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Dan Hardy is a mixed martial artist, host of the “Full Reptile” podcast, and commentator for the Professional Fighters League. https://www.youtube.com/@DanHardyFR https://www.pflmma.com
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Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day.
Yep, we're rolling.
My man.
Good to see you, brother.
Great to see you, man.
What is this?
We're on the neck.
What is that?
Oh, this is Moldavite.
Have you heard of Moldavite before?
No.
So a meteorite hit in the Czech Republic millions of years ago.
And the particular tektite that was created from the earth matter falling back
down to the ground became Moldavite.
And most tektites are like a black or a brown, but Moldavite's green.
Let me show you.
It's really interesting.
Jamie's got some on the screen already.
Here we go.
Hold it up to the light.
Whoa.
Oh, that's fucking dope.
So it's basically like nuclear glass.
Exactly that, yeah.
Same type of...
Wow.
And then that's the case my wife had made for me, and it's wrapped in an old
chain that belonged to my dad.
Oh, that's so dope.
Yeah.
Keep it with me all the time.
Yeah, that's fucking cool, man.
I used to have a piece in, you know, the old Thai amulets with the little
bronze.
I used to have one in that.
Took it out.
I took the butter out and put a piece of Moldavite in it wrapped in a piece of
UFC canvas.
And I wore it just all the time.
But then my wife upgraded me as she tries to do all the time.
So the UFC gave you a chunk of canvas?
I have a whole canvas.
Ooh.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Nice.
From which fight?
It was Vadum Volkov from UFC London.
And it's covered in Vadum's blood.
He got his nose busted pretty badly.
But it had to be in quarantine for like 12 months until they gave it me.
Really?
Yeah.
Because of the blood?
It's a biohazard.
So does it all die after 12 months?
I guess so.
I mean, I guess so.
It was kept in a warehouse and then they, yeah, they dropped it off for me.
Do they have to check it?
I don't know.
To make sure it's not...
I don't know.
What would be...
I mean, I wouldn't lick it, but it looks fine to me.
What could possibly be in the blood?
I mean, doesn't everybody get tested before the...
That's a good point.
That's a good point.
Maybe there's just some kind of rule.
I think they incinerate them all now, don't they?
Do they?
I don't think they keep them.
I mean, they keep the...
They've got the pieces with the names, but I think the rest of it gets disposed
of now.
Huh.
Yeah.
I wonder if there's any logic to that.
I don't know.
Or if it's just people being scared.
Yeah, maybe.
Maybe.
It's a cool thing.
I've actually got it on the wall of my house, believe it or not.
Oh, really?
Yeah, I had it in the gym, but then it's on the wall of my house now.
Oh, that's nice.
That's pretty cool.
Yeah.
It's just a nice thing to have, you know?
Dude, what happened with you in the UFC?
Like, I don't know the story.
I don't.
I know you got into it with Herb Dean.
Yeah.
About a stoppage, a late stoppage.
Yeah.
And you were upset.
This was during COVID, right?
Yeah.
This was, I think it was Fight Island 3.
And it was the second fight of the night where it happened.
There was a heavyweight that had gone down and just took a bunch, too many
shots before the fight was stopped.
But the Jai Herbert Francisco Trinaldo one was the one where you heard me shout
up and yell, stop the fight.
And it was just, it was a weird circumstance.
And look, you know, caveat, Herb's a great referee.
He's refereed me a lot.
But every now and then people do make mistakes.
And in Fight Island, everyone was tired.
It was quiet in the arena as well.
So you can, I mean, you can hear me yelling.
It wasn't the first time I'd done it, though.
I yelled at him in Moscow for a CB Dalloway fight.
And it's, the thing is, there's a point where I'm there for the knockouts.
I'm there for the blood.
But I'm also there to make sure that once it's done, it's done.
And those fighters are protected.
Right.
You know, and the way that Jai Herbert fell, it was just, you get the reeds,
you know it.
Yeah.
You see him fall and you're like, man, there's something not right about the
way that he's fallen.
And then as he landed, he was looking up at the lighting rig, but his arms were
kind of stretched out.
So he was gone.
He was gone.
He was out of it.
And then there was this, and I think, of course, because it was quarantine
times, it was silent in there.
The time, it was like you could hear a heartbeat in the air.
And there was just this moment where Trinaldo stood over him and looked at Herb.
And Jai's still on the floor, kind of not fully conscious.
And Trinaldo just started cracking him with more shots.
And that was the point where I stood up straight away and I'm yelling and Paul
Felder was doing the same thing next to me.
You actually see Herb look at me through the cage and point at me and tell me
to shut up.
The thing that annoyed me about it was the miscommunication about what had
happened.
Because the message that got back to Dana and everybody at the top was that I
left my commentary desk and went over and I was stood outside the cage.
And I wasn't.
Herb came to me.
So, like, I'm at my desk.
We've got this piece of plexiglass because it's all COVID.
Hilarious.
The plexiglass.
That stopped everything, didn't it?
And then we had another desk in front of that.
So, Herb's basically...
And Herb doesn't move very quickly most of the time.
He's a big old boy.
But he was moving at pace towards me.
So, I stood up, took my headset off and put them down or had them in my hand.
And he came over and he started yelling at me and, you know, you stay out of it.
Can't be shouting and this and that.
And that's where you see me go.
That was two times.
It's the second time of the night.
After the...
I mean, as it's going on.
And this was when we're not doing interviews in the cage as well, right?
So, I'm standing up.
Also hilarious.
Also hilarious, yeah.
Kind of just breathing on each other, sweating and bleeding on each other.
And we're shaking hands in the hotel and everything.
And it was kind of odd.
But because I'm not going into the cage, I'm now turning around and my
interview camera is behind me.
So, basically, what the UFC wanted me to do when Herb's marching over to me was
to stand up, turn my back on him and put my headset on.
And me as a martial artist, I'm not going to turn my back on someone when they're
moving at me with the kind of pace that he was.
So, everything got a bit delayed because I was having an interaction with Herb.
As soon as the event was over and I was on my way over to the ESPN desk, Herb
and I bumped into each other.
And we had just had a brief minute conversation.
Everything was cool.
I said, look, I respect you as a referee.
You left that one too late.
There was no doubt.
And it was the second one the night.
And there are other instances where it's happened, right?
Nobody's perfect.
I would make mistakes as well, of course.
Very difficult job.
Very, very difficult job.
The thing that annoyed me though, and for me it was done then, when I got
backstage, someone from the production team confronted me about approaching Herb.
I tried to make sure that the narrative was set correctly, that he actually
came over to me.
But that never got escalated up the chain.
So, it was always, you know, you approach an official, et cetera, et cetera.
And it just so happened to coincide with where someone had approached Mark Goddard
and pushed him at another event, UAE Warriors.
So, the whole thing kind of got convoluted and bundled into the same thing.
Was that the Conor situation?
No, that was in Bellator.
But there was another one.
It was UAE Warriors.
And I think someone had kept hold of a choke too long.
And then Goddard had separated the fight.
And then he came over to Mark and he's trying to push Mark and stuff.
And when Dana actually made the statement about if you approach an official,
you'll be gone, that was actually in reference to the other thing that happened.
But it was LinkedIn with me as well.
The thing that pissed me off is when I got back to the hotel or to the airport
or whatever, Herbert posted this video.
And he was like sitting at the airport, you know, trying to justify what had
happened.
But it was just like, he was saying things like, if you think you're the
smartest guy in the room and just like poking at me just constantly.
And I'm like, I've got a bunch of hours sitting on a plane on the way back to
the UK now.
And you know what I'm like, I'm pulling this apart.
And I'm like, did I step out of line?
Did I say something I shouldn't have said?
And I'm assessing it.
And then I'm going, no, hang on a minute.
Like, my intention is to protect that fighter that needed protecting, right?
His family are at home sitting watching that.
They don't want to see him getting smashed in the face unnecessarily.
They know the risks of the job already.
So I kind of sat on the plane on the way home and I'm like, how am I going to
deal with this?
So I dealt with it the way that I would always do.
I get all the facts on the table.
I try and organize my response.
And what I did was I created a video that I put up on YouTube, which the UFC
actually contacted YouTube and had them delete off the back end.
And it was about an hour and a quarter long.
It was a decent chunk of information.
But I went through what had happened on the night, other circumstances where
Herbert maybe not pulled the trigger quick enough,
or times when he'd been indecisive, like Cowboy Masvidal.
I'm not sure whether you remember that one.
Cowboy went down at the end of the first round and they actually helped him
back to his stool and sat him on the stool.
And Greg Jackson's going, hey, Cowboy, you're okay.
Everything's fine.
Then he went out and got TKO'd at the start of the second round.
But if you remember that, Herb jumps in and waves the fight off at the end of
the round
and then decides to restart it in the second.
So I pointed out a bunch of things where he could have maybe done a better job.
I also gave him the benefit of the doubt in, like, the Robbie Lawler-Ben Askren
fight,
where, to me, that wasn't stopped early.
You could see Robbie Lawler's arm fall for a second.
I think he went out for a split second in that moment.
And then came back and then complained about it.
So in that moment...
Hard to tell.
Very hard to tell.
But you can see Herb in that situation going, oh, man, I'm sorry.
I thought you were out.
Like, those things are going to happen.
I would always rather the fighter be protected than just kind of leave it for
the benefit of the doubt
and just let him take...
It's different with a submission, of course.
But the point is I was trying to create something that was quite balanced.
And the other thing as well was, you know, it was Fight Island.
Like, we're getting tested every other day.
Like, we're quarantined in our rooms sometimes.
We were doing fights at weird hours of the day.
So people were kind of foggy and fatigued.
And it was just a weird environment.
So I gave Herb and all the officials the benefit of the doubt that, you know,
you're not going to be at 100% at 4 o'clock in the morning.
But it was the way they responded to me which pissed me off.
And then the way that the UFC kind of pulled all their support for me, you know.
And they contacted me and they said, hey, we're going to organize a
conversation with you and whoever.
And I said, I just want to let you know I've got this video ready to go.
And I am going to post it because it vindicates what I did, in my opinion.
But it also offers some understanding of what Herb was trying to do and the job
that he has and how difficult it is.
And unfortunately, I mean, it got a couple of hundred thousand views before it
was taken down.
But it's still on the channel now.
If you look at it, it's just a little gray square with three dots.
And there's just nothing on the back.
They literally went into my channel and took it away.
That's so weird that they could take down something that doesn't violate any
laws or rules.
You know, that's kind of weird.
I don't know whether they contacted YouTube and said, hey, you know, he's used
some UFC footage.
Did you?
Yeah, I did.
But at the time, I had permission to use UFC footage.
They were allowing me to make war rooms and all kinds of stuff.
Right, because it only helps them.
That's it.
I mean, I was an ambassador for Europe as well as being a commentator.
So my job in my mind was to spread the word of MMA, right?
I'm trying to educate everybody as much as I can.
And I could make a lot more content through my channel than I could rely on the
UFC to make content.
So I was just trying to churn extra stuff out to keep drawing attention to it.
So they'd given me permission to use footage on my channel.
And I'd built a company off the back of this.
I'd employed my Raptors.
I think you remember meeting those guys.
And all that was gone, you know?
And the thing is, it was like, I understand that the UFC are not going to fire
me for shouting up to protect a fighter.
But I knew on that day my card was marked, you know?
And I knew that my card was marked on that day because I was too stubborn.
I didn't wait for the UFC to tell me what I should have said and this and that.
I posted my video.
I wanted to clear my name.
And I wanted to back up the reason why I'd said that because it wasn't the
first time I'd done it.
You know, it was the first time I'd done it in a quiet, empty arena.
But if you go back to, I think it was Moscow with CB Dalloway.
And he was fighting a guy called Murtaz Aliyev.
And for about a minute 15, he was just curled up in a ball on the floor.
And he was just getting pounded.
He went from fetal position to completely belly down to fetal position on the
other side in the space of that minute.
And at the end of the round, Herb's just stood over him.
And he's lying there like a corpse on the floor.
I'm like, this fight should have been stopped easy 30 seconds ago.
Even CB Dalloway came out and said that he didn't feel protected by it.
But the difference was that we've got 25,000 people in the arena.
So you can't really hear me shouting, stop the fight in that scenario.
It's just an awkward situation because I like Herb.
I would never have him referee my wife.
I always make a request to make sure that he doesn't.
But that's more because of the history between me and him.
I don't want to put him in a position where I'm going to get angry at him again
for not doing his job.
But I was disappointed that the UFC kind of pulled all support for me and
backed Herb in that situation.
Was there a situation backstage where you got into it with someone else from
the staff?
Because that's what I had heard, that someone said something to you and you
yelled at someone backstage.
I did, yeah, I did.
But in the scenario, I just left the ESPN desk.
And this is like 5 o'clock in the morning or something now after the broadcast.
And I walked backstage.
I won't mention his name.
I love him.
He's a lovely guy.
But everyone's kind of ragged and tired in Fight Island, you know what I mean?
And as I'm walking back to my dressing room, he came flying at me.
And he's like, hey, you can't ever approach an official and blah, blah, blah.
I'm like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Hang on a fucking minute.
And like, just the intensity that he came at me with just spiked my adrenaline
again.
And I'm already kind of like, I'm heightened because the fights have just ended.
You know what it's like with adrenaline.
I'm like three days.
I'm like excitedly shaking after a good event.
And it was just the energy that he came at me with just pushed my energy up.
So then we had this back and forth where I'm like, hey, you need to get your
facts right.
He approached me and blah, blah, blah.
And I don't know whether that information had already been passed on to people
above him to say,
Dan Hardy's just approached Herb Dean after the fight.
When in actuality, that just never happened.
And because that was the perspective that the guys in the truck had got, like,
I automatically felt like I'm going to get in trouble here.
Like, I've done something really wrong.
Right.
You know?
And I mean, the thing is, it's like, I've been working with that man for a long
time.
The guy backstage I'm talking about.
I love him.
He's a lovely guy.
We've always got on.
If I saw him now, we'd have a good conversation.
It was just, you know, you know, it's like heightened experience and just the
energy that he came at me with,
especially with the misinformation of me now, you know, being the guy that took
my headset off
and marched over to the door to wait for Herb as he walked out.
Right, right.
I just didn't do that.
Like, I'm there to do my job.
But ultimately, above my job and above everything, UFC and everything included,
I'm there to make sure that MMA is stable and the fighters are safe.
Right.
Because that's my instinct, you know?
Everybody that gets in that cage is someone's son or daughter or father or
brother.
You know what I mean?
And in those moments, the people in the cage, they go from being the best
fighters in the world
to a very, very human victim that is not being protected by the referee.
And from a fighter's perspective, I want to feel that warlike feeling when I
step in the cage.
I want to feel like I can throw everything at my opponent.
And I also want to feel safe that they can throw everything at me.
Right.
I don't want to have in my mind, oh, hang on.
Do I need to pull this punch because the referee's not going to jump in?
Like, there are three people in there.
One person's got the job to protect both of us.
Neither of us have a responsibility to protect each other.
Right.
We don't have a responsibility to pull a punch after a knockdown.
We don't have a responsibility to stop when the bell rings.
Right?
Who was the referee with Anderson Silva and Michael Bisping?
Oh, that's a good question.
Because that was a weird one, right?
That fight should have been over.
Yeah.
Anderson hits him with a flying knee and then hops on top of the cage.
Yeah.
And they didn't stop the fight.
Was that Herb?
It might have been.
It might have been.
Look, the thing is, I mean...
Can you find that out, Chamby, please?
Herb's refereed me a bunch of times.
And I like Herb.
But that, obviously, was Anderson's beef.
We made mistakes, right?
That was Anderson's issue.
Anderson should have followed up until the referee stops.
Absolutely.
But you could have easily said, this fight's over.
I mean, yep.
Yeah.
That's a crazy situation.
So, Michael, I think, had lost his mouthpiece.
Yes.
And this is also when Michael was blind in his right eye.
Right?
So, you have to take this into consideration.
So, Michael loses his mouthpiece.
And at some point in time, he points like that he wants his mouthpiece back.
And look at the time.
We're into the last 20 seconds.
Right.
And it's a beautiful knee that Anderson lands as well.
So, he points his mouthpiece.
That's you, buddy.
Uh-huh.
One of my favorite fights to have called.
Bang.
Right on the bell.
Okay, the fight's not over.
You're saying the fight's not over.
But in this situation.
That actually makes sense because he was still conscious and he was still up
and he had his
hand down.
Yeah.
That was Anderson's fault.
Oh, for sure it was.
For sure it was.
And unfortunately for Anderson, he had the adrenaline dump of thinking he'd won
the fight.
Right.
He got up on the cage, started celebrating and then had another 10 minutes.
And this is where Michael Bisping is just a gangster.
See, he's pointing to his mouthpiece and he's communicating with Herb, but Herb
didn't stop the fight.
I mean, the thing is, like, this second's left.
Anderson Silva's got no responsibility to pull any punches, right?
No.
What a perfect fucking flying knee, too.
It was lovely, wasn't it?
God, he was a master in his prime.
And this is post-leg break, too.
Yeah.
This wasn't even prime, Anderson, you know?
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Still one of the best fights I've ever called.
This and Max Holloway, Calvin Cater.
One of the best fights I've ever called.
It was a privilege to be sat cage side for it.
But like, Bisping's, you know, coming out now with 10 minutes left and stamps
his authority on this fight, which was very, very impressive.
But it was just, this was just a messy situation.
And I kind of didn't really mind this because of the circumstance that had
played out.
I mean, Herb was very clear in him saying, I didn't stop the fight.
Right, right, right.
But then if, like, if you remember the, um, the Cowboy-Saroni-Masvidal fight.
I do remember that one.
Right.
He gets dropped bad.
Yeah.
And Herb's bad habit at the end of the round, if there's an engagement, he
steps in, he waves his arm.
That's a signal the fight's off.
Right.
Right.
You don't wave off the round, you wave off the fight.
Right.
So, so at the end of the round, the referee's job is to get in between the
fighters.
Right.
Right.
Cowboy was on the floor.
Masvidal was already wandering off.
I mean, this is like, that's, um, and watch this.
So, so this is the problem, right?
You have to leave the fighter to get back to their stall.
You can't touch him.
Herb's holding him up there.
Right.
And then they come up, they, they come over, they put the seat down, the stool
down.
He sits down and then Greg Jackson's saying, Hey, cowboy, it's okay.
This always happens to us.
Like, he's just not conscious for this whole minute.
He goes back out and gets TKO'd almost immediately afterwards.
But, but Herb has a habit of waving the fight off.
Yeah.
But that didn't look like he was waving the fight off.
That looked like he was signaling the end of the round.
He didn't do this.
Potentially.
But then if you've got one arm in between and you wave him with the other one,
you know,
I just don't, you don't need to, you don't wave at the end of the round.
I think by his hand movements there, I don't think that qualifies.
I think he's saying, stop, stop, stop.
I think he's putting his hands out.
He's got a hand on and a hand out.
Now the other hand's waving, that right hand's waving.
It's just, it's an unnecessary motion and I'm okay with the debate about it.
Like, doing the breakdown of the Jai Herbert finish, I learned something really
important,
which I don't know is, I've asked lots of referees and most of them have not
heard about it.
Fencing response, right?
Have you heard of this?
No.
It's a concussion symptom.
And it's a weird thing.
In a newborn baby, when you turn their head to the side, their arms come up
like a boxer.
Really?
Right.
It's a weird, I don't know exactly where it comes from,
but it's something that happens when people get concussed.
Like, you will have seen this before in K1.
There was a really famous one where a guy gets kicked in the head and as he's
going down.
You see it in football a lot.
Yes, you see it in football a lot.
So there's one with Marlon Marat.
Yeah.
Yeah, look, see arms go out straight.
But I have seen that.
Yeah, you've seen a lot of that.
You want the judges, you want the referees to know about fencing response,
to be able to recognize all of the different tells of a concussion, right?
So, and I didn't know about fencing response until after the Jai Herbert fight,
but I had, in my video that was taken down, I had lots and lots of different
versions of fencing response,
from K1 to football to rugby, all kinds of stuff.
