When
one considers Randy Couture’s place in MMA, it’s easy to see
a comparison between his career and that of say, Larry Bird
or Magic Johnson. In the history of every professional sport,
athletes appear who reopen the subject of what is possible.
The techniques, attitudes and results that these performers
bring to the competition forever alter the future training
and strategy of all participants. Whether it’s Bird repositioning
three-point shots as viable offense, Johnson leaving the ground
and delivering baskets from an altitude where defense cannot
block, or Couture implementing swift, merciless takedowns
and punishing combinations on the floor, these moments and
individuals are forces of athletic evolution.
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| Old enough to
be his daddy, The Natural gives Vitor another spanking
in their third encounter in the Octagon.
Photography by Peter Lockley |
Like no other fighter, Randy Couture’s innovative simplicity
has redefined what it is to be an effective MMA competitor
in the minds of fans and athletes. No longer fledgling, now
a perpetual champion in search of the next and possibly ultimate
challenge, Couture’s journey is mixed martial arts’ journey;
one of seasoning, transformation and new, sometimes difficult
renegotiations in the face of the changes inherent.
Couture dispensed with bluster and pomp early-on, concentrating
instead on watching his opponents carefully, analyzing their
psychology and conducting his fight with a sense of loose
prescience that consistently unravels showmen like Tito Ortiz.
Additionally, Couture promotes his lean, mean system as something
worth sharing and codifying. Making his training program (via
manuals and infamous powdered green drinks) available online
has proved a shrewd business venture, but it also puts his
concept into the hands of his colleagues.
It’s had an effect. The way his opponents fight him, and
they way they fight other MMA athletes has transformed. This
past August, UFC
47 in Las Vegase proved that Couture’s, “it’s-the-sport-stupid”
approach works for fighters like Chuck Liddell. Liddell’s
performance against Tito Ortiz felt rather like a Randy Couture
fight. Liddell took the octagon with poise, relaxed and confident.
He later explained that he’d trained and fought to that match
by paying attention to the basics, and by finding joy in the
roots of his experience with MMA.
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Should've been a
no contest, but the belt was temporarily handed over
to The Phenom. But age, wisdom and slow and steady grappling
prevailed.
Photography by Nick H.
McDonell |
Since Couture’s success with this heartfelt, Everyman strategy,
MMA contestants have paid renewed, intense attention to Greco-Roman
wrestling techniques. Couture himself acknowledges that he
perceives his opponents incorporating takedown and anti-takedown
skills into their training. Suddenly, chasing the X-factor
has become a full time job for the light heavy weight champion.
Without the assured trump card of a lightning-fast and the
following flurry of elbows and fists, Couture began training
with kickboxing masters like Nasser Navioroni. He also began
to look beyond the octagon. It’s in this essential trait,
this restless, expansive nature, that Randy Couture has pushed
his own limits. He seems bound to explore how much one fighter
can pack into one career.
The ramifications, however, have sometimes been severe. With
an eye on the much-sought-after but as yet unrealized UFC-PRIDE
championship match, Couture joined a vanguard of fighters
testing their skills in the roped ring rather than the caged
octagon. This proved a stinging lesson in adaptation: failure
is the price of growth.
When Couture squared off against Mikhail Illoukhin, spectators
witnessed a classic moment go awry in the face of unexpected
interpretations of familiar rules. In this (possibly landmark)
fight, Couture used the ropes the way he’d normally set an
opponent up against an octagon’s cage. Once Illoukhin was
confined to a kill zone, Couture downed him with an uppercut.
From there, in many enthusiasts’ eyes, it should have been
a very typical mount-and-elbow dynamic for Couture. Illoukhin
scrambled to attach the best Kimura he could to Couture. It
was a strategy that proved more useful than anyone could have
predicted.
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Couture knocked
them down one by one until there was no one left standing
in line for his throne.
Photography by Nick H.
McDonell |
Given his imperfect start, Illoukhin failed to implement
a very credible Kimura. Unable to effectively undo Couture’s
dominance, the fight slowed to an agonizing test of will.
Couture needed to struggle free and finish the job he’d started,
and without a concrete application, Illoukhin wasn’t in a
position to definitively prevent his escape. What happened,
instead of the apparently inevitable ground-and-pound, however?
