Sherdog’s Top 10: Flashes in the Pan
Number 9
Few
can match Roger Gracie in the grappling department. | Dave
Mandel/Sherdog.com
9. Roger Gracie
Gracie was supposed to be the symbol of the legendary family’s return to relevance in the sport it helped create. One of the most decorated submission grapplers in history, with enough Mundials and Abu Dhabi Combat Club Submission Wrestling World Championships gold medals in his collection to inspire the lustful attentions of a conquistador or mining company executive, Gracie had all of the accolades and seemingly the talent to make a successful transfer to mixed martial arts. More importantly, he seemed to have a style that would work well in modern MMA, with its focus on fundamentals -- takedown, pass, submission -- rather than the complicated, gi-specific guard and sweep games that have become common at the highest levels of grappling.
Four fights into his MMA career, everything seemed to be going to plan. Despite not cutting much weight to reach the 205-pound light heavyweight limit, Gracie had dispatched respectable competition -- Ron Waterman, Yuki Kondo, Kevin Randleman, and Trevor Prangley -- with shocking ease and had even begun to flash a rangy, jab-heavy striking game to complement his otherworldly grappling.
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Even after his poor performance against Lawal, a bit of the hype stuck around. “King Mo” was a big light heavyweight and a much more polished fighter than Gracie; a loss was not unexpected. Gracie dropped to middleweight and took a dominant decision from Keith Jardine before submitting journeyman Anthony Smith at Strikeforce’s last show. His first UFC test was to be Tim Kennedy, and although he was a slight underdog, the American’s willingness to grapple should have played right into Gracie’s hands.
It did not, and three humiliating rounds later, Gracie was released from the UFC. He signed with One Fighting Championship in August, and while the book is not yet closed on his career, the hype is certainly gone.
Number 8 » His greatest “accomplishment,” however, was his involvement in the Securitas depot robbery, one of the two or three largest cash heists in human history. He and at least five other accomplices made off with more than £53 million.
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