There are many, many reasons for James Toney to feel uncomfortable in the Octagon on August 28, but there are two factors that aren’t getting a lot of play: gloves and shoes. One is shrinking, and one is disappearing.
The boxer is also moving from the big foam clubs to four-ounce grappling mitts, and while that’s usually a sign of sadism -- if he can maul with bigger gloves, imagine what he can do without -- it’s also going to affect Toney’s defense. Boxers can protect themselves with the same tool they use as a weapon. If Toney instinctively puts his hands up expecting coverage, a hand is going to slice through.
These are not points Bernard Hopkins brought up during an interview with Hardcore Sports Radio (and uncovered by Cagewriter) this week, but the argument is still the same: Toney is out of his element.
"When you step out into a situation where, against a legend too in his own sport. I believe, and I'll go on the record, that the best MMA guy or UFC guy go up against the best boxer in the world in their arena, in their arena gets their ass kicked,” he said. “I don't care who it is, whether Floyd, Pacquiao, Bernard Hopkins, they get their ass kicked. That is not what we do."
Hopkins is 90% there. Two kinds of boxers would have modest success in MMA: the highly athletic and the highly aggressive. Mike Tyson had the fuel injection momentum of Melvin Manhoef without the kicks, and Manhoef has earned wins despite having no ground aptitude whatsoever. Sometimes a guy’s sheer steamrolling is enough.
The second contingent would resemble the early Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic: a hyper-athletic striker who can pick up defensive wrestling quickly. A few years ago, maybe the Klitchkos could’ve pulled it off.
I’m not willing, as Hopkins is, to totally dismiss any boxer’s chances in MMA. But Toney, with his plodding, gut-slop style, ain’t the guy.