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World MMA Light Heavyweight Scouting Report: #5 - Jan Blachowicz

Polish fighter Jan Blachowicz ranks at #5 on our 2011 World MMA Light Heavyweight Scouting Report.

One of the rising regions in the sport of mixed martial arts is the Eastern Bloc of countries of Germany and Poland. Poland, in particular, has continued to progress in not only producing talented fighters, but creating an outlet for those local talents to display their skills in front of large crowds. While the sanctioning of bouts and the overall organization of the country's mixed martial arts scene is a bit of a mess, there are still plenty of events for fans living in the region to attend. 

At #5 on our 2011 World MMA Light Heavyweight Scouting Report, Jan Blachowicz (12-2) makes a strong case that Poland is a country to keep an eye on in the future. His well-rounded skills and continued success against progressively better competition should have him on a shortlist of potential acquisitions for any major promotion.

Offensive Skills: Blachowicz is what I would describe as a much better version of Marcus Vanttinen. In fact, I'd consider him to be well above his skill level and something that Vanttinen himself should strive to become. Blachowicz does two things very well in his offensive abilities. He uses his reach to his advantage, and he's well-versed in knowing how to pass guard and pepper opponents with damage from more dominant positions. 

His straight punching from distance is a huge plus for him in the context of keeping opponents at bay, something a guy like Vanttinen has yet to grasp. Blachowicz also uses his kicking game and knees in the clinch to his advantage, but those distance fighting skills are his means to damaging opponents on the feet while staying away from any dangerous counters.

On the ground, he has an above average takedown game and good transitions to side control. He likes to move to north-south at times, but most of his damage either stems from side control or a transition to the submission once his opponent scrambles. Add the fact that he's a brown belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, and he is considered one of the more well-rounded athletes in the weight class.

Defensive Skills: Defensively, Blachowicz is phenomenal at reversing takedowns and dominant positions he's put in. His most successful ability is to latch onto his opponent's arm and threaten with a kimura while in full guard or even half guard. His strength allows him to crank the submission tight enough to force his opponent to either roll out of it or rise from guard enough for Blachowicz to reverse the position using his own power. He uses the technique quite often, and it's surprising to see it consistently work when it's obvious that he will use it in his defense. It's a testament to Blachowicz's grip strength and technical know-how that he continues to succeed in using it.

On the feet, his ability to maintain distance and land from the ends of his fists allows him to stay away from counters. It also causes his opponents to shoot from a farther distance than you would normally see against shorter fighters, giving him an advantage in seeing the takedown and stuffing it. But Blachowicz is very good at seeing the incoming shots, locking up that kimura hold as he goes to the ground, and flipping his opponent almost immediately. This allows him to gain dominant position despite being the defensive fighter during the transition.

Progression: Many of his abilities have been fine tuned from fight to fight, but the biggest improvement is in his ability to mold every area of his game to work together seamlessly. The only nit picking I can see is in his strength of competition, but even that's a bit hard to scrutinize. He's fought some solid competitors in the past, but it would be nice to see KSW bring in some international stars to test where Blachowicz is in his development against proven veterans of the UFC. Unfortunately, it's hard to find those types of challenges, but it could go a long way into proving he belongs with the promotion.

LightweightWelterweightMiddleweight
#1 - Thiago Michel
#2 - Ricardo Tirloni
#3 - Magno Almeida
#4 - Ui Cheol Nam
#5 - Henrique Mello
#6 - Reza Madadi
#7 - Alexander Sarnavskiy
#8 - Ole Laursen
#9 - Guillaume DeLorenzi
#10 - Al Iaquinta
#1 - Yuri Villefort
#2 - Alex Garcia
#3 - Erick Silva
#4 - Douglas Lima
#5 - Luis "Sapo" Santos
#6 - Jesse Juarez
#7 - Gunnar Nelson
#8 - Quinn Mulhern
#9 - Alberto Mina
#10 - Joe Ray
#1 - Papy Abedi
#2 - Chris Weidman
#3 - Vitor Vianna
#4 - Vyacheslav Vasilevsky
#5 - Bruno Santos
#6 - Costantinos Philippou
#7 - Jordan Smith
#8 - Uriah Hall
#9 - Victor O'Donnell
#10 - Assan Njie

