I was thinking about the concept of a pure striker vs a pure grappler today and an avenue opened in my mind.
In the early days of mma, those whose main discipline was grappling would had very much success against those whose main discipline was a striking art.
Why was this, though? Almost all fights start standing and because of this grapplers have been trained in the art of getting a fight to the ground. So, without even training in a striking art, they already have somewhat of an advantage over strikers who don't train in ground fighting because, though not specifically trained to perform takedowns against a person who has the rights to strike, they know how to take a standing(striker) fighter out of his domain and into theirs ( This is akin to a striker knowing how to wrestler their way out of the ground and get back to their feet. )
This skill of training to take a person out of their domain and into theirs is something that most strikers early to MMA never did as part of their training because they did not need to do it because in their art the fight is always in their domain. The inability to do this basically was a handicap that strikers had when fighting grapplers.
Another advantage that early grapplers had over strikers is that they trained in keeping their opponent in their domain. It's part of a grapplers art to keep their opponent locked in position in the ground. This is akin to a striker training on a sprawl (ala Chuck Liddell) Striking arts, with the exception of perhaps Mau Thai with it's clinch) never trained on how to
keep a fighter in their domain because their arts never required it.
This is another handicap they had against them.
Everyone claiming that grappling arts are so much more superior than striking arts are not giving you the full story. There is much more that goes into early grapplings success over striking.
It's recently with fighters such as Cro Cop, Liddell, Machida and others that possess the skills that early strikers did not have, that we've begun to see how successfull a person that decides to stay and strike can be against a pure grappler.
With more emphasis being put on sprawling and ground defense and more studies and advancement being done in the area, I'm not so sure that we can just clearly say that grappling is for sure the way to go.
In the early days of mma, those whose main discipline was grappling would had very much success against those whose main discipline was a striking art.
Why was this, though? Almost all fights start standing and because of this grapplers have been trained in the art of getting a fight to the ground. So, without even training in a striking art, they already have somewhat of an advantage over strikers who don't train in ground fighting because, though not specifically trained to perform takedowns against a person who has the rights to strike, they know how to take a standing(striker) fighter out of his domain and into theirs ( This is akin to a striker knowing how to wrestler their way out of the ground and get back to their feet. )
This skill of training to take a person out of their domain and into theirs is something that most strikers early to MMA never did as part of their training because they did not need to do it because in their art the fight is always in their domain. The inability to do this basically was a handicap that strikers had when fighting grapplers.
Another advantage that early grapplers had over strikers is that they trained in keeping their opponent in their domain. It's part of a grapplers art to keep their opponent locked in position in the ground. This is akin to a striker training on a sprawl (ala Chuck Liddell) Striking arts, with the exception of perhaps Mau Thai with it's clinch) never trained on how to
keep a fighter in their domain because their arts never required it.
This is another handicap they had against them.
Everyone claiming that grappling arts are so much more superior than striking arts are not giving you the full story. There is much more that goes into early grapplings success over striking.
It's recently with fighters such as Cro Cop, Liddell, Machida and others that possess the skills that early strikers did not have, that we've begun to see how successfull a person that decides to stay and strike can be against a pure grappler.
With more emphasis being put on sprawling and ground defense and more studies and advancement being done in the area, I'm not so sure that we can just clearly say that grappling is for sure the way to go.
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