JRE MMA Show 178 with Dan Hardy

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Dan Hardy

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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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Timestamps

0:00Dan Hardy’s Fight Island incident: yelling at Herb Dean, late stoppages, and UFC fallout
9:57Dan Hardy on Fight Island fallout: Herb Dean criticism, UFC support withdrawal, and referee responsibility
19:56Refereeing controversies, concussion tells, and the dangers of weight cutting

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Transcript

0:00

Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out.

0:03

The Joe Rogan Experience.

0:05

Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day.

0:09

Yep, we're rolling.

0:13

My man.

0:14

Good to see you, brother.

0:15

Great to see you, man.

0:16

What is this?

0:16

We're on the neck.

0:17

What is that?

0:17

Oh, this is Moldavite.

0:19

Have you heard of Moldavite before?

0:20

No.

0:20

So a meteorite hit in the Czech Republic millions of years ago.

0:26

And the particular tektite that was created from the earth matter falling back

0:31

down to the ground became Moldavite.

0:34

And most tektites are like a black or a brown, but Moldavite's green.

0:39

Let me show you.

0:40

It's really interesting.

0:42

Jamie's got some on the screen already.

0:46

Here we go.

0:46

Hold it up to the light.

0:47

Whoa.

0:48

Oh, that's fucking dope.

0:50

So it's basically like nuclear glass.

0:52

Exactly that, yeah.

0:53

Same type of...

0:54

Wow.

0:56

And then that's the case my wife had made for me, and it's wrapped in an old

0:59

chain that belonged to my dad.

1:00

Oh, that's so dope.

1:01

Yeah.

1:02

Keep it with me all the time.

1:03

Yeah, that's fucking cool, man.

1:05

I used to have a piece in, you know, the old Thai amulets with the little

1:09

bronze.

1:10

I used to have one in that.

1:12

Took it out.

1:12

I took the butter out and put a piece of Moldavite in it wrapped in a piece of

1:17

UFC canvas.

1:18

And I wore it just all the time.

1:20

But then my wife upgraded me as she tries to do all the time.

1:24

So the UFC gave you a chunk of canvas?

1:26

I have a whole canvas.

1:27

Ooh.

1:28

Yeah.

1:28

Yeah.

1:29

Nice.

1:30

From which fight?

1:30

It was Vadum Volkov from UFC London.

1:34

And it's covered in Vadum's blood.

1:37

He got his nose busted pretty badly.

1:38

But it had to be in quarantine for like 12 months until they gave it me.

1:43

Really?

1:44

Yeah.

1:44

Because of the blood?

1:45

It's a biohazard.

1:48

So does it all die after 12 months?

1:50

I guess so.

1:51

I mean, I guess so.

1:52

It was kept in a warehouse and then they, yeah, they dropped it off for me.

1:55

Do they have to check it?

1:56

I don't know.

1:57

To make sure it's not...

1:57

I don't know.

1:58

What would be...

1:58

I mean, I wouldn't lick it, but it looks fine to me.

2:00

What could possibly be in the blood?

2:03

I mean, doesn't everybody get tested before the...

2:05

That's a good point.

2:05

That's a good point.

2:06

Maybe there's just some kind of rule.

2:07

I think they incinerate them all now, don't they?

2:09

Do they?

2:09

I don't think they keep them.

2:10

I mean, they keep the...

2:11

They've got the pieces with the names, but I think the rest of it gets disposed

2:14

of now.

2:15

Huh.

2:15

Yeah.

2:16

I wonder if there's any logic to that.

2:19

I don't know.

2:19

Or if it's just people being scared.

2:21

Yeah, maybe.

2:22

Maybe.

2:22

It's a cool thing.

2:23

I've actually got it on the wall of my house, believe it or not.

2:25

Oh, really?

2:26

Yeah, I had it in the gym, but then it's on the wall of my house now.

2:28

Oh, that's nice.

2:29

That's pretty cool.

2:30

Yeah.

2:31

It's just a nice thing to have, you know?

2:32

Dude, what happened with you in the UFC?

2:34

Like, I don't know the story.

2:37

I don't.

2:38

I know you got into it with Herb Dean.

2:41

Yeah.

2:41

About a stoppage, a late stoppage.

2:43

Yeah.

2:43

And you were upset.

2:46

This was during COVID, right?

2:47

Yeah.

2:48

This was, I think it was Fight Island 3.

2:50

And it was the second fight of the night where it happened.

2:53

There was a heavyweight that had gone down and just took a bunch, too many

2:57

shots before the fight was stopped.

2:59

But the Jai Herbert Francisco Trinaldo one was the one where you heard me shout

3:05

up and yell, stop the fight.

3:07

And it was just, it was a weird circumstance.

3:10

And look, you know, caveat, Herb's a great referee.

3:13

He's refereed me a lot.

3:14

But every now and then people do make mistakes.

3:17

And in Fight Island, everyone was tired.

3:19

It was quiet in the arena as well.

3:21

So you can, I mean, you can hear me yelling.

3:24

It wasn't the first time I'd done it, though.

3:25

I yelled at him in Moscow for a CB Dalloway fight.

3:29

And it's, the thing is, there's a point where I'm there for the knockouts.

3:34

I'm there for the blood.

3:35

But I'm also there to make sure that once it's done, it's done.

3:38

And those fighters are protected.

3:40

Right.

3:40

You know, and the way that Jai Herbert fell, it was just, you get the reeds,

3:47

you know it.

3:48

Yeah.

3:48

You see him fall and you're like, man, there's something not right about the

3:51

way that he's fallen.

3:52

And then as he landed, he was looking up at the lighting rig, but his arms were

3:56

kind of stretched out.

3:58

So he was gone.

3:59

He was gone.

3:59

He was out of it.

4:00

And then there was this, and I think, of course, because it was quarantine

4:04

times, it was silent in there.

4:05

The time, it was like you could hear a heartbeat in the air.

4:09

And there was just this moment where Trinaldo stood over him and looked at Herb.

4:14

And Jai's still on the floor, kind of not fully conscious.

4:18

And Trinaldo just started cracking him with more shots.

4:22

And that was the point where I stood up straight away and I'm yelling and Paul

4:25

Felder was doing the same thing next to me.

4:27

You actually see Herb look at me through the cage and point at me and tell me

4:31

to shut up.

4:31

The thing that annoyed me about it was the miscommunication about what had

4:35

happened.

4:36

Because the message that got back to Dana and everybody at the top was that I

4:41

left my commentary desk and went over and I was stood outside the cage.

4:45

And I wasn't.

4:46

Herb came to me.

4:47

So, like, I'm at my desk.

4:50

We've got this piece of plexiglass because it's all COVID.

4:53

Hilarious.

4:54

The plexiglass.

4:55

That stopped everything, didn't it?

4:57

And then we had another desk in front of that.

4:59

So, Herb's basically...

5:01

And Herb doesn't move very quickly most of the time.

5:04

He's a big old boy.

5:05

But he was moving at pace towards me.

5:07

So, I stood up, took my headset off and put them down or had them in my hand.

5:11

And he came over and he started yelling at me and, you know, you stay out of it.

5:15

Can't be shouting and this and that.

5:16

And that's where you see me go.

5:17

That was two times.

5:18

It's the second time of the night.

5:23

After the...

5:23

I mean, as it's going on.

5:25

And this was when we're not doing interviews in the cage as well, right?

5:28

So, I'm standing up.

5:30

Also hilarious.

5:31

Also hilarious, yeah.

5:32

Kind of just breathing on each other, sweating and bleeding on each other.

5:35

And we're shaking hands in the hotel and everything.

5:37

And it was kind of odd.

5:38

But because I'm not going into the cage, I'm now turning around and my

5:42

interview camera is behind me.

5:44

So, basically, what the UFC wanted me to do when Herb's marching over to me was

5:48

to stand up, turn my back on him and put my headset on.

5:50

And me as a martial artist, I'm not going to turn my back on someone when they're

5:54

moving at me with the kind of pace that he was.

5:56

So, everything got a bit delayed because I was having an interaction with Herb.

6:03

As soon as the event was over and I was on my way over to the ESPN desk, Herb

6:06

and I bumped into each other.

6:08

And we had just had a brief minute conversation.

6:11

Everything was cool.

6:12

I said, look, I respect you as a referee.

6:13

You left that one too late.

6:15

There was no doubt.

6:15

And it was the second one the night.

6:17

And there are other instances where it's happened, right?

6:22

Nobody's perfect.

6:23

I would make mistakes as well, of course.

6:25

Very difficult job.

6:26

Very, very difficult job.

6:28

The thing that annoyed me though, and for me it was done then, when I got

6:32

backstage, someone from the production team confronted me about approaching Herb.

6:37

I tried to make sure that the narrative was set correctly, that he actually

6:41

came over to me.

6:42

But that never got escalated up the chain.

6:45

So, it was always, you know, you approach an official, et cetera, et cetera.

6:49

And it just so happened to coincide with where someone had approached Mark Goddard

6:53

and pushed him at another event, UAE Warriors.

6:56

So, the whole thing kind of got convoluted and bundled into the same thing.

7:01

Was that the Conor situation?

7:03

No, that was in Bellator.

7:04

But there was another one.

7:05

It was UAE Warriors.

7:05

And I think someone had kept hold of a choke too long.

7:09

And then Goddard had separated the fight.

7:12

And then he came over to Mark and he's trying to push Mark and stuff.

7:15

And when Dana actually made the statement about if you approach an official,

7:20

you'll be gone, that was actually in reference to the other thing that happened.

7:25

But it was LinkedIn with me as well.

7:27

The thing that pissed me off is when I got back to the hotel or to the airport

7:31

or whatever, Herbert posted this video.

7:35

And he was like sitting at the airport, you know, trying to justify what had

7:39

happened.

7:39

But it was just like, he was saying things like, if you think you're the

7:43

smartest guy in the room and just like poking at me just constantly.

7:47

And I'm like, I've got a bunch of hours sitting on a plane on the way back to

7:51

the UK now.

7:52

And you know what I'm like, I'm pulling this apart.

7:54

And I'm like, did I step out of line?

7:55

Did I say something I shouldn't have said?

7:57

And I'm assessing it.

7:59

And then I'm going, no, hang on a minute.

8:00

Like, my intention is to protect that fighter that needed protecting, right?

8:04

His family are at home sitting watching that.

8:06

They don't want to see him getting smashed in the face unnecessarily.

8:10

They know the risks of the job already.

8:12

So I kind of sat on the plane on the way home and I'm like, how am I going to

8:16

deal with this?

8:18

So I dealt with it the way that I would always do.

8:21

I get all the facts on the table.

8:22

I try and organize my response.

8:25

And what I did was I created a video that I put up on YouTube, which the UFC

8:30

actually contacted YouTube and had them delete off the back end.

8:34

And it was about an hour and a quarter long.

8:37

It was a decent chunk of information.

8:40

But I went through what had happened on the night, other circumstances where

8:44

Herbert maybe not pulled the trigger quick enough,

8:47

or times when he'd been indecisive, like Cowboy Masvidal.

8:50

I'm not sure whether you remember that one.

8:51

Cowboy went down at the end of the first round and they actually helped him

8:55

back to his stool and sat him on the stool.

8:58

And Greg Jackson's going, hey, Cowboy, you're okay.

9:00

Everything's fine.

9:01

Then he went out and got TKO'd at the start of the second round.

9:04

But if you remember that, Herb jumps in and waves the fight off at the end of

9:08

the round

9:08

and then decides to restart it in the second.

9:11

So I pointed out a bunch of things where he could have maybe done a better job.

9:17

I also gave him the benefit of the doubt in, like, the Robbie Lawler-Ben Askren

9:21

fight,

9:21

where, to me, that wasn't stopped early.

9:24

You could see Robbie Lawler's arm fall for a second.

9:26

I think he went out for a split second in that moment.

9:28

And then came back and then complained about it.

9:30

So in that moment...

9:31

Hard to tell.

9:32

Very hard to tell.

9:33

But you can see Herb in that situation going, oh, man, I'm sorry.

9:36

I thought you were out.

9:37

Like, those things are going to happen.

9:40

I would always rather the fighter be protected than just kind of leave it for

9:43

the benefit of the doubt

9:44

and just let him take...

9:45

It's different with a submission, of course.

9:48

But the point is I was trying to create something that was quite balanced.

9:51

And the other thing as well was, you know, it was Fight Island.

9:55

Like, we're getting tested every other day.

9:57

Like, we're quarantined in our rooms sometimes.

10:00

We were doing fights at weird hours of the day.

10:04

So people were kind of foggy and fatigued.

10:06

And it was just a weird environment.

10:08

So I gave Herb and all the officials the benefit of the doubt that, you know,

10:13

you're not going to be at 100% at 4 o'clock in the morning.

10:15

But it was the way they responded to me which pissed me off.

10:18

And then the way that the UFC kind of pulled all their support for me, you know.

10:24

And they contacted me and they said, hey, we're going to organize a

10:27

conversation with you and whoever.

10:29

And I said, I just want to let you know I've got this video ready to go.

10:33

And I am going to post it because it vindicates what I did, in my opinion.

10:39

But it also offers some understanding of what Herb was trying to do and the job

10:45

that he has and how difficult it is.

10:47

And unfortunately, I mean, it got a couple of hundred thousand views before it

10:50

was taken down.

10:51

But it's still on the channel now.

10:54

If you look at it, it's just a little gray square with three dots.

10:57

And there's just nothing on the back.

10:59

They literally went into my channel and took it away.

11:02

That's so weird that they could take down something that doesn't violate any

11:06

laws or rules.

11:08

You know, that's kind of weird.

11:10

I don't know whether they contacted YouTube and said, hey, you know, he's used

11:13

some UFC footage.

11:14

Did you?

11:15

Yeah, I did.

11:16

But at the time, I had permission to use UFC footage.

11:18

They were allowing me to make war rooms and all kinds of stuff.

11:22

Right, because it only helps them.

11:23

That's it.

11:24

I mean, I was an ambassador for Europe as well as being a commentator.

11:27

So my job in my mind was to spread the word of MMA, right?

11:30

I'm trying to educate everybody as much as I can.

11:32

And I could make a lot more content through my channel than I could rely on the

11:37

UFC to make content.

11:38

So I was just trying to churn extra stuff out to keep drawing attention to it.

11:43

So they'd given me permission to use footage on my channel.

11:46

And I'd built a company off the back of this.

11:48

I'd employed my Raptors.

11:50

I think you remember meeting those guys.

11:52

And all that was gone, you know?

11:54

And the thing is, it was like, I understand that the UFC are not going to fire

11:59

me for shouting up to protect a fighter.

12:02

But I knew on that day my card was marked, you know?

12:05

And I knew that my card was marked on that day because I was too stubborn.

12:11

I didn't wait for the UFC to tell me what I should have said and this and that.

12:14

I posted my video.

12:15

I wanted to clear my name.

12:16

And I wanted to back up the reason why I'd said that because it wasn't the

12:20

first time I'd done it.

12:22

You know, it was the first time I'd done it in a quiet, empty arena.

12:25

But if you go back to, I think it was Moscow with CB Dalloway.

12:28

And he was fighting a guy called Murtaz Aliyev.

12:30

And for about a minute 15, he was just curled up in a ball on the floor.

12:34

And he was just getting pounded.

12:36

He went from fetal position to completely belly down to fetal position on the

12:40

other side in the space of that minute.

12:42

And at the end of the round, Herb's just stood over him.

12:45

And he's lying there like a corpse on the floor.

12:48

I'm like, this fight should have been stopped easy 30 seconds ago.

12:52

Even CB Dalloway came out and said that he didn't feel protected by it.

12:56

But the difference was that we've got 25,000 people in the arena.

13:00

So you can't really hear me shouting, stop the fight in that scenario.

13:04

It's just an awkward situation because I like Herb.

13:09

I would never have him referee my wife.

13:11

I always make a request to make sure that he doesn't.

13:13

But that's more because of the history between me and him.

13:16

I don't want to put him in a position where I'm going to get angry at him again

13:19

for not doing his job.

13:20

But I was disappointed that the UFC kind of pulled all support for me and

13:27

backed Herb in that situation.

13:30

Was there a situation backstage where you got into it with someone else from

13:34

the staff?

13:35

Because that's what I had heard, that someone said something to you and you

13:38

yelled at someone backstage.

13:40

I did, yeah, I did.

13:41

But in the scenario, I just left the ESPN desk.

13:46

And this is like 5 o'clock in the morning or something now after the broadcast.

13:49

And I walked backstage.

13:50

I won't mention his name.

13:51

I love him.

13:52

He's a lovely guy.

13:54

But everyone's kind of ragged and tired in Fight Island, you know what I mean?

13:57

And as I'm walking back to my dressing room, he came flying at me.

14:01

And he's like, hey, you can't ever approach an official and blah, blah, blah.

14:04

I'm like, whoa, whoa, whoa.

14:05

Hang on a fucking minute.

14:06

And like, just the intensity that he came at me with just spiked my adrenaline

14:11

again.

14:11

And I'm already kind of like, I'm heightened because the fights have just ended.

14:15

You know what it's like with adrenaline.

14:16

I'm like three days.

14:18

I'm like excitedly shaking after a good event.

14:20

And it was just the energy that he came at me with just pushed my energy up.

14:26

So then we had this back and forth where I'm like, hey, you need to get your

14:29

facts right.

14:29

He approached me and blah, blah, blah.

14:31

And I don't know whether that information had already been passed on to people

14:35

above him to say,

14:37

Dan Hardy's just approached Herb Dean after the fight.

14:39

When in actuality, that just never happened.

14:41

And because that was the perspective that the guys in the truck had got, like,

14:47

I automatically felt like I'm going to get in trouble here.

14:50

Like, I've done something really wrong.

14:51

Right.

14:51

You know?

14:52

And I mean, the thing is, it's like, I've been working with that man for a long

14:58

time.

14:59

The guy backstage I'm talking about.

15:01

I love him.

15:02

He's a lovely guy.

15:03

We've always got on.

15:03

If I saw him now, we'd have a good conversation.

15:06

It was just, you know, you know, it's like heightened experience and just the

15:10

energy that he came at me with,

15:11

especially with the misinformation of me now, you know, being the guy that took

15:16

my headset off

15:16

and marched over to the door to wait for Herb as he walked out.

15:19

Right, right.

15:19

I just didn't do that.

15:20

Like, I'm there to do my job.

15:22

But ultimately, above my job and above everything, UFC and everything included,

15:27

I'm there to make sure that MMA is stable and the fighters are safe.

15:31

Right.

15:31

Because that's my instinct, you know?

15:34

Everybody that gets in that cage is someone's son or daughter or father or

15:38

brother.

15:38

You know what I mean?

15:39

And in those moments, the people in the cage, they go from being the best

15:44

fighters in the world

15:45

to a very, very human victim that is not being protected by the referee.

15:49

And from a fighter's perspective, I want to feel that warlike feeling when I

15:55

step in the cage.

15:57

I want to feel like I can throw everything at my opponent.

15:59

And I also want to feel safe that they can throw everything at me.

16:03

Right.

16:03

I don't want to have in my mind, oh, hang on.

16:06

Do I need to pull this punch because the referee's not going to jump in?

16:08

Like, there are three people in there.

16:10

One person's got the job to protect both of us.

16:12

Neither of us have a responsibility to protect each other.

16:16

Right.

16:16

We don't have a responsibility to pull a punch after a knockdown.

16:19

We don't have a responsibility to stop when the bell rings.

16:22

Right?

16:24

Who was the referee with Anderson Silva and Michael Bisping?

16:26

Oh, that's a good question.

16:29

Because that was a weird one, right?

16:31

That fight should have been over.

16:32

Yeah.

16:33

Anderson hits him with a flying knee and then hops on top of the cage.

16:37

Yeah.

16:37

And they didn't stop the fight.

16:39

Was that Herb?

16:39

It might have been.

16:40

It might have been.

16:41

Look, the thing is, I mean...

16:42

Can you find that out, Chamby, please?

16:43

Herb's refereed me a bunch of times.

16:45

And I like Herb.

16:46

But that, obviously, was Anderson's beef.

16:48

We made mistakes, right?

16:48

That was Anderson's issue.

16:50

Anderson should have followed up until the referee stops.

16:53

Absolutely.

16:54

But you could have easily said, this fight's over.

16:57

I mean, yep.

16:59

Yeah.

16:59

That's a crazy situation.

17:02

So, Michael, I think, had lost his mouthpiece.

17:05

Yes.

17:06

And this is also when Michael was blind in his right eye.

17:10

Right?

17:11

So, you have to take this into consideration.

17:12

So, Michael loses his mouthpiece.

17:14

And at some point in time, he points like that he wants his mouthpiece back.

17:21

And look at the time.

17:23

We're into the last 20 seconds.

17:24

Right.

17:25

And it's a beautiful knee that Anderson lands as well.

17:27

So, he points his mouthpiece.

17:29

That's you, buddy.

17:37

Uh-huh.

17:37

One of my favorite fights to have called.

17:40

Bang.

17:40

Right on the bell.

17:44

Okay, the fight's not over.

17:52

You're saying the fight's not over.

17:53

But in this situation.

17:55

That actually makes sense because he was still conscious and he was still up

17:58

and he had his

17:59

hand down.

18:00

Yeah.

18:00

That was Anderson's fault.

18:02

Oh, for sure it was.

18:03

For sure it was.

18:04

And unfortunately for Anderson, he had the adrenaline dump of thinking he'd won

18:07

the fight.

18:08

Right.

