Joe sits down with Belal Muhammad, a mixed martial artist and current UFC Welterweight Champion. https://www.ufc.com/athlete/belal-muhammad Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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rules and restrictions apply see blinds.com for details the joe rogan experience train by day joe rogan podcast by night all day all right what's up good to see you man congratulations good to see you brother appreciate you the champ is here everybody has to shut the fuck up now
That's the best part right now, is now I can just talk as much as possible, and they can't say nothing.
They can't say nothing. There were so many doubters, so many naysayers, so many people did want you to get that title shot. It was so unfair, dude. It was really wild. It was wild to see. It really was. It really was. Because I'm like, are you guys not watching his fights? Like, what the fuck are you guys seeing? I do not understand when people don't appreciate excellence. I really don't get it.
Like the Sean Brady fight, you see that fight, you don't think this dude is a fucking problem for everybody. You see the Wonderboy fight, see all your fights.
And all of them, they've been different, right? Like with Deshaun Brady, all I did was stand up. I didn't shoot one takedown on him. Gilbert Burns, I didn't shoot one takedown. Wonderboy, I took him down. Obviously, I'm not going to strike with a kickboxer. So I've showed you guys all forms of martial arts. And people still hate it. They're still hating. So crazy. Even with the Leon fight.
So even for this fight.
Absolutely. I think they have to shut the fuck up. I think everybody has to shut the fuck up and just recognize what you did because you put so much pressure on him standing up. You were in his face from the very first second of the very first round.
You just advanced and you could tell he wanted that space and you could tell it was a different experience than what he thought he was going to get from you.
Yeah, I mean, when we saw him against Kobe and him against Usman, the third fight, we saw that he's an expert at distance. He manages the distance. He puts it at his own pace. So we were like, bro, we got to make this the dirtiest fight, the hardest fight for him. So we got to step right away.
So even when the ref was looking to me, telling me to back up, when he looked at Leon and said, you ready, you ready? I'm walking forward right away. So I'm right in his face before he even looks up. So I was like, I got to get him on his back foot right away, make him uncomfortable. And I knew he's not good uncomfortable. No striker's really good moving backwards. Right.
But I knew Leon specifically, I don't want to be in his kick range. I don't want him at his slow pace like he did against Kobe and these guys where he kicks, moves, kicks, moves. I'm like, I'm going to be in his face nonstop, punching him in his mouth, and taking him down whenever I see an opening.
The Kobe fight I thought was going to be different. I think Kobe broke his foot real early in that fight. Yeah.
I mean, I think Kobe sucks, but... For me, I think that Kobe wasn't... He's just not a good striker. Even with the fights that we see that he was really good at, it was just because he put a good pace on all these guys. And he dictated the pace with RDA and Robbie Lawler, all these guys. But none of those guys really had that type of cardio. When we saw him against Usman...
Usman showed you, all right, he could keep up that pace with Kobe, and then Kobe can't take him down. So it ended up being like a kickboxing match. For Leon, he knew if he dictated the pace with Kobe, Kobe wasn't going to be able to do anything to him. And I don't think the time off, I think, hurt Kobe's distance management because his shot takedowns were terrible in that fight. Like, he didn't...
If he's telling the truth, though, I think the foot had a big factor because I think he broke his foot. I think Leon checked the kick real early on or he kicked low and hit the shin and broke his foot, hit the knee, something. I don't remember exactly what happened, but apparently in the first round he broke his foot. If you can't move against Leon, you're in real trouble.
Yeah, especially because Leon's so good at his lateral movement. And his kicks hurt so hard. So for me, I was like, I can't be in kicking range at all. I think I felt like one body kick early, and I was like, alright, let me step forward on it. So even with my mindset the whole camp, I probably took...
two to three thousand body kicks and then move forward on each of them and if i backed up at all my coach is yelling at me look what you did here you did this wrong move forward move forward we can't take one step back so i was like i was writing it down i was putting in my head do not take a step back do not take a step back and then it just came out in the fight it came out perfect it was a master plan it really was watching you execute it i was i was just so i was so shocked first of all's inability to deal with you on the feet
Because even if it was just a kickboxing match, there was so much pressure and so much volume of strikes. You were constantly on him. Your boxing was so on point, man. It looked better than it's ever looked.
I think people just underestimate me when they look at me because they say, oh, he doesn't have a bunch of knockouts. But when you look at my fights and you see the way I pieced up a lot of these big names like Gilbert and Sean Brady, I beat them both on the feet. And for the Leon fight, My gym is small, but we have... I work with, I think, who's the best striker in the UFC right now?
He's a 55er, Ignacio Balmondes. Like, this kid is a monster. He probably has, like... Monster. You saw, yeah, his spinning heel kick knockout. I'm like... Dangerous dude. I'm sparring with this dude every single day. So I'm like, nothing that Leon was going to throw at me was going to surprise me. Nothing was going to make me uncomfortable. Mm-hmm.
And for me, if you're beating me up, I want to keep going to you. So for Nacho, I'm like, bro, throw the kitchen sink at me. I want you to throw everything you have in your tool bag at me. So whatever Leon throws, I'm just going to be comfortable in that fire. So for me, it was just nonstop, nonstop sparring, sparring, sparring.
Even if it's not hard sparring, light sparring, just enough to see everything and have my reaction time. And I think that helps a lot with the way I've been fighting lately.
How much time did you have to prepare for Leon? I had about eight weeks. Did you kind of have an inkling that it was going to happen before that? Had you been preparing mentally before that?
That was the hardest part, right? The lead up because it was after beating Gilbert, they were like, you're guaranteed next. And then you're like, when is it happening? They're like, well, Colby has to fight first. So then I'm sitting there and playing the waiting game. And then they offered me Usman. They're like, well, you know, if you don't want to wait, we can give you Usman.
So we were at talks with Usman. And then Usman ended up fighting Hamza on short notice. So then I was like, all right, well, there's nothing else they can put in front of me. It's going to be me against the winner of Kobe and Leon. Then that fight happens. And then Leon's trying to brush it off like crazy. Nah, there's still other guys I could look at and see who's next.
And he even brought up Gilbert Burns. And I'm like, bro, I just beat Gilbert Burns. So I'm sitting there in limbo. Like, what's happening? I'm calling my manager every day. And Ali's my manager. And he's like, bro, trust me. Dana's not going to go against his word. He's going to give you the shot. He's going to give you the shot. And then all of a sudden, 300 comes up.
And I'm like, oh, so we're probably going to be 300. And then they say, oh, they offered to fight to three other guys. And I was one of those guys. So then, like... I'm sitting there like, bro, wait. No way am I about to get screwed right now. Are they going to give it to somebody else?
Did you ask? Like, why didn't I get the fight at 300? If they were trying to get Leon to fight at 300, why didn't you get that title shot?
For me, it was just – I put it out there. I said if they really wanted Leon to fight there, they would have put me on there because I said yes. They said they asked Islam. They said they asked Shavka. They said they asked Hamza. And they all said no because of Ramadan. But I fought multiple times during Ramadan. So for me, I'm like if they really wanted Leon – They could have had him with me.
But I think they just wanted to have that shock factor with 300, where it's like, oh, double champ status for Islam. Or Hamzat's obviously a huge star. He comes back down. So I think they just wanted that. And Leon's not a promoter. He doesn't really promote his fights in general. Obviously, he's a great fighter. But for 300, I think they want somebody that's going to try to push the event.
Yeah, but still.
Yeah. The rules are the rules. You know, a guy makes it to the top of the heap, he's supposed to be next in line for a title shot.
Yeah. I mean, for me, I'm like, what else do I got to do?
All the purists felt that way. I didn't see anybody who's like a real solid MMA fan who felt that was a lot of the casuals. A lot of the casuals jumping in with their goofy opinions on things.
But that's the age we live in, right? I know. The troll age. Nobody has a profile picture. They just say the dumbest stuff.
Well, not only that, you have a – look, the reality of the numbers is – I had a joke in my act that 90% of all Twitter is done by 10% of the people, and those people are 100% retarded. It really almost is that. I mean, it's a joke, but it's kind of almost true because – Are you commenting on shit all the time? Do you go to someone's YouTube videos and talk shit?
No, no.
You're busy. You're busy being the fucking welterweight champion of the world. You ain't got no time for that. So the people that have time to be doing that all the time are, unfortunately, generally not doing that good. Michael Jordan's not leaving YouTube comments. You know what I'm saying? Yeah.
It's like the people that are engaged in these attacks on specific fighters in particular, they're usually just dorks. And I get it that these dorks buy pay-per-view, and I get it that these dorks... But they're not most people. Most people want to see the best people fight the best people. And would it be exciting to see Islam go up and try to win at 170? Fuck yeah, it would be.
I'd be all in for that fight, unfortunately, for you. I mean, it sounds great, but... If I was running things, I'd be like, the fights are going to be fucking great anyway. It's UFC 300. Everyone's going to be super hyped up. There's so much on the line. It's a crazy fucking card. That's a great fight. It's a great fight. Yeah.
And it's two guys that are on 10 fight winning streaks.
Yeah. So, I mean. But how weird was it to have to do the fight at like 5 in the morning? Oh, my God. So, let's explain that to people who don't know. The UFC that was done in England was done on American pay-per-view time. So the card had to start, what did it start, like 1 a.m.? Yeah, it started, yeah, the first fight was 1 a.m.
First fight of the night, 1 a.m., undercard, UFC fight pass, first fight of the night. That's crazy. That's so crazy. As if we can't watch it earlier in the day. As if UFC fans on a fucking Saturday are going to say, oh, the pay-per-view starts at noon. Okay. We watch football games at noon. We watch world title fights at noon. Making you guys fight at 5 in the morning to me was bananas.
I was like, that is so contrary to anything you would want from optimum physical performance.
Yeah, it was wild. Like we got down there the week before on Saturday and, you know, we're trying, we found a gym. So we're like, let's start trying to work out at 4 a.m. Because being the main event, they said it'll probably be on around like 5, 5.30. So the hardest part was just trying to stay up from midnight to 4 a.m. to go drive to this gym. And, you know, we had like a big house.
So we had a bunch of people with us. But one person yawns and it's like addictive. And it's like, bro, it's midnight. We're all just like watching Netflix. And then we didn't have no games or anything, so we were just trying to watch movies. Wow. And then one guy yawns, and you're like, I'm going to go upstairs by myself for a second.
And then just like, the PI is really good because they gave us some jet lag glasses that shine light in your eyes that you're supposed to turn on right when the sun sets. Because when the sun sets, you start getting melatonin in your body, and it makes you want to go to sleep. So they put this on when the sun sets, so it shocks your body, making you think it's about to be sunlight.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
So I'm walking around the house with like these glasses that are like shining light in my eyes. And it still was hard. We would jump to the gym.
Fuck you, bitch.
It's three in the morning. We went to go work out. So I'm trying to get everybody to work out with me. So like we had... maybe us five or six guys with us. And then the gym was at 30 minutes away. So by the time we finished working out at night, it was starting, the sun was rising because it was like 7 a.m. And I'm like, how am I about to fall asleep right now?
So I would like take melatonin, fight week, And then it would wake me up at, like, 2 p.m., and I would still be at Groggy the rest of the day. And then you have to do, like, interviews and stuff like that. It was hard.
So did you try to stay on Chicago time the whole thing?
I tried, but it was still hard just because, like I said, that time in between where – that board time. Right. Where we're like, all right, we got to work out at 4 a.m., And then during the day, we had interviews and stuff starting at 3 p.m. They adjusted those times. So then when we would finish everything, it would be like 7 p.m.
How have they done London cards in the past? Did they do that in the past?
They've done it once with – I think it was Bisping against Hendo twice. Hendo 2. The second one? Yeah, the second one. But other than that, they would just do it in – American time zone would be like daytime here. That's so crazy. But I think pay-per-view wise, they expect more people to buy pay-per-views in primetime, like night, 9 p.m. Probably. Yeah. Yeah, I guess.
But when they go to Abu Dhabi, we still fight Abu Dhabi time, nighttime. Yeah. And then over here, it's daytime. Yeah. But I wonder if they see like a change in numbers with that and that made them adjust.
They probably do, but whatever. Yeah. That's my feelings. Whatever. You can't have people fight at 5 in the morning. That's nonsense. You can't have an audience there at 5 in the morning fucking exhausted for a world title fight. Exhausted. Can't believe you're still awake.
For me, I was like, I hope they are exhausted because they're probably going to be booing me anyway, so I'm like... Let them get drunk starting at midnight. Let them be dead tired once it gets to that level. How many people were asleep in the audience? People started leaving early. It was like the fourth round. And I think I got the last takedown and I was like finishing on top of them.
They said people were leaving. Wow. And I was like.
that's a good sign that just tells me that they know that there's nothing else he could really do he had one big moment in the last round yeah I still got it right here and it's just like I just keep shaking my head every time I think of it but it just tells me that I still have stuff to fix still have stuff to work on and you can never get like too comfortable especially with him
But, yeah, my coach is the type that'll, like, tell me everything I did wrong after a fight instead of the stuff I did right. So right away, he said, now look at your face. Now look at your, like, you did that because you took your foot off the gas for one second. And something could happen. Who knows if there's a minute left what could have happened or blah, blah, blah.
And I'm like, I won, coach. I'm the world champion. You chill out. Yeah.
But he wants it to be perfect. Yeah, that was uh it was interesting because it was you could see him Using energy management. You know you could see him trying to figure out when to just defend and when to try to break free and you know when to when to plan himself and fire shots and when to just stay stay on the back foot and keep moving like he tried to hold you off a few times, but
I think whatever you were doing for strength and conditioning, your cardio was insane. Because the volume, just the sheer volume and pressure that you were putting on him, and the fact that you keep that up solid five rounds, that was insane.
Yeah, I think every fighter's fear is to get tired in the cage. Every fighter's fear is to be in there and not be able to lift up your arms. And you've seen it happen with a lot of guys, big-name guys, where you'll see them give up a choke, and it'll be like... He just lifted up his neck and maybe he was too tired. No, he just wanted to get out of there. For me, I had no fear.
And I know that I could go harder than any of these guys. And if I'm tired, I know he's going to be twice as tired. But I think a lot of it, like you said, is just... The team I have around me, I do strength and conditioning with my boy Matt Murphy, but it's not anything outrageous. We're not doing the crazy new stuff that's coming out.
We do heavy weights, and we do the big muscles like chest, lower back, and squats. But we put all this other stuff around it, like the cosmetic stuff too. And we're lifting three days a week. What do you mean by cosmetic stuff? Like say if I go heavy on my squat. And then we'll still end up doing like lower back, chest and like dumbbells, chest and everything on that day.
But like on a heavy chest day, we're going like legs, lunges, like lesser weight. So we go heavy with like squats, chest and deadlifts one day a week for each of those. And then we still do full body stuff that same day, but just like lower the weights and higher reps.
So you're essentially doing almost like, you're doing like power lifter work. Yeah. You're doing bench press, like just power generating stuff. Yeah. Are you doing any plyometrics or any of that kind of stuff?
I mean, I do a lot of swimming for my, for like cardio wise. And then people make in front of me a lot. Swimming is so hard.
Swimming is fucking hard.
People don't know how to, people when they, when I take them to the pool, like when I take a brand new fighter to the pool and if they never swam before, they get so tired. And I tell them, bro, it's a full body workout. It's everything you need, especially for fighting. It's like one of the hardest things you could do.
Especially if you're like built like you, because you probably sink like a rock.
So it's hard to stay above water. Like fat people, they say swimming's not hard. Right, because you got a floaty on. You're literally swimming around with a floaty. You could float. Yeah.
Dense dudes just go right under. You got to struggle to stay above water. And I don't have like the best technique to doing it. So I still like go there and I'm like, I'm going to go a mile. And then I'll go and I'll take a little break. Go take a little break. And like you said, you see like that fat person just going nonstop. Yeah.
And you're looking at them like, bro, I just want to like slap them.
What am I doing wrong? They're cheating. Yeah.
They're cheating. They got a human floaty on. I remember Maurice Smith was the first guy that started using swimming for MMA. Maurice Smith was training with Frank Shamrock when Frank Shamrock was just a cardio machine. I think Frank Shamrock was the first guy in the UFC that had a full, complete arsenal of MMA weapons. He could stand. He could take guys down. He could strangle you.
He could armbar you. He could do everything. He could submit you off his back. And Frank was just a cardio machine. And when Maurice went from kickboxing and got into MMA, he was doing a lot of training with Frank. Maurice was super cardio focused. So that was like when he beat Mark Coleman. He beat Mark Coleman because Mark Coleman got tired.
And then Maurice defended off of his... And that was the old days, bro, when they had headbutt. That was the headbutt days. You know, that's crazy. And Maurice started tuning him up on the feet. Once Maurice got up to his feet, he was just leg kicking the shit out of him. And he was talking to him saying, come on, Mark, ground me and pound me. I thought you were going to ground me and pound me.
Whack, whack. Like he didn't take any crazy chances. And, you know, so he didn't get taken down at the end, but he won the heavyweight title. It's funny how you say that.
The headbutt days. I did an interview yesterday with the Chicago News. And then the lady's like, she had no idea who I was. I'm like, you didn't do no research. Because she's like, you're the champion of street fighting, right? Oh, boy. And I'm just like. Imagine that.
You're literally the world champion. And this person hasn't even done five minutes of research in the sport you do. I was wild. And I was like, people still think that. You should just start making shit up. Yeah, we made it in alleyways. You know, it's not even. You got to get it on the dark web. I fight with a roll of nickels in my hand. I don't give a fuck.
I didn't realize there's still people out here that have that mindset. Well, there's people in the news that aren't even humans. They're just robots. They're like media robots. All they want to do is be on TV. They have no opinions, no personality. Oh, I hear you're the champion of street fighting.
I'm looking at the teleprompter, I'm like, I feel like that's all they do is just read the teleprompter.
That's such, that's so disrespectful to someone who has risen to the top of the greatest organization ever for combat sports. We all know that, look, I'm a huge boxing fan. Boxing's amazing. I love boxing. But we all know if Francis Ngannou and Tyson Fury had a fight fight, That shit would not last one round. There's not a chance in hell if they had a fight fight, a real fight, like an MMA fight.
Boxing is a sport. MMA is the sport of fighting. It's the hardest fucking thing to do for an athlete. The hardest thing to do is what you did. Become the champion of the world in a tank filled with sharks. It's not saying that it's not if you were a 170-pound boxer. It'd be just as difficult. I'm not saying boxing's not hard to do. I'm not saying it's hard as fuck to be a Ryan Garcia.
Hard as fuck to be a Javante Davis. Just the same mentality they have, they would have been world champions in MMA. But MMA is harder. It's harder, and it's more effective. It's the real sport of fighting. So for you to reach the pinnacle in the greatest combat sport ever, and this lady to go, you're the champion of street fighting, and you're on fucking TV? That's so crazy.
