So I tried as hard as I could and thats all they can ask from me. I didnt know what I was gonna do in the ring and how I was gonna do, all I knew was that I could put on a good show, and try to not quit, to keep going.
DC: You did K-1 and PRIDE, something a lot of fighters dont seem to want to do. What did you find tougher?
GG: Well Id say I find K-1 tougher because its not my base sport. Boxing is my base sport. I suppose if wrestling was my base sport Id find it really difficult the way Tom Erikson did. What is tougher? I dont know,
Ive seen some really weak MMA people and Ive seen some really weak K-1 people. Personally for me at this point d have to say K-1 is a little tougher. Ive been training K-1 style fighting hard for the past two years and its tough, its a very painful sport. MMA seems to be a walk in the park compared to the K-1 stand-up, kicking and punching. K-1 is going MMA now.
DC: How did boxing differ from K-1 for you?
GG: Because of the timing, the distance are totally different for punching [and] for kicking, its just totally, totally different. You can use it, its still the same skills and almost the same technique you still use. Theres more added, boxers can hold their hands down, for example
Don Frye and myself, my last fight with Don Frye, my whole thing was he was a typical boxer with a great wrestling base. I knew that he was going to come in holding his hands down low. Its just a boxers style. When youre not expecting the kick, youre really expecting it to the thigh and then you surprise somebody and throw it up to the head youll get somebody ten times out of ten.
Its a big, big difference. It was hard for me, I learned a big lesson from Gilbert Yvel when I got knocked out the exact same way. Boxers come in and hold their hands low because they can pretty much take a punch to the head full force when you see it. But with a kick when you dont see it, a kick is a whole new different ballgame. Youre going to sleep. I find it hard.