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Melvin Guillard and the Wasted Potential Fallacy

Last night in the main event of UFC on FX: Miller vs. Guillard, Jim Miller and Melvin Guillard had a fight where both showed everything they were known for. Jim Miller showed there is no shot hard enough to stop him from searching for a submission, while Guillard showed dynamite in his hands and looked helpless on the ground against a superior grappler. No sooner had Miller taken Guillard’s back and locked-up the fight-ending rear naked choke than fans on the web the world over began tweeting and commenting with one main theme — "Why won’t Melvin just work on his jiu jitsu, already? He’s got so much wasted potential."

Well, that’s a load of BS.

Allow me to present a quick case study of two fighters.

Fighter A is a hard-nosed fighter. After every fight he diligently breaks down his performance to find holes in his game, win or lose, and spends his time working his ass off to fill those holes. This hard-working style works well and he grinds his way into the top half of the division in the UFC. Fighter A finds himself fighting for the title more than once, but ultimately he just does not have the physical tools to get over the hump and be the best, no matter how hard he works.

Fighter B is a physically gifted fighter. While his work ethic in regards to assessing his problems, learning from them, then drilling until they are no longer so glaring is often criticized, nobody can deny the natural gifts that Fighter B possesses. He fights with a speed and strength unmatched by anyone in the division, but ultimately fails to ever put together a long run at the top of the division as he finds his weakness exploited by top fighters every time he starts to sniff a title shot.

By the masses, Fighter A is considered somebody who maximized his potential, and just never was somebody destined to be physically capable of winning a title. Fighter B is bemoaned as a waste of talent, somebody good enough to win the title if he could just get his mind straight for a couple years in a row. For some bizarre reason, a fighter with a physical deficiency who achieves more is considered less viable as a true potential-champion than a fighter whose flaws are mental but has never reached the heights of his counterpart. Why is this?

Star-divide

The problem comes primarily from the way a mental weakness and a physical weakness are viewed in general. At some point we are willing to accept that a body has achieved all it is destined to achieve within the legal methods available to a professional fighter. Without the use of steroids or other outside agents, there’s only so much efficient muscle mass a given fighter can put on. The muscle he does have will only be able to be used so fast. His body will only be able to handle so much resistance before he tires. When a man has reached the physical limit that his genetics allows, he’s reached that limit. There’s no shame in that and we accept it.

Mentally we hold people to higher standards. "The Secret" tells you that anything you set your mind on and want hard enough can be yours. When we see somebody who we know is, in the short term, capable of accomplishing great things, we often assume that any failure to maintain that as a long-term payoff is not a deficiency that they can not fix, but is instead simply the individual being weak willed. They don’t want it enough to fix it. They aren’t determined enough to try. They’re happy just wasting their potential.

Here’s the rub, though. At what point do you have to just accept that, no, they don’t have the potential to do what everyone thinks they can. When a rookie bursts onto the scene and is clearly a naturally gifted specimen but he doesn’t fight smart with it, there’s potential. You need to look no farther than another of Miller’s recent victims, Charles Oliveira. Having breezed through his first two UFC opponents, he expected more of the same. You could hear it in his interviews before the fight where he said he would use his purple belt to show the black belt Miller "what real jiu jitsu is." In the cage, Oliveira didn’t fight smart. He threw up Hail Mary subs, didn’t identify that they were not just being stuffed, but being more and more stuffed each time, and ultimately got stuffed so bad it opened up a counter which he failed to identify the danger in until his knee was bent the wrong way. That’s a young fighter who is inexperienced doing an inexperienced thing against a better fighter. He has the potential to learn from that mistake.

Now let’s look at Melvin Guillard. Guillard looked strong early, as everyone expected of him. He dropped Miller with a punch and, while Miller’s legs didn’t ever appear weak during the ensuing takedown efforts, Miller admitted his body was working on auto-pilot for much of the fight after. Then Guillard got too flashy, as many expected of him. He threw one too many flying knees and got dumped on his back. Then he got quickly tapped when the fight hit the ground, as everyone expected of him. After the fight, Guillard made excuses for his two straight losses, calling one a fluke and claiming no errors in the latest bout, as everyone expected. Guillard didn’t shock us with his errors, he did exactly what people expected of him, and yet we still maintain that he is capable of not doing things he always does.