Why can't they bring in an expert?
There's so many people who could have interviewed you. I was like, yeah, don't you guys have a sportscaster or somebody that's going to interview me?
Call in Ariel Helwani. Call in somebody. There's somebody out there that can do this. This is crazy. Or do it. One little second of research.
Yes.
Oh, the UFC. Yeah, but even then.
Yeah.
They're going to be asking you stupid ass questions. Yeah. You should have someone who knows what the fuck they're talking about. They have to have a sports guy. Yeah. Don't they have a sports guy? The sports guy's got to know.
They did. And that's what I was like, why am I getting with these two? And she was like, so you do boxing then too? And I'm like, well, boxing is a part of it. It's mixed martial arts.
A lot of thumb wrestling.
Yeah. That's a real important part of my game. I added. We do power slap. Yeah. I'm the champion of that.
I have the most powder on my hand when I slap. It's just disrespectful. It's just a bummer that people don't get it yet. So many people, way more people get it now than never got it before. When I first started doing commentary for the UFC, it was in 97, when I first started doing backstage interviews, and people were acting like I was doing porn. They were like, what are you doing?
Why are you doing that? Are you crazy? I go, I love it. It's great. What the fuck are you talking about? Yeah, it was like being involved, and that was bad for your career. That's wild. Yeah, Dana and I have talked about it so many times. People would tell people that he bought the UFC, and they'd be like, what the fuck are you doing? I'm like, God, that's terrible.
Meanwhile, everybody watches it now.
Yeah, it's going to be up there bigger than, I think, all the other sports. It'll be bigger than everything but football in America. You're never going to beat football. You can't beat football. You're seeing this next younger generation. It's just wild how they're coming up. Kids are starting. My boy Ignacio, his brother's 15 years old, and he's already 5-0 pro. Crazy.
15.
Yeah, and you're a pro? I'm like, that's wild.
Fighting pro at 15 is nuts. That's nuts. You're fighting pro men at 15.
Yeah, his next fight is for a title against a 30-year-old, and I'm just like, bro. Where's this happening? It's in Colombia. Yeah, that's what I'm thinking.
They let you go wild down there, boy.
They don't have any fucking rules. That's funny. You can fight at 15.
But imagine when he gets to his 20s, the experience he's going to have. Oh, yeah. And then if one of these younger guys now that only fought locally in Chicago or something, they see him, he's going to look at them like, okay, let me show you what I do.
Do you think there's something to be said for not jumping in too quick? Because I feel like there's some fighters that... They just got rushed, and they weren't really prepared for an elite fighter, and they got tuned up, and they were kind of never the same again.
I think there's been a few guys like that that I think had real potential, but someone rushed them into a top 10 situation way too quick.
Yeah, 100%. I think Darren Till is probably the biggest one I think of when I think of that, when he rushed into the title fight.
It's hard to say, though, because Darren Till, when he knocked out Cowboy... See, people have two Darren Tills in their head. They have Darren Till with knee injuries, older, later in his career, and you have Darren Till when he was 170. Darren Till, when he could make 170, and dude, he was dangerous. When he fucked up Cowboy, I was like, Jesus Christ, this guy's fucking terrifying.
He was ferocious. But he didn't keep that for whatever reason. He didn't keep that level of success. He had mad potential. So I'm not sure if he got rushed or if he just got injured. Or if it was just a grappling game. He was too late taking in the grappling game.
I think there's a lot of guys that don't know how to take a loss. I think that once he was undefeated, then you get your first loss. And then you go back to the gym, your confidence deflated. You look at... People look at you differently. You don't have that same mentality. I'm the biggest one in the room.
Tyron Woodley, he fought Tyron when Tyron was in his prime. That was prime time Tyron Woodley, and Tyron Woodley fucked him up. But Tyron Woodley in his prime fucked everybody up. Everybody just thinks about that Jake Paul fight. Get that out of your head. That's an older athlete at the end of his run doing something only really mostly for money.
Usman said it yesterday. He said, like, people are so quick to forget, right, of the stuff you did when you were great and when you were at the top. And especially guys like Woodley where he was one of the best to ever do it. One of the best. Then later you start losing a couple. Exactly. And then it just tarnishes everything. I'm like, bro, go back to the knockout of Robbie Allard.
That was crazy. Yeah. Like the way he did it. And Robbie was the man at that time.
I think one of his most impressive performances, two of his most impressive performances are performances that weren't even that exciting. And that's the Wonderboy fight. Because he fought the perfect fight with Wonderboy. He never led. Never led. He's like, let's make it boring. I don't give a fuck. But then when they had exchanges, Tyron hurt Wonderboy. Wonderboy never hurt Tyron.
Wonderboy is a 57-0 kickboxer. One of the greatest strikers the UFC's ever seen. But he was so worried about those takedowns that he didn't really commit either. And he was always worried about the takedown, which, of course, you know, opens up punches. And Tyron could fucking crack. Tyron could crack back then. When he knocked out Lawler with one punch, like, holy shit. Tyron could crack.
People forget.
Yeah. When I fought Wonderboy, that was like one of the fights I watched. And that was one of the fights I was most afraid of because you're looking at him against Woodley, him against Johnny Hendricks, and none of these guys could take him down. And then Anthony Pettis told me, like, bro. I was like, should I bring in somebody for him? And he's like, nah, because nobody moves like him.
And his kicks hurt harder than anybody else I brought in because he brought in like Sage Northcutt and those guys to be like him and Mike Biggie Rhodes. And he's like, bro, Wonderboy is just different. So he said, I would just try to wrestle. And I was like, all right, let's go. And then I was like, let me just get ahead of him right away and grab a hold of him and not – Pull back at all.
The problem with Wonderboy is he can do some shit that other people can't do. And one of them is that lead leg. That lead leg's a real problem. Because he's got the best front leg side kick in the business. And he also throws that round kick off the front leg over your shoulder. His first knockout in the UFC. He throws that shit over the shoulder. You don't see it until it's up there.
And you're like, oh shit, it's too late.
Yeah, and he disguises his stuff so beautifully. He disguises it with his personality because before the fight, he's like, hey, what's up, bro? How you doing? And then I'm like, bro, I know you're going to try to kill me tomorrow, man.
But he's genuinely sweet. Some guys will do that just to try to throw you off, but that literally is Wonderboy. He's the sweetheart of a guy. The nicest. Which happens to be a killer. And I feel like Wonderboy, man, he's one of those guys –
He – I feel like if he had gotten into MMA earlier and really learned grappling earlier with that kickboxing – like maybe if he hadn't had 50 kickboxing fights but only had – he was elite at 20 fights in, I'm sure, 30 fights in. Yeah. And really gotten into MMA when he was a younger man. Because the thing about – like he's 40 now or 41, right? The thing about fighting is if you're not cheating –
You know you're getting into your 40s like there's no way there's no way you're the same guy you were when you were 25 It's not possible. Yeah, so if you don't have the same body to work with it doesn't matter how good the mind is doesn't matter How good we've all seen it from the great champs. They just hung around too long and the body just doesn't perform anymore and
And they know what to do, but the body can't do it.
Yeah, and everything just slows down. Your reflexes, even your mindset, right? Because you don't want to – it's the hardest thing to train for. You have to fight every day in the practice room to train for a fight. So these guys who have been doing it for so long, you're burnt out. So it's like you get to your 40s and you've got a family and stuff.
You're like, do I want to train two to three times a day? Do I want to go to the gym right now and wrestle? I think that's one of the keys that my coach is very good at. He tells all of his guys, like – We're wrestling three times a week. If you're not at wrestling practice, then you're not going to be at sparring practice. Because a lot of our guys are really great strikers.
Nacho's been striking with him since he was 16 years old. He told him, like, I don't care if you hate this right now. You don't know how to wrestle. You're going to lose. You could be the best striker in the world. But all the champions know how to wrestle.
That's a solid coach right there because every guy needs to learn that because there's so many dudes who don't want to roll because they don't want to get tapped out, but they're elite kickboxers. There was a bunch of those guys in the early days of the UFC just didn't. This episode is brought to you by Blinds.com. Do you know the right window treatments aren't just about privacy?
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Yeah, I see that a lot with guys, like I said, that don't want to get beat up. They go to practice and they don't want to get in bed. That's when the ego comes in, right? Like, I'm a UFC fighter. I shouldn't be losing to Joe Schmoe at a jiu-jitsu class. So there's like, avoid those guys.
Yeah, I don't think Wonderboy ever avoided anybody like that. I just think he was late to the game, you know, and he was training a lot with Weidman, who's an awesome wrestler. But like he got his first loss in the UFC, I think was Mike Brown.
Yeah.
And Mike Brown just mauled him, just mauled him. That was Mike Brown in his prime. He was a scary motherfucker.
A dog.
He played no games. He played no games.
Mike Brown was trying to kill you. I would wish that I would never get that call to like, hey, do you want to fight Mike Brown? And I was like, bro, no. My brother's like, call him out. And I'm like, bro, I'm not going to call him Matt Brown. My brother's always the type to be like, you can be anybody. And I was like, nah, I'll call him.
If they call me for Matt Brown, I'll do it, but I'm not going to call him out, though.
You don't want to get him motivated. Yeah, he's the boogeyman. I feel like there's some dudes that, for whatever reason, with Matt Brown, he died. He had overdosed, and he had a serious drug problem. I think there's guys who see the other side, and they come back, and they just have a different mentality.
They almost lost their life to some really stupid shit, and they have a grip on life that's a little bit different, and a drive that's a little different. There's been a few guys that I know. They were like real heavy drug addicts and got off the drugs and just became performance freaks. Just endurance freaks. Just animals. And like so disciplined.
You're like, wow, how is it that this guy used to be a drug addict? A junkie. And now this guy's weighing his food and drinking electrolyte-filled water and fucking showing up before anybody and putting in those rounds on the air dime machine after practice. You're like, god damn.
I live with Jared Gordon for three years together. He's like my best friend. Same situation. He would say, I'm going to go for a jog. And I'm like, all right, cool. And he'll be like, come back like three hours later. I'm like, I just ran 20 miles. And I'm just like, you said you're going for a jog. That's not a jog. It's like a marathon. Yeah. And he would just do that out of nowhere.
Like you said, they just had that crazy cardio endurance. And they'll just go nonstop. Yeah. And I think it's that type of mindset, right? I think so. It just gets your mind off all their stuff.
They're a little extra spooky. Yeah. It's a little extra spooky, those former junkies. I don't know why, man. They're, like, not playing any fucking games. You know, guys that have almost died, they are not playing any fucking games with you.
Yeah.
It's interesting, because, like, there's different things that make a great fighter. There's a lot of stuff. There's genetics. There's gifts. Some people just have that touch of death. You know, they just have that one shot KO power. Some guys just are born with crazy. Like Cain Velasquez, they said, just has genetic cardio.
They said that motherfucker could take months off the gym, come in and just smother everybody and nobody could deal with them. They said it was crazy. Like nobody had ever seen anything like it. Like, I think Kane, for sure, was an elite fighter because of his mind, his discipline, his drive, his determination, his skill set.
I mean, he was, I think, in his prime, there's the argument of who's the best heavyweight of all time, and I always throw Kane in there. I think prime time Kane was, he was a tornado. He was a tornado. You couldn't understand how a heavyweight could be throwing so many punches. He never stopped. And he could take you down. And if you took him down, he didn't give a fuck. You get right back up.
Like with Brock Lesnar... Yeah. Bro, he was a tornado in that cage.
And I was able to go down to AKA and get some work in with the guys down there. And Kane was there. Oh, wow. Yeah. It was just, I was so intimidated. I'm like, this is Kane Velasquez. He's a killer. Yeah. And he's like the nicest guy in the world. Super nice guy. But seeing how athletic he was, he was like doing cartwheels in the gym.
And just like seeing how he moves, I'm like, now I could understand why he was such a great heavyweight and such a killer. Yeah.
He was the perfect model heavyweight in his prime. You know, like 240, not too big. So he has insane cardio. You're never going to see a guy like Francis that has the kind of cardio that Kane has. I don't think it's possible. I think you'd get a trade. With Francis, you get the touch of death. You get that one shot. Everybody's like, oh, shit. Like the Alistair Overeem fight. Yeah. God. Damn!
He had that crazy, crazy power. But I don't think you get that power with that endurance. I've never seen anybody that has that kind of power. Connor even. Amazing power, but he doesn't have the kind of endurance that some of these guys that have less power do.
Yeah, I'm interested to see how Aspinall is past the first round, right? Because we've seen him. He looks so fast. You're like, nobody moves like him. He looks like a younger Kane. Right. But he just keeps knocking these guys out so quick. So I'm like, let me see him past the first round to see if he has that cardio as well.
It's a bit of a problem for him, right? Because he has not been tested in that way. And, you know, you're getting up to elite status where you're calling out Jon Jones. Yeah. Right? That's the boogeyman. Jon Jones is the fucking boogeyman. And maybe he hasn't died, but he's probably come out. He's probably knocked on the door a couple of times, like, what's going on, Def? You in there?
You know, Jon Jones has had some trials and tribulations, but the skill set and the ability to push deep into rounds is nuts. Like, Jon fought... When he fought Gustafsson, he had almost no training camp. They said he barely showed up, like... You know, I talked to Jackson about it, and Greg Jackson was telling me he didn't even train for that fight. Wow.
And then he pulled that fight off in the fourth and fifth rounds. That's when he really turned it up. So you're talking about a guy who hasn't even been training, and then you saw the real Jon Jones in the second fight. That's motivated Jon Jones, who's like, I'm going to show you what the fuck is really up. And then he just beats the shit out of Gustafson in the second fight.
And I wonder if it's going to get him to that point, all this talking from Aspinall, is it going to get him motivated, right? Or is it going to be at a point like, let me be done with Stipe and be done with it. But I don't want a heavyweight motivated Jon Jones if I'm on the other side.
Yeah.
The way he just pulled Gon down so easily and choked him out, I was like, bro. And then Gon looks good his last two fights.
Gon is like one of the most exciting guys on the feet. He's so athletic in that style. He's had a weird front kick too. You ever notice his front kick? Like a twisting front kick off the front leg?
Yeah, a little push kick.
But it's weird because he turns. turns it and snaps it up. So he jabs you with the toes. There's a kick in Taekwondo that's kind of a goofy kick. It's called a twisting kick. And you kind of do it to the face. And it's like you swing your leg up and kick like this. It's like this. But that's what he's doing in a sideways stance. He's just doing it to the body. He's like got a twisting front kick.
Nobody kicks like him.
And he hurt Bam Bam with that, right?
He fucked Bam Bam up. That was like Cyril gone at his very best. A guy like Bam Bam who just comes forward and takes a hell of a shot. He's not scared to take one to give one. I mean, Tui Vassa is one of the most exciting guys of all time, right? Yeah, it's crazy how... But that style. Yeah.
With Gon, Gon's this elite striker, incredible lateral movement, you know, counter-punching the ability to move out of range and dive right back in real quick. Yeah. But Aspinall is like, we've only seen him smash. We've only seen, we've never seen him be the nail.
No one ever, right? And I thought Pavlovich was going to be the one that was like, it's going to be a banger. And he just puts him to sleep.
And he took Pavlovich's fight with a fucked up rib. He couldn't even wrestle.
Yeah, short notice too, right?
I mean, imagine you're going up against Pavlovich. You know the only guys who's ever beat him was Overeem. And Overeem took him down, beat him up on the ground. And you're like, I got to get this guy down. This guy's knocking everybody dead. And he knocks them out standing. He's so fast for a heavyweight. But again, you're saying the right thing.
Like, what is it like in the fifth round with Jon Jones? Because if you can't steamroll Jon Jones and he starts sidekicking your fucking kneecaps... You know? There's nobody better with distance than John.
The best. Nobody comes close. A lot of that, too.
I know you've experienced that. Man. Yeah. How many eye surgeries have you had to have?
I've had three. Wow. Yeah. Holy shit. They're literally the hardest thing in the world. The most depressing thing in the world. Yeah. I don't think... Did you have one after the Leon fight or before? I had one after that as well. Wow. Even in my fight when I fought Luque... After the third round, I went back to my corner. I was like, there's something in my eye.
And, like, I couldn't see out of my eye. And I'm, like, trying to blink it out. And then the cut man, Tate, he's like, bro, ain't nothing wrong with your eye. Stop touching your eye. So then I was like, all right, well, whatever. So I go back in there the fourth and fifth round. And I just can't manage distance. I'm, like, just shooting in.
And then I was like, man, there's still something wrong with my eye. And then I ended up going to the doctor like two days later because I thought it was just a scratched cornea or something. But it ended up being like a detached lens. Oh, Jesus Christ. So the whole lens they had to like take out and then like sew back in. Yeah. And my eye was like super bloodshot red for like two weeks.
And then I ended up doing like a weigh-in show with the UFC. I have a pay-per-view. And everybody's like posting pictures of me like, oh, look, somebody farted on his pillow because he had like a red eye. And they're like making fun of me. And I was just like, I'm like crying myself in my room. I don't got pink eye. It's surgery. How long did it take to recover from that? That one wasn't as long.
That one was, the blood was still in there for like a month. The test run was the hardest one. That one is like eight weeks of not doing absolutely nothing. And I have to be like this, my head sideways for a full eight weeks. Really? Yeah. And have like a bubble in your eye the whole time. And then even when I'm watching TV, I have to like put my head in a massage chair. Oh, wow.
And there's like a mirror at the top. So I aim the mirror at the TV and I can't do nothing. Wow. But like keep my head down or sideways.
And how long did you have to stay like that for?
It was like eight weeks. Wow.
Whoa.
Yeah.
So you're lying. Did you go to sleep in a massage chair?
Yeah. I had to sleep. I had to sleep with my face down in that massage chair the whole time.
Wow.
Yeah. It was, that was the hardest thing. How hard is it to sleep like that? And I'm a back sleeper too. So I hate sleeping on my front, on my stomach. So it was like the worst two months of my life. And then you're like, you don't know if you're going to be able to train after that and fight after that. Cause the doctor's looking at me like I'm stupid. I'm telling him I'm going back to the gym.
And, yeah, it was rough.
Doctors always want you to stop doing what you're doing.
Yeah. How'd you hurt your shoulder? Jiu-jitsu. Oh, you need to quit that.
That's what they always say.
Yeah. Or you need surgery. And I'm just like, there's no form of rehab or, like, exercises I could do. They love to give you surgery. Right away. But even with the eye, I'm so afraid to even go to the doctor in general. So I was avoiding it at all costs. So I would see a little black dot inside of my eye. And I'm still training. I'm like, whatever.
And then I was supposed to go with Jared to Brazil when he fought Charles Oliveira. And I had my ticket booked and everything. And then the week before, I'm sparring with him. And then all of a sudden, that black dot turned into a black sheet. And it just went full black. And I'm just like, I think I should go to a doctor now. And then they were like, you got to go under the knife right away.