18:08

He got up on the cage, started celebrating and then had another 10 minutes.

18:11

And this is where Michael Bisping is just a gangster.

18:13

See, he's pointing to his mouthpiece and he's communicating with Herb, but Herb

18:19

didn't stop the fight.

18:22

I mean, the thing is, like, this second's left.

18:24

Anderson Silva's got no responsibility to pull any punches, right?

18:28

No.

18:28

What a perfect fucking flying knee, too.

18:29

It was lovely, wasn't it?

18:29

God, he was a master in his prime.

18:31

And this is post-leg break, too.

18:34

Yeah.

18:35

This wasn't even prime, Anderson, you know?

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19:44

Still one of the best fights I've ever called.

19:46

This and Max Holloway, Calvin Cater.

19:48

One of the best fights I've ever called.

19:50

It was a privilege to be sat cage side for it.

19:52

But like, Bisping's, you know, coming out now with 10 minutes left and stamps

19:56

his authority on this fight, which was very, very impressive.

20:00

But it was just, this was just a messy situation.

20:03

And I kind of didn't really mind this because of the circumstance that had

20:06

played out.

20:07

I mean, Herb was very clear in him saying, I didn't stop the fight.

20:10

Right, right, right.

20:10

But then if, like, if you remember the, um, the Cowboy-Saroni-Masvidal fight.

20:16

I do remember that one.

20:17

Right.

20:17

He gets dropped bad.

20:18

Yeah.

20:18

And Herb's bad habit at the end of the round, if there's an engagement, he

20:22

steps in, he waves his arm.

20:24

That's a signal the fight's off.

20:26

Right.

20:27

Right.

20:27

You don't wave off the round, you wave off the fight.

20:30

Right.

20:30

So, so at the end of the round, the referee's job is to get in between the

20:34

fighters.

20:35

Right.

20:35

Right.

20:35

Cowboy was on the floor.

20:38

Masvidal was already wandering off.

20:40

I mean, this is like, that's, um, and watch this.

20:44

So, so this is the problem, right?

20:45

You have to leave the fighter to get back to their stall.

20:48

You can't touch him.

20:49

Herb's holding him up there.

20:50

Right.

20:51

And then they come up, they, they come over, they put the seat down, the stool

20:53

down.

20:54

He sits down and then Greg Jackson's saying, Hey, cowboy, it's okay.

20:58

This always happens to us.

20:59

Like, he's just not conscious for this whole minute.

21:02

He goes back out and gets TKO'd almost immediately afterwards.

21:05

But, but Herb has a habit of waving the fight off.

21:09

Yeah.

21:10

But that didn't look like he was waving the fight off.

21:12

That looked like he was signaling the end of the round.

21:14

He didn't do this.

21:16

Potentially.

21:17

But then if you've got one arm in between and you wave him with the other one,

21:20

you know,

21:21

I just don't, you don't need to, you don't wave at the end of the round.

21:23

I think by his hand movements there, I don't think that qualifies.

21:27

I think he's saying, stop, stop, stop.

21:29

I think he's putting his hands out.

21:33

He's got a hand on and a hand out.

21:34

Now the other hand's waving, that right hand's waving.

21:37

It's just, it's an unnecessary motion and I'm okay with the debate about it.

21:45

Like, doing the breakdown of the Jai Herbert finish, I learned something really

21:49

important,

21:50

which I don't know is, I've asked lots of referees and most of them have not

21:53

heard about it.

21:53

Fencing response, right?

21:55

Have you heard of this?

21:56

No.

21:57

It's a concussion symptom.

21:58

And it's a weird thing.

22:00

In a newborn baby, when you turn their head to the side, their arms come up

22:03

like a boxer.

22:03

Really?

22:05

Right.

22:05

It's a weird, I don't know exactly where it comes from,

22:07

but it's something that happens when people get concussed.

22:09

Like, you will have seen this before in K1.

22:12

There was a really famous one where a guy gets kicked in the head and as he's

22:15

going down.

22:15

You see it in football a lot.

22:17

Yes, you see it in football a lot.

22:18

So there's one with Marlon Marat.

22:20

Yeah.

22:21

Yeah, look, see arms go out straight.

22:22

But I have seen that.

22:23

Yeah, you've seen a lot of that.

22:24

You want the judges, you want the referees to know about fencing response,

22:28

to be able to recognize all of the different tells of a concussion, right?

22:34

So, and I didn't know about fencing response until after the Jai Herbert fight,

22:38

but I had, in my video that was taken down, I had lots and lots of different

22:42

versions of fencing response,

22:43

from K1 to football to rugby, all kinds of stuff.

22:46

It's a tell of concussion, right?

22:49

Like, consciousness is not removed immediately with every punch, is it?

22:53

Like, you've got a, everything's on a spectrum.

22:55

You're either completely conscious or completely unconscious.

22:58

But the window in which the fight needs to be stopped is probably 5 or 10%

23:02

towards the end of that spectrum, right?

23:05

The point where someone's unable to defend themselves or not intelligently

23:08

defending themselves.

23:09

It's very subjective.

23:11

It's very, very subjective.

23:12

The problem is, like, when a referee stops too early, it's very frustrating.

23:16

And we have seen many instances.

23:19

And then we've also seen some instances where it looked like a fight could

23:22

easily be stopped,

23:23

and the fighter comes back and wins.

23:25

Frankie Edgar Gray Maynard.

23:27

What a, what, I mean, fights.

23:29

What, great fights?

23:30

Crazy fights.

23:31

Yeah.

23:31

Crazy fights.

23:31

But in the one where Frankie won, where he KO'd him,

23:36

that it looked like he was out before.

23:39

It was like three times in the first round he was drunk.

23:40

Oh my goodness.

23:41

I mean, Gray Maynard was a beast.

23:43

He was a big, strong, powerful wrestler.

23:45

Really big for 155.

23:47

And Frankie famously did not cut weight.

23:50

Frankie was one of the rare guys that fought at 155

23:53

and essentially weighed, like, maybe 160.

23:56

If that.

23:56

You know, and he was just fast.

23:58

And because of that, he was very durable.

24:01

And this is a thing that we need to, I mean,

24:03

I fucking hate weight cutting.

24:06

I hate it so bad.

24:07

I really do.

24:08

I think it's, I think it's sanctioned cheating.

24:10

I think we should have figured out a way to eliminate it

24:12

a long time ago.

24:13

But, you know, honestly, when I watch one FC,

24:16

I don't think they've figured out a way to do it either.

24:19

Like, it's not, it's almost like it's ingrained in the culture

24:23

to the point where I don't know,

24:26

other than, like, random USADA style weigh-ins.

24:31

You know what I mean?

24:31

Instead of a drug test, like, hey, Dan, get on the scale.

24:34

Oh, but I've been eating.

24:36

I don't give a fuck.

24:37

Get on the scale.

24:37

Like, what do you weigh?

24:39

You're fighting 155.

24:40

You weigh 190.

24:41

This is crazy.

24:42

Oh, no, I'm just four weeks into camp.

24:45

You know, the next five weeks,

24:47

I really tighten up my diet.

24:48

Get the fuck out of here, bitch.

24:50

You're huge.

24:51

Yeah.

24:51

You're way too big for 155.

24:53

Yeah.

24:53

I mean, well, look at Anthony Johnson.

24:55

You know, one of the...

24:56

Right.

24:56

I'm resting still.

24:57

Rumble.

24:57

Like, he was 214 on the night when we fought.

25:00

We both weighed in at 171.

25:02

He was 214.

25:03

That was before the days of IVs, you know?

25:05

Yeah.

25:06

That's crazy.

25:07

You have to wonder what it does to people, you know?

25:08

Oh, it destroys you.

25:09

It probably had some sort of an impact on his health problems that he had.

25:13

Yeah.

25:13

Because he was an enormous guy.

25:15

I ran into him one time at a lobby at the hotel.

25:19

And I go, how much do you weigh?

25:22

And he goes, 230.

25:23

I'm like, bro, get the fuck out of here.

25:25

That's crazy.

25:26

Why?

25:27

You're going to lose 60 pounds?

25:29

6-0 is nuts.

25:32

Crazy.

25:32

And he was 230, built like a house.

25:36

I mean, he was a fucking stacked dude.

25:39

It was crazy.

25:40

And unfortunately, those big muscular guys can cut more weight because muscle

25:44

is more water.

25:45

Yeah.

25:46

But it's horrible.

25:48

Like, I mean, look, Izzy landed a perfect punch on Pereira.

25:53

But I feel like Pereira at middleweight just could not take the same kind of

25:59

shots that Pereira can take at light heavyweight.

26:01

It's just, you're dehydrating the shit out of yourself.

26:05

He would weigh in 40 pounds more than he weighed, like on fight night.

26:08

Fight night, he would be 40 pounds heavier.

26:11

That's crazy, isn't it?

26:12

I think it was 41.

26:12

I think he was 226.

26:14

Yeah.

26:15

Which is bananas.

26:16

That's just bananas.

26:18

I mean, even if I think about it, I was getting up to like 186, 188.

26:23

And that felt like a lot for me, cutting down to 170.

26:27

Yeah.

26:27

I mean, at the time, I was fairly big for the weight class, you know what I

26:30

mean, compared to some of the other guys around.

26:32

But it just didn't work for me.

26:34

You know what I mean?

26:35

Like, I invested too much in getting bigger and stronger.

26:38

And because when I was fighting before the UFC, I mean, I was fighting, you

26:41

know, 10, 12 times a year.

26:43

And I needed to stay close to weight.

26:45

So I was always, I was always within about 10 pounds.

26:48

There were very few fights before the UFC that I cut a lot of weight.

26:52

And even, and then when I was fighting out in Japan, because I couldn't use

26:55

sauna, like, I just didn't want to, you know, put myself in a position where I

26:58

was having to trash bag and, you know, sweat out in the streets of Tokyo.

27:02

So my weight was always.

27:03

Why couldn't you use sauna in Japan?

27:04

Because of my tattoos.

27:05

Isn't that crazy?

27:06

I got kicked out of a gym in Japan.

27:08

Did you really?

27:09

Yeah.

27:09

I had to go back up to my room and put a long sleeve shirt on.

27:12

That's crazy.

27:13

That's nuts.

27:14

The gym in the hotel.

27:14

I'm like, I'm staying here.

27:16

Yeah.

27:16

They said, no, you can't have exposed tattoos.

27:18

I'm like, oh my God, that's so wild.

27:21

Do you have a Yakuza gym that I could go to?

27:23

Yeah, right.

27:24

I've got too many fingers for that.

27:26

That's what it is.

27:26

It's all about Yakuza tattoos.

27:29

Yeah.

27:29

I'm like, look at me.

27:30

Do you think I'm in Yakuza?

27:31

I know, right?

27:31

Come on.

27:31

It's crazy.

27:32

I mean, I think it's changed a bit now, but this was.

27:34

I don't know, man.

27:35

This was not that long ago.

27:36

I mean, I guess it was.

27:37

Maybe it was 15 years ago.

27:38

When was the last time the UFC was in Tokyo?

27:41

I'm not sure.

27:42

I think it was more than 15 years ago, I believe.

27:45

I want to say it was like, shit.

27:48

It might have been like 2009.

27:50

Yeah.

27:51

Something like that.

27:51

Mine was 2007 hours out there fighting for cage force.

27:54

Yeah.

27:55

Yeah.

27:55

Crazy.

27:57

Yeah.

27:58

I mean, that was back when they didn't have those options, like those small

28:01

portable sauna options

28:02

that they have now.

28:04

Like there's some of them, they have these hot boxes where it's like, they have

28:06

a little

28:07

tiny heater in there and you zip it up and you're in this little thing and you

28:10

can kind

28:11

of carry it with you on the road and you can check it with your bags.

28:14

Yeah.

28:14

The blankets are really good.

28:15

Veronica used that for the last couple of cuts.

28:17

They're really good.

28:18

Great.

28:18

But people use hot baths now.

28:19

No one was hot bathing in my day.

28:21

Right.

28:21

Like if you were sweating, you were working out, you were running, you were in

28:25

a sauna.

28:25

You know, they were the only ways people were cutting weight.

28:28

Hot bathing came in kind of towards the end of my career.

28:31

What's better?

28:32

I don't know.

28:33

I mean, for me, I never used the hot baths.

28:35

I tried it one time.

28:36

I didn't really like it.

28:37

And that's partly a psychological thing, I think, because for me, the hot bath

28:41

was the

28:42

reward after the fight.

28:43

You know, so I didn't want to feel like I was relaxing the day before the fight.

28:47

I was cold showered.

28:49

I wanted to feel like a feral animal, to be honest.

28:51

Right.

28:51

You know, so I would cut weight on my own.

28:54

I would like, it was a process of me preparing for the fight.

28:57

I always imagined it like, it's like, you know, you grab your shield and you

29:01

spear and

29:01

it's the march to the battlefield.

29:03

You know, you don't, you don't walk out of your tent and you're on the

29:05

battlefield.

29:06

There's a process of getting there.

29:08

And the weight cut for me was a part of that.

29:10

It was the suffering to get to the fight.

29:12

So the, like for me, it was hot sauna, cold shower, you know, treadmill pads,

29:19

if I needed

29:20

it.

29:20

I mean, Tokyo, I didn't even have a treadmill.

29:22

I just put trash bags on, cut the corners off the old school Thai boxing way.

29:26

How much did you weigh before that fight?

29:28

I cut seven pounds.

29:30

And that was, and that was one of the reasons why I changed the way that I was

29:33

doing it.

29:33

Because like, I should have stopped that guy in the first round and I didn't

29:37

have the

29:37

power to it.

29:38

And that was his last fight.

29:39

Like he went, he passed out after the, after the fight, went to the hospital.

29:42

He had a bleed on his brain.

29:44

And he, he retired completely after that.

29:47

He was, who was that?

29:48

His name was Daiso Ishige.

29:50

Oh, I remember.

29:50

Yeah.

29:51

He was the king of pancreas.

29:52

He was like 20.

29:53

He was the favorite to win the cage force tournament.

29:55

And I pulled him in the first round.

29:58

And I, I went out there just with the intention of doing a normal weight cut,

30:01

you know, six

30:02

to seven pounds, exactly what I would normally do.

30:05

I had a little bit more to cut because of the flight, but I honestly, hand on

30:10

heart,

30:10

believe that if I'd either not cut the weight or I'd cut the weight in a better

30:14

way and rehydrated,

30:15

I would have been able to stop him.

30:17

And he wouldn't have had the, the brain damage that he, he ended up with, you

30:21

know, because

30:21

like, I look back to that third round and I just, I just didn't have the power.

30:24

It was like a bad dream where I'm just punching him and he's just bouncing

30:28

around.

30:29

He's a bloody man.

30:29

So he just took repeated subconcussive blows.

30:32

Way more than he needed to.

30:33

You know, and I don't know whether he cut weight as well, but certainly the

30:38

thing that

30:39

played into the damage that was done to him was my weight cut, you know?

30:43

That's crazy.

30:43

Isn't that crazy to think of?

30:45

I just didn't want to, I mean, and it, but again, like I have no guilt

30:49

associated with

30:50

that because we knew what we were doing when we got in there and I would not

30:53

hold it against

30:53

him if that had happened to me, you know what I mean?

30:55

But in, but in hindsight, pulling the whole thing apart, like I could have been

30:59

a better

31:00

version of myself as a martial artist and it would have actually probably saved

31:04

him some

31:04

of the damage that he ended up taking in the third.

31:06

My position is that the UFC and I think MMA in general, PFL, all of them, they,

31:12

we need

31:13

more weight classes.

31:14

I don't think there's nearly enough weight classes.

31:16

I think the gaps are enormous.

31:18

I think the names are stupid.

31:20

It's very stupid to have welterweight 170 when welterweight has been with

31:25

boxing at 147

31:26

forever for a hundred years.

31:29

And all of a sudden the UFC comes along and decides welterweight is 170.

31:33

Like, why is it called welterweight then?

31:35

Yeah.

31:35

You know, imagine if you go to another country and you buy a hammer and it's a

31:39

sandwich.

31:39

No, I wanted a hammer.

31:41

I need to build a house.

31:42

What the fuck is this?

31:43

It's like a totally different thing.

31:45

Like, why is it 170 welterweight?

31:47

Why not just call it the 170 pound division?

31:50

That's what wrestling does.

31:51

They just, they have divisions.

31:52

It doesn't need to be like a name.

31:55

The name seems silly.

31:57

That's a, that's a good point.

31:59

Actually, I'd not thought about that.

32:00

I've actually, I actually developed a system of introducing weight classes over

32:04

the next several

32:04

years for the PFL.

32:06

I mean, obviously the problem that we have is that some weight classes are just

32:09

not filling

32:09

out because the fighters are just not there, unfortunately.

32:11

Right.

32:12

You know?

32:12

But I also think that's a, that's a bit of a, that's a result of, of the

32:17

monopolization

32:18

and the kind of killing off of the grassroots of the sport because the sport's

32:21

not growing

32:22

like it was in my day.

32:23

You know what I mean?

32:24

It's, it's very, very different now.

32:25

What do you think is the cause of that?

32:26

I think, I think the control and the monopolization of the sport by the UFC,

32:31

unfortunately.

32:31

How does that stop small organizations?

32:34

Well, because anything that starts to gather some momentum, they, they buy them

32:38

out and

32:38

they got rid of them.

32:39

Some, well, they certainly did buy out a bunch of organizations back in the day,

32:43

right?

32:43

They bought out Strikeforce.

32:45

They bought out pride, but they sort of bought out pride.

32:47

They got fucked.

32:49

Yeah.

32:49

Like they thought they were buying out proud.

32:50

Do you know the whole deal behind that?

32:52

They, they, all the contracts are bad.

32:54

Is that right?

32:55

Yeah.

32:55

They got a fucking DVD library.

32:57

Look over time, I'm sure it's been worth it.

33:00

Right.

33:01

But I believe they paid 60 million for pride.

33:04

I might be wrong about that number, but that's what I recall.

33:06

And they didn't have any contracts.

33:09

Like, you know, the, the contracts were all fucked up.

33:12

So like, they thought they were going to get Fedor.

33:14

They thought they were going to get everybody.

33:16

And so they got a lot of the guys to come over and sign new contracts with the

33:20

UFC, like

33:21

Krokop and Noguera and a bunch of other people.

33:23

But I don't think they got nearly what they thought they were getting.

33:27

Yeah.

33:28

That's, that's interesting.

33:29

I mean, obviously, you know, I, I love the UFC and I've, I've, I've always held

33:34

Dana

33:35

and the UFC and what they've created for us in very, very high regard.

33:38

But there, there, there has, in my opinion, we've passed the tipping point now

33:42

where now

33:42

we're starting to see some of the negative effects of them kind of locking down

33:45

everything.

33:47

Because like there are certain organizations that are, they are connected with

33:51

the UFC

33:51

and they're enabled by the UFC through Fight Pass.

33:53

And then they become almost like the feeder.

33:55

Like LFA.

33:56

Exactly.

33:57

But then a lot of these, a lot of those shows are now starting to get dropped

33:59

off of Fight

34:00

Pass.

34:00

Right.

34:01

And the reason for that is because Contender Series is replacing them.

34:04

So which shows have been dropped off Fight Pass?

34:06

I think LFA has just been dropped, hasn't it?

34:08

Oh, has it been?

34:08

I think so.

34:09

I mean, Invicta was on there a long time ago.

34:11

I think they moved away themselves, but like there are, Aries was dropped a

34:14

period, you

34:15

know, my, my wife's commentator on Aries.

34:16

They, they were dropped a while ago.

34:18

What was Aries?

34:19

It's the French promotion.

34:20

Okay.

34:21

Aries.

34:21

I always say it wrong.

34:22

Aries.

34:23

And they were dropped from Fight Pass?

34:24

Yeah.

34:24

Yeah.

34:25

I think they've been picked up again now, but you know, but this, this is the,

34:29

this is

34:30

my, my thinking behind it.

34:31

Right.

34:31

And I remember back in the day when I was fighting on cage warriors in, in the

34:35

UK and the

34:36

UFC were coming over once or twice, like it started to kill off all the other

34:40

shows

34:41

because everyone was like, I'll just save my money.

34:42

I'll wait for the UFC to come.

34:44

Before the UFC came over and start and like state to claim in, in the UK, we

34:48

had a lot

34:49

of shows that were kind of, you know, popping up on weekends.

34:51

I was up and down the country and across Europe all the time.

34:54

But then when we started having two or three UFC events a year, a lot of the

34:59

smaller shows

35:00

just, just dropped off, died off.

35:02

Do you think you, so you're saying you save your money meaning as an audience

35:06

member?

35:07

Yeah.

35:07

Yeah.

35:08

But you can't fault the UFC for that.

35:09

Oh no, absolutely not.

35:11

And look, and what they did when, when the UFC landed in, in Europe, they

35:14

legitimized the

35:15

sport.

35:16

And then, you know, so, so we, the perspective started to change very quickly.

35:20

Like when I was doing, when I had my title fight in 2010, I would say at least

35:24

half of

35:25

the interviews that I did was trying to justify the sport and why I was allowed

35:28

to do what

35:29

I did.

35:29

Right.

35:30

That was 2010.

35:31

So this is back when everybody thought it was human cockfighting still.

35:34

And I was getting into debates with journalists about the, the, the human cockfighting

35:38

thing

35:38

and trying to explain.

35:39

Oh, I know.

35:40

Those debates are so ew.

35:41

But, but like, and imagine trying to like attach power slap onto the side of,

35:45

of UFC when

35:46

it was then.

