Monday, April 22, 2013

Power Position the Most Difficult to Master Areas of MMA

While understanding one discipline in MMA can be quite a ongoing activity in and of itself, if a fighter really desires to become successful inside the cage, she or he should discover ways to combine all these different factors together in an effective manner. A fighter must be able to seamlessly move between striking, getting the clinch, choosing the takedowns, etc. Since you never know where in fact the struggle will go. And whilst the activity has established over the years, being fully a master of one discipline is not a for long-term success. Going for a look at the UFC's most dominant winners, none of them are true owners of every single part of the overall game, but each one of them, from Ronda Rousey to Cain Velasquez, is amazing at mixing up their attacks. And out of most of these, welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre is just about the best of the best at this. Sure, he is quite skilled in all the different aspects of MMA, but if we're talking pure wrestling or pure jiu-jitsu, there are a small number of 170ers who are deemed better at that single discipline than St-Pierre. But, there is virtually no one out there who is able to easily integrate them for such an assault like "Rush"Ainside the Octagon. Jon Jones is another fighter who, though being a amazing wrestler and a very creative striker, shows holes in his jiu-jitsu game. But, his combination of attacks, both standing up and on the mats, have already been a proven formula for success, also leading to a few submission wins over BJJ dark belts for "Bones." By the end of the afternoon, there's a reason so it shouldn't be a shock that learning how to properly use every one of these various guns together may be the hardest part to master in this game, why this is known as mixed fighting techinques. Make sure toAlike me on FacebookAorAfollow @MattchidaMMA

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