Guillard isn’t a rookie still learning by trial-and-error. Guillard has 42 fights officially, and will never hesitate to let you know that number is too low. With some 60-odd fights or so under his belt, then, he is still doing the same things wrong time and time again. A fighter who can not bring his body to the physical level he needs to get over the hump isn’t failing to live up to potential, he is being who he is. A fighter like Guillard who can not bring his mental game to that level he needs to get over the hump is just doing the same exact thing.

When I was in college I helped a friend get through her required math classes, because math comes easy to me. She was not a dumb woman by any stretch of the word, but the way her brain was wired it just never fell in line and made sense the way things did so easily for someone who is math-savvy. If she wanted to be a math teacher, she would struggle, despite having all the skills required to be a great teacher in general. An element of mental make-up required for the job isn’t there, and it doesn’t matter how capable you are for the other elements of a job if an important part of you isn’t wired for it. Similarly, whether it’s a failure to be able to honestly assess himself, a failure for his mind to be able to grasp and truly internalize the intricacies of the ground game or a combination of both, Melvin Guillard is not wired to be a consistent world beater. No differently than the guy who has a certain arrangement of cells in his body that prevents it from doing what it needs to to win, Guillard just does not have the right arrangement of cells in his brain that lets him fix his deficiencies.

More than 9 years later, Guillard still has the same problems he had when he was handed his first defeat by Carlo Prater. That’s not a waste of potential, that’s a fighter being who he is. Guillard is a fighter who, on his day, can beat anyone in the world, but something with the way his brain works means he doesn’t have the ability to consistently win at the top of the division against fighters who are capable of achieving more well-rounded skill sets. It’s comforting to think that anybody can just will themselves to be a better person, that physical limitations can only be battled so much but with hard work any mental block can be overcome, but it isn’t the case. You are who you are, and hyping up somebody to a level that everyone knows he has failed repeatedly to match just because his weakness isn’t a physical one just leads to disappointment all around.

Reblogged from Just Blog Guy.

The FanPosts are solely the subjective opinions of Bloody Elbow readers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Bloody Elbow editors or staff.

Comment 41 comments  |  13 recs  | 

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Melvin is just a dummy.

His instincts are really, really bad. So yes, he is wasting his potential, because he could have easily won that fight, had he not done some incredibly stupid things.

by Warbreezy on Jan 21, 2012 11:31 AM EST reply actions   1 recs

But he always behaves that way. If somebody does something again, and again, and again, maybe it’s possible that they don’t have the ability to stop doing that thing. Your brain is just a big bundle of neurons arranged in a certain way which makes you good at grasping some things and bad at grasping others. Melvin is not somebody who has shown in any way that he has a brain geared toward picking up on the minutia of BJJ, or properly assessing and learning from past losses. Even if he doesn’t drill as hard on it as he should (and frankly, at this point if that’s the case that itself would be a mental weakness that means he doesn’t have the potential for greatness) he makes basic mistakes often, things he certainly has done enough BJJ in his time where he “should” know better.

That is a biological impediment that lowers his potential every bit as much as Jonathan Goulet’s glass chin is a biological impediment that lowers his potential. If you can not learn from your errors, and Melvin has shown time and time a can he can not do it despite constantly saying he has learned and is going to do everything he can to fix it, you do not have the potential for greatness.

Just Blog Guy: http://JustBlogGuy.wordpress.com/
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by JustBlogGuy on Jan 21, 2012 11:52 AM EST up reply actions  

I'm not saying that he could ever improve.

Frankly, I don’t think any amount of drilling BJJ and takedown defense will ever stop him from doing stupid shit. He could have easily won the miller fight. all he needed to do was muscle miller around and punch him in the face.

He’s wasted his physical talents by making all of the stupid choices he makes. If he just kept his head together in there, he could beat anybody.

by Warbreezy on Jan 21, 2012 1:04 PM EST up reply actions  

That's all it takes hey?

Well, you should really become a fighter then. You got it locked!

"It is hard to free fools from the chains they revere."
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by Shotokanman on Jan 22, 2012 12:15 PM EST up reply actions  

I agree that psychological deficiencies do not get the “respect” they deserve. However, I bet Melvin has never even tried to get psychological help. So it’s not like he has explored every avenue to success that is available to him. And yes, that is probably extremely hard for him. The guy has some psychological blockade that makes him unable to acknowledge his errors and therefore, in a vicious circle, to improve or seek help or training, if you will, on a psychological level. But there are many drug addicts who also had to be pushed by the people surrounding them into accepting that something is “wrong” with them and managed to gain insight into their troubles and finally overcome them. It’s not impossible for Guillard to go the same route with his troubles.

