UFC 109 Preview: The Main Card
Couture vs. Coleman
Feb 6, 2010
The concept of “better late than never” will face its stiffest test
yet at UFC
109 on Saturday. For those of you into trivia, the headlining
bout of Randy
Couture vs. Mark Coleman
was originally scheduled for UFC 17 -- yes, I said UFC 17 -- before
a Couture injury set the table for Pete
Williams to score one of the defining knockouts in MMA
history.
That was more than 10 years ago, back when the UFC couldn’t even fill civic centers made of plywood and duct tape. Quantum leap to today and both Couture and Coleman will fight in comfier confines, but the stakes are even higher than they were in ’98.
The rest of the main card isn’t quite so prone to nostalgia, but
makes up for it with a high violence probability quotient. Whether
it’s the world’s most dangerous real estate agent, Chael
Sonnen, taking on Nate
Marquardt or Paulo
Thiago looking to claim his second American Kickboxing Academy
scalp from Mike Swick,
2010’s latest MMA fix should keep us all mellow until at least
Monday morning.
Randy Couture vs. Mark Coleman
A fight is exactly what Coleman wants to avoid, as his game hasn’t evolved much since the days when he helped make ground-and-pound a revolutionary concept. Coleman’s bout with Stephan Bonnar at UFC 100 showed his striking limitations, and his grappling remains stuck in the late 90s.
What “The Hammer” does have going for him is Bill Brasky-level strength and a bench-pressing double-leg shot that has been known to level small cities. Neither of those attributes will intimidate Couture, though, who practically wrote the bible for using Greco-Roman wrestling in MMA. Unlike Coleman, Couture has also spent much of his career developing the striking and grappling knowledge to complement his wrestling base.
Being a decent striker with a grasp of basic fundamentals is an incalculably huge advantage in this fight for Couture. For instance, Coleman doesn’t really set up his takedowns. Once upon a time, Coleman was spry enough to blast a double leg from a mile away, but he just can’t move like he used to and his boxing is too slow and sloppy to serve as an effective
segue to a takedown.
Even the worst-case scenario for Couture -- Coleman blasting a vintage double leg of doom -- isn’t that bad since “The Natural” excels at stuffing takedowns and immediately transitioning to the clinch. That’s a place Coleman doesn’t want to be since the last thing he needs is to get sucked into one of Couture’s dirty-boxing clinics.
Finishing skills are a necessary component of any modern fighter’s repertoire, and that is where the biggest disparity lies in this fight. Coleman’s ground-and-pound is his only offensive weapon. He has neither the power to finish Couture with it nor the conditioning to use it effectively for 15 minutes. Not a good sign considering Couture will be putting a strain on Coleman’s gas tank from the first minute.
The Bottom Line: For as long as Coleman’s lungs hold up, this should be an entertaining wrestling match. Once he starts wilting, though, this fight will be all but over. Too much striking from Couture and too little conditioning from Coleman will net Joe Rogan’s hero a TKO win late in the second round.
That was more than 10 years ago, back when the UFC couldn’t even fill civic centers made of plywood and duct tape. Quantum leap to today and both Couture and Coleman will fight in comfier confines, but the stakes are even higher than they were in ’98.
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Randy Couture vs. Mark Coleman
The Breakdown: The inclination here is
to write this fight off as a case of the UFC cashing in on the
names of two legends on the wrong side of 45. And to a certain
extent, that’s a fair point, but both Coleman and Couture are
coming off of wins over guys more than a decade younger than them,
so maybe this is just a fair fight.
A fight is exactly what Coleman wants to avoid, as his game hasn’t evolved much since the days when he helped make ground-and-pound a revolutionary concept. Coleman’s bout with Stephan Bonnar at UFC 100 showed his striking limitations, and his grappling remains stuck in the late 90s.
What “The Hammer” does have going for him is Bill Brasky-level strength and a bench-pressing double-leg shot that has been known to level small cities. Neither of those attributes will intimidate Couture, though, who practically wrote the bible for using Greco-Roman wrestling in MMA. Unlike Coleman, Couture has also spent much of his career developing the striking and grappling knowledge to complement his wrestling base.
Being a decent striker with a grasp of basic fundamentals is an incalculably huge advantage in this fight for Couture. For instance, Coleman doesn’t really set up his takedowns. Once upon a time, Coleman was spry enough to blast a double leg from a mile away, but he just can’t move like he used to and his boxing is too slow and sloppy to serve as an effective
segue to a takedown.
Even the worst-case scenario for Couture -- Coleman blasting a vintage double leg of doom -- isn’t that bad since “The Natural” excels at stuffing takedowns and immediately transitioning to the clinch. That’s a place Coleman doesn’t want to be since the last thing he needs is to get sucked into one of Couture’s dirty-boxing clinics.
Finishing skills are a necessary component of any modern fighter’s repertoire, and that is where the biggest disparity lies in this fight. Coleman’s ground-and-pound is his only offensive weapon. He has neither the power to finish Couture with it nor the conditioning to use it effectively for 15 minutes. Not a good sign considering Couture will be putting a strain on Coleman’s gas tank from the first minute.
The Bottom Line: For as long as Coleman’s lungs hold up, this should be an entertaining wrestling match. Once he starts wilting, though, this fight will be all but over. Too much striking from Couture and too little conditioning from Coleman will net Joe Rogan’s hero a TKO win late in the second round.
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