It's a tell of concussion, right?
Like, consciousness is not removed immediately with every punch, is it?
Like, you've got a, everything's on a spectrum.
You're either completely conscious or completely unconscious.
But the window in which the fight needs to be stopped is probably 5 or 10%
towards the end of that spectrum, right?
The point where someone's unable to defend themselves or not intelligently
defending themselves.
It's very subjective.
It's very, very subjective.
The problem is, like, when a referee stops too early, it's very frustrating.
And we have seen many instances.
And then we've also seen some instances where it looked like a fight could
easily be stopped,
and the fighter comes back and wins.
Frankie Edgar Gray Maynard.
What a, what, I mean, fights.
What, great fights?
Crazy fights.
Yeah.
Crazy fights.
But in the one where Frankie won, where he KO'd him,
that it looked like he was out before.
It was like three times in the first round he was drunk.
Oh my goodness.
I mean, Gray Maynard was a beast.
He was a big, strong, powerful wrestler.
Really big for 155.
And Frankie famously did not cut weight.
Frankie was one of the rare guys that fought at 155
and essentially weighed, like, maybe 160.
If that.
You know, and he was just fast.
And because of that, he was very durable.
And this is a thing that we need to, I mean,
I fucking hate weight cutting.
I hate it so bad.
I really do.
I think it's, I think it's sanctioned cheating.
I think we should have figured out a way to eliminate it
a long time ago.
But, you know, honestly, when I watch one FC,
I don't think they've figured out a way to do it either.
Like, it's not, it's almost like it's ingrained in the culture
to the point where I don't know,
other than, like, random USADA style weigh-ins.
You know what I mean?
Instead of a drug test, like, hey, Dan, get on the scale.
Oh, but I've been eating.
I don't give a fuck.
Get on the scale.
Like, what do you weigh?
You're fighting 155.
You weigh 190.
This is crazy.
Oh, no, I'm just four weeks into camp.
You know, the next five weeks,
I really tighten up my diet.
Get the fuck out of here, bitch.
You're huge.
Yeah.
You're way too big for 155.
Yeah.
I mean, well, look at Anthony Johnson.
You know, one of the...
Right.
I'm resting still.
Rumble.
Like, he was 214 on the night when we fought.
We both weighed in at 171.
He was 214.
That was before the days of IVs, you know?
Yeah.
That's crazy.
You have to wonder what it does to people, you know?
Oh, it destroys you.
It probably had some sort of an impact on his health problems that he had.
Yeah.
Because he was an enormous guy.
I ran into him one time at a lobby at the hotel.
And I go, how much do you weigh?
And he goes, 230.
I'm like, bro, get the fuck out of here.
That's crazy.
Why?
You're going to lose 60 pounds?
6-0 is nuts.
Crazy.
And he was 230, built like a house.
I mean, he was a fucking stacked dude.
It was crazy.
And unfortunately, those big muscular guys can cut more weight because muscle
is more water.
Yeah.
But it's horrible.
Like, I mean, look, Izzy landed a perfect punch on Pereira.
But I feel like Pereira at middleweight just could not take the same kind of
shots that Pereira can take at light heavyweight.
It's just, you're dehydrating the shit out of yourself.
He would weigh in 40 pounds more than he weighed, like on fight night.
Fight night, he would be 40 pounds heavier.
That's crazy, isn't it?
I think it was 41.
I think he was 226.
Yeah.
Which is bananas.
That's just bananas.
I mean, even if I think about it, I was getting up to like 186, 188.
And that felt like a lot for me, cutting down to 170.
Yeah.
I mean, at the time, I was fairly big for the weight class, you know what I
mean, compared to some of the other guys around.
But it just didn't work for me.
You know what I mean?
Like, I invested too much in getting bigger and stronger.
And because when I was fighting before the UFC, I mean, I was fighting, you
know, 10, 12 times a year.
And I needed to stay close to weight.
So I was always, I was always within about 10 pounds.
There were very few fights before the UFC that I cut a lot of weight.
And even, and then when I was fighting out in Japan, because I couldn't use
sauna, like, I just didn't want to, you know, put myself in a position where I
was having to trash bag and, you know, sweat out in the streets of Tokyo.
So my weight was always.
Why couldn't you use sauna in Japan?
Because of my tattoos.
Isn't that crazy?
I got kicked out of a gym in Japan.
Did you really?
Yeah.
I had to go back up to my room and put a long sleeve shirt on.
That's crazy.
That's nuts.
The gym in the hotel.
I'm like, I'm staying here.
Yeah.
They said, no, you can't have exposed tattoos.
I'm like, oh my God, that's so wild.
Do you have a Yakuza gym that I could go to?
Yeah, right.
I've got too many fingers for that.
That's what it is.
It's all about Yakuza tattoos.
Yeah.
I'm like, look at me.
Do you think I'm in Yakuza?
I know, right?
Come on.
It's crazy.
I mean, I think it's changed a bit now, but this was.
I don't know, man.
This was not that long ago.
I mean, I guess it was.
Maybe it was 15 years ago.
When was the last time the UFC was in Tokyo?
I'm not sure.
I think it was more than 15 years ago, I believe.
I want to say it was like, shit.
It might have been like 2009.
Yeah.
Something like that.
Mine was 2007 hours out there fighting for cage force.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Crazy.
Yeah.
I mean, that was back when they didn't have those options, like those small
portable sauna options
that they have now.
Like there's some of them, they have these hot boxes where it's like, they have
a little
tiny heater in there and you zip it up and you're in this little thing and you
can kind
of carry it with you on the road and you can check it with your bags.
Yeah.
The blankets are really good.
Veronica used that for the last couple of cuts.
They're really good.
Great.
But people use hot baths now.
No one was hot bathing in my day.
Right.
Like if you were sweating, you were working out, you were running, you were in
a sauna.
You know, they were the only ways people were cutting weight.
Hot bathing came in kind of towards the end of my career.
What's better?
I don't know.
I mean, for me, I never used the hot baths.
I tried it one time.
I didn't really like it.
And that's partly a psychological thing, I think, because for me, the hot bath
was the
reward after the fight.
You know, so I didn't want to feel like I was relaxing the day before the fight.
I was cold showered.
I wanted to feel like a feral animal, to be honest.
Right.
You know, so I would cut weight on my own.
I would like, it was a process of me preparing for the fight.
I always imagined it like, it's like, you know, you grab your shield and you
spear and
it's the march to the battlefield.
You know, you don't, you don't walk out of your tent and you're on the
battlefield.
There's a process of getting there.
And the weight cut for me was a part of that.
It was the suffering to get to the fight.
So the, like for me, it was hot sauna, cold shower, you know, treadmill pads,
if I needed
it.
I mean, Tokyo, I didn't even have a treadmill.
I just put trash bags on, cut the corners off the old school Thai boxing way.
How much did you weigh before that fight?
I cut seven pounds.
And that was, and that was one of the reasons why I changed the way that I was
doing it.
Because like, I should have stopped that guy in the first round and I didn't
have the
power to it.
And that was his last fight.
Like he went, he passed out after the, after the fight, went to the hospital.
He had a bleed on his brain.
And he, he retired completely after that.
He was, who was that?
His name was Daiso Ishige.
Oh, I remember.
Yeah.
He was the king of pancreas.
He was like 20.
He was the favorite to win the cage force tournament.
And I pulled him in the first round.
And I, I went out there just with the intention of doing a normal weight cut,
you know, six
to seven pounds, exactly what I would normally do.
I had a little bit more to cut because of the flight, but I honestly, hand on
heart,
believe that if I'd either not cut the weight or I'd cut the weight in a better
way and rehydrated,
I would have been able to stop him.
And he wouldn't have had the, the brain damage that he, he ended up with, you
know, because
like, I look back to that third round and I just, I just didn't have the power.
It was like a bad dream where I'm just punching him and he's just bouncing
around.
He's a bloody man.
So he just took repeated subconcussive blows.
Way more than he needed to.
You know, and I don't know whether he cut weight as well, but certainly the
thing that
played into the damage that was done to him was my weight cut, you know?
That's crazy.
Isn't that crazy to think of?
I just didn't want to, I mean, and it, but again, like I have no guilt
associated with
that because we knew what we were doing when we got in there and I would not
hold it against
him if that had happened to me, you know what I mean?
But in, but in hindsight, pulling the whole thing apart, like I could have been
a better
version of myself as a martial artist and it would have actually probably saved
him some
of the damage that he ended up taking in the third.
My position is that the UFC and I think MMA in general, PFL, all of them, they,
we need
more weight classes.
I don't think there's nearly enough weight classes.
I think the gaps are enormous.
I think the names are stupid.
It's very stupid to have welterweight 170 when welterweight has been with
boxing at 147
forever for a hundred years.
And all of a sudden the UFC comes along and decides welterweight is 170.
Like, why is it called welterweight then?
Yeah.
You know, imagine if you go to another country and you buy a hammer and it's a
sandwich.
No, I wanted a hammer.
I need to build a house.
What the fuck is this?
It's like a totally different thing.
Like, why is it 170 welterweight?
Why not just call it the 170 pound division?
That's what wrestling does.
They just, they have divisions.
It doesn't need to be like a name.
The name seems silly.
That's a, that's a good point.
Actually, I'd not thought about that.
I've actually, I actually developed a system of introducing weight classes over
the next several
years for the PFL.
I mean, obviously the problem that we have is that some weight classes are just
not filling
out because the fighters are just not there, unfortunately.
Right.
You know?
But I also think that's a, that's a bit of a, that's a result of, of the
monopolization
and the kind of killing off of the grassroots of the sport because the sport's
not growing
like it was in my day.
You know what I mean?
It's, it's very, very different now.
What do you think is the cause of that?
I think, I think the control and the monopolization of the sport by the UFC,
unfortunately.
How does that stop small organizations?
Well, because anything that starts to gather some momentum, they, they buy them
out and
they got rid of them.
Some, well, they certainly did buy out a bunch of organizations back in the day,
right?
They bought out Strikeforce.
They bought out pride, but they sort of bought out pride.
They got fucked.
Yeah.
Like they thought they were buying out proud.
Do you know the whole deal behind that?
They, they, all the contracts are bad.
Is that right?
Yeah.
They got a fucking DVD library.
Look over time, I'm sure it's been worth it.
Right.
But I believe they paid 60 million for pride.
I might be wrong about that number, but that's what I recall.
And they didn't have any contracts.
Like, you know, the, the contracts were all fucked up.
So like, they thought they were going to get Fedor.
They thought they were going to get everybody.
And so they got a lot of the guys to come over and sign new contracts with the
UFC, like
Krokop and Noguera and a bunch of other people.
But I don't think they got nearly what they thought they were getting.
Yeah.
That's, that's interesting.
I mean, obviously, you know, I, I love the UFC and I've, I've, I've always held
Dana
and the UFC and what they've created for us in very, very high regard.
But there, there, there has, in my opinion, we've passed the tipping point now
where now
we're starting to see some of the negative effects of them kind of locking down
everything.
Because like there are certain organizations that are, they are connected with
the UFC
and they're enabled by the UFC through Fight Pass.
And then they become almost like the feeder.
Like LFA.
Exactly.
But then a lot of these, a lot of those shows are now starting to get dropped
off of Fight
Pass.
Right.
And the reason for that is because Contender Series is replacing them.
So which shows have been dropped off Fight Pass?
I think LFA has just been dropped, hasn't it?
Oh, has it been?
I think so.
I mean, Invicta was on there a long time ago.
I think they moved away themselves, but like there are, Aries was dropped a
period, you
know, my, my wife's commentator on Aries.
They, they were dropped a while ago.
What was Aries?
It's the French promotion.
Okay.
Aries.
I always say it wrong.
Aries.
And they were dropped from Fight Pass?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think they've been picked up again now, but you know, but this, this is the,
this is
my, my thinking behind it.
Right.
And I remember back in the day when I was fighting on cage warriors in, in the
UK and the
UFC were coming over once or twice, like it started to kill off all the other
shows
because everyone was like, I'll just save my money.
I'll wait for the UFC to come.
Before the UFC came over and start and like state to claim in, in the UK, we
had a lot
of shows that were kind of, you know, popping up on weekends.
I was up and down the country and across Europe all the time.
But then when we started having two or three UFC events a year, a lot of the
smaller shows
just, just dropped off, died off.
Do you think you, so you're saying you save your money meaning as an audience
member?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But you can't fault the UFC for that.
Oh no, absolutely not.
And look, and what they did when, when the UFC landed in, in Europe, they
legitimized the
sport.
And then, you know, so, so we, the perspective started to change very quickly.
Like when I was doing, when I had my title fight in 2010, I would say at least
half of
the interviews that I did was trying to justify the sport and why I was allowed
to do what
I did.
Right.
That was 2010.
So this is back when everybody thought it was human cockfighting still.
And I was getting into debates with journalists about the, the, the human cockfighting
thing
and trying to explain.
Oh, I know.
Those debates are so ew.
But, but like, and imagine trying to like attach power slap onto the side of,
of UFC when
it was then.
It would have just buried us.
You know?
I do not like power slap.
I hate it.
I hate it.
I do not like it.
And the thing is, and I'm, I'm very much, you know, as long as you're not, as
long as,
as long as you're not hurting anybody else or you've, you're agreeing to hurt
each other.
I'm all for your ability to power slap each other.
Just separate it from MMA.
And I've watched a bunch of clips.
I've watched a bunch of people get flatlined and bounce their head off the
podium and fall
backwards.
And I don't like it.
My whole thing about martial arts is it's human chess.
It's high level problem solving.
It's you're, you know, you're working up to a moment and you're doing your very
best to
not get hit and hit them.
And a flawless performance.
Like it's one of the things that was most impressive about Hamzat during his
first few
UFC fights.
I think he fought like three or four fights where he took like three punches.
Yeah.
Reece McKee, John Phillips.
I can't remember the other one.
I called a couple of those fights.
Gerald Mirchardt took nothing.
That was one punch.
One punch.
That was flatlined with one punch.
I mean, it was, that was the craziest thing about him.
It's like, look at this guy.
He's not even getting hit.
Like, this is nuts.
And when you'd grab guys, they'd be helpless.
I like skill.
There's no skill in having a big hand and a fat face.
Yeah.
And I don't even understand why you have chalk on your face.
Why do you have, or your hand.
For grip?
I don't know.
Is that what it is?
I don't know.
Is it just to like the powder flies through the air?
And, you know, I don't get it.
Maybe dunk your head in water.
I don't know.
Hey, they used to do it in the Kung Fu movies, didn't they?
They used to put talc on people.
So when you hit them, you get a cloud of power.
Did they do that?
Yeah, yeah.
And hitting the watermelons with the mallets to make the noises.
Look, again, like, power slap can be its thing and exist just away from MMA,
you know?
And what I hate to see is the likes of Herzog and Mark Smith and Forrest, like,
catching these unconscious guys as they're falling.
It just attaches the sport that we've worked so hard to develop to something
that is going to—it does an injustice to the MMA fighters and how hard they
work and how much of human chess MMA is.
Yeah, it's literally like taking—what are those fucking smash-em-up derby
racing events where they crash into each other?
Yeah, demolition derby.
Demolition derby, yeah.
It's like a Formula One driver being involved in demolition derby.
Like, that's fucking crazy.
There's actually a reason for the chalk.
Oh.
It's so that they can see where the hit was made.
Oh.
Indication of where the petition strike lands.
Well, can't you see that, though?
They're not, like, moving at the speed of light.
They're also not allowed to have excessive chalk and they can't use water.
There's no excessive water.
As you said, put your head in water.
The idea that—
They're not allowed to do it.
They have rules.
The idea they have rules is so crazy.
It's so crazy.
But it is a reflection of how solid the UFC is right now, right?
You go back to 2010, they couldn't have done that without having a real
negative effect on the sport.
I think it has a negative effect on the sport now.
I agree with you.
I just think it's not—
The UFC is so powerful and so strong now that they can even take a liberty and
advertise Power Slap off the back of it and get away with it.
It's that and then it's also we're in the TikTok era where it's just really all
about clips.
I mean, is Power Slap, does it air anywhere?
Because it aired on television for a while, right?
Didn't they force it into the Paramount deal in some way?
Did they?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I think it's much more digestible in these very short clips.
You know, I don't think there's a person—like, there's some fucking hardcore
MMA fans who can tell you about guys that are competing in the amateurs and
tough enough and they're making their way to the UFC and they're fighting in
the LFA.
There's guys who are coming in their debuts.
I mean, you can watch YouTube videos of guys breaking down these guys' skill
sets and you never even heard of these cats.
Guys who are fighting in Russia, guys who are fighting in Brazil and there's no
Power Slap, hardcore fans.
There's no, like, this guy, fucking, you got to see him slap.
You got to see him take a slap.
You got to see the way she stares down her opponent before she gets slapped.
Like, it's not the same, man.
It's not—I mean, you can watch it.
You can do it.
I don't have a problem with it.
This is America.
I believe in freedom.
But don't do it.
That's what I'd say.
I'd say, don't do it.
You come to me, I'd say, don't do it.
As a recommendation, you don't do it, right?
Like, don't, like, you know, whatever you would recommend.
But, like—
Well, I'd also say, don't do jackass.
And, you know, I've had those guys on my show all the time.
Yeah.
Every time I talk to Steve, I'm like, don't fucking do it, man.
Why are you doing that?
He's a special type, man.
He's a special type.
Yeah.
Johnny Knoxville told me he's been knocked out 16 times out cold.
I'm like, that's way too many.
That's way too many.
That's nuts.
Absolutely.
I mean, you have zero fights on your record.
You've been KO'd 16 times.
That's real bad.
Hey, he's got well paid out of it, though.
He's, you know—
Yeah.
You find someone else that got knocked out 16 times and—
Yeah, right.
That's a good point.
How much did they make from it?
That's a good point.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the other thing with these powerslap guys is, like, they're
making pocket money.
How much did they make?
I don't know.
Three and three?
Five and five?
Three?
Yeah.
I was chatting to someone in Vegas, and she didn't want to do it, but she was
like, I don't have a choice.
I can't get MMA fights.
Why?
You know, she just couldn't get MMA fights.
She was too big for most of the weight classes.
Oh, yeah.
You know?
But—
That's a problem.
Yeah.
Look at poor Kayla.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She's got to make 135.
Every time I see her in between fights, I'm like, how?
How do you get to 135?
You're as big as me.
This is crazy.
Crazy.
Yeah.
I saw her the other week in Pittsburgh, and she's—I mean, she's huge.
She's gigantic.
Yeah.
She's got phenomenal genetics.
Yeah.
She's got that neck scar.
Yeah.
She's got an artificial disc, which is—it's really interesting that they
could do that now,
and guys go, look, Aljamain did it and came back better than ever.
I mean, that was—I mean, everybody was so upset at him, the way he won the
title with Piotr Jan.
But he had a legitimate neck issue going into that fight, and that illegal knee
that he took to the head really did fuck him up.
Yeah.
And then he went and got an artificial disc, put it in his neck, and then came
back and dominated in the rematch.
And then—did you see him in his last fight?
Yeah.
Fucking dude, man.
That guy has the best back control in the game.
His back control is so elite.
It's—it's really incredible, because he gets a hold of your back, man.
And it's like, my God.
Yeah, absolutely.
See that—and I don't mean to keep picking on officials, but that is another
situation where I actually feel quite bad for Aljo,
that he had to put on that performance and damage his brand in such a way,
because he didn't want to continue fighting.
Right.
Right?
Like—and the officials are put in a circumstance where they don't have the
confidence to just go,
no, hang on a minute, that was bad.
Fight's over.
Fight's done.
Right, right, right.
Well, you want to give a guy the opportunity to fight still.
So you don't—this is the thing about damage.
You don't know looking.
Some guys can take a shot like that, and then they bounce back, and they're
fine.
Look, Bisping.
Bisping came back and won that fight after that flying knee.