Light Heavyweight
#5 - Jan Blachowicz
#6 - Yoel Romero
#7 - Ryan Jimmo
#8 - Nik Fekete
#9 - Marcus Vanttinen
#10 -  Ronny Markes

Star-divide

Environment: He is currently training at Nastula Club in Warsaw, Poland, a camp founded by 1996 Olympic gold medalist and PRIDE FC veteran of the same name, Pawel Nastula. It isn't one of the most well-known gyms in Europe, but it is one of the best in Poland. It provides Blachowicz with a consistent base of knowledge to continue honing his Brazilian jiu-jitsu and Muay Thai games along with a means to obtaining fights around the region.

As Sherdog.com pointed out in their prospect watch piece in September, Blachowicz did try to make a move stateside. With fellow Polish fighter Tomasz Drwal helping him make the transition, Blachowicz moved out to San Diego, but he was unable to find any fights. He took a fight down in Mexico when things became rather desperate money-wise, but he tore knee ligaments during his training camp. Blachowicz moved back home after the experience.

Potential: The 27-year-old is on the cusp of signing with a major promotion, whether it be the UFC, Strikeforce, or Bellator. Bellator seems like an unlikely suitor, but they have snuck into the region and grabbed some notable talent within the last couple of years. The UFC would be the better place for him however, unless he's looking to make a large payday by winning the Bellator tournament and gaining exposure with American fans through their television deal.

In terms of his skills, he has everything to be competitive at the top of the food chain. It wouldn't surprise me if Blachowicz eventually becomes an upper echelon talent in a major organization or, at the very least, a solid mid-tier fighter who can defeat upper-level competition from time to time. Either way, he has staying power rather than a one-and-done future. 

Video:

Jan Błachowicz vs Daniel Tabera

Jan Blachowicz Highlight

Jan Blachowicz vs Julio Brutus -KSW 13

Maro Perak vs. Jan Blachowicz

Jan Blachowicz vs Wojciech Orlowski -KSW 13

Andre Fyeet vs Jan Blachowicz (KSW 8)

Comment 17 comments  |  2 recs  | 

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These reports are absolutely awesome Leland!!

Thank you & keep up the good work!

"Common sense is not so common"

by SpL on Jan 13, 2011 5:12 PM EST reply actions  

WTF?

In Europe UK, Poland, Russia, are places where MMA is not regarded as a fighting dog, but SPORT (especially in Poland, where every year dozens events that are broadcast on biggest TV Network in country).
German MMA is weak, cuz some authorities and media have recognized this as a great threat to society and banned MMA from tv. Yeah, they have UFC, but only reason – German audience is statistically richer than Polish = Zuffa can earn more $$$ on the 3-4k German fans than 15k Polish (+broadcast on big tv network).

Look at tv ratio biggest polsih promotion – KSW:
KSW 11: more than 1 milion (full broadcast on cable channel + few fight at night on national tv)
KSW 12, 13, 14 – ratio 4-7 mln on national tv.

ESPN on UK and even M1 CHallenge on public Russia Tv don’t even come close

PS: Yeah, Janek (“John”) is big prospect and possible, to make its debut soon in the U.S.

"In a gym you can work on your chest or thigh muscles, but you can't grow your balls. You born with it, or you don't."– Jerome Le Banner

by John1980Doe on Jan 13, 2011 5:23 PM EST reply actions  

MMA in Poland is not truly mainstream

KSW’s masterplan to get exposure by freak fights worked but also had the side-effect of making some proper sports media iffy on the sport. Case in point, the biggest sport site in Poland still treats MMA as a complete afterthought.

And really “dozens events that are broadcast on biggest TV Network in country” is an overstatement on par with calling Lutter the Michael Jordan of Jiu-jitsu.

by greco-roman airlines on Jan 13, 2011 5:40 PM EST up reply actions  

I don’t get it. What is the “WTF?” for?

