers. 

Begin Slideshow

CagePotato Ban: MMA Fighters Announcing Their Retirement, Then Immediately Unretiring


(Okay, okay,okay, *you* can do whatever you want, Aleks. Just stop looking at us like that.) 

Earlier today, it was announced that former PRIDE star and perpetual blue-balled can crusher, Aleksander Emelianenko, had signed a multi-fight deal with the Russian organization ProFC. Which would be fine, had Emelianenko not announced his retirement from the sport three months earlier after being shitcanned by M-1 Global. Many of you are probably wondering why we are wasting our time poking fun at a long-since relevant Emelianenko brother when we could be, I dunno, predicting who is most likely to test positive for quaaludes at UFC 159, but Aleks’ recent revelation highlights a growing problem amongst MMA fighters: understanding what the term “retirement” is supposed to mean.

Look, we get it. Everyone from Michael Jordan to Muhammad Ali have announced their retirement from their respective sports in the past, only to recant shortly thereafter. It’s understandable to a degree, especially in the fight game. A guy suffers a couple tough losses, begins to fear for his own health, and decides that it is in his best interest — as well as his family’s — to call it a career before he suffers an injury he cannot come back from. Then, after adjusting to the stale, mundane existence that constitutes the lives of most non-fighters, he begins to convince himself that he’s always had “it,” but has just been held back by issues in his training camp, at home, in their own mind etc. — issues which are now completely behind him. If only it were that simple.


(Okay, okay,okay, *you* can do whatever you want, Aleks. Just stop looking at us like that.) 

Earlier today, it was announced that former PRIDE star and perpetual blue-balled can crusher, Aleksander Emelianenko, had signed a multi-fight deal with the Russian organization ProFC. Which would be fine, had Emelianenko not announced his retirement from the sport three months earlier after being shitcanned by M-1 Global. Many of you are probably wondering why we are wasting our time poking fun at a long-since relevant Emelianenko brother when we could be, I dunno, predicting who is most likely to test positive for quaaludes at UFC 159, but Aleks’ recent revelation highlights a growing problem amongst MMA fighters: understanding what the term “retirement” is supposed to mean.

Look, we get it. Everyone from Michael Jordan to Muhammad Ali have announced their retirement from their respective sports in the past, only to recant shortly thereafter. It’s understandable to a degree, especially in the fight game. A guy suffers a couple tough losses, begins to fear for his own health, and decides that it is in his best interest — as well as his family’s — to call it a career before he suffers an injury he cannot come back from. Then, after adjusting to the stale, mundane existence that constitutes the lives of most non-fighters, he begins to convince himself that he’s always had “it,” but has just been held back by issues in his training camp, at home, in their own mind etc. — issues which are now completely behind him. If only it were that simple.

But in the past year or so, we’ve seen Matt Hamill, BJ Penn, Nick Diaz (twice, sort of), and both Emelianenko brothers to name a few pull this kind of move, only to tease at coming out of retirement or just plain unretire before most of the MMA world ever realized they were gone. The problem is not that these fighters are merely invalidating our much loved “And Now He’s Retired” articles, or that they are cheapening the term “retirement” in doing so. The problem is that, when these fighters decide to return to world of professional fighting, they often do so at the cost of not only their own health, but to that of the “legacy” they left behind. And aside from being disheartening from a fan’s perspective, it is also quite infuriating, like if Bruce Wayne/Batman was declared dead by Gotham, only to pop up in some Italian cafe a week later without anyone noticing or being able to make the Goddamn connection. Seriously, fuck The Dark Knight Rises.

For examples of this (not TDKR being an overrated, plothole-filled mess; you can find those examples here), look no further than Hamill, who hung up his gloves following a pair of hard losses to Quinton Jackson and Alexander Gustafsson in 2011. While we were sad to see him go, most of us probably didn’t lose any sleep debating whether or not Hamill might have called it quits a little early. Barring some insane turnaround, it appeared as if Hamill (along with most of us), realized that he had gone as far as he could go in MMA and had nothing left to prove.