You know, and you really got to kind of like let the fighter, if the fighter's
conscious, you got to let them decide whether or not they can—because you don't
know.
It's not possible to tell by looking at someone what kind of damage they've got,
especially Aljo with the neck.
Neck situations are so bad, man.
But the crazy thing is that with these artificial discs now, like Weidman got
one.
There's quite a few guys that have gotten artificial discs in their neck now.
And then they go back to finding, which is crazy.
I wonder how that changes the way that the head twists.
I don't know.
One thing I noticed on Yael Romero, whose head just doesn't twist, but he's got—his
neck's fused, right?
His neck is fused to the base of his skull.
So, like, how do you turn his head to cause concussion?
I don't know.
Well, there's a good argument that it makes him more durable.
Do you remember when Derek Brunson head kicked him?
Yeah.
He hit him with a neck kick, like right here.
He didn't even budge because you're hitting a steel bar.
So then think, didn't Tiger Woods have some kind of eye surgery so his eye was
20-10?
So he has better edge and—better depth perception for golf.
Did he?
I'm pretty sure he did.
Really?
Yeah, I'm sure he had something done to his eyes.
Put that into our sponsor, Perplexity Chain.
Never heard of that.
What did they do?
They could do that?
He got laced.
So did he have bad eyes and he got them better?
Or did he have good eyes and said, what can you do?
Can you make me have fucking superhuman eyes?
Uh, to correct nearsightedness, it improved him to 2015 vision.
2015.
Okay.
So he wasn't improved to 2020.
The problem with that is with these surgeries, if you have macular degeneration
and it continues
to progress, you are going to need it again.
Or it's going to get worse—like, Ari Shafir got LASIK and he's like, oh, it's
amazing.
I have 20-20 vision because he had terrible vision before.
And then it started going to shit after a while because it just kept deteriorating.
And now his eyes suck.
The thing is, though, you know athletes.
Like, if—I mean, and I think it was a poll done a while ago with Olympians.
Like, if you can win a gold medal but you're going to live to 30 or 35, would
you take the gold medal?
And a good portion of them said yes, they absolutely would.
Like, most athletes, in order to achieve their goals, would do absolutely
anything.
Right.
So if I all of a sudden discovered that having your neck fused like your Romero
means that
you've got a 30% chance of, you know, less chance of getting knocked out, how
many fighters
do you think would have their neck fused just to give them the advantage, right?
How about that Tommy John surgery that people get electively so they can pitch
better?
Before surgery, he was extremely nearsighted.
He had an 11 prescription.
I don't know what that is.
Minus 11.
He was essentially legally blind without glasses or contacts.
Whoa!
And one of the greatest golfers of all time, if not the greatest.
First LASIK was done after his 1999 PGA Championship win.
Yeah, here you go.
Results and impact on his golf.
Wood reportedly achieved about 2015 vision better than the standard 2020,
meaning he could
see more detail at distance than the average person.
Interesting.
He described the cup and ball as looking larger and said his ability to read
greens improved
and he went on a notable win streak winning five PGA Tour events in a row right
after the surgery.
Wow.
So that links into the stoned ape theory, though, if we're going in a massive
circle, right?
Because microdosing mushrooms gives you better edge and depth perception.
Yes.
So then the theory was that you would have better chances of surviving.
Yes.
Either as, you know, not becoming prey or finding prey.
Yes.
Right?
Yeah.
Better vision.
It would make you hornier.
So it would make you more likely to breed.
And it also makes you more creative.
And, you know, Terrence McKenna and Dennis McKenna link it to the creation of
language.
Fascinating.
Oh, it's very fascinating.
I used to remember when I was in Vegas, I had a room in my house, which I think
we talked
about it before, which was the mushroom.
And I would like once a week, I would like clear the day and I would have
ceremony on a
Saturday in the evening that I'd get up on Sunday morning and go out into Red
Rock and
I'd do trail running.
But like at the point where, you know, I took six or seven grams the night
before, so now
I've probably got the equivalent of two, three grams in my system.
But I'm running in Vibrams downhill and I'm like a cat.
I can see the ground in a much different way to how I would if I was completely
straight.
So, you know, there are some fighters that have been microdosing through fights
as well.
I won't throw them under the bus.
Oh, I know a few.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Joe Schilling talked pretty openly about it.
He's got a fight coming up.
Does he?
Joe's back?
He's fighting in Brussels.
Is he doing PFL?
Yeah.
Interesting.
Yeah, yeah.
Interesting.
How old's Joe now?
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I sparred with him at Frank Mears' gym in Vegas a few years ago, Suffer.
Obviously, I knew Joe Schilling, who he was.
And, you know, the gym that he created in L.A. had a real reputation and all
that kind of
stuff.
42.
Damn.
Wow.
But he was just, he was standing outside the back, just smoking a cigarette,
came in, put
his gloves on and just beat the snot out of me.
You know what I mean?
Such a good fighter.
Yeah, he's a beast kickboxer, man.
I was at the last man standing event in L.A. when he fought.
Like, that was really crazy.
Because you had to fight multiple kickboxing fights in a day.
And, you know, this was glory.
This was like, who used to run Bellator?
What was the guy who ran Bellator?
Not Scott Coker?
No.
Yeah, no, it is Scott Coker.
Because there was a guy before Scott, right?
Yeah.
Is it Bjorn?
Bjorn Rebner?
Right.
So he left and then Scott took, and Scott was also involved in Bellator.
Yeah.
Or in, excuse me, glory.
Right?
It was in Strikeforce.
Strikeforce.
Scott Coker ran Strikeforce?
Founded Strikeforce.
So who ran Bellator?
Yeah.
Bjorn founded it and then Scott Coker.
Right.
Okay, right.
So that is correct.
Okay.
I think he was involved in glory, too.
Right.
And I think I remember I went up to him and I said, this is awesome, but don't
do this.
Don't have people fight multiple times in a night.
It's just like, because you get a concussion and no one even knows about it.
Like, there's been a lot of fights where guys got concussions and they didn't
get knocked out.
And then you have to fight again in an hour.
And then you fight again 45 minutes after that.
Like, man, that's a recipe for people getting fucked up.
I know they did it back in the old days in hardcore and all that stuff.
It's all great.
But, man, don't do that.
But you look at some of those first round matchups when they were doing that
and you're like,
hmm, okay, I can see what you're doing here.
You know what I mean?
Give people easier fights in the beginning.
So they're ultimately trying it.
Sometimes, but I think it's kind of random, you know, sometimes you get a tough
one.
Especially with the heavyweight K1.
I mean, you know, like some of those guys, you fight Hongman Choi or Bob Sapp,
no matter how confident you are in your skill set, just the sheer size of them
is a problem.
Yes.
Those fucking K1 tournaments were bananas.
They were so good.
Woo, they were so good.
Especially the lights.
I had a friend of mine in Canada that used to get me VHS tapes back in the day.
I don't know.
I think he had like a satellite dish or some shit.
I forget how he was getting them, but he was getting them and he was sending
them to me.
K1, Heroes, all these like real obscure events he would send me.
Awesome.
Oh, I had a, I don't know where the fuck they are now.
I think they might even be in my LA house, but I had a giant box filled with VHS
tapes.
There were all kinds of old school fights.
I used to have a, I used to have a, like a CD, like a zip CD thing that used to
take with
me and I had a guy at my gym and he would five pounds.
He would burn me pride or K1 Heroes or whatever.
And he was finding them online and just ripping it and, you know, selling them
in the gym.
But I had a whole database of stuff, IFL and all those old shows, K1 Heroes.
I loved, I loved K1 Heroes.
You know, that's kind of partially how I got the job at the UFC.
Um, when I first met Dana, like he just, he got me tickets because it was the,
I was on Fear Factor and the UFC, they just purchased it.
So this is 2001.
This is a, right post 9-11 when Tito Ortiz fought Vladimir Matyushenko, came
out with the American flag.
Everybody went crazy.
And, um, I started talking to him about like Japan Valley Tudo and do you know
about this guy?
Do you know about that guy?
And I was, I was just like rattling off all these fighters that he had never
heard of before.
I was talking about all these guys that are fighting out of Russia, all these
guys in Japan.
And then we started talking and then next thing you know, he's like, do you
want to do commentary?
I was like, oh, I just want to, I just want to watch.
And you never thought about it before commentary?
No.
No.
No.
Well, I worked for the UFC before that as the post-fight interviewer, but that
was in 97, UFC 12.
I remember.
And so I did it for 97 to 98 and then it was costing me money.
Because I would make way more money if I'd go work out a comedy club for the
weekend than I would doing this.
But it was fun.
So I did it for a little while, but then it was like, I think it was UFC Japan.
They wanted me to fly to Japan.
And Frank Shamrock was fighting Kevin Jackson.
Is that who it was?
I think he won by first round armbar.
And I was like, I'm not going to fucking Japan, man.
I can't.
No.
I'm done.
So I'd quit.
I was like, I love you guys.
It was fun.
Good time.
While it lasted.
Did you feel like it was going to go where it went though?
No, I thought they were fucked.
Really?
It was funny because, you know, Eddie Bravo and I were backstage at one of
these events.
You know, I met Eddie way back in the day.
So it was like, this was like 97, 98.
Eddie and I were backstage.
We were like, you know what this fucking sport needs?
Some crazy billionaires with a ton of money who love the sport.
Who just, because we know it's so exciting.
And we know people would think it's so exciting.
It just needs to be in everybody's face.
And then who comes along?
The Fertittas.
It's like we manifested them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was crazy because like, you know, one of the first events that I did for the
UFC,
I did for free.
I did like the first 15 events for free.
And I just said, just get my friends tickets.
So it was like, Eddie and I would go.
And, you know, we'd be like, bro, it's fucking happening.
It's actually happening.
But even back then, it wasn't famous.
It was just, it was in Vegas.
And it was, you know, it was kind of getting a little bit of attention.
It wasn't until 2005 that Forrest Whitaker, that the main event of,
rather, excuse me, Forrest Griffin and Stephen Bonner, main event of,
the Ultimate Fighter, that one fight changed everything.
It was really crazy where like, the stars align with one fight.
The whole sport takes off.
Yeah.
Because it really was that.
I can't believe I called him Forrest Whitaker.
But yeah, I did that on commentary.
I called Robert Whitaker, Forrest Whitaker live on commentary.
I've called people.
I fucked up Juliana Pena's name once.
Yeah.
I fucked people's names up.
It's like, you have so many names in your head.
That's what people don't understand.
Like, you and I, between you and I, we probably have 500 fighters' names in our
head.
And then plus jiu-jitsu guys, plus wrestlers, plus boxers.
Like, oh my God, there's so many names in your head.
Yeah.
And then project that into the history of the sport now.
Right.
Because we've got the history of the sport, and the history of boxing on top of
that as well.
The way I describe my memory, it's like I have a whole bunch of boxes of
folders.
And if I find that box, I can open that bitch up and talk to you about Marvin
Hagler versus Juan Roldan.
And it'll tell you, like, the knockdown was fake, and this and that, and Hagler
went on to stop him.
I'll tell you details.
But if I don't have that folder in front of me, I'm like, uh, I don't know why.
I don't know why I can't, like, immediately remember sometimes.
But sometimes I can pull that box out, and it's right there.
And I can just get that folder out, and boom.
Do you remember the first time you sat down at the commentary booth and put the
headset on?
Yes.
Yes.
That was UFC 37 and a half.
London?
No.
Oh, no, of course.
It was just after that, though, right?
UFC 38 was London.
Well, it was 37 and a half because it was, like, a fit.
It was an event they put together for Best Damn Sports Show.
Right.
So remember Best Damn Sports Show, which was on Fox Sports, I think?
Fox Sportsnet?
And so what it was was they had this opportunity to do a show, and this is when
Dana asked me
to do commentary, and I just did it as a favor.
He goes, it'd be great if you did it because it was the Fear Factor days, and
it was Chuck
Liddell versus Vitor Belfort.
And I said, oh, fuck yeah, I'll do it.
And I think, I don't remember who else.
I think Robbie Lawler might have made his debut.
Steve Berger versus Robbie Lawler.
That's right.
Thank you, sir.
Yeah.
So it was fun.
And I did it once, and then they asked me, would you do it again?
I'm like, okay, I'll do it again.
But it was really just, I just kept doing it.
It wasn't a job.
Like I said, I didn't even ask for money.
I did like 15 of them.
And then finally, Dana says, look, I want to sign you to a contract.
I want to pay you.
I was like, okay.
All right.
I was like, reluctantly got dragged into being a commentator.
Yeah.
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That's kind of cool.
Yeah, it's similar to me, though, really.
I mean, I was, because I've been sidelined because, you know, because of my
heart situation and they wouldn't clear me in California.
So then the UFC just wouldn't match me anywhere.
And I'd had like a month or two of just kind of wallowing and being depressed
and, you know, avoiding MMA gyms and Lorenzo had invited me into the offices on
Sahara.
And I'd gone and sat with him and we were chatting through and he said, hey,
you know, I'm going to send you out to California.
I want you to go and see my specialist, you know, my family specialist and get
a second opinion and et cetera.
But he said, also, we've got another plan for you.
He said, I won't spoil it.
At some point, you'll see Dana and Dana will tell you what the plan is.
And as I was, it was like a movie.
As I was walking out of the offices, a stretch monster Hummer pulled up.
Literally, I'm like, what's going on here?
And Dana got out and he was like, oh, just the fucking blah, blah, blah.
I just wanted to see.
He was like, I want you to go to the UK.
I want you to be an ambassador.
I want you to do commentary.
And I said, that's great.
You know, let me know what I need media training.
He's like, no, none of that.
I just want you to be you sitting cage side.
And I remember getting to the first UFC London event and sat down at the desk,
just fighting
imposter syndrome bad and seeing all the fans starting to trickle into the
arena.
And then someone from the truck came through and said, oh, I've just realized
we've not practiced
any post-fight interviews.
I said, oh, I'd not really thought about it, but it's just talking to fighters.
I'll be fine.
He said, no, no, no.
I'd feel better if we practiced.
I said, okay.
He said, okay, Brad Pickett wins by knockout.
Go.
I'm like, how did you knock him out?
It was my first question.
And it was weird because it was like, I'd not even thought about it up until
that point.
But when they asked me to do the kind of practice rehearsal with not any
scenario that was
realistic, then all of a sudden I started to panic.
But I remember sitting there feeling like a 14-year-old, like someone's going
to tap me
on the shoulder in a minute and throw me out.
Really?
It felt so weird.
Yeah.
That's funny.
It felt really weird.
That's interesting.
I don't remember if I felt imposter syndrome.
I think because I wasn't getting paid, I probably thought it was just fun.
Yeah.
I probably didn't think it was a job.
So I probably thought like, oh, they just want me to do this because I'm famous
and it
would be good for the sport if the Fear Factor guy is enthusiastic about this
sport.
So that's how I thought about it.
And so like I would go on like the Howard Stern show and stuff and we'd wind up
just talking
about the UFC.
And this was, again, I wasn't even working for the UFC.
I was there to promote Fear Factor.
But I was talking about how much I loved UFC and I just, I think it's awesome.
And back when I was competing, no one knew what the best sport, it's so hard
for people
to recognize that today because it's not that long ago, you know, like when I
was, last time
I fought was like 88 or 89.
You would think like we kind of had it sorted out back then, but you didn't, no
one knew.
No one knew like what was the best thing to study.
I remember I went to this gym, a friend of mine was teaching at this university
and I
would go and train with him and his students sometime and I would go there and
they had
a judo program there.
And I'd be like, look at these suckers practicing this stupid judo.
Like this is useless.
You can't even kick anybody.
I mean, all those guys would have killed me.
They would have just grabbed me and fucking thrown me on my head.
But I didn't think that.
I was totally delusional.
I thought I was going to kick them into the fucking shadow realm and no one
knew what
the right thing to study was.
If you took Kung Fu, you thought Kung Fu was the shit.
Bruce Lee, right?
I'm wearing a Bruce Lee shirt.
He was really the only guy that was wise enough to realize you just got to take
a little bit
from everything and having one style, whether it was his initial style, which
was Wing Chun
or whatever it is, karate, that's not the way.
The way is the right way to win.
In close quarter combat, you need to learn how to grapple.
You need to learn boxing.
You need to learn how to block correctly.
You need to learn how to kick correctly.
Back then, we didn't know.
And we always wondered, what would happen if they did a fucking, put a bunch of
guys together.
And I knew Benny the Jet had competed in some weird stuff in Hawaii, but no one
really knew.
So when it was finally happening, to me, I was like a little kid.
I was like, oh my God, it's happening.
It's really happening.
And I was like, please let this work.
Please let this work.
And then to watch the evolution of it from the beginning, which is just Hoist
going in there
and dominating everybody because no one knew jiu-jitsu.
And he had the Gi on, so he had all this friction.
It was amazing.
And everybody took jiu-jitsu, including me.
I was like, I got to learn jiu-jitsu.
And then to watch the evolution, like these giant juiced up fucking wrestlers
come along,
like Mark Coleman and Mark Kerr smashing everybody.
They're like, oh my God, you've got to get on the sauce.
And so everybody, you know, Vitor got up to like 240 pounds and his fucking
neck started at the top of his head.
Oh, yeah, bro.
I was training at the same gym as him when he made his UFC debut.
So I was training at Carlson Gracie's gym.
So you kind of knew what was coming then?
Well, I didn't, I knew he was awesome, but I didn't know how good his hands
were
because I only saw him doing jiu-jitsu, right?
But I knew he was a beast.
Like, he was a black belt in jiu-jitsu at the time and, you know, a phenomenal
athlete, just so fast.
But then I saw a video of him.
He fought John Hess in Hawaii.
Do you remember John Hess?
Yeah, I do remember John Hess.
Safta fighting?
Yeah.
So John Hess was this giant guy.
He's like 6'7 or something like that.
And Vitor just fucking took him to the ground and bang, bang, bang, bang, bang,
bang, bang,
hit him with like 30 fucking unanswered punches in a row, like in three seconds.
Like, brrrr, and put him away.
And then they're screaming, jiu-jitsu, jiu-jitsu.
And I was like, wait a minute.
This is not, I mean, I get it.
You know jiu-jitsu.
But that was boxing.
You used striking.
But it was like, to be there at the very beginning and watch this evolution.
There it is.
There's Vitor.
Look at this.
Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
Look at his legs shaking.
My God.
And look how thin Vitor was back then.
Yeah.
That was Vitor at like, you know, 199 pounds.
Maybe.
Terrifying.
Maybe 190.
Oh, he was so fast.
And so that was there for his UFC debut.
So that was UFC 12.
So he fought Trey Tellegman.
And Trey Tellegman, like, had no idea that this guy could box that way.
Like, no one did.
They thought he's a Carlson Gracie jiu-jitsu black belt.
It was like, okay, you know, avoid the takedowns.
This guy's really good on the ground.
And he just starts tuning people up with his hands.
Yeah.
And Tellegman was Lions then, wasn't he?
Yep.
He was one of Ken Shamrock's guys.
Didn't he have a missing pec?
Yes.
He was in a car accident, I believe, when he was a child.
Oh, is that right?
Yeah.
And his pec was not attached on one side.
And he was fucking jacked, dude.
And then he fought Scott Ferrozo after that, who was like a giant fat guy.
He was also like a tank, you know, like a huge fucking knockout artist.
And Vitor tuned him up too.
Just the speed he had.
So this is like, you know, 1997.
And it was wild.
And that was in like a high school auditorium in Dothan, Alabama.
It was like really weird.
Crazy.
I was like, this is so, these places, these are so strange.
These events were so bizarre.
You know, I was hanging out with the Lion's Den guys.
We'd go drinking together and stuff.
It was fun.
But it was just weird.
It was like, what is this thing that we're doing?
This is it.
The Dothan Civic Center.
That's what it was.
Look how small it is.
Man.
Look how little that place is.
97.
Yeah.
So that would have been the time when I was at art college.
Yeah.
And I went to Virgin Megastore.
There you are.
Look.
Jeff Blatnick.
He was the fucking man.