Follow me on Twitter @lelandroling
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein

by Leland Roling on Jan 13, 2011 6:00 PM EST up reply actions  

Dude, Fyeet breaking his arm with that kimura was nasty. That said, I was really impressed with this guy. Definitely the most well-rounded guy on the LHW list thus far.

by KAN0 on Jan 13, 2011 6:25 PM EST reply actions  

The loss to Fyeet was a bad loss too. Fyeet is currently 5-12, and was 2-9 at the time of his fight with Blachowicz.

by KAN0 on Jan 13, 2011 6:31 PM EST up reply actions  

it was a bad loss, but long ago. It was Jan’s first fight on a big KSW show, he made a mistake and paid for it. He’s much better fighter now.

http://www.mmarocks.pl
https://twitter.com/mmarocks_pl

by Venom77 on Jan 14, 2011 10:15 AM EST up reply actions  

Looks like a combination of Chuck’s face and Tito’s head

by drawp on Jan 13, 2011 8:11 PM EST reply actions  

He is the type of prospect the UFC should get on TUF.

I know the UFC signs top guys, Barboza, Chiquerim, Oliveira, Falcao etc and they get guys on TUF who are solid but the truth is to make TUF really seem like its the place they develop the talent like before, before you did TUF to get into the UFC< now you can just sign with the UFC you dont have to do TUF, but they need to get real blue chip prospects on TUF and have them win so they can say see TUF still produces the future champs, like Jon Jones, Phil Davis, Oliveira, they should have been on TUF.

So taking a top prospect like a Yuri Villefort, Weidman, guys like that they need to get on TUF so they can say TUF produces the best guys, if they just sign these prospects first then why do TUF? TUf gives them promotion, you know who a guy who doesnt even win TUF more then you know a stud prospect like Edson Mendes jr, so having top prospects on TUF to get more fame, some fights, then they win and you build them up and TUF winners get main card spots and more of a push.

I realize the one issue is speaking English, the Brazilian fighters who do nt like an Oliveira cant be on TUF which sucks.

Anyway now I’m wondering who is gonna top this list, GIan? You already did Jimmo and Jan, so I assume Glover and Gian will be the top 2.

by Aldo27 on Jan 13, 2011 8:54 PM EST reply actions  

Heh, you are missing out on one of the most devastating prospects out there if that’s what you believe.

Follow me on Twitter @lelandroling
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein

by Leland Roling on Jan 13, 2011 9:10 PM EST up reply actions  

It’s Pezao, Gian and Glover. I have no idea who’s the 4th one. Or maybe you’ve included Raphael Davis, but he’s signed with Bellator.

http://www.mmarocks.pl
https://twitter.com/mmarocks_pl

by Venom77 on Jan 14, 2011 10:17 AM EST up reply actions  

Great profile on Jan, I’d venture that he even should be higher. I’ve watched him a few times in KSW, which is, to me, the most underrated promotion in the world.

by BVandDietPepsi on Jan 14, 2011 1:27 AM EST reply actions  

The only thing that really hurts Polish prospects is the question as to whether they can compete at the UFC level. Some have, like Tomas Drwal, but he has made the transition stateside to amp up his defense to wrestlers. Guys in Poland don’t have that type of training, although it is improving.

Follow me on Twitter @lelandroling
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein

by Leland Roling on Jan 14, 2011 9:02 AM EST up reply actions  

Wow, your description of this guy really pumped me up, I want to see him fight! Unfortunately I’m at work so I can’t view videos right now. If guy #5 on the list is that good, the rest four must be spectacular.

by Horselover Fat on Jan 14, 2011 3:29 AM EST reply actions  

Leland, I can't tell you ...

how much I’ve been diggin’ all of the hard work and great analysis you’ve been putting into these scouting reports.

It’s truly unique content and there’s no question you’re putting some serious time into it. Thanks, and well done.

Our “Ninja in a Finnish” tree did a spot on Blachowicz awhile back:

http://thegarv.com/Beatings-From-the-North-Back-with-a-Vengeance-Jan-Blachowicz.html

"Excuse me. I don't mean to impose... but I AM the ocean."

by Dallas Winston on Jan 28, 2011 10:44 AM EST reply actions  

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