Rip is good within his niche, but outside of that I'd take what he says with a grain of salt. Most professional MMA fighters or combat athletes would rank conditioning higher than maximal strength when it comes to professional fighting. You can read Joel Jamieson's take on the subject in his manual Ultimate MMA Conditioning. He explains how he initially made the mistake of trying to train his UFC fighters like strength athletes but soon realized that was a flawed approach. Coming from a football S&C background (including pro NFL teams) he tried to transfer that strength and power training mentality. He pretty much came to the realization that maximal-strength training was important but not nearly as important as other facets for MMA S&C such as conditioning/energy systems. Ross Enamait promotes the same mentality...strength is good, but conditioning is king in the ring. It think it was Ross that said no loser interviewed in the ring ever said "I wish I'd benched more leading up to the match"WallBilly wrote:Just a point, Bark's article from Starting Strength was not written by Rip. It was a guest article by some other dude named Dave Longley.
The fact that it was published on SS means that Rip endorses it, I assume.
I also have much respect for Rip, but his disdain for TB-style conditioning seems to be a flaw. He pushes the prowler occasionally, but actually makes fun of people who choose to actually, you know, run.
We all love the saying "strong people are harder to kill", but it doesn't mean squat without conditioning (pun intended). Take it from the athletes that actually step into the ring and try to kill each other lol. No one on this board (I hope) would argue that maximal-strength isn't important, but how much importance you place on it depends on what you're training for.
Here's an interesting clip that illustrates the point...Dom talks about how he only had 12 weeks to prepare for a championship fight after a 9 month layoff. Strength training was one of the first things to be sacrificed so he could bring his conditioning up to last 5 rounds. He spent the majority of his camp doing conditioning and skills/sparring. Goes to show when push comes to shove, having a massive deadlift isn't that important in the grand scheme of things:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8vX9Q26QbHk