Well, that's literally the concept of P4P. Thank's to Mirko for pointing it out.
Everything is bound by the laws of physics, so a larger heart does not necessarily mean a better one. The largest people who have ever lived often suffered from heart problems, including heart attacks, because at a certain point, an excessively large heart cannot function as efficiently as a smaller one. In other words, there is a limit to human growth: if the body and its organs become too large, they may be unable to sustain normal physiological function.pound for pound has always been dumb and nonsensical , but that’s kind of what makes it an attractive concept, much like goat talk
side note; I thought smaller guys had better cardio than big guys because their hearts were the same size, but after further review of the medical science it appears bigger guys have bigger hearts but not sure if it correlates exactly even if the premise is ruined
but at what point does the cardiac capability begin to limit peak physical performance, are we talking -15% from a 135lb fighter to a 175 lb fighter, or does it only start 200 lbs + , and is the heart even the limiting factor or just the biological system in general being larger and thus just slower and less efficient …Everything is bound by the laws of physics, so a larger heart does not necessarily mean a better one. The largest people who have ever lived often suffered from heart problems, including heart attacks, because at a certain point, an excessively large heart cannot function as efficiently as a smaller one. In other words, there is a limit to human growth: if the body and its organs become too large, they may be unable to sustain normal physiological function.
Guys who actually move up in weight successfully should automatically have more claim to P4P than guys who stayed in 1 weight class. By doing so it actually proves that they can win despite the handicap of being naturally smaller.Pound-for-pound refers to the consideration for skill set alone. It is like to say: if Islam were the same size as Tom Aspinall, he would beat Tom. Likewise with Islam, if he were the same size as Alex Perriera. It’s an exercise of hypothetically evaluating a skill set objectively.
It is simply to say: with the playing field leveled of the consideration for weight class, which athlete possesses the skill set which would be the most dominant.
In the case of the present, Islam is that figure. Even moving up 20 lbs in weight, his skills so greatly out-matched those of JDM that JDM never seemed to even stand a chance in the match. That is generally how fighters go about attempting to credential a P4P claim.
He's probably referring to those huge behemoths that are bordering 300lbs. An optimal, perfectly sized HW wouldn't have such issues.but at what point does the cardiac capability begin to limit peak physical performance, are we talking -15% from a 135lb fighter to a 175 lb fighter, or does it only start 200 lbs + , and is the heart even the limiting factor or just the biological system in general being larger and thus just slower and less efficient …
P4P should only be something for fighters that actually proved they could fight above their weight. Roy Jones Jr could go all the way up to HW despite being a MW (160lbs). Or Hendo being able to fight in 3 divisions and slaying legends along the way. Weight bullies like Khabib that stay in 1 weight class can go fuck themselves when it comes to demanding P4P rankings. The only obvious exception being HW since they can't fight in more than 1 division and don't need to since they're already Sherdogger sized.Yes, it's a ridiculous, manipulative concept designed to induce mongs to buy tickets to watch midgets fight.
The problem is that this brainwashing has been very successful: dwarf Floyd Mayweather is the biggest PPV star of all time.
And thus it is important for sane people like Mirko to regularly point out how stupid it is, because 'P4P' nonsense discussion is everywhere.
Same here. Internet_high_five.jpgI love Mirko. He is the reason I started watching MMA