But out of nowhere, Hamill announced last August that he would be returning to the UFC at UFC 152, where he would be taking on Roger Hollett Vladimir Matyushenko Bellator veteran Roger Hollett. Hamill hit all the familiar notes, stating that his hasty retirement was the result of various lingering injuries and that we would see a whole new version of “The Hammer” come September 22nd. Only when September 22nd came, we were treated to an even more sluggish, seemingly apathetic version of Hamill than we had ever seen before. One that completely gassed inside of two rounds. One that was only able to claim victory due to the fact that his opponent was fighting on short notice and had even less gas in his tank. If Hamill was trying to prove that he could still throw down at the highest level, well, we’re not exactly sure he succeeded.

And while Jamie Varner has enjoyed moderate success since returning to the sport, his story is essentially the exception that proves the rule. Don’t even get us started on Penn

Look, we’re not asking fighters to stay retired if they truly believe they can still hang with the best, for where would guys like Mark Hunt, Matt Brown, or Demian Maia be with that kind of defeatist mentality? All we’re asking is that they stop going out of their way to announce their retirement from the sport when all they really want is an extended vacation. It’s like when the lamestream media spent half a year covering a Kardashian wedding that fell apart in less time than a game of Jenga in a crack den (I’m also upset that Kim totally re-gifted that bread machine I gave her, but that’s another story entirely…).

In short, retirement is something that is not meant to be decided in the immediate wake of a loss, or over a few too many drinks with friends. In MMA, retirement signifies a fighter’s coming to grasp with the fact that they are only putting themselves in more danger by continuing on. It’s supposed to be a permanent decision — an admission of defeat, if you will — that should not be inherently intertwined with that of failure, but that should require more thought than it has in the world of MMA as of late. Call it a hiatus, call it a vacation, call it whatever you want, just stop pulling the bait-n-switch on us fans with this “retirement” nonsense.

In short, when you do decide to finally hang ‘em up, MMA fighters of past, present, and future who might be reading this, just remember that the decision is meant to be final.

J. Jones

Don Frye: “Mir and Couture Threw Fights Against A—hole Brock Lesnar”

The only things certain in life are death, taxes and outrageous Don Frye interviews.While attending the 2013 Arnold Classic, the living MMA legend managed to make headlines once again at the expense of former UFC heavyweight champ Brock Lesnar.”The guy…

The only things certain in life are death, taxes and outrageous Don Frye interviews.

While attending the 2013 Arnold Classic, the living MMA legend managed to make headlines once again at the expense of former UFC heavyweight champ Brock Lesnar.

“The guy’s a waste of flesh, I’ve never met such an asshole in my life,” Frye told Casey Oxendine of MMA: Inside the Cage.

“I can’t even formulate the words because he just pisses me off so bad. They wasted all that time bumping him up, and they hand fed him, you know, I think that Randy Couture and Frank Mir threw the god***m fight. I know Randy is a much better wrestler than Lesnar ever thought about being, and Frank Mir could’ve been the greatest fighter of all time if he didn’t get in that motorcycle accident. There’s no way either one of those guys could’ve lost to Lesnar.”

Frye met Lesnar through Brad Rheingans, a former friend and professional wrestling mentor.

The trio got together a couple of times for dinner and drinks. After getting an opportunity to know Lesnar, Frye admits to finding the WWE superstar to be a complete “asshole.”

Many have attributed Lesnar‘s nasty attitude and brute-like persona as him being the “baddest man on the planet,” but to Frye, he’s just bad.

“He’s a cousin of a guy who used to be a friend of mine, Brad Rheingans. Brad Rheingans got me into pro-wrestling over in Japan, so they’re like second cousins or something like that. I’ve had a couple of dinners with Lesnar, had a couple of drinks with him, and I found him to be a complete asshole.”

Lesnar isn’t the first person to suffer verbal jabs from Frye in the media.

The former MMA star has also gone after Dan Henderson and UFC President Dana White. According to Frye, Dan Henderson is also an “asshole,” and White “cheats” fighters out of money.

While Henderson hasn’t offered a formal response, White has already exchanged words with Frye on Twitter. He basically sees Frye as a bitter, old fighter wallowing in jealousy over the lucrative paydays earned by current UFC fighters.

Could this be the main reason why Frye harbors so much animosity towards Lesnar?

At age 47, Frye is still talking about competing in MMA, and Lesnar‘s retirement plan was fortified in four years. Even though Frye had four times as many fights, Lesnar still walked away from the sport with the deeper pockets.

That kind of realization would crush anyone.

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