"A belt only covers two inches of your ****and the rest you need to back up on your own." Royce Gracie (allegedly...I just read it somewhere and thought it was cool for my sig!)

by KGNLuc on Jan 21, 2012 11:35 AM EST reply actions  

What about a very strict/direct coach/trainer?

Do you think his problems could be fixed by a coach who gave him a solid gameplan and just made sure he stuck to it? I know that’s easier said than done, but…

Also, wasn’t he training with the “Blackzilian’s” for the Joe Lauzon fight as well as this one? Maybe Greg Jackson tried to get him to stop making mistakes and Guillard didn’t like it? I don’t really know what I’m talking about but I’m spitballing.

I'd rather be trollin'.

by thirdparty on Jan 21, 2012 1:11 PM EST reply actions  

There are definitely things he could do that would improve his results, but when people talk about Guillard with “he has the potential to be the best in the world if he just fixes his BJJ,” the level that he would have to get to at submission grappling to be the best is a level he has in no-way shown himself capable of reaching. Despite years in the sport he still makes basic mistakes that you know he has been drilled on over and over by his coaches. It’s just how he is. All signs point to him being somebody who just doesn’t grasp the submission game. Just like somebody else may not be able to understand physics, no matter how hard they study and how many tutors they hire they know they’ll be lucky to pull a C, Melvin constantly struggles with defensive grappling. People seem willing to accept a fighter’s physical limitations, but things like mental limitations people always just assume those can automatically be gotten over, when it is often not the case.

Just Blog Guy: http://JustBlogGuy.wordpress.com/
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by JustBlogGuy on Jan 21, 2012 5:40 PM EST up reply actions   1 recs

I get that he just doesn’t seem to understand how to grapple, but you’d think “STAY OFF THE GROUND” would be a fairly simple directive. Seems like that was literally all he had to do to win. Granted, it’s a bit of an oversimplification, but still.

I'd rather be trollin'.

by thirdparty on Jan 22, 2012 1:24 AM EST up reply actions  

I agree with you, it’s just baffling to me.

I'd rather be trollin'.

by thirdparty on Jan 22, 2012 3:07 PM EST up reply actions  

Another great example is Jake Shields’ striking. He was top 10 P4P for years of accomplishments, but he just can’t throw a punch.

Why fake laugh at jokes in the workplace? Shouldn't we be encouraging people to up their humour game?

by Bolshevik on Jan 23, 2012 12:19 AM EST up reply actions  

If losing to Rich Clementi

Didn’t motivate Melvin to train the submission game harder, I can’t imagine what would.

What is crazy is that Melvin actually has two submission wins of his own…

by RobtWeaver on Jan 23, 2012 10:43 AM EST up reply actions  

They were against a then 1-7 (now 3-10) opponent and Kyle Bradley is who is both not a world beater and was making his debut at the time. It’s possible they weren’t exactly fine examples of technical submission offense.

Just Blog Guy: http://JustBlogGuy.wordpress.com/
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by JustBlogGuy on Jan 23, 2012 9:50 PM EST up reply actions  

It's an interesting suggestion

There does seem to be the idea out there that, we all could be like the best sportsmen of the world, if only we would pull our fingers out and stop being lazy. Clearly this is bullocks.

As for Guillard part of the problem seems to be not just his lack of skills in some areas, but his lack of discipline in fights.

by vanandrew on Jan 21, 2012 7:23 PM EST reply actions  

It's his mental state

He could have any number of slight disorders, or he could just not be very smart. There are some things you should not do in some fights. Throwing flying knees at an infinitely better jiu-jitsu player than yourself who can’t take you down is one of them.

He should start seeing a sport psychologist. He should take up yoga or meditation. But if he doesn’t do something to control himself in fights, or unless he improves his jiu-jitsu skills by leaps and bounds, he won’t crack the top ten again.

And an interesting point brought up by Stephan Bonnar in the post-fight show was that he shouldn’t have been so calm when he rocked Miller, and that he should be calmer in bad positions. He has to slowly and methodically get out of mount and back control, not rush it and give the guy the positional advantage.