So it was like I had to get surgery right there.
Yeah, I had a friend of mine who had a detached retina and he didn't go in quick enough. And he lost most of his vision in that eye.
Yeah.
He had a bunch of surgeries that could never fix it. He said that whoever told him that it wasn't a detached retina fucked him because if he had known right away when he went in to check it that it was a detached retina, he would have been able to immediately get surgery and they would have saved it.
Wow. Yeah. That's the hard part because you always think about Michael Bisping. You're looking at him like, I don't want to be that guy. Exactly.
How gangster is that motherfucker? That dude fought 10 times in the UFC with one eyeball.
That's wild.
Couldn't see. He memorized the fucking eye chart.
Yeah, I literally had moments where I'm looking at myself like, am I going to have to do that? Am I going to have to figure out something to do to do this?
Well, how about fucking, what's his face? The pirate.
Shot a bullet? Yeah, shot a bullet. Yeah. That's crazy.
That guy's crazy. He's only got one eye.
But it's wild, right? Because, I mean, he still looks like he sees everything when he's fighting, right? Oh, yeah. Distance management's incredible. Yeah. It makes you think, how good was that motherfucker with two eyes? They can fight that good with one eye? I fought in Abu Dhabi my first time there when Khabib fought Dustin Poirier.
And then he was just like a fan, and he came up to me, and he said, I'm going to be in the UFC. And I remember the picture with him because he tagged me, and obviously you can't forget that face. Right. But then when I saw him, Like undefeated killer. I'm like, bro, dang, he wasn't lying. He is a beast. Oh, he's a beast. Yeah, he's a monster.
I watched him fight before he was ever in the UFC when he was on other organizations. And I was like, Jesus Christ, this guy can kick. He kicks like you're thinking he's going to get tired from all that kicking. And he does not get tired. Yeah. It's wild. The volume of kicks. He reminds me a lot of Yair. Oh.
You know, Yair is like one of those guys like, yo, you better stop thinking about kicking with him. You ain't kicking with Yair Rodriguez. You better figure out a way to get past that shit because that guy can kick in a weird way.
I train with Yair and like even just like light sparring, I don't even want to like play with him. because he just comes from all different angles. But he's so good at, like, he'll get so close. It'll be, like, right here, and he'll just pull it. Yeah. I think that's where I learned a lot from him.
And then just, like, when you're going with somebody who flows like that and knows how to move like that, it makes you more creative, too.
Right, because you're not so tense you're worried about getting knocked out.
Yeah. I think that makes up the best. Yeah, that's the best kind of sparring.
But it's, like, with a guy like Yair, if you're going to fight a guy like Yair... You got to find some Taekwondo champion and bring him in. But even then, they're not going to know how to punch that good. They're not going to know how to wrestle. So you're going to be missing part of it because Jair can submit a lot of people. He's fucking wicked off his back. His triangle is fast as fuck.
People don't know how good he is. And even his wrestling is really good. Yeah. But when he puts it all together. But I think even when he gets in there, it's just like so much, right? He puts so much energy into everything.
Yeah.
That sometimes it leaves openings for guys to take him down and hold him down. And if I'm a guy fighting him, I'm like, bro, I'm... I don't want to give this guy any distance or any room to do anything.
Yeah, that style is just so taxing. For people that don't see the difference, there's two things in the octagon that are probably the most taxing that you wouldn't really guess. The biggest one is the clinch. Bro, you see guys just get drained after the first round and the clinch, and they go back to their corner, and then everything's coming slower. The punches are coming slower.
The footwork looks slower. Reaction time is slower. They'll take a shot that maybe they could have got away from because they just don't want to move.
Yeah. I, we literally like do this in the gym where it's like, all right, let's do 20 pushups and then just hand fight for, for three minutes. And then we start sparring. It's like little stuff like that. Cause that's when you get lactic acid in your arms. You're tired. Now let's see you throw punches right now. And it'll stop people from actually like throwing hard at practice.
It'll make you want to conserve your energy and stuff. But yeah, that feeling when you're in there and you can't lift up your arms, like, Damian Maia shot on me like 30 times. And it's the third round. I was like, bro, my arms are like dead right now. So if he does take me down, I'm going to be in a bad spot because my arms are so heavy. Damian Maia. Yeah.
That guy had that creepy grappling strength where he would get a hold of guys and he'd be like, what is happening here? Like, how is this guy so fucking strong, especially at 170? Bro, Damian Maia at 170 was terrifying. Yeah.
People keep forgetting, man. They do keep forgetting.
He got fucked in the Kamaru Usman fight. He got fu-ha-ha-ha-fucked. He got fucked. He got to Kamaru's back. He had one hook in standing up, and they fucking separated him. It is one of the greatest tragedies and travesties in the history of the sport. That one positional change. That is a terrible – I don't know what referee it was. I don't want to call him out. People make mistakes.
But for Damian Maia, he got fucked because he had Kamaru's back. And Kamaru's only loss up to that point was a rear naked choke in his first fight.
Yeah.
And Kamaru was nowhere near the grappler in terms of submissions that Damian was. Damian will set traps. He will do shit to you. And he just gets a hold of – like what he did to Neil Magny. Damian gets a hold of dudes and you're like, what is happening here? This is a different kind of squeeze, man. And he got fucked.
He got totally fucked. But that's crazy, right? Because a lot of the fights could change off of one ref or one judge could change the whole thing.
Everything could have changed from that fight. Everything could have changed. So let's imagine the judge doesn't do that. There is a 30% likelihood Kamara's going to get him to the ground and strangle him. Legitimately. You're looking at primetime Damian Maia in the worst possible position. One hook in, he's got your back. How are you shaking him off?
Yeah.
You got a 30% chance of shaking him off. You're stuck. You got a good chance of holding off until the end of the round. You might be able to stop him from advancing, but it's perilous. This is a terrible position you're in. Damian Maia's on your back, and the referee's like, break it up! There's no action here. Are you a champion street fighter? It's the same shit. What are you doing?
This is the sport. The sport is this guy is a professional strangler, and he's finally gotten a hold of this guy. Oh, boo. The casuals are booing, so you're going to separate it? This is... It's the worst, for me, the biggest travesty I've ever seen in MMA. That was number one. There's probably been a few.
If I really had to go over all of them, I'd probably find a few other ones that were right up there.
They'd be like a top ten. I mean, even Leon against Kamaru, too, when Kamaru was on top of him and the ref stood him up because the crowd was booing, right? And then he got head kicked.
Right.
It's like, bro, he's on top of him the whole five rounds, but now you want him to stand him up because the crowd's booing right now.
I believe in no stand-ups.
Yeah.
I know it's boring. I don't give a fuck. No stand-ups. No stand-ups. I go a step further. No stand-ups. And I think the fight should resume exactly what position you were in at the end of the round.
That'll be the game-changer.
That's a real fight, though, right? That's a real fight. How did you get back up to your feet? The round ended. Yeah. Okay. What are we doing? We're cheating for the striker? Because that seems like you're kind of cheating for the striker. I know everyone's used to doing it this way, but if you want to look at it realistically, the striker has an advantage for the first few seconds of every fight.
Every fight. The fight starts standing. So in that perceived distance where the striker has his advantage, it starts off with the striker's advantage. So if a grappler gets you to the ground, why do you get that advantage back in the next round?
Yeah, and it's the hardest thing to get somebody down and figure it out.
And it's the hardest thing to get up. Yeah. So if you can never get up, that's tough shit.
Tough shit. It's on you.
It's on you. That's the sport. The sport is not, boo, stand them up, just breathe. You know? Here it is. Look at this. Let's look at this again. Take it back from the beginning. So Damien gets the clinch, right? And Kamaru's got an overhook on the left arm, and he's defending so far. So Damien's working towards the takedown.
Damien sneaks that leg in, and now Kamaru starts to get in trouble because Damien takes that left arm. He goes all the way over and cinches the waist. So now he's pretty deep. The thing that's saving Kamaru here is his right arm. That whizzer on his right arm is the thing that's saving him. But he's in danger. Now he's in much more danger.
Because now Damian has the hook, and now Damian's pulling that arm over the top of Kamaru's whizzer. So he'll connect his arms. If the referee lets him, what he wants to do is connect his hands in front of Kamaru. Kamaru does not want that. They're hand-fighting right here. But this is a dangerous spot for Kamaru because the only thing that's saving him is that whizzer.
Without that whizzer, he's fucked right now. And he knows it, and he's strong as fuck, and he's holding on to that whizzer with everything he's got. But Damien is just slowly inching, and he's putting leverage with his leg.
He's using that left hook.
Yeah, that little back leg is so cool. Yeah, and look, he's further. Now he's even further. Now he can punch him. He's even further. So he's progressing. So he has gotten to a spot where, and the referee is telling him, I guess he's grabbing gloves. The referee's saying he's got to grab the wrist. And he's close to doing like a twister, standing twister. Yeah, and he's closer.
He's even closer now. Now it's even better. Now it's even better. So now Damien is trying to figure out when he can get his right hook in and what he's doing with his left arm. So the whizzer is still holding that left arm in place, but Damien at one point in time had sort of threatened to creep it up over the top of Kamaru's left shoulder. And that's what he wants to do here.
So he wants to put all this pressure on, make Kamaru do something to defend all the leverage he's putting on his legs, defend these punches. He's setting up little traps, just trying to open up the space so that he can get that right hook in and that left arm over the top. So he is on the back now, like fully on the back. And then the referee stops him. Wow.
And this is the first round when they're still driving. Bro, in fucking sane that this referee did this. In fucking sane. A travesty. An unfair advantage. for Kamaru for sure. And then Kamaru caught him with a left hand or a right hand. He's catching with jabs. He shouldn't be in this position now. Kamaru should be still trying to fight out his way out of that clinch. And guess what?
He might not have fought his way out of that clinch. He was like six steps to checkmate. You know, he was pretty close. Six out of ten, he was in.
It's crazy because it's the first round. Even if the crowd's booing, it's like, bro, he just got to this spot this early.
Damien punched his butt, so you don't think a butt punch hurts? He's trying to do something to get Kamaru to react. He's trying to get movement out of him.
Yeah, you want him to make the mistake. Travesty. Yeah, now that I look at that, I'm like, that's wild.
Travesty. Now, imagine. Damian Maia submits him. The world changes. Kamaru goes to that next fight. Now everybody's looking to submit him. Things change. He's not the boogeyman anymore. Somebody just tapped him. Maybe his confidence goes down a little bit. Maybe he doesn't get favorable matchup in his next fight. Maybe he loses again. Damian goes, gets the belt. Yes, Damian gets the belt.
Things happen, man. Weird things happen. Weird things happen in the sport. You know, that's why it's so incredible when someone reaches the title. When you actually do it, you become Islam Makachev, you become Bilal Muhammad, you get all the way up there and you win the title. There's so many hurdles. Like, you've lost fights. The eye poke with Leon was crazy. You've had bad moments.
And to get all past that and get to the title.
yeah just thinking back to like all your ups and downs yeah just looking at the journey in general and you're like why did this happen or why did that happen especially after a lot i'm a terrible loser so you're like why is this happening to me but then now that i look back at it thinking about the stuff that i changed and then i started doing this more i started fixing this and now it just like made me the fighter i am today and it's like i'm glad those downs happen because now the ups feel so good and
Nobody could take that away, right? The mountain I climbed was way higher than anybody else climbed. It was a lot harder than anybody else climbed.
There's a lot to that. Yeah. There's a lot to that. There's a lot to that because the guys that come up real fast and super talented and just fuck everybody up and never get tested, I think for some of those guys, it's harder to maintain that motivation because you don't know the downs.
yeah you know like they just they have a belief in themselves like you know BJ Penn is a good example that in my opinion I always put BJ in the category of one of the greatest of all time I always say you got to look at BJ in his prime you have to look at BJ when he was beating Sean Shirk BJ when he beat Joe Daddy Stevens and BJ was a monster man just a monster he had crazy flexibility unbelievable balance you could try to take him down he would hop around on one leg like he had two
It was nuts, man. But BJ was so fucking talented that I think BJ didn't really like to work that hard. He didn't really get up for it as much as some of the other guys that weren't as talented. And when BJ wasn't as primed, that's when he was training with the Marinovichs. That's when he was doing those crazy plyometric workouts. So he had this insane gas tank with all the talent of a BJ Penn.
Yeah. And like you said, people forget how good he was. These new age fans, they've never seen him before. They never saw him fight. They forget. They're like, oh, he's going to fight for a losing streak.
Like Tyron Woodley, the same kind of thing. You think about them only when they're at the end of their career. You don't think about how good they were. Nobody can maintain that forever. It's not possible.
It's not possible. Habib said it from the beginning, right? He said, you're always going to lose. There's a time for your thing. He said it about Kamaru. He said it about Tony Ferguson. He said, these guys, they're going to learn the hard way. And for me, he said, if I stayed in, I'd probably end up losing sometime. I don't think he would lose, but yeah.
He said, you're thinking, I could still go with him. And I'm looking at this guy like, bro, you could be the heavyweight champion right now. It's like nuts. What does he weigh now? I think he's probably like 200 because he rolls –
consistently with everybody and he always says i have to jog 30 minutes a day he always on a treadmill at least 30 minutes but just like him and grappling it's wild because i just be like it was when i first got the fight uh announced from dana white i was over there in new jersey training with islam for for his fight when he was uh fighting poirier and then like they announced it and i'm like habib's like oh come with me over here train and then he just
killing me like literally like throwing me around and i'm just like getting murdered then my coach tells me i hey you see dana way to announce you got the title fight and i'm looking at myself like really all right all right what's crazy is he's still in his prime yeah that's what's crazy like he get out 29 and oh in his prime it's like i'm done i made a promise to my mom and do it on top no injuries nobody does that nobody does that
Only the greats, right? I mean, GSP did it.
But GSP came back and he fought when he was older. He fought Bisping at 85. And GSP, he had gone through some wars. And at the end of that last one, he was just like, I need some time off.
You know? Yeah. I think a lot of these fighters, they need the time off, but they don't take it. And they try to rush back in after losses. And it just adds up. You see it with Tony Ferguson. Prime example. I think after that Gaethje fight, that should have been time off. That should have been like... All right, let me take a year off, not do nothing.
But you want to rush back in there, and then all of a sudden the losses start adding up. Your body's taking damage.
Here's another one. So let's imagine Tony Ferguson doesn't trip over those wires backstage. So he's about to fight Khabib for the title in Madison Square Garden. He trips over some wires backstage and tears his knee apart. Just a freak accident. Yeah. Just a freak accident that could happen to anybody. Tears his knee apart. Has to get knee surgery. Misses the title fight. Al Iaquinta steps in.
Has a good fight with him. And Tony Ferguson, the one guy that we were always like, how would Tony do? Because in his prime... People forget, in his prime, that motherfucker was terrifying. He had a long-ass win streak and fucking everybody up. He was cutting people, strangling people. He was a beast, dude. Tony Ferguson was a fucking monster. But people forgot. They forgot.
They only see Tony Ferguson now when he got knocked out by Chandler. They see Tony Ferguson now when Patti Pimblitt beats him. You don't understand. He's 40-whatever-he-is years old. He's natural. The body just can't do what the mind wants it to do anymore.
You're looking for that one point where at least a coach, family, or somebody tells them, you're done. Maybe you want to end on a winning note.
I think these guys just like it. They want to fight and that's all they know. It's different in different people. Some people get out and they go, I think I did enough. I'm out. And they hold to it like Khabib or like Andre Ward. Andre Ward's another one. Goes out on top. Gold medalist in the Olympics. Two division world champions. That's it. I'm good.
I think they offered him when Canelo fought Kovalev, when he knocked out Kovalev and won the light heavyweight title. They were saying maybe Andre Ward would come back and they were going to throw a lot of money at him. And I think he considered it, but I think he said I serve boxing better in the position that I am. So here's a guy.
Olympic gold medalist, two-division world champion, speaks perfectly. Nothing wrong with him at all. Very religious man, never swears. I did a podcast with him. He got upset that I said the F word. He did. He called me afterwards like, I didn't know you were going to be swearing. Oh, wow. Because he would want people from his church to listen.
Yeah.
So now he can't say, yeah, he's got to say, don't listen to that one. Oh, wow. Joe Rogan's got a potty mouth. Yeah. I thought he's a boxing champion. I was going to talk to him like a regular dude. But he's one of the wise ones that said, that's it. Everybody else comes back, man. Marvin Hagler, he was another one. Never came back. So that's it.
I'm done. Yeah. But Ward, I think. Even, like I said, in the commentary, the way he breaks stuff down. His new book was so good. Just him, it's like hearing his stories. Wow. Yes.
It's a crazy story. But him and Canelo would have been crazy. That would have been crazy. Yeah. I would have loved to see that fight. I want to see Canelo and Benavidez. Like, come on, Saudi Arabia. Throw that money. Throw that money. Let's see that fight. Because if Crawford, if they're not going to have him fight Crawford, which I did want to see. I did want to see. Even though I know it's crazy.
It's a giant weight jump. Yeah. But Benavidez is not a weight jump. That's the right weight. And that guy's a killer.
And it makes the most sense.
It makes the most sense.
But.
And Canelo's like, give me $200 million.
And I can see them just offering it. Let me just go on my bank account. I'll just give you that check real quick. Saudi Arabia guy.
I hope that Benavidez and him do fight. And I hope it's at 168 because I think that's like Benavidez's best division. I mean, he only fought. He fought that last fight at 75 against a good guy. And he won the fight. But he didn't look like the same guy that he looks like at 68. I don't think that power carries quite as much with those bigger guys. It's a little bit of a step.
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step up you know like that there's very few guys that keep that power as they keep going up and up and up in weight it's just and there's so many weight classes in boxing right yeah you could be like i said if for canelo and him it's the fight that makes sense so for him he's like i need to find the biggest fight and it's all right let me move up a couple more pounds here yeah and then you think it's not a big jump but those pounds make a difference
It makes a difference. But for Crawford, I think he just wants the big money fight. Like, what is the big money fight? Canelo's the big money fight. You know, Crawford is one of the best ever. He's 36. He's like, maybe this is, you know, let me get one big money fight and get the fuck out of here.
Yeah.
But he's got Boots Ennis, you know, knock on his door, too, which is another amazing fight, but super dangerous. You know, like, just like Benavidez is dangerous, Boots Ennis is very fucking dangerous.
Very dangerous. There's always somebody coming, right? Right behind you. And these guys who've been at the top so long, you're like, all right, let me get somebody that's on my level. Canelo. Yeah. He's been in the game just as long as me. And all right, let's just do this for his paycheck and then move on.
I think when they get to a certain level and they realize they only have a few fights left, they want the big money fights. And Canelo is obviously the biggest money fight. Even though Boots Ennis is a great fighter, most people don't know who he is yet. Yeah. And with Canelo, everybody knows who Canelo is. You get the Canelo fight, that's red panties night. Yeah. You're in. Let's go.