I went to Virgin Megastore.
And look how, you're beautiful, man.
Look how beautiful you are.
And no one taught me.
No one told me what to do.
No one gave me any instruction.
Nothing.
They gave me a microphone and then said, we're going to come to you backstage.
I'm like, what do you want me to say?
Like literally, it was fucking nothing.
It was nothing.
You probably knew better than everybody else though.
Well, luckily, I was a huge fan.
So it was pretty easy.
I got the job because they had a guy that was doing it before and they got rid
of him.
And Campbell McLaren, who was one of the producers, was good friends with my
comedy manager.
And he was just casually talking.
It's like, we're looking for someone to do post-fight interviews.
And he's like, Joe loves the UFC.
And he's like, you think you'd do it?
And so they called me up.
I was like, fuck yeah, let's go.
I was like, this is, and this is, I was like 97.
I guess I was 30.
Yeah.
Is this how the judges used to announce it?
Their picks?
They just held up a whiteboard?
I guess so.
I guess so.
There was a bunch of rules at the beginning that seemed very strange to me too,
too.
I saw they had overtime rules.
Ooh, I forgot about that.
I forgot about Obata.
They called them laws of the octagon.
Valigi.
Yeah.
Valid Ishmael.
He was a lunatic, wasn't he?
Oh, he was a mad man.
So intense.
Mad dog.
Yeah.
No biting, no eye gouging, no fish hooking.
That was it.
You could hit people in nuts.
It was...
That's it.
That's it.
I tell you what, I've got a piece of my gum missing from someone trying to fish
hook
me.
Oh, God.
They took a piece of the gum away with their fingernail.
I'm going to have to get something done.
I've got some teeth that need fixing at some point.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Not nice.
Ay, ay, ay.
It's fish hooking dangerous.
Yeah, that's nasty.
If someone's fish hooks you, you should bite their fucking fingers.
Oh, I think so.
You should be able to bite them.
Like, fuck you.
Get your fucking fingers out of my mouth, motherfucker.
That's interesting about commentary.
I've always wondered because everybody came after you, right, when it comes to
MMA commentary.
So, like, in the early days when I was first doing the job, no one knows what a
color commentator
or a play-by-play commentator is back in the day.
I think there's more of an understanding now.
So, my response to everybody is, I'm going to try and do Joe's job.
You know what I mean?
But you'd set the bar so high.
I think partly that's what fed into my imposter syndrome.
I'm sitting there and look, the podcast that you did with Dustin, I appreciate
all the
kind words you did.
I want to throw it back to you, though, because you were the person that raised
the bar for
everybody else to reach, you know?
So, and I didn't realize, because I never had an intention of being a commentator.
Like, it just came off the back of my career because my career was ended
abruptly.
So, then anyone that ever says, oh, you're actually pretty good at this, the
reason why
is just because I listen to you religiously.
Like, a lot of people watch the fights and don't pay attention to the
commentary.
Like, I tuned in.
I was paying attention to everything that you said.
So, even the delivery and the cadence and stuff, what you did laid the
foundation for me to
learn.
So, I very, very much appreciate that.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
It was accidental.
Same for me.
But it can't have been accidental because I had somebody to learn from, you
know?
That's why I asked you, because you didn't have anybody that kind of, you know,
set the job out.
Well, it was weird because I think I was one of the first people to do it that
had a real
understanding of jiu-jitsu.
So, when the fights would go to the ground, the play-by-play guy would have,
you know, like,
Goldberg, great guy, didn't train, didn't know what the fuck was happening.
So, I would have to, and also people at home, what's going on?
So, I would have to walk them through exactly when someone's in danger and why
they're in
danger and how they can get out of it and when they're free.
Okay, see his elbow?
He's free now.
He's good.
And so, my mind is spinning like 100 miles an hour.
I'm like, now I don't have to do that as much because people kind of understand
things
much more, but there's certain situations in certain positions where I would
have to say,
no, this is a submission.
Like, he's very close here.
Like, okay, now he's got to cinch it up.
He's got to put his ankle behind his leg.
Now he's got it.
And you'd have to, like, talk people through it.
So, it was different than any other sport because it was, you're kind of, like,
educating
people on what's happening.
Like, I couldn't use obscure, even though I used the obscure term, like, you
know, crackhead
control or something like weird stuff like that, that Eddie comes up with these
fucking ridiculous
names for submissions and positions, but I would have to explain why this works
and what's
happening and what's going on and what's in danger, you know?
And it was weird because I felt, like, this obligation to jujitsu that that was
the one
thing.
Like, you could, if someone kicks you in the head, you get it.
Someone knees someone in the head.
Oh, you hit him with a flying knee.
You get it.
But explaining someone, like, what, like, you know, a calf crusher is, like,
that's a weird
fucking position.
Yeah.
Like, what is going on there?
You know, explaining to someone, you know, why a triangle works and why it
doesn't work
and why someone's safe, you know, with a head and arm choke.
Why, okay, he's okay.
He's got his hand over his ear.
There's, it was all this weird stuff where it was partially trying to be
entertaining,
but also trying to educate.
And I had to kind of figure it out as I did it.
You know, as I called, I don't know how many fights I've called.
It's probably thousands.
Yeah.
I mean, I've called a lot.
You've been doing it a lot longer than me.
Well, I don't do as many now.
You know, I only do North American pay-per-views and I don't even do, I don't
even go to Canada anymore.
So fuck them.
I love Canadians.
It's the government that fucking creeps me out.
But, um, the, the amount I was doing back then, I was doing like 20 shows plus
a year,
22 shows a year.
Yeah.
So I was doing a show almost every other weekend.
I was flying somewhere.
Yeah.
And it was exhausting.
It was a really, it was a problem, but it was in, in one point in time, it
became really
my main job after Fear Factor was over and, uh, I loved it, but the, the
traveling was brutal.
You'd go to Australia, you come back from Australia and now you're going to
Dallas, you're going
to Dallas, you're going to New York.
It's like, Ooh.
Yeah.
I was in us.
First time I went to Australia with the UFC, it was a 56 hour round trip and I
was on the
ground for 30 hours.
You feel like you're on drugs.
I feel like, like someone gave me a drug.
I don't even know where I am.
Yeah.
I loved it though.
I loved being there.
I was like, wow, what a crazy country.
You guys are on the other side of the planet and you're all cool and the food's
great.
Yeah.
It's fun.
And I got all the, I got all the gigs that most people didn't want to do.
So like I was, I was being sent to all of the farthest reaches, you know what I
mean?
Like I, I did, I mean, Singapore, I loved Japan.
I loved, you know, going out to Australia to do those events.
I did a lot of the Russian events, you know, I was even back at one time in
case Bruce
Buffett didn't make it.
I was going to be the.
Really?
MC as well.
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
That's crazy.
That's a hard job.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
That guy set the bar.
Right.
He almost dies every event.
Really?
We were, we were looking at him like one day is going to be loud.
Cause he, you know, Bruce has got to be like 70 years old now.
Right?
Yeah.
So I'm like one day that motherfucker is going to stroke out in the middle.
And just fucking pop.
Blood starts leaking.
That's it.
But if you ask Bruce, that's the way we'd like to go.
That's how you'd want to go.
One of my craziest experiences.
Sweet suit on.
I remember, I remember coming down a slide, like a metal slide from the Great
Wall of
China with Bruce Buffer in front of me and Uriah Faber behind me.
And we're going down on these like rugs on the way down from just weird
experiences that
you have on the road with the UFC.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
That was good.
I've always, always loved Bruce.
Yeah.
He's a great guy.
You know, that's another thing as well is like, and you'll remember this from
back,
you know, back when I made my debut, like I'd get into it with Bruce.
Like I'd be like calling Bruce on and he always used to come to me.
I loved it.
Cause it was just the idea of, of, of hearing Bruce Buffer say my name was just
wild to
me.
The Outlaw Hardy.
Dude, I'll get goosebumps.
We always talk about like whether or not it's, um, a jinx to fist bump Buffer,
you know,
like me and Anik, we're talking about it, but I was like, no, Khabib fist
bumped him every
time.
So it can't be a jinx.
Cause you look for jinxes, you look for things that are a bad omen or a bad
sign, you know?
Yeah.
Weirdly superstitious, aren't we?
We like to, we like to hang stuff on things that aren't our responsibility.
Isn't that weird?
It is strange.
Especially with fighters.
Fighters are super superstitious.
Yeah.
They get real weird about the, the things they do, their rituals before fights,
what
they, what they eat, where they like, what they wear.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And like some of the things that they do, like, I mean like Ben Henderson with
the
toothpick.
Mm-hmm.
Like crazy.
Yeah.
I was interviewing him post-fight.
I'm like, do y'all have a toothpick in your mouth?
And he got in trouble for that.
Yeah.
Dangerous though.
Especially if you know you get knocked out and that toothpick's going down your
throat.
I just didn't understand why he did it.
It seems like a bit of a, bit of a safety blanket almost.
It's like a familiarity that it's there.
It's the weirdest one of all time.
Yeah, it is.
A toothpick in your mouth?
Yeah.
Like, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very strange.
I like a toothpick, but not during a fight.
That dude still had it.
Yeah.
Which is crazy.
He's got a fight coming up in Brussels.
Wow.
It's a rough fight as well.
How old is he now?
44.
Wow.
Yeah.
Fighting a kid called Patrick Haberora.
Good Belgian fighter.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
It's interesting though.
I mean, you know, you've got to form a champ with all that experience.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, he's still in great shape.
Yeah.
He still can compete at a high level.
It's just, wow, these guys, when they're competing for that long, it's so nuts.
You know what I've, and I've suggested as well as a thousand other things that
I've suggested
to the PFL, but a master's division, right?
You know, the likes of Cowboy and Tony Ferguson and, you know, the guys that
you want to keep
fighting, but you don't want to see them just get smashed by Chemaev, you know?
Sure.
I would love to see some of those fairly matched fights.
You know, like when we had, it was Nate Diaz against Chemaev, wasn't it?
And then Chemaev was taken out of the fight and Tony Ferguson was put in the
place and
Nate won the fight.
That to me was the perfect matchup.
Like the Chemaev one would have made me feel really uncomfortable to watch.
And I would love to see a master's division, especially now we could
accommodate it with
some of the older fighters around.
Yeah.
Because most of them, they just kind of bounce over onto, you know, bernucle or
whatever
else is out there as options.
Whereas like, they've still got so much to offer.
And if the fights are fairly matched, I think we get some more really real good
ones.
Yeah.
That it is a problem when you see those old veterans that still have something
to offer and
then you see them getting thrown in there with some 27 year old assassin and
you're like,
good Lord, don't do this.
I mean, I'm what, 43.
I'd fight someone this weekend.
Like, I love it.
It's still in me.
But I know I'm physically like, I mean, even if I was at my athletic peak, I
won't be competing
with these guys now.
They're terrifying.
But, you know, like, to know that I'm getting into a fight with someone that's
as game as
me.
Right.
But has also had the experience as well as the wear and tear.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Evenly matched.
Yeah.
Like, look at Pacquiao's about to fight Mayweather.
Yeah.
Makes sense.
Yeah.
You know, like fighting Terrence Crawford, you'd be like, yeah, don't do that.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Like, I don't want to see you get stretched.
You know what I mean?
But, like, you guys are both in your late 40s.
Like, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
I'll pay for that.
Yeah.
It's as long as they're not gone.
You know, there's some guys that they get to a certain point and they're like,
why is their
family letting them compete?
Why hasn't anybody stepped in?
Doesn't anybody recognize their skills are gone?
Doesn't anybody recognize they get knocked out way too easily now?
There's a bunch of fighters like that that I just really wish would not be
doing it anymore.
Yeah.
And the thing is, it's sad about it as well.
And this is where I feel like the community around MMA has probably changed in
the last
decade or two.
Is, like, the old, the veteran fighters were just carried in such high regard,
whereas now
you're the highlight of somebody else's, the start of somebody else's career.
Right.
And a lot of the fans, I mean, certainly what I see online, they're very
dismissive of fighters
that at one point were great and are now not quite where they used to be.
And, you know, they start throwing around words like washed and stuff.
I'm like, you've got to respect where these guys came from.
Like, no one lives forever.
No one is at their athletic peak forever.
But we also should still be celebrating what people have achieved, you know?
And I feel like that's something that we're not, we don't get as much in the
sport.
And that's partly because the young fighters get matched with the veterans to,
you know,
like, you know, bring Ken Shamrock back out of retirement and dust him off for
Rich Franklin
to fight him because no one knew who Rich was and he was so close to a title
shot.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, that was one of those moments where I'm like, that's kind of a, I don't,
I don't
like that fight.
You know what I mean?
Because, because I can see what, what's being done there.
Right.
And I mean, not that you might have needed it, but the boost that he would have
got from
smashing the hell out of Nate Diaz, you know, that, that was kind of part of
the benefit
of throwing Nate into that fight, you know?
And that they're, they're, they're the fights that I would like to not see
anymore.
Because I think we get more fights out of some of these guys towards the end of
their career
where they, maybe their athleticism is not where it was, but their knowledge is
way ahead
of where it used to be.
Right.
Like we, we go back, you know, we were talking about, about the old days and
when we first
getting into it and when MMA first became a thing, like me as a 17 year old
sitting,
I wheeled the TV in with the VHS and I put the tape in and I watched UFC two
and three
and I had this feeling of, I'm like, now I'm questioning myself and everything
that everything
about me as a martial artist.
Like I have to do this.
And if I don't do this, I'm going to be questioning myself my whole life.
But at the same time, I'm looking at this going, well, I know one martial art
really well,
Taekwondo, and I know probably four or five other martial arts.
All right.
You know, Wing Chun, I'd done some traditional jujitsu, I'd boxed quite a lot.
You know what I mean?
So like I had a decent handle, but I also have a library of martial arts books
and I would
sit in front of that library and think to myself, like, how am I going to
consume all of this
information?
And it wasn't like, okay, I need this bit of information and this, and it wasn't
a case
of absorbing what is useful and rejecting what's useless.
I had to absorb everything in order to go through that shedding process.
And it just felt so overwhelming.
Like I remember going into fights feeling like I have no idea how this is going
to play out.
Like I don't know half of this guy's skillset just purely because I haven't had
the time
to learn all of this stuff.
And it's like, the more you pick at it, the more, you know, it's like, it's
like you're
hitting a rock and all of a sudden it falls in and it's a massive cave inside
and it's
just full of information.
And I'm like, how am I going to consume all of this knowledge?
You know what I mean?
And it was, I remember feeling very, very overwhelmed by it all.
And that fed into a lot of anxiety during fight week, which was, you know,
something that everybody
always manages.
But if I look back, that was where my anxiety came from.
It was the, it was the over analysis of the sport and the feeling like I was
never going
to be able to learn all of this information.
Whereas now in actuality, I feel very, very opposite.
I feel like now if I was going back, my training would be very, very focused
and very, very streamlined.
But that's because I've had years and years of experience of watching the sport
and knowing
what works and what doesn't and pulling things apart.
You know what I mean?
So it was almost like, and I said this, I've said this to a lot of young
fighters.
If I, if I, in my career at one point could have stopped and taken six months
out or a year
out just to be a student and just to learn and absorb, that would have been a
real benefit
for me.
When I stopped fighting and I was doing commentary and work doing inside the
octagon and stuff,
like my knowledge was growing on a daily basis.
I felt it.
And, and I, and I just, I thought to myself, man, I could have done this when I
was in my
career, but I, I didn't because I was, I was partly scared of the, of the, the
over analysis
of it, you know, and partly, partly concerned that I was going to show myself
so much that
I didn't know that I was just going to feel like it was endless.
It was a bottomless pit of knowledge.
Right.
You know, whereas when I started doing inside the octagon and I was, I was
watching fights
in chronological order from the beginnings of people's careers all the way
through.
And then I was going back and I was watching prelims of, of fights that I
wouldn't have watched
in my career because I only want to watch this guy and this guy, because I don't
want all
of this.
Sometimes I watch somebody and feel like I'm getting worse when I'm watching
them.
You know what I mean?
So I'd be very, very specific about who I would watch.
Whereas in actuality, if you watch the whole card start to finish, the fight IQ
increases
generally as the card goes on.
So the guys at the top make far less mistakes and they're the guys that I'm
watching.
So I'm watching people that are, you know, way closer to flawless than I am.
But if I watch the prelims, I can see the same people, the same mistakes that
people are making.
They're just making them far more regularly on the prelims.
So it was almost like watching the prelims was uncovering problems and, and bad
decisions
much quicker than it was when I was watching the few specific guys that I was
trying to
learn from.
So there was a real benefit in just absorbing all of it.
And then the next stage was, and it was specifically Robbie Lawler against Roy
McDonald.
It was the first time I realized I was watching a fight without putting myself
in the cage.
And, and it was, it was like an epiphany.
I was like, Oh, I'm, I'm just watching these two guys as a fan.
I'm not comparing Robbie Lawler to me and Roy McDonald to me.
And my process of preparing for an opponent was very similar to what I would do
for, for
an analysis.
I would, I'd get into him.
I would watch it as much as I could have that person, but then I would go back
and watch
my fights that I knew were available to them.
So I'm now I'm watching my fights with their skillset in mind.
Right.
So now I'm, I'm, I'm almost, I'm almost pretending to be that person to watch
me and go, okay,
well I can do this to him and I can do this to him, but there's always a bit of
ego involved
there.
So like, say with Carlos Condit, an incredible fighter, right?
He's great at everything, but he's not gonna be able to take me down.
And there's no way in hell he's gonna be able to knock me out, you know, Mohawk
flapping
in the wind, you know, and it, and it was like, and that was, that was my ego
getting
in the way.
Right.
Because if I was looking at Carlos Condit versus Robbie Lawler or Carlos Condit
versus
GSP, I would have respected his counterpunching.
Right.
But my ego was a block in that scenario.
So by watching two fighters and being able to remove myself entirely, I just
saw things
differently.
And it took my, my shit out of it.
It took my drama out of the way.
That's interesting.
Your ego really can get in the way.
And it really makes you make terrible decisions.
Like how many people have taken fights they shouldn't have taken just because
of their
ego, their ego just gave them a distorted perception.
Absolutely.
There was this guy that was training with us that was really good at jujitsu
and he had
no striking and he was going to take an MMA fight.
And I remember saying to him, you, you have to understand that, like what you
can do to
people on the ground, right?
You could, you could make a person feel helpless, right?
Someone could do that to you standing up and it's way scarier.
It's way scarier.
Like you have no idea.
Like you have no, you think it's this, this weird Dunning-Kruger effect, right?
Like you think you're really good.
So you think you're good at that?
Like you've this distorted, you don't know anything about striking.
Like his striking was like, pap, pap, like rudimentary, like nothing.
I'm like, someone's going to set you up and boom, right?
And head kick you.
They're going to, and he got TKO'd.
He got beat up badly.
And I think it really fucked him up too.
Really?
Yeah.
It's almost like you pull the curtain back and you realize there's a whole of
the world
behind the curtain that you, you'd not anticipated was there.
But the scariest world to not be good at is the striking world.
Absolutely.
That's the scariest world.
And I've, I've tried to quantify this myself because, because it is an
interesting thing
because often I find myself, I'm explaining the nuances of feints and movements
that are
opening doors for other things to land.
I mean, Adesanya was a master at this.
Conor McGregor was a master at this, you know, and, and the way that they
deliver their techniques,
there's such a, there's such an elite level of intelligence to it that it's
easy to just
think that it's chance what they're doing, right?
Like, like take color, take a Conor McGregor cowboy, for example, right?
And, and the beauty, the beauty of inside the octagon is I would download all
the angles
of the fight.
I would watch every angle, the full fight from the whole, whole, whole angle.
So I'd see different things and there's a, there's a moment in that fight.
And this is, this is the benefit of, of, uh, say Conor McGregor, say his brand
is the left
hand, right?
Conor McGregor's left hand brand was a very, very powerful weapon for him to
take into the
fight against cowboy because cowboy was so focused on it.
