Resolved: Jon Jones is the Greatest UFC fighter of all time.
I am maintaining this position on a baseline of three fundamental key points that I think are key to establishing why someone would be a GOAT in this sport.
Contention 1: Jon Jones has one of the most impressive fighting styles and never provides a boring fight.
Let’s face it, many UFC champions have a tendency throughout the competition's history to coast, and play it safe. There is a lot of hard work and dedication that goes into acquiring a UFC belt and holding it. Fighters like Aljamain Sterling, Leon Edwards, Magomed Ankalaev, and Raquel Pennington were kind of known for doing great work to get the title, but once they got it basically did the bare minimum required in order to hold said title. Some of these fights can be considered snooze fests, where a fighter does everything possible to maintain distance, avoid strikes and generally engaging only in a few scraps here and there in a round in order to maintain a slight advantage over their opponent each round without putting themselves at risk.
And don’t get me wrong, it’s a smart move in general, when you're trying to protect your legacy and career. However there are some fighters that have shown themselves throughout their UFC careers and absolutely refuse to play this game. They do what they need to do to win and more. Fighters like Alexander Volkanovski come to mind, always pushing the pace, never letting a round get away from them. Fighters like Justin Gaethje, Nate Diaz, Robbie Lawler, Michael Chandler come to mind, when you think about fighters who go out on their sword every single fight. They provide entertaining fights that the fans love to watch, but it doesn’t always work out for them in the end. But there is one fighter who can and does consistently provide an entertaining fight while maintaining that perfect record.
Sub A: A grade effort against top level guys
You guessed it, Jon Jones. In his career of 28 fights, over half of them were finishes, with 11 knockouts and 5 submissions.(1) That’s more than half of his fights that don’t even make it to the finish line, and keep in mind this man has been fighting top contenders and champions only since he won the Light Heavy Weight Belt in 2011 against Mauricio “Shogun” Rua. Looking at his fights that do go the distance, it’s rarely ever a close fight. Let’s look at his first fight with Daniel Cormier that went the distance. He almost out struck Cormier by twice his strikes, with the final tally being 92 strikes to Jones, 58 to Cormier (not to mention scoring three takedowns against the guy who was the most feared wrestler in the division at the time). (2)
What's more impressive is that Jones managed to repeat that beating in their second fight still nearly doubling his strikes against Cormier 95-58, and doing it in three rounds instead of 2, when he finished Cormier with a devastating head kick.
He also doubled the strikes against Glover Teixeira (who would later regain the belt when Jon moved up) with 138 strikes to 53.(3)
And then do it again in his 5 round five against Ovince Saint Preux with 105 strikes to 57. (4)
Then he went on to more than quadruple Anthony “Lionheart” Smith’s strikes with a whopping 125-36. (5)
While these fights all went to decision, these are whopping numbers to beat these guys by. Keep in mind these are champion level contenders, meaning they had to work through the top ten in the rest of the division to get to this spot, no easy feat, just to get absolutely shut down by the king every single time.
Jon Jones shut down every single person to challenge him for 9 years 2011-2020, and he not only did it dominantly, he did it in a fashion that never left the viewers bored during a second of his fights. Keep in mind, as a champion you have to stay busy, he fought multiple times in a lot of these years. Jon Jones stayed busy and successful this entire period.
Sub B: Exciting wrestling ground and pound style.
Jon Jones is one of the few fighters that can take it to the ground and keep things interesting. Given the range advantage he has over most of his opponents. Take a look at the Matt Hamill fight. Matt Hamill had just come off of winning The Ultimate Fighter season 3 after knocking out Jesse Forbes in the finale, and was a force to be reckoned with upon entering the UFC after prominent Knockouts over Mark Munoz and Tim Boetsch. During the fight, Jones scores a sweet trip against Hamill in a clinch, and easily moves from side control to full mount, and proceeds to rain absolute punishment on Hamill, resulting in a stoppage. The fight was initially looked at as a loss, for the use of an illegal downward elbow, but thankfully was later overturned to changes in the UFC ruleset after the common misconception that downward elbows were more dangerous than other elbows was proven wrong. Long story short, Hamill was decimated with ground and pound and ended the fight with only landing 5 strikes to Jones’s 44. (6)(7)
Jones has done with with multiple opponents on the ground as well, finishing Brandon Vera (8) in a similar fashion, and even doing so as recently as with his last fight against Stipe Miocic. (9) Jones is one of the few fighters next to legends like Tito Ortiz who knew how to make things interesting while on the ground, instead of just holding and maintaining a position like many wrestlers and jiu-jitsu fighters tend to do when gaining an advantageous position.
The most impressive thing about this is, you don’t see a lot of LHW and HW fighters going to the ground at all, simply because it takes up so much more energy for these big guys to go to the ground. The amount of cardio it takes to constantly get in these positions and maintain them is more difficult than smaller weight classes in general, which is why so many LHW and HW fights are stand up fights that end in knockouts. So when you see someone like Jon Jones get in a position and not just “hold on to it” like so many of the LHW and HW’s do, it's even more impressive when you factor in his ability to maintain striking pressure in these positions.
Contention 2: His resume is more impressive than any other fighter
If you look at the level of competition this man has fought over the years, Jon Jones has fought some of the toughest guys in the sport. There was a point when the light heavyweight division was considered one of the most challenging divisions in the sport purely based on the level of competition there was and the names of the people fighting. Jon Jones dismantled people who have never been dismantled, and he made it look easy.
