- Joined
- Mar 22, 2018
Yan basically gave the first round up on volume while also doing good enough work to the leg and body to have an effect later on. Dude was throwing some wild shit out there as well THAT WORKED. It's usually a bad idea to do spinning back fists and spinning heel kicks, and we have never seen him really do it before, but he got it to work.
The stats on this fight are something. 445 strikes thrown by Sandhagen to Yan's 270, only 37% of them landed. Yan landed at a 55% clip, and those shots really stuck out over the pitter patter of Sandhagen's in terms of impact and damage done. The man is just a machine.
You mentioned Volkanovski being your prior "best fighter in the UFC", that is a fight I would like to see between them. They were pre covid times training partners at Tiger Muay Thai.
Close to a year ago, I explained how boxing was the best martial art in terms of practicality. I still believe this. However, at the time, I started arguing in a long-winded, idiotic way when I shifted my attention towards setups, tactics and timing when explaining how boxing worked without realizing that all of those things were just applications of technique, and if the technique sucks, the tactics won't matter (e.g. you could time a slap to the face as a guy is moving forward, but it won't do shit).
Petr Yan basically proves that technique is the foundation on which champions are built, because it isn't done for it's own sake. It's done for max efficiency. In the past, I liked watching Dom Cruz, Barboza and Zabit because of how flashy they were with either their footwork or kicks. Over time though, I gradually began to appreciate a tight 5-punch combo more than a good spin kick or backfist.
Yan is real special in my book because although he doesn't shy away from spin attacks, he can only make doing things like that possible through continuous application of tried-and-true basics. Even Sandy had to abandon spinning things so he could box with Yan. He also failed to land his knees because Yan pulled off flashy techniques of his own called "stepping back" and "blocking".
And yeah, Volk vs Yan is feasible and could be a FOTY; it's a fight that i'm the most interested in now that you brought it up. Volk is kind of undersized for his division, so him going down to fight the bantams will be reasonable. Also, I don't see any of the bantams beating Yan, anyway.
Where does Sean O Malley fit into all of this?
Probably in a dumpster, because that's where he finds his opponents.