I mean, that's the Jon Jones effect with Stipe, right? Not a lot of people know where Aspinall is yet. I mean, the real fans know him, but everybody knows Stipe, right? Everybody knows he was one of the greatest heavyweights to ever do it.
It's a great thing if Jon can beat him on his resume. It's one more notch that Jon beat the most accomplished heavyweight of all time. But here's the thing. Everybody's sleeping on Stipe. Here's the thing about heavyweights. Heavyweights mature later, and they get, they get compromised later, too. George Foreman won the heavyweight title at 45 years old. And that was in the natural days.
I think there's maybe not natural. I mean, I don't know what George is doing, but I was thinking of Vander Holyfield.
Maybe there's something going on.
But my point is that like heavyweight fighters, I think because there's not as much movement. It's a different thing. The body matures. It takes longer. They're just bigger human beings. I could see a guy that's in his 40s still fighting elite. And we haven't seen Stipe since he got knocked out. So we saw that fight against Francis where Francis just looked unstoppable.
Francis knocks him out, and we haven't seen Stipe in years now. When was the last time Stipe fought? I remember it was at the Apex, and it was in the middle of the pandemic because there was no crowd.
Yeah.
Which was crazy to see a heavyweight title fight with no crowd. Yeah. It was nuts.
Yeah, the pandemic days were wild.
Wild. Everybody's wearing a mask, hanging over their nose. It's all so stupid.
2021.
And we're getting real close to 2025.
So 2025, if this fight happens in November, 2025 is just a fucking month away. That's a long-ass time. But it's also a long-ass time with no head injuries. It's a long-ass time without getting two or three fights, a serial gun fight, another fight, this fight, that fight. It's a long time without getting beat up.
You don't know if he comes as a different version himself. What if he's been working on some stuff and he – Yes. I mean, if he knows he's fighting Jon Jones, and he probably knew probably for the last year and a half, I'm just studying one guy for a year and a half just focused on him. Exactly. It changes a lot of stuff.
And, you know, he's had time to rest. Like, let the chin recover. Because that's a, you know, I think Daniel Cormier landed the picture-perfect right hand when he knocked out Stipe. But I also think Stipe was probably beaten up from that Francis fight. That Francis fight was not much. I mean, I don't remember how many months.
How many months was there between Francis, Stipe fighting Francis and then Stipe fighting DC? Seven. Seven months? That's not enough time.
A year before the previous fight.
Yeah. The year before, that's a different thing. It's the Francis fight was the damage. Francis was... In the first round in particular, he landed some big shots. He was fucking scary as shit, dude. So I think him coming in and fighting Daniel... I gotta imagine...
He took some heavy blows in that fight and you know, like even if he didn't lose He had to have gotten some damage like he may have been concussed like he got hit.
No doubt.
Yeah hard in that fight and then Do you go right back in a train really? No, you should take a long-ass time with no contact at all and let everything heal up And he probably didn't get a chance to do that. I mean, I think that's also Volkanovski after Islam. Oh, I
Yeah, I think that was his biggest mistake, right?
Huge mistake. Two mistakes. One, you don't fight Islam on 10 days notice. You just can't. That just doesn't make any sense. That's crazy. He's so hard to beat. He's so good. If he's not the best, it's you and him for the best, pound for pound. And you're going to risk that on 10 days? That's crazy. And that, again, changes the course of his career, right? That's wild, right?
Imagine if he doesn't take that fight. He says, I can't. I'm ready for Ilya Toporia. That guy's coming. And he knows how fucking dangerous Ilya is. And so he doesn't take that fight, and then he goes in fresh against Ilya, and you have a much better fight.
Yeah.
Who knows who would have won, but you got to think he was compromised from that. I mean, he got head kicked. Yeah. Head kicked. Shin to the dome, which is just for sure it's going to rattle you for a long time.
When you're just getting put out cold like that. And especially, he probably cut a lot of weight to get to that point. Because he looked kind of flabby in that Islam fight. So you're taking a fight on a 10 days notice. There's not a lot of guys that are around their weight class anyway. So they're cutting a lot.
Then you have to go, all right, now I'm going to fight Islam, who's number one pound for pound. And then that head kick.
Islam looked like Michelangelo sculpted him. He's so big.
And he's so strong, so good.
What does he weigh? What does he weigh like normal? Like right now, if you called him up.
What would he say?
I would say at least minimum like 185, 190. Get the fuck out of here. He's 210 pounds. That guy's 250 pounds. His strength feels like 250 pounds. That's what I hear. But that's the thing with them. They're always training. No matter what they're doing, they always at least run once a day or grapple.
So he's losing roughly 30 pounds to make 55?
From the start, I would say, yeah.
He's big. That's about as big as you can get and keep doing that. That's big.
Yeah, and he's tall. He's lengthy, and he has power. He could go up to 70 easily, I think.
Yeah, easily. He's got real power now on his feet, which is a new addition over the last X amount of years. His stand-up has gotten elite. Like, he knocked down Oliveira. He had Oliveira in real trouble. The Volkanovski head kick, though, and it was also the way he set it up. He kept kicking to the body. Oh, my God.
I think people just assume that all he's going to do is wrestle. But then when you see him go in there and outstrike somebody, he even boxed with Poirier. He had some really good hands in there with him. And people are like, oh, wait, he can strike too. But his grappling is just as good.
He can do everything. He's as good as it gets. He's the most complete fighter on the roster because he submits people. He submitted Poirier in the final round. Incredible, incredible submission. But he was winning that fight already.
Yeah.
But then, you know, he can also knock you out. He literally does everything. He's one of the best wrestlers in the sport. His top control and his squeeze is insane.
Yeah.
Remember when he tapped out Drew Dober? He got a hold of Drew Dober. It's like Drew Dober had zero chance of moving. He wasn't going anywhere. He was just crushed. It was like he was fighting a man twice his size.
I was just bringing that up when I talk about Dan Hooker. He just went to war with Gamrot. Exactly. And Islam just took him down and tapped him out within the first two or three minutes.
And tapped him out to the point where you're like, please tap, please tap. Fucking tap. Dude, just tap. Don't let him do it.
Because it looked like he was going to break his fucking arm apart. It's so funny because Habib will get guys in there and he's the type that will grapple and just have a conversation as he's grappling. But he had Ali and Kimora and he's laughing and Ali's tapping. And he's just like, brother, give me coffee. And he's just like, I'm like, bro, I think you're going to break his arm at some point.
That's a terrible break too, that spiral break. It's the worst. And I'm like, they're so strong and it's like effortless with them. Their bodies move crazy.
I remember Michael Johnson. Khabib got Michael Johnson in that Kimura. And I was like, Jesus, please tap, Michael. God. tap please just tap I was like squirming in my chair because I'm waiting to hear crack because I've seen it like the Noguera fight with Frank Mir remember that yeah you see his arms you hear the snap and you see him like look over at his arm and his arm's like halfway hanging oh
That's the scary part about the whole thing. It's so scary.
That's such a scary break. Because this arm is never the same again. It's never the same again.
Yeah.
No matter what. They're going to screw things in there and bolt things. All your muscles have been cut. All your nerves are fucked up. It's never going to be the same arm.
And then you have guys that are crazy enough to keep fighting after that. Yeah, they don't give a fuck. With a broken arm.
Break my arm. Yeah, go ahead. Tim Sylvia. When Frank Mir broke his arm. Oh, here it is with no gear.
Oh, Jesus.
You're going to make me. Look at this. And he looks down at his arm like, God damn, please, ladies and gentlemen, tap. Please tap. Sometimes you have to tap. I know, I know, but sometimes you got to tap for the future. Did you see that guy Mikey Musumechi fought in one FC and he destroyed his leg? Yeah. The guy wouldn't tap. This fucking guy's an animal. He would not tap.
And I was tapping at home. I couldn't believe it. He broke his leg like three times. He just kept breaking his knee left and right and ripping it apart. I'm watching his knee. I'm like, that's destroyed. There's your LCL. Look at this. This is so horrible. Oh, my God. Like right now, his leg is destroyed. His leg right now is fully destroyed. It's totally twisted. All his ligaments are fucked.
He couldn't walk after this fight. I mean, look at his heel is totally the wrong way. His knee is twisted completely around. That is horrible. Oh, he's going that way with it. Oh, my God. The dude never tapped. The dude got his leg destroyed and never fucking tapped. But he's probably never going to be the same again. Mikey has to have some craziness inside of him just to keep going, though.
Oh, he's an evil little man.
He has to be evil.
He's an evil little man. He's a really, really, really nice guy, but he's also got a switch. There's a switch, and he gets into that octagon, and what's that? Why'd you do that to me? That's what Mikey said to him. He felt bad that the guy wouldn't tap. It was a crazy demonstration, but that poor guy. I mean, I got to think, what kind of surgery?
Find out what kind of surgery that guy had to have after that fight.
I hate leg locks in general. Even at practice, I'll tell you guys, if you're going to put leg locks on, I'm just going to tap. I'm not even going to play.
Well, I came up before leg locks, so I didn't learn leg locks until late in my jiu-jitsu journey. I was already a black belt before leg locks became the big thing. We already knew about them. I'd seen Dean Lister use them. When Eddie went to Abu Dhabi, I went down there with him, and Dean Lister was tapping people. Dean Lister was the first guy to really fuck a lot of guys up with leg locks.
And a few of those Luta Livre guys were really good at leg locks. They would do them, but Leg locks and jiu-jitsu tournaments were booed.
Really?
Yeah, man, because they ruined people's knees and no one really knew how to defend them. Torn ACL, torn MCL, torn meniscus, and a broken ankle. My God. That's wild. He tore everything. Mikey said, I'm sick to my stomach. I never felt someone's leg explode like that in a match. I've been training for 22 years. I never broke someone's leg that much. I broke a lot of legs, but that leg exploded.
I didn't know what to do, and it was just disgusting and gross. I really wish he tapped. The result didn't change. Now he's in the hospital, so I don't know. But what a warrior he is for showing his will. That's why you got to choke people. You got to choke people. Some people just, they don't want to tap and they just go to sleep and that's okay. That's Marcelo Garcia's route.
Marcelo Garcia never used Kimuras because Marcelo Garcia, although of course you could do a Kimura, he never used Kimura because he felt like Kimuras were like a strong man's move because you have to kind of yank it and you're resisting the arm. It's not perfect technique. So Marcelo was all about grabbing your neck. He had the nastiest guillotines. Did you ever watch Marcelo fight? Yeah.
Oh, my God, dude. I was there live when he fought Shaolin in Abu Dhabi. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. It was like, what was that dude, the Tasmanian Devil from the cartoons? That was like, just spinning around him, getting his back, and put him to sleep.
That's crazy.
Oh, my God. And nobody knew who Marcelo was. That was what was crazy. A lot of people respected him. Everybody knew he was a black belt. Fabio Gurgel lineage, solid lineage. Everybody knew he was good, but God. Damn.
Killer. Killer. Did you watch that million-dollar tournament with Craig Jones? I did. Yeah, I did. That one match was really good in the semifinals with them two kids.
Oh, yeah. Rutolo and who was the other caddy fighter? I forgot, but that was crazy. I think they said it's on YouTube as the greatest grappling match of all time. Yeah, that was a wild one. The Rutolo brothers are so good, man. They're so good. And again, look, 20 years old, 19 years old, just coming up. The young ones, man. Young and explosive and wild. They do all kinds of crazy techniques.
They catch Darces from everywhere. And I like the ring they did. Andrew Tackett, who's also a killer. So it was an incredible match. And these guys just went at it. I don't like that ring. It's fun. It's like something different. I don't like it. I don't like it because it's another obstacle. I think they had it right before when there was no obstacles. Like, this is an obstacle, right?
This keeps you from being able to get upright. It's a thing that you have to think about. This is why, like, I've said this before. I apologize for everybody who's heard it. I think fighting should take place with no cage. It would be easier to see, and I think it should be on a basketball court, and you fight in the center.
If you can have basketball in the same arenas where we have UFCs, you take an enormous space, you mat it up, you put security around it so nobody can get in, you put ropes up, and guys step in and they fight right in front of everybody.
That would be epic. No time limit.
No, I think you should have time limits. I think you should even have rounds. But if I was running things, this is what I'd do. Number one, first thing I'd do, cover the fingertips. Why are the fingertips open? They don't have to be open. All you need is the same UFC gloves right now and extend the leather like a mitten over the tips of the front fingers and pull it back in there.
I think it would help grappling. I don't think it would hurt grappling. So I don't think grapplers would have a problem with it. It would have no difference at all on your striking. you would just pull it like a bag glove. You know like those old Everlast bag gloves? Yeah. But not even as thick. Just have it. So now you have one piece. So you don't have nothing that can go in your eyeball.
Like we've seen fingers go in eyeballs before. So that would be eliminated. You'd still have some abrasions of the eye. You could still run into fingers like that. It would suck. It would suck less though.
Yeah.
It would suck less. So that would be my first thing I would do. Second thing I would do, nobody gets stood up ever for any reason, unless someone gets injured or some foul or something happens wrong, somebody bites somebody, some crazy shit, then stand people up. And then I think you put them right back down to the position after you take the point away or whatever you're going to do.
But once a guy gets you down, it's your job to get back up. And at the end of the round, if you're on your back and he's mounted you, you start the next round with him mounted you. You put the arm in the exact same place. He had an overhook on the right arm and he's on top and he's got his hand on your bicep. Okay, this is how the round ended. This is how we start.
And everybody looks at the screen and everybody looks at the guys and they go, three, two, one, fight.
That would be wild.
That would be real.
That would be real.
Because it's not five fights. It's one fight. It's one fight that's five rounds. Why should it start on your feet every round? That's crazy. Why? Because that's how it is in boxing? They come out of their corner? Who fucking cares? That's stupid. Yeah. You got to get better the same way you got sick. You got taken down, you got to get up. Somebody got you down, you got to get up.
Because if you don't get up, then he's winning. He's figured out a way to hold you down. You don't want to be held down. He's holding you down. So he's winning. Even if he's not doing any damage, he's winning. He's holding you down. Everybody, boo, boo. So what? So it'll affect your ticket sales. So you'll get less money for pay-per-views. So what? But this is what real fighting is. That's real.
That's the most pure version of the sport that we could offer. Giant matted down space. You make it so that you have security around it so no fucking psychos can rush. You know, you put ropes up so people can't pass it. Everybody's going to have a clear line of sight. No cages in the way. You still have the big monitors and everything like that.
They fight in an enormous space and you have a danger zone. You got an outside danger zone. And if you keep going into that fucking danger zone, they take a point away. If you get kicked in the nuts, take a point away. You get poked in the eye, take a point away. Well, grab the fence, I think. Take a point away, too. But let's have no fence. Yeah. No fence.
So there's no way to take someone down except taking them down. You've got to actually take them down. You can't get them up against the cage and trip them because their back isn't getting... No, no, no. You have to take them down. On a flat ground with no help. And he's got to get up without the cage. He can't wall walk up to the cage and press his back up and use the leverage. Uh-uh. Get up.
You're in the middle of the fucking matted area. Get up.
I'm just imagining guys like MVP and Wonderboy. To be able to catch those guys in a basketball court would be wild. Hard. Sean O'Malley. Yeah, hard.
Great for them, too. Bad for them if they get taken down, though. Real bad. Real bad. Because now you have to actually be able to get up. And you're stuck there. And imagine getting up with Khabib on top of you. Has anybody ever gotten up? Dude, that guy gets on top of you. You're fucked.
You got to wait till the round's over. Bro, when we grapple, the round will be over with and he'll still be going. And he's like, no, brother, you have to get up. And I'm just like, bro, I can't. The bell rang, bro. You got to get up. That's what I mean. It'll just stay on top of you. It'll be like a 15-minute round. It'll be just like nonstop. It's wild.
But that mentality is why that camp produces so many assassins. I was very impressed with Umar. Very impressed. Very impressed. Because I always knew he was an elite kicker. He's an elite striker, too. But to see him fight a guy like Sanhagen, who's so complex, he does so many things well. And to see him dominate that fight, I was like, wow, that's really impressive. That's really impressive.
Yeah, I think he still only has less than five fights in the UFC. He's still... Yeah, he's incredible. Starting.
Yo, I butchered his name one time. So bad.
I could see it all the time.
It couldn't get out of my mouth. Like, I don't know what it is. Like, sometimes my mouth just don't work right. And that's fine if you're doing a podcast. You can just say it again.
Yeah.
But if you're, like, saying it, guys, I was like... Fuck. Like, what did I say? I felt so bad because I really love the guy. I think he's awesome. And especially after the San Hagen fight, I think he's the most compelling contender in that division after Merab.
Yeah.
So after Merab, I think he's got to get that shot. Whoever wins and him against either one of those guys is sensational. That's a sensational fight. That's like elite top. That's like as good as we have to offer today in terms of martial arts talent.
Yeah, 100%. Like, the way he did – like, Sanhagen's one of my favorite fighters. He's so good. To see how good Umar did against them and didn't have really any moments of difficulty in there. And I was like, he's elite.
Yeah, he's super elite. You know, I think about Sanhagen. One thing I think about is – Here's a bummer. T.J. Dillshaw. Like, T.J. Dillshaw, let's imagine T.J. Dillshaw didn't blow out his shoulders. Because T.J. Dillshaw beat Sanhagen with one leg. Yeah. Which is crazy. And he beat Sanhagen, Sanhagen. Sanhagen that had fucked up Marlon Marais. Sanhagen, Sanhagen. Like, the Sanhagen of today.
You know, that guy is fucking top of the food chain. He's very good. And TJ beat him with one leg and a fucked up shoulder. His shoulder wasn't good back then either. Yeah. It was fucked up. But he figured out a way to win. It wasn't the most exciting fight, but how could it be? He had one ACL. He blew his fucking knee apart. But he still beat him. That guy's had so many fucking injuries.
If you imagine TJ Dillashaw not having all those injuries and someone talking him out of going down to 25...
Yeah.
You see how big he is right now? Bro, he's huge. He's like 180 pounds. It's wild. I'm like, that's what I want to be. I wish I was tighter with him because I would have said, do not fucking do it. Look at him now. He's huge. Oh my God. Yeah. His piss would melt that US Donna cup.
Just put him and Chad Mendes in a room and just have him duke it out. Do a best body contest. The votes are like takes.
But you got to think, man, how good Cody Nolove was when he beat him, you know, when he stopped him. Dude, TJ Dillashaw was a bad man. Hennon Barau was the pound for pound considerate of number one fighter in the world when he was the Bantamweight champion. A lot of people, he was in consideration. And TJ just pieced him up, and he did it like he was sparring. He was all loose and relaxed.
Dwayne Ludwig, I don't know if you ever trained with Dwayne.
No.