The referee called a stop to the stalemate and repositioned
the two men. Within these new parameters, Illoukhin was able
to create a near-perfect shoulder lock. Cranking Couture for
all his skeleton could sustain, Illoukhin achieved Couture’s
tap out swiftly; a controversial end to an epic fight.
It might be summed up best as a cultural gap between the
one kind of fighting environment (rings) and the other (cages).
With Couture’s concentration on finishing floor work, ring
referees may look for transgressions (such as ring-illegal
elbows) that would otherwise be stock-and-trade in an octagon.
The chances of some kind of premature, preventative halt to
a struggle are the transitional pitfalls migratory (UFC to
PRIDE) fighters will encounter. Couture’s experience in the
ring raise that question, but they also point to the basic
distance between the strategy he’s developed in his years
with UFC versus the strategy he would develop if the ring
became a more frequently encountered fighting space. How will
Couture deal with the changes demanded?
It’s these sorts of matches that illustrate the cultural
shift a fighter like Couture and his brethren (like current
Team Quest-mate Dan Henderson) seem bound to address. Crossing
over between environments, and the rules/interpretative concessions
implied for both organizations, will require versatility and
adaptability from fighters (and fans). Pioneers like Dan Henderson
(who’s showed alarmingly quick development in this process,
and has applied himself to for longer than any other fighter)
and Randy Couture (who’s at the top of his career and draws
enormous attention to his fights) are the vanguard. The evolution
of MMA and the growth it will enjoy, stem from the acknowledgement
of these growing pains as necessary and natural. While some
fans recoiled at the sight of fighters like Illoukhin, Enson
and Overeem dispatching Couture quickly and efficiently, they
also saw the now classic Couture response. He got back in
the ring. If there’s a question of how Couture will deal with
the alterations needed in his strategy, that is the answer.
He will fight until he gets it right.
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Walking Tall Part
3, starring Randy Couture as Bufford Pusser
Photography by Peter Lockley |
This leaves one detail to dangle. Couture may have only one
legitimate undiscovered territory to conquer. The concept
of an ultimate Light heavyweight title bout between UFC and
PRIDE is probably the sexiest concept going for MMA enthusiasts.
It’s certainly no secret that Wanderlei Silva was very much
a presence cage-side at UFC 49. Couture and Silva have been
open advocates for an inter-organization championship, but
there’s a culture of resistance to the transformation. When
the UFC enrolled some of its fighters in PRIDE the dam seemed
ready to spring, but so far no plans have been announced (by
PRIDE) to formalize or reciprocate the exchange.
The opportunity to watch the respective titans of each organization
face off, while dealing with the difficulties of significant
cultural differences, this is the meat and drink of speculation
on the circuit. There will always be fresh blood in the octagon
and in the ring, but an infusion of height-of-their-powers
talent, from and into each other’s organization; this would
elevate the sport to dizzying heights, with vigorous new rivalries
and reevaluated matchups. The precedent is clear, as nearly
every major competitive sport has inter-league championships.
The only major difference in this case is the looming disconnect
between how each organization builds its match environment
(caged space versus roped space, and the variances in allowed
techniques and tactics, such as elbows versus knees).
Concentrating on new ideas and redefining strategy seems
to be the nature of the future-bound athlete. Couture is an
evolutionary force in the middle of MMA, asking the fighters
around him to respond. People watch sports (they watch man-to-man
combat sports in particular) because humans are fascinated
by the species’ potential to overcome insurmountable odds.
When Couture talks about dropping down to 205 pounds to fight
light heavy weight, and then maintains the irrelevance of
bulking back up to fight heavyweight again, we understand
that the man comprehends his role in MMA. He is there to define
excellence, to reissue the prime directive of all athletic
competition: to explore the outer limits of human capabilities.
When the UFC and PRIDE work out their resistance to change,
fighters like Couture (and Silva, and Liddell and others)
will be prepared to do then what they’re already doing now.
They will evolve and adjust and perfect their bodies to defeat
their opponents, whatever the rules and shape of the arena.
It would do both organizations well to note, however, that
their premier fighters are aging. Couture passed the forty-year
mark, this year. To let his unique contribution to the potential
of the sport lay unused would be a grievous mistake by its
organizers.
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