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Thread: What If...? (Spain, Boztepe, et al.)

  1. #1

    What If...? (Spain, Boztepe, et al.)

    (On the eve of UFC 41)

    What if somehow, back in the 80s, Emin Boztepe, Rick Spain, Gary Lam, or one of the other young, hungry, fight-rich WCK proponents wanted to, and was accepted to, fight in the UFC Octogon with Royce, Shamrock, Hackney, and the like. What would have happened?

    Would it have been Steve Faulkner the prequel? (clinch, takedown, WCK person losing) Or would it have been an earlier version of Mo Smith or Dan Henderson? (clinch, knockout, grappler losing) Or something else?

  2. #2
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    Very hard thing to say. You need to have some idea of the skill all three had at the time. Mo Smith showed that once the game was understood a stand up fighter could do just fine. However based on articles ,videos of the time,etc, I think Boztepe would have lost fast,Spain probably too ( maybe thats why he stated training grappling?)

  3. #3
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    I've never seen Mr Boztepe in action so I can't comment.

    I think my Sifu would have done as well as any competent kickboxer/pugilist that entered the Octagon. I think he would probably expect to have lost or to have been very lucky to win in hindsight - as he is now a very competent and committed Machado BJJ blue belt.

    There WERE good strikers in UFC1. Gerard Gordeau was no tomato can. My teeth have never felt the same after seeing him kick Yarbrough in the mouth. But Royce beat him (Gordeau) with tactics and a strategy he'd never seen before let alone prepared for. Like a nonswimmer dropped into a tank with a shark.

    This isn't a total "what if:":

    The WWCKFA were invited to enter fighters in the UFC early on. They offered Joe Sayah and Rick Spain. These gents were allegedly rejected as "unknowns" by the UFC organisation because they wre "unknowns" who would do little for the box office. My recollection of the details are hazy, but Marty Goldberg was fairly closely involved and could give more (anyone know how his mother is, BTW?)

    Emin also challenged Royce, but of course this never happened.

    Personally, I've never liked the UFC that much - IMHO Pride is a much more interesting format. Sakuraba is definitely my favorite fighter.
    "Once you reject experience, and begin looking for the mysterious, then you are caught!" - Krishnamurti
    "We are all one" - Genki Sudo
    "We are eternal, all this pain is an illusion" - Tool, Parabol/Parabola
    "Bro, you f***ed up a long time ago" - Kurt Osiander

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  4. #4
    Hunt1 - Good point. Very few had experienced that kind of fight dynamic before and the element of surprise could have been a great hinderance.

    Anerlich - Congrats to your sifu on his blue! Even nowadays, pure strikers seem to rely a bit on luck still for their clean wins (as opposed to the ground and pounders or stall and sprawlers). The ones that excell seem well versed enough in wrestling to avoid going down (Lidell) or to get the take down and smash through the guard, against the fence (Ortiz).

    I too prefer Pride, and it looks like they have a great card coming up. Sak is amazing, but I think he's rushing his comeback again. Nino Shembri should be familiar enough style for him, but at 80% or whatever he's at now... I don't know. I also think he's nuts for wanting to bulk up for the heavyweight grand prix...

  5. #5
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    I also agree with hunt1. I think Royce's biggest advantage was no one was familiar with his system and so were unable to deal with it. Even Ken Shamrock said the gi flummoxed him.

    I too think Saku's got his hands full - but to my mind he is an incredibly versatile, exciting and intelligent fighter who might pull an upset.

    Ortiz/Liddell should be very interesting.
    "Once you reject experience, and begin looking for the mysterious, then you are caught!" - Krishnamurti
    "We are all one" - Genki Sudo
    "We are eternal, all this pain is an illusion" - Tool, Parabol/Parabola
    "Bro, you f***ed up a long time ago" - Kurt Osiander

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  6. #6
    if you dont mind me adding my opinion,i've used judo in
    a couple of fights,and though it's an oldie but a goodie,
    the way the rules are set up in these events,you must
    have more than one style in your arsenal.
    if only strike based fighters could learn a couple of
    neat tricks from the ground/grapplers.with the way
    i see wck working,a fighter could learn some judo/jiu
    jitsu,deal with the intitial grapple,then let loose with that
    vertical punch ive seen.honestly,it would not take much
    instruction for a wck person [with heart] to dominate.one
    could use say 25% grapple and finish with wck,then the
    feeling would be "he has won using wing chun,he's a
    wing chun fighter".the grapple style would merely be
    a compliment to the striker.
    and that's what i find hard to understand about some
    [not all] wing chun fighters,the almost fear of trying out
    something "other".and you should,because afterall,jiu jitsu
    and judo,are like wck,designed for "anyone",and its far
    easier to learn than you might imagine.in fights my judo
    was good against people bigger than me,but i admit [and
    that's why id like to learn wck] that a good style that can
    handle the incoming punches would be fantastic.are you
    still awake?

  7. #7
    Over the years I have asked similar questions like this. There is something so thrilling and comforting to hear of past exploits of famous heroes or of your Sifu in the long process of WC learning. Until one day a WC brother cruelly awoke me abruptly from my WC dreams. He pointedly asked: “why are you concerned about so and so? Why don’t you jump and find out what you can do instead of looking at another mans accomplishments, and how does any of this improve your skills?” I was speechless. I replied later that there are no harms in this sort of question. It is a beautiful dream to be shattered. And to that he said:” it's cruel to perpetuate a lie that might get you killed . Or worse pass on idea's that will get someone else killed. everybody is talking but no one is doing and they still ask the why things don't work . it's like the man that spent a lifetime talking about swimming and knew every thing about the body mechanics and concept and taught others these things but then never enters the water for fear of drowning in reality.” I post this not to attack anyone for I am also guilty of this. Perhaps it will serve to stimulate people more to action to experience the truth for ourselves and to test our WC stuffs more.

