What would be MMA if Royce Gracie had lost to a “giant’ on the first edition of the UFC, in 1993? MMA legend, Rickson Gracie helped us to answer that question at TATAME Magazine’s edition of June, already available for purchase.
But it was not the only topic asked for the master.
Responsible for bringing MMA up in Japan, one year after Royce got things started in the UFC, Gracie evaluated the evolution of the sport and revealed that, in his opinion, pure Jiu-Jitsu has no space left.
“No, things have changed. Nowadays the rules impose a rhythm to the bout, conditioning and a game plan which imposes Jiu-Jitsu to have a determined shape”, said, explaining how the rules changed fighters’ posture.
“If you take off time and weight (limit) you might add some technique, game plan, conditioning and a way of thinking. From the moment it’s a five-minute three-round fight, you spend some energy, lose 17 to 22lbs to fight and you have a high level training technology”.
To Rickson, great part of Jiu-Jitsu lessons, used at gyms and big Jiu-Jitsu tournaments, are useless in MMA.
“You may use like 30 percent of Jiu-Jitsu”, explains. “You can’t put Royce or any other guy only using it… Technology has changed the sport a lot in terms of how much you train, the capacity of losing weight to fight… It’s completely different. You can use many Jiu-Jitsu things, but the body is your main element”.
Things have changed so much that TATAME asked Rickson to point out athletes who astonish him now, and he did not list any Jiu-Jitsu guy.
“Jon Jones and Anderson Silva”, says Rickson. “They are really controlling the scene. You can’t say anything about them. They are smart, well conditioned and they fight in high level”.
In the veteran’s opinion, however, the number of high level athletes might be even bigger in case the sport could embrace all fighters that wanted to fight.
“There are always newcomers and things are very dynamic. Athletes just emerge from nowhere”, explains. “The filler is too small for the number of people that would like to be there fighting on the events. There’s a bigger demand than we know. If it was an open championship, like in Jiu-Jitsu, there would came many new names”.
http://www.tatame.com/2012/06/06/Ric...-enough-at-MMA
But it was not the only topic asked for the master.
Responsible for bringing MMA up in Japan, one year after Royce got things started in the UFC, Gracie evaluated the evolution of the sport and revealed that, in his opinion, pure Jiu-Jitsu has no space left.
“No, things have changed. Nowadays the rules impose a rhythm to the bout, conditioning and a game plan which imposes Jiu-Jitsu to have a determined shape”, said, explaining how the rules changed fighters’ posture.
“If you take off time and weight (limit) you might add some technique, game plan, conditioning and a way of thinking. From the moment it’s a five-minute three-round fight, you spend some energy, lose 17 to 22lbs to fight and you have a high level training technology”.
To Rickson, great part of Jiu-Jitsu lessons, used at gyms and big Jiu-Jitsu tournaments, are useless in MMA.
“You may use like 30 percent of Jiu-Jitsu”, explains. “You can’t put Royce or any other guy only using it… Technology has changed the sport a lot in terms of how much you train, the capacity of losing weight to fight… It’s completely different. You can use many Jiu-Jitsu things, but the body is your main element”.
Things have changed so much that TATAME asked Rickson to point out athletes who astonish him now, and he did not list any Jiu-Jitsu guy.
“Jon Jones and Anderson Silva”, says Rickson. “They are really controlling the scene. You can’t say anything about them. They are smart, well conditioned and they fight in high level”.
In the veteran’s opinion, however, the number of high level athletes might be even bigger in case the sport could embrace all fighters that wanted to fight.
“There are always newcomers and things are very dynamic. Athletes just emerge from nowhere”, explains. “The filler is too small for the number of people that would like to be there fighting on the events. There’s a bigger demand than we know. If it was an open championship, like in Jiu-Jitsu, there would came many new names”.
http://www.tatame.com/2012/06/06/Ric...-enough-at-MMA