35:47

It would have just buried us.

35:48

You know?

35:48

I do not like power slap.

35:50

I hate it.

35:50

I hate it.

35:51

I do not like it.

35:52

And the thing is, and I'm, I'm very much, you know, as long as you're not, as

35:55

long as,

35:56

as long as you're not hurting anybody else or you've, you're agreeing to hurt

35:59

each other.

35:59

I'm all for your ability to power slap each other.

36:02

Just separate it from MMA.

36:02

And I've watched a bunch of clips.

36:04

I've watched a bunch of people get flatlined and bounce their head off the

36:07

podium and fall

36:08

backwards.

36:09

And I don't like it.

36:10

My whole thing about martial arts is it's human chess.

36:15

It's high level problem solving.

36:17

It's you're, you know, you're working up to a moment and you're doing your very

36:22

best to

36:23

not get hit and hit them.

36:25

And a flawless performance.

36:26

Like it's one of the things that was most impressive about Hamzat during his

36:31

first few

36:32

UFC fights.

36:33

I think he fought like three or four fights where he took like three punches.

36:37

Yeah.

36:38

Reece McKee, John Phillips.

36:39

I can't remember the other one.

36:40

I called a couple of those fights.

36:41

Gerald Mirchardt took nothing.

36:43

That was one punch.

36:44

One punch.

36:44

That was flatlined with one punch.

36:46

I mean, it was, that was the craziest thing about him.

36:49

It's like, look at this guy.

36:50

He's not even getting hit.

36:51

Like, this is nuts.

36:52

And when you'd grab guys, they'd be helpless.

36:54

I like skill.

36:57

There's no skill in having a big hand and a fat face.

37:01

Yeah.

37:03

And I don't even understand why you have chalk on your face.

37:05

Why do you have, or your hand.

37:06

For grip?

37:06

I don't know.

37:07

Is that what it is?

37:08

I don't know.

37:08

Is it just to like the powder flies through the air?

37:10

And, you know, I don't get it.

37:13

Maybe dunk your head in water.

37:14

I don't know.

37:15

Hey, they used to do it in the Kung Fu movies, didn't they?

37:17

They used to put talc on people.

37:19

So when you hit them, you get a cloud of power.

37:20

Did they do that?

37:21

Yeah, yeah.

37:21

And hitting the watermelons with the mallets to make the noises.

37:24

Look, again, like, power slap can be its thing and exist just away from MMA,

37:30

you know?

37:31

And what I hate to see is the likes of Herzog and Mark Smith and Forrest, like,

37:36

catching these unconscious guys as they're falling.

37:38

It just attaches the sport that we've worked so hard to develop to something

37:43

that is going to—it does an injustice to the MMA fighters and how hard they

37:48

work and how much of human chess MMA is.

37:51

Yeah, it's literally like taking—what are those fucking smash-em-up derby

37:57

racing events where they crash into each other?

38:01

Yeah, demolition derby.

38:02

Demolition derby, yeah.

38:03

It's like a Formula One driver being involved in demolition derby.

38:08

Like, that's fucking crazy.

38:09

There's actually a reason for the chalk.

38:10

Oh.

38:11

It's so that they can see where the hit was made.

38:13

Oh.

38:14

Indication of where the petition strike lands.

38:17

Well, can't you see that, though?

38:19

They're not, like, moving at the speed of light.

38:21

They're also not allowed to have excessive chalk and they can't use water.

38:24

There's no excessive water.

38:25

As you said, put your head in water.

38:26

The idea that—

38:27

They're not allowed to do it.

38:28

They have rules.

38:29

The idea they have rules is so crazy.

38:31

It's so crazy.

38:34

But it is a reflection of how solid the UFC is right now, right?

38:38

You go back to 2010, they couldn't have done that without having a real

38:41

negative effect on the sport.

38:43

I think it has a negative effect on the sport now.

38:45

I agree with you.

38:46

I just think it's not—

38:47

The UFC is so powerful and so strong now that they can even take a liberty and

38:51

advertise Power Slap off the back of it and get away with it.

38:54

It's that and then it's also we're in the TikTok era where it's just really all

38:58

about clips.

38:59

I mean, is Power Slap, does it air anywhere?

39:01

Because it aired on television for a while, right?

39:05

Didn't they force it into the Paramount deal in some way?

39:07

Did they?

39:07

I don't know.

39:08

I don't know.

39:09

I think it's much more digestible in these very short clips.

39:15

You know, I don't think there's a person—like, there's some fucking hardcore

39:19

MMA fans who can tell you about guys that are competing in the amateurs and

39:24

tough enough and they're making their way to the UFC and they're fighting in

39:28

the LFA.

39:29

There's guys who are coming in their debuts.

39:32

I mean, you can watch YouTube videos of guys breaking down these guys' skill

39:35

sets and you never even heard of these cats.

39:37

Guys who are fighting in Russia, guys who are fighting in Brazil and there's no

39:42

Power Slap, hardcore fans.

39:44

There's no, like, this guy, fucking, you got to see him slap.

39:46

You got to see him take a slap.

39:48

You got to see the way she stares down her opponent before she gets slapped.

39:51

Like, it's not the same, man.

39:53

It's not—I mean, you can watch it.

39:55

You can do it.

39:56

I don't have a problem with it.

39:58

This is America.

39:58

I believe in freedom.

39:59

But don't do it.

40:02

That's what I'd say.

40:02

I'd say, don't do it.

40:03

You come to me, I'd say, don't do it.

40:05

As a recommendation, you don't do it, right?

40:06

Like, don't, like, you know, whatever you would recommend.

40:09

But, like—

40:10

Well, I'd also say, don't do jackass.

40:12

And, you know, I've had those guys on my show all the time.

40:14

Yeah.

40:14

Every time I talk to Steve, I'm like, don't fucking do it, man.

40:17

Why are you doing that?

40:18

He's a special type, man.

40:19

He's a special type.

40:20

Yeah.

40:20

Johnny Knoxville told me he's been knocked out 16 times out cold.

40:24

I'm like, that's way too many.

40:26

That's way too many.

40:28

That's nuts.

40:29

Absolutely.

40:31

I mean, you have zero fights on your record.

40:33

You've been KO'd 16 times.

40:35

That's real bad.

40:36

Hey, he's got well paid out of it, though.

40:38

He's, you know—

40:39

Yeah.

40:40

You find someone else that got knocked out 16 times and—

40:43

Yeah, right.

40:43

That's a good point.

40:44

How much did they make from it?

40:45

That's a good point.

40:46

Yeah.

40:46

I mean, that's the other thing with these powerslap guys is, like, they're

40:49

making pocket money.

40:50

How much did they make?

40:52

I don't know.

40:52

Three and three?

40:53

Five and five?

40:54

Three?

40:55

Yeah.

40:56

I was chatting to someone in Vegas, and she didn't want to do it, but she was

40:59

like, I don't have a choice.

41:01

I can't get MMA fights.

41:02

Why?

41:03

You know, she just couldn't get MMA fights.

41:05

She was too big for most of the weight classes.

41:07

Oh, yeah.

41:08

You know?

41:08

But—

41:09

That's a problem.

41:10

Yeah.

41:10

Look at poor Kayla.

41:12

Yeah.

41:13

Yeah.

41:13

She's got to make 135.

41:15

Every time I see her in between fights, I'm like, how?

41:17

How do you get to 135?

41:18

You're as big as me.

41:20

This is crazy.

41:21

Crazy.

41:21

Yeah.

41:22

I saw her the other week in Pittsburgh, and she's—I mean, she's huge.

41:26

She's gigantic.

41:26

Yeah.

41:27

She's got phenomenal genetics.

41:28

Yeah.

41:29

She's got that neck scar.

41:30

Yeah.

41:30

She's got an artificial disc, which is—it's really interesting that they

41:34

could do that now,

41:35

and guys go, look, Aljamain did it and came back better than ever.

41:38

I mean, that was—I mean, everybody was so upset at him, the way he won the

41:41

title with Piotr Jan.

41:43

But he had a legitimate neck issue going into that fight, and that illegal knee

41:48

that he took to the head really did fuck him up.

41:50

Yeah.

41:50

And then he went and got an artificial disc, put it in his neck, and then came

41:54

back and dominated in the rematch.

41:56

And then—did you see him in his last fight?

41:59

Yeah.

41:59

Fucking dude, man.

42:01

That guy has the best back control in the game.

42:04

His back control is so elite.

42:06

It's—it's really incredible, because he gets a hold of your back, man.

42:11

And it's like, my God.

42:13

Yeah, absolutely.

42:14

See that—and I don't mean to keep picking on officials, but that is another

42:18

situation where I actually feel quite bad for Aljo,

42:20

that he had to put on that performance and damage his brand in such a way,

42:24

because he didn't want to continue fighting.

42:26

Right.

42:26

Right?

42:27

Like—and the officials are put in a circumstance where they don't have the

42:30

confidence to just go,

42:32

no, hang on a minute, that was bad.

42:33

Fight's over.

42:34

Fight's done.

42:35

Right, right, right.

42:36

Well, you want to give a guy the opportunity to fight still.

42:39

So you don't—this is the thing about damage.

42:41

You don't know looking.

42:43

Some guys can take a shot like that, and then they bounce back, and they're

42:47

fine.

42:47

Look, Bisping.

42:48

Bisping came back and won that fight after that flying knee.

42:51

You know, and you really got to kind of like let the fighter, if the fighter's

42:55

conscious, you got to let them decide whether or not they can—because you don't

42:59

know.

43:00

It's not possible to tell by looking at someone what kind of damage they've got,

43:04

especially Aljo with the neck.

43:07

Neck situations are so bad, man.

43:10

But the crazy thing is that with these artificial discs now, like Weidman got

43:14

one.

43:15

There's quite a few guys that have gotten artificial discs in their neck now.

43:21

And then they go back to finding, which is crazy.

43:23

I wonder how that changes the way that the head twists.

43:25

I don't know.

43:26

One thing I noticed on Yael Romero, whose head just doesn't twist, but he's got—his

43:30

neck's fused, right?

43:32

His neck is fused to the base of his skull.

43:35

So, like, how do you turn his head to cause concussion?

43:38

I don't know.

43:39

Well, there's a good argument that it makes him more durable.

43:41

Do you remember when Derek Brunson head kicked him?

43:44

Yeah.

43:44

He hit him with a neck kick, like right here.

43:47

He didn't even budge because you're hitting a steel bar.

43:50

So then think, didn't Tiger Woods have some kind of eye surgery so his eye was

43:54

20-10?

43:55

So he has better edge and—better depth perception for golf.

43:59

Did he?

43:59

I'm pretty sure he did.

44:00

Really?

44:01

Yeah, I'm sure he had something done to his eyes.

44:02

Put that into our sponsor, Perplexity Chain.

44:04

Never heard of that.

44:08

What did they do?

44:09

They could do that?

44:10

He got laced.

44:10

So did he have bad eyes and he got them better?

44:13

Or did he have good eyes and said, what can you do?

44:16

Can you make me have fucking superhuman eyes?

44:19

Uh, to correct nearsightedness, it improved him to 2015 vision.

44:24

2015.

44:24

Okay.

44:25

So he wasn't improved to 2020.

44:26

The problem with that is with these surgeries, if you have macular degeneration

44:31

and it continues

44:32

to progress, you are going to need it again.

44:37

Or it's going to get worse—like, Ari Shafir got LASIK and he's like, oh, it's

44:41

amazing.

44:41

I have 20-20 vision because he had terrible vision before.

44:44

And then it started going to shit after a while because it just kept deteriorating.

44:48

And now his eyes suck.

44:50

The thing is, though, you know athletes.

44:52

Like, if—I mean, and I think it was a poll done a while ago with Olympians.

44:56

Like, if you can win a gold medal but you're going to live to 30 or 35, would

45:00

you take the gold medal?

45:01

And a good portion of them said yes, they absolutely would.

45:03

Like, most athletes, in order to achieve their goals, would do absolutely

45:07

anything.

45:07

Right.

45:08

So if I all of a sudden discovered that having your neck fused like your Romero

45:12

means that

45:13

you've got a 30% chance of, you know, less chance of getting knocked out, how

45:18

many fighters

45:19

do you think would have their neck fused just to give them the advantage, right?

45:22

How about that Tommy John surgery that people get electively so they can pitch

45:25

better?

45:25

Before surgery, he was extremely nearsighted.

45:28

He had an 11 prescription.

45:31

I don't know what that is.

45:32

Minus 11.

45:33

He was essentially legally blind without glasses or contacts.

45:36

Whoa!

45:37

And one of the greatest golfers of all time, if not the greatest.

45:40

First LASIK was done after his 1999 PGA Championship win.

45:45

Yeah, here you go.

45:47

Results and impact on his golf.

45:48

Wood reportedly achieved about 2015 vision better than the standard 2020,

45:54

meaning he could

45:55

see more detail at distance than the average person.

45:57

Interesting.

45:58

He described the cup and ball as looking larger and said his ability to read

46:02

greens improved

46:04

and he went on a notable win streak winning five PGA Tour events in a row right

46:08

after the surgery.

46:09

Wow.

46:11

So that links into the stoned ape theory, though, if we're going in a massive

46:14

circle, right?

46:15

Because microdosing mushrooms gives you better edge and depth perception.

46:19

Yes.

46:20

So then the theory was that you would have better chances of surviving.

46:24

Yes.

46:24

Either as, you know, not becoming prey or finding prey.

46:27

Yes.

46:28

Right?

46:28

Yeah.

46:28

Better vision.

46:29

It would make you hornier.

46:30

So it would make you more likely to breed.

46:33

And it also makes you more creative.

46:35

And, you know, Terrence McKenna and Dennis McKenna link it to the creation of

46:39

language.

46:40

Fascinating.

46:41

Oh, it's very fascinating.

46:42

I used to remember when I was in Vegas, I had a room in my house, which I think

46:45

we talked

46:46

about it before, which was the mushroom.

46:47

And I would like once a week, I would like clear the day and I would have

46:51

ceremony on a

46:52

Saturday in the evening that I'd get up on Sunday morning and go out into Red

46:56

Rock and

46:56

I'd do trail running.

46:57

But like at the point where, you know, I took six or seven grams the night

47:01

before, so now

47:02

I've probably got the equivalent of two, three grams in my system.

47:05

But I'm running in Vibrams downhill and I'm like a cat.

47:11

I can see the ground in a much different way to how I would if I was completely

47:15

straight.

47:16

So, you know, there are some fighters that have been microdosing through fights

47:20

as well.

47:21

I won't throw them under the bus.

47:22

Oh, I know a few.

47:23

Yeah.

47:23

Yeah.

47:24

Joe Schilling talked pretty openly about it.

47:26

He's got a fight coming up.

47:27

Does he?

47:28

Joe's back?

47:28

He's fighting in Brussels.

47:29

Is he doing PFL?

47:31

Yeah.

47:31

Interesting.

47:32

Yeah, yeah.

47:32

Interesting.

47:33

How old's Joe now?

47:33

I'm not sure.

47:34

I'm not sure.

47:35

I sparred with him at Frank Mears' gym in Vegas a few years ago, Suffer.

47:40

Obviously, I knew Joe Schilling, who he was.

47:42

And, you know, the gym that he created in L.A. had a real reputation and all

47:45

that kind of

47:46

stuff.

47:46

42.

47:47

Damn.

47:48

Wow.

47:48

But he was just, he was standing outside the back, just smoking a cigarette,

47:51

came in, put

47:52

his gloves on and just beat the snot out of me.

47:54

You know what I mean?

47:55

Such a good fighter.

47:57

Yeah, he's a beast kickboxer, man.

47:59

I was at the last man standing event in L.A. when he fought.

48:03

Like, that was really crazy.

48:04

Because you had to fight multiple kickboxing fights in a day.

48:08

And, you know, this was glory.

48:11

This was like, who used to run Bellator?

48:13

What was the guy who ran Bellator?

48:15

Not Scott Coker?

48:17

No.

48:17

Yeah, no, it is Scott Coker.

48:19

Because there was a guy before Scott, right?

48:21

Yeah.

48:21

Is it Bjorn?

48:22

Bjorn Rebner?

48:23

Right.

48:23

So he left and then Scott took, and Scott was also involved in Bellator.

48:27

Yeah.

48:27

Or in, excuse me, glory.

48:29

Right?

48:29

It was in Strikeforce.

48:30

Strikeforce.

48:31

Scott Coker ran Strikeforce?

48:33

Founded Strikeforce.

48:34

So who ran Bellator?

48:36

Yeah.

48:37

Bjorn founded it and then Scott Coker.

48:39

Right.

48:40

Okay, right.

48:40

So that is correct.

48:41

Okay.

48:42

I think he was involved in glory, too.

48:44

Right.

48:45

And I think I remember I went up to him and I said, this is awesome, but don't

48:49

do this.

48:50

Don't have people fight multiple times in a night.

48:52

It's just like, because you get a concussion and no one even knows about it.

48:56

Like, there's been a lot of fights where guys got concussions and they didn't

48:59

get knocked out.

49:00

And then you have to fight again in an hour.

49:03

And then you fight again 45 minutes after that.

49:05

Like, man, that's a recipe for people getting fucked up.

49:09

I know they did it back in the old days in hardcore and all that stuff.

49:12

It's all great.

49:13

But, man, don't do that.

49:15

But you look at some of those first round matchups when they were doing that

49:17

and you're like,

49:18

hmm, okay, I can see what you're doing here.

49:20

You know what I mean?

49:20

Give people easier fights in the beginning.

49:22

So they're ultimately trying it.

49:23

Sometimes, but I think it's kind of random, you know, sometimes you get a tough

49:26

one.

49:26

Especially with the heavyweight K1.

49:27

I mean, you know, like some of those guys, you fight Hongman Choi or Bob Sapp,

49:32

no matter how confident you are in your skill set, just the sheer size of them

49:34

is a problem.

49:35

Yes.

49:36

Those fucking K1 tournaments were bananas.

49:39

They were so good.

49:40

Woo, they were so good.

49:41

Especially the lights.

49:42

I had a friend of mine in Canada that used to get me VHS tapes back in the day.

49:47

I don't know.

49:48

I think he had like a satellite dish or some shit.

49:50

I forget how he was getting them, but he was getting them and he was sending

49:54

them to me.

49:55

K1, Heroes, all these like real obscure events he would send me.

50:00

Awesome.

50:00

Oh, I had a, I don't know where the fuck they are now.

50:03

I think they might even be in my LA house, but I had a giant box filled with VHS

50:07

tapes.

50:08

There were all kinds of old school fights.

50:10

I used to have a, I used to have a, like a CD, like a zip CD thing that used to

50:14

take with

50:15

me and I had a guy at my gym and he would five pounds.

50:18

He would burn me pride or K1 Heroes or whatever.

50:21

And he was finding them online and just ripping it and, you know, selling them

50:24

in the gym.

50:25

But I had a whole database of stuff, IFL and all those old shows, K1 Heroes.

50:30

I loved, I loved K1 Heroes.

50:31

You know, that's kind of partially how I got the job at the UFC.

50:34

Um, when I first met Dana, like he just, he got me tickets because it was the,

50:39

I was on Fear Factor and the UFC, they just purchased it.

50:43

So this is 2001.

50:44

This is a, right post 9-11 when Tito Ortiz fought Vladimir Matyushenko, came

50:50

out with the American flag.

50:52

Everybody went crazy.

50:53

And, um, I started talking to him about like Japan Valley Tudo and do you know

50:57

about this guy?

50:58

Do you know about that guy?

50:59

And I was, I was just like rattling off all these fighters that he had never

51:03

heard of before.

51:04

I was talking about all these guys that are fighting out of Russia, all these

51:07

guys in Japan.

51:08

And then we started talking and then next thing you know, he's like, do you

51:11

want to do commentary?

51:12

I was like, oh, I just want to, I just want to watch.

51:15

And you never thought about it before commentary?

51:17

No.

51:17

No.

51:18

No.

51:18

Well, I worked for the UFC before that as the post-fight interviewer, but that

51:22

was in 97, UFC 12.

51:24

I remember.

51:24

And so I did it for 97 to 98 and then it was costing me money.

51:28

Because I would make way more money if I'd go work out a comedy club for the

51:32

weekend than I would doing this.

51:34

But it was fun.

51:35

So I did it for a little while, but then it was like, I think it was UFC Japan.

51:39

They wanted me to fly to Japan.

51:40

And Frank Shamrock was fighting Kevin Jackson.

51:45

Is that who it was?

51:48

I think he won by first round armbar.

51:50

And I was like, I'm not going to fucking Japan, man.

51:53

I can't.

51:54

No.

51:54

I'm done.

51:55

So I'd quit.

51:56

I was like, I love you guys.

51:57

It was fun.

51:58

Good time.

51:58

While it lasted.

51:59

Did you feel like it was going to go where it went though?

52:02

No, I thought they were fucked.

52:03

Really?

52:04

It was funny because, you know, Eddie Bravo and I were backstage at one of

52:06

these events.

52:08

You know, I met Eddie way back in the day.

52:10

So it was like, this was like 97, 98.

52:13

Eddie and I were backstage.

52:14

We were like, you know what this fucking sport needs?

52:16

Some crazy billionaires with a ton of money who love the sport.

52:20

Who just, because we know it's so exciting.

52:22

And we know people would think it's so exciting.

52:24

It just needs to be in everybody's face.

52:26

And then who comes along?

52:27

The Fertittas.

52:28

It's like we manifested them.

52:30

Yeah.

52:30

Yeah.

