What are some great in-fight adjustments you’ve seen turn the tide of a fight?

chupacabra5

Orange Belt
@Orange
Joined
Dec 19, 2020
Messages
394
Reaction score
1,011
In-fight adjustments are one of my favourite things in MMA. I can’t imagine how hard it would be to stay focused and change tactics for something that you maybe didn’t prepare for.

Could you point me to some more to watch?

The ones I remember are:

Cejudo/Moraes - Cejudo starts blasting Moraes from the clinch after getting kicked to pieces in round 1

Stipe/DC II - Stipe starts going to the body and eventually KOs DC

Jones/Machida - Jones feints the kick that Machida was countering in round 1, and rocks him with an elbow (if I remember correctly)

“Panic-wrestling” and opponents gassing don’t really count. I’m interested in intentional changes in strategy.
 
In-fight adjustments are one of my favourite things in MMA. I can’t imagine how hard it would be to stay focused and change tactics for something that you maybe didn’t prepare for.

Could you point me to some more to watch?

The ones I remember are:

Cejudo/Moraes - Cejudo starts blasting Moraes from the clinch after getting kicked to pieces in round 1

Stipe/DC II - Stipe starts going to the body and eventually KOs DC

Jones/Machida - Jones feints the kick that Machida was countering in round 1, and rocks him with an elbow (if I remember correctly)

“Panic-wrestling” and opponents gassing don’t really count. I’m interested in intentional changes in strategy.

crazy that you mentioned cejudo morales because that was the first one that came to mind. That was some of the best thai clinch knees I’ve ever seen delivered. Simply a thing of beauty how Henry started manhandling him with them.
 
Jones/Machida - Jones feints the kick that Machida was countering in round 1, and rocks him with an elbow (if I remember correctly)
from
tumblr_mp193bCmgV1ry1rm7o1_400.gifv

to
b1e1f558266cb02ae89e482abd124b3c.gif
 
Recently Dustin made a great adjustment against Conor and I’m not talking about calf kicks. Conor was catching him with a right uppercut leaning to the right. Dustin adjusted by shortening up his right hook counter and caught Conor every subsequent time Conor tried the same shot.
 
Speaking of Conor, Mayweather made some amazing adjustments against him. In the first round Mayweather was fighting from the outside and got countered with an uppercut. He then completely switched strategies to one where he just walked forward with his guard up drawing shots and throwing power shots when he got close, which Conor was not prepared for.
 
Recently Dustin made a great adjustment against Conor and I’m not talking about calf kicks. Conor was catching him with a right uppercut leaning to the right. Dustin adjusted by shortening up his right hook counter and caught Conor every subsequent time Conor tried the same shot.
They are talking about in-game adjustments that they didn't prepare for and had to adjust to on the spot. Dustin and his boxing coach prepared to counter that lead uppercut combo, Conor's 1-2, and pull counters. It's just harder to counter when Conor is fresh and still has his speed, timing, power. Dustin started catching Conor when he slowed down after the clinch fighting.

The list in the original post is pretty spot on, not many fighters/trainers/coaches can make adjustments on the spot in real time. Most have a certain game plan they worked on prefight that they stick to win or lose.
 
Speaking of Conor, Mayweather made some amazing adjustments against him. In the first round Mayweather was fighting from the outside and got countered with an uppercut. He then completely switched strategies to one where he just walked forward with his guard up drawing shots and throwing power shots when he got close, which Conor was not prepared for.
Interestingly, it's similar to what Diaz did in his second fight with Connor. He was getting pieced for 1-2 rounds by overextending and getting countered. His corner just told him to shell up and walk forward. Obv. didnt win, but it made Connor have to grind it our for 5 rounds.

Overeem vs Sakai had an often see gameplan change. Reem was getting pieced up, so he started the old hug and drag, which Sakai had no answer for and got GnPed to oblivion.
 
Speaking of Conor, Mayweather made some amazing adjustments against him. In the first round Mayweather was fighting from the outside and got countered with an uppercut. He then completely switched strategies to one where he just walked forward with his guard up drawing shots and throwing power shots when he got close, which Conor was not prepared for.
Floyd is great at making reads and adjustments during the fight. That's why he starts slow, he's analyzing your techniques, patterns, timing, strategies, and game plan. Then makes his adjustments to counter your style as the fight progresses. He realized Conor didn't have an inside game or a active power jab to stop his forward pressure so he started walking him down and fighting him on the inside. Great adjustment and read from Mayweather. He has great fight IQ.
 
In-fight adjustments are one of my favourite things in MMA. I can’t imagine how hard it would be to stay focused and change tactics for something that you maybe didn’t prepare for.

Could you point me to some more to watch?

The ones I remember are:

Cejudo/Moraes - Cejudo starts blasting Moraes from the clinch after getting kicked to pieces in round 1

Stipe/DC II - Stipe starts going to the body and eventually KOs DC

Jones/Machida - Jones feints the kick that Machida was countering in round 1, and rocks him with an elbow (if I remember correctly)

“Panic-wrestling” and opponents gassing don’t really count. I’m interested in intentional changes in strategy.
Nothing specific is coming to mind, but I love when you can hear the corner's (often angry) advice, and the fighter *actually* implements the change in strategy immediately. I always consider fighters who can think/react/listen in the moment to be the most skilled and most dangerous. Conversely, fighters with low fight IQ, who don't listen to their corners or can't change-up a plan that isn't working drive me crazy.
 
Dillashaw vs Garbrandt I comes to mind. In the corner, after the first round, Ludwig told TJ to stop using punches to set up his high kick because Cody was reading it, and instead just lead with the kick. TJ proceeded to land the kick and finish the fight.

Pretty sure there were some other details to the adjustments he made after a terrible first round, several good breakdowns on youtube.
 
Justin Gaethje got caught by Tony while swinging wild, one of his old tendencies that Trevor Whitman called him on, he shortened up his punches and wiped Tony out.
 
Back
Top