SPORTSSHERDOG
Sherdog.com Home
News Blog Videos Sherdog Radio Pictures MMA Statistics Sherdog Forums Sherdog Store
Fight Finder

  First Name
  Last Name
  Nick Name
Articles Quicklinks
» 'Fedor vs. Rogers' Results and Live Play-by-Play
» Werdum Wants Fedor Next
» Shields Eyes Welterweight Title, Too
» Santiago, Hioki Upset in Sengoku
» Evangelista Outpoints Gurgel in Strikeforce ‘Challengers’
» The Weekly Wrap: Oct. 24 - Oct. 30
» Pros Pick: Fedor vs. Rogers
» Sherdog's Guide to 'The Ultimate Fighter 10'
» Strikeforce/M-1 Global 'Fedor vs. Rogers' Preview
» ‘Mayhem’ Miller’s Nonstop Hustle
MMA Fighters & Boxing Counterparts: Part 2  
 Options: | Printer Friendly
MMA Fighters & Boxing Counterparts: Part 2
Thursday, October 09, 2008
by Jason Probst (jprobst@sherdog.com)

In this three-part series, Sherdog.com’s Jason Probst takes a closer look at some of MMA’s athletes and those in the Sweet Science with whom they share notable traits. Part two features counterparts for Fedor Emelianenko, Georges St. Pierre, Tito Ortiz and Chuck Liddell.

Fedor Emelianenko = Ray Robinson

Emelianenko’s 28-1 record represents the most impressive run of success in MMA history, especially when you consider the tough competition he’s faced. Although relative inactivity -- just six fights in three years -- and a drop-off in quality opposition have somewhat chipped away at his reputation, Emelianenko remains the ruling heavyweight of his time, despite an inability to secure a mega-fight with Randy Couture or a deal with the UFC.

His last outing, a 36-second stoppage of Tim Sylvia, suggests he’s still as dangerous as ever, even if he’s painfully out of the loop on securing mainstream exposure.

No matter where you fight Emelianenko, he’s going to get the better of you because he’s simply superior in every phase of the game. He has incredible technical skills, backed up by a ton of fortitude and cool-headedness. That’s why he was able to stand and trade with Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic and outwork Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira on the ground. Simply put, he’s the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, at least until B.J. Penn or Anderson Silva win a title in a higher weight division.

Robinson was the greatest boxer of his time or anyone else’s, for that matter. While he’s largely remembered by fans for winning the middleweight title five times, very little of his prime years -- when he was a welterweight -- were captured on film. Until he lost the middleweight title against Randy Turpin in 1951, he was 128-2-1, including four wins in five bouts with the bigger Jake LaMotta and victories over a slew of other hall of famers and tough contenders. At welterweight, Robinson was virtually unbeatable, as he could outbox you with lightning-quick hands and wicked power. He was also shoe-leather tough if you went toe-to-toe with him, though he rarely needed to with his superior skills.

It was only well past his prime years that Robinson had to show his toughness on a regular basis -– in the early to mid 1950s and beyond. He was well into his 30s, and his natural advantages dissipated to such a degree that he had to slug it out with naturally bigger men. Even then, he was still amazing. He was only stopped once in a 225-bout career.

Jeff Sherwood/Sherdog.com

Georges St. Pierre is one of
the world's most well-rounded
fighters.
Georges St. Pierre = Benny Leonard

With technical brilliance in every phase of the game, UFC welterweight champion St. Pierre suggests a new kind of fighter emerging in the game. Not content to merely cross-train and become competent in one area while depending on another, the Canadian outwrestles wrestlers like Matt Hughes and Jon Fitch with disdainful ease and beats them standing, as well. St. Pierre’s all-around technical ability comes in stark contrast to champions who, just a few years ago, were content to dominate one aspect of the sport.

Benny Leonard was probably the best lightweight that ever lived -- up there with Roberto Duran and the legendary Joe Gans -- precisely because he ushered in an era of scientific boxing, picking up the torch left by predecessors like Gene Tunney and Jimmy Slattery. In addition to a masterful sense of timing, feints and combinations, Leonard could also knock you flat with his punches, as evidenced by his impressive record of 183-19-11 (70 KO). Several of his wins were in the “newspaper decision” era --fights were quasi-official, but victory was awarded to the man judged by the press to be the winner at the final bell.

By the time he retired in 1925, Leonard had cleaned out the lightweight division, having bested tough competition like Rocky Kansas, Lew Tendler and Johnny Dundee. These men were all rough, tough battlers from a golden era of boxing, but Leonard was several levels above them in technique.

That’s the feeling you get watching St. Pierre, who may be the best functional wrestler in MMA despite having no background in amateur wrestling. Given his athletic ability and what he’s done with it, it also prompts consideration of how good fighters will be in a few years, as more people enter the sport.

More UFC 92 News
Next Page: Tito Ortiz & Chuck Liddell   
RELATED NEWS:
Post-Mortem: UFC 92
Monday, December 29, 2008
Evans Earns $130,000 at UFC 92
Monday, December 29, 2008
Unlikely Times, Unlikely Champions: An Early Look at Mir-Lesnar II
Monday, December 29, 2008
UFC 92 Notebook: ‘Rampage’ Eyes Griffin Rematch, Not Title Shot
Monday, December 29, 2008
Evans, Mir Crowned; Rampage Gets Revenge
Sunday, December 28, 2008
UFC 92 Play-by-Play
Sunday, December 28, 2008
RECENT GEORGES ST. PIERRE NEWS:
Buy Georges: St. Pierre Signs Major Endorsement Deal
Thursday, November 05, 2009
St. Pierre New Face of Under Armour, Aims for Feb. or March Return
Thursday, November 05, 2009
Alves: Fighting GSP for Title Is a Different Game
Monday, November 02, 2009
5 Questions: UFC 104
Saturday, October 24, 2009
GSP Discusses Future, Return to Octagon
Monday, September 21, 2009
St. Pierre Dodges Surgery
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Search Sherdog Archive     
Sherdog.com, A property of CraveOnline, a division of AtomicOnline, LLC.
© 2009 CraveOnline Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | RSS | Mobile | Advertise
Not in any way associated with Crave Entertainment, Inc.