And there's an angle from, from cowboy's back to against the fence.
And he sees Conor close his left hand and straight away, cowboy goes, left hand's
coming.
And he moves onto the head kick.
It was the, it was the threat of the left hand coming that forced cowboy to
make that mistake.
Anderson Silva, Vitor Belfort, when he looked at his leg and kicked him in the
face, like
the idea of him being able to sell.
And you look at that fight, Vitor's checking the inside low kick while the,
while he's got
Anderson's toes in his mouth.
You know what I mean?
And it's like, he was able to sell a technique purely with his eyeline, purely
with a feint.
And Adesanya is another master at it as well.
And that to me then shows that there are, we've got ranges in MMA, but in each
one of those
ranges, there's dimensions as well, right?
There's dimensions of understanding.
Like you could be a button mashing fighter.
And a lot of people have success with button mashing.
Right.
They throw the technique that they worked in the changing room, warming up on
the pads.
But then there are people that understand that each one of these techniques and
each, each
thing that they do or, or piece that they have in their arsenal is a setup for
something
else.
Right.
You know?
Well, that's, what's interesting about people that have a real system.
Yeah.
Like Dwayne Bang Ludwig.
Have you ever trained with him?
I haven't, but we, we fought, didn't we?
So I've still, I mean, I was a huge fan of him back in the day.
I remember him, TKO-ing somebody in cage, King of the Cage up against the fence.
Oh yeah.
And he did that in love with him.
Yeah.
That was Genki Sue though, wasn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Great, great system of footwork though, isn't it?
Oh, he has an amazing system and his system is like, he has a giant notebook
filled with
like techniques where everything, his system is like very well thought out.
And it's really interesting because he didn't fight the way he teaches.
No.
That's what's really interesting.
Like TJ Dillashaw is probably his greatest student and TJ fought completely
different than Dwayne.
He'd constantly switch stances constantly.
It was like, he was giving you so many looks and you know, it's, it's wild
watching when
you know, you watch like Dwayne style versus what he would teach.
Cause it was just like, Oh, if I had only known this while I was fighting, if I
had only known
this while I was coming up, if I only known this early, early on in my career.
Yeah.
And this is where I don't think we get enough people crossing over to coaching
afterwards.
Like whenever I see former fighter in the corner, Mike Brown, Robbie Lawler,
whoever
it is, like I'm, I'm filled with confidence that the sport is moving on because
they're
going to pass on information that they've taken on from somebody else and
refined, you know,
like my Taekwondo teacher told me when I was a kid, if, if you're not better
than me at
my age, I've failed as a teacher and like, and he always, Mick Rowley, his name
is, he
always gave me everything.
There was never any restriction because he wanted to see what I would do with
it and where
I would take it.
Because then same with Eddie Bravo, he was, we were just chatting about it, uh,
backstage.
Um, remember Sean Bollinger?
Sure.
He used to be able to heel hook himself and he created the double bagger and
there's a few
different things, but I remember being on the mats and watching Eddie Bravo
listened to
one of his 16, 17 year old students to see what he could learn from him.
And that's, that's such an unusual thing in a lot of martial arts schools is
the teacher
being a student, right?
And, um, that, that's something that always stood out to me about particular
people.
Like I would never want to train a fighter and hold anything back from them
because I
always want to be just a little bit better.
You know, I want to, I want to give you everything, throw everything I've got
on the table and then
see what you pick up, see what you run with and see what you can teach me from
it.
Yeah.
And it'll make you better too.
And that's the thing.
Absolutely.
But you have to have a, an honest ego.
Yes.
Like you have to be able to really say, okay, this is how good I am.
I can't pretend I'm better than I am for these people.
This is how good I am.
And you have to be able to show it.
Yeah.
And that's one of the beautiful things about jujitsu is like you have to roll.
Like if you're a teacher, you're rolling with people.
But if Eddie gets caught in something, he'll tell people.
And he'll show you, show me what you did.
And everybody look what he did.
And he'll bring people around.
He's like, he's like, he'll let you know.
I'm just a human being.
I just happen to be really good at this.
And even if I'm really good at this, there's openings, there's holes, there's
things that
I don't know.
And this is a constantly changing and evolving game where people are bringing
in new things.
And some of these new things, you know, you analyze it.
And you go, well, here's a simple way to stop this.
And as soon as someone knows this, that submission's gone.
And so then you kill it.
And you put it aside.
Well, we tried that one.
It didn't work.
We're like, try to stop this.
And you're like, I don't, I think that's legit.
And then guys would get down.
They would go, what if you do this?
What if you do that?
And he'll have classes.
We'll have like 15 guys come up with different solutions to these problems.
And say, okay, get him in it.
And put him in it.
All right.
Now, how do you finish it?
And you grab here?
Okay.
What would you do here?
And then like you have guys like break things down and that's, that honest
approach.
Someone told me that, remember when Hoist Gracie tapped Dan Severin with a
triangle?
They were training at one of the Gracie schools, a friend of mine.
And he saw that and he said, can you show us that?
He said, you're not ready for that yet.
I can't show you that.
And he's like, what the fuck are you talking about?
He's like, okay, it's, it's a technique, like show me the technique.
Like he just did it.
And he's like, no, we're not going to like, they were holding back.
Yeah.
So in the early days, there was a lot of holding back.
You know, this is like, what was that?
What year was that?
That had to be like 94 or something like that.
Right.
But then, you know, but then like everyone's reputation as a coach back in
those days couldn't
really be questioned too much.
You know what I mean?
Right.
Because there was no way of them proving it.
I just, I can't, it's too deadly.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Whereas, you know, like, like the people that, and those, those people stand
out in my mind,
you know, Eddie was one of those people.
He stood out in my mind because, because of how he, he approached the sessions.
He was always a student, even when he was the teacher.
Yeah.
And the other thing as well that, you know, everybody wanted to name something
in the 10th
planet system.
Right.
Make something and make it stick.
Mm-hmm.
So it, like, it created this really, like, it was a, it was a, a thriving
environment to
be in.
And I loved being at legends back in the day and the, and I, you know,
obviously bomb
squad as well before that.
Yeah.
What year did you start training with us?
It was legends.
It was after the bomb squad had closed.
I went back to the bomb squad.
I went back to the bomb squad.
Well, where, what was the bomb squad to train with Paulo Tolcher, um, of Bloodsport
fame.
Yeah.
But, uh, yeah, legends, it was, and it just opened when I, when I arrived.
So what year was that?
2005?
6?
Uh, probably 2006.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
Cause before that I've been training at American Top Team.
Bro, that's 20 years ago.
Isn't that crazy?
I know.
Two decades, man.
That's when we met.
20 fucking years ago.
Yeah.
And a lot's changed.
Nuts.
Yeah.
It's nuts how time just fucking waits for no one.
I was, I was just saying to the guys, the guys here, like, it's funny, like the
Joe Rogan
experience.
If you'd have asked me what the Joe Rogan experience was 20 years ago, it was
getting
crushed inside control.
That was my experience of Joe Rogan.
Being on the mats during the class and watching you smash the bag with your
back kick and then
stepping onto the mats and just, and you had, you almost had like the opposite
game to
most of the guys on the mat.
Cause all the 10th planet guys were like pulling you into half guard or into
guard and trying
to wrap you up.
Whereas you were very much a top game player.
Yeah.
That's at least how it felt to me.
It was like you were the different role on the mat to everybody else.
Well, I, I got obsessed with head and arm chokes.
Yeah.
I felt it.
You know, it fucked my neck up.
I think I wound up having bulging disc in my neck.
It was either that or not tapping the guillotines, but, uh, I, I got a head and
arm chokes.
I developed it where it was like, if I locked it on, you were pretty much done,
you know?
And when I started tapping like brown belts and higher level guys with that,
and then
I just really concentrated on it.
And it's one of those things where it's like, you know how it is just like with
a kick, like
everyone has strong legs, you know, you can lift weights with your legs, but
like, how
come some people can kick harder than other people?
Well, it's the, the coordination, the technique, the refinement of it where it
just, and there's
something like that and a squeeze like Marcelo, like Marcelo would get your
back and his rear
naked choke.
Marcelo Garcia was just like a master.
He's not a big, strong guy, like, so what is it?
And so I, that was like my number one go-to was the head and arm choke.
If I could get that shit, I was pretty sure I could lock it up.
So I just developed this style of just crushing where I would just have my
whole body would
just rock on to something like a pit bull.
You know?
Yeah.
It is.
But that's interesting.
The difference between striking and grappling and going back to what we were
talking about
a minute ago, like there's something mechanical about grappling, right?
Yes.
If you pull on somebody's head, the head's going to come down or they're going
to force
back and the head's going to go back.
There's a, there's a cause and reaction in grappling almost all the time that
even a person
that doesn't fight can see the basics of, right?
Yes.
Well, if I pick one leg up and I throw you around, you're going to lose your
balance.
Right.
Even something as simple as that.
But with striking, there's so many, so many things that happen with striking
where no one
touches anybody.
Right?
Especially when you've got, and then this is where the dimensions come in.
You know, you've got the button mashers at the bottom.
You've got the guys that have refined their button mashing skill sets.
So now they've got two or three combos that work well for them.
Or they've got a particular technique that they refine to a point where they
can deliver
it in 10 different ways.
But then you've got people that understand that each one of their weapons is a
different
thing at a different time.
It serves a different purpose at a different time.
You know?
Yeah.
Like with a jab, for example.
Everybody in their game has got a jab.
But if you strip that jab down into its core components and you go, you know,
you look
at like a secondary identifier, right, of that technique, there are going to be
differences.
Right?
If I throw my right hand straight and I throw it over your jab or I throw it
when I split
your cross, that to me is three different techniques.
Yes.
Right?
It's the same weapon that you're using, but the delivery system's different.
Right.
Right?
But then on top of that complexity, you've got all of the damage that you can
inflict that
draw responses to people, right?
Like the calf kick.
Now you can feint a calf kick and get someone to pick their leg up.
And like, that's a very, very basic example.
Or when someone's, you know, been hit with a body shot, you feint a body shot
and their
head's almost always open.
There are certain things.
I mean, headshot dead is a good, another good example.
Yeah.
How often do you see someone throw a punch followed by a kick and knock their
opponents
out?
Duke Rufus used to teach that.
Is that right?
Yeah.
He taught me that.
That was, that was his thing.
The shield, the vision with a punch and have the kick come behind it.
See that's, that's, that for me is that's one delivery mechanism of one
particular technique.
Right.
And there are lots and lots of those.
Lots of them.
Lots of them.
But that's where I find it really interesting is and how, how I, I sat one day
and I thought
to myself, I'm going to, I'm going to nail down the jab.
I'm going to start with that.
Cause I, I have intended on writing a book or two about this at some point.
And I started with the jab and I got to like 20,000 words and I thought to
myself, no one's
going to read this shit.
Like I'm going to say, I'm going to sell one copy.
It's going to be to myself so I can criticize it.
Do you know what I mean?
So it's like, well, you've always been a very thorough guy in the way you
analyze things,
which makes you a perfect candidate for someone who's a commentator.
Cause you, you really have a very complex understanding of the mechanics of
movement.
You're going to have all the different things that are happening.
You're not just like, you know, Oh, we hit them hard.
Like you, you're looking at all the different layers and you're, you're, you
analyze things
on multi levels, which I always find fascinating.
Like you have a great commentary style.
It's really excellent.
You're absolutely one of the best out there.
That means a lot to me.
Thank you.
Yeah, you're great.
I'm fortunate enough to have a bit of the tism you see.
So it's like, I see the patterns.
That's a good thing.
Yeah.
Touching the tism is good.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
I don't think I have that.
No.
I don't know.
I have ADHD.
Yeah.
I was going to say, yeah, my dad's ADHD.
My mom's, my mom's tism for sure.
You know what I mean?
We're a bit of both.
I don't have the tism, but I have this weird ability to lock in on things where
the world goes
away and I don't need food.
Yeah.
I can just, I could do something for like 12 hours in a row.
A hundred percent.
Yeah.
I forget to eat all the time.
Yeah.
All the time.
In fact, Tom Hardy's just announced that he's autistic.
He's just collaborated with a brand and they've, they've created a whole line
of, of, you
know, no eye contact rash guards and stuff.
How convenient.
How convenient.
He's autistic.
Come on.
You know what was really interesting.
There's so many people that are claiming autistic.
Like, unless you're coding in your sleep, shut the fuck up.
You know what was really interesting is I have a friend called Scroobius Pip.
He's a rapper in the, in the UK.
Oh, I know that guy.
You know Scroobius.
Yeah.
He's great.
So he was in, he was in Taboo with Tom Hardy.
And he told me a story when they were driving from LA to Vegas and Scroobius
Pip, his, his,
uh, record labels called speech development records.
He has a stammer.
Um, he has a speech impediment.
And on this drive between LA and Vegas, he's driving, Tom Hardy's in the
passenger seat.
And Tom started to mimic his stammer, but apologized for it.
He's like, I can't, I can't help it.
Like he's, he's like absorbing parts of his character while he was sitting
there.
Very similar to like, it happened to with, with Johnny Depp and Bill Murray
when they
played Hunter Thompson, right?
Like, like you, like you watch Jack Sparrow and Jack Sparrow's got a Hunter
Thompson kind
of move to him.
And even Johnny Depp said himself, he don't think he was ever the same after he
played
Hunter Thompson in Fear and Loathing.
Well, he was such a giant Hunter Thompson fan.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it's interesting about like, like certainly method actors, people that
can play a role
to like Jim Carrey is another good example, Christian Bale, right?
Daniel Day-Lewis.
Oh my goodness.
Maybe the best.
Like their ability to like, almost like Shang Tsung out of Mortal Kombat.
They can absorb a bit of the person's character.
Yeah.
And then kind of become that character.
Yeah.
I met Tom a couple of times in Henzo's in New York.
And he's a, I mean, he's a, he's a lovely guy, but he's like kind of hunched
over no eye
contact and you know.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I think a little bit of that is fame as well.
I think so.
There's a little bit of fame that just weirds you out.
Like if I go places, I try not to make eye contact sometimes.
Yeah.
It's just too odd.
I just like, hi.
Like you, you might think I'm autistic, but I'm just fucking weirded out by too
many people.
I totally get that.
You know, one, one of my favorite shows that you ever did was with Henry Rollins,
the first
one.
And he said something that always stuck in my mind.
He said, I'm very good being the party.
I'm not very good being at the party.
Yeah.
Stuck in my mind.
I feel like that all the time, but I'm, I'm, I go the opposite way.
I, I realized recently I, I hold too much eye contact.
I, and I find it exhausting.
I'm, I was walking through the park next to the hotel last night and I'm no, I'm
like having
a conversation in my head, like stop looking at people.
Stop looking people in the eyes.
Stop making eye contact.
I do all the time.
I like lock in, but I'm even doing it now.
Like we're talking and I'm kind of locked into you.
And I, even in your conversation, you, you like have a look away.
I, I struggle to do that.
I'm actually trying to consciously do it.
I have to sometimes.
I have to sometimes if I'm thinking of an idea.
Yeah.
I look away.
My wife said that I wonder if that's autism because it's just like, uh, one of
my daughters
has my recall, my ability to like, she'll talk about like, um, you know,
whatever it is.
She can rattle off like information about the Titanic.
Like, and it's, she's like, you have your fucking dad's brain.
Like that's nuts.
But I do, when I do it, I look away.
Sometimes like I look up, like I'm talking about things, but I really want to
be clear
about what I'm saying.
I look up and it's because I want to, I think it's because I want to take out
the element
of eye to eye and communicating with someone looking away while thinking known
as gaze aversion,
a common cognitive behavior that helps people process information by reducing
external distractions.
Yeah.
That's what I'm doing.
By looking at an empty space or upward, the brain shifts from environmental
input to internal
cognitive tasks, such as memory retrieval or complex thinking.
Yeah.
That's what I do.
I don't even, I didn't know.
It was a similar, like when people turned on the radio when you're trying to
find where
you're going, you know?
Oh yeah.
You have to like block your, whatever it is.
Right.
You can still see, but you have to like, you know.
Oh right.
Or if someone's yapping at you while you're trying to figure out where you're
going and
they're telling you, and I tell her and they're like, we shut the fuck up.
I don't know where I am.
Yeah.
We have to figure out where we're going.
You know, I find myself doing it when I'm walking through airports, when I'm
traveling,
I've got my wife with me, Veronica.
Like I notice, I consciously don't make eye contact with her when we're
traveling.
And I don't know why that is.
It's like, I feel a little bit like there's enough to be dealing with right now.
Yeah.
And then open a conversation with you by looking at you.
That's another layer of.
Yes.
Let me just deal with the airport.
Yes.
Well, you know, people don't think about that.
But when you're involved in multiple tasks at the same time, you know, you're
taking away
your ability to concentrate and do a great job at any one of those things.
If there's multiple things going on at the same time, that's why like, I used
to do interviews
in my car and I stopped doing them because I sound like a moron.
And I realized this because I'm thinking about cars.
Right.
I'm going 60 miles an hour.
There's a car to the left.
There's a car to the right.
There's a car in front of me, car behind.
This guy, this fucking asshole.
Oh, this guy in a motorcycle.
He's going to get killed.
Look at him zipping in between the lanes.
And so I'm thinking all these different things.
And then I'm trying to explain different stuff.
I thought it would be a great way to multitask.
Let me do this fucking stupid interview that I don't want to do anyway.
And let me do it while I'm on the phone.
It'd be kind of fun.
Yeah.
But meanwhile, I just sound like a moron because I can't articulate well
because I'm thinking
about too many different things simultaneously.
Well, you're already multitasking.
Yeah.
Which is why I like the sensory deprivation tank so much.
Yes.
Because there's none.
There's nothing.
There's no tasks.
Is that still a regular thing for you?
I got it right here.
Have you really?
Yeah.
Got it right here.
I've only done it a couple of times, but I found it very useful.
Where are you living these days?
I'm in the UK.
I'm right in the Midlands in the UK.
I'm getting a little kooky over there, isn't it?
Yes.
You might want to bail before they lock you up for thought crime.
I know, right?
I know.
For real.
It's like I'm conscious and cautious all the time.
I feel right now like I'm holding my tongue on a lot of things just purely
because I know
that when I start talking, I'm just because that's how I am.
I'm very opinionated, unfortunately.
That's a good thing.
Well, if I decide to start talking, then I won't shut up and I've not opened
that floodgate
yet, but I do feel like it's coming, but I also feel like I need to, I need to
feel
like I need to prepare for it a little bit.
You know what I mean?
Like there's a bunch of books I need to consume before I'm, I'm in the right
place
where I can open up and fully express yourself about certain things.
Yeah.
It's just where it's going right now is not in a good direction.
It's going, it's tightening down on people's ability to express themselves.
Yeah.
And you've got so many issues.
It's happening everywhere though, isn't it?
I mean, even like, you know, like, I mean, as a, as a comedian, you know,
freedom of speech
is so important to you and to your industry.
You know what I mean?
And I feel like that's changed a lot, you know, across, across the world.
It's the same in Europe as well in a lot of places.
I think in America and comedy, it was closing down and then people realize we
can't have
this and it's opened right back up.
Right. Okay.
You know, there was a bunch of people that were trying to conflate jokes with
your actual
opinions.
Yeah.
You know, I talked about on stage once.
I'm like, you know, Bob Marley didn't really shoot the sheriff.
You know, it's just when Quentin Tarantino's filming a film, nobody's dying.
Okay.
This is entertainment.
And you say things that you don't really believe because it's an outrageous
thing to
say because it's funny.
And there's this understanding of that as an audience member, you're supposed
to be able
to accept that.
But then you have these cunts out there in the world that are just looking to
find words
that someone said and ascribe them as if they're, you know, put it, put it down
on paper,
as if this is a statement.
Like this is what this person actually thinks and believes like, no, that's not
what we're
fucking around.
We're talking shit.
Like you can't pretend.
Yeah.
And then take a small clip and put it completely out of context.
All the time.
Yeah.
All the time about all kinds of things.