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by halitosis on Jan 21, 2012 8:53 PM EST up reply actions  

rec'd

But I still think he (or anyone) can will himself into improvement.

by vivero on Jan 21, 2012 9:05 PM EST reply actions  

rec’d. Though, we have so much to understand on how and what is the nature of the brain. In a few decades (barring the Mayan prophecy) – JustBlogGluy might just be right in saying that there is a limit.

by vivero on Jan 21, 2012 9:29 PM EST up reply actions  

He is right. But there’s no device you can wave over your head that tells you “Okay, you’re done now. Stop trying to improve yourself.” So you keep going.

by crazybones on Jan 21, 2012 10:03 PM EST up reply actions  

Thats an awesome device.

by vivero on Jan 21, 2012 10:12 PM EST up reply actions  

I don't know about a limit

Your brain works in too complex a way to put it like that. I would think it has a “maximum storage” point where it just starts breaking off stuff you don’t need in turn for things you do. Once your brain is “filled” there are new things that can be added slowly, but at the expense of other things stored in your brain.

The sheer power of the human mind is one reason I believe in God. It’s just complex beyond imagination.

Please donate what you can to the Daniel James Miller Foundation.

by halitosis on Jan 21, 2012 10:40 PM EST up reply actions  

Yeah, there’s always room for improvement, I’m not saying he could never get any better, just that there comes a point of diminishing returns in a subject. Not to keep using the schooling analogy, but take teaching somebody math. Simple addition is cake for them. Multiplication takes a bit more effort but with a little study they can ace it to the point of never forgetting. Come high school and calculus now the kid is really having to bust his ass to learn it, and if he doesn’t stick with math, a lot of it he won’t remember by the time he graduates college. And then, unless he’s really tuned into math and his brain gets it, there will come a level of advanced mathematics that try as he might is just gibberish to him (think the stereotypical science equations that take multiple chalkboards to write out.)

Everybody has a learning curve for everything they do. For some fighters, unfortunately, the the parts where they hit “no matter how hard I study I just can’t retain this” at a level which can be exploited by top-level opponents.

Just Blog Guy: http://JustBlogGuy.wordpress.com/
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by JustBlogGuy on Jan 22, 2012 9:40 AM EST up reply actions  

Stereotypical science equations don't take multiple chalkboards to write out.

If they do, then they aren’t stereotypical, at all.

Maxwell’s equation, Schrodinger’s equation, Neton’s equations, etc., all have in common that they can be written on a tiny sheet of paper. Most science stuff I’ve ever come across is just straighforward mumbo-jumbo.

Everyone has a learning curve, yes, but we do not know yet where the limit lies where one cannot compensate one’s in-built disabilities with new neural connections. To say that strenuous physical activity and decision making just cannot be intellectually grasped by some folk during their youth is kinda overselling the concept, in my mind.

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Draft #: 69--The magic number.

by Unabomberman on Jan 22, 2012 5:27 PM EST up reply actions  

*Newton's*

The Internets: Where there are no girls and men become children.

Proud Member of INEPT: 80% More IntellEgent than y'all, WANKERZ.

Draft #: 69--The magic number.

by Unabomberman on Jan 22, 2012 5:29 PM EST up reply actions  

I meant the hackish formulas that you’ll see in bad entertainment to show “smart people are doing smart people things on these here boards.”

Just Blog Guy: http://JustBlogGuy.wordpress.com/
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by JustBlogGuy on Jan 22, 2012 7:49 PM EST up reply actions  

I don't think you can draw a line on physical ability just yet, either

It was once mathematically proven the four minute mile could not be beaten.

The bumblebee should not be able to fly.

We accept physical limitations because we visual evidence that seems to corroborate what we already believe.

by RobtWeaver on Jan 23, 2012 11:26 AM EST up reply actions  

This is Melvin's problem...

Bob Arum thinks I'm a white Nazi skinhead even though I'm a brown grad student (with hair)

by ludakrish on Jan 22, 2012 11:53 AM EST reply actions   2 recs

He rack's disherprinn?

"I'm trying to be like a Ryan Seacrest for men." - Joe Rogan

by Shawn1379 on Jan 23, 2012 2:27 PM EST up reply actions  

"He racks disherprinn?" is what I was trying to say.

Not “he rack is disherprinn.”

I’ll still see through the fog of rage caused by my typo and rec any South Park reference any day.

"I'm trying to be like a Ryan Seacrest for men." - Joe Rogan

by Shawn1379 on Jan 23, 2012 2:30 PM EST up reply actions  

We don't even fully understand how the human brain works at this point in time.

