Originally Published: November 10, 2008
Couture has the tools, but what's to gain in beating Lesnar?
Defeat Brock Lesnar with ease, and MMA fans will downplay Randy Couture's challenge. Struggle, and both fighters will come out looking solid. Such is Randy Couture's conundrum.
MMA Live Episode 26
You know "Judo" Gene LeBell even if you don't know "Judo" Gene LeBell: He's a grappler-hyphen-stuntman with a face right out of J.R.R. Tolkien's imagination, a judoka from the days when you didn't need written waivers to step onto a mat and squeeze the carotids until an opponent's face looked like a burnt turnip.
LeBell has the kind of stories you'd expect from an 80-something-year-old martial artist, many of which involve him doing something that no lawyer today would ever allow. Most notably, he had what's believed to be the first cross-discipline prizefight in history, a 1963 bout with boxer Milo Savage. (Spoiler: LeBell won.) In an earlier, pre-PETA incident, LeBell actually scrapped with a 700-pound Canadian black bear named Victor. It wasn't a real no-holds-barred fight -- the loser wasn't dinner -- but it goes to show you that there's not much new under the sun; 50 years on and the man vs. beast promotional hook is alive, well and coming to a pay-per-view provider near you on Saturday. Brock Lesnar, all 280 pounds of him, is ostensibly the bear, a quick, vicious and almost supernaturally strong carnivore whose athleticism makes him nearly impossible to control. Standing in opposition is Randy Couture, the comparatively weaker homo sapiens who will have to try and negate that aggression with a more substantial martial arts IQ. It might not be the most sensible matchup for the UFC's tangled heavyweight title picture -- Lesnar is a piddling 1-1 in the organization -- but it's exactly the kind of guilty-pleasure spectacle that gives fans, for lack of a more masculine term, butterflies. Lesnar is nothing if not imposing, and Couture is nothing if not capable. Bet large on the fight and there's a 50/50 chance you'll be enjoying Top Ramen for a few months. That's because handicapping the bout is largely pointless without having any knowledge of which Couture will show up. While he looked sharp against another Doctor Moreau creation in Gabriel Gonzaga in August '07, taking 14 months off in your mid-40s is for CEOs, not prizefighters; as much as the media likes to romanticize Couture's remarkable career stamina, his body will eventually decide to follow its genetic fate and begin decomposing. If that sounds like preamble for a declaration that Couture is once again the underdog, you're half-right.[+] Enlarge

Ric Fogel for ESPN.comBrock Lesnar's combination of speed and power might prove too much for a 45-year-old Randy Couture to handle.


