Saturday, May 15, 2010

Is there a karate (Shukokai,shotokan or wado-ryu), tae-kwon-do, aikido or ju-jitsu master that could beat UFC?

Think of the No1 exponent of each of these martial arts, how would they fare in a ring against the best UFC fighters?


You can include judo etc if you wish.|||In the early, or beginning UFC days, a Number 1 exponent of any of these styles have the potential to be champions. Today however, you have to be VERY well-rounded in atleast 3 different styles to have a chance of suceeding.





If you have JUST a Tae-kwon-do (TKD) expert against a MMA fighter, the TKD guy will not last a minute! It is the same to anyone that is trained in JUST one style. Today%26#039;s Mixed Martial Artists study wrestling, jujitsu, kickboxing, greco-roman, western boxing, Sombo, or whatever they can get their hands on that works!





Basically, if you are a number 1 exponent in a certain style and wish to take part in events like the UFC, you need to start cross-training in other styles so you can attack/defend on the standup, clinching, groundwork, etc.





I believe you should watch the early UFC matches (like UFC 1 to 5) and you will notice a big difference to todays fighters. Notice how people like Ken Shamrock has altered his fighting game for example.|||Muay Thai. Nuff said.|||ufc are all gay....just poke em in the eye and poke them in the throat....easy|||This is a stupidly worded question. But I prefer the Tao of Jeet Kune do. Any fighter could beat any fighter on any given day.|||Nothing can stand against my light saber.|||real fighting involves deadly moves that can kill being as all fighting sports have rules to protect people from serious injury you will never be able to tell who would win. UFC is as close as you get to real fighting within the law|||I think your question is contradicting ,ufc is made up of all styles|||If karate guys are real good they go into the UFC. So its hard to really answer the question.





UFC is for the best. Karate is for self defense and they are not the same level of athlete.

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