People, which is part of the game.
You know, people love to do that.
It's like, it's fine.
It's like, it's okay.
You know what?
You're it's fine for tick tock minded people.
The real problem is people that don't know you and don't understand you.
And then they get an impression of you based off of that.
This is their first introduction to you.
And it's based off.
Well, the fuck that guy.
But, you know, that's just part of the game.
Yeah, it's gonna happen.
I think comedians and satire is one of the last lines of defense against tyranny.
I really do.
Like I watch prime minister's questions every Wednesday and I listen to just
the nonsense
that comes out of it.
And we've got Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch just going at each other over just
nonsense.
It's not nothing real, no real, no real quality of conversation is coming out
of that.
But what I feel like is if we had a panel of comedians sitting in the gallery
somewhere,
you know, you've got a Robert Mitchell and Ricky Gervais and James A. Castor
and a few
others just sitting there just going, well, that sounds like nonsense.
And then poking fun at it and making a joke out of it.
It brings a reality to things that I don't think, I think we're lacking in a
lot of ways.
Well, the Lakota had that in their tribes.
They had a thing called the Hayoka, which they called a sacred clown.
And the Hayoka would be able to make fun of everything.
And as soon as you couldn't make fun of something, you knew it was bullshit.
So it's like you couldn't make fun of the chief's wife or you couldn't make fun
of, you know, someone,
some warrior couldn't make fun of something.
As soon as you couldn't make fun of something like, hey, why are you so
defensive?
How come I can't make fun of that?
That's interesting.
Yeah.
I mean, look, it had to actually be funny.
Hayoka.
Hayoka.
It had to actually be funny, of course, or you'd probably get killed.
But that's your new move.
That's your new move, Joe.
You need to set up a Hayoka for the world.
Well, I think that's what comedy is in many ways.
It's a test.
You test things.
It doesn't mean it always works.
And it doesn't mean that jokes are always funny.
And it doesn't mean that sometimes people don't overreach.
You know, Patrice O'Neil had a great statement about that where he was talking
about something
that happened on the Opie and Anthony show.
And he was on Fox News and they were criticizing it.
And he was saying, you've got to understand that all jokes come from the same
place.
They all come from the place of trying to be funny.
And some of them you might find offensive and some of them you might laugh at
really hard.
But it's the mindset, the place that it's coming from is all the same.
And I was like, that's so wise.
Because that's really the best way to describe it.
Because that's really what everyone's trying to do.
They're just trying to make people laugh.
It's just sometimes it doesn't come out right.
Or sometimes it's a miss.
Like especially if it's an ad lib.
Like at any moment in time you generally don't know what the next word out of
your mouth is going to be like right now.
Right?
I don't know.
I'm just free balling.
And sometimes you'll say something really hilarious.
And sometimes you say something and you're like, cut that out, Jamie.
It's like you try, you swing, you miss.
You know, you don't know.
And people want to take these things that you're free balling with and just
trying to make laughs and call them a statement.
And think of that as like this well thought out, you know, like you sat down,
you wrote this out.
You went over it with a fine tooth comb.
This is my press release.
Like that's not what comedy is.
It's jokes.
You're just fucking around.
And if you can't take a joke, you're probably annoying.
Yeah.
And you really shouldn't be in any position to regulate discourse because you're
not a fun person.
Right?
You're a person that's looking to take things very seriously.
Yeah.
We know a lot of people like that that are bad faith actors and, you know, they
play gotcha.
You just said this.
Like, you really mean that?
So tell your position on that.
Like, oh, fuck off.
Yeah.
Like, you're not, I'm not interested in engaging with you because you're not
real.
You know, like this is not a real thing.
You're playing a stupid game.
I'm playing a game of we're two human beings communicating with each other and
we're going to overstep sometimes.
We're going to slip up.
We're going to, and every now and then you're going to nail it, knock it out of
the park.
And even if I don't like you, if you fucking make me laugh, I'll clap.
Yeah.
You know, it's kind of similar with trash talking, isn't it?
You know what I mean?
And if somebody, like one of the funniest lines ever was, and I remember Connor,
as he was saying
it, he was laughing at himself and it was the back and forth with Chad Mendez.
And he was, Chad was saying, you can't wrestle.
And Connor, he was on a live feed at BT Sports Studio.
And I remember it so clearly because he was like, as he was saying it, he was
finding it funny himself.
He was like, I'll wrestle my balls on your forehead.
And then he's laughing and everybody in the room is laughing.
Even Chad Mendez is laughing.
You know what I mean?
But then like.
Funny dude.
How about the Jeremy Stevens one?
Who the fuck is that guy?
And that's become a part of MMA law, right?
Like it's amazing how he's influenced it.
Oh, he was the master shit talker.
Yeah.
And also the master at emotional warfare.
Yes.
Like the Jose Aldo fight.
I remember being there for that fight going, Aldo is out of sorts.
Yes.
His whole, he looked fucked up.
His body looked smooth.
He didn't look, he didn't look like he wanted to be there.
And he just threw himself at Connor and got cracked.
Wasn't it crazy?
He was so emotionally torn.
And like the moment was so big.
And then Connor across the other side looks so relaxed and loose.
Cause he know, he knew he had won the emotional warfare.
The emotional warfare was won.
And that is a giant factor in fights.
Whether or not someone bites on emotional warfare.
And I think that's a giant factor this weekend.
I watched your war room.
By the way, I love your YouTube show.
It's really excellent.
Thank you.
And this fight this weekend is a lot of emotional warfare, right?
Strickland has said some wild shit about Hamzad.
He would say, shoot him.
He calls him a goat fucker.
I mean, but it's interesting to me that it doesn't seem like Hamzad is biting
on any other.
He's like, this guy, he said this thing, but he doesn't believe it.
Yeah.
And you're like, whoa.
Like he's not, he doesn't seem upset about it.
It doesn't seem like it's under his skin.
He's like, this guy says he wants war, but I don't think he wants war.
He'd be dead.
That's it.
That's how it should be.
I mean, Strickland would be the same.
I don't think you could say anything to Strickland that would offend him.
He's just...
He'll laugh.
Yeah, exactly.
Whereas like, say like when I had that fight against Marcus Davis coming up.
Like I was surprised at how angry he got at me.
Like in the countdown show, I'm like, I'm laughing.
I'm like, I can't, I literally can't believe he's this het up and wound up
about it.
You know?
And like, you go back to the Connor thing.
The, you remember the press conference where he stole Aldo's belt?
The last one they did in Ireland.
Yes.
I was behind the stage for that one to start with when they were both being
kept separate
and Dana was there.
And then when they went on stage, I was on Connor's side of the stage at the
bottom of the stairs.
And the anger just emanating off Aldo the whole day was exhausting for me just
to be around.
And then after the press conference where Connor had taken his belt, as soon as
they circled back and they were behind the thingy, again, Aldo was like beside
himself angry.
Yeah.
And as soon as I saw that, I'm like, wow, that is, that's like a level of witchcraft
that you see in like the fainting of striking.
Yeah.
And when you can start to pull somebody's emotions out like that.
Yeah.
And like, for me, I think, I think fighters should be completely impenetrable.
Like no one should be able to say anything to a fighter to upset them.
I just, it's, it's an immediate weakness that you throw on the table for
someone to get their teeth into.
Well, it's one of the things that I really appreciate about Pereira, his stoicism.
He's always just stoic.
You could talk all that mad shit about him, you know?
And like the Ankaliev, the rematch with Ankaliev, like Ankaliev had talked so
much shit after that first fight.
Yeah.
You know, and then when he blasted him out in the first round, then he went
like this.
Beautiful.
You know, the same thing with Jamal Hill.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, he, he's very stoic, but afterwards his celebration is even
like, look, look.
It's so cool.
I like the fact that his, his coldness is a part of his brand.
Oh yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
He's, he's very cold.
That's stare down.
Yeah.
Like him and Yuri Prohaska.
It's so disturbing that Yuri thought he was using spiritual warfare.
Like Yuri accused him of using sorcery.
He's like, no magic this time.
Yeah.
Yuri's so crazy.
Such a crazy request.
Yeah.
Like do not invoke spirits.
I had someone trying to get a witch doctor on me in Brazil once.
Really?
They thought I was casting spells.
Yeah.
They tried to get a witch doctor.
Yeah.
Casting spells is fine.
Cause if you believe it, it'll work.
Yeah.
Right.
If you really, but that's why voodoo works.
Right.
Cause if you believe in voodoo, it will fuck you up.
But someone says, I'll curse you.
You're like, oh no, I'm fucking curse shit.
Yeah.
If you really believe that it will work.
Yeah.
If you commit, if you can make someone afraid of something or sensitive to
something, you know,
and, and, and, you know, and I, I was always a big fan of Marcus Davis and I
knew how dangerous
he was in the division, but I also knew that if I poked him enough in the right
direction,
I would get a particular version of him that suited me.
Right.
And there were two versions of Marcus, right?
There was the Marcus that showed up and he was like stacked, looked like the
Hulk.
And then you're like, okay, he's going to grapple.
Or there was the Marcus that was a little bit slender and it just looked
different.
And that version of Marcus Davis was knocking everybody out.
Right.
That's when he's coming into box.
And, and I knew that if I pushed him enough, cause I, it was easier for me to
deal with
the heavily muscled grappler version of Marcus Davis than the slick Southpaw
boxer version.
So my thought was if I can push him to be really, really angry at me, he's not
going to
want to roll the dice on striking games.
He's going to want to edge his bets and try and force the fight into the range
that I'm
not very good at.
So there was a, there was a purpose to it.
But as soon as he bit on it, I was like, that was too easy.
That was too easy.
And like there was, there was clips of him training.
He's like, the nose is bleeding and he just looks.
And then that's when I'm for the weigh-ins.
I made the, I hate Dan Hardy t-shirts because we did a, like a 10 minute
countdown show for
it.
And I was trained at wildcard at the time just to try and get inside his head.
You know, I'm training a boxing gym.
I'm, you know, I'm expecting you to be a boxer.
And I played the game really hard on that fight.
And, um, it was just, it was interesting to see how it played out because of
what he expected
from me and, and, and the version of him that I got.
Right.
And, and he was, he was so angry at me that he's, his vision was, his mind was
clouded.
And even in the, was it the end of the second round?
He went back and sat on his stool and it always stuck in my mind, Mark Della Grotti
in his
corner.
It wasn't advice.
It wasn't anything.
He said, you're one round away from shutting this kid up.
It was all about, about silencing me, putting me in my place.
Interesting.
You know?
And then, and then funnily enough, after that, the next fight was Mike Swick.
And for the whole training camp, Mike Swick was like, he was waiting for me to
start
trash talking.
So I'm like, I'm not going to do it because he's expecting it and he'll find it
funny.
So it's not going to have any kind of impact.
So I just waited until the press conference and brought him a runner up trophy.
And he was like, I'm bringing this to the cage on, on fight night and I'm going
to give
it back to you.
But you know, but it was, it's interesting to see what you can do, how you can
affect people
like that and, and, and make them act out, you know, like the, the countdown
show, the,
the very start of it.
It's just hilarious.
Still in my mind is you've got this whole kind of, it's like dimly lit.
And Marcus is there.
And, and he's like, you know, when I was a kid, uh, my mom used to say, you can't
say
you hate this unless you think a little bit about how much you dislike it every
day.
And then there was a pause and the UFC nailed it with the editing.
And he looked down the camera and he went, I hate Dan Hardy.
And then it cut to me and I'm just laughing like a prick.
Like, you know, like I, and I totally under, I got so much hate mail for that
fight.
I can't even tell you.
I think I've still got a folder in my old email account cause I saved it all.
That's funny.
It was, I got, I got death threats.
I got all kinds of stuff.
Of course.
Like people hated me from that fight, but like, as soon as I'm, I thought, you
know,
I'm going to make, I hate Dan Hardy t-shirt surely to kind of like bring some
light to this.
I even made one for Marcus and he threw it back at me, but it was just like, I
wanted a particular
version of him, you know, just like, like what Connor did with Aldo.
He primed Aldo to run onto that counter left and, and Aldo, a clear mind
training from a blank slate, not having any of that psychological warfare in
mind.
Would never charge like that.
Would have been so much more dangerous for Connor.
Right.
He, and, and Connor was always heavy on the front leg and Aldo was one of the
best leg kickers ever.
You know, he probably would have tried to kick the legs and piece them apart
from the outside and find his motions.
But Connor was always going to be a problem for Aldo because he's so fast and
he's so explosive and so big.
Yeah.
He was so big for 45.
He, his weight cut was hell.
Watching him weigh in and that was the days where you would actually weigh in.
This is before the ceremonial weigh in.
So he would have to make 145 and then stand there and he looked like a dead man.
He looked like someone from like fucking The Walking Dead.
Yeah.
It was weird.
And then he would just rehydrate.
And the next day he, you know, he had to be a buck 65 when he actually fought.
Easy.
Easy.
I'm, I, I like what they've done with the weight cutting.
I like the fact that it's done in the morning and people can rehydrate and
stuff.
The only, the thing I miss is to see people facing off when they're in that feral
dehydrated state.
Right.
That's the thing I miss.
Cause like a lot of the time I'll be looking for reads, you know, there's the
picture of you kind of looking around.
You know what I mean?
It's like, you want to see that face off of where people are in that state.
Like what's one of my favorite things to do is see the guys head to head,
looking at each other's eyes because you just, there's a fucking smell.
Yeah.
There's a feeling in the air.
You get a sense.
I wear the meta glasses when I'm doing face offs now.
So you can see PFL have made a little logo.
Hardy's, Hardy vision.
Nice.
And you can see, and sometimes people are like face to face, it's palpable, you
know?
And, and, um, what I, what I always loved when people were cutting weight is
you've got a far more genuine version of them than the version that was, I mean,
even look at Connor, right?
He was feral at one 45, but one 55, he was, he was cutting, but he was on point
at one 70.
He was like, right.
Feel great.
Just a different, three different versions of the same person, 10 pounds apart.
Yeah.
And when I fought Rory Markham, that was co-main event in my second fight in
London, um, UFC 95, he arrived at fight week on the Tuesday at one 95 to make
one 71.
And I knew that it was going to be a rough weight cut for him.
He was a big guy.
He was massive.
And he'd never been the distance 16 and four.
He was knocked everybody out that he fought.
And I was, remember when he fought, was it Brody Farber kicked him in the neck
and like, as he went down, he like crossed his legs on the way down.
That was at the palms.
Yeah, no, I do remember that.
And it was just dead at him.
It was brutal.
But like, when we were, we did the weigh-ins in a theater in London and
obviously we're all on weight.
I've been on weight since two o'clock as most people have.
We've journeyed into London on the bus.
Everyone's still on weight.
No one's drinking.
And like, you walk through the changing rooms in the back and we're in like an
old, like West End theater.
And like, you can see where people are at, what state they're at, how much they've
cut weight.
And I remember seeing Rory Markham just sitting there.
Just, he would just look like he was broken already.
He was just so drained and exhausted.
So my thought to myself is I'm going to get right in his face as soon as I've
stepped off the scales.
And I wanted him to feel that I wasn't as depleted as he was the day before
because that would then be his memory going into the fight on fight days that
he didn't cut as much as me.
He didn't feel like shit like I did yesterday.
Right.
And like, as I walked onto the stage, I'm standing on the scales and I'm
looking at him.
And there's never a photograph of me looking at the crowd and flexing.
I'm looking directly at him.
And as soon as they read my weight, I went straighter up on my forehead on his
and I tried to push him back a step or two.
And that was because we were on weight.
If that was a morning weigh in and we were doing it later in the day, it wouldn't
have had the same kind of impact.
Right.
You know, he would have already been replenished.
He would have felt much better.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a good point.
He would have pushed.
That's why I always wore contact lenses as well.
I always had the contact lenses on the stage.
You know, I just didn't want people to see my eyes.
I didn't want them to get a real version of me until fight night.
Yeah.
You know.
Yeah.
Emotional warfare.
It's real.
It's very important.
I loved it.
I mean, I wasn't very good as a fighter, you see, so I had to lean on what I
could get.
Look at the guys in my division though.
I mean, John Fitch.
I know.
Mike Swick was great.
Josh Koscheck, a bit of a prick, but great fighter.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Like, they were good guys in my division at the time.
And man, I didn't have the wrestling to be competing with a lot of those guys.
It has a giant factor.
And that's a factor that takes so long to catch up to.
Yeah.
God, if you can ever, unless you're like a real superior athlete, just a freak
athlete.
It's just like someone who's got a gymnastics background or something.
Yeah.
It's like very explosive.
It's so hard to pick up that wrestling later in your career.
It's like, that's what's so crazy about Pereira.
Is that he figured out how to just stuff everything.
Like, from a multiple champion kickboxing career.
Yeah.
Where he didn't do any grappling at all.
Lost his first MMA fight to submission.
Yeah.
Really couldn't fucking grapple at all.
Gets together with Glover Teixeira and just figured it out.
But I also think with him, it's a freak athlete thing.
For sure.
Because it's the same reason why he hit so hard.
I think he's just weirdly built.
But even a freak athlete though, you take him back 10 years and you take Glover
Teixeira away.
And he's not supplied with the information where he can apply that athleticism,
right?
Yes.
And this is where former fighters passing on knowledge like we talked about.
Like we went Bass Rutten, Dwayne Ludwig, TJ Dillashaw, right?
Right.
You know, like Glover Teixeira to Alex Pereira is probably one of the best
relationships.
Because for me Glover Teixeira was, he overachieved in his career based on his
age and his athleticism compared to other people in the division.
The reason why was because his game was so solid and so sound.
I say to young fighters, you need that Glover Teixeira base level where you can
be semi-conscious, taking big shots.
Sweep to top position, take someone's back and choke him out.
Right.
Like he did that consistently.
Yeah.
He would get dropped and come back from the dead and finish people.
And Glover also missed six years of his prime.
Crazy.
Because he couldn't get out of Brazil.
Well, you were talking about him constantly before he was signed.
Yeah.
I remember that.
I remember hearing his name a lot because you were, same with Pereira.
You know, you were talking about him before the UFC signed him.
But like if you'd imagine Glover Teixeira, sorry, Alex Pereira walked into an
MMA gym in 2005, they would have probably tried to teach him a whole system of
Jiu Jitsu.
Right.
And then he would have had a wrestling coach that would have tried to teach him
folk style or freestyle wrestling.
Right, right.
What I remember to share is like, there's a lot of this shit you don't need,
brother.
Yeah.
Like, first of all, I'm not going to teach him any submissions because you're
not really going to need them.
But he does know submissions.
He's a Jiu Jitsu black belt.
But that's the thing.
He's like, does he know the whole database of Jiu Jitsu?
Does he know everything that a normal black belt would learn?
And I'm not discrediting his black belt, but what I'm saying is his game has
been very specifically tailored to be effective in the arena that he's fighting
in.
That's true.
But it's also the relationship that he has with Glover too, where it's one
really elite coach with a world championship level experience, concentrating on
a very special athlete.
Whereas if you're at ATT, you know, there's fucking Chechens and fucking Dagestanis
and just a room full of assassins and there's five coaches.
And like, I don't know if you'd get that kind of attention there.
You know, there's two different schools of thought.
You know, there's the school of thought that you need to be around those people
because that's a shark tank and that's how you get better.
You'd be around all these killers.
And then there's another school of thought is like, no, you're better off at a
very small gym with a small group of people that really concentrate on you.
I'm more inclined to think of the small gym.
I think the small gym with elite trainers is a better option than being in a
giant.
I mean, it's not that ATT doesn't create amazing world champion athletes.
It certainly does.
But I think if someone's coming up, maybe you're better off with someone like,
first of all, you'd have to find someone like Glover who's really interested in
taking the time and really working with you.
Yeah. And Glover, and you know, going back to what we're talking about earlier,
like Glover's already gone through the process of learning Jiu Jitsu and
absorbing what's useful and rejecting a lot of what's useless.
Yes.
So he's not giving Pereira the useless part of Jiu Jitsu for MMA.
