Rutten is a hard guy to rank h2h. He's got some very sweet striking but virtually zero takedown defence. Yet once he's on the ground he is very skilful and hangs with the best of them. Yet AGAIN, I've seen big wrestler types lay on top of him and he could not escape.
It is very difficult. These early HW greats don't seem as well rounded to me. Shamrock looked like the full package in his prime. Mark Kerr looks awesome but I know he's about to capitulate. I see now why the pride HW fighters (Fedor, Nog, Cro Cop) are considered amongst the best ever.
Kerr imploded mentally. He was incredibly strong but fragile mentally. He didn't like getting hit much, a kind of a Lesnar type. Actually Kerr / Lesnar would have been awesome. Money's on Kerr. It really goes to show how much fighting is a mental game. Little midgets like Igor and Fedor objectively have no business at playing at heavyweight, yet they were very successful in part to their calmness under fire and willingness to travel to hell and back for the win. There was a guy in Pride that I loved, a dude called Akira Shoji. He was a little stubby dude who used to ritually write out his will before every match, just so that if he had to die in the ring, it was OK because his affairs were in order. A true samurai. Alas, because he was small and because the Japanese like freak shows (heyyy! let's pitch the midget against the sumo wrestler, lulz) he got the shyte beaten out of him through his career, but he always left it all in the ring. I can't help but respect that. The Pride HW's were on another level at that time. Nogueira and Cro Cop were well rounded and super skilled at their particular disciplines. But Fedor was the guy that could analyse the other guy's gameplan and blow through it like a tornado. When he entered Pride it was against Heath Herring, who was a scary dude at the time. I remember Rutten and Quadros commenting, and desperately trying to sell little, harmless-looking and pudgy Fedor as a legit opponent for the hulking Herring. "He's not a gimme," said Quadros. LOL. Heath took a career-ending beating that night. He came in with some crazy hairstyle out of starwars and Rutten, ever the comedian, said, after the fight "Now his face matches his hairstyle."
Yeah I feel I'm getting a decent understanding because I'm watching them in order and reading stuff from that time. I normally would never do something as in depth as this but with MMA being a new sport it's not too onerous a task. Plus loads of pride fights are on YouTube so I didn't have to buy them.after UFC 50 I'm gonna just watch the "best of" DVD's to speed up the process. Even though I know Kerr capitulates I find it hard to envision right now because of how dominant he's looked. Everyone calls him Coleman + because of his skill set, but obviously Coleman has the two big victories over Severn and Frye. Although he also has 3 big losses in a row now. It feels like I've gone back in time when I watch these events. My Mrs is sick of it though lol.
Waching that old stuff for the first time was fantastic for me. I got some light weights and did triceps and sholders while parking off in front of the pc. My Mrs also got tired of it Edit: doing the dishes and mopping seemed to calm the beast down ... for a while
UFC 19. This event has no tournament whatsoever. What it did is show a few things. There are no single disciplines any more everyone is now a MMA and the rules are starting to be implemented to make it a fair fight. Maurice Smith has proven to be a one off man who took advantage of a poorly conditioned Mark Coleman. Tito Ortiz has burst into the top echelons with his rematch victory over Guy Mezger. Jeremy Horn beats Lidell for hs first loss to keep himself in title contentions. Evan Tanner picks up another victory and looks good in doing so. Over in Pride 5 we see Vovanchyn keep up the race for top spot between him and Kerr. (Rutten is still number 3 for me at present) Mark Coleman throws a fight to earn a contract with Pride. The big story though is Kazushi Sakuraba. Giving up 22 pounds and beating Vitor Belfort in dominant fashion was astonishing. Yeah Belfort broke his hand, but he did that because Sakuraba blocked his furious flurry very cleanly in the opening minute. After that we saw some great kicking, takedown and ground game by Sakuraba. It is marginally more impressive than Gracie beating Shamrock for me which means we have a displacement at the top of the tree for the first time in 6 years. Some decent moves in the rankings after this. 1 Kazushi Sakuraba 2 Royce Gacie 3 Ken Shamrock 4 Mark Kerr 5 Igor Vovanchyn 6 Bas Rutten 7 Randy Couture 8 Vitor Belfort 9 Frank Shamrock 10 Pat Miletich 11 Rickson Gracie 12 Dan Henderson 13 Tito Ortiz 14 Mark Coleman 15 Dan Severn 16 Don Frye 17 Evan Tanner 18 Guy Mezger 19 Renzo Gracie 20 Jeremy Horn
Yay! You're back. I'd forgotten how good Sakuraba was at the time. So, so creative. His match against Carlos Newton was dynamite. In Pride the influx of insane talent is about to begin. I remember that there was some boring-ass fighter called Malenko that used to lay n pray to victory. Then he ran into a guy called Wanderlei Silva, who was absolutely terrifying in his heydey. Man, the early MMA was so much fun.