Coming up with self-appointed axiom that, mentally, we have preset limits even within the fields where we naturally operate (spatial movement, threat assessment, creativity, etc.) seems kinda overreaching to me. Wait, hear me out:

We do know that the brain works like a muscle, where depending on the stimuli it starts pumping more and more connections between neurons to achieve a certain kind of specialized desired performance—what JustBlogGuy is saying basically amounts to making the argument that some people just don’t have it in themselves to pump ‘certain’ kinds of connections even within the fields of everyday life, which is, quite simply, pure nonsense considering the organs’s extreme levels of plasticity—I mean, monkeys can have a chip implanted into their brains so that they learn to control a fake virtual arm, or screen cursor, in a PC computer running the appropriate research software, and still operate that thing successfully in order to achieve some kind of goal, and all while still processing sensory feedback from their other limbs.

What I’m talking about is that the brain of these monkeys adapted itself to handle a situation and then process information from that situation in order to operate, and feel, a phantom limb. Their kind of mammal (our kind of mammal) are born with four limbs, not five, and they can still get the gig done. Because, in the end, it’s all about connexions in the brain.

What does this have to do with Melvin? Well, everything. because JustBlogGuy is basically advocating for some kind of inborn neural limitation, other than a psychological block, that prevents Melvin from naturally getting halfway decent at jiu jitsu or gauge the danger he is in that leads him to have bad judgment and execute stupid actions mid-fight, which in turn has turned him into the most inconsistent high-level world beater we know—or at least that’s what it comes across from reading his fanpost.

Melvin is not a neurally impaired individual: he’s just a guy that can act cocky, dumb, stubborn, and make bad choices—these flaws in his character have been substantially developed throughout his lifetime, and are as much a matter of his inborn characteristics as well as of circumstance. If the research monkeys can learn to spatially recognize and operate something that is not a nominal occurrence in nature, then so can we; and so, in principle, can Mr. Guillard develop the neural connections that would allow him not to mind fart consistently.

Sauce: http://singularityhub.com/2011/10/13/revolutionary-new-brain-chip-allows-monkeys-to-grasp-and-feel-objects-using-their-thoughts/

Note that I’m not saying there are no brain limitations, only that the limitations he advocates for make little sense.

The Internets: Where there are no girls and men become children.

Proud Member of INEPT: 80% More IntellEgent than y'all, WANKERZ.

Draft #: 69--The magic number.

by Unabomberman on Jan 22, 2012 3:17 PM EST reply actions  

Melvin is not a neurally impaired individual: he’s just a guy that can act cocky, dumb, stubborn, and make bad choices—these flaws in his character have been substantially developed throughout his lifetime, and are as much a matter of his inborn characteristics as well as of circumstance.

I mean, this is pretty much what JBG is getting at. I don’t think he’s saying Melvin’s brain is incapable of telling his muscles to coordinate themselves for BJJ. At this point, it’s become clear that Melvin’s psychological flaws are as much an unfixable weakness as any physical limitation.

by crazybones on Jan 22, 2012 4:21 PM EST up reply actions  

Unfixable within the length of his career, anyway. Maybe when he’s 50 years old or something he’ll have mellowed out.

by crazybones on Jan 22, 2012 4:28 PM EST up reply actions  

Then he isn't being clear.

You do not get to say this:

No differently than the guy who has a certain arrangement of cells in his body that prevents it from doing what it needs to to win, Guillard just does not have the right arrangement of cells in his brain that lets him fix his deficiencies.

Just right after saying this:

When I was in college I helped a friend get through her required math classes, because math comes easy to me. She was not a dumb woman by any stretch of the word, but the way her brain was wired it just never fell in line and made sense the way things did so easily for someone who is math-savvy. If she wanted to be a math teacher, she would struggle, despite having all the skills required to be a great teacher in general. An element of mental make-up required for the job isn’t there, and it doesn’t matter how capable you are for the other elements of a job if an important part of you isn’t wired for it.

And then not have people come to the conclusion that you are declaring that some things people just can’t learn, which is a fallacy to me. If that’s not it, then some kind of small paragraph dedicated to Melvin’s brain having become the way it is after a long period of a certain kind of life leanings and experiences would’ve certainly changed how the whole thing comes across.

The Internets: Where there are no girls and men become children.

Proud Member of INEPT: 80% More IntellEgent than y'all, WANKERZ.

Draft #: 69--The magic number.

by Unabomberman on Jan 22, 2012 4:38 PM EST up reply actions  

I don't see how the physical make-up of the brain is relevant.