He's got an incredible system. That bang muay thai system is one of the most complex and well-thought-out striking systems I've ever seen. He's a maniac. He's got notebooks, like binders, with all these moves locked in. If you watch Dwayne fight, though, it's so crazy because he didn't fight that way. Yeah.
Dwayne thought he had kind of traditional, like a lot of Muay Thai, a lot of Dutch kickboxing style, nasty striker. But he didn't switch stances all the time and do like TJ. But he figured that out. He figured out that this is the way.
The constant switching and striking from each stance and the constant footwork and movement and all these patterns that they would get guys to lead into certain positions and do it. It wasn't just like smashing buttons like Stylebender likes to talk about. Dwayne's thought about it as like a real comprehensive striking program. TJ was his best pupil.
And TJ, when he fought Hannon Burrell, was showing that style in its world-class form. But people forget. People forget how good TJ Dillashaw was. They forget. He has that fight with Cejudo. He tests positive for EPO because he's... literally dying to make 125. He looked like an Auschwitz concentration camp survivor. He did.
He looked like they just opened the doors and let him out of the concentration camp. He had no skin on his face. His face was just, it was just bones. He looked terrible. And TJ is a big guy for 35. He's big. He's a good, solid, perfect 35-pound frame. And somehow or another, someone talked him into it or he wanted to do it for the challenge.
chasing that greatness yeah fuck that man fuck that kind of cut yeah cuz he had to be starving to death in camp so he must have been like doing his camp while he was starving literally starting to death like your organs are shutting down your brains not working anymore
And then when you're thinking about, was the EPO just because of the weight cut? That's what he said. Right. But then you think if he was using it beforehand, how good Cody Nolove was before he fought him. And after him beating Dominic Cruz, that was like the best performance I've ever seen in my life. And then he goes and gets knocked out by him. And if he says... Because he was on EPO.
And it's like, that changed your whole career. It does.
It does change your whole career. And, you know, there's guys that have accused him of doing stuff other than that. And I don't know who's telling. That's what he looked like. Oh, my God. That's so crazy. That is so crazy. I wish I was his friend. I wish I was tight with him back then. I wish he would have listened to someone who said, just don't do that, man. Don't fucking do that.
You could be one of the all-time greats at 35 and stay there. But you also got to think, how many of his injuries got amplified because of that weight cut? How much body deterioration was he going through and then also going through camp? So he's pushing hard, he's wrestling, he's hitting the mitts, he's sparring, all this while his body's deteriorating.
So all his mass is down, all the muscle that's protecting his shoulders, which are, you know, his supraspinatus has been missing forever. His supraspinatus has been ripped off the bone from like the beginning of his career.
We were just – I was talking to a guy yesterday about weight cutting. We were at the sushi spot, Sushi by Scratch. And then the sushi guy who was rolling it, he was like, I used to be a weight cutter in high school when I was a wrestler. And I had to have heart surgery because I was cutting weight since I was six years old. My dad would make me cut weight. And I was like –
that'll change your whole life because you started cutting yet that young and he's like bro i had so many issues problems from there and it was just wrestling he said i wasn't even grappling or anything i was just wrestling since a kid my dad just made me cut weight since i was a kid it was like 109 pounds like 90 pounds and i was like why are you cutting weight that young it's so bad for you yeah it stunts your growth does a lot of wild shit to your body make your kidneys fail
Changes your life.
Changes your life. Yeah, and you don't grow up right. It's like you're being poisoned from the time you're a kid. Your body doesn't develop right. Who knows what could do to the future of your life? It might have taken a decade or two off of his life.
And it just burns you out in general if you go to fighting after that. Exactly. And you've been cutting weight since that long. Now you're a fighter. Now you have to cut weight. Right. Every single fighter, I think, has like an eating disorder or two now after. Oh, yeah. Yeah.
I'm sure. I'm sure. Well, how much do you have to cut?
Me, like, I get around to, like, 190, and then when I'm in fight camp and I'm training, I'm walking around at 185. Oh, that's not bad at all. Yeah, but I keep a chef with me for, like, this last five weeks. Ian Larios, he's been with, like, DC, Kane, and all them guys, and he lives in my house for five weeks, and I tell people... It changes your life.
Like you, you train so much better off it because he's giving you the right food to eat. Right. Before I would sit there when I'm cutting my own myself, I was like, I'm not going to have breakfast. I'm just going to go to the gym and train. Now I'm waking up and he's giving me like potatoes and eggs. And I'm like, bro, I can't have carbs. What are you giving me these for?
Bro, you're not going to train. You're not going to have a good workout unless you had this stuff. So there's no thought process with me. He just gives me everything, my shakes, my food, and then I come home from practice and then he has lunch on the table. Then I come home after another session and he has dinner on the table.
And is he calculating the calories for each meal and how it's set up? That's where it gets fascinating, right? When they calculate the calories for each meal and they give you the exact right amount.
Yeah. I hate looking at the scale. So like he'll make me stop on the scale and it'd be five weeks. I was like, bro, no, we're not. We still have like five more weeks. Get on the scale so I won't look at it. So he'll look at it right in his phone and then he'll just keep tracking it the whole time. That's an eating disorder. It is. Yeah, man. You wouldn't even look at it.
I was like, bro, I don't even want to look at it because then it just – It tells me, like, oh, man, I got to do this or I got to do that more. But it'll make me push that much harder at practice. But I'm like, I'm going to push hard anyway for the fight. But I think mentally I just hate scales. I won't step on a scale until I have a fight. Yo, nobody's got an eating disorder like Patty.
Oh, my God. Patty celebrates his eating disorder. That motherfucker gained 40 pounds after his last fight. And that's gonna literally kill him, I feel like. It's wild. It's not good. Well, he's so good, though, man. I'm so impressed with him. Like, he keeps getting better. I thought Jared Gordon beat him. And I thought that fight, to me, that was another one of those fights.
If Jared Gordon wins, then all of a sudden Jared Gordon's got another big fight, another big fight. He had two blunders in a row. You know, not his fault. The other one was the headbutt with Bobby. Yeah. But the Paddy one was a big one, man, because the Paddy one, he was fucking winning that fight, man. I felt that he was landing the big shots. That counter left hook was sweet. He looked good.
I thought he won the fight. I thought it was a good fight, but I thought he won the fight. And then Paddy fights Bobby Green, and he looks like a world beater. He looks like a world beater. The strategy was perfect. Stay on the outside. Fuck his legs up. And then you realize how big Paddy is, too. Paddy's a big 50-fiver because Bobby's big.
Yeah.
Excuse me, King. He's King now. That's wild. Change his name to King. I love that dude. Change his name to King. So King is, you know, he's a tall dude too for the division. Yeah. But you realize how big Patty is. And people think of Patty only as a grappler, but his kicks were on point, man. His kicks were on point.
And he's tough in general. Yep. Those guys... When you hit a guy and he's still standing in front of you, it makes you want to shoot on him. Because I'm looking at Bobby like, why would you shoot a takedown on Petty? I feel like this is the only way of beating you is to catch you in a submission.
I think his legs were getting fucked up.
Yeah. Yeah. But it just makes you uncomfortable. So he shot.
Here it is. Yeah, I think he was seeing where this was going. Look how big he looks, man. You realize, like, damn, he's a big 55er. And he caught him with that inside low kick. I mean, it might have been just instinct where Bobby just felt like he had to catch it. Excuse me, King felt like he had to catch that kick because it was available. But it was a trap.
The crowd in Manchester, when Petty walks out, it's like nuts.
Yeah, he's a star.
Yeah, over there, it's crazy. When I was sitting in the back, we were sitting in the back warming up, and then we just hear the people going nuts. And my family texted me like, man, I wish we were fighting so I could just enjoy this right now and watch Petty walk out.
He's a scouser. He's just fun. He looks like he's having a good old time when he's out there. And he can back it up. So that fight was big for him because that fight moves him into elite status, right? He goes from Jared Gordon and now, you know, a couple other fights. Now, bam, Bobby Green, bam, someone's going to be a big name. Someone next is going to be a big name.
So he's thinking right now about Islam. He's thinking about those guys at the top of the heap.
He's at the point where I think one more, especially because of his name, if he gets like a hooker or a Chandler and he gets past one of them guys, I see them giving him a toe shot.
Don't you think, considering the amount of growth that we've already seen from him, though, like if you were in his corner, wouldn't you say, couple more would be good? Couple more, couple more, don't rush.
I would, but for money-wise, and I think he's about the big name, especially if the UFC, when you're thinking of lightweight, Oliveira just lost, Gaethje just lost, Hooker already lost to Islam. If Islam gets past Armond, there's... I mean, if McGregor comes back and he beats Chandler, he's there.
But, like, there's not a lot of names right now for Islam because Gamrot was supposed to be the backup, and he just lost to Hooker. But Islam walked through Hooker. So you're like, who is Islam going to fight after Armand?
Right, right. It's a good question. Good question. You know, because Gamrot was an interesting one. We were looking forward to that versus Islam. Like, that could be interesting because he's such a good grappler. But when, you know, people forget about Dan Hooker. They forgot about him, too.
He's a dog, yeah.
He's a dog. Dan Hooker went blow for blow with Dustin Poirier. That was as close a fight as you're going to get. And again, another change of the career, right? Dustin moves on from that, gets the corner fights. Dustin becomes the man. Yeah, people forget about that fight. That was a fucking very close fight. A very good fight.
And there were some moments where Dan Hooker was tuning Dustin Poirier up. There's a video compilation online of Hooker having Poirier against the ropes. Rap, rap. He's ripping shots before the end of the round. He's a bad motherfucker. He's the only guy that fought with a broken arm. He got his arm broken.
Didn't say shit.
Didn't say a goddamn word about it. Wins the fight. And they're like, what happened to your arm? It's just a scratch.
Even in this fight, his face was bleeding in between rounds, and he's like, I love this stuff.
Well, he also loves, he had that devastating knockout loss to Chandler, right? Chandler comes out, catches him with that leaping hook, and drops him, and just puts it on him, and fuck. This is a big, high-profile fight, and he got caught. And anybody can get caught. That's what's crazy about the sport. That's why it's so exciting. Anybody can get caught. But it's like, how can you bounce back?
Can you bounce back and be the same guy after you got caught?
Yeah, and that's the hardest part too because you get caught and you don't really feel anything afterward. It's not like you went through a war or injury. So you want to hop right back into it. You're like, let me get that up, taste it in my mouth. Let me fight again. But you need the coaches around you to tell you, you still got a concussion. Chill out. Don't fight. Take a couple months off.
Gaethje's taking a year off. And it's like you need those guys to hold you back because I've been knocked out before and it's like – I'm all right. I feel good. My body feels good. I don't have no scratches or anything. I didn't go through a 15-minute war. So I'm like, let me get another fight. Let me get another fight. But you don't know what's going on in your brain.
You don't know what your brain is dealing with. And that's going to be your future right there.
Yep, exactly. And so many fighters, they're so tough. They feel fine. Their mind is, you know, their determination is strong. Like, I want to get back in there. Like, that was the case with Jamal Hill. He was going to get right back in after the Pajero fight, and he was going to fight Roundtree. Right. Which is, whew, that's a bad fight if you just got knocked out just a few months ago.
That's a scary dude.
And even taking the Paquita fight. He had a torn Achilles. And I think he just got cleared to come back from that Achilles. And it's like, right now you've got to fight Alex in six weeks. Yeah. And I'm like, bro, that's a short camp. And you're switching up right away. But he's like, 300 is such a big opportunity. You can't say no to that. Yeah. And then, yeah, you get knocked out by Paquita.
And you're like... I want to get right back in there. But your right back in there is going to be against a monster like Roundtree. I know. I know. It's not an easy fight. It's funny because he was on your show and I'm like listening to him and he's like, I may do a jiu-jitsu tournament. And then I'm like, a week later he gets a title fight. Yeah, I know. You're telling him no.
No.
No fucking way. Don't do that. You do all that shit when it's over. Because I remember Cub Swanson did a jiu-jitsu tournament and tore his ACL. Yeah, once you tear some shit doing something stupid and you miss a title shot, you're never going to forgive yourself. Yeah. Kalil's like 35. He's up in that age range, too, where it's like, now's the time, man.
Yeah.
So it was perfect timing. And a lot of people are like, Uncle Ive should have got the title shot. But the problem is they already set up that fight with Rakic, which doesn't really totally make sense, right? Yeah. Right? Has Rakic fought since Yuri beat him up?
No. No.
Okay, so that kind of doesn't make sense a little bit. Yeah. It'd make more sense if Jamal fought Rakic, right? But Jamal wants something a little more high profile. I understand that, but... Uncle I have man. No one's beaten him Uncle I have had that one draw with Jan Boho vich and no one's beaten him Yeah, there's another guy everybody forgets about Jan Boho vich.
What the fuck that guy almost be Peter He was right that was such a close fight super close. Yeah down with the wire. I was like yeah We already saw that like What? What? You've got to give Jan his deal. He was a light heavyweight champion of the fucking world and a destroyer. But for whatever reason, I think they look at that number. They say, oh, he's 40 years old.
Yeah.
He's 41 years old, whatever he is now. So what? So what? He still fucked up Dominic Reyes. He still fucks up everybody. Jan Bohovic is a murderer. Yeah. He's a scary dude, man. That's a good fight. And he's Polish, bro. They don't age. He's a killer. That dude's made out of rocks. I remember when Ankalayev and him were going leg kick to leg kick. He was kicking his shins at fucking Ankalayev.
I have his legs up.
I'm like, this guy is nuts. And I'm like, so I went to my coach and I'm like, what kind of low kick was he doing? He was like, I think he was just going shin to shin. He was. It's like, I'm not going to teach that.
He was just saying, feel Polish bone density. Slamming, slamming those fucking shins into the shins.
But if I'm ahead, I like, I'm going to pick all the strikers. Like, him and Rountree is going to be a crazy one.
This is the only loss. Against Paul Craig, his first fight in the UFC.
Oh, yeah, Uncle Ive got caught in a triangle.
That's right. Last second of the third fight. Yeah, last second of the fight.
Oh, my God. Paul Craig has the nastiest triangle in the division, for sure. One of the nastiest triangles in the sport. Look at this. Look how quick he snatches that shit up. Boom, snap, and too late. So here we got, I think there was like five seconds to go when he locks this up. Unbelievable, man. That is wild. So Uncle Ives had this long-ass win streak. He looked real good in his last fight.
And then they give him a guy who... So he beat Johnny Walker twice. One of them with Johnny Walker, it was like a... It was the desert. What happened?
I remember he was in Abu Dhabi and... He got kneed while he was down and then the doctor came in and he said, who are you? And he said, desert. And the doctor stopped it.
Oh, that's right. And he got mad. Like, why are you stopping it? Yeah. That's right. That's right. But so he has the draw with Jan Blachowicz. He KOs Anthony Smith, beats Tiago Sanchez, beats Volkan, beats all these guys. I mean, he's beaten a lot of guys. I mean, he's got a really good skill set where you think about with a guy like Pejeta because he can wrestle. He can strike and he can wrestle.
And he has a knockout, a huge knockout against Johnny Walker last.
Yeah. So I guess for him, he fights Rockage. I favor him in that fight. But Rockage is fucking dangerous as shit, man. You know, Rockage has had a long time off of the Prohaska fight. And Rockage looked real good in that fight. He was eating Yuri up. But Yuri was just walking through everything.
Yuri is like the new age Tony Ferguson where you hit me, I'm going to hit you with five other punches. And it's going to make you tired of just hitting me. And I'm going to catch you.
It just doesn't work with Poiton.
Yeah.
You can't, you can't be getting hit by that guy.
I want to feel his low kick just because I'm like, bro, what does he do? Like he just touches, it feels like he just like touches you with his foot and it's just like, you can't walk afterward.
He's targeting it too. He doesn't ever go shin to shin. And even when he checks, he doesn't go shin to shin. He lifts his leg up like he's playing hacky sack.
Yeah.
He just lifts his leg up. He just goes ankle. He just lifts his ankle. So his foot comes all the way up to his other knee and then he drops it back down and he comes in with a right hand. He's got it down where if you try to ankle kick him, he's got so many counters for that calf kick.
I feel like he's on every pay-per-view now. Yeah, man. Hey, we need somebody to put the bat symbol out there. And he's like, all right, I'm ready.
He'll fight anybody.
Yeah.
Yeah, he's fighting in Salt Lake City against Roundtree. And that's a wild-ass fight, man. That's a wild fight. A lot of people say, oh, Roundtree doesn't deserve it. Let me tell you something. Roundtree fights like you just killed his family and lit his house on fire. That dude's coming for you.
Yeah.
He's coming for everybody.
And stylistically, it's just –
He's not going to shoot a takedown. There'll be no takedowns. He's fucking dangerous, man. But if you think about the—Pajero's striking—his overall accomplishments are second to none in MMA. Two-division glory world champion. I mean— And the thing about him is that that fucking power is just freakish.
And he just, like, touches it, though. It feels like, bro, what is that?
You see him hit the power cube, and he got 191 on the power cube with a right hand. And that's not even his left hook. Like, hit it. He probably doesn't want anybody to know. Like, hit it with the left hook. That's the sleeper.
That left hook is the sleeper. It'd be like 5,000. Bro.
It's crazy. He just touches people.
And when you're starting to see his personality come out now more, it's so fun. Because Glover's like the nicest guy in the world. And at first, Alex was like so quiet. And now you're starting to see Glover pull it out of him.
Even when he wins, he's never like, yeah! And so he's like, yep.
Another day.
Yep, another day. Another day, another dude I put to sleep. Like even after he beat Izzy, he just walked away from him. The referee stopped the fight and he just walked away. But there's something exciting about that, too. Like, that guy's one of the biggest pay-per-view stars in the country, in the world, and most people don't even understand what he's saying. And he's a star, right?
He's a huge star. All he has to do is make facial expressions. But also, it's scary. When he comes out with the bow and arrow, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. If you're sitting there watching that guy walk through the cage, you're like, oh, shit.
I'd be thinking to myself, I've got to come up with some sort of shtick like that. I've got to figure out something. I can't think of anything. It would just look fake.
Yeah, you've got to be yourself. That's either you or that's not you.
But that's the coolest thing in the world. Whenever I'm in one of his fights, to see that walk out.
That face, dude. And the music. That is the most terrifying face. Him walking towards the cage and you're standing there. You've been prepping for this dude for 12 weeks. And you're like, oh, Jesus. Here it comes.
Damn.
Bro, I hate seeing that one just because Jamal's my boy. Obviously, I'm a fan of Peta, but man, to see him just catch my boy, I'm like, come on, Jamal. Give one back just to get that taste out of our mouth.
Well, there was a weird moment in that fight, and we've talked about it before, where Jamal accidentally low kicked him, and the referee moves him to stop, and Jamal stands up straight and relaxes like, you okay? Yeah. When Poiton puts his hand on Herb Dean, he advances. He makes a little hop step, and then he goes right back to fighting, and he catches him with the left hook.