52:31

It was crazy because like, you know, one of the first events that I did for the

52:36

UFC,

52:37

I did for free.

52:38

I did like the first 15 events for free.

52:40

And I just said, just get my friends tickets.

52:41

So it was like, Eddie and I would go.

52:43

And, you know, we'd be like, bro, it's fucking happening.

52:46

It's actually happening.

52:47

But even back then, it wasn't famous.

52:49

It was just, it was in Vegas.

52:51

And it was, you know, it was kind of getting a little bit of attention.

52:55

It wasn't until 2005 that Forrest Whitaker, that the main event of,

53:02

rather, excuse me, Forrest Griffin and Stephen Bonner, main event of,

53:07

the Ultimate Fighter, that one fight changed everything.

53:12

It was really crazy where like, the stars align with one fight.

53:17

The whole sport takes off.

53:19

Yeah.

53:19

Because it really was that.

53:20

I can't believe I called him Forrest Whitaker.

53:22

But yeah, I did that on commentary.

53:25

I called Robert Whitaker, Forrest Whitaker live on commentary.

53:27

I've called people.

53:29

I fucked up Juliana Pena's name once.

53:31

Yeah.

53:31

I fucked people's names up.

53:33

It's like, you have so many names in your head.

53:35

That's what people don't understand.

53:37

Like, you and I, between you and I, we probably have 500 fighters' names in our

53:42

head.

53:42

And then plus jiu-jitsu guys, plus wrestlers, plus boxers.

53:48

Like, oh my God, there's so many names in your head.

53:51

Yeah.

53:51

And then project that into the history of the sport now.

53:53

Right.

53:53

Because we've got the history of the sport, and the history of boxing on top of

53:56

that as well.

53:56

The way I describe my memory, it's like I have a whole bunch of boxes of

54:00

folders.

54:01

And if I find that box, I can open that bitch up and talk to you about Marvin

54:05

Hagler versus Juan Roldan.

54:07

And it'll tell you, like, the knockdown was fake, and this and that, and Hagler

54:11

went on to stop him.

54:12

I'll tell you details.

54:13

But if I don't have that folder in front of me, I'm like, uh, I don't know why.

54:19

I don't know why I can't, like, immediately remember sometimes.

54:22

But sometimes I can pull that box out, and it's right there.

54:25

And I can just get that folder out, and boom.

54:27

Do you remember the first time you sat down at the commentary booth and put the

54:30

headset on?

54:31

Yes.

54:31

Yes.

54:32

That was UFC 37 and a half.

54:34

London?

54:35

No.

54:36

Oh, no, of course.

54:37

It was just after that, though, right?

54:40

UFC 38 was London.

54:41

Well, it was 37 and a half because it was, like, a fit.

54:44

It was an event they put together for Best Damn Sports Show.

54:49

Right.

54:49

So remember Best Damn Sports Show, which was on Fox Sports, I think?

54:53

Fox Sportsnet?

54:54

And so what it was was they had this opportunity to do a show, and this is when

54:59

Dana asked me

55:00

to do commentary, and I just did it as a favor.

55:02

He goes, it'd be great if you did it because it was the Fear Factor days, and

55:06

it was Chuck

55:07

Liddell versus Vitor Belfort.

55:08

And I said, oh, fuck yeah, I'll do it.

55:10

And I think, I don't remember who else.

55:14

I think Robbie Lawler might have made his debut.

55:16

Steve Berger versus Robbie Lawler.

55:17

That's right.

55:18

Thank you, sir.

55:19

Yeah.

55:20

So it was fun.

55:22

And I did it once, and then they asked me, would you do it again?

55:25

I'm like, okay, I'll do it again.

55:26

But it was really just, I just kept doing it.

55:30

It wasn't a job.

55:31

Like I said, I didn't even ask for money.

55:33

I did like 15 of them.

55:35

And then finally, Dana says, look, I want to sign you to a contract.

55:39

I want to pay you.

55:40

I was like, okay.

55:41

All right.

55:43

I was like, reluctantly got dragged into being a commentator.

55:46

Yeah.

55:46

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56:55

That's kind of cool.

56:56

Yeah, it's similar to me, though, really.

56:58

I mean, I was, because I've been sidelined because, you know, because of my

57:01

heart situation and they wouldn't clear me in California.

57:03

So then the UFC just wouldn't match me anywhere.

57:07

And I'd had like a month or two of just kind of wallowing and being depressed

57:12

and, you know, avoiding MMA gyms and Lorenzo had invited me into the offices on

57:18

Sahara.

57:19

And I'd gone and sat with him and we were chatting through and he said, hey,

57:22

you know, I'm going to send you out to California.

57:24

I want you to go and see my specialist, you know, my family specialist and get

57:27

a second opinion and et cetera.

57:29

But he said, also, we've got another plan for you.

57:32

He said, I won't spoil it.

57:34

At some point, you'll see Dana and Dana will tell you what the plan is.

57:38

And as I was, it was like a movie.

57:40

As I was walking out of the offices, a stretch monster Hummer pulled up.

57:45

Literally, I'm like, what's going on here?

57:49

And Dana got out and he was like, oh, just the fucking blah, blah, blah.

57:52

I just wanted to see.

57:53

He was like, I want you to go to the UK.

57:55

I want you to be an ambassador.

57:57

I want you to do commentary.

57:58

And I said, that's great.

57:59

You know, let me know what I need media training.

58:01

He's like, no, none of that.

58:02

I just want you to be you sitting cage side.

58:04

And I remember getting to the first UFC London event and sat down at the desk,

58:09

just fighting

58:11

imposter syndrome bad and seeing all the fans starting to trickle into the

58:14

arena.

58:15

And then someone from the truck came through and said, oh, I've just realized

58:20

we've not practiced

58:21

any post-fight interviews.

58:23

I said, oh, I'd not really thought about it, but it's just talking to fighters.

58:26

I'll be fine.

58:26

He said, no, no, no.

58:27

I'd feel better if we practiced.

58:29

I said, okay.

58:30

He said, okay, Brad Pickett wins by knockout.

58:34

Go.

58:34

I'm like, how did you knock him out?

58:39

It was my first question.

58:40

And it was weird because it was like, I'd not even thought about it up until

58:43

that point.

58:44

But when they asked me to do the kind of practice rehearsal with not any

58:51

scenario that was

58:52

realistic, then all of a sudden I started to panic.

58:56

But I remember sitting there feeling like a 14-year-old, like someone's going

59:01

to tap me

59:02

on the shoulder in a minute and throw me out.

59:03

Really?

59:04

It felt so weird.

59:04

Yeah.

59:05

That's funny.

59:05

It felt really weird.

59:06

That's interesting.

59:07

I don't remember if I felt imposter syndrome.

59:10

I think because I wasn't getting paid, I probably thought it was just fun.

59:14

Yeah.

59:14

I probably didn't think it was a job.

59:17

So I probably thought like, oh, they just want me to do this because I'm famous

59:21

and it

59:22

would be good for the sport if the Fear Factor guy is enthusiastic about this

59:26

sport.

59:27

So that's how I thought about it.

59:29

And so like I would go on like the Howard Stern show and stuff and we'd wind up

59:33

just talking

59:33

about the UFC.

59:34

And this was, again, I wasn't even working for the UFC.

59:36

I was there to promote Fear Factor.

59:39

But I was talking about how much I loved UFC and I just, I think it's awesome.

59:44

And back when I was competing, no one knew what the best sport, it's so hard

59:50

for people

59:51

to recognize that today because it's not that long ago, you know, like when I

59:56

was, last time

59:57

I fought was like 88 or 89.

59:58

You would think like we kind of had it sorted out back then, but you didn't, no

1:00:02

one knew.

1:00:03

No one knew like what was the best thing to study.

1:00:06

I remember I went to this gym, a friend of mine was teaching at this university

1:00:12

and I

1:00:12

would go and train with him and his students sometime and I would go there and

1:00:15

they had

1:00:16

a judo program there.

1:00:17

And I'd be like, look at these suckers practicing this stupid judo.

1:00:20

Like this is useless.

1:00:20

You can't even kick anybody.

1:00:22

I mean, all those guys would have killed me.

1:00:25

They would have just grabbed me and fucking thrown me on my head.

1:00:28

But I didn't think that.

1:00:29

I was totally delusional.

1:00:30

I thought I was going to kick them into the fucking shadow realm and no one

1:00:35

knew what

1:00:36

the right thing to study was.

1:00:38

If you took Kung Fu, you thought Kung Fu was the shit.

1:00:40

Bruce Lee, right?

1:00:42

I'm wearing a Bruce Lee shirt.

1:00:43

He was really the only guy that was wise enough to realize you just got to take

1:00:47

a little bit

1:00:48

from everything and having one style, whether it was his initial style, which

1:00:52

was Wing Chun

1:00:53

or whatever it is, karate, that's not the way.

1:00:56

The way is the right way to win.

1:00:59

In close quarter combat, you need to learn how to grapple.

1:01:02

You need to learn boxing.

1:01:03

You need to learn how to block correctly.

1:01:05

You need to learn how to kick correctly.

1:01:07

Back then, we didn't know.

1:01:08

And we always wondered, what would happen if they did a fucking, put a bunch of

1:01:13

guys together.

1:01:14

And I knew Benny the Jet had competed in some weird stuff in Hawaii, but no one

1:01:18

really knew.

1:01:19

So when it was finally happening, to me, I was like a little kid.

1:01:23

I was like, oh my God, it's happening.

1:01:25

It's really happening.

1:01:27

And I was like, please let this work.

1:01:30

Please let this work.

1:01:31

And then to watch the evolution of it from the beginning, which is just Hoist

1:01:37

going in there

1:01:37

and dominating everybody because no one knew jiu-jitsu.

1:01:40

And he had the Gi on, so he had all this friction.

1:01:42

It was amazing.

1:01:43

And everybody took jiu-jitsu, including me.

1:01:45

I was like, I got to learn jiu-jitsu.

1:01:46

And then to watch the evolution, like these giant juiced up fucking wrestlers

1:01:51

come along,

1:01:52

like Mark Coleman and Mark Kerr smashing everybody.

1:01:55

They're like, oh my God, you've got to get on the sauce.

1:01:58

And so everybody, you know, Vitor got up to like 240 pounds and his fucking

1:02:02

neck started at the top of his head.

1:02:03

Oh, yeah, bro.

1:02:05

I was training at the same gym as him when he made his UFC debut.

1:02:07

So I was training at Carlson Gracie's gym.

1:02:11

So you kind of knew what was coming then?

1:02:12

Well, I didn't, I knew he was awesome, but I didn't know how good his hands

1:02:17

were

1:02:17

because I only saw him doing jiu-jitsu, right?

1:02:20

But I knew he was a beast.

1:02:21

Like, he was a black belt in jiu-jitsu at the time and, you know, a phenomenal

1:02:25

athlete, just so fast.

1:02:28

But then I saw a video of him.

1:02:29

He fought John Hess in Hawaii.

1:02:32

Do you remember John Hess?

1:02:33

Yeah, I do remember John Hess.

1:02:33

Safta fighting?

1:02:34

Yeah.

1:02:34

So John Hess was this giant guy.

1:02:36

He's like 6'7 or something like that.

1:02:38

And Vitor just fucking took him to the ground and bang, bang, bang, bang, bang,

1:02:42

bang, bang,

1:02:43

hit him with like 30 fucking unanswered punches in a row, like in three seconds.

1:02:48

Like, brrrr, and put him away.

1:02:50

And then they're screaming, jiu-jitsu, jiu-jitsu.

1:02:53

And I was like, wait a minute.

1:02:54

This is not, I mean, I get it.

1:02:57

You know jiu-jitsu.

1:02:57

But that was boxing.

1:02:59

You used striking.

1:03:01

But it was like, to be there at the very beginning and watch this evolution.

1:03:06

There it is.

1:03:08

There's Vitor.

1:03:08

Look at this.

1:03:09

Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.

1:03:09

Look at his legs shaking.

1:03:10

My God.

1:03:11

And look how thin Vitor was back then.

1:03:13

Yeah.

1:03:13

That was Vitor at like, you know, 199 pounds.

1:03:17

Maybe.

1:03:17

Terrifying.

1:03:18

Maybe 190.

1:03:19

Oh, he was so fast.

1:03:20

And so that was there for his UFC debut.

1:03:22

So that was UFC 12.

1:03:23

So he fought Trey Tellegman.

1:03:26

And Trey Tellegman, like, had no idea that this guy could box that way.

1:03:30

Like, no one did.

1:03:31

They thought he's a Carlson Gracie jiu-jitsu black belt.

1:03:34

It was like, okay, you know, avoid the takedowns.

1:03:37

This guy's really good on the ground.

1:03:38

And he just starts tuning people up with his hands.

1:03:41

Yeah.

1:03:41

And Tellegman was Lions then, wasn't he?

1:03:43

Yep.

1:03:43

He was one of Ken Shamrock's guys.

1:03:44

Didn't he have a missing pec?

1:03:45

Yes.

1:03:46

He was in a car accident, I believe, when he was a child.

1:03:49

Oh, is that right?

1:03:50

Yeah.

1:03:50

And his pec was not attached on one side.

1:03:53

And he was fucking jacked, dude.

1:03:55

And then he fought Scott Ferrozo after that, who was like a giant fat guy.

1:04:00

He was also like a tank, you know, like a huge fucking knockout artist.

1:04:05

And Vitor tuned him up too.

1:04:07

Just the speed he had.

1:04:09

So this is like, you know, 1997.

1:04:11

And it was wild.

1:04:13

And that was in like a high school auditorium in Dothan, Alabama.

1:04:17

It was like really weird.

1:04:18

Crazy.

1:04:19

I was like, this is so, these places, these are so strange.

1:04:21

These events were so bizarre.

1:04:23

You know, I was hanging out with the Lion's Den guys.

1:04:25

We'd go drinking together and stuff.

1:04:26

It was fun.

1:04:27

But it was just weird.

1:04:29

It was like, what is this thing that we're doing?

1:04:31

This is it.

1:04:32

The Dothan Civic Center.

1:04:35

That's what it was.

1:04:36

Look how small it is.

1:04:37

Man.

1:04:37

Look how little that place is.

1:04:38

97.

1:04:39

Yeah.

1:04:40

So that would have been the time when I was at art college.

1:04:43

Yeah.

1:04:43

And I went to Virgin Megastore.

1:04:46

There you are.

1:04:46

Look.

1:04:47

Jeff Blatnick.

1:04:47

He was the fucking man.

1:04:49

I went to Virgin Megastore.

1:04:50

And look how, you're beautiful, man.

1:04:54

Look how beautiful you are.

1:04:55

And no one taught me.

1:04:57

No one told me what to do.

1:04:59

No one gave me any instruction.

1:05:01

Nothing.

1:05:01

They gave me a microphone and then said, we're going to come to you backstage.

1:05:05

I'm like, what do you want me to say?

1:05:06

Like literally, it was fucking nothing.

1:05:10

It was nothing.

1:05:11

You probably knew better than everybody else though.

1:05:13

Well, luckily, I was a huge fan.

1:05:15

So it was pretty easy.

1:05:17

I got the job because they had a guy that was doing it before and they got rid

1:05:21

of him.

1:05:22

And Campbell McLaren, who was one of the producers, was good friends with my

1:05:26

comedy manager.

1:05:27

And he was just casually talking.

1:05:30

It's like, we're looking for someone to do post-fight interviews.

1:05:32

And he's like, Joe loves the UFC.

1:05:35

And he's like, you think you'd do it?

1:05:36

And so they called me up.

1:05:37

I was like, fuck yeah, let's go.

1:05:39

I was like, this is, and this is, I was like 97.

1:05:42

I guess I was 30.

1:05:43

Yeah.

1:05:44

Is this how the judges used to announce it?

1:05:47

Their picks?

1:05:47

They just held up a whiteboard?

1:05:49

I guess so.

1:05:49

I guess so.

1:05:50

There was a bunch of rules at the beginning that seemed very strange to me too,

1:05:53

too.

1:05:53

I saw they had overtime rules.

1:05:55

Ooh, I forgot about that.

1:05:57

I forgot about Obata.

1:05:58

They called them laws of the octagon.

1:05:59

Valigi.

1:06:00

Yeah.

1:06:01

Valid Ishmael.

1:06:02

He was a lunatic, wasn't he?

1:06:03

Oh, he was a mad man.

1:06:04

So intense.

1:06:04

Mad dog.

1:06:05

Yeah.

1:06:06

No biting, no eye gouging, no fish hooking.

1:06:08

That was it.

1:06:09

You could hit people in nuts.

1:06:10

It was...

1:06:11

That's it.

1:06:11

That's it.

1:06:12

I tell you what, I've got a piece of my gum missing from someone trying to fish

1:06:16

hook

1:06:16

me.

1:06:16

Oh, God.

1:06:17

They took a piece of the gum away with their fingernail.

1:06:20

I'm going to have to get something done.

1:06:21

I've got some teeth that need fixing at some point.

1:06:23

Oh, Jesus Christ.

1:06:24

Not nice.

1:06:25

Ay, ay, ay.

1:06:26

It's fish hooking dangerous.

1:06:27

Yeah, that's nasty.

1:06:28

If someone's fish hooks you, you should bite their fucking fingers.

1:06:30

Oh, I think so.

1:06:31

You should be able to bite them.

1:06:32

Like, fuck you.

1:06:33

Get your fucking fingers out of my mouth, motherfucker.

1:06:35

That's interesting about commentary.

1:06:37

I've always wondered because everybody came after you, right, when it comes to

1:06:42

MMA commentary.

1:06:43

So, like, in the early days when I was first doing the job, no one knows what a

1:06:48

color commentator

1:06:49

or a play-by-play commentator is back in the day.

1:06:51

I think there's more of an understanding now.

1:06:52

So, my response to everybody is, I'm going to try and do Joe's job.

1:06:57

You know what I mean?

1:06:58

But you'd set the bar so high.

1:07:00

I think partly that's what fed into my imposter syndrome.

1:07:03

I'm sitting there and look, the podcast that you did with Dustin, I appreciate

1:07:07

all the

1:07:07

kind words you did.

1:07:08

I want to throw it back to you, though, because you were the person that raised

1:07:12

the bar for

1:07:12

everybody else to reach, you know?

1:07:14

So, and I didn't realize, because I never had an intention of being a commentator.

1:07:18

Like, it just came off the back of my career because my career was ended

1:07:21

abruptly.

1:07:22

So, then anyone that ever says, oh, you're actually pretty good at this, the

1:07:27

reason why

1:07:28

is just because I listen to you religiously.

1:07:30

Like, a lot of people watch the fights and don't pay attention to the

1:07:32

commentary.

1:07:33

Like, I tuned in.

1:07:35

I was paying attention to everything that you said.

1:07:37

So, even the delivery and the cadence and stuff, what you did laid the

1:07:41

foundation for me to

1:07:42

learn.

1:07:42

So, I very, very much appreciate that.

1:07:44

Oh, thank you.

1:07:45

Thank you.

1:07:46

It was accidental.

1:07:47

Same for me.

1:07:49

But it can't have been accidental because I had somebody to learn from, you

1:07:52

know?

1:07:53

That's why I asked you, because you didn't have anybody that kind of, you know,

1:07:57

set the job out.

1:07:57

Well, it was weird because I think I was one of the first people to do it that

1:08:03

had a real

1:08:04

understanding of jiu-jitsu.

1:08:05

So, when the fights would go to the ground, the play-by-play guy would have,

1:08:11

you know, like,

1:08:12

Goldberg, great guy, didn't train, didn't know what the fuck was happening.

1:08:16

So, I would have to, and also people at home, what's going on?

1:08:19

So, I would have to walk them through exactly when someone's in danger and why

1:08:24

they're in

1:08:24

danger and how they can get out of it and when they're free.

1:08:27

Okay, see his elbow?

1:08:28

He's free now.

1:08:29

He's good.

1:08:29

And so, my mind is spinning like 100 miles an hour.

1:08:32

I'm like, now I don't have to do that as much because people kind of understand

1:08:35

things

1:08:36

much more, but there's certain situations in certain positions where I would

1:08:40

have to say,

1:08:41

no, this is a submission.

1:08:42

Like, he's very close here.

1:08:44

Like, okay, now he's got to cinch it up.

1:08:46

He's got to put his ankle behind his leg.

1:08:47

Now he's got it.

1:08:47

And you'd have to, like, talk people through it.

1:08:50

So, it was different than any other sport because it was, you're kind of, like,

1:08:54

educating

1:08:55

people on what's happening.

1:08:57

Like, I couldn't use obscure, even though I used the obscure term, like, you

1:09:00

know, crackhead

1:09:01

control or something like weird stuff like that, that Eddie comes up with these

1:09:04

fucking ridiculous

1:09:06

names for submissions and positions, but I would have to explain why this works

1:09:10

and what's

1:09:11

happening and what's going on and what's in danger, you know?

1:09:15

And it was weird because I felt, like, this obligation to jujitsu that that was

1:09:21

the one

1:09:22

thing.

1:09:22

Like, you could, if someone kicks you in the head, you get it.

1:09:24

Someone knees someone in the head.

1:09:25

Oh, you hit him with a flying knee.

1:09:26

You get it.

1:09:27

But explaining someone, like, what, like, you know, a calf crusher is, like,

1:09:35

that's a weird

1:09:37

fucking position.

1:09:37

Yeah.

1:09:38

Like, what is going on there?

1:09:39

You know, explaining to someone, you know, why a triangle works and why it

1:09:43

doesn't work

1:09:44

and why someone's safe, you know, with a head and arm choke.