Right.
Now, how much of Jiu Jitsu specifically is applied to MMA, right?
Yeah.
There are so many positions that it just changes when you start to use punches.
Things become a lot easier when you can start to strike as well, because you
can force people to do things they don't want to do.
Yep. Yep. Yep.
So like, I feel like the refinement that Glover Toshiro went through to be the
great fighter that he was is the reason why Pereira has become so successful
because he's been given the pieces that he needs.
And I would imagine that, you know, if you rolled with him, he would be a real
problem. But I would imagine his game still very direct. Like he's not using
crackhead control and he's not rolling for knee bars and that kind of thing.
Right.
I just because.
But neither is Hodger Gracie.
Of course.
You know what I mean?
But he's also gone through the shedding process, right?
Yes.
Well, I don't think he ever really acquired all the crazy shit. I think there's
a lot of these guys that like fundamentals are just like laser focused.
Yes.
Like Hickson. Hickson was always just laser focused fundamentals. Minotauro Nogueira,
laser focused fundamentals.
Do you think the do you think the existence of Vale Tudo kind of forced them to
go very specifically to what worked though for no rules contests?
Probably. There's probably some of that because obviously Hickson created and
competed in Vale Tudo very early on. So it's like, yeah, yeah. I mean, a lot of
stuff goes out the window as soon as you punch.
Yeah.
Right. A lot of stuff.
Absolutely.
Including some heel hooks and things like that. Like there's certain positions
where you see guys in jujitsu tournaments like boy, you find yourself like that
in a fight.
That guy's gonna blast you in the face.
Yeah.
Like you're in a bad, like you're grabbing a hold of someone's leg and your
head is right here and you're hooked like there is nothing stopping someone
from elbowing you or punching you in the face.
It's kind of nuts to even pursue those. But as long as there's no striking, boy,
it's very effective.
Yeah.
See, this, I often think that I'm quite, I feel very fortunate that I came into
martial arts before MMA.
And the reason for that is because the way that I learned martial arts was not
for sport.
Right.
And this was an observation I've had recently where, you know, a fighter just
would fall apart if they don't have a particular person in their corner.
Right.
My, my martial arts instructor back in the day from when I was six was teaching
me Taekwondo or teaching me martial arts, should I say, for him not to be there
cornering me because I'm doing it for self defense.
There's no sport context.
He's not teaching me techniques that I can use when he's there to coach me
through a street fight.
Right.
He's trying to give me the techniques that I need.
So when he's not there, I know what I'm doing.
Yeah.
Right.
Same thing with like spatial awareness.
Like often, like, you know, when, when I was in clubs and I was fighting a lot
back in the day, my awareness of fire exits and tables and that kind of stuff.
It gives me, it gave me a similar awareness to how I can use the cage against
my opponent, which I feel is not necessarily used as much as it could be in, in
MMA these days.
Like there are, there are certain fighters.
They just don't like, how often do you see two fighters up against the fence
panel and the whole cage is there?
And they're like, they're not, they're not, no one's using the pressure that
they could be using.
Sometimes people circle themselves onto the fence unnecessarily.
But the idea of being backed up against the wall is only if you don't want
people attacking you from behind was my, my perspective in a, in a self defense
context.
So I think the way that I learned martial arts allowed me to kind of see it as
a, um, in a more efficient way.
Right.
Like say, for example, if I'd have learned jujitsu, I wouldn't have wanted to
use jujitsu for a street fight because a lot of street fights I got in, it wasn't
one person.
Right.
So I don't want to be inside control or choking somebody out while he's volleying
me in the head.
Right.
Like for me, it was the efficiency of, okay, here's a guy.
Here's a guy.
You know what I mean?
Right.
Like how quickly can I get through these people?
Yeah.
You know, and I, and I feel like that's something that this is maybe where the
scoring criteria can be adjusted to.
So we keep getting what we want out of the sport.
Cause there are stagnant fights.
They do slow down.
People do start to think, okay, this round, this round, this round.
And there's not, there's not a, an instigation for a conclusion built into
their game necessarily.
But isn't that also dependent upon matchups?
Like sometimes people just cancel each other out skill wise and that's just
part of the game.
Absolutely.
But usually the ones where they cancel each other out skills, skill wise, are
the, are they actually the more interesting fights?
Because whether it's grappling or striking, it keeps moving almost always.
It's when there's a dominant skillset on one side and the other person just can't
deal with it.
Like look at me.
Like Kamzat and Drickus.
Exactly.
Me against GSP.
Right.
Like I, I didn't have the skillset to compete with him.
Right.
If I'd have been able to wrestle, I'd have forced him to strike.
If I'd have been better at jujitsu, I'd have maybe forced him to, to strike a
bit more.
Right.
But because there was a way of him to completely taking me out my game, there
wasn't necessarily an, an onus to, to instigate a conclusion to the fight.
Right.
So almost always when you see one person that is so dominant in wrestling and
the other person can't handle it, that's when the fights can sometimes be quite
stagnant.
Yeah.
And my argument in those scenarios is okay, well, yeah, you're winning this
with wrestling.
You're winning it with wrestling, but you're not concluding it.
Right.
Like you're going to get to the end and the judges are going to go, well, yeah,
you, you know, you, you controlled him for more of the fight.
Like the Hamzat Drick as well.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is, I mean, I'd be interested to get your thoughts on this.
I think we should stop scoring control in MMA.
Right.
Control is scored up against the fence.
Right.
Defense is not scored in MMA.
Right.
Defense is its own reward.
Right.
Control, in my opinion, is its own reward.
If you're a grappler and I'm a striker, it's, it's on you to take me into the
range that suits you.
Right.
But if someone's taking someone down and controlling them and working towards a
submission, how do you quantify that?
Well, they're working towards a submission.
They might not get it, but they're working towards it.
So, so then if, if you consider top control as you would center control, right?
When everything else is even, you go to octagon control as, as one of the
latest scoring criteria is when the striking and the grappling, everything's
even.
Then we move into, okay, well.
Octagon control is weird though, because it's like, so octagon control could be
you're in the center of the cage and you're pressing the action.
But what if you're a counter striker?
Like what if you're Tyron Woodley versus Steven Wonderboy Thompson and you
spend a lot of the time just moving away?
Like, remember they fought to a draw, right?
Yeah.
Didn't they fought to a draw in one of their fights?
Yeah.
But, but that, that was also, that was also, I mean, I, and I don't necessarily
want to criticize Tyron, but I don't really think Tyron liked fighting.
He spent a lot of time wearing his back heel down against the fence with the
crowd booing in the championship rounds.
I never got the impression that Tyron liked fighting.
He was just good at it.
You know?
That's interesting.
And I don't know what, why you would think that.
I just thought that was the style to beat Wonderboy.
I think that's the smart style to beat Wonderboy because he didn't fight that
style that Darren Till.
Well, Dan Till, he blasted him, took him down and got rid of him quick.
For sure.
With, with Wonderboy, you cannot stand in the middle of the cage and kickbox
that guy because he's doing weird shit.
He's doing things with his legs.
You can't do like, and you know, like if you see a guy like Raymond Daniels or
MVP, like you can't, you can't.
You can't, yeah.
If you can.
If you can.
Yeah, if you can.
I, I, I, I hear what you're saying totally.
But, but like say for example in the Damian Meyer fight, he defended 26 takedowns
in that fight, win the distance.
Right?
Right.
But with the Wonderboy fight, he rocked Wonderboy and he had Wonderboy hurt.
Where Wonderboy didn't hurt him.
Which is like, because he forced Wonderboy to be offensive instead of countering.
So by making it boring, by backing up.
Yeah.
But, but I, I, at the same time I don't necessarily think, I don't know if that
was a calculation of going on.
I think it was.
Do you think?
Yes.
Cause he fought him that way the second time as well.
I think.
But I think that was intimidation from what Wonderboy could do on the feet and
him not wanting to waste energy trying to take him down.
I don't think he was intimidated.
I think he was waiting.
He was waiting for moments to explode because it's not like he was timid when
he blasted him and had him rocked and hurt.
He just, he never made a fan out of me, Tyrone.
That's interesting.
And the thing is, what was interesting is I had a similar.
You didn't think you, you weren't a fan after the Darren Till fight?
Oh, absolutely.
Right.
Like, and, and same with the Robbie Lawler fight, you know, that was an
incredible knockout.
Yeah.
And this was the thing that was frustrating is that he had the capability to do
that kind of thing.
And sometimes I just felt like he, he wants to play King of the Hill.
He didn't want to be the smashing champion that, that other fighters did.
You know what I mean?
Well, you know, you got to think like he had some, he had some fights that didn't
go his way as well.
Strike Force, the Nate Marquardt fight.
The Nate Marquardt fight where he got KO'd, where Nate hit him with like a
video game combination with those elbows against the cage.
Like, so there's consequences to just wait.
And by the way, Nate Marquardt, boy, there, there's the guy that kind of people
forget how fucking good that guy was when he was in his prime.
Woo.
Yeah.
When he went over to Strike Force, he was a fucking monster, dude.
Yeah.
Facts.
That guy was good.
He was good.
You know, I had heard stories about him training at, um, in Colorado with GSP
with all those guys
are like, dude, Nate Marquardt fucked everybody up.
He was that good at one point in time.
Man.
So many names of fighters that have just been kind of lost to time that people
don't realize.
Yep.
Eve Edwards.
There's another one.
I talk about him all the time.
There's a point in time where Eve Edwards was the best 155 pounder on the
planet.
Facts.
Yeah.
It's just like people forget.
People forget how good people were.
You know, interesting the point you made about Counter-Strike.
And I've always thought this about guard playing as well.
Like, if you're a guard player, you've kind of got to accept that you're losing
until you win.
Yeah.
It's like Machida was one of the best examples of a Counter-Strike.
And then it, you know, you say Adesanya against Paolo Costa.
Paolo Costa was in the center of the cage for most of that.
Yeah.
So if you're just looking at Octagon Control, well, you're going to score it to
Paolo because he was in the center.
But there was no doubt that Izzy was just toying with him and lighting him up
from a distance.
Yeah, but you couldn't say Octagon Control because Izzy was landing all his
shots.
But that's the thing.
That was a very, very clear one, right?
Right.
Where you've got one person moving back and giving the center of the cage, but
clearly winning on the striking.
Whereas when it gets very even with the striking, you have to really have good
judges to be able to pick apart who's landing what.
Yes.
Even because like we had a fight the other week, Yakub Kasuba, he was fighting
Natan Schulte and he was backing up the whole fight.
But he was landing way more strikes than his opponent.
But even when it got to the end of the fight, I'm like, are these judges going
to score this right?
Because they don't have the stats that we have on the screen in front of us,
right?
They should.
Exactly.
They should.
But because they don't, they're going to go, oh, well, you know, he was moving
forward.
And we had a fight in Sioux Falls the other day where the female fighter,
Sharon Bowers, was pushing forward and she was landing.
But her opponent was backing up and countering a lot of the shots.
And the judges scored it to Sabrina.
It was, you know, it was the right decision to make.
But the crowd didn't like it because they felt like the Bowers was the one
pushing forward and making a fight out of it.
Yeah, but that's casuals.
Of course.
Yeah.
But it is a risky thing to be a counter striker and a guard player in MMA
because you have to, first of all, credit the judges to see what, you know.
But who's left that's a guard player?
Not many, right?
It's kind of been cycled out of the game.
Olivera is like the best at it.
But even that didn't work out for him in some times, did it?
No.
There was a lot of time he'd spend energy guard playing.
Yeah.
A lot of the time why, you know, good wrestlers decide not to wrestle.
Because the amount of energy it costs.
That's true.
But I mean, like, look what he did to Gamrot.
And that was super impressive.
And Gamrot's so good.
So good.
So good.
The fact that Gamrot was just lost on the ground with Olivera.
Showed you how good Olivera is.
Do you remember Gamrot's debut?
Oh yeah.
Against Garam Katateladze.
Like, both of those guys.
He's in karate combat now.
Is he?
Both of those guys are so elite.
Mm-hmm.
And then when they got matched up against each other in their UFC debut.
I'm like, man.
People aren't going to realize how good this matchup is.
Right, right, right.
Like, Saruqian.
I called his debut against Makachev.
Islam.
Yeah.
He was 5% behind Islam in that fight.
Yeah.
Amazing fight.
But that 5% was, you know, incredible fight.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I am very curious to see how Pereira does against Cyril Gaon.
Yeah.
Cyril Gaon's a different thing.
Just moves differently for a big guy, doesn't he?
He's also a real heavyweight.
There ain't a fucking time since he's been 15 where that guy's making 185.
No.
Right?
That's a big man.
And he's an incredible athlete and a really elite striker.
Like, a really good striker.
Like, and a fucking big heavyweight, man.
And I know Pereira weighs like 260 now.
I get it.
I get it.
Yeah, he's a heavyweight.
Yep.
Definitely.
He was 185.
It wasn't 185.
A few years ago.
Just a few years ago.
And he was a 185 pound champion and then the 205 pound champion.
And I don't think Cyril Gaon could even make 205.
No.
Cyril's big.
Yeah.
And he's big and fucking thick.
And he's good, man.
And I'm telling you that Tom Hardy fight, excuse me, Tom Aspinall fight.
Tom Hardy fight.
Jesus.
My mind sucks.
The Tom Aspinall fight in that first round before the eye pokes were disgraceful.
First of all, I think.
Still gotta fix the gloves.
Oh God.
You know, my solution is mittens.
We don't do this anyway.
Why are these out like this?
Yeah.
It's a good point.
The thing that annoyed me is like they went through all the effort to fix the
gloves,
but they never asked a fighter or a person that wraps hands like what they
actually thought.
They were getting contender series fighters to grade them.
And of course, they're all like, they're great.
They've got UFC on them.
I'm so happy to be here.
You know what I mean?
Like, you know, like talk to Tate, for example.
I'm like, they must have asked you about the hand wrapping, about the gloves
and stuff.
Because the problem is, right, like when you get there on Tuesday and you try
your gloves
on, you're like, yeah, they feel good.
And then you get to fight night and they put a quarter inch of padding
underneath.
Right.
And then you're trying to close your hand.
Right.
And like the difference between like the pride gloves or the rising gloves or
like the Fairtex.
I always used to use Fairtex if I could.
There's a curve in the glove.
Right.
When you try your gloves on, what the blue shirts backstage do, because they
know the game,
is they roll the glove up and then wrap it with the Velcro of the wrist.
So it stays rolled from Tuesday to Saturday.
Right.
And then when you get them on Saturday, they've kind of curved a little bit.
Right.
But it's not, the curve is not built into the padding.
Right.
And the new ones that they made, there was just too much technology and not
enough common sense.
Have you used Trevor Whitman's?
I have.
Veronica's just got a pair of them.
The best.
They are very, very good.
Absolutely.
They're the best.
That's an ownership problem though, isn't it?
It is.
I've tried to negotiate that and broker that and maybe I still can be
successful.
I just talked to them.
I talked to Trevor.
Maybe it still can be done.
But even with Trevor's, the fingers are still exposed.
Yeah.
And I think there's certain guys who just have this fucking impulse to do that.
And I think one point every time.
Yeah.
Poke somebody in the eye, one point.
Absolutely.
Every fucking time.
Because there's a lot of fighters that have never poked anybody in the eye.
Right?
So how come?
How come?
They've been in wild scraps, never poked anybody in the eye.
Yeah.
I mean, I watch one championship, Smugglers Muay Thai, and they are in range.
Right.
They're not poking each other.
No, they're not.
And by the way, I love small gloves Muay Thai.
It's so cool.
It's so good.
It's so cool.
North America needs it.
And for all these people that hate when fights go to the ground, my God, that's
the solution.
And I've been trying to sell this to the UFC forever.
I'm like, fuck all this slap fight shit.
And I know you're really interested in Zufa boxing.
That's great.
How about UFC striking?
How about UFC Muay Thai?
It'd be amazing.
You know?
Because, and even kickboxing, what they're doing with one.
You know, guys like Yukioza and, you know?
Yeah.
Watch out for Ben Wallace.
Have you seen this kid?
Oh, yeah.
He's a beast, man.
A little while ago.
Just can't get him matched.
Just couldn't get him matched.
Really?
Because people don't want to stand with him.
You click on his Instagram and he's, I mean, in my opinion, he's one of the
best strikers
in the world right now.
Yes.
And I've, you know, he trained at Renegade for a long time with the Edwards
brothers
and I would watch him just play spar with people and the level of trickery.
Like, that's where you, like, go back to saying about dimensions, right?
Mm-hmm.
There are rangers in fights and then there are dimensions in those rangers.
Yes.
He's at, like, a Jedi level of dimension, of understanding, of striking.
Mm-hmm.
And to see him have the success he has, I mean, stopping John Lineker with calf
kicks and,
you know.
Yeah.
Very impressive.
You're gonna see him go straight to the top.
How is one doing?
Are they...
Not good from what I can tell.
I mean...
Yeah, that's what I've heard as well.
And that concerns me because if we have more limited options, that sucks.
Yeah.
This is why, I mean, and I've, you know, I feel very much like I'm in the right
place now
with the PFL because we need more organizations.
Yes.
Like, we need more organizations.
Unfortunately, in my opinion, the UFC's not the custodian of the sport that we
need right
now, you know.
Well, what do you think they're doing wrong?
I mean, I think it's a variety of different things.
I mean, underpaying the fighters, killing the sponsorship market, they buried a
lot of
growth of the subculture.
You know, you remember the old UFC Expos that we used to do?
I'd do like five, six hours a day signing.
Tap out, over to Silver Star, over to Zions.
And like, as soon as that was all killed off, a lot of that subculture died off.
And all those subcultures offer jobs outside of fighting, you know.
It allows people to then start a brand and sponsor some young fighters.
Like, Charles Lewis, Mask, paid me double what I was getting paid for my purse
when I was
in Japan.
Double.
Just to wear tap out shorts in a tournament and cage force.
Like, he didn't need to do that.
But he was a fan of the sport.
He loved it.
And he wanted to support it.
And back in the day, like, I had sponsors like Earache Records and stuff that
was on my
banner.
From, like, my local town.
Like, the idea of being able to have these personal sponsors that would help
you out was massive.
Yeah.
And then the other thing, the other issue that we've got is that we don't have,
we don't
have enough events now for a lot of fighters to get experience.
So then a lot of the people that get signed to contenders are like five, six,
seven fights
into their career.
I was talking to somebody about this the other day, and there's good, clear
examples.
Like, I was 19 and six when I joined the UFC in 2028.
So, like, John McGregor had already built a brand and-
Wait a minute.
You just said 2028.
Sorry.
2008.
Yeah.
Maybe there's a return on the car.
2008.
So, I-
I was like, are you a time traveler?
I feel like I am here a little bit with the UFO.
Yeah.
So, in 2008, like, there was, where was I going?
I lost my train of thought.
Sponsors.
Sponsors.
Yeah.
So, like, we had sponsors.
There was a subculture that was growing around the brand.
There were shows that would host you long enough for you to develop a brand,
right?
Right.
So, like, I didn't have nearly as big of a following as Conor McGregor or Paddy
Pimlet,
but I had a similar platform, right?
I was Cage Warriors champ, then Conor was Cage Warriors champ, and he was an
established
fighter with a game and a following before he came to the UFC.
Right.
Same with Paddy.
We don't see that as much anymore, right?
We don't see the fighters growing on their local scene and building a local fan
base that
really starts to grow the sport on a grassroots level, you know?
Right, but why is that the UFC's responsibility?
No, I'm not saying it is.
What I'm saying is that, unfortunately, I think the UFC is now kind of paying
for the control
that they took many years ago because the industry has been stifled around it.
Like, the sponsorship industry for a start was massive, you know?
The problem with it was there was a lot of sponsors that weren't paying, so a
lot of
fighters would wind up in lawsuits, and there was a lot of bullshit that was
going on.
Some of them were, and it was great.
Yeah.
You know, like, you know, I'm really good friends with Brendan Schaub, and
there was a point
in time where he was making X amount for a fight, but he was making, like,
three times
that in sponsors.