So he closed some distance.
And it's a game of inches.
Oh, especially with that guy. Yeah, especially with that guy.
He does everything for a reason. And then when you see somebody break it down like that, like you said, everything changes. Imagine if he didn't. Imagine if the ref said, all right, you back up, you back up. Yep. Yep, everything changes. Yeah.
Yeah, everything changes. But that's moments and fights, you know, and maybe that will define Jamal's career. Maybe Jamal will learn from that and never take his eye off the prize again. Yeah. Never relax. And I guarantee you he won't relax now. Yeah. Protect yourself at all times. And I guess... You know, I see it from Perreira's point of view, too.
The referee said, okay, keep going, and he caught him, but he did close that distance because of that low kick. So it is a moment.
And I think it opened up a lot of fighters' eyes, too, right? Because you're starting to see these little things. For me now, I'm like, no, if the ref tells me something, I'm either taking one step back myself or I'm going to take that step forward and catch that Perreira distance myself. You just can't relax ever.
You can never relax because it's such a game of impossible things happening at any moment. Because so many guys have pulled out impossible things. Head kicks, spinning elbows out of nowhere. You know, things happen. And if you're relaxed even for a second.
Yeah. The Korean zombie, Yair. Oh, my God. Uppercut elbow.
Oh, my God.
What was this? Running away, uppercut elbow.
With like two seconds left. Yeah, crazy. And you're like, how? How did this just happen right now? When Yair landed that jumping roundhouse kick on Andre Feely. Oh. Ooh, the scissor kick. Oh, wow.
My God. His kicks are so nasty.
Yeah. It's so interesting to see all these different ways to get elite. There's so many different ways. Some guys are specialists like Pejeta, and some guys just dominate all aspects like Islam. There's all these different ways that guys achieve to becoming the best.
yeah that's my mindset i like i always tell myself i'm behind because i got started late so i'm like i didn't do martial arts since i was a kid so like i always got to tell myself oh we got to do everything there's not like one thing that i'm like amazing at right but people see the fight and they're like oh all you are is a wrestler all you are is this and that i was like bro i do everything and i train everything more than everybody else and i i like i don't take any days off how old were you when you first started training
I was 23. Wow.
Yeah. That's crazy.
Yeah.
That's way behind the curve.
Way behind.
Way behind.
And I did like two years of high school wrestling.
Wow.
Yeah.
At least you had that.
Yeah.
That's definitely something. Oh, no. I mean, for me, it changed my life. Also, when you're in high school, because you're in high school, your body's developing.
Yeah.
You know, your body's developing where you learn how to take people down. Like, yeah, that helps for sure. But if nothing, by 23 is crazy. Yeah. Yeah.
I mean, yeah, I always played sports in general. I love basketball.
No striking at all? Nothing?
No, I mean, I would always get in, like, street fights in, like, Chicago just because I'm a trash talker when I play basketball. So, like, we would always sit there and go to the park, and then people would see, like, who are these A-Raps coming to play basketball? And then we'll be winning, and I'm talking trash. And then, like, they want to start a fight afterward. So it was always the best.
What made you start training? My high school wrestling coach, Lewis Taylor, he was, like, the PFL middleweight champion. He was in my high school wrestling coach for two years. And then he like left. And so I'm like, whatever happened to him? He was like that cool coach, that young coach. And he was like gone. So I stopped wrestling. And then I was at school. I was trying to be like a lawyer.
And I ended up seeing him in a newspaper. He was fighting in Strikeforce. So then I just, like, messaged him on Facebook. And I was like, bro, you're a fighter? And he's like, yeah. I was like, whatever happened to you? He's like, oh, I was still young. I still had something left in me. So I wanted to start training. Wow. And he used to be, like, Rampage's roommate in college.
So he already had, like, that mindset of, like, oh, these guys are fighting. I can fight, too. Right, right, right. So then his gym ended up being probably, like, 10 minutes away from my mom's house. So when I come home from school on the weekends, I'll just start training with him. And then it was just like a snowball effect. I started like falling in love with it.
And after my first amateur fight, after like two months, I was like, could I get a fight? It was like two months. Yeah. Because I was just like excited about the whole thing. And for us two, it was like we were only training partners. So I'm training with him. Like, I'm learning the hard way. Like, we're just going straight sparring or straight wrestling. And he was, like, a Division I wrestler.
He had crazy power, crazy jiu-jitsu. So, like, I'm getting good just because he's beating me up the whole time. So then I'm like, oh, I can fight amateur. And he's like, yeah, let's go. Get you one. Wow. Yeah. So then I got it. It was, like, the biggest street fight in the world, the amateur fight. There was, like, nothing good about it, my technique or anything.
But it's funny because Mark Coleman was a commentator for it. Oh, wow. Yeah. It was like the whole scenario was crazy. And it was like I had a bar and it was just like, cool. So then after that, I was like, bro, I transferred to like a closer school near the gym. I started training more with them. And then, you know, my parents are telling me, like, stay in school, stay in school.
So then once I started just like getting more wins, more wins, and I decided to go pro, I said, I'll go back to school after I lose. And then we just kept going until we got to the UFC. Wow. Yeah, it was wild. He's still with me now to this day. But even with him, he was 41 years old, and they never gave him a UFC shot. But he ended up going to PFL, and he was like a 1,200 underdog.
And he won the million dollars in 30 seconds with a knockout.
Wow.
Yeah, he was fighting Abus, the one that's in the UFC now. They were in the finals. He beat Abus? He beat Abus, 30-second knockout. Wow.
Abus is good.
yeah and he was 41 years old never got a shot and it's crazy how his career ended like that middleweight champion retired on top now million dollars and there's a lot of guys that go to the UFC that don't hit a million dollars that's true so he's like my path was that way so even with me when I was doing all this waiting for this title fight he's like patience it's gonna come like you saw what I had to go through your title fight's gonna come it's gonna come at the right moment so just enjoy the journey can you find that fight see if you can find that fight Jamie Lewis Taylor
And Abus Magomedov. Abus had a great first round with Sean Strickland. A great first round. But that was like, Sean Strickland is just a zombie. He just marches towards you and you can't hit him. He's hard to hit. But he was fucking his legs up. I was hoping Abus would knock him out. I was like, come on, Abus, please. Bro, he was putting it on him in that first round, but he started getting tired.
By the end of the first round, he was tired.
He threw everything at him.
Yeah. Everything was full clip, too. Full speed, full clip. And I was like... Because even at PFL, the way he was killing everybody, he was like... So he was 41 in this fight? Yeah. That's so crazy. So this is the PFL Championships in 2018?
Yeah. And it's crazy because they got rid of the middleweight division after this. So now they don't have middleweight there anymore.
How is that possible?
Because they wanted to put the women's division, the 55ers. So they got rid of the middleweight guys.
Can I talk to somebody over there? Abus. See, there's a low kick. His low kicks are nasty. He just, for whatever reason, Abus has a hard time sustaining it. I mean, I think he's getting better in the UFC. And I think the Sean Strickland fight was just too quick. Oh, left hook. Oh, my goodness. Oh, my goodness. Back that up again. Look at this. They go shin to shin. Boom. Oh, my God.
The distance he covered with that left hook.
And it's like a boost was even blocking it, too. Like, he just has crazy power.
There's another thing about guys who are really good at shooting. That same ability to cover distance when you make a double leg is the same kind of drive that you need to move forward to punch. That's one of the reasons why Randleman was so dangerous. Yeah. You know, because Randleman had that crazy shot. So he could explode forward and punch you from a distance. You really can't punch him.
That's incredible. Look how much distance he covers. Jamie just broke it down. Look at this. Yeah, he hopped in there. Go back a little bit further, please. Just a little bit further before he throws the punch. He's way back there, dude. Watch this. Look how far away he is. Oh, my goodness. Abus made a mistake that he tried to counter.
He was thinking about countering before the punch got to him, and he just wasn't quick enough. That's incredible. Good for him, man. Good for him. And that guy's legit, man. To knock out a guy like that, Abus is legit. Yeah.
When people go back and look at his record, he had like 10 first-round finishes on his come-up. But like the UFC just said, he was too old. They never gave him a shot. Oh, that's crazy. Yeah. And I was like, bro, if people just saw him. And even when he started his career, like I said, I was like one of his main training partners from the beginning.
If he was like an American top team or like a real gym because he had kids early. So he didn't want to like leave them. So he always trained in Chicago. And he's like, I'm going to build up my own guys. So we had like a small gym, like three or four guys that he just used as the main training partners.
And there's some dudes that can compete at a world-class level deep into their 40s. And I always point to Bernard Hopkins. Everybody wrote Bernard Hopkins off before he fought Kelly Pavlik. And he beat the shit out of Kelly Pavlik. And he just boxed him. He just did everything perfect. It was a master class in boxing.
A master class in world championship caliber boxing against a guy in Kelly Pavlik, which was... Fucking dangerous, man. Wicked puncher, tough as shit. That Jermaine Taylor fight was crazy. He was out in that fight and came back to stop Taylor. Just a warrior, a real dog. So Bernard was like, how old was Bernard when he fought Kelly Pavlik? When he fought Felix Trinidad, everybody wrote him off.
He was like 36 or something by the time he fought Trinidad.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah, man. Everybody wrote him off. Wow. Bernard was wild, too. He threw the Puerto Rican flag down on the ground in Puerto Rico. He had to run. People were chasing him. He ran? He had to run. They were trying to kill him. Yeah, you can't do that. Yeah, he told me the whole story. It was hilarious. Yeah, he's a, I mean, but how old was Bernard? 43 years old when he fought Kelly Pavlik.
Come on, son. 43 years old. That's so crazy. He beat Roy Jones Jr.
when he was 45.
Unbelievable. Unbelievable. The Chad Dawson fight, bro. He was 46 years old and Chad Dawson was a killer. Chad Dawson was a vicious knockout artist. And he knocked him out in the second round. And then he lost against him in the next fight. That's how good Chad was. Chad was a fucking good fighter. Then he lost to Kovalev. And he lost to Joe Smith Jr., which was a bad one. Wow.
But he was 51 years old when he fought Joe Smith. And Joe Smith is another one who's a fucking killer, man. He's a dangerous puncher. Joe Smith is a mauler. Dangerous guy.
And he's 51 years old?
That's wild.
Natural? 51 years old?
What do you think of Tyson and Jake? I wish he didn't do it. I wish it wasn't a thing. I wish it wasn't a thing where a 58-year-old guy was going to fight a 28-year-old. That said, that out the window, I fully support his desire to do it. What, is he going to live forever? He's not going to live forever. Maybe he wants one more shot at it. Maybe his body can do one more fight. I don't know.
He looks great on the mitts, but that doesn't mean that you know as much as I know. I can look good on the mitts.
Yeah. I tell people that, like, bro, mitts doesn't show anything.
Especially if you're watching 30-second clips. What you want to see is him sparring. You want to see him hitting the bag for multiple rounds. You'd want to see, like, let's see three rounds hard on the bag. I'm going to see what you could do. I want to see how your feet move. I want to see what it looks like if you're off balance when you throw in combinations. Dude, you look like Tyson.
Yeah.
Remember there's some videos of Tyson hitting the bag when he was, like, 19 years old? It's crazy. Watch the speed and the power. See if you can find that. Mike Tyson hitting the heavy bag when he's young. Terrifying. Terrifying. That, to me, a bag is different than mitts. Mitts guys are meeting you halfway. You've got a combination worked out.
Okay, I want you to go left, right, left of the body, right overhand. Pow, pow, pow, pow. Okay, do it again pop pop pop. It kind of can look real good. Yeah, but can you do that with a guy who's moving? Can you do can you spar like if would they bring in a world-class heavyweight? Can you do that? Like what? How do you move? How are your knees? How's your back?
Like are you can you can sustain that? Can you sustain those kind of explosions or is this just a gimmick? You know, I mean, I don't know I know he used to be able to but we won't really know so here's it when he's young Michael Tyson Yeah, kill the sound. You don't have to see the sound. Just look at this. And he's young here, man. Young. So that's him hitting the bag later in life.
I would want to see rounds, you know? I want to see rounds. I want to see what it looks like when he's tired. How quick does he get tired? I want to see him sparring. I wonder if he's going to spar. Look at that when he's young, man. Dude, terrifying. Those combinations. Show that again. Bro, he was so fast. So fast and always moving. Always moving. Bobbing and weaving.
He was a target that you couldn't find. Just moving at you. Constantly advancing. Just a mindset. Just craziness. Madness. Just controlled madness in there. With perfect technique and ferocious power and awesome genetics. You know, they said that Teddy Atlas told me that when he was 13 years old, he would bring him to smokers and they would go, how old is that kid? He's 13. He's 16.
190.
That's wild. What? Yeah. That's God. He got a gift.
God kissed his physique. Imagine you're at a smoke, you're a 13-year-old, and you see that guy. What the fuck? Oh, you got to fight him. You're like, wait, what?
What the fuck?
What are you talking about?
That's a man. I'm going to pull a guard. I said, box it. Fuck this. Yeah, and he scared a lot of guys before they even threw their first punch. You'd see the look. I remember Bruce Seldon. He missed a left hook of Bruce Seldon, and Bruce Seldon went down. He's like, fuck. Fuck all this. Fuck all this. Fuck all this.
Yeah, what do you want to mess?
Yeah, but he's 58, you know? I support him. I love that guy. I fully support. I'm a gigantic fan of his. Me meeting him the first time I met him at the UFC, there's some starstruck moments where you meet people, you're like, oh, shit. That's Sugar Ray Leonard. Oh, shit, that's Mike Tyson. I was one of the most starstruck moments I ever had. Really? Couldn't believe I was meeting Mike Tyson.
It's wild, yeah. I did a podcast with him. I was like, I can't believe I'm talking to Mike Tyson. He was such a huge part of my childhood. When I was a kid was when he was coming up. I have in my office framed the cover of Sports Illustrated when he was 19. Wow, really? Yeah, it says Kid Dynamite. See if you can find that.
You had it from back then?
Oh, no, no, no. Someone gave it to me recently. It might have been Sports Illustrated sent it to me. I don't know who sent it to me. Do you know who sent it? Somebody sent it to me. Thank you, whoever did it. I forgot. I'm sorry. But that's the cover. That's framed in my office.
At 19 years old on the cover of Sports Illustrated.
86?
Okay. So that was right before he won the title. He won the title when he was 20. So I was just out of high school, and he was the guy. Heavyweight boxing had gotten boring. Nobody cared. After Larry Holmes, people were bored with heavyweight boxing. There was a bunch of champions that nobody heard of. It was like they weren't really interested.
No disrespect to any of those guys, but they didn't excite the public the way Muhammad Ali did, the way George Foreman did. Heavyweight boxing was kind of dead, and then all of a sudden this dude comes along. You're like, oh, my God. And he was doing everything you wanted a heavyweight to do, just starching people, just sending them flying. He'd hit them with left hooks. They'd go flying.
You're like, look at this guy. He's going to become the youngest heavyweight champion of all time. And then he fights Trevor Burbick and knocks him out quick. How much were pay-per-views back then? Oh, my God. I don't remember. But I remember a lot of times people wouldn't want to buy Mike Tyson pay-per-views because they knew the fights would be over so quickly. It was nuts, man.
So this is, is this a documentary? It's his kid Dynamite, 1985. Oh, so this is him in 1985. Yeah, this is him when people were just starting to hear about him. And he came through the ranks quick. Just was fucking everybody up. He was having a hard time getting fights. And everybody thought, this is the guy. This is the next destroyer. I mean, he was just killing people, man.
Everybody he fought was getting fucked up. Oh, my God. Just that head movement on the inside is just wild. Everything. And the power. That's what you wanted to see from a heavyweight. So that guy is still alive. And he still remembers all these moments. It's not like he doesn't know how to put his knuckles on your face. The question is, how much does he have left in his body?
58 today is not 58 when i was 21. it's a different 58 especially if they're not testing him okay if they're letting him take hormones and peptides and do all the things that i would recommend 100 i don't know how you could do it if you're 58 if you're not doing that if if he's if they're allowing him to do all that stuff and get his body to the optimum level that's known to science
You're dealing with a different kind of human being. You're dealing with one of the greatest fighters that's ever lived. It's just how much does he want to do it? Is he doing it for money? How much does he have left in the tank? Those are all questions that will make me buy the pay-per-view.
It's on Netflix, though. It's free.
Yeah, that's right. It's free. Yeah, I'm going to watch it. 100% I'm going to watch it. I'm going to feel bad if he gets knocked out. Yeah.
But, you know. Those are his most recent comments about the fight.
Tyson addressed the meeting with his usual boldness during a press conference to show his readiness for battle. He said, I'm just ready. I'm ready. I'm going to talk my talk and do my shit, but I'm ready to fight.
Is he really a young killer, Tyson said, discounting any questions on his readiness, reacting to Paul's taunting Tyson's need to postpone the fight because of an ulcer flare-up earlier in the summer. Former champion made a strong statement about his unmatched abilities. He said, I feel a lot better now. Who else can do it but me? Who else is going to fight to make this happen?
You got a YouTuber fighting the greatest fighter that ever lived. Ooh. I want to hear him say that.
That sounds, coming out of his voice would be like.
We also have to remember about Mike Tyson is that Mike Tyson knows how to mentally prepare. He was trained by Customato, who was a hypnotist. And Customato started hypnotizing him when he was 13 years old. Really? Yeah. That was part of the reason why he was so terrifying. His mindset was just unstoppable. He really thought that he could not be stopped. He thought he was going to murder everybody.
And Cuss was his hero. Cuss raised him. Cuss took him in when he was 13 years old. He had this terrible childhood. No love. Just...
in and out of trouble, terrible, bad situation, horrible poverty and crime, and then all of a sudden he's being taken care of by this dude who's a master boxer, master boxing coach, he trained world champions like Jose Torres and Floyd Patterson, and now he's got this young pupil. This is his last hurrah and the greatest shot he's ever had at having a real all-time great.
I mean, this guy's an all-time great and he's 13.
Wow, yeah.
He's a 13-year-old, 190-pound kid. Like, what in the fuck? And he's got this kid, and he's hypnotizing him. And he's telling him, you're the greatest. And he's getting it into his head. So from the time he was really young, he was learning mental preparation. He was learning how to put himself into a mindset of just an unstoppable juggernaut that had one goal, one task.
And Cuss would tell him, you don't exist. Only the task exists. Like, you don't exist. What you have to do exists. That's what you are. Wow, that's powerful. I'm going to write that down. Yeah, so the question is, how much does that guy have left? You know, conventional wisdom would say this is a terrible fight.
Conventional wisdom would say there's a 28-year-old with knockout power, just knocked out Mike Perry. He's real fast. He's young. He's fucking athletic. He's bold as shit. He's a good boxer. He's a very good boxer. People don't want to give him his credit because he's a YouTuber and all that shit. Anybody who knocks out Tyron Woodley with one punch can fucking crack.
