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March 23, 2011
First it was kickboxer Duane “Bang” Ludwig. Next up was
jiu-jitsu
ace James Wilks. Finally, entering the fray and staying
there was jack of all trades DaMarques Johnson.What do the
above welterweights have in common? They’ve all been
opponents for
Amir Sadollah in the last month. For most fighters, one
switch can cause chaos in a training camp; two, that’s off
the charts panic. But not for Sadollah, who continues to set
new standards daily with his low-key and intellectual
approach to the sport. “Fortunately, my approach to the
fight has always been multi-dimensional, so I didn’t have to
radically change anything,” he said. “There are differences,
but for the most part it’s still the same training for me
and I’m still working on things that I think are my strong
suits.”It really shouldn’t be like this. As everyone knows,
Sadollah was the quiet underdog who ran the table on The
Ultimate Fighter seven, defeating Steve Byrnes, Gerald
Harris, Matt Brown, and CB Dollaway (twice) to take the
season title. Then, with no pro fights to his name, he has
jumped into the Octagon to win three of five bouts,
basically learning as he goes. It’s a Cinderella story that
shows no signs of ending three years after it began.“I try
to figure out where all the time went,” he laughs. “This
career makes time fly. I feel kinda young because it only
feels like three weeks have gone by since the show, and in
reality it’s been three years.”And these days in the UFC,
with turnover rates rising in order to trim the roster, to
be here for three years is a feat in and of itself. Sadollah
doesn’t look at such matters though. Frankly, there’s not
enough time to reminisce.“I don’t ever want to look at my
career as a summary until it’s over,” he said. “I obviously
want to look at what I’m doing and what I’ve done, but I
don’t care if my record was 10-0 in the UFC, every fight is
just as important to showcase your skill and showcase what
you have.”That’s not to say he’s walked through the
welterweight gauntlet unscathed. A controversial stoppage
loss to Johny Hendricks and a clear-cut decision defeat
against Dong Hyun Kim sandwiched impressive back-to-back
wins over veterans Phil Baroni and Brad Blackburn, and these
early erratic performances, while expected, kept him from
making significant forward progress in the talent-rich
division. But at UFC 122 last November, Sadollah seemed to
put it all together in his decision win over Peter Sobotta.
It wasn’t a flashy knockout or decision win, just a solid,
mature effort that saw Sadollah emerge as a dangerous
fighter on his way to the next level.“I’d be happy to agree
with that,” he laughs. “It’s something you work your whole
career to get and it’s ever-evolving. The ability to put
stuff together and implement something that’s working for
you and not get rattled, I think I did a good job of that
that night, but it’s not something I think ‘okay, I got
that.’ It’s ever-evolving and every fight I want to be
working on that ability and getting even better.”It was
almost as if everything clicked and that all the hard work
over the last few years in Vegas was paying dividends. And
when each UFC fight could be your last, there was no better
time to hit that clutch home run.“You fight at this level,
you have no choice to get better,” said Sadollah, now 5-2.
“Either you get better or you’re out. And that’s something
that kinda vibes with my personality. I have that all or
nothing mentality with a lot of things, so I enjoy that.
It’s obviously harder, but at the same time, that’s the way
I like it. I put high expectations on myself and high
benefit with high risk is something I enjoy and something I
don’t mind working for.”The work is far from done. Sadollah
knows it as well, and he’s doing everything he can to soak
up all the knowledge available to him. Before the Sobotta
fight he even got to Europe a few weeks early to work in
Holland with his coach Marco van den Broek. “It worked out
for a couple reasons,” said Sadollah, whose bout with
Sobotta was in Oberhausen, Germany. “My trainer lives in
Holland and his gym wasn’t far; it was less than an hour
away from where I was fighting, so it worked out well. I
went out there a few weeks early and I like to train with
those guys to sharpen up my standup, and obviously it was an
advantage to be so close. It wasn’t like a big traveling
trip for me, so it worked out well.”And when it comes to
pure striking, Sadollah makes it clear that Holland’s
stellar reputation is well-deserved.“Yeah, I really think
so,” he said. “For pure K-1 stuff and striking, absolutely.
I think there’s something to learn from every style of
martial arts and what I like about their style and what I
think works well in MMA is that it’s a very aggressive,
forward pressure style of striking, and that plays into how
I like to fight anyway. It’s got its pros and cons. Walking
forward you have to be more wary of the takedowns, but at
the same time you can use your offense and defense. For me
personally, I enjoy the style and I think I take away a lot
from it. As long as you train with your specific skill in
mind, I think you can make anything translate.”Everything is
coming together for Sadollah at precisely the right time. At
30, he’s probably hitting or about to hit his physical
prime, and with nearly 13 rounds of UFC experience under his
belt, he’s run through the gamut of emotions that a fighter
can go through in the Octagon. But as he explains, that can
be a double-edged sword, so he never wants to lose that
ability to expect the unexpected.“I don’t like to think I
know what’s gonna happen or that I’ve reached any level
where I’m not cautious about things,” he said. “Complacency
is where a lot of senior guys lose it. You get to the point
in your career where you start to get experience and you
start to think you know what’s gonna happen and when it
doesn’t, that bothers you more than when you were starting
and you just expected that everything was going to be
unexpected. So it’s almost easier to deal with. You use your
experience for what it’s worth and at the same time never
think you’re so experienced that you know what’s gonna
happen.”Sadollah has no idea what’s going to happen with
Johnson on Saturday night. The Utah product has shown the
ability to knock out or submit his UFC foes, and he’s also
had a couple off-nights. He’s a gameplanning nightmare,
especially when he’s the third fighter you’ve gameplanned
for. But at this point, Sadollah doesn’t get rattled;
conversely, he’s learned to enjoy the game more than
ever.“One thing that I’m noticing is that I’m able to have
more fun with this and enjoy my job and I really do now,” he
said. “When I first got off the show, the biggest difference
was that I was more stressed about everything. I was trying
to drink from a fire hose of information and now I’ve
learned to process a lot and let things in at a slower pace,
and I have the ability to just stop and enjoy this.
Sometimes I have to look back and say I get paid to train, I
get paid to do what I love, so it’s something that’s
definitely getting better with time.”
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