It's strange because I know some of these guys go on to be legends cos I recognise the names, but I don't know how each individual match goes cos I don't remember the resume. So I've just seen early Belfort tear through UFC like Tyson, come up short against the future HW champ but he's clearly being lined up for a shot at Shamrock were he'd be a huge favourite. I also see this WW fighter who's lied about his weight to enter a UFC tournament and who is dominating world class fighters with a mixture of showmanship and the best grappling abilities I've ever seen. I didn't know Sakuraba beat this man, let alone dominated him. The two stand out victories so far in MMA are Gracie over Shamrock and Sakuraba over Belfort imo.
UFC 20 Wanderlei Silva redeemed his early destruction by Belfort to win with a very good performance, he's on a good run of form now and breaks into my rankings for the first time. Pedro Rizzo maintains his unbeaten run and puts himself as one of the best HW fighters in the world. Randlemann and Rutten have an extremely close fight that went to the wrong man. Rutten gets the nod but two less than dominant performances highlight that there is a decline going on here. Over in Pride the usual suspects in Sakuraba, Kerr and Vovanchyn keep on winning. Newton also returns to winning ways. Elsewhere in the world of MMA we have Rickson Gracie going inactive and pretty much taking his hype with him. Despite a big rep it hasn't been proven in the ring and we all know it never will be. Couture loses again in controversial manner. A man named Kiyoshi Tamura is on a good run of form as well to put himself in the running. Miletich is submitted and maybe he wasn't quite as good as we all thought. Tanner loses over in Pancrase although the it's hard to say how on the level it is. Quite a strange couple of months with a lot of the early greats picking up losses. Comparing Randlemann and Rizzo with Severn, Frye and Coleman is very hard. Severn and Frye dominated a shallower field, Coleman is losing close decisions, throwing fights and walking straight into a head kick but he has some great victories. Randlemann is a lot improved from the fighter 2 years ago and could easily have received this decision. Rizzo is on a very good run of form but I don't see how he would beat Severn or Frye right now. After all the shakes and moves I find myself in July 1999 with the following ATG rankings: 1 Kazushi Sakuraba 2 Royce Gacie 3 Ken Shamrock 4 Mark Kerr 5 Igor Vovanchyn 6 Frank Shamrock 7 Bas Rutten 8 Randy Couture 9 Vitor Belfort 10 Pat Miletich 11 Dan Henderson 12 Tito Ortiz 13 Mark Coleman 14 Dan Severn 15 Don Frye 16 Kevin Randlemann 17 Pedro Rizzo 18 Evan Tanner 19 Renzo Gracie 20 Jeremy Horn 21 Carlos Newton 22 Kiyoshi Tamura 23 Wanderlei Silva
UFC 21 and 22 It's all changing now, new 10 point must system and 5 minute rounds means decisions will actually mean something rather than a holistic overview of a fight. This has been a very hectic period now. Sakuraba and Silva remain on winning form. Vovanchyn beats Kerr to stake his claim as the best HW in the world and probably the best striker in MMA history so far. Over in UFC Miletich and Horn keep on winning and Lidell impresses very much with a big performance over Jones. Obviously the big story is Frank Shamrock beating Ortiz. What a great performance this was. I can't make my mind up whether to rank him above Ken or not. Either way as of September 1999 it's now looking like 1 Kazushi Sakuraba 2 Royce Gacie 3 Ken Shamrock 4 Frank Shamrock 5 Igor Vovanchyn 6 Mark Kerr 7 Bas Rutten 8 Randy Couture 9 Vitor Belfort 10 Pat Miletich 11 Dan Henderson 12 Tito Ortiz 13 Mark Coleman 14 Dan Severn 15 Don Frye 16 Kevin Randlemann 17 Pedro Rizzo 18 Jeremy Horn 19 Evan Tanner 20 Kiyoshi Tamura 21 Wanderlei Silva 22 Chuck Lidell 23 Renzo Gracie 24 Carlos Newton