Anybody that can move the way that dude moves and have a fight with Tommy Fury, who's a world-class boxer, and he lost that fight, but it was a very good fight. He's a good fighter, a real good fighter.
And he's actually training. He's getting better. People are just sleeping on him just because he's a YouTuber. But I'm like, he just beat Mike Perry, who was killing it in bare-knuckle boxing. He was on top, but they don't want to give credit.
It would have been interesting to see him fight Mike Perry bare-knuckle, though.
That changes everything.
That changes everything. Mike Perry is the best at that shit. It's interesting how that's a different sport, because it really is a different sport. It's a whole different thing when your hands aren't covered and you feel those bones piercing your skin.
It's a mindset too.
Yeah. It's like. He's a 100% human pit bull. That's a 100% human pit bull. That guy has no quit in him. No quit. You know, he fucking throws caution to the wind at every possible occasion. You can hit him. He's going to hit you back. He knows how to take punishment. He likes it. He likes getting hit. and he broke Rockhold's teeth. And I was like. Broke Luke Rockhold's teeth.
He's way bigger too, Rockhold, yeah.
Well imagine, okay, how about him and MVP? Okay? Him and MVP with the gloves on in an MMA fight, you favor MVP, right? I favor MVP. MVP is super hard to hit. He's got crazy distance management, those kicks in that distance and the long length. But he decided to take a challenge and fight Mike Perry bare knuckle because he thought, look, I can move better than anybody.
I am the most elite mover in all of MMA. And I'm going to fight this flat-footed meathead psychopath. Yeah. And that flat-footed meathead psychopath just walked him down. And dropped him a couple times in there. Yeah, man.
Crazy.
Crazy.
It changes everything.
Changes everything.
And just the scarring on your knuckles and your faces after that. Yeah. Your face is getting sliced open. But they're starting to pay these guys. When you see guys like Eddie Alvarez and Chad Mendes go over there, you're like... Yeah. Mike McGregor, like, an owner part of it now, too.
Yeah.
But... McGregor's grinding though after Mike Perry lost and he said, yeah, I'm cutting it out. Like, bro, who just tweeted? I wonder if this guy tweeted for himself.
He's tweeting for fun. Apparently Mike Perry has a piece of Bare Knuckle too. Oh, does he? Yeah, I think that's what he said. He's like, I'm one of the owners too, motherfucker. He's the face of it.
Like, I wouldn't even be watching it if Mike Perry wasn't on there.
I think regular boxing is just very different. It's very different. What you can get away with, the fact that you can't really clinch and punch the way those guys do. In bare-knuckle boxing, those guys are getting grimy. There's a lot of dirty boxing in there. It's just so different when those bare knuckles touch you. It's just so different. You can't guard as much. Still stuff's getting through.
You don't have the big cushions in front of you. Those big cushions mean a lot, man. They stop a lot of shit.
It's wild, the differences. Even when we're sparring with big gloves or sparring with smaller gloves that we have, it's like it changes everything. Changes everything. Yeah. But even no patting on your knuckles, you don't even want to throw as hard. Right. Yeah. Right. And your wrist will break easily, so you have to punch a specific way.
I think they all have a different format of the way they punch. They just hold their wrist in a... A different way like this or something like that.
Yeah, like you remember them old-timey boxing guys?
Yeah.
They all were holding their punches like this. Those bare-knuckle guys, they all fought like this. They jabbed each other like this. They were just trying to only hit with these two knuckles.
Yeah. When we were younger, we would do that. Like we're going to punch somebody in the knee or something like that. We'd put that knuckle out there. I just think how stupid it was. But, I mean, you could use a bare knuckle. You could definitely use an eyeball.
You know, if you punch someone like that on purpose with an eyeball, like that's real.
Has there been eye pokes in a lot of eye pokes in their fighting? That's a good question. I don't remember any. Yeah, like I haven't really even thought about that, but I don't feel like there has.
I think in MMA a lot of them come from this. A lot of them come from that distance management. Yeah. And I think that's, ooh, I think one point every time. Poke someone's eye, one point. And no one will ever do that again. Everybody will keep their hands closed.
Yeah.
You poke someone with the fingers one time, one point.
It should be trained. Like even at our practice, if somebody's putting their fingers out, I tell them, like, yo, close your fist. That should be like a natural. It shouldn't be even thought. It shouldn't even be a habit.
It's just such a natural instinct to try to push a guy away from you.
Yeah.
And if a guy's coming at you and you're trying to push him away, those fingers go right in there, man. You see the Wyman fight?
Oh, my God, yeah.
Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Yeah.
And that's one of those, too, where you're like... Same thing. Bro. Right. But then I'm, like, annoyed by Weidman because I'm like, bro, you did poke him in the eye, but he's saying, like, oh, he shouldn't have felt like that. I'm like, bro, when you get poked in the eye that bad... Yeah.
That was the referee's problem.
Yeah.
The referee should have stopped that. Should have stopped that on that last eye poke for sure. But maybe he didn't see it. Maybe he wasn't in a position to see it. Yeah. It's just... It's hard.
I mean, I understand how hard it is for a ref. Even with stopping fights. Sure. Looking at somebody... Who was this weekend? Gerald Mearshard, where he was getting...
beat up and then all of a sudden he caught up with the submission after that you're like some refs would have stopped the fight in that round so it's like the good refs that give you a longer leash and then the shorter refs that Dominic Cruz you and Dominic Cruz hates you for the rest of your life because you stop a fight too early who did Jared Cannoneer get stopped by who was his Jared not the last fight but the fight before that that was a bad stoppage
Yes, that's right. And that was another one of those situations, the same kind of situation where you're like, that's not a stoppage. He's standing up. He's up. The last one, he got hurt harder by Bojalio. When he got dropped, that looked worse than the fight where he got stopped previously.
And if you beat Imalov, you're in title contention again because he was on a streak, but now you're on a two-fight losing streak.
Yeah, and he's 40.
Because a ref stopped it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's crazy how those little moments in a fight can change the entire career of a fighter. You never know. Like at any moment, something screwy can happen, you know? So is this it? So here it is. Imalvov is hitting him with some good shots for sure. Jared's definitely getting hit, but he's firing back and the referee stops it. And he's like, what the fuck are you doing? And Herzog's a good ref.
He's a very good ref. And he faced some serious criticism after that fight. And I think, you know, he made a mistake.
Yeah.
You know, he was probably trying to save Jared from further punishment. He thought it was over. But Jared was like, I got a lot left. I was not as badly hurt as you thought. You know, the thing is, the problem is when a guy is teeing off on you, even if you're not getting hurt, it looks bad. Even if you're moving away and covering up and you're getting out of the range, you're stumbling around.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It looks bad, but you could still come back, and you've got to give the guy the opportunity to still come back. You don't let him take shots when he's out, but you've got to give him the opportunity to be able to come back. And when a guy's standing and still throwing back, you've got to give him a chance because fights are fights. Things change.
Guys, he might have got burned out from that because he emptied the gas tank. We've seen that happen many times.
And there's some fighters that just look bad. And they make it look, just because the body movement's weird. Right. I mean, Driscus always looks like he's dead tired and dead in there, and all of a sudden he comes back and wins a fight. But there's just guys that just don't have that good look all the time, even when they're taking punches.
Everybody's baffled by Driscus. Oh, my God. Like, what is going on? How's he beating everybody? Like, what is going on? It's wild. He's a bulldog. That dude, I was stunned. I was stunned by the Adesanya fight. I was stunned. Because Adesanya was looking good. He was looking good. But Drikus was looking good, too. And Drikus was landing a lot of leg kicks.
He's got that real sneaky left high kick, too. That left high kick comes out of nowhere.
It's just awkward. He just moved so awkwardly. Awkward.
But game.
Yeah.
So game.
He has so much heart. Even when he started taking those bad shots, when he was shooting, he was on his knees, and I was like, oh, he's about to break. And then all of a sudden, you see him still have a lot left in the tank.
He's a tank. He is a tank. He marches forward, man. And the way he capitalized, he hurt Izzy with a couple good punches. One good left hook, he hurt Lizzy, and Izzy moved away, and then they got into another exchange. He hit him with those two right hands from the clinch, and then got his back. And once he got his back, it was like that.
Yeah, it was quick.
He went right to the choke, right to the choke, and cinched it up. I mean, between the time he hit Izzy to the time where Izzy was tapping was just a few seconds.
Yeah. For me, I thought, does he look like he got a lot tired faster than he normally does? And I was like, he looked like he put a lot more muscle on.
Yeah.
So that could have been a key in it where his body wasn't used to moving like that. Maybe. With the extra muscle. But I was like, bro, he's moving a lot slower than usual in this third round.
I always wonder, and I wanted to talk to him about this, is if he's ever considered doing like one of those Marv Marinovich type camps. So Marv Marinovich, they had this philosophy that the most important thing was your gas tank. You already know how to fight. You already know how to fight. All your getting better has already been done.
And in the six weeks or eight weeks, whatever your camp is, you should be only concentrating on cardio. And they would do these explosive plyometric things. BJ hated it. He hated it. But if you look at his gas tank from those fights, it was unstoppable.
And when a fighter's not tired and the other fighter is tired and you realize all that work has paid off and you start putting it on him and you got this unlimited gas tank and you also haven't been beat up in training for six to eight weeks because you're really not sparring. You're really not doing much of anything other than your cardio. They're just doing plyometrics.
It's all just jumping around and shit. It's all... Have you ever seen Marlboro Innovative? See if you can find... Marv Marinovich trains BJ Penn. They had BJ doing all kinds of wild shit.
That's all they would do.
That's all they would do, man. Wow. That's all they would do. Nick Curzon came on the podcast. He was a protege of those guys. And that's his philosophy as well. He was telling me that it's really an elite fighter that's fighting in a world championship fight. They already know how to fight. You just got to give them the unstoppable gas tank.
And if you concentrate only on that, it's the most important thing. Because when a fighter gets tired, like when Izzy got tired in that fourth round with Drikus, you could see he's not the same Izzy in the first round that's like lightning fast and moving and countering and controlling distance and getting out of the range of shots. This is an Izzy that's experiencing fatigue.
Yeah.
But he already knows how to fight. The fighting is in his DNA at this point. He knows how to fuck people up. Yeah. Here's BJ training with the Marinoviches. So it's all these plyometrics, even with the arms. It's all this explosive shit. Everything is done for time and distance, and they measure everything.
And he just breaks guys down physically to the point where when they get into that octagon, they just have the craziest fucking gas tank of all time. It's an interesting philosophy.
Yeah, my mindset. Is this going around?
Eli Alex Pineda spots Israel Adesanya injury. Draws partial confession from stylebender. He said, this guy knows me. Said Izzy was injured.
He said he was noticing that he wasn't throwing kicks like he might have been injured. And then Izzy was like, it's almost like this guy knows me or something. So he's sort of admitting to being injured, but not.
Well, they clash shins a bunch of times. I mean, it could have happened in the fight. But the problem is he was still tired.
Yeah.
He's still tired. I mean, I'm sure he was injured. It's a crazy fight. You get injured.
In general, camps, you get so injured in camps. It's like the hardest thing. Even if a fight's quick, people don't realize that I just had an eight-week camp of nonstop training. You get more injuries in training camp than you do in the fight.
What is the worst injury you ever went into a fight with?
Um, it's funny. I was, uh, I was in Australia and I was fighting Tim Beans and then me and my coach were in the back warming up. And then, uh, we ended up going like knee to knee in the back during the warmup. And, like, I couldn't put my knee down to the ground after that. And it was, like, before the fight. So I was like, what the heck? I thought we just clashed knees. So it was, like, sore.
So, like, even in the fight, it just felt weird. So then after the fight, we went. And I still couldn't put my knee down to the floor for, like, two or three weeks. And then I ended up tearing my – it was a torn meniscus. Oh, wow. Yeah. But, like – Right before the fight. Right before the fight. We just, like, clashed knee to knee.
And it's – like you said, it's so much random stuff that could happen to you. Yeah. Because I like to spar in the back before my fights. Really? I like to feel it. So I'll have them put the shin guards on, headgear, and I'm throwing a lot harder than them. But I want to feel that so I can feel the distance. So I want to go out to the fight like it's my third or fourth round. Right.
Because I usually start slow when I'm at practice. But in the fight, I want it to be going right away. And I have cardio for it. So I want to feel like it's the third round already when I go out there.
Well, they always say that you should do that anyway, like really elevate your heart rate and then cool down and then compete.
Yeah. Some guys like to hit mitts. But for me, I like to spar. So I have my training partner come down there with me. And then you got to have a controlled guy that's not going to hurt you. But, yeah, we just go in the back. We throw. Wow. Yeah, we're throwing. So he'll have big gloves on. And, like, I get to the point where I hit me because I want to feel it.
So even in this fight with Leon, he threw, like – 50 kicks at me hard at the back. So I wanted to go out there like, all right, my arms feel it, my legs feel it. And my body's already gonna adjust to it. Yeah. That's so risky. It's risky. But I'm like, I'm about to go in a fight anyway. And once you get that adrenaline,
like you don't really feel nothing and I'll feel it afterward but like the biggest risk is just a headbutt or like catching your blood or something like that so that's why I make him wear a headgear and you know like I said you have to have the perfect training partner for it where he's gonna throw the right stuff at you he's there for you yeah he's not really sparring he's there for you yeah if I tell you hit me right here hard he'll hit me here hard but it's not like we're not gonna just sit there and bang in the back right wow who else does it that way
I don't know. For us, we caught ourselves doing it. I feel like I'm one of the first guys to start doing it that I know. And then I'll start telling my other teammates when I go corner them, like, let's do the same thing. And they'll like it, too. But, yeah, there's not a lot of guys that just – I know a lot of guys that just like hitting mitts.
And then you go out there, and then you start a lot slower. But for me, I'm like, bro, we're going to fight. I don't need to hit miss right now. I'd rather feel you throwing punches at me so I catch distance. So I look at the punches coming at me, and then I know where I'm backing up, where I'm not backing up.
You're already loose, for real loose.
Yeah, because even when I spar, I'm sparring like five or six rounds regardless. So I know I can go five rounds easy in the cage, especially with that extra adrenaline. So if I do those extra two rounds in the back, it's not going to affect me.
And you're going into the fight completely warmed up.
Yeah.
Psychologically too.
Yeah.
Like you're much closer psychologically to a fight than just hitting mitts and then all of a sudden someone's throwing back.
Yeah. The mindset is the hardest thing, right? To get locked in. Because when I first started fighting, I was like, I'm another guy. I don't like to curse. But then I was like, I was telling myself, I got to listen to rap music. I got to curse as I'm in the back. And I'm like trying to hit myself to hide myself up. But because I feel like I'm too calm.
But my coach is like, bro, that's that's a good thing. Like you being calm is good for you. You don't have to sit there and be something you're not. So then I was like, all right, well, let's stay calm. But then let's start adding inspiring. So now I feel that. So I'll just get it. So it was your idea. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Because you try different things at practices and I'd be like, all right, when did I feel good at sparring? I'll take notes of everything. I felt good on this bar day. And I did this type of drilling beforehand. And where I did this type of warmup beforehand. Cause my coach, he's like, he tries to mimic the fight with everything. So he'll tell us, I warm up on your own, do your own thing.
Then we're going to get your five sparring rounds in a cage. So for me, I'm trying to adjust to make my style. This helped me better today. What did I eat today? Let me write that down. This is when I felt the best. I had the most energy doing this. I had the most energy eating this. So now I got it down to a system that I like more than anything.
What is the food you take before you train?
Before I train? Yeah, what's the stuff that makes you feel the best? Like white rice. Usually my guy will make me white rice, eggs, and turkey bacon. So it's protein with good carbs. Not heavy. Not heavy, yeah. Something that's easy to digest. Something that I digest fast, yeah. Like I said before, I would just think I have to starve myself.
And then he came in and he was like, oh, like, what are you doing? Like, you're not going to have good practices with this way. But my mind said, I don't really care because I was just like, I know how to push myself no matter what.
Yeah. Well, having, you've gone through camps with Ramadan and that's where it gets, and you, we should tell people, there's ways to kind of make that a little easier on yourself where you sleep during the day and then you get up and then at nighttime, once you can eat and drink, then you do that. But you don't do that.
Yeah, I've had multiple times, multiple camps during it where I would still stick to my normal schedule of training where I'll train at 10.30 a.m. And I can't eat or drink in the morning. So I wake up at 5 a.m. for our morning prayer. You get your last sip of water before the sun rises.
And then I'll have like a protein shake, a date or something like that that will give me some energy for the morning. And then at 10 a.m. I have my morning practice. And then I have another practice.
And you can't drink water in between rounds? No. So you're training with no water?
No water or food. Yeah. So after the first three or four days, your body just adjusts. It feels good, honestly, because it makes you feel... Mentally, you're in a different place. Spiritually, you're in a different place in general because it's Ramadan. That's where, for any Muslim, that's the best time because you're not stressing out about other things. And you know that you're doing it for God.
And God's going to give you the strength to push through no matter what. So for myself... For the reasons I'm doing it, I know I can push through. And I know that whoever I'm training for is not doing what I'm doing. So I can push myself harder than them when it gets into the cage, when I can't drink, when I can't eat. So I think mentally it just puts me in a different place.
But for fight camps, like after it's time to break my fast, when the sun sets, that's when I have to be the smartest. That's where I got to put the carbs in, a lot of protein in, and then I got to make sure I'm getting my electrolytes, my salts, and just getting all the fluids back in like I just finished cutting weight. Right.
Because if I don't do it the right way, then the next morning I'll be screwed. Right. Because I'll feel super drained.
That's interesting. So you got to treat it like you're cutting weight almost.
Yeah. So like every night I'm treating it like a weight cut. I have my shakes, have my protein that I'm getting in the right way. And I try to hit a certain, at least a gallon and a half of water before bedtime. Yeah.
Okay. Yeah. So that it carries you on at least a little bit in the morning. Yeah.
Yeah, and then I said after first your body honestly just figures it out like but you would you wouldn't want to defend the title that way No, no Like I've before I was trying to chase everything right I was trying to chase that the next ranked guy I was trying to chase this and I felt like I couldn't say no to anything right because I was always looking for These guys say yes, and I can't waste an opportunity but now
I am the opportunity. Now I am the champion. So now I feel like it gives me more leeway to be like, no, I want to wait a little bit longer. This one feels better for me. My body's healthy now because it took me so long to get here. So now I don't have to go through a camp during Ramadan for it.
Well, now it's about your legacy as a champion. Yeah. And exactly all the things we were talking about before, the little thing can change your life, a little loss here, a little loss there. Fuck all those taking those fights on 10 days notice. Yeah. If the UFC calls you 10 days before an event, change your number. Change your fucking number, man. Don't let them talk you into it.