1:09:47

Why, okay, he's okay.

1:09:49

He's got his hand over his ear.

1:09:50

There's, it was all this weird stuff where it was partially trying to be

1:09:55

entertaining,

1:09:56

but also trying to educate.

1:09:58

And I had to kind of figure it out as I did it.

1:10:01

You know, as I called, I don't know how many fights I've called.

1:10:04

It's probably thousands.

1:10:06

Yeah.

1:10:06

I mean, I've called a lot.

1:10:08

You've been doing it a lot longer than me.

1:10:09

Well, I don't do as many now.

1:10:11

You know, I only do North American pay-per-views and I don't even do, I don't

1:10:14

even go to Canada anymore.

1:10:15

So fuck them.

1:10:16

I love Canadians.

1:10:17

It's the government that fucking creeps me out.

1:10:20

But, um, the, the amount I was doing back then, I was doing like 20 shows plus

1:10:26

a year,

1:10:26

22 shows a year.

1:10:27

Yeah.

1:10:28

So I was doing a show almost every other weekend.

1:10:30

I was flying somewhere.

1:10:31

Yeah.

1:10:31

And it was exhausting.

1:10:32

It was a really, it was a problem, but it was in, in one point in time, it

1:10:36

became really

1:10:36

my main job after Fear Factor was over and, uh, I loved it, but the, the

1:10:41

traveling was brutal.

1:10:43

You'd go to Australia, you come back from Australia and now you're going to

1:10:46

Dallas, you're going

1:10:47

to Dallas, you're going to New York.

1:10:48

It's like, Ooh.

1:10:50

Yeah.

1:10:50

I was in us.

1:10:51

First time I went to Australia with the UFC, it was a 56 hour round trip and I

1:10:55

was on the

1:10:55

ground for 30 hours.

1:10:56

You feel like you're on drugs.

1:10:58

I feel like, like someone gave me a drug.

1:11:00

I don't even know where I am.

1:11:01

Yeah.

1:11:01

I loved it though.

1:11:02

I loved being there.

1:11:03

I was like, wow, what a crazy country.

1:11:05

You guys are on the other side of the planet and you're all cool and the food's

1:11:08

great.

1:11:09

Yeah.

1:11:09

It's fun.

1:11:09

And I got all the, I got all the gigs that most people didn't want to do.

1:11:12

So like I was, I was being sent to all of the farthest reaches, you know what I

1:11:16

mean?

1:11:16

Like I, I did, I mean, Singapore, I loved Japan.

1:11:19

I loved, you know, going out to Australia to do those events.

1:11:21

I did a lot of the Russian events, you know, I was even back at one time in

1:11:25

case Bruce

1:11:26

Buffett didn't make it.

1:11:27

I was going to be the.

1:11:28

Really?

1:11:28

MC as well.

1:11:29

Yeah.

1:11:29

Oh, wow.

1:11:30

That's crazy.

1:11:32

That's a hard job.

1:11:33

Yeah.

1:11:33

Absolutely.

1:11:33

That guy set the bar.

1:11:35

Right.

1:11:35

He almost dies every event.

1:11:37

Really?

1:11:38

We were, we were looking at him like one day is going to be loud.

1:11:42

Cause he, you know, Bruce has got to be like 70 years old now.

1:11:44

Right?

1:11:45

Yeah.

1:11:45

So I'm like one day that motherfucker is going to stroke out in the middle.

1:11:48

And just fucking pop.

1:11:52

Blood starts leaking.

1:11:55

That's it.

1:11:55

But if you ask Bruce, that's the way we'd like to go.

1:11:57

That's how you'd want to go.

1:11:58

One of my craziest experiences.

1:11:59

Sweet suit on.

1:12:00

I remember, I remember coming down a slide, like a metal slide from the Great

1:12:06

Wall of

1:12:07

China with Bruce Buffer in front of me and Uriah Faber behind me.

1:12:12

And we're going down on these like rugs on the way down from just weird

1:12:15

experiences that

1:12:16

you have on the road with the UFC.

1:12:17

You know what I mean?

1:12:18

Yeah.

1:12:18

That was good.

1:12:19

I've always, always loved Bruce.

1:12:20

Yeah.

1:12:20

He's a great guy.

1:12:21

You know, that's another thing as well is like, and you'll remember this from

1:12:24

back,

1:12:24

you know, back when I made my debut, like I'd get into it with Bruce.

1:12:29

Like I'd be like calling Bruce on and he always used to come to me.

1:12:33

I loved it.

1:12:34

Cause it was just the idea of, of, of hearing Bruce Buffer say my name was just

1:12:39

wild to

1:12:39

me.

1:12:39

The Outlaw Hardy.

1:12:42

Dude, I'll get goosebumps.

1:12:43

We always talk about like whether or not it's, um, a jinx to fist bump Buffer,

1:12:50

you know,

1:12:51

like me and Anik, we're talking about it, but I was like, no, Khabib fist

1:12:53

bumped him every

1:12:54

time.

1:12:55

So it can't be a jinx.

1:12:56

Cause you look for jinxes, you look for things that are a bad omen or a bad

1:13:01

sign, you know?

1:13:02

Yeah.

1:13:03

Weirdly superstitious, aren't we?

1:13:04

We like to, we like to hang stuff on things that aren't our responsibility.

1:13:07

Isn't that weird?

1:13:08

It is strange.

1:13:09

Especially with fighters.

1:13:10

Fighters are super superstitious.

1:13:12

Yeah.

1:13:12

They get real weird about the, the things they do, their rituals before fights,

1:13:17

what

1:13:17

they, what they eat, where they like, what they wear.

1:13:21

Yeah.

1:13:21

Yeah.

1:13:22

And like some of the things that they do, like, I mean like Ben Henderson with

1:13:25

the

1:13:25

toothpick.

1:13:26

Mm-hmm.

1:13:26

Like crazy.

1:13:27

Yeah.

1:13:27

I was interviewing him post-fight.

1:13:29

I'm like, do y'all have a toothpick in your mouth?

1:13:31

And he got in trouble for that.

1:13:33

Yeah.

1:13:33

Dangerous though.

1:13:34

Especially if you know you get knocked out and that toothpick's going down your

1:13:37

throat.

1:13:37

I just didn't understand why he did it.

1:13:39

It seems like a bit of a, bit of a safety blanket almost.

1:13:42

It's like a familiarity that it's there.

1:13:44

It's the weirdest one of all time.

1:13:45

Yeah, it is.

1:13:45

A toothpick in your mouth?

1:13:46

Yeah.

1:13:47

Like, okay.

1:13:47

Yeah.

1:13:48

Yeah.

1:13:48

Very strange.

1:13:48

I like a toothpick, but not during a fight.

1:13:50

That dude still had it.

1:13:51

Yeah.

1:13:52

Which is crazy.

1:13:52

He's got a fight coming up in Brussels.

1:13:54

Wow.

1:13:54

It's a rough fight as well.

1:13:56

How old is he now?

1:13:57

44.

1:13:58

Wow.

1:13:59

Yeah.

1:13:59

Fighting a kid called Patrick Haberora.

1:14:01

Good Belgian fighter.

1:14:04

Mm-hmm.

1:14:04

Yeah.

1:14:04

It's interesting though.

1:14:05

I mean, you know, you've got to form a champ with all that experience.

1:14:08

Oh, yeah.

1:14:09

I mean, he's still in great shape.

1:14:11

Yeah.

1:14:12

He still can compete at a high level.

1:14:13

It's just, wow, these guys, when they're competing for that long, it's so nuts.

1:14:18

You know what I've, and I've suggested as well as a thousand other things that

1:14:22

I've suggested

1:14:23

to the PFL, but a master's division, right?

1:14:25

You know, the likes of Cowboy and Tony Ferguson and, you know, the guys that

1:14:29

you want to keep

1:14:30

fighting, but you don't want to see them just get smashed by Chemaev, you know?

1:14:34

Sure.

1:14:34

I would love to see some of those fairly matched fights.

1:14:37

You know, like when we had, it was Nate Diaz against Chemaev, wasn't it?

1:14:41

And then Chemaev was taken out of the fight and Tony Ferguson was put in the

1:14:45

place and

1:14:46

Nate won the fight.

1:14:47

That to me was the perfect matchup.

1:14:49

Like the Chemaev one would have made me feel really uncomfortable to watch.

1:14:52

And I would love to see a master's division, especially now we could

1:14:55

accommodate it with

1:14:57

some of the older fighters around.

1:14:58

Yeah.

1:14:58

Because most of them, they just kind of bounce over onto, you know, bernucle or

1:15:02

whatever

1:15:02

else is out there as options.

1:15:04

Whereas like, they've still got so much to offer.

1:15:07

And if the fights are fairly matched, I think we get some more really real good

1:15:10

ones.

1:15:11

Yeah.

1:15:11

That it is a problem when you see those old veterans that still have something

1:15:15

to offer and

1:15:16

then you see them getting thrown in there with some 27 year old assassin and

1:15:20

you're like,

1:15:20

good Lord, don't do this.

1:15:22

I mean, I'm what, 43.

1:15:23

I'd fight someone this weekend.

1:15:25

Like, I love it.

1:15:27

It's still in me.

1:15:28

But I know I'm physically like, I mean, even if I was at my athletic peak, I

1:15:32

won't be competing

1:15:33

with these guys now.

1:15:34

They're terrifying.

1:15:34

But, you know, like, to know that I'm getting into a fight with someone that's

1:15:39

as game as

1:15:40

me.

1:15:40

Right.

1:15:41

But has also had the experience as well as the wear and tear.

1:15:44

You know what I mean?

1:15:44

Yeah.

1:15:45

Evenly matched.

1:15:46

Yeah.

1:15:46

Like, look at Pacquiao's about to fight Mayweather.

1:15:48

Yeah.

1:15:49

Makes sense.

1:15:50

Yeah.

1:15:50

You know, like fighting Terrence Crawford, you'd be like, yeah, don't do that.

1:15:56

Exactly.

1:15:56

Yeah.

1:15:57

Like, I don't want to see you get stretched.

1:15:59

You know what I mean?

1:16:01

But, like, you guys are both in your late 40s.

1:16:04

Like, okay.

1:16:04

Yeah.

1:16:05

Yeah.

1:16:05

All right.

1:16:05

I'll pay for that.

1:16:07

Yeah.

1:16:08

It's as long as they're not gone.

1:16:11

You know, there's some guys that they get to a certain point and they're like,

1:16:16

why is their

1:16:16

family letting them compete?

1:16:17

Why hasn't anybody stepped in?

1:16:19

Doesn't anybody recognize their skills are gone?

1:16:21

Doesn't anybody recognize they get knocked out way too easily now?

1:16:24

There's a bunch of fighters like that that I just really wish would not be

1:16:27

doing it anymore.

1:16:28

Yeah.

1:16:29

And the thing is, it's sad about it as well.

1:16:31

And this is where I feel like the community around MMA has probably changed in

1:16:36

the last

1:16:37

decade or two.

1:16:38

Is, like, the old, the veteran fighters were just carried in such high regard,

1:16:42

whereas now

1:16:43

you're the highlight of somebody else's, the start of somebody else's career.

1:16:47

Right.

1:16:48

And a lot of the fans, I mean, certainly what I see online, they're very

1:16:52

dismissive of fighters

1:16:53

that at one point were great and are now not quite where they used to be.

1:16:57

And, you know, they start throwing around words like washed and stuff.

1:17:00

I'm like, you've got to respect where these guys came from.

1:17:04

Like, no one lives forever.

1:17:05

No one is at their athletic peak forever.

1:17:07

But we also should still be celebrating what people have achieved, you know?

1:17:11

And I feel like that's something that we're not, we don't get as much in the

1:17:14

sport.

1:17:14

And that's partly because the young fighters get matched with the veterans to,

1:17:18

you know,

1:17:19

like, you know, bring Ken Shamrock back out of retirement and dust him off for

1:17:23

Rich Franklin

1:17:24

to fight him because no one knew who Rich was and he was so close to a title

1:17:28

shot.

1:17:28

Do you know what I mean?

1:17:29

Like, that was one of those moments where I'm like, that's kind of a, I don't,

1:17:33

I don't

1:17:33

like that fight.

1:17:34

You know what I mean?

1:17:34

Because, because I can see what, what's being done there.

1:17:37

Right.

1:17:38

And I mean, not that you might have needed it, but the boost that he would have

1:17:41

got from

1:17:42

smashing the hell out of Nate Diaz, you know, that, that was kind of part of

1:17:46

the benefit

1:17:47

of throwing Nate into that fight, you know?

1:17:49

And that they're, they're, they're the fights that I would like to not see

1:17:52

anymore.

1:17:53

Because I think we get more fights out of some of these guys towards the end of

1:17:56

their career

1:17:57

where they, maybe their athleticism is not where it was, but their knowledge is

1:18:02

way ahead

1:18:02

of where it used to be.

1:18:03

Right.

1:18:04

Like we, we go back, you know, we were talking about, about the old days and

1:18:06

when we first

1:18:07

getting into it and when MMA first became a thing, like me as a 17 year old

1:18:11

sitting,

1:18:12

I wheeled the TV in with the VHS and I put the tape in and I watched UFC two

1:18:17

and three

1:18:17

and I had this feeling of, I'm like, now I'm questioning myself and everything

1:18:22

that everything

1:18:22

about me as a martial artist.

1:18:24

Like I have to do this.

1:18:25

And if I don't do this, I'm going to be questioning myself my whole life.

1:18:29

But at the same time, I'm looking at this going, well, I know one martial art

1:18:33

really well,

1:18:34

Taekwondo, and I know probably four or five other martial arts.

1:18:38

All right.

1:18:39

You know, Wing Chun, I'd done some traditional jujitsu, I'd boxed quite a lot.

1:18:44

You know what I mean?

1:18:45

So like I had a decent handle, but I also have a library of martial arts books

1:18:50

and I would

1:18:51

sit in front of that library and think to myself, like, how am I going to

1:18:55

consume all of this

1:18:56

information?

1:18:56

And it wasn't like, okay, I need this bit of information and this, and it wasn't

1:19:01

a case

1:19:01

of absorbing what is useful and rejecting what's useless.

1:19:03

I had to absorb everything in order to go through that shedding process.

1:19:07

And it just felt so overwhelming.

1:19:10

Like I remember going into fights feeling like I have no idea how this is going

1:19:14

to play out.

1:19:14

Like I don't know half of this guy's skillset just purely because I haven't had

1:19:18

the time

1:19:18

to learn all of this stuff.

1:19:20

And it's like, the more you pick at it, the more, you know, it's like, it's

1:19:24

like you're

1:19:25

hitting a rock and all of a sudden it falls in and it's a massive cave inside

1:19:28

and it's

1:19:29

just full of information.

1:19:30

And I'm like, how am I going to consume all of this knowledge?

1:19:32

You know what I mean?

1:19:33

And it was, I remember feeling very, very overwhelmed by it all.

1:19:37

And that fed into a lot of anxiety during fight week, which was, you know,

1:19:41

something that everybody

1:19:42

always manages.

1:19:43

But if I look back, that was where my anxiety came from.

1:19:46

It was the, it was the over analysis of the sport and the feeling like I was

1:19:49

never going

1:19:50

to be able to learn all of this information.

1:19:52

Whereas now in actuality, I feel very, very opposite.

1:19:55

I feel like now if I was going back, my training would be very, very focused

1:19:58

and very, very streamlined.

1:20:00

But that's because I've had years and years of experience of watching the sport

1:20:03

and knowing

1:20:04

what works and what doesn't and pulling things apart.

1:20:06

You know what I mean?

1:20:07

So it was almost like, and I said this, I've said this to a lot of young

1:20:10

fighters.

1:20:11

If I, if I, in my career at one point could have stopped and taken six months

1:20:17

out or a year

1:20:17

out just to be a student and just to learn and absorb, that would have been a

1:20:21

real benefit

1:20:22

for me.

1:20:22

When I stopped fighting and I was doing commentary and work doing inside the

1:20:27

octagon and stuff,

1:20:28

like my knowledge was growing on a daily basis.

1:20:31

I felt it.

1:20:32

And, and I, and I just, I thought to myself, man, I could have done this when I

1:20:35

was in my

1:20:35

career, but I, I didn't because I was, I was partly scared of the, of the, the

1:20:41

over analysis

1:20:42

of it, you know, and partly, partly concerned that I was going to show myself

1:20:46

so much that

1:20:47

I didn't know that I was just going to feel like it was endless.

1:20:49

It was a bottomless pit of knowledge.

1:20:51

Right.

1:20:52

You know, whereas when I started doing inside the octagon and I was, I was

1:20:56

watching fights

1:20:57

in chronological order from the beginnings of people's careers all the way

1:21:00

through.

1:21:01

And then I was going back and I was watching prelims of, of fights that I

1:21:05

wouldn't have watched

1:21:07

in my career because I only want to watch this guy and this guy, because I don't

1:21:11

want all

1:21:12

of this.

1:21:13

Sometimes I watch somebody and feel like I'm getting worse when I'm watching

1:21:16

them.

1:21:16

You know what I mean?

1:21:17

So I'd be very, very specific about who I would watch.

1:21:20

Whereas in actuality, if you watch the whole card start to finish, the fight IQ

1:21:25

increases

1:21:25

generally as the card goes on.

1:21:27

So the guys at the top make far less mistakes and they're the guys that I'm

1:21:30

watching.

1:21:31

So I'm watching people that are, you know, way closer to flawless than I am.

1:21:36

But if I watch the prelims, I can see the same people, the same mistakes that

1:21:40

people are making.

1:21:41

They're just making them far more regularly on the prelims.

1:21:43

So it was almost like watching the prelims was uncovering problems and, and bad

1:21:48

decisions

1:21:49

much quicker than it was when I was watching the few specific guys that I was

1:21:53

trying to

1:21:53

learn from.

1:21:54

So there was a real benefit in just absorbing all of it.

1:21:57

And then the next stage was, and it was specifically Robbie Lawler against Roy

1:22:01

McDonald.

1:22:02

It was the first time I realized I was watching a fight without putting myself

1:22:06

in the cage.

1:22:07

And, and it was, it was like an epiphany.

1:22:10

I was like, Oh, I'm, I'm just watching these two guys as a fan.

1:22:14

I'm not comparing Robbie Lawler to me and Roy McDonald to me.

1:22:17

And my process of preparing for an opponent was very similar to what I would do

1:22:21

for, for

1:22:22

an analysis.

1:22:22

I would, I'd get into him.

1:22:25

I would watch it as much as I could have that person, but then I would go back

1:22:28

and watch

1:22:29

my fights that I knew were available to them.

1:22:31

So I'm now I'm watching my fights with their skillset in mind.

1:22:34

Right.

1:22:35

So now I'm, I'm, I'm almost, I'm almost pretending to be that person to watch

1:22:40

me and go, okay,

1:22:40

well I can do this to him and I can do this to him, but there's always a bit of

1:22:44

ego involved

1:22:45

there.

1:22:46

So like, say with Carlos Condit, an incredible fighter, right?

1:22:50

He's great at everything, but he's not gonna be able to take me down.

1:22:52

And there's no way in hell he's gonna be able to knock me out, you know, Mohawk

1:22:56

flapping

1:22:57

in the wind, you know, and it, and it was like, and that was, that was my ego

1:23:00

getting

1:23:00

in the way.

1:23:01

Right.

1:23:01

Because if I was looking at Carlos Condit versus Robbie Lawler or Carlos Condit

1:23:04

versus

1:23:05

GSP, I would have respected his counterpunching.

1:23:07

Right.

1:23:09

But my ego was a block in that scenario.

1:23:11

So by watching two fighters and being able to remove myself entirely, I just

1:23:15

saw things

1:23:16

differently.

1:23:16

And it took my, my shit out of it.

1:23:19

It took my drama out of the way.

1:23:20

That's interesting.

1:23:21

Your ego really can get in the way.

1:23:23

And it really makes you make terrible decisions.

1:23:26

Like how many people have taken fights they shouldn't have taken just because

1:23:29

of their

1:23:30

ego, their ego just gave them a distorted perception.

1:23:33

Absolutely.

1:23:34

There was this guy that was training with us that was really good at jujitsu

1:23:36

and he had

1:23:36

no striking and he was going to take an MMA fight.

1:23:38

And I remember saying to him, you, you have to understand that, like what you

1:23:45

can do to

1:23:45

people on the ground, right?

1:23:48

You could, you could make a person feel helpless, right?

1:23:51

Someone could do that to you standing up and it's way scarier.

1:23:54

It's way scarier.

1:23:55

Like you have no idea.

1:23:56

Like you have no, you think it's this, this weird Dunning-Kruger effect, right?

1:24:02

Like you think you're really good.

1:24:05

So you think you're good at that?

1:24:07

Like you've this distorted, you don't know anything about striking.

1:24:11

Like his striking was like, pap, pap, like rudimentary, like nothing.

1:24:15

I'm like, someone's going to set you up and boom, right?

1:24:19

And head kick you.

1:24:20

They're going to, and he got TKO'd.

1:24:22

He got beat up badly.

1:24:23

And I think it really fucked him up too.

1:24:25

Really?

1:24:25

Yeah.

1:24:26

It's almost like you pull the curtain back and you realize there's a whole of

1:24:29

the world

1:24:29

behind the curtain that you, you'd not anticipated was there.

1:24:32

But the scariest world to not be good at is the striking world.

1:24:35

Absolutely.

1:24:36

That's the scariest world.

