First of all, huge news that the UFC just absorbed the WEC and now will have featherweight and bantamweight classes. Champs Jose Aldo Jr. and Dominick Cruz will both become the automatic UFC Undisputed Champion and the winner of Henderson/Pettis will face the winner of Maynard/Edgar in a mini Lightweight tournament to unify the WEC and UFC titles.
Exciting:
Jose Aldo Jr. Here is a 24 year old kid 8-0 in the WEC, 7 by way of knockout and 1 by way of one of the most brutal 5 round thrashings ever executed which Uriah Faber had to suffer. He is 18-1 with 12 T(KO)'s and 2 submission victories though one of those submissions came from kicking a guy in the head.
He has the kind of dynamic athleticism that is just now becoming staple in modern hybrid combat promotions. You don't see guys who throw double flying knees and knock guys out 8 seconds into the first round or guys who can leg kick an orthodox fighter's right foot out from underneath him. The man is a savage.
Most exciting of all time: Wanderlei Silva, 'nuff said.
Runners up: Fedor Emelianenko, Mauricio Rua
Technical soundness, I would guess not in terms of pure technique but ability to execute and general effectiveness would be more complicated.
Striking: Allistair Overeem or Semmy Schlit. Both of these guys have extremely renowned kickboxing credentials and technical sound skills but Schlit lacks the athleticism to really be great outside of K-1. Obviously guys like Anderson Silva, Rua, Wanderlei and Aldo have great Muay Thai, but Silva is the most pinpoint sound out of all them, Wanderlei and Rua are very powerful brawlers who can bully their striking into working effectively and Aldo has the speed, power and great timing and distance. Thiago Alves has the best leg kicks in the modern game sans Antoni Hardonk. And of course there have been numerous boxers who have cross over who have punching skills that don't necessarily translate over: Ray Mercer, James Toney and One Glove Art Jimmerson.
Overall ... Anderson Silva. The guy puts on absolute clinics. His defense is really what sets him apart.
Clinchwork: Randy Couture here because he has the Greco Roman Olympic credentials and he uses them. He controls the fight inside the clinch, can punch effectively and can transition either back to standing or down to the ground at will and in a way that gives him the advantage. However, I just heard he retired. It's about time, he's freaking 48 years old.
Jon Jones is almost like a hybrid between Couture and Anderson Silva and is starting to learn some great Judo trips and throws when the other guy can maintain his base and hips. Brandon Vera has excellent MT skills in the clinch, probably one of the top 10 in the UFC overall and a Greco Roman background. On paper, he should be the best, but he falls apart in the actual fight.
All the MT guys have awesome knee work in the clinch. Judoka's like Yoshihiro Akiyama, Hidehiko Yoshida and Kazuhiro Nakamura are all internationally credential'd guys who can really dominate the fight when clinched.
Overall, no one has put the game together like Couture.
Wrestling: GSP GSP GSP
Too many runners up to mention. Funny how GSP didn't pick up wrestling until he started his MMA career. There are too many wrestlers to count that are great, many that are many times have much greater credentials than GSP (Lesnar, Velasquez, Jon Jones, Couture, Dan Henderson just to name a few) but GSP just looks the best when it comes to actually wrestling during the fight.
Jiu-Jitsu/Submission Grappling/Guard Game etc:
Once again, a billion fighters have top credentials (black belt victories or achievements in ADCC, Mundials or Pan Am's): Ricardo Arona, Rani Yahya, Jose Aldo Jr., Robert Drysdale, the entire Gracie family, Jake Shields, Fabricio Werdum, Demian Maia, Shinya Aoki, Megumi Fujii, Kurt Pelligrino etc etc.
Robert Drysdale, Roger Gracie, Ricardo Arona, Werdum and Maia are probably the best jiu-jitsu players in MMA, Yahya is probably the best at using grappling to win, Aoki is the best jiu-jitsu player to win a major title.
Overall, I'd give this to either Rani Yahya or Demian Maia.
Transitional: Scrambling, changing levels, flowing in and out of different phases, flowing between techniques.
I have no clue, but Mauricio Rua has always shown great overall game in this area.
So overall technically, I have no idea. GSP has awesome wrestling, but his punching is not that great (aside from his jab, but even that's only above average) and his submission game is horrible as evidenced by the Dan Hardy fight where all he had to do to lock in the armbar was squeeze his knees and bridge, something even White Belts know how to do.
Anderson Silva has ridiculous striking but his wrestling is non existence.
Fedor Emelianenko has shown he can dominate other fighters in every single phase of combat, but the way he does it makes purists cringe at his technique. Eventually, this cost him where he fought a very one dimensional Fabricio Werdum who capitalized on a tiny window of opportunity when Fedor tried to play Werdum's game.
The most technically sound fighter is probably some Journeyman at 145, 155 or 170 who will never make it as a contender due to bad conditioning, no heart, bad gameplan or whatever reason.
_________________ "It's real, grew up in trife life, the times of white lines The hype vice, murderous nighttimes and knife fights invite crimes" - Nasir Jones
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