Come on, you can beat them. I know you work out all the time, and you start thinking, yeah, I do work out all the time. And they're like, we're going to offer you X amount of money. You're like, oh, shit, that's a lot of money. And you start spending that money. Exactly.
That's the hard part right now is because, like you said, for me, I hate saying no in general just because I have the fighter mentality. I ain't scared. I'll say yes to anything. The Gilbert Burns fight, it was three weeks notice. It was during Ramadan, and they were like, you win. Do it for the fans that just bought their ticket to their first event.
And I was like, yeah, I do want to do it for those fans. I'm not afraid of Gilbert. And Gilbert started chirping on Twitter like, oh, he's afraid. He doesn't want to fight. So then I'm like, I do want to fight. I'm not afraid of you. So then I say, yeah, no matter what. Then it's like, I'm thinking to myself, bro, I'm on a nine fight winning streak. I'm taking this fight on three weeks notice.
Why did I do this? I'm stupid. Like if I lose, I'm back in the line again. I was one fight away. Now if I lose this fight, I'm done. But yeah, it changes like your mindset. But like fighters are dumb. Like we just want the glory no matter what. I want to prove – for me, I want to prove everybody wrong.
So you have to temper that mindset. Yeah.
you know you have to think about the overall big picture because what got you to the dance is that mindset like anybody anytime let's go who am i fighting i'm ready i'm ready i'm ready i don't know but now once you got the title so you got to keep the dog but you also got to be intelligent about what fights you take and when you take them yeah and no one don't fight injured you know there's so many guys take fights i had a broken foot coming into this fight like what
Yeah, afterward, right? Yeah, what? And those are the guys that, like, for me as a fighter, if I lose, I lost. That's it. I hate guys who come up with a million excuses afterward because then, like, for the guy that won, it's like people are not going to give him credit for that win. And then for me, like, when I lost my fight, it was like, all right, I got to change this. I lost. That's it.
Like, that was always my mindset. Don't give excuses. If we're going into a fight injured, we accepted it injured. That's it. That's it. Put it out of your head. Because if you go in there overthinking about it, like, oh, I got an injured ankle or I got an injured rib. No, I should never took this fight in between rounds. You never want to second guess yourself in the fight.
And for me, I just try to clear my head of anything. Once we said yes, our name's on the contract. That's it. We're all in.
So who do you think is next? There's talk of Shavkat and there's talk of Kamaru Usman.
Those are the ones that I hear mostly. I think, like you said, for legacy-wise, Usman is obviously the bigger name. And he was the guy that Dana said was the best welterweight behind GSP or in front of GSP. But for boogeyman-wise and to shut up the naysayers, I think it's Shavkat. Because he is undefeated. He is the guy that everybody thinks is this killer. And then for myself, it's like...
Either one of them does a lot for me. Usman, obviously, would probably be bigger pay-per-view numbers. And then beating him, my resume is up there with GSP. Because then I have Usman on my resume, Leon, Maya, Wonderboy, all these big-name guys, Gilbert Burns, Brady. And it's like, look at that resume. It's neck-and-neck with his. But Shotgun's also that.
this young guy is going to come out here and beat you. Right after being Leon. Everybody comments, oh, you can't do the shotgun, though. Shotgun will kill you. And my chip on my shoulder is like, all right, let's go. I'm going to prove you guys wrong. Now I'm going to show you guys what I can do. Because for me, I...
Like you said with BJ Penn where it was like the strength conditioning was his whole camp that one. For us, we strategize everything. My coach is so good at breaking down stuff. We're so good at breaking down fighters that I have a game plan for everybody and a strategy for every single one of these fighters. And I already have a strategy for Shavkat.
I already have a strategy for Usman because I was chasing him so long. And I've been watching tape on these guys for so long. So I don't see anything from either one of them to where I'm looking at him like, I'm afraid of this guy because of this. I'm afraid of this guy because of that. I think Usman's a tougher fight than Shotgun, if I'm being honest.
But I do see many ways where I could beat them both. Because there's a lot of guys in the division that have to fight a certain way. They're specialists. Whether they're grapplers or strikers. I could strike with you. I could grab with you. I could wrestle with you. I could move laterally. I could move forward. Every time you see me in the cage, it's something different.
And I think that that comes from my team and the strategy that we bring to fighting. We look at it like a real sport instead of, all right, I'm in shape. Let's go fight. We look at it as like, what's this guy's weakest point? Oh, Leon can't move backwards? Let's move him backwards. Gilbert Burns, he can't take you down. He's going to gas out. He's not going to take me down.
Let's beat him up on the feet a little bit. Brady, he's only good on the ground. All right, let's strike with him. It's like I look at guys and I look at fights in a different way than a lot of these other fighters where some of these guys... Let's go in there. I see red. I don't care what happens.
Right.
Yeah.
I think for legacy, Usman's an important name. Also because Usman probably won't be fighting that much longer. You know, he's kind of at the end of his career. And I feel like the UFC owes him a little bit something for the Hamzat fight. Takes Hamzat on short notice. Yeah. That was like 11 days notice too, right?
Yeah. In Abu Dhabi. That's crazy.
That's crazy. That's crazy. And it was close. Very close. And he was winning the third round. Yeah. But I was going to say earlier about Oliveira and Saryukian. Like that's another fight where I felt like that is a five-round fight. That should be a five-round fight. And Charles almost caught him a couple times in that fight.
I'm like that's a wild close fight between two top of the food chain guys. It seems wrong to have that fight three rounds. Especially for number one contender status.
Yeah. Especially Charles, who's been in there for so long, was the champion. And he's like a different type of champion, right? He comes balls to the wall no matter what. So even if it's five rounds, you're not expecting it to go five rounds. But in general, I felt like it should have been there.
And he almost caught him a couple of times. Yeah. He got real close a couple of times. And Charles is, I think he's the most successful finisher with submissions in the history of the sport.
Yeah, and now he's two-fight losing streak himself.
Yeah, but the last one was so fucking close, and it's against Saroukian, who's the top of the food chain. Yeah. That 155-pound division, whew. It's... What happens if Islam decides to go to 170?
I mean, for me, I would never fight Islam, but, I mean, if I get two more... So how do you do that, though?
So what if you're going to... Okay, let's assume you beat Usman, let's assume you beat Shavkat...
I'm calling out Driscus.
100%.
Really? Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, I feel if there's anybody that can and be willing, who deserves it, it would be me because I had to fight five top five guys to get to where I am now. So I think at least two more, then I can start talking about one middleweight. So that's what you would do?
Islam would go to 70 and you'd go to 85?
Yeah, for sure.
Wow.
Would you pack on size to go to 85? Yeah, I mean, I would put on muscle, but in general, I've trained with a lot of 85ers, and I think I have good size for 85.
Well, Drakus is talking about going up to 205 and fighting Alex, which is crazy. So maybe he vacates the middleweight title, or who knows, maybe he goes double champ status.
But I feel like there's so many guys at 85 for him still to fight. Oh, yeah. He's fought Izzy. He's fought Strickland.
Whitaker. He fought Whitaker.
Yeah, you got Whitaker. But now you still got the young guns, right? Brendan Allen, who's a dog, came against Imalvov. The winner, I feel like, should be there. Hamzat's still there that people aren't even really talking about anymore.
If Hamzat wants to fight, and, you know, I think Hamzat's at 70 is the scariest Hamzat.
But that weight cut's crazy for him, though. Is it? Yeah.
What does he walk around at?
I've seen him out, and he looks like over, like, 215. Michael Morales, he just fought. He just beat Neil Magny. Yes. He came to train with us. I brought him in for Leon fight. And he was like, I was like, bro, you're huge. He's like, no, yeah, I'm like 190. And then my coach put him on a scale. He's like 218. I was like, bro. I was like, bro, what do you mean? What are you talking about?
He said, oh, no, I just had bad breakfast. And I was like, bro.
What did you eat? You eat a whole ostrich? What the fuck did you eat?
But he's young and he's huge. And I'm like, bro, this is not going to last long, bro. You can't cut this much weight. No, he's big. He's good, too. He's a dog.
He's good.
He's real good. Just training with him. He was like another one of those guys we brought in. And it was like... He was a perfect training partner where he didn't have ego where I'm fighting somebody in my weight class. He's undefeated. He'd come in and say, oh, he's fighting for the belt. Let me go crazy with him. No, he was such a good kid.
Oh, that's nice.
Yeah, he fought, trained really well with us. And then to see him get out there and finish Neil Magny, who he thinks is the perfect gatekeeper for any up-and-comer, right? Yeah. He's that test where you go past them. It's like, you're a real deal.
Yeah, that's the real deal. And he looked great in that fight. Yeah, he's a real contender. There's so many real contenders. Yeah. And your division is just so filled.
and yeah people forget man like even gary uh jdm like all these guys people forget about jeff neal you know yeah jeff neal's a fucking killer he's going against rda now yeah that's funny that's funny that's a wild fight yeah i want to rda was another guy trained with nick curse on oh yeah yeah he was using that sort of uh that when rda was in his prime
Him and his cardio days where he could just go nonstop, punching, striking, wrestling.
That's what we're talking about, though. That's what it was.
Wow.
He was doing that same kind of workout with Nick Curzon.
That's wild. Does he still train people?
Curson? I'd have to reach out. I bet he still does. I know he was training a bunch of other athletes in a bunch of different sports as well. But his whole thing is plyometrics and foot strength and your ability to move and continue to move. It's interesting because I see both ways. I see like, look, Sean Strickland is the craziest fucking cardio of anybody, right?
Because all that guy does is spar. He's fighting every day. He spars more than anybody in the UFC and he gets hit less. That's nuts.
Yeah.
That's nuts. So his cardio is from his being completely comfortable with fighting all the time. And I'm sure he does other things too, but most of which, if you talk to Nick Sick and all those guys that train with him, most of the stuff what he does is spar.
Yeah.
He just loves sparring. He loves getting in there and sparring.
And he spars stupidly. Stupidly? Yeah. Stupidly? Yeah. There's guys that will spar light and spar for distance and managing and stuff, and there's guys that just want to throw it on.
But he doesn't get hit much. The reason why he's so good at that, first of all, that style is so weird. Stands straight up. Has the Philly shell and throws punches in weird angles and he's just peppering you, peppering you, peppering you, keeping them on you. Keep to the body, front kick to the body, peppering you, keeping on you. It's a weird style, man.
Yeah. It's a weird style. It's, like, agitating, especially if you're a guy like Adesanya who wants that distance and wants it to look pretty. To have somebody who's, like, striking and looks so ugly just in front of you just nonstop. Yeah. Or, like, against, what's his, Bocinia, where he just threw, like, 55 teeps at him every round.
Yeah. I was shocked at that fight. But that was a good example of how hard he is to hit. He's fucking hard. I mean, because I think, you know, for some reason, I don't know what happened, but I think that... I think some fighters, they just have, like, when Stylebender beat Bohemia, like, he was kind of a different guy after that fight, you know? There's some guys, they have a fight...
And for whatever reason, they never are the same guy again. And it's not even a bad beating. It might be like a psychological thing.
Yeah. I think it's the undefeated thing. He was undefeated in that fight. Then you get your first loss and you don't have that same mindset anymore. Because... You were killing everybody. Then all of a sudden you lose, and you lose by finish. You're like, was I not as good as I thought I was?
Yeah.
When Izzy dry humped him. Izzy has the best celebrations after any fight. The fight with Pejeta, when he knocks Pejeta out and he shoots the three arrows into him, that's the greatest.
To be thinking about that beforehand is just wild. And then to put it out there, it was so beautiful.
I don't think he said he did think about that. I think he just did that in the moment. In the moment?
Yeah. Yeah, that's wild.
Well, you know, Alex always shoots arrows at you in the beginning.
I don't think there's a better, there can't be a better celebration than that one. No, it's the best. Nothing's going to come close.
It's the best. And then the speech afterwards makes it even better.
Yeah.
You know, the speech was incredible.
That was really good. Yeah. Do you think we ever see the third one?
knows man I don't know if Izzy wants to fight that dude again I don't think he wants to fight him at 205 I think 205 you don't get a drained Alex Pejeta you get a destroyer yeah what he just did to Prohaska everybody's got to be nervous all he has to do is one shot just touch you once and I think at 185 he doesn't take a shot as well either yeah I think that draining of your body and you know your brain dehydrates the whole deal yeah and Drick has said if he fights him again he doesn't want any excuses so he doesn't want Alex to come down to 85 he wants to go up to 205
But if you're fighting him, if your first move is not shooting a single leg, I don't know what kind of coaching you have. Right. Because that should be your first goal. At least in the first round, try to grapple him.
Something.
Yeah.
You got to do something.
I never want to sit there and go toe-to-toe with him.
It's just too dangerous. It's weird. It's like some guys just have weird power.
Yeah.
It's weird. It's different than everybody else's by a magnitude. So a large gap between his power and everybody else's. And with everything. With kicks, with punches, anything he hits you, that scissor knee that he hit Michelinus with.
Oh, yeah. And I feel like he's always sparring to himself. He's always posting videos of sparring with the normal classes. It's not like he's even had crazy training partners.
No, he spars light.
He'll spar light. He even sparred light with Strickland.
That's the only time Strickland spars light. Strickland goes in there and spars with him. He's like, let's just touch each other.
Yeah, I don't even want to feel him with big gloves on.
Yeah, fuck all that. And he's talking about going to heavyweight, which is even crazier. Him against Aspinall would be wild, though. Wild. But you got to think Aspinall can take him down.
But would his ego want him to take him down? Or like, all right, let me show you how I can strike with you.
I think Aspinall, the moment he realized, if he can hit him on his feet, he'll try. But if he can't, the takedown's always there. And he's so much bigger. I mean, Aspinall's a solid 255.
And I think he's a black belt as well, right? Yeah.
Wicked on the ground. And he's had nothing but success. Other than that one time where he fought Curtis and his knee blew apart. But that's just a freak accident.
Yeah, it's crazy, right? I can tell people that so many random things could happen in a fight. That could happen. And then you look at guys that are undefeated for so long and people don't respect how hard that is to get there.
Yeah, it's a crazy sport, man. It really is. And for you, what a journey to be 23 years old and step into a gym for funsies. You know what I'm saying?
learn a little martial arts what the hell next thing you know you're the champion of the world it's wild man yeah it's it's it's a blessing right like just thinking about the whole journey man like spiritually it puts you into a different mindset too because you just thank god for everything no matter what and for myself thinking of what like i said i was going to school to try to be a lawyer and i always tell my mom yeah i'll quit when i lose and it's like
Now I could have went from that to being able to do something like this every single day. And being able to train every day.
And being able to do that kind of a fight, a world title fight, your first world title fight, at five in the morning in another country. Bananas. Yeah. Just a crazy accomplishment. Enemy territory. Enemy territory. People dying.
But tired.
Tired enemy. Sleepy.
But it's wild because the fans out there were crazy. There were still so many fans. We ended up having a parade. That same night, because we got out of the fight, it was like at 7 a.m., and then we had people out there that set up like a parade for us in Manchester. Oh, wow. Yeah, and the streets were like crazy packed. It was full. Wow. Yeah. So you just stayed up.
Yeah, because it was like 7 a.m., so I went back to the house, and everybody wants to come see you now, so we're just chilling, and then all of a sudden it gets to like—
noon and you take your try to say everybody's taking a power nap now because we were up from the night before at midnight so it came up to like two three o'clock and then everybody started falling asleep so for myself i'm still wide awake i mean we watched the fight and then they were like let's go get some food and they like surprised me with like a huge parade at like one of their busiest streets in manchester oh wow and they said like they said the streets got like shut down but they have like a huge muslim population over there
In England area. So... Like... A lot of the... Even before the fight... I was getting a lot of messages from people like... You're not in any territory. This is your home. And... We were blessed out there. Because people took care of us the whole time. That's awesome. My team had food. Everything. Every single day. Like... Even the gym. When I was first looking for myself...
A lot of the gyms I was messing out there were like, no, you can't. You're fighting Leon. We can't open the doors for you.
Right.
Yeah. But then we met some guys that opened up their gym for us. And there were lawyers driving us around at 4 a.m. They had other jobs. But they were driving us around, staying up with us at 4 a.m. and then having to go to work at 9 a.m.
wow yeah well they're probably excited to be a part of it yeah that's what they a lot of them said like you know we're just happy to be here we don't want nothing from you and it was just yeah it was such a cool thing that's amazing you meet just like new friends right new new people and it was for my team for my family like to have that journey all that all of us together my dad went my mom didn't go what did it feel like when they put that belt around your waist
It was wild because I got to try to think back to it. And for me, at first, it was like, I told you so. I told you I could beat Leon. That was my mindset the whole time. I didn't want to even think about the belt. It was more so to be like, I beat Leon. You guys thought I was going to lose to him. I had to live with it for three years of everybody telling me I'm going to lose to this guy.
He would have beat you the last four rounds. He would have killed you. And for myself... For that, it was just like, I told you I could do it. I told you I was better than him. And his coach and his team were all talking trash to me before the fight. So just to rub it in their face.
But then for me to be able to wear the title and to be able to carry my flag with the title and to show people what's possible. Because obviously you know what's going on right now in the world. For Palestine, for them to have a champion right now, for them to have a win from that fight, That meant more than anything. Because I was getting so many messages from them.
We had people in Gaza that were watching video of it. And it was kids at a refugee camp. They were watching videos of the fight. And it was such an amazing thing.
There's you.
And even from my coach right there, Mike Valley. He's a small gem. He doesn't talk big. And for me to stick with him and for us to do it together from the start. now he has another world champion. We're literally a tiny gym in there and he does so much for a lot of his fighters.
He brings a lot of guys in from Chile, Mexico, and he puts them in like apartments, doesn't charge them rent, just like helps them grow from their start.
You just have to work hard. That's amazing, man.
Yeah. So, yeah, a lot of it just comes back down for my people in general. Me, it was just to prove everybody that I could beat them. I could beat Leon. I told you so. But, now we got a real title and Just attention. So for me, it's like using that now.
You're calling the shots. Congratulations, brother.
Thank you, my brother.
Very impressive. Amazing.
It's a blessing, man. I'm blessed to be here to talk to you. I'm blessed to be able to, like, for people now to know my story, hear my story. And in general, if I get to have a conversation like this and carry this belt around, people will look at me and look at themselves with a dream.
That's the parade. Yeah. What a picture. God damn, what a great picture. That picture's incredible. That looks like a fake picture. That's like AI.
It's so perfect. They literally had smoke and everything. It was wild. That's amazing. Yeah, I was so surprised by the whole thing.
That's amazing. Well, I can't wait to see you fight again, man. I can't wait to see you defend your title, whoever it's going to be. I hope I'm there. I can't wait to see it.
My brother, I appreciate it. Hopefully it's in the U.S. so you can become a commentator. Yeah, hopefully.
All right, well, congratulations. Thank you, brother. Bye, everybody.