1:24:37

And I've, I've tried to quantify this myself because, because it is an

1:24:41

interesting thing

1:24:42

because often I find myself, I'm explaining the nuances of feints and movements

1:24:46

that are

1:24:47

opening doors for other things to land.

1:24:49

I mean, Adesanya was a master at this.

1:24:50

Conor McGregor was a master at this, you know, and, and the way that they

1:24:55

deliver their techniques,

1:24:56

there's such a, there's such an elite level of intelligence to it that it's

1:25:00

easy to just

1:25:00

think that it's chance what they're doing, right?

1:25:03

Like, like take color, take a Conor McGregor cowboy, for example, right?

1:25:07

And, and the beauty, the beauty of inside the octagon is I would download all

1:25:12

the angles

1:25:13

of the fight.

1:25:13

I would watch every angle, the full fight from the whole, whole, whole angle.

1:25:17

So I'd see different things and there's a, there's a moment in that fight.

1:25:21

And this is, this is the benefit of, of, uh, say Conor McGregor, say his brand

1:25:27

is the left

1:25:28

hand, right?

1:25:29

Conor McGregor's left hand brand was a very, very powerful weapon for him to

1:25:32

take into the

1:25:33

fight against cowboy because cowboy was so focused on it.

1:25:36

And there's an angle from, from cowboy's back to against the fence.

1:25:40

And he sees Conor close his left hand and straight away, cowboy goes, left hand's

1:25:46

coming.

1:25:47

And he moves onto the head kick.

1:25:48

It was the, it was the threat of the left hand coming that forced cowboy to

1:25:52

make that mistake.

1:25:53

Anderson Silva, Vitor Belfort, when he looked at his leg and kicked him in the

1:25:58

face, like

1:25:59

the idea of him being able to sell.

1:26:00

And you look at that fight, Vitor's checking the inside low kick while the,

1:26:04

while he's got

1:26:05

Anderson's toes in his mouth.

1:26:06

You know what I mean?

1:26:07

And it's like, he was able to sell a technique purely with his eyeline, purely

1:26:11

with a feint.

1:26:12

And Adesanya is another master at it as well.

1:26:15

And that to me then shows that there are, we've got ranges in MMA, but in each

1:26:20

one of those

1:26:21

ranges, there's dimensions as well, right?

1:26:23

There's dimensions of understanding.

1:26:25

Like you could be a button mashing fighter.

1:26:27

And a lot of people have success with button mashing.

1:26:29

Right.

1:26:29

They throw the technique that they worked in the changing room, warming up on

1:26:33

the pads.

1:26:33

But then there are people that understand that each one of these techniques and

1:26:37

each, each

1:26:38

thing that they do or, or piece that they have in their arsenal is a setup for

1:26:42

something

1:26:43

else.

1:26:43

Right.

1:26:44

You know?

1:26:44

Well, that's, what's interesting about people that have a real system.

1:26:47

Yeah.

1:26:48

Like Dwayne Bang Ludwig.

1:26:49

Have you ever trained with him?

1:26:50

I haven't, but we, we fought, didn't we?

1:26:52

So I've still, I mean, I was a huge fan of him back in the day.

1:26:55

I remember him, TKO-ing somebody in cage, King of the Cage up against the fence.

1:26:59

Oh yeah.

1:26:59

And he did that in love with him.

1:27:00

Yeah.

1:27:00

That was Genki Sue though, wasn't it?

1:27:02

Yeah.

1:27:03

Yeah.

1:27:03

Great, great system of footwork though, isn't it?

1:27:06

Oh, he has an amazing system and his system is like, he has a giant notebook

1:27:10

filled with

1:27:11

like techniques where everything, his system is like very well thought out.

1:27:16

And it's really interesting because he didn't fight the way he teaches.

1:27:20

No.

1:27:20

That's what's really interesting.

1:27:22

Like TJ Dillashaw is probably his greatest student and TJ fought completely

1:27:26

different than Dwayne.

1:27:28

He'd constantly switch stances constantly.

1:27:30

It was like, he was giving you so many looks and you know, it's, it's wild

1:27:36

watching when

1:27:37

you know, you watch like Dwayne style versus what he would teach.

1:27:41

Cause it was just like, Oh, if I had only known this while I was fighting, if I

1:27:45

had only known

1:27:46

this while I was coming up, if I only known this early, early on in my career.

1:27:50

Yeah.

1:27:50

And this is where I don't think we get enough people crossing over to coaching

1:27:53

afterwards.

1:27:54

Like whenever I see former fighter in the corner, Mike Brown, Robbie Lawler,

1:27:57

whoever

1:27:58

it is, like I'm, I'm filled with confidence that the sport is moving on because

1:28:02

they're

1:28:02

going to pass on information that they've taken on from somebody else and

1:28:05

refined, you know,

1:28:06

like my Taekwondo teacher told me when I was a kid, if, if you're not better

1:28:10

than me at

1:28:11

my age, I've failed as a teacher and like, and he always, Mick Rowley, his name

1:28:16

is, he

1:28:17

always gave me everything.

1:28:19

There was never any restriction because he wanted to see what I would do with

1:28:22

it and where

1:28:23

I would take it.

1:28:23

Because then same with Eddie Bravo, he was, we were just chatting about it, uh,

1:28:27

backstage.

1:28:28

Um, remember Sean Bollinger?

1:28:30

Sure.

1:28:30

He used to be able to heel hook himself and he created the double bagger and

1:28:33

there's a few

1:28:35

different things, but I remember being on the mats and watching Eddie Bravo

1:28:38

listened to

1:28:39

one of his 16, 17 year old students to see what he could learn from him.

1:28:43

And that's, that's such an unusual thing in a lot of martial arts schools is

1:28:46

the teacher

1:28:47

being a student, right?

1:28:49

And, um, that, that's something that always stood out to me about particular

1:28:53

people.

1:28:54

Like I would never want to train a fighter and hold anything back from them

1:28:57

because I

1:28:58

always want to be just a little bit better.

1:29:00

You know, I want to, I want to give you everything, throw everything I've got

1:29:03

on the table and then

1:29:04

see what you pick up, see what you run with and see what you can teach me from

1:29:07

it.

1:29:08

Yeah.

1:29:09

And it'll make you better too.

1:29:10

And that's the thing.

1:29:12

Absolutely.

1:29:13

But you have to have a, an honest ego.

1:29:15

Yes.

1:29:16

Like you have to be able to really say, okay, this is how good I am.

1:29:19

I can't pretend I'm better than I am for these people.

1:29:22

This is how good I am.

1:29:23

And you have to be able to show it.

1:29:24

Yeah.

1:29:25

And that's one of the beautiful things about jujitsu is like you have to roll.

1:29:28

Like if you're a teacher, you're rolling with people.

1:29:31

But if Eddie gets caught in something, he'll tell people.

1:29:33

And he'll show you, show me what you did.

1:29:35

And everybody look what he did.

1:29:37

And he'll bring people around.

1:29:38

He's like, he's like, he'll let you know.

1:29:39

I'm just a human being.

1:29:40

I just happen to be really good at this.

1:29:42

And even if I'm really good at this, there's openings, there's holes, there's

1:29:46

things that

1:29:46

I don't know.

1:29:47

And this is a constantly changing and evolving game where people are bringing

1:29:52

in new things.

1:29:52

And some of these new things, you know, you analyze it.

1:29:56

And you go, well, here's a simple way to stop this.

1:29:58

And as soon as someone knows this, that submission's gone.

1:30:02

And so then you kill it.

1:30:03

And you put it aside.

1:30:04

Well, we tried that one.

1:30:05

It didn't work.

1:30:06

We're like, try to stop this.

1:30:08

And you're like, I don't, I think that's legit.

1:30:11

And then guys would get down.

1:30:12

They would go, what if you do this?

1:30:13

What if you do that?

1:30:14

And he'll have classes.

1:30:15

We'll have like 15 guys come up with different solutions to these problems.

1:30:20

And say, okay, get him in it.

1:30:22

And put him in it.

1:30:23

All right.

1:30:24

Now, how do you finish it?

1:30:25

And you grab here?

1:30:26

Okay.

1:30:27

What would you do here?

1:30:28

And then like you have guys like break things down and that's, that honest

1:30:32

approach.

1:30:33

Someone told me that, remember when Hoist Gracie tapped Dan Severin with a

1:30:37

triangle?

1:30:38

They were training at one of the Gracie schools, a friend of mine.

1:30:41

And he saw that and he said, can you show us that?

1:30:45

He said, you're not ready for that yet.

1:30:47

I can't show you that.

1:30:48

And he's like, what the fuck are you talking about?

1:30:50

He's like, okay, it's, it's a technique, like show me the technique.

1:30:55

Like he just did it.

1:30:56

And he's like, no, we're not going to like, they were holding back.

1:30:59

Yeah.

1:31:00

So in the early days, there was a lot of holding back.

1:31:02

You know, this is like, what was that?

1:31:04

What year was that?

1:31:05

That had to be like 94 or something like that.

1:31:07

Right.

1:31:08

But then, you know, but then like everyone's reputation as a coach back in

1:31:12

those days couldn't

1:31:13

really be questioned too much.

1:31:14

You know what I mean?

1:31:15

Right.

1:31:16

Because there was no way of them proving it.

1:31:17

I just, I can't, it's too deadly.

1:31:18

Right.

1:31:19

You know what I mean?

1:31:20

Whereas, you know, like, like the people that, and those, those people stand

1:31:25

out in my mind,

1:31:25

you know, Eddie was one of those people.

1:31:27

He stood out in my mind because, because of how he, he approached the sessions.

1:31:32

He was always a student, even when he was the teacher.

1:31:34

Yeah.

1:31:35

And the other thing as well that, you know, everybody wanted to name something

1:31:38

in the 10th

1:31:38

planet system.

1:31:39

Right.

1:31:40

Make something and make it stick.

1:31:41

Mm-hmm.

1:31:42

So it, like, it created this really, like, it was a, it was a, a thriving

1:31:47

environment to

1:31:48

be in.

1:31:49

And I loved being at legends back in the day and the, and I, you know,

1:31:51

obviously bomb

1:31:52

squad as well before that.

1:31:53

Yeah.

1:31:54

What year did you start training with us?

1:31:55

It was legends.

1:31:56

It was after the bomb squad had closed.

1:31:57

I went back to the bomb squad.

1:31:58

I went back to the bomb squad.

1:31:59

Well, where, what was the bomb squad to train with Paulo Tolcher, um, of Bloodsport

1:32:03

fame.

1:32:04

Yeah.

1:32:05

But, uh, yeah, legends, it was, and it just opened when I, when I arrived.

1:32:08

So what year was that?

1:32:09

2005?

1:32:10

6?

1:32:11

Uh, probably 2006.

1:32:12

Yeah.

1:32:13

Wow.

1:32:14

Yeah.

1:32:15

Cause before that I've been training at American Top Team.

1:32:16

Bro, that's 20 years ago.

1:32:17

Isn't that crazy?

1:32:18

I know.

1:32:19

Two decades, man.

1:32:20

That's when we met.

1:32:21

20 fucking years ago.

1:32:22

Yeah.

1:32:23

And a lot's changed.

1:32:24

Nuts.

1:32:25

Yeah.

1:32:26

It's nuts how time just fucking waits for no one.

1:32:28

I was, I was just saying to the guys, the guys here, like, it's funny, like the

1:32:31

Joe Rogan

1:32:32

experience.

1:32:33

If you'd have asked me what the Joe Rogan experience was 20 years ago, it was

1:32:35

getting

1:32:36

crushed inside control.

1:32:37

That was my experience of Joe Rogan.

1:32:42

Being on the mats during the class and watching you smash the bag with your

1:32:45

back kick and then

1:32:46

stepping onto the mats and just, and you had, you almost had like the opposite

1:32:49

game to

1:32:50

most of the guys on the mat.

1:32:52

Cause all the 10th planet guys were like pulling you into half guard or into

1:32:55

guard and trying

1:32:55

to wrap you up.

1:32:56

Whereas you were very much a top game player.

1:32:58

Yeah.

1:32:59

That's at least how it felt to me.

1:33:00

It was like you were the different role on the mat to everybody else.

1:33:04

Well, I, I got obsessed with head and arm chokes.

1:33:07

Yeah.

1:33:08

I felt it.

1:33:09

You know, it fucked my neck up.

1:33:11

I think I wound up having bulging disc in my neck.

1:33:13

It was either that or not tapping the guillotines, but, uh, I, I got a head and

1:33:18

arm chokes.

1:33:19

I developed it where it was like, if I locked it on, you were pretty much done,

1:33:23

you know?

1:33:24

And when I started tapping like brown belts and higher level guys with that,

1:33:27

and then

1:33:27

I just really concentrated on it.

1:33:30

And it's one of those things where it's like, you know how it is just like with

1:33:34

a kick, like

1:33:35

everyone has strong legs, you know, you can lift weights with your legs, but

1:33:38

like, how

1:33:39

come some people can kick harder than other people?

1:33:41

Well, it's the, the coordination, the technique, the refinement of it where it

1:33:46

just, and there's

1:33:46

something like that and a squeeze like Marcelo, like Marcelo would get your

1:33:50

back and his rear

1:33:51

naked choke.

1:33:52

Marcelo Garcia was just like a master.

1:33:54

He's not a big, strong guy, like, so what is it?

1:33:57

And so I, that was like my number one go-to was the head and arm choke.

1:34:02

If I could get that shit, I was pretty sure I could lock it up.

1:34:06

So I just developed this style of just crushing where I would just have my

1:34:10

whole body would

1:34:10

just rock on to something like a pit bull.

1:34:13

You know?

1:34:14

Yeah.

1:34:15

It is.

1:34:16

But that's interesting.

1:34:17

The difference between striking and grappling and going back to what we were

1:34:19

talking about

1:34:19

a minute ago, like there's something mechanical about grappling, right?

1:34:22

Yes.

1:34:23

If you pull on somebody's head, the head's going to come down or they're going

1:34:26

to force

1:34:26

back and the head's going to go back.

1:34:28

There's a, there's a cause and reaction in grappling almost all the time that

1:34:32

even a person

1:34:32

that doesn't fight can see the basics of, right?

1:34:36

Yes.

1:34:37

Well, if I pick one leg up and I throw you around, you're going to lose your

1:34:40

balance.

1:34:40

Right.

1:34:41

Even something as simple as that.

1:34:42

But with striking, there's so many, so many things that happen with striking

1:34:45

where no one

1:34:46

touches anybody.

1:34:47

Right?

1:34:48

Especially when you've got, and then this is where the dimensions come in.

1:34:50

You know, you've got the button mashers at the bottom.

1:34:52

You've got the guys that have refined their button mashing skill sets.

1:34:54

So now they've got two or three combos that work well for them.

1:34:57

Or they've got a particular technique that they refine to a point where they

1:35:00

can deliver

1:35:01

it in 10 different ways.

1:35:02

But then you've got people that understand that each one of their weapons is a

1:35:06

different

1:35:07

thing at a different time.

1:35:08

It serves a different purpose at a different time.

1:35:10

You know?

1:35:11

Yeah.

1:35:12

Like with a jab, for example.

1:35:13

Everybody in their game has got a jab.

1:35:14

But if you strip that jab down into its core components and you go, you know,

1:35:20

you look

1:35:20

at like a secondary identifier, right, of that technique, there are going to be

1:35:27

differences.

1:35:28

Right?

1:35:29

If I throw my right hand straight and I throw it over your jab or I throw it

1:35:33

when I split

1:35:34

your cross, that to me is three different techniques.

1:35:36

Yes.

1:35:37

Right?

1:35:38

It's the same weapon that you're using, but the delivery system's different.

1:35:41

Right.

1:35:42

Right?

1:35:43

But then on top of that complexity, you've got all of the damage that you can

1:35:47

inflict that

1:35:48

draw responses to people, right?

1:35:50

Like the calf kick.

1:35:51

Now you can feint a calf kick and get someone to pick their leg up.

1:35:53

And like, that's a very, very basic example.

1:35:55

Or when someone's, you know, been hit with a body shot, you feint a body shot

1:35:59

and their

1:35:59

head's almost always open.

1:36:01

There are certain things.

1:36:02

I mean, headshot dead is a good, another good example.

1:36:04

Yeah.

1:36:05

How often do you see someone throw a punch followed by a kick and knock their

1:36:09

opponents

1:36:09

out?

1:36:10

Duke Rufus used to teach that.

1:36:11

Is that right?

1:36:12

Yeah.

1:36:13

He taught me that.

1:36:14

That was, that was his thing.

1:36:15

The shield, the vision with a punch and have the kick come behind it.

1:36:20

See that's, that's, that for me is that's one delivery mechanism of one

1:36:24

particular technique.

1:36:25

Right.

1:36:26

And there are lots and lots of those.

1:36:27

Lots of them.

1:36:28

Lots of them.

1:36:29

But that's where I find it really interesting is and how, how I, I sat one day

1:36:33

and I thought

1:36:34

to myself, I'm going to, I'm going to nail down the jab.

1:36:36

I'm going to start with that.

1:36:37

Cause I, I have intended on writing a book or two about this at some point.

1:36:40

And I started with the jab and I got to like 20,000 words and I thought to

1:36:44

myself, no one's

1:36:45

going to read this shit.

1:36:46

Like I'm going to say, I'm going to sell one copy.

1:36:49

It's going to be to myself so I can criticize it.

1:36:51

Do you know what I mean?

1:36:52

So it's like, well, you've always been a very thorough guy in the way you

1:36:56

analyze things,

1:36:57

which makes you a perfect candidate for someone who's a commentator.

1:37:01

Cause you, you really have a very complex understanding of the mechanics of

1:37:05

movement.

1:37:06

You're going to have all the different things that are happening.

1:37:09

You're not just like, you know, Oh, we hit them hard.

1:37:12

Like you, you're looking at all the different layers and you're, you're, you

1:37:17

analyze things

1:37:17

on multi levels, which I always find fascinating.

1:37:21

Like you have a great commentary style.

1:37:23

It's really excellent.

1:37:24

You're absolutely one of the best out there.

1:37:26

That means a lot to me.

1:37:27

Thank you.

1:37:28

Yeah, you're great.

1:37:29

I'm fortunate enough to have a bit of the tism you see.

1:37:31

So it's like, I see the patterns.

1:37:32

That's a good thing.

1:37:33

Yeah.

1:37:34

Touching the tism is good.

1:37:35

Yeah.

1:37:36

Oh my God.

1:37:37

Yeah.

1:37:38

I don't think I have that.

1:37:39

No.

1:37:40

I don't know.

1:37:41

I have ADHD.

1:37:42

Yeah.

1:37:43

I was going to say, yeah, my dad's ADHD.

1:37:44

My mom's, my mom's tism for sure.

1:37:45

You know what I mean?

1:37:46

We're a bit of both.

1:37:47

I don't have the tism, but I have this weird ability to lock in on things where

1:37:52

the world goes

1:37:53

away and I don't need food.

1:37:54

Yeah.

1:37:55

I can just, I could do something for like 12 hours in a row.

1:37:57

A hundred percent.

1:37:58

Yeah.

1:37:59

I forget to eat all the time.

1:38:00

Yeah.

1:38:01

All the time.

1:38:02

In fact, Tom Hardy's just announced that he's autistic.

1:38:03

He's just collaborated with a brand and they've, they've created a whole line

1:38:07

of, of, you

1:38:07

know, no eye contact rash guards and stuff.

1:38:09

How convenient.

1:38:10

How convenient.

1:38:11

He's autistic.

1:38:12

Come on.

1:38:13

You know what was really interesting.

1:38:14

There's so many people that are claiming autistic.

1:38:15

Like, unless you're coding in your sleep, shut the fuck up.

1:38:18

You know what was really interesting is I have a friend called Scroobius Pip.

1:38:21

He's a rapper in the, in the UK.

1:38:22

Oh, I know that guy.

1:38:23

You know Scroobius.

1:38:24

Yeah.

1:38:25

He's great.

1:38:26

So he was in, he was in Taboo with Tom Hardy.

1:38:27

And he told me a story when they were driving from LA to Vegas and Scroobius

1:38:32

Pip, his, his,

1:38:32

uh, record labels called speech development records.

1:38:35

He has a stammer.

1:38:36

Um, he has a speech impediment.

1:38:38

And on this drive between LA and Vegas, he's driving, Tom Hardy's in the

1:38:43

passenger seat.

1:38:44

And Tom started to mimic his stammer, but apologized for it.

1:38:48

He's like, I can't, I can't help it.

1:38:50

Like he's, he's like absorbing parts of his character while he was sitting

1:38:55

there.

1:38:55

Very similar to like, it happened to with, with Johnny Depp and Bill Murray

1:38:59

when they

1:38:59

played Hunter Thompson, right?

1:39:01

Like, like you, like you watch Jack Sparrow and Jack Sparrow's got a Hunter

1:39:05

Thompson kind

1:39:05

of move to him.

1:39:06

And even Johnny Depp said himself, he don't think he was ever the same after he

1:39:09

played

1:39:10

Hunter Thompson in Fear and Loathing.

1:39:12

Well, he was such a giant Hunter Thompson fan.

1:39:14

Yeah.

1:39:15

Yeah.

1:39:16

I think it's interesting about like, like certainly method actors, people that

1:39:20

can play a role

1:39:21

to like Jim Carrey is another good example, Christian Bale, right?

1:39:24

Daniel Day-Lewis.

1:39:25

Oh my goodness.

1:39:26

Maybe the best.