Every person requires a certain amount of mental effort to get good at something. I agree that most professional fighters (some may have specific conditions) can learn something of this magnitude if time and effort are not to be considered, but I don’t think the article disputes that.

At what point is learning too much of a difficult concept (and BJJ could be as hard as rocket science is for others) going to cause Melvin to disengage, or start to be unhappy enough to outweigh the potential gains? That would create an economy where it isn’t impossible for him to learn it, but he would be making a poor decision (that fans should caution him away from) if he chose to.

Why fake laugh at jokes in the workplace? Shouldn't we be encouraging people to up their humour game?

by Bolshevik on Jan 23, 2012 12:37 AM EST up reply actions  

Dude, the physical makeup of the brain is all there is, really.

The Internets: Where there are no girls and men become children.

Proud Member of INEPT: 80% More IntellEgent than y'all, WANKERZ.

Draft #: 69--The magic number.

by Unabomberman on Jan 23, 2012 1:22 AM EST up reply actions  

My point is more that whether or not a person is capable of learning something is better left to a psychologist (with first-hand knowledge of the individual) than a neurologist examining scans of his brain.

The arrangement of cells in said brain may allow someone to absorb certain information while also dictating he lack the patience (for example) to ever actually do it.

Why fake laugh at jokes in the workplace? Shouldn't we be encouraging people to up their humour game?

by Bolshevik on Jan 24, 2012 12:59 AM EST up reply actions  

You’re right in that Melvin doesn’t see himslef as a wrold beater. He said he is happy landing a couple good shots and rocking Miller. I’ll never buy into the concept that you cant’ improve the effects in your life by changing the causes of those effects. The old saying “sow a thought reap an action, sow an action reap a habbit, sow a habbit and reap a lifestyle” (or something to that effect) is true in the cause of Melvin as it is with everyone. In essence our thoughts become OUR realities (reality itself is a whole different story!) I think the general consenus is that Melvin panics a bit when it comes to submission grappling .He over emphasizes his strikes because he doesn’t believe in his sub grappling skills, rightfully or wrongly. It sounds corny but if he worked primarily on his BJJ (and catch wrestling) and repeated to himself over and over(100 times /day) with intensity and conviction “I love my work and I’m the best” he would eventually program his subconscious mind thus his actions, subconscious and otherwise, would eventually correspond to that new belief that he is the best. Of course that doesn’t mean he would be the best grappler but all of his behavior (in and out of the octogon) would begin reflect that core belief that he is very capable of dealing with whatever situation arises. That’s not a recipe to become champ but imo it would almost certainly aid in his success. Melvin still has the physical tools to make this mental (and skill) transformation very meaningful for him.

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by Hardy's in your face on Jan 22, 2012 3:18 PM EST reply actions  

Fighters normally stay the same after there first few years of MMA, I don’t expect any big change in Melvin happening, its possible look at Mega Reem, but that is a rare occurrence.

I am free because I choose to be so-Me

by Kefka on Jan 22, 2012 5:25 PM EST reply actions  

This is a very interesting article, I like it a lot.

Rec’d.

I’d say people neglect to consider the mental abilities of a fighter when looking at their potential because of the deeply ingrained belief that we’re all capable of becoming smarter. The nature vs. nurture argument has mostly been settled as nature AND nurture, but people still like to believe that we can all do anything we set our mind to with enough hard work. Though physical disparities are right there in our faces when you compare Melvin’s athleticism to another lightweight’s, it’s not really possible to measure his mental toughness by anything but speculation and guesswork about his results. Because of that, his physical abilities capture our imaginations and we tend to think “man, if only for him not making all those mental mistakes.” The idea that a fighter might have both physical gifts and the mental prowess to take advantage of them… well that’s what makes a fighter like GSP, Anderson Silva, Jose Aldo, or Jon Jones. We would all love to think Melvin could ever be that kind of world beater, even if it just might not be possible.

I think with Melvin there are also the visible excuses (man, Melvin’s life was a mess—he got busted for cocaine for Christ’s sake) makes us want to think that once the problems go away, so too will his mental issues. “If only Greg Jackson.” “If only he rolled more than 4 days a week.” “If only Melvin just fought smarter!”

by Scott Whitaker on Jan 23, 2012 12:23 AM EST reply actions  

The brain is a weird thing… just like Lesnar’s brain that couldn’t get used to being hit in the face, Melvin’s brain won’t make the right decisions. As the famous saying goes, 90% of the game is half mental…

by Shnak on Jan 23, 2012 7:25 AM EST reply actions  

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