Sub A: Jon Jones ended careers
Let’s take a look at Shogun. He had just taken huge wins over Alistair Overeem, Mark Coleman, Chuck Lidell, and a stunning KO over Lyoto Machida, who until that point most people had struggled with figuring out his unorthodox style. At this point in time it seemed the UFC was facing someone that would become a prominent stay in as a longstanding UFC Champion. That was until Jones came in and destroyed him with a Knockout in the third round. Prior to Jones, Shogun was only starring in PPV fights and getting big names. After that fight, he went on to take a collection of losses sparsed with the occasional win, but no big names, and mostly fight nights. In fact, 11 of his next fights his next 18 fights were fight nights instead of Pay-Per-Views, and he wasn’t the main event ever again. In fact his only notable wins after that were arguably Little Nog and a past his prime Forrest Griffin. (10)
Let’s look at Rampage next, who was on a tear after just beating Chuck Liddell, Dan Henderson, Wanderlei Silva, Kieth Jardine, Lyoto Machida and Matt Hamill, his only notable loss being to Rashad Evans. His next fight with Jones after getting submitted in the 4th round when he was already losing every single round in the fight prior to that. Rampage lost his next two fights in the UFC and then transferred over to Bellator, where he only fought against no names in MMA until he retired in 2019. (11)
Without overtly drawing out this point, I can draw multiple examples where Jon Jones just ruined the careers of his opponents, including Anthony Smith, Alexander Gustafsson, and Dominick Reyes as other prominent examples. People who fight Jon Jones are never the same afterwards,
Contention 3: Continued success after a weight jump
My last point here will be talking and focusing on his most recent success. After a 3 year break from the UFC, Jones promised a return to the heavyweight division. Moving up a weight class has notoriously resulted in a bigger challenge for fighters, such as Max Holloway who tried it and immediately lost to Poirier, or Volkanovski who tried it and lost against Makachev. When you're used to fighting at a certain weight for so long, you get familiar and comfortable at that weight. When Jones was set to fight Ciryl Gane, early betting odds in January had Jones as a +130 Underdog against Gane, based on uncertainty around the weight jump and his prolonged time off. (12)
While these odds later ended up changing to giving Jon a slight boost, it was clear that people were uncertain about how he would perform against Gane who was not only knocking out most of his opponents showing dominant punching power, but also had displayed great wrestling ability and cardio against his recent opponent. Jones came in and submitted him with a standing guillotine in round 1, (the same choke he used against Machida in 2011) he shook the world. Jones winning wasn’t out of the question, but winning so dominantly after just moving up an unfamiliar weight class, is pretty damn impressive. He then went on to finish Stipe Miocic, who was arguably one of the best strikers in the heavy weight division, even boasting wins over Daniel Cormier and Francis Ngannou. (13)
Conclusion:
Having a perfect record is one thing. There are a few fighters that can boast one, take Khabib Nurmagomedov for example. But you look at Khabib’s record, and he really didn’t fight anyone prominent 5 fights, and even then he didn’t defend his belt more than 4 times before retiring. His entire UFC career lasted only a brief 8 years. Jon Jones has been fighting top level competition for 14 years, and not just winning, but dominating in most cases against some of the most talented people in the sport. He not only maintained that 0 loss on his record, he did it in a spectacular fashion that never left the viewers bored or unsatisfied. Seriously, find me a Jones fight that wasn’t entertaining to watch the whole way through. Even his close fights with Reyes and Gustafson were absolutely wild to watch, and created long lasting memories for fans around the world. Jon Jones is the GOAT and has nothing to prove to anyone, he’s done it all. With his reputation he deserves GOAT status alongside Tyson and Ali for boxing. While there are contenders for this position in the future, it is my opinion that there isn’t a better resume out there than Jon Jones at this current time.
“And still…”
I look forward to hearing my opponent's response.
Sources:
- http://ufcstats.com/fighter-details/07f72a2a7591b409
- http://ufcstats.com/fight-details/57385188587c83b9
- http://ufcstats.com/fight-details/e332aec001b34f50
- http://ufcstats.com/fight-details/05c8aeb2806be99c
- http://ufcstats.com/fight-details/5b9f545890407976
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/i7kzLG86MIU
- http://ufcstats.com/event-details/91d73ee59347ac16
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/VVed2EsLl-E
- https://www.youtube.com/shorts/B637Wkuu4ZY
- https://www.espn.com/mma/fighter/history/_/id/2335514/mauricio-rua
- https://www.espn.com/mma/fighter/history/_/id/2335470/quinton-jackson
- https://mmajunkie.usatoday.com/story/sports/ufc/2023/01/15/ufc-285-opening-odds-jon-jones-slight-underdog-vs-ciryl-gane/81001873007/
- http://ufcstats.com/fighter-details/d28dee5c705991df
Its long standing, he's always got a new reason to think i'm hitler. The latest one is for getting him lynched in a mafia game. I am super evil because of that.
What happened?
Do you and AR have beef?
Thats quite a slippery slope from the guy who claims to be abused because he gets voted off in a mafia game. lol
It could be true, however based on data you have on me you have concluded that and decided to disseminate that a wife beater with barely any morals who is known to abuse steroids and use any dirty trick in the book to brutalise opponents is a better person than I am.
Then you clearly prioritise superficial success or might is right mentality. By that definition everyone on here is either inferior to him as a person by your logic or they are hiding their success and prowess.
Meant to say rounds 2-4 will be for debate. lol
Yeah he’s still a better person than you AR lol
Truism. Good luck to con lol
If I knew more than Jack shit about UFC I’d consider accepting… I love a good GOAT debate
Still Jordan ;)
He clarified this in the description…
What a conscience to glorify a man like that. Sociopathic wife beater...
Welcome to UFC.
I named myself Bones because I was a huge fan of Jon several years back but now I despise him. I'm interested in the debate but idk who would possibly be able to adjudicate the debate.
Would've liked to see that aspinal fight tho.