1:39:27

Like their ability to like, almost like Shang Tsung out of Mortal Kombat.

1:39:31

They can absorb a bit of the person's character.

1:39:33

Yeah.

1:39:34

And then kind of become that character.

1:39:36

Yeah.

1:39:37

I met Tom a couple of times in Henzo's in New York.

1:39:40

And he's a, I mean, he's a, he's a lovely guy, but he's like kind of hunched

1:39:43

over no eye

1:39:44

contact and you know.

1:39:45

Oh, yeah.

1:39:46

Well, I think a little bit of that is fame as well.

1:39:48

I think so.

1:39:49

There's a little bit of fame that just weirds you out.

1:39:52

Like if I go places, I try not to make eye contact sometimes.

1:39:54

Yeah.

1:39:55

It's just too odd.

1:39:56

I just like, hi.

1:39:57

Like you, you might think I'm autistic, but I'm just fucking weirded out by too

1:40:02

many people.

1:40:03

I totally get that.

1:40:04

You know, one, one of my favorite shows that you ever did was with Henry Rollins,

1:40:08

the first

1:40:08

one.

1:40:09

And he said something that always stuck in my mind.

1:40:11

He said, I'm very good being the party.

1:40:13

I'm not very good being at the party.

1:40:15

Yeah.

1:40:16

Stuck in my mind.

1:40:17

I feel like that all the time, but I'm, I'm, I go the opposite way.

1:40:21

I, I realized recently I, I hold too much eye contact.

1:40:25

I, and I find it exhausting.

1:40:27

I'm, I was walking through the park next to the hotel last night and I'm no, I'm

1:40:32

like having

1:40:32

a conversation in my head, like stop looking at people.

1:40:34

Stop looking people in the eyes.

1:40:35

Stop making eye contact.

1:40:37

I do all the time.

1:40:38

I like lock in, but I'm even doing it now.

1:40:40

Like we're talking and I'm kind of locked into you.

1:40:43

And I, even in your conversation, you, you like have a look away.

1:40:46

I, I struggle to do that.

1:40:47

I'm actually trying to consciously do it.

1:40:48

I have to sometimes.

1:40:49

I have to sometimes if I'm thinking of an idea.

1:40:52

Yeah.

1:40:53

I look away.

1:40:54

My wife said that I wonder if that's autism because it's just like, uh, one of

1:40:59

my daughters

1:40:59

has my recall, my ability to like, she'll talk about like, um, you know,

1:41:04

whatever it is.

1:41:06

She can rattle off like information about the Titanic.

1:41:09

Like, and it's, she's like, you have your fucking dad's brain.

1:41:12

Like that's nuts.

1:41:13

But I do, when I do it, I look away.

1:41:16

Sometimes like I look up, like I'm talking about things, but I really want to

1:41:20

be clear

1:41:20

about what I'm saying.

1:41:21

I look up and it's because I want to, I think it's because I want to take out

1:41:25

the element

1:41:26

of eye to eye and communicating with someone looking away while thinking known

1:41:30

as gaze aversion,

1:41:32

a common cognitive behavior that helps people process information by reducing

1:41:35

external distractions.

1:41:37

Yeah.

1:41:38

That's what I'm doing.

1:41:39

By looking at an empty space or upward, the brain shifts from environmental

1:41:42

input to internal

1:41:43

cognitive tasks, such as memory retrieval or complex thinking.

1:41:47

Yeah.

1:41:48

That's what I do.

1:41:49

I don't even, I didn't know.

1:41:50

It was a similar, like when people turned on the radio when you're trying to

1:41:53

find where

1:41:53

you're going, you know?

1:41:54

Oh yeah.

1:41:55

You have to like block your, whatever it is.

1:41:56

Right.

1:41:57

You can still see, but you have to like, you know.

1:41:59

Oh right.

1:42:00

Or if someone's yapping at you while you're trying to figure out where you're

1:42:03

going and

1:42:03

they're telling you, and I tell her and they're like, we shut the fuck up.

1:42:05

I don't know where I am.

1:42:06

Yeah.

1:42:07

We have to figure out where we're going.

1:42:08

You know, I find myself doing it when I'm walking through airports, when I'm

1:42:11

traveling,

1:42:11

I've got my wife with me, Veronica.

1:42:13

Like I notice, I consciously don't make eye contact with her when we're

1:42:16

traveling.

1:42:17

And I don't know why that is.

1:42:18

It's like, I feel a little bit like there's enough to be dealing with right now.

1:42:21

Yeah.

1:42:22

And then open a conversation with you by looking at you.

1:42:24

That's another layer of.

1:42:25

Yes.

1:42:26

Let me just deal with the airport.

1:42:27

Yes.

1:42:28

Well, you know, people don't think about that.

1:42:30

But when you're involved in multiple tasks at the same time, you know, you're

1:42:34

taking away

1:42:35

your ability to concentrate and do a great job at any one of those things.

1:42:39

If there's multiple things going on at the same time, that's why like, I used

1:42:42

to do interviews

1:42:43

in my car and I stopped doing them because I sound like a moron.

1:42:47

And I realized this because I'm thinking about cars.

1:42:49

Right.

1:42:50

I'm going 60 miles an hour.

1:42:51

There's a car to the left.

1:42:52

There's a car to the right.

1:42:53

There's a car in front of me, car behind.

1:42:54

This guy, this fucking asshole.

1:42:55

Oh, this guy in a motorcycle.

1:42:56

He's going to get killed.

1:42:57

Look at him zipping in between the lanes.

1:42:59

And so I'm thinking all these different things.

1:43:01

And then I'm trying to explain different stuff.

1:43:03

I thought it would be a great way to multitask.

1:43:06

Let me do this fucking stupid interview that I don't want to do anyway.

1:43:10

And let me do it while I'm on the phone.

1:43:12

It'd be kind of fun.

1:43:13

Yeah.

1:43:14

But meanwhile, I just sound like a moron because I can't articulate well

1:43:18

because I'm thinking

1:43:19

about too many different things simultaneously.

1:43:21

Well, you're already multitasking.

1:43:22

Yeah.

1:43:23

Which is why I like the sensory deprivation tank so much.

1:43:25

Yes.

1:43:26

Because there's none.

1:43:27

There's nothing.

1:43:28

There's no tasks.

1:43:29

Is that still a regular thing for you?

1:43:30

I got it right here.

1:43:31

Have you really?

1:43:32

Yeah.

1:43:33

Got it right here.

1:43:34

I've only done it a couple of times, but I found it very useful.

1:43:35

Where are you living these days?

1:43:36

I'm in the UK.

1:43:37

I'm right in the Midlands in the UK.

1:43:38

I'm getting a little kooky over there, isn't it?

1:43:41

Yes.

1:43:42

You might want to bail before they lock you up for thought crime.

1:43:44

I know, right?

1:43:45

I know.

1:43:46

For real.

1:43:47

It's like I'm conscious and cautious all the time.

1:43:49

I feel right now like I'm holding my tongue on a lot of things just purely

1:43:53

because I know

1:43:55

that when I start talking, I'm just because that's how I am.

1:44:00

I'm very opinionated, unfortunately.

1:44:02

That's a good thing.

1:44:03

Well, if I decide to start talking, then I won't shut up and I've not opened

1:44:07

that floodgate

1:44:07

yet, but I do feel like it's coming, but I also feel like I need to, I need to

1:44:11

feel

1:44:11

like I need to prepare for it a little bit.

1:44:13

You know what I mean?

1:44:14

Like there's a bunch of books I need to consume before I'm, I'm in the right

1:44:17

place

1:44:17

where I can open up and fully express yourself about certain things.

1:44:21

Yeah.

1:44:22

It's just where it's going right now is not in a good direction.

1:44:25

It's going, it's tightening down on people's ability to express themselves.

1:44:29

Yeah.

1:44:30

And you've got so many issues.

1:44:32

It's happening everywhere though, isn't it?

1:44:34

I mean, even like, you know, like, I mean, as a, as a comedian, you know,

1:44:40

freedom of speech

1:44:41

is so important to you and to your industry.

1:44:43

You know what I mean?

1:44:44

And I feel like that's changed a lot, you know, across, across the world.

1:44:47

It's the same in Europe as well in a lot of places.

1:44:49

I think in America and comedy, it was closing down and then people realize we

1:44:55

can't have

1:44:56

this and it's opened right back up.

1:44:58

Right. Okay.

1:44:59

You know, there was a bunch of people that were trying to conflate jokes with

1:45:03

your actual

1:45:04

opinions.

1:45:05

Yeah.

1:45:06

You know, I talked about on stage once.

1:45:07

I'm like, you know, Bob Marley didn't really shoot the sheriff.

1:45:09

You know, it's just when Quentin Tarantino's filming a film, nobody's dying.

1:45:13

Okay.

1:45:14

This is entertainment.

1:45:15

And you say things that you don't really believe because it's an outrageous

1:45:19

thing to

1:45:20

say because it's funny.

1:45:21

And there's this understanding of that as an audience member, you're supposed

1:45:24

to be able

1:45:24

to accept that.

1:45:25

But then you have these cunts out there in the world that are just looking to

1:45:30

find words

1:45:31

that someone said and ascribe them as if they're, you know, put it, put it down

1:45:37

on paper,

1:45:37

as if this is a statement.

1:45:39

Like this is what this person actually thinks and believes like, no, that's not

1:45:42

what we're

1:45:43

fucking around.

1:45:44

We're talking shit.

1:45:45

Like you can't pretend.

1:45:46

Yeah.

1:45:47

And then take a small clip and put it completely out of context.

1:45:50

All the time.

1:45:51

Yeah.

1:45:52

All the time about all kinds of things.

1:45:54

People, which is part of the game.

1:45:56

You know, people love to do that.

1:45:57

It's like, it's fine.

1:45:58

It's like, it's okay.

1:45:59

You know what?

1:46:00

You're it's fine for tick tock minded people.

1:46:03

The real problem is people that don't know you and don't understand you.

1:46:06

And then they get an impression of you based off of that.

1:46:08

This is their first introduction to you.

1:46:10

And it's based off.

1:46:11

Well, the fuck that guy.

1:46:12

But, you know, that's just part of the game.

1:46:15

Yeah, it's gonna happen.

1:46:16

I think comedians and satire is one of the last lines of defense against tyranny.

1:46:20

I really do.

1:46:21

Like I watch prime minister's questions every Wednesday and I listen to just

1:46:26

the nonsense

1:46:27

that comes out of it.

1:46:28

And we've got Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch just going at each other over just

1:46:33

nonsense.

1:46:34

It's not nothing real, no real, no real quality of conversation is coming out

1:46:40

of that.

1:46:41

But what I feel like is if we had a panel of comedians sitting in the gallery

1:46:44

somewhere,

1:46:45

you know, you've got a Robert Mitchell and Ricky Gervais and James A. Castor

1:46:49

and a few

1:46:49

others just sitting there just going, well, that sounds like nonsense.

1:46:52

And then poking fun at it and making a joke out of it.

1:46:55

It brings a reality to things that I don't think, I think we're lacking in a

1:46:59

lot of ways.

1:47:00

Well, the Lakota had that in their tribes.

1:47:03

They had a thing called the Hayoka, which they called a sacred clown.

1:47:07

And the Hayoka would be able to make fun of everything.

1:47:10

And as soon as you couldn't make fun of something, you knew it was bullshit.

1:47:13

So it's like you couldn't make fun of the chief's wife or you couldn't make fun

1:47:17

of, you know, someone,

1:47:18

some warrior couldn't make fun of something.

1:47:20

As soon as you couldn't make fun of something like, hey, why are you so

1:47:23

defensive?

1:47:23

How come I can't make fun of that?

1:47:25

That's interesting.

1:47:26

Yeah.

1:47:27

I mean, look, it had to actually be funny.

1:47:28

Hayoka.

1:47:29

Hayoka.

1:47:30

It had to actually be funny, of course, or you'd probably get killed.

1:47:32

But that's your new move.

1:47:33

That's your new move, Joe.

1:47:34

You need to set up a Hayoka for the world.

1:47:37

Well, I think that's what comedy is in many ways.

1:47:42

It's a test.

1:47:43

You test things.

1:47:44

It doesn't mean it always works.

1:47:45

And it doesn't mean that jokes are always funny.

1:47:48

And it doesn't mean that sometimes people don't overreach.

1:47:51

You know, Patrice O'Neil had a great statement about that where he was talking

1:47:56

about something

1:47:57

that happened on the Opie and Anthony show.

1:48:00

And he was on Fox News and they were criticizing it.

1:48:04

And he was saying, you've got to understand that all jokes come from the same

1:48:07

place.

1:48:08

They all come from the place of trying to be funny.

1:48:12

And some of them you might find offensive and some of them you might laugh at

1:48:16

really hard.

1:48:17

But it's the mindset, the place that it's coming from is all the same.

1:48:21

And I was like, that's so wise.

1:48:22

Because that's really the best way to describe it.

1:48:24

Because that's really what everyone's trying to do.

1:48:26

They're just trying to make people laugh.

1:48:28

It's just sometimes it doesn't come out right.

1:48:31

Or sometimes it's a miss.

1:48:33

Like especially if it's an ad lib.

1:48:35

Like at any moment in time you generally don't know what the next word out of

1:48:39

your mouth is going to be like right now.

1:48:41

Right?

1:48:42

I don't know.

1:48:43

I'm just free balling.

1:48:44

And sometimes you'll say something really hilarious.

1:48:46

And sometimes you say something and you're like, cut that out, Jamie.

1:48:50

It's like you try, you swing, you miss.

1:48:53

You know, you don't know.

1:48:54

And people want to take these things that you're free balling with and just

1:49:00

trying to make laughs and call them a statement.

1:49:04

And think of that as like this well thought out, you know, like you sat down,

1:49:09

you wrote this out.

1:49:11

You went over it with a fine tooth comb.

1:49:13

This is my press release.

1:49:14

Like that's not what comedy is.

1:49:16

It's jokes.

1:49:17

You're just fucking around.

1:49:18

And if you can't take a joke, you're probably annoying.

1:49:22

Yeah.

1:49:23

And you really shouldn't be in any position to regulate discourse because you're

1:49:27

not a fun person.

1:49:28

Right?

1:49:29

You're a person that's looking to take things very seriously.

1:49:32

Yeah.

1:49:33

We know a lot of people like that that are bad faith actors and, you know, they

1:49:36

play gotcha.

1:49:37

You just said this.

1:49:38

Like, you really mean that?

1:49:40

So tell your position on that.

1:49:42

Like, oh, fuck off.

1:49:43

Yeah.

1:49:44

Like, you're not, I'm not interested in engaging with you because you're not

1:49:47

real.

1:49:47

You know, like this is not a real thing.

1:49:49

You're playing a stupid game.

1:49:50

I'm playing a game of we're two human beings communicating with each other and

1:49:54

we're going to overstep sometimes.

1:49:55

We're going to slip up.

1:49:56

We're going to, and every now and then you're going to nail it, knock it out of

1:49:58

the park.

1:49:59

And even if I don't like you, if you fucking make me laugh, I'll clap.

1:50:03

Yeah.

1:50:04

You know, it's kind of similar with trash talking, isn't it?

1:50:06

You know what I mean?

1:50:07

And if somebody, like one of the funniest lines ever was, and I remember Connor,

1:50:10

as he was saying

1:50:11

it, he was laughing at himself and it was the back and forth with Chad Mendez.

1:50:15

And he was, Chad was saying, you can't wrestle.

1:50:17

And Connor, he was on a live feed at BT Sports Studio.

1:50:20

And I remember it so clearly because he was like, as he was saying it, he was

1:50:24

finding it funny himself.

1:50:25

He was like, I'll wrestle my balls on your forehead.

1:50:27

And then he's laughing and everybody in the room is laughing.

1:50:32

Even Chad Mendez is laughing.

1:50:33

You know what I mean?

1:50:34

But then like.

1:50:35

Funny dude.

1:50:36

How about the Jeremy Stevens one?

1:50:37

Who the fuck is that guy?

1:50:39

And that's become a part of MMA law, right?

1:50:41

Like it's amazing how he's influenced it.

1:50:43

Oh, he was the master shit talker.

1:50:45

Yeah.

1:50:46

And also the master at emotional warfare.

1:50:49

Yes.

1:50:50

Like the Jose Aldo fight.

1:50:51

I remember being there for that fight going, Aldo is out of sorts.

1:50:54

Yes.

1:50:55

His whole, he looked fucked up.

1:50:57

His body looked smooth.

1:50:59

He didn't look, he didn't look like he wanted to be there.

1:51:03

And he just threw himself at Connor and got cracked.

1:51:06

Wasn't it crazy?

1:51:07

He was so emotionally torn.

1:51:09

And like the moment was so big.

1:51:11

And then Connor across the other side looks so relaxed and loose.

1:51:15

Cause he know, he knew he had won the emotional warfare.

1:51:19

The emotional warfare was won.

1:51:21

And that is a giant factor in fights.

1:51:24

Whether or not someone bites on emotional warfare.

1:51:27

And I think that's a giant factor this weekend.

1:51:29

I watched your war room.

1:51:30

By the way, I love your YouTube show.

1:51:32

It's really excellent.

1:51:33

Thank you.

1:51:34

And this fight this weekend is a lot of emotional warfare, right?

1:51:40

Strickland has said some wild shit about Hamzad.

1:51:43

He would say, shoot him.

1:51:44

He calls him a goat fucker.

1:51:46

I mean, but it's interesting to me that it doesn't seem like Hamzad is biting

1:51:53

on any other.

1:51:54

He's like, this guy, he said this thing, but he doesn't believe it.

1:51:58

Yeah.

1:51:59

And you're like, whoa.

1:52:00

Like he's not, he doesn't seem upset about it.

1:52:03

It doesn't seem like it's under his skin.

1:52:05

He's like, this guy says he wants war, but I don't think he wants war.

1:52:09

He'd be dead.

1:52:10

That's it.

1:52:11

That's how it should be.

1:52:12

I mean, Strickland would be the same.

1:52:13

I don't think you could say anything to Strickland that would offend him.

1:52:16

He's just...

1:52:17

He'll laugh.

1:52:18

Yeah, exactly.

1:52:19

Whereas like, say like when I had that fight against Marcus Davis coming up.

1:52:22

Like I was surprised at how angry he got at me.

1:52:26

Like in the countdown show, I'm like, I'm laughing.

1:52:29

I'm like, I can't, I literally can't believe he's this het up and wound up

1:52:33

about it.

1:52:34

You know?

1:52:35

And like, you go back to the Connor thing.

1:52:36

The, you remember the press conference where he stole Aldo's belt?

1:52:39

The last one they did in Ireland.

1:52:40

Yes.

1:52:41

I was behind the stage for that one to start with when they were both being

1:52:46

kept separate

1:52:46

and Dana was there.

1:52:47

And then when they went on stage, I was on Connor's side of the stage at the

1:52:50

bottom of the stairs.

1:52:53

And the anger just emanating off Aldo the whole day was exhausting for me just

1:52:59

to be around.

1:53:00

And then after the press conference where Connor had taken his belt, as soon as

1:53:04

they circled back and they were behind the thingy, again, Aldo was like beside

1:53:10

himself angry.

1:53:11

Yeah.

1:53:12

And as soon as I saw that, I'm like, wow, that is, that's like a level of witchcraft

1:53:16

that you see in like the fainting of striking.

1:53:18

Yeah.

1:53:19

And when you can start to pull somebody's emotions out like that.

1:53:22

Yeah.

1:53:23

And like, for me, I think, I think fighters should be completely impenetrable.

1:53:27

Like no one should be able to say anything to a fighter to upset them.

1:53:30

I just, it's, it's an immediate weakness that you throw on the table for

1:53:33

someone to get their teeth into.

1:53:35

Well, it's one of the things that I really appreciate about Pereira, his stoicism.

1:53:40

He's always just stoic.

1:53:42

You could talk all that mad shit about him, you know?

1:53:45

And like the Ankaliev, the rematch with Ankaliev, like Ankaliev had talked so

1:53:50

much shit after that first fight.

1:53:52

Yeah.

1:53:53

You know, and then when he blasted him out in the first round, then he went

1:53:56

like this.

1:53:57

Beautiful.

1:53:58

You know, the same thing with Jamal Hill.

1:54:00

Yeah.

1:54:01

You know, I mean, he, he's very stoic, but afterwards his celebration is even

1:54:05

like, look, look.

1:54:08

It's so cool.

1:54:09

I like the fact that his, his coldness is a part of his brand.

1:54:13

Oh yeah.

1:54:14

You know?

1:54:15

Yeah.

1:54:16

He's, he's very cold.

1:54:17

That's stare down.

1:54:18

Yeah.

1:54:19

Like him and Yuri Prohaska.

1:54:20

It's so disturbing that Yuri thought he was using spiritual warfare.

1:54:23

Like Yuri accused him of using sorcery.

1:54:26

He's like, no magic this time.

1:54:28

Yeah.

1:54:32

Yuri's so crazy.

1:54:33

Such a crazy request.

1:54:35

Yeah.

1:54:36

Like do not invoke spirits.

1:54:38

I had someone trying to get a witch doctor on me in Brazil once.

1:54:42

Really?

1:54:43

They thought I was casting spells.

1:54:44

Yeah.

1:54:45

They tried to get a witch doctor.

1:54:47

Yeah.

1:54:48

Casting spells is fine.

1:54:49

Cause if you believe it, it'll work.

1:54:50

Yeah.

1:54:51

Right.

1:54:52

If you really, but that's why voodoo works.

1:54:53

Right.

