OP
LiteBlu
Guest
- Thread Starter
- #21
"Many people keep saying it is the style that determines the winner which is false. The style is apart of the man, the man is the one that determines who wins the fight.
The Sakuraba vs. Royler Gracie fight, Sakuraba killed Royler with kicks and Royler lost but that does not mean Brazillian Jiu-Jitsu is bad or not good, it all depends on the man not which style is better than that style."
That's true today, with the high degree of athleticism, skill and cross training that both fighters and players have available.
BUT, back in 1993 it was the style that won the fight. Not the man. As my previous post stated, no one cross trained. Everyone was a 1 dimensional fighter. How do you think, that back in 1993, an anorexic Brazilian guy could man handle the crap out of a 220 pound shoot fighter from Pancrase. (Royce Gracie vs Kenneth Wayne Shamrock 1).
And regarding your example above (Sakuraba vs Royler), you do know that in an MMA context, Sakuraba is the better grappler of the two and the better cross trained fighter of the two.
The Sakuraba vs. Royler Gracie fight, Sakuraba killed Royler with kicks and Royler lost but that does not mean Brazillian Jiu-Jitsu is bad or not good, it all depends on the man not which style is better than that style."
That's true today, with the high degree of athleticism, skill and cross training that both fighters and players have available.
BUT, back in 1993 it was the style that won the fight. Not the man. As my previous post stated, no one cross trained. Everyone was a 1 dimensional fighter. How do you think, that back in 1993, an anorexic Brazilian guy could man handle the crap out of a 220 pound shoot fighter from Pancrase. (Royce Gracie vs Kenneth Wayne Shamrock 1).
And regarding your example above (Sakuraba vs Royler), you do know that in an MMA context, Sakuraba is the better grappler of the two and the better cross trained fighter of the two.