‘Rampage’ and the Struggle Within
Facing the Hammer
Brian Knapp May 27, 2011
Matt
Hamill (above) has gotten under Rampage’s skin. | Photo: Terry
Goodlad/Sherdog.com
Facing ‘The Hammer’
Because of his track record, championship pedigree and bankable personality, Jackson can afford such missteps. A decisive victory over Hamill, a man against whom he will be heavily favored, will thrust the Memphis, Tenn., native right back into the title conversation at 205 pounds.
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“Some MMA fans -- they don’t understand,” he says. “They don’t hear something they want to hear, [and] they jump all over you. If they’d really get to know me, I’m not really excited about anybody I fight. It’s my job to me. It’s my career. I don’t get excited anymore. I’ve got almost 40 fights. I don’t get excited about anybody I fight. I just go and do it.”
Hamill presents his own set of challenges in the cage. Spawned by
Season 3 of “The Ultimate Fighter,” he will carry a five-fight
winning streak into the most significant match of his career. The
34-year-old Loveland, Ohio, native last set foot in the Octagon at
UFC 121 in October, when he outpointed former mentor and onetime
light heavyweight king Tito Ortiz.
Hamill has been finished only once -- by former middleweight
champion Rich
Franklin -- in 12 professional appearances. He was a three-time
Div. III national wrestling champion at the Rochester Institute of
Technology.
“
My main motivation
is to win. I think Matt
made a mistake when
he said he was going
to break my will and
that I’m going to over-
look him.
”
Some point to the possibility of Hamill employing a game plan similar to that of Evans, who outpointed Jackson at UFC 114 by clinching, grappling and securing timely takedowns.
“We’re prepared for that,” Gibson says. “That Rashad situation -- that will never happen again. I had an athlete [in Jackson] who was coming off a movie. We were lucky to just get through that camp.”
Cementing a Legacy
Still in his prime, Jackson has spent more than half of his career competing in either the UFC or Pride, where his violent slam knockout of Ricardo Arona became a staple of virtually every MMA highlight reel. It could be argued that he has achieved as much as any light heavyweight of his generation, including Liddell and Rua. Even so, Jackson has remained adamant about his intention to retire at age 35, which leaves him two short years with which to cement his legacy.
“I felt that way the day I started fighting,” he says. “I didn’t want to fight past 35. I said it years ago. I don’t know why people are just catching onto it now. I’m older. I’ve had a lot of wars. I’ve got little bumps and bruises that bother me in training.”
A second title run inside the UFC would leave little ammunition for his detractors, and, after weeks of outward disinterest, Jackson seems to have found incentive in Hamill’s words.
“My main motivation is to win,” he says. “I think Matt made a mistake when he said he was going to break my will and that I’m going to overlook him. That actually lit a fire up under my ass and made me train a little bit harder just so I can break his will, so I can make sure I outclass him.
“That’s why I worked on my wrestling, [why I worked] extra on my cardio and extra on getting off my back in case he does take me down,” Jackson adds. “In the beginning, fighting him, I wasn’t 100 percent motivated as I would be against, like, someone who has beaten me before. When he said that, it motivated me just as much as I’ve been for any other fight.”
Gibson expects Jackson to be in rare form.
“I’ve never met anybody who’s such a fight night fighter,” he says. “He’s a cerebral fighter. When he puts his mind to it and believes in it, nothing stops him.”
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