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Sport Specific Training for MMA (Mixed Martial Arts)An article
by Ryan Pratt |
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The whole MMA game has evolved quite a bit from the early days. It is now a distinct sport with its on style, tactics and strategies. To think and train as though it is merely a combination of several arts would, in my opinion, be a mistake. While your regime will most certainly include training methods and tactics originally derived from various arts, they are (and should be) approached from the MMA perspective. Peering through the lens of MMA skews the original approach of the parent art and fashions it into a new and different objective. So attempting to get good at MMA by getting good at it's various component parts is not the most efficient use of your time. In my opnion if you want to get good at MMA in the most efficient manner possible you must begin with the end in mind and train in the style of MMA. Sport specificity is a proven methodology. At some point during the process you may discover a strength or weakness in your overall game that will drive you to isolate a particular component (stand-up, clinch or ground). When that happens you will inevitably allocate more practice time to that component and may train in the parent sport for an extended amount of time. However, since your ultimate goal is MMA you will never look at or participate in that sport in same way as an athlete from that sport does. As far as
what makes an effective MMA style, school, or coach...well Stand-up-
primary delivery system is boxing. I don't believe that Clinch-
primary delivery system is a combination of Greco and Muay thai Ground- primary delivery system is BJJ Conditioning- mostly anaerobic and muscle endurance As far as how much emphasis is given to what component that would depend on the individual athlete but for developing a foundation I would weight the training regime as follows: 1. Conditioning Training in a bunch of different sports and trying to assemble a cohesive MMA game a few months before the fight is not going to be as effective as spending the entire time training MMA. That would be a little like a football team throwing the ball back and forth, running up and down the field and practicing isolated blocking/ tackling drills. While those activities develop real skills that can be applied to the game, it's no substitute for practicing as a team and actually "playing" football. A large number of skills that you practice during BJJ class would get you punched in the face if you tried it in a MMA setting. If you were training MMA you would never have learned those tactics because they don't apply to that sport. You can learn to box with you feet inline with each other but you can't do MMA that way. Don't try to use a kickboxing stance in MMA unless you like being on your back a lot. I think you see my point. As far as
conditioning for a fight goes there are a lot of variables. Generally
a fighters conditioning program will progress something like 1.
Off-season - no fight in the foreseeable future 2.
Preseason - your thinking about fighting 3.
Early season- your going to fight 4.
Peak season- you have a fight scheduled in four months Naturally you taper off as fight night approaches.
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