1:54:54

Cause if you believe in voodoo, it will fuck you up.

1:54:56

But someone says, I'll curse you.

1:54:58

You're like, oh no, I'm fucking curse shit.

1:55:00

Yeah.

1:55:01

If you really believe that it will work.

1:55:03

Yeah.

1:55:04

If you commit, if you can make someone afraid of something or sensitive to

1:55:09

something, you know,

1:55:10

and, and, and, you know, and I, I was always a big fan of Marcus Davis and I

1:55:14

knew how dangerous

1:55:14

he was in the division, but I also knew that if I poked him enough in the right

1:55:18

direction,

1:55:18

I would get a particular version of him that suited me.

1:55:21

Right.

1:55:22

And there were two versions of Marcus, right?

1:55:24

There was the Marcus that showed up and he was like stacked, looked like the

1:55:28

Hulk.

1:55:29

And then you're like, okay, he's going to grapple.

1:55:31

Or there was the Marcus that was a little bit slender and it just looked

1:55:34

different.

1:55:35

And that version of Marcus Davis was knocking everybody out.

1:55:37

Right.

1:55:38

That's when he's coming into box.

1:55:40

And, and I knew that if I pushed him enough, cause I, it was easier for me to

1:55:44

deal with

1:55:44

the heavily muscled grappler version of Marcus Davis than the slick Southpaw

1:55:49

boxer version.

1:55:50

So my thought was if I can push him to be really, really angry at me, he's not

1:55:54

going to

1:55:54

want to roll the dice on striking games.

1:55:56

He's going to want to edge his bets and try and force the fight into the range

1:56:00

that I'm

1:56:00

not very good at.

1:56:01

So there was a, there was a purpose to it.

1:56:04

But as soon as he bit on it, I was like, that was too easy.

1:56:08

That was too easy.

1:56:10

And like there was, there was clips of him training.

1:56:12

He's like, the nose is bleeding and he just looks.

1:56:14

And then that's when I'm for the weigh-ins.

1:56:16

I made the, I hate Dan Hardy t-shirts because we did a, like a 10 minute

1:56:21

countdown show for

1:56:22

it.

1:56:23

And I was trained at wildcard at the time just to try and get inside his head.

1:56:25

You know, I'm training a boxing gym.

1:56:27

I'm, you know, I'm expecting you to be a boxer.

1:56:29

And I played the game really hard on that fight.

1:56:31

And, um, it was just, it was interesting to see how it played out because of

1:56:37

what he expected

1:56:38

from me and, and, and the version of him that I got.

1:56:42

Right.

1:56:43

And, and he was, he was so angry at me that he's, his vision was, his mind was

1:56:47

clouded.

1:56:48

And even in the, was it the end of the second round?

1:56:51

He went back and sat on his stool and it always stuck in my mind, Mark Della Grotti

1:56:55

in his

1:56:55

corner.

1:56:56

It wasn't advice.

1:56:57

It wasn't anything.

1:56:58

He said, you're one round away from shutting this kid up.

1:57:01

It was all about, about silencing me, putting me in my place.

1:57:04

Interesting.

1:57:05

You know?

1:57:06

And then, and then funnily enough, after that, the next fight was Mike Swick.

1:57:09

And for the whole training camp, Mike Swick was like, he was waiting for me to

1:57:14

start

1:57:14

trash talking.

1:57:15

So I'm like, I'm not going to do it because he's expecting it and he'll find it

1:57:18

funny.

1:57:19

So it's not going to have any kind of impact.

1:57:22

So I just waited until the press conference and brought him a runner up trophy.

1:57:25

And he was like, I'm bringing this to the cage on, on fight night and I'm going

1:57:30

to give

1:57:30

it back to you.

1:57:31

But you know, but it was, it's interesting to see what you can do, how you can

1:57:34

affect people

1:57:36

like that and, and, and make them act out, you know, like the, the countdown

1:57:39

show, the,

1:57:41

the very start of it.

1:57:42

It's just hilarious.

1:57:43

Still in my mind is you've got this whole kind of, it's like dimly lit.

1:57:48

And Marcus is there.

1:57:49

And, and he's like, you know, when I was a kid, uh, my mom used to say, you can't

1:57:54

say

1:57:54

you hate this unless you think a little bit about how much you dislike it every

1:57:58

day.

1:57:58

And then there was a pause and the UFC nailed it with the editing.

1:58:01

And he looked down the camera and he went, I hate Dan Hardy.

1:58:04

And then it cut to me and I'm just laughing like a prick.

1:58:07

Like, you know, like I, and I totally under, I got so much hate mail for that

1:58:12

fight.

1:58:12

I can't even tell you.

1:58:13

I think I've still got a folder in my old email account cause I saved it all.

1:58:16

That's funny.

1:58:17

It was, I got, I got death threats.

1:58:18

I got all kinds of stuff.

1:58:19

Of course.

1:58:20

Like people hated me from that fight, but like, as soon as I'm, I thought, you

1:58:25

know,

1:58:25

I'm going to make, I hate Dan Hardy t-shirt surely to kind of like bring some

1:58:28

light to this.

1:58:29

I even made one for Marcus and he threw it back at me, but it was just like, I

1:58:34

wanted a particular

1:58:35

version of him, you know, just like, like what Connor did with Aldo.

1:58:38

He primed Aldo to run onto that counter left and, and Aldo, a clear mind

1:58:44

training from a blank slate, not having any of that psychological warfare in

1:58:50

mind.

1:58:50

Would never charge like that.

1:58:51

Would have been so much more dangerous for Connor.

1:58:53

Right.

1:58:54

He, and, and Connor was always heavy on the front leg and Aldo was one of the

1:58:58

best leg kickers ever.

1:58:59

You know, he probably would have tried to kick the legs and piece them apart

1:59:03

from the outside and find his motions.

1:59:05

But Connor was always going to be a problem for Aldo because he's so fast and

1:59:08

he's so explosive and so big.

1:59:11

Yeah.

1:59:12

He was so big for 45.

1:59:13

He, his weight cut was hell.

1:59:15

Watching him weigh in and that was the days where you would actually weigh in.

1:59:19

This is before the ceremonial weigh in.

1:59:21

So he would have to make 145 and then stand there and he looked like a dead man.

1:59:26

He looked like someone from like fucking The Walking Dead.

1:59:29

Yeah.

1:59:30

It was weird.

1:59:31

And then he would just rehydrate.

1:59:33

And the next day he, you know, he had to be a buck 65 when he actually fought.

1:59:37

Easy.

1:59:38

Easy.

1:59:39

I'm, I, I like what they've done with the weight cutting.

1:59:41

I like the fact that it's done in the morning and people can rehydrate and

1:59:44

stuff.

1:59:45

The only, the thing I miss is to see people facing off when they're in that feral

1:59:49

dehydrated state.

1:59:50

Right.

1:59:51

That's the thing I miss.

1:59:52

Cause like a lot of the time I'll be looking for reads, you know, there's the

1:59:54

picture of you kind of looking around.

1:59:57

You know what I mean?

1:59:58

It's like, you want to see that face off of where people are in that state.

2:00:01

Like what's one of my favorite things to do is see the guys head to head,

2:00:05

looking at each other's eyes because you just, there's a fucking smell.

2:00:09

Yeah.

2:00:10

There's a feeling in the air.

2:00:11

You get a sense.

2:00:12

I wear the meta glasses when I'm doing face offs now.

2:00:15

So you can see PFL have made a little logo.

2:00:18

Hardy's, Hardy vision.

2:00:19

Nice.

2:00:20

And you can see, and sometimes people are like face to face, it's palpable, you

2:00:24

know?

2:00:25

And, and, um, what I, what I always loved when people were cutting weight is

2:00:28

you've got a far more genuine version of them than the version that was, I mean,

2:00:32

even look at Connor, right?

2:00:33

He was feral at one 45, but one 55, he was, he was cutting, but he was on point

2:00:38

at one 70.

2:00:39

He was like, right.

2:00:40

Feel great.

2:00:41

Just a different, three different versions of the same person, 10 pounds apart.

2:00:44

Yeah.

2:00:45

And when I fought Rory Markham, that was co-main event in my second fight in

2:00:49

London, um, UFC 95, he arrived at fight week on the Tuesday at one 95 to make

2:00:56

one 71.

2:00:57

And I knew that it was going to be a rough weight cut for him.

2:00:59

He was a big guy.

2:01:00

He was massive.

2:01:01

And he'd never been the distance 16 and four.

2:01:02

He was knocked everybody out that he fought.

2:01:04

And I was, remember when he fought, was it Brody Farber kicked him in the neck

2:01:07

and like, as he went down, he like crossed his legs on the way down.

2:01:11

That was at the palms.

2:01:12

Yeah, no, I do remember that.

2:01:15

And it was just dead at him.

2:01:16

It was brutal.

2:01:17

But like, when we were, we did the weigh-ins in a theater in London and

2:01:21

obviously we're all on weight.

2:01:23

I've been on weight since two o'clock as most people have.

2:01:26

We've journeyed into London on the bus.

2:01:28

Everyone's still on weight.

2:01:29

No one's drinking.

2:01:30

And like, you walk through the changing rooms in the back and we're in like an

2:01:33

old, like West End theater.

2:01:35

And like, you can see where people are at, what state they're at, how much they've

2:01:40

cut weight.

2:01:40

And I remember seeing Rory Markham just sitting there.

2:01:42

Just, he would just look like he was broken already.

2:01:44

He was just so drained and exhausted.

2:01:47

So my thought to myself is I'm going to get right in his face as soon as I've

2:01:51

stepped off the scales.

2:01:52

And I wanted him to feel that I wasn't as depleted as he was the day before

2:01:56

because that would then be his memory going into the fight on fight days that

2:02:00

he didn't cut as much as me.

2:02:02

He didn't feel like shit like I did yesterday.

2:02:04

Right.

2:02:05

And like, as I walked onto the stage, I'm standing on the scales and I'm

2:02:10

looking at him.

2:02:11

And there's never a photograph of me looking at the crowd and flexing.

2:02:14

I'm looking directly at him.

2:02:16

And as soon as they read my weight, I went straighter up on my forehead on his

2:02:19

and I tried to push him back a step or two.

2:02:21

And that was because we were on weight.

2:02:23

If that was a morning weigh in and we were doing it later in the day, it wouldn't

2:02:27

have had the same kind of impact.

2:02:28

Right.

2:02:29

You know, he would have already been replenished.

2:02:30

He would have felt much better.

2:02:32

Yeah.

2:02:33

Yeah.

2:02:34

It's a good point.

2:02:35

He would have pushed.

2:02:36

That's why I always wore contact lenses as well.

2:02:37

I always had the contact lenses on the stage.

2:02:38

You know, I just didn't want people to see my eyes.

2:02:40

I didn't want them to get a real version of me until fight night.

2:02:43

Yeah.

2:02:44

You know.

2:02:45

Yeah.

2:02:46

Emotional warfare.

2:02:47

It's real.

2:02:48

It's very important.

2:02:49

I loved it.

2:02:50

I mean, I wasn't very good as a fighter, you see, so I had to lean on what I

2:02:52

could get.

2:02:53

Look at the guys in my division though.

2:02:55

I mean, John Fitch.

2:02:56

I know.

2:02:57

Mike Swick was great.

2:02:58

Josh Koscheck, a bit of a prick, but great fighter.

2:03:00

You know what I mean?

2:03:01

Yeah.

2:03:02

Like, they were good guys in my division at the time.

2:03:04

And man, I didn't have the wrestling to be competing with a lot of those guys.

2:03:07

It has a giant factor.

2:03:08

And that's a factor that takes so long to catch up to.

2:03:11

Yeah.

2:03:12

God, if you can ever, unless you're like a real superior athlete, just a freak

2:03:17

athlete.

2:03:17

It's just like someone who's got a gymnastics background or something.

2:03:20

Yeah.

2:03:21

It's like very explosive.

2:03:22

It's so hard to pick up that wrestling later in your career.

2:03:27

It's like, that's what's so crazy about Pereira.

2:03:30

Is that he figured out how to just stuff everything.

2:03:33

Like, from a multiple champion kickboxing career.

2:03:37

Yeah.

2:03:38

Where he didn't do any grappling at all.

2:03:39

Lost his first MMA fight to submission.

2:03:41

Yeah.

2:03:42

Really couldn't fucking grapple at all.

2:03:44

Gets together with Glover Teixeira and just figured it out.

2:03:48

But I also think with him, it's a freak athlete thing.

2:03:51

For sure.

2:03:52

Because it's the same reason why he hit so hard.

2:03:54

I think he's just weirdly built.

2:03:57

But even a freak athlete though, you take him back 10 years and you take Glover

2:04:01

Teixeira away.

2:04:02

And he's not supplied with the information where he can apply that athleticism,

2:04:06

right?

2:04:07

Yes.

2:04:08

And this is where former fighters passing on knowledge like we talked about.

2:04:11

Like we went Bass Rutten, Dwayne Ludwig, TJ Dillashaw, right?

2:04:15

Right.

2:04:16

You know, like Glover Teixeira to Alex Pereira is probably one of the best

2:04:20

relationships.

2:04:21

Because for me Glover Teixeira was, he overachieved in his career based on his

2:04:26

age and his athleticism compared to other people in the division.

2:04:29

The reason why was because his game was so solid and so sound.

2:04:33

I say to young fighters, you need that Glover Teixeira base level where you can

2:04:38

be semi-conscious, taking big shots.

2:04:40

Sweep to top position, take someone's back and choke him out.

2:04:44

Right.

2:04:45

Like he did that consistently.

2:04:46

Yeah.

2:04:47

He would get dropped and come back from the dead and finish people.

2:04:49

And Glover also missed six years of his prime.

2:04:51

Crazy.

2:04:52

Because he couldn't get out of Brazil.

2:04:53

Well, you were talking about him constantly before he was signed.

2:04:55

Yeah.

2:04:56

I remember that.

2:04:57

I remember hearing his name a lot because you were, same with Pereira.

2:04:59

You know, you were talking about him before the UFC signed him.

2:05:02

But like if you'd imagine Glover Teixeira, sorry, Alex Pereira walked into an

2:05:07

MMA gym in 2005, they would have probably tried to teach him a whole system of

2:05:12

Jiu Jitsu.

2:05:13

Right.

2:05:14

And then he would have had a wrestling coach that would have tried to teach him

2:05:17

folk style or freestyle wrestling.

2:05:18

Right, right.

2:05:19

What I remember to share is like, there's a lot of this shit you don't need,

2:05:21

brother.

2:05:21

Yeah.

2:05:22

Like, first of all, I'm not going to teach him any submissions because you're

2:05:25

not really going to need them.

2:05:26

But he does know submissions.

2:05:27

He's a Jiu Jitsu black belt.

2:05:28

But that's the thing.

2:05:29

He's like, does he know the whole database of Jiu Jitsu?

2:05:33

Does he know everything that a normal black belt would learn?

2:05:35

And I'm not discrediting his black belt, but what I'm saying is his game has

2:05:38

been very specifically tailored to be effective in the arena that he's fighting

2:05:43

in.

2:05:43

That's true.

2:05:44

But it's also the relationship that he has with Glover too, where it's one

2:05:48

really elite coach with a world championship level experience, concentrating on

2:05:53

a very special athlete.

2:05:55

Whereas if you're at ATT, you know, there's fucking Chechens and fucking Dagestanis

2:06:01

and just a room full of assassins and there's five coaches.

2:06:05

And like, I don't know if you'd get that kind of attention there.

2:06:08

You know, there's two different schools of thought.

2:06:10

You know, there's the school of thought that you need to be around those people

2:06:13

because that's a shark tank and that's how you get better.

2:06:16

You'd be around all these killers.

2:06:17

And then there's another school of thought is like, no, you're better off at a

2:06:20

very small gym with a small group of people that really concentrate on you.

2:06:23

I'm more inclined to think of the small gym.

2:06:27

I think the small gym with elite trainers is a better option than being in a

2:06:32

giant.

2:06:33

I mean, it's not that ATT doesn't create amazing world champion athletes.

2:06:38

It certainly does.

2:06:39

But I think if someone's coming up, maybe you're better off with someone like,

2:06:44

first of all, you'd have to find someone like Glover who's really interested in

2:06:48

taking the time and really working with you.

2:06:51

Yeah. And Glover, and you know, going back to what we're talking about earlier,

2:06:55

like Glover's already gone through the process of learning Jiu Jitsu and

2:06:58

absorbing what's useful and rejecting a lot of what's useless.

2:07:01

Yes.

2:07:02

So he's not giving Pereira the useless part of Jiu Jitsu for MMA.

2:07:06

Right.

2:07:07

Now, how much of Jiu Jitsu specifically is applied to MMA, right?

2:07:13

Yeah.

2:07:13

There are so many positions that it just changes when you start to use punches.

2:07:17

Things become a lot easier when you can start to strike as well, because you

2:07:19

can force people to do things they don't want to do.

2:07:21

Yep. Yep. Yep.

2:07:23

So like, I feel like the refinement that Glover Toshiro went through to be the

2:07:28

great fighter that he was is the reason why Pereira has become so successful

2:07:32

because he's been given the pieces that he needs.

2:07:35

And I would imagine that, you know, if you rolled with him, he would be a real

2:07:38

problem. But I would imagine his game still very direct. Like he's not using

2:07:41

crackhead control and he's not rolling for knee bars and that kind of thing.

2:07:45

Right.

2:07:46

I just because.

2:07:47

But neither is Hodger Gracie.

2:07:48

Of course.

2:07:49

You know what I mean?

2:07:50

But he's also gone through the shedding process, right?

2:07:52

Yes.

2:07:53

Well, I don't think he ever really acquired all the crazy shit. I think there's

2:07:58

a lot of these guys that like fundamentals are just like laser focused.

2:08:02

Yes.

2:08:03

Like Hickson. Hickson was always just laser focused fundamentals. Minotauro Nogueira,

2:08:08

laser focused fundamentals.

2:08:10

Do you think the do you think the existence of Vale Tudo kind of forced them to

2:08:15

go very specifically to what worked though for no rules contests?

2:08:20

Probably. There's probably some of that because obviously Hickson created and

2:08:25

competed in Vale Tudo very early on. So it's like, yeah, yeah. I mean, a lot of

2:08:33

stuff goes out the window as soon as you punch.

2:08:34

Yeah.

2:08:35

Right. A lot of stuff.

2:08:36

Absolutely.

2:08:37

Including some heel hooks and things like that. Like there's certain positions

2:08:40

where you see guys in jujitsu tournaments like boy, you find yourself like that

2:08:44

in a fight.

2:08:45

That guy's gonna blast you in the face.

2:08:47

Yeah.

2:08:48

Like you're in a bad, like you're grabbing a hold of someone's leg and your

2:08:50

head is right here and you're hooked like there is nothing stopping someone

2:08:54

from elbowing you or punching you in the face.

2:08:56

It's kind of nuts to even pursue those. But as long as there's no striking, boy,

2:09:01

it's very effective.

2:09:02

Yeah.

2:09:03

See, this, I often think that I'm quite, I feel very fortunate that I came into

2:09:07

martial arts before MMA.

2:09:10

And the reason for that is because the way that I learned martial arts was not

2:09:13

for sport.

2:09:14

Right.

2:09:15

And this was an observation I've had recently where, you know, a fighter just

2:09:19

would fall apart if they don't have a particular person in their corner.

2:09:22

Right.

2:09:23

My, my martial arts instructor back in the day from when I was six was teaching

2:09:27

me Taekwondo or teaching me martial arts, should I say, for him not to be there

2:09:31

cornering me because I'm doing it for self defense.

2:09:35

There's no sport context.

2:09:36

He's not teaching me techniques that I can use when he's there to coach me

2:09:40

through a street fight.

2:09:42

Right.

2:09:43

He's trying to give me the techniques that I need.

2:09:45

So when he's not there, I know what I'm doing.

2:09:47

Yeah.

2:09:48

Right.

2:09:49

Same thing with like spatial awareness.

2:09:50

Like often, like, you know, when, when I was in clubs and I was fighting a lot

2:09:54

back in the day, my awareness of fire exits and tables and that kind of stuff.

2:09:59

It gives me, it gave me a similar awareness to how I can use the cage against

2:10:03

my opponent, which I feel is not necessarily used as much as it could be in, in

2:10:07

MMA these days.

2:10:08

Like there are, there are certain fighters.

2:10:10

They just don't like, how often do you see two fighters up against the fence

2:10:13

panel and the whole cage is there?

2:10:15

And they're like, they're not, they're not, no one's using the pressure that

2:10:18

they could be using.

2:10:20

Sometimes people circle themselves onto the fence unnecessarily.

2:10:23

But the idea of being backed up against the wall is only if you don't want

2:10:26

people attacking you from behind was my, my perspective in a, in a self defense

2:10:31

context.

2:10:31

So I think the way that I learned martial arts allowed me to kind of see it as

2:10:36

a, um, in a more efficient way.

2:10:39

Right.

2:10:40

Like say, for example, if I'd have learned jujitsu, I wouldn't have wanted to

2:10:43

use jujitsu for a street fight because a lot of street fights I got in, it wasn't

2:10:47

one person.

2:10:48

Right.

2:10:49

So I don't want to be inside control or choking somebody out while he's volleying

2:10:52

me in the head.

2:10:53

Right.

2:10:54

Like for me, it was the efficiency of, okay, here's a guy.

2:10:57

Here's a guy.

2:10:58

You know what I mean?

2:10:59

Right.

2:11:00

Like how quickly can I get through these people?

2