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The problem with the 'well rounded' meme is you can't just wave your hands and become proficient in multiple phases of the fight game.
The greatest fighters to step onto the canvas all tend to have two qualities from a technical perspective: a 'golden hammer' they specialize in that they can pull off on pretty much anyone, and the ability to force the fight into situations where they can use that golden hammer.
Generally speaking, in MMA, the methods one might use to dictate what phases the fight might end up in tend to involve lots of wrestling. So to apply the transitive property too it, the greatest fighters to step inside a cage all tend to highly rate grappling in the neutral phases.
If Maia had spend more time in camp working on teeps and switch kicks, might the fight have been closer? Maybe. But the thing is, spending more time on one-twos is time not spent on anything else. Would that time have been worth more than spending more of that time on, say, cagework? Landing a few more strikes might have merited a round or two, but would still have been a losing effort. Further more, it would shift how Woodley himself would fight too. Whereas, if one can breach that critical level, to be able to take someone down, and hence, be able to keep taking them down, that would be a much surer path to victory for someone like Maia.
Like i said before, if you're good enough to beat someone using the best weapons, you're gona likely be beating them any other which way as well. Sometimes someone is just simply a more talented fighter.
I won't say i was a fly on the wall in either guy's camps, but going by the impressions i got, i would bet Woodley spent a lot more time on takedown defense than Maia did on the converse.
The greatest fighters to step onto the canvas all tend to have two qualities from a technical perspective: a 'golden hammer' they specialize in that they can pull off on pretty much anyone, and the ability to force the fight into situations where they can use that golden hammer.
Generally speaking, in MMA, the methods one might use to dictate what phases the fight might end up in tend to involve lots of wrestling. So to apply the transitive property too it, the greatest fighters to step inside a cage all tend to highly rate grappling in the neutral phases.
If Maia had spend more time in camp working on teeps and switch kicks, might the fight have been closer? Maybe. But the thing is, spending more time on one-twos is time not spent on anything else. Would that time have been worth more than spending more of that time on, say, cagework? Landing a few more strikes might have merited a round or two, but would still have been a losing effort. Further more, it would shift how Woodley himself would fight too. Whereas, if one can breach that critical level, to be able to take someone down, and hence, be able to keep taking them down, that would be a much surer path to victory for someone like Maia.
Like i said before, if you're good enough to beat someone using the best weapons, you're gona likely be beating them any other which way as well. Sometimes someone is just simply a more talented fighter.
I won't say i was a fly on the wall in either guy's camps, but going by the impressions i got, i would bet Woodley spent a lot more time on takedown defense than Maia did on the converse.