Is Randy Couture still a contender?

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The big debating point after last night’s UFC 105 was Randy Couture’s controversial victory over Brandon Vera and what the future holds for former five-time UFC champions. In his first fight outside of North America in almost a decade, Couture managed to edge a close fight by unanimous decision despite Brandon Vera, Joe Rogan and many in the crowd believing that Vera had done enough to defeat the ‘The Natural’.

This was Couture’s return to the light-heavyweight division and was his chance to prove that away from the super-heavyweights that increasingly dominate the heavyweight division he could still be a contender within the UFC. The move down in weight was a tremendous risk as he would lose the speed and conditioning advantage that had helped him defeat Tim Sylvia and Gabriel Gonzaga. Against quicker fighters such as Nogueria and even Brock Lesnar, Couture had struggled as he couldn’t use his speed and footwork to effectively work in the clinch or the pocket while avoiding getting hit. A move down to light-heavyweight means Couture fighting against even faster opponents and having to change his style to mitigate his opponent’s speed advantage.

And last night he did precisely that although even he had to admit that his tactics were not entertaining to watch. As he had hinted at in his pre-fight interviews, Couture focused on using his wrestling to wear down Brandon Vera. The second there was an opening, he was going for the clinch or takedown, pushing up against the cage and just wearing Vera down. Now that is a tactic that Couture has used repeatedly in his previous fights but the extent to which he avoided the striking game in the first two rounds and his failure to remain active in the clinch was different. And whereas usually Couture’s charisma and fan-favorite status stops the fans getting bored, the Manchester tired of these tactics by the second round and repeatedly called for the fighters to be separated.

The problem is that Couture can’t win any other way. He is forty-six years old and he cannot risk getting drawn into a brawl because he no longer has the speed or the resilience to stay out of his comfort zone for long. Like Lesnar and Nogueria, Vera was able to get hard shots in on Couture throughout the fight and really should have finished him when he got the knockdown off a knee to the head in the second round. Unlike the other two, he wasn’t able to dictate the pace of the fight or control where it took place. The consequence of that failure was that Couture was able to wear Vera down to the point where in the third round he finally felt confident enough to put some boxing combinations together and become more active in the clinch.

When the buzzer went at ringside, my snap judgment was that Couture had lost the fight by 29-28 with the last round being very even and being decided largely on Vera getting the one takedown of the round. However taking the fight as a whole I am struck by the coherence of Couture’s strategy and the single-minded way he implemented it. Vera did cause more damage but it was Couture who dictated where the fight took place. And towards the end of the fight Vera was the one who was visibly tiring suggesting that the wrestling that had so infuriated the fans had been effective in wearing down Vera.

But as we look towards to the next Couture fight (which may well be a shot at the light-heavyweight title) I feel increasingly uneasy. At his peak Couture was a rounded fighter who intelligently used his wrestling as the foundation to an effective and entertaining mixed martial arts fighting style. As his age finally catches up with him, he is becoming an increasingly limited fighter who cannot comfortably fight outside his ever-decreasing comfort zone. The whole evolution of mixed martial arts is of fighters becoming more comfortable in a variety of different styles and developing new ways to merge different martial arts into a coherent fighting style. At his best Couture was able to do that but now he is forced to fight a slow, Greco-Roman wrestling match to avoid his chin being tested by a fighter who hits harder or his conditioning being tested by a faster fighter. When it works it can keep him competitive against the very best but it hardly marks him out as the elite fighter he once was.

Today’s Randy Couture has the same grasp of strategy that he always had. He is the best in the world when it comes to thinking about a fight and developing a strategy that will get him the victory. But as we saw last night that strategy is becoming increasingly negative to mask his physical limitations. His fighting style is slipping dangerously close to self-parody as he threatens to become the limited, overly negative wrestler that his critics always accused him of being. I don’t want to see any fighter end their career undermining their own legacy, let alone a fighter who has achieved as much for this sport as Randy Couture. With his first victory in over two years, last night won’t be the last time that Randy Couture steps into the Octagon but perhaps it should be.

A Comics Nexus original, Will Cooling has written about comics since 2004 despite the best efforts of the industry to kill his love of the medium. He now spends much of his time over at Inside Fights where he gets to see muscle-bound men beat each up without retcons and summer crossovers.