The Necessary James Toney Mention, Day VII
Jake Rossen Mar 9, 2010
“There are a lot of guys in the UFC who can take me down, but I'm
learning how to defend the takedown. I'm not even worried about
that. They've got to worry about that when they get in with me --
how are they going to take me down? They've got to take risks when
they take me down. They're taking a risk that they're going to get
knocked out....It’s all hand to hand combat.”
Here’s how I know MMAFighting.com’s Michael David Smith is a professional: there’s no evidence he burst out laughing when James Toney offered him that quote over the weekend.
Toney, the former heavyweight champion of the alphabet soup of
boxing, signed with the UFC last week in the promotion’s attempt to
head off any geek shows being assembled by Strikeforce. Toney is a
force on the feet, but the attitude on display here is eerily
similar to the kinds of letters that poured into Black Belt
magazine when open-arena fighting became popular in the 1990s.
Paraphrased: “Gracie is tough, but he’d never take a Tang Soo Do fighter to the ground. I would punch/kick/knee him first.”
We expect this kind of delusion from traditional artists who were confused by the earliest days of this sport, but Toney has 15 years of footage proving that when an Olympic-caliber grappler wants your ass on the ground, your ass is going to the ground. One-dimensional strikers can sometimes betray this rule by using athleticism and a seriously expedited level of anti-grappling: Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic spent the better part of the last decade destroying people despite his lack of a wrestling background. Whatever he did, he needs to bottle and sell to Toney.
It’s strange that the first, most obvious question for Dana White on this issue has yet to be asked by any outlet: Before signing this guy, did you request to see him spar with takedowns and kicks integrated as part of a scouting report? My guess is no. Don’t ask, don’t tell."
Here’s how I know MMAFighting.com’s Michael David Smith is a professional: there’s no evidence he burst out laughing when James Toney offered him that quote over the weekend.
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Paraphrased: “Gracie is tough, but he’d never take a Tang Soo Do fighter to the ground. I would punch/kick/knee him first.”
We expect this kind of delusion from traditional artists who were confused by the earliest days of this sport, but Toney has 15 years of footage proving that when an Olympic-caliber grappler wants your ass on the ground, your ass is going to the ground. One-dimensional strikers can sometimes betray this rule by using athleticism and a seriously expedited level of anti-grappling: Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic spent the better part of the last decade destroying people despite his lack of a wrestling background. Whatever he did, he needs to bottle and sell to Toney.
It’s strange that the first, most obvious question for Dana White on this issue has yet to be asked by any outlet: Before signing this guy, did you request to see him spar with takedowns and kicks integrated as part of a scouting report? My guess is no. Don’t ask, don’t tell."