    Regards,

  8. #8
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    Thumbs up

    PaulH

    Golden words. Brilliant.

  9. #9
    Interesting topic, however hypothetical it is. One point that I think clearly differentiates tournament fighting of any description to that of "real" fighting is the prior knowledge you have of your opponent. No doubt the professional fighters spend countless hours studying their fellow combatants in order to study their strengths and weaknesses, not something that you can do with the same amount of depth in a street situation. So they take this information and train accordingly, with that in mind you'd have to ask yourself how much of the fight is purely based on the fighters skill in the moment and what the specific pre-fight preperation is worth. If Rick Spain had to fight Royce Gracie back in the day then you know he would have done everything to finish the fight on his feet and Royce would have waited to take him to the mat.

    Interesting to hear that Rick is a blue belt, I've heard instructors suggest in the Brisbane kwoon that Rick is better than John Will.
    "A basic tenet of the Shoalin teaching, which is an echo of the Buddha's advice to his followers, is that one should not accept anything on faith alone, nor on the reputation of the masters, but practise the arts diligently for a reasonable length of time, and then assess the results according to one's understanding and experience" Wong Kiew Kit, The Art of Shaolin Kung Fu.

  10. #10
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    Yikes!

    If a guy like Rick Spain, with his experience, physicality, conditioning and skills is ONLY a Machado Blue Belt, that ought to give folks in Wing Chun Kuen a wakeup call about the skills lacking in terms of groundfighting.

    What the heck must the Australian purple and brown belts in Machado BJJ be like in terms of submission skills?

    Talk about a reality check for the rest of us plodders.

    In any case, congratulations to Spain Sifu on his progress in crosstraining Machado ju jutsu.
    David Williams
    http://www.wingchun.com
    Kim sut, Lok ma, Ting yu, Dung tao, Mai jiang

  11. #11
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    What the heck must the Australian purple and brown belts in Machado BJJ be like in terms of submission skills?
    Aussies kick a$$
    S.Teebas

  12. #12
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    Interesting to hear that Rick is a blue belt, I've heard instructors suggest in the Brisbane kwoon that Rick is better than John Will.
    While their faith in their teacher is shared by me, his humble student, I can assure you that Spain Sifu himself would certainly refute this.

    I've taken seminars with John Will and his knowledge and skill are at a whole other level. We are also an associate school of the organisation of which John is the head. As far as Rick Spain and his students are concerned, John Will is THE MAN when it comes to BJJ.

    Rick Spain is coached in BJJ by Anthony Lange, a brown belt, and he will tell you that Anthony schools him on a weekly basis.

    Anthony himself told me once that one of HIS lessons from John Will was an hour long rolling session where John just spent the whole hour catching Anthony in armbars from every position and direction, at will. Anthony said it was extremely humbling but did wonders for his armbar defence thereafter.

    That should give you some idea of the relative skill of Messrs Will and Spain.

    That said, Rick Spain is a **** good blue belt. I have the privilege of rolling with him 2-3 times a week. We usually roll fairly light, but a few weeks ago he was feeling a bit frisky after several weeks of a neck injury and decided to go full bore on me. 25 minutes of sheer breathless claustrophobic hell.

    Our brown and purple belts in Oz are IMO at least as good as those anywhere else in the world. Elvis Sinosic, Anthony Perosh, and Luke Beston are among those I have had the privilege of meeting.
    "Once you reject experience, and begin looking for the mysterious, then you are caught!" - Krishnamurti
    "We are all one" - Genki Sudo
    "We are eternal, all this pain is an illusion" - Tool, Parabol/Parabola
    "Bro, you f***ed up a long time ago" - Kurt Osiander

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  13. #13
    Hey Andrew,

    You guys attending the Michael Jen seminar down there? (bearing in mind I have no idea on the geograpy of OZ 8).

    What's Luke Beston like in person? Anything like his net personality? He has me ROFLOL with some of his posts.

    And to bring it back on topic, has WCK made any impression on their stand up mindsets?

    (BTW - Just caught the UFC. Mixed show)

  14. #14
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    Rene,

    The Jen seminar is on in Sydney. Sifu is taking a trip to NZ and I have previous commitments (work, where I get to type ths ) No doubt it would have been great. Anthony Lange is one of the organisers.

    We went to JJ Machado's seminar a couple of years back when he was here. I also went to Scott Sonnon's Aussie seminar, which was attended by most of the Machado luminaries mentioned above.
    "Once you reject experience, and begin looking for the mysterious, then you are caught!" - Krishnamurti
    "We are all one" - Genki Sudo
    "We are eternal, all this pain is an illusion" - Tool, Parabol/Parabola
    "Bro, you f***ed up a long time ago" - Kurt Osiander

    WC Academy BJJ/MMA Academy Surviving Violent Crime TCM Info
    Don't like my posts? Challenge me!

  15. #15
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    Luke assisted John Will when he gave a seminar at our kwoon. He was very polite and helpful. He even posted, unprompted, on the Underground that he was quite impressed with Sifu and our school, especially the photo board full of photos of students sparring full contact.

    High praise indeed if you're familiar with his regular posts there.

    He is a bona fide purple belt and very technical.

    Are you the "rene r." I occasionally see on there?
    "Once you reject experience, and begin looking for the mysterious, then you are caught!" - Krishnamurti
    "We are all one" - Genki Sudo
    "We are eternal, all this pain is an illusion" - Tool, Parabol/Parabola
    "Bro, you f***ed up a long time ago" - Kurt Osiander

    WC Academy BJJ/MMA Academy Surviving Violent Crime TCM Info
    Don't like my posts? Challenge me!

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