Yeah.
I mean, I doubled my show money on the GSP fight because of my banner.
I only got 22,000 for that fight.
Which is crazy.
Crazy.
It's crazy.
World title fight.
But that's what I signed up for.
I wasn't doing it for the money, you know what I mean?
But in hindsight, when I look at it, and GSP was getting, I mean, you get like
six million.
He spent a quarter of a million on his training camp.
How could I compete?
Like, he would book out a whole hotel and bring guys in from New York.
Yeah.
I had Aldo in my corner, who at the time was a brown belt, you know?
Yeah.
And I had a Thai boxing coach that was telling me to knee him in the head on
the ground from bottom
position, you know?
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Like, bless him.
He just didn't know the rules.
I didn't have the support network because I just, I couldn't afford what I
would have
really needed for that, you know?
Right.
But if I go back to, you know, I mean, the sponsorship process was interesting
because the
first thing that they did was they brought in the fees that the sponsorship
companies had
to pay.
So it was like, if you're a clothing brand, you have to pay $50,000 a year to
sponsor UFC
fighters.
And that goes to the UFC.
Now, before that, as long as it wasn't offensive and it wasn't a conflict in
sponsor, the UFC
would take it and you'd carry on.
Condom Depot.
Oh man.
Remember that?
No.
I turned them down a few times, but like, if you think about it, like say Eric
records,
right?
They, they couldn't afford to pay the UFC $50,000.
They would pay me 300 pounds to have the thing on my banner.
Right?
Right.
So if you're bringing in this, okay, everybody has to pay 50,000 to be a
sponsor in the UFC
cage, almost all of the sponsors then fell out the market straight away.
Right.
And then you've only got a few that are lingering.
And then if you're a, if you're a clothing distributor, if you sell a variety
of different
brands, it was a hundred thousand dollars that you had to pay.
Right?
So if you're MMA warehouse and you're sponsoring Alistair Overeem and your
sponsorship budget
for the year is $250,000 and straight away a hundred grand has been taken out
because the
UFC need it, just your pool's gone down.
Right.
So you've got less money to give to the fighters and then you're sponsoring
less fighters overall.
I get that.
I get that argument.
And I definitely agree about fighter pay.
Like I'm always in favor of fighters getting paid more.
It's very dangerous job.
And it's the only thing that people are paying to see.
They're not paying to look at the cage.
They're not paying to look at the ring card girls and not paying to hear me
talk.
They're paying to watch the fights.
Fighters should get the majority of the money.
And it is a problem when they don't have leverage.
And I think that it's great that you have things like MVP getting involved with
the Netflix
card.
I wish the card was a little stronger, but it's difficult.
Like, Lin's fighting against Francis Ngannou.
Like, you know, you need, like, who the fuck is even available that's not
signed to a contract
that you can get Francis to fight?
Yeah.
That's not a goddamn execution.
You know, you know, Francis is the legitimate heavyweight champion of the world.
Absolutely.
And the thing is, the heavyweight division is always going to be more of a
victim of the
underpayment than any other industry.
Right.
Is Francis no longer with the PFL?
No.
What happened there?
I just think it was, I just think it was a bad deal done by the previous owner,
by the previous
CEO.
Oh, it was a previous CEO?
Yeah.
So I'm not aware.
So he fought Henning Ferreira in that one fight.
Yes.
Is that the only fight that he had in the PFL?
The only one he had, yeah.
That's kind of crazy.
Yeah.
It was just, I mean, it was a bad deal for the PFL.
And we've done a lot of, we've done a lot of bad deals, bad decisions.
Who's that guy that just knocked out Henning Ferreira?
Oh, Sergei Bilisteni.
Woo!
Used to train with Fedor and, yeah.
Woo!
That guy is fucking legit.
Yeah.
And very, very fast.
Yeah, man.
Like him vs. Tom Aspinall is an interesting fight.
That is an interesting fight.
Him vs. anybody is interesting.
Him vs. Cyril Gant.
He moves a lot like Cyril Gant, but he's got Sambo background.
Bro, that guy is legit.
I watched that Ferreira fight and I was like, holy shit.
Spun his head around, didn't he?
Yeah, dude.
And, you know, I mean, this cat.
Yeah.
He moves like Fedor, too.
He trained with Fedor, which is interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You want to get through to the third.
Yeah, that's that little body shot.
So, third round was the finish.
And he catches him with this massive shot.
But it just looked so dominant.
He looked so dominant, like, throughout the fight, man.
Like, right away.
He's a beast, isn't he?
This kid is very, very legit.
Oh, my goodness.
Look at that.
The speed.
Yeah.
So, the world needs another fucking big heavyweight, man.
Yeah.
And this is awesome that this guy exists.
What's his name again?
Sergey Bilestani.
I just saw this yesterday.
I'm guilty of not watching enough PFL.
But the thing is, it's like the fights are legit.
The talent is legit.
But man, it is just not getting the attention that it deserves.
Look, the thing is, as a UFC fan, I get it.
Right?
Because you want to watch one promotion where all the fighters are so you can
find out who the best is.
Because that's what ultimately it was about, right?
It was about finding out who's the best.
Listen, man.
That guy can kind of compete with anybody.
Of course.
Of course.
Absolutely.
And we've got guys that can across the sport.
I mean, you know, across the promotion we have.
I mean, you know, Dakota, Thad Jean.
You know, we've got some real, real good fighters.
And even in, like, if you've not watched Lewis McGrill and Dean Garnett, it is
one of the best fights you'll ever see.
There were 13 knockdowns in it.
It was carnage.
But then we're also seeing really interesting things like the Scottish Twister.
Have you seen the Scottish Twister?
Yes.
So that was Stevie Ray, who hit it against Pettis.
And then he hit it against Lewis Long in Glasgow.
And then he's passed it on to Jake Hadley.
And then Jake Hadley's just submitted Matthias Matos with it.
And it's fascinating because it's kind of a twister.
Uh-huh.
It's like it's...
Have you tried it?
Yeah.
I mean, I struggle with it.
So here it is.
But look at this.
The key is the foot in the thigh.
It's like an offside triangle.
You can see that that right foot is just hooked in.
Uh-huh.
And he's going to threaten with an arm triangle.
He's kind of holding Matthias here.
There's a bit of a hand fight going on.
He's going to keep hitting Matthias and Matthias is going to go to an arm
triangle position.
Then he's going to start to try and force that right elbow down.
So he's not in an arm triangle and turn into the body triangle.
But that right foot caught in his thigh doesn't allow him to turn fully into
the guard.
So look at this.
How he turns in.
Clears the head and there's the crank.
Look at the foot on the inside of the thigh.
Oh, that's nasty.
So that is, I mean, I've had this done to me as well as I've done it.
So you've got compression into the neck, pressure into the lower back, your
hips being lifted.
Yeah.
It's a horrible submission.
It looks horrible.
And this is the Cheesecake Assassin demo in it.
Interesting.
And this is what's fascinating still to me about MMA is that I still feel like
these technologies that we've not yet discovered.
The calf kicker being a good example.
Right.
Scottish Twister being another good example.
What comes next?
Right.
There's going to be some shit.
I've got books and books and martial arts books and I feel like if I dug, I
might find something.
Yeah, I don't know what's missing.
Here's something that I think might be missing.
Front leg roundhouse kick to the face.
Guys who are fast with that, I used to see that a lot in Taekwondo.
I used to see that a lot.
There's guys that just throw it out there like a jab and if it hits you in the
face, you're fucked.
And we've seen it a few times in MMA.
We've seen a few guys get dropped.
We saw Rose Namajunas and Zhang Weili.
You just don't see it very often.
And man, if you're good at that, if you have a fast one, that is a devastating
kick.
Yeah.
See, that is a good example because that's a great technique and a great setup.
Because the reason why the head kick landed was because she just landed an
inside low kick.
Yes.
So Weili had pulled her lead leg back and pitched her head forward.
Yeah.
Beautiful set.
I totally agree with you.
I think there's a lot that's still to be discovered.
It's just stunning to me how few people get cracked with that.
I mean, I feel like that was a major weapon when I was doing Taekwondo.
A lot of people use that.
Yeah.
Crescent kick as well.
Oh, yeah.
There's a few guys that use that still.
Anderson used that a few times.
Yeah.
There's a cat.
I'm so sorry, man.
I forget your name.
But there's a dude who's got a video on Instagram where he knocks this guy out
with an inside
crest and kick to the face.
There's a few people that are pulling it off.
You know?
Yeah.
There's definitely more to come.
Yeah.
There's definitely a lot more.
There are a lot more techniques.
I also think there are going to be a lot more targets on the body that can be
exploited that
we're not yet exploiting.
Right.
You know?
The guys in kickboxing in particular in one are using that toe kick to the body.
Yes.
Apchagi.
Right?
There's this cat.
Yes.
What is his name, Jamie?
I've actually congratulated this guy.
I apologize, sir, because I went back and forth with him.
Sick.
Jason Barry, is that what he just said?
Back it up a little bit.
Before that.
Before that.
Before that.
See, look at those Cage Warriors gloves.
Justin Barry.
Justin Barry.
That's it.
Look at the curve in those Cage Warriors gloves.
Mm-hmm.
So they're basically...
They're either Fairtex gloves or they're a copy of the Fairtex gloves that they
use.
Look at how he does that.
It's crazy.
That's slick, isn't it?
Crazy.
Very cool.
Crazy.
Yeah.
Cage Warriors is another great organization that's really producing elite
talent.
It's just...
I agree with you.
There's not enough of them.
But it's like, what does the PFL have to do to get more attention?
You know?
Because it seems like they're throwing a lot of money at fighters.
Yeah.
Is that million dollar thing still happening?
No.
The tournament.
We've gone to regular shows now.
So we have main and co-main.
We've got rankings now done by combat registry.
They don't have all the crazy point system where you...
No.
All that's gone.
That didn't make any fucking sense.
Honestly.
I'll be honest.
I love the PFL, but PFL has been its own worst enemy for many, many years.
Right?
We've got a new CEO, John Martin, who's been on Ariel's show a couple of times.
He does great interviews.
He loves the sport from a fan's perspective.
Doesn't know it quite as much as other people, but he's making the right moves
and making the right decisions.
Previously, I mean, I love Don Davis, but he was like Willy Wonka of MMA.
He was like, I've got a great idea.
Let's do this and blah, blah, blah.
And then you had Pete Murray, who just was consistently making bad deals and
bad decisions.
Yeah.
All the point things were like, I didn't understand any of it.
So I was running PFL Europe for a couple of three years.
I stepped in at the end of 2022 as commentator.
In 2023, I became the head of fighter ops for Europe.
So I was doing all the signing and matchmaking.
I only had four shows a year, but I mean, it was a passion project for me to
sign all these young guys and match them.
And my argument was every single...
And I always used to say this to the fighters because remember when Dana used
to do this back on the old weighing days where he'd get all the fighters, no
cornermen, no coaches, just translators and the fighters.
And we'd gather in one of the changing rooms in the arena and Dana give us this
speech and it was stirring.
Like we're all there to murder each other.
But for like five minutes, we all felt like we were in it together.
And I loved that feeling.
I missed it.
Even walking out with like fist bumping each other and we're all hyped.
And that's where he'd announce the bonus amounts and stuff.
So I would do that with PFO Europe.
I'd gather all the fighters together and I'm like, look, there's not a single
fight on this card that has been matched for one person to win.
Every single person stepping into the cage has got a fair chance of winning.
Your destiny is in your hands, right?
And with PFO Europe, I was able to build a good roster and to...
I mean, we had some fantastic shows, but when I first inherited it, we had four
tournaments, right?
So I had to sign 16 fighters, sorry, eight fighters per weight class.
So I had 32 fighters on my roster that was done already before the year started.
And then I'm having to get loads of different flags.
So we're going into a place and I've got a bunch of fighters on the card that I
don't need that aren't going to sell any tickets.
And it was just working against me constantly.
So I pushed to go down to two tournaments and have just a normal MMA show for
the rest of it.
And that worked out well, but they loved the tournament format because it was a
distinguishing factor.
And the question is, you know, what do we have to do to make a difference?
Like, I mean, I think we are doing those.
We are making those moves.
We have to make more content and tell the fighters stories better for sure.
Maybe you guys should start a fucking Muay Thai small gloves.
I'm down for it.
UFC is fucking up with that.
I sent Dana all these different fights.
I sent him all these.
Iman Gazeliev.
That dude, Asadullah Iman Gazeliev.
Holy shit is that guy good.
I'm like, look at this.
Like, this is what people want to see, man.
Like, everybody boos when the fights go to the ground if it gets boring.
This shit's never boring.
Maybe you guys should pick up the slack.
100%.
I mean, I've thrown hundreds of ideas on the table.
I always am.
That might be the move, man.
That might be what differentiates.
Yeah, I think so.
Because look how big it is with one.
I mean, it's essentially become most of their fights now.
Yeah.
And it's accommodating fighters that have got two or three hundred fights in
another discipline
that don't want to learn how to wrestle or grapple.
Exactly.
But they are the elitest of elite strikers.
And so easy to translate.
Absolutely.
Everybody knows what's going on.
Yeah.
A kick to the face is a kick to the face.
Yeah.
I agree with you.
I mean, I'm always throwing ideas at the PFO.
The one that stuck was introducing elbows.
When I first started working for the PFO, we didn't have elbows.
Crazy.
Crazy.
Crazy.
And I hated it.
And I'm like...
Well, it's pride.
Pride didn't have elbows.
Yeah.
Did Bellator?
Bellator had elbows.
So what the fuck?
Well, see, that was my selling point.
That was the way I managed to convince them.
I said, OK, right.
We've taken on Bellator now.
We've inherited Bellator and everything that it was.
Take the rules too.
Right?
Yeah.
Well, this is how I pitched it to them.
One of my biggest opponents was Ray Sefo.
He did not want elbows added in.
I could not get my head around it because he's always coaching elbows from the
corner.
Right?
Why didn't he want elbows?
I'm not sure.
I couldn't get my head around it.
But the thing that pushed it over the line was me going, OK, right, we've just
taken on Bellator.
We've got Bellator and we've got PFL.
Imagine in a world where we now apply PFL rules to Bellator.
What are the fans going to say?
They're going to be like, well, that'd be terrible.
They'd hate it because you're taking elbows out.
I'm like, you've illustrated my point.
Exactly.
So clearly that's not the right way to go.
So then we need elbows.
Well, I'm glad they listened to you because that's ridiculous.
Yeah.
You know, what really needs to happen is knees to the head on the ground.
100%.
Absolutely.
It's crazy that someone could just huddle in a turtle position and not get pummeled.
Like you shouldn't be in that position.
The only thing I can do without and I loved it in Pride and I wanted to fight
in Pride for the soccer kicks as well.
That's the only thing I can reasonably do without.
And the reason why.
No ring.
The ring is different.
You can move.
Yeah.
The problem with being planted into the cage and stomped or soccer kicked.
For sure.
Do you remember Wes Simms' Frank Mir?
Oh, I do.
Stomped him.
Yeah.
The thing with, and I've watched every single Pride fight that's ever existed,
I'm sure.
I only ever see people get involved in the head when the fight's already pretty
much done.
Right.
Right.
So it's...
Malvin Manhoof and Sakuraba.
Exactly.
It's like the icing on the cake that we don't necessarily need when you can
just hit them with one more shot.
Right.
And they tried something in cage rage when cage rage existed back in the day
where the referee would decide that you could stomp on or kick him in the head.
Let me ask you this.
What do you think about sidekicks to the knees?
I don't mind it.
The problem with that is it's one shot and you're out for a year.
But then heel hooks are just as dangerous, aren't they?
But they're not because you can tap.
You can tap and you can hold on to the arms before it gets to that position.
You can tap.
The thing about the sidekick to the knee, like, what's his face?
Khalil Roundtree.
Yeah, but the guy, Modestus.
Oh, Modestus.
Modestus Bocacus.
When you watch his knee go sideways like that, you're like, good lord.
You're done for a year.
If you're ever the same again.
I mean, I know Shavkat's in a similar situation right now, isn't he?
But you can't hit to the back of the head.
But you do hit to the back of the head.
Because if it's a roundhouse kick and it goes over the shoulder, guess where it
lands?
Absolutely.
But the thing is, the back of the head is more protecting from the bottom of
the base of the skull downwards.
That's real.
Right, but if someone throws a roundhouse kick and it goes over the shoulder,
it's going bong right to the back of the head.
But then how many football players in a season are taken out with a low tackle?
I mean, it's the same in rugby as well.
It's like, for me, that is a risk of the sport.
That is a part of the...
But it's a victory with an illegal move that we all allow.
It's only illegal because you can't strike to the knee.
But then...
No, no, no.
Back of the head kick.
Oh, yeah, yeah, for sure.
You know what I'm saying?
The back of the head kick, you win by knockout and you shouldn't have hit them
there.
Yeah, but then also you've got to go into, well, did they turn their head?
What was the circumstance of it?
Et cetera, et cetera.
That's true.
I mean, the thing is, in the rules, you can't strike joints, right?
But then it was the same thing when we had elbows.
And I'm like, we're doing shows in France and I'm saying to the French
commission, we don't have elbows.
And they're like, okay, so where does the elbow start and where does the...
Where is it forearm?
Right, where is it forearm?
Right.
But the thing about attacking the knees, you would have to say, well, it's got
to be a straight
kick where you hyperextend the knees because you can't say don't leg kick the
knees because
you're going to be able to leg kick the back of the knee always.
If you take that out, you're taking out a giant chunk of all techniques.
But the side kick to the knee, the problem with that is you're going to ruin
careers.
Like, there's a lot of guys that are just not the same.
Tiago Silva, I don't think it was ever the same after the Jon Jones fight.
In my mind, it's the game we play.
I agree with you.
I see your point.
I see it.
No one's dying from a knee injury.
It's very unusual too.
Yeah.
It's like the Modestus fight was one fight that you can name and Khalil's
obviously a very
elite striker.
Yeah.
I don't mind it.
I genuinely don't.
I mean, I'm more interested in making sure the fighters are protected when they
can't
protect themselves.
That's where we need to raise everyone's understanding of what's happening.
Yeah.
I agree with you.
Um, always good to talk to you.
We should do this more often.
We should absolutely.
Except for every six years.
We should.
Yeah.
We're back in Austin soon though.
We're back in Austin soon.
Oh, when are you guys here?
Martin Costello-Van Stinas in the rematch at the Moody Center.
When in July?
Uh, July 19th.
Saturday.
Saturday, July 19th.
Is that the right day?
Oh, motherfucker.
I'm out of town.
I know where you are.
God damn it.
I'm out of town.
Yeah, I know.
I know where you are.
I'll be there.
You'll be there?
Yeah, I think I'll be there.
We'll be there afterwards.
I don't know what we're talking about.
Yeah.
But that's, but yeah.
Johnny Ebelin, Costello-Van Stinas.
That's too bad.
I want to see that.
Fuck.
Yeah.
And I will say like, for me, our middleweight division is probably the most
competitive with
the UFC's middleweight division.
Johnny Ebelin's a bad motherfucker.
Costello-Van Stinas, the current champ.
Did you watch that fight?
No.
So Johnny Ebelin, undefeated in 17, 18 fights, was beating the brakes off Costello
for most
of it.
Oh, he got submitted.
Like last 10 seconds.
Yes, I did see that.
Yes, that's right.
So Costello's defended his belt.
He beat Fabian Edwards, Travis Brown elbows.
Yes.
And then Johnny Ebelin just ragdolled Brian Battle like it was nothing.
I saw that too.
That was insane.
No, he's a beast dude.
Those two boys are going to rematch.
Austin at the Moody Center, middle of July.
It's going to be a good one.
I wish I was here.
Me too.
All right.
Thank you, brother.
Thank you, man.
Very good to see you, always.
Dan Hardy, what's your Instagram?
Dan Hardy MMA.
Dan Hardy MMA.
All right.
Bye, everybody.