Hey guys,
Slow week because of the mediocre card this weekend so I decided to have some more toung-in-cheek fun. This time we're takling about that most famous quarter-muncher, Street Fighter!
Hope you don't mind clicking the link and as always all feedback is welcomed,
Cheers,
Jack
Before 1993 and the founding of the Ultimate Fighting Championship, the world lacked a flagship No Holds Barred organization. Brazil had vale tudo events, Japan's Pancrase organization was only a few years off, and Frank Dux had wandered into the jungle with a trophy shaped duffel bag, only to return from his fictional Kumite with an eerily familiar trophy. But in 1987 a young karateka named Ryu was setting out on only a slightly more fictitious quest than Dux, in the World Warrior tournament.
The dizzying heights which combat reached through the Street Fighter franchise have yet to be matched in the real world. But as so many members of the UFC's key demographic spent their early years at the arcade machines, the anticipation is tangible every time fighters step into the cage. Is someone going to do some stuff right out of a video game this time?
The parallels drawn between Lyoto Machida and Ryu, or Jon Jones and Dhalsim by fans should emphasize this. Anthony Pettis is marketed as someone who could have been pulled right out of a fighting game. And I think we all know that if the all female fight organization, Invicta FC could find a good looking lady who could fight like Chun Li and win matches, women's MMA would be a lot more successful.
Yet through the years of evolution in mixed martial arts, and combat sports around the globe, we have had occasional moments which have come close to measuring up to the world's favourite fighting game franchise. Just last week we saw Shane Campbell in World Series of Fighting execute a beautiful body kick and attempt a hadouken afterwards. Though it was disappointing to see Campbell abandon the strategy after his first attempt, he would do well to remember that it's only spamming if you lose—if you win it's called “zoning”.
And the power of the low jab has been no secret to Street Fighter players for years.
But we're only starting to see the game-breaking power of this technique in the octagon.
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Read on and we'll talk about some of combat sports' most Street Fighter-esque moments.
The Shotos
Dual protagonists, Ryu and Ken shared the same teacher and this made for a good narrative through the SF games (and a nice excuse to clone one set of moves with very slight differences). As the series progressed the two were awarded more unique moves to differentiate them and each has gone through his fair share of techniques.
Sokuto-geri
A kick which Ryu had picked up in time for Third Strike was his side kick, dubbed Sokuto-geri. This side kick with a full step up was the kind we all recognized from the movies and could launch Ryu's opponents a good distance across the screen.
Sokuto is actually the blade on the foot in karate, but most real world side kicks are done with the heel. Unfortunately the technique didn't make it into other iterations of the game despite being a fan favourite—Ryu forgot it... or something, but it did sneak into Jon Jones' bout with Vitor Belfort.
Jones had been slamming side kicks in straight from his stance, but finally decided he had the space and the time to perform a full step up into a gut-munching power kick. Belfort staggered backwards, hit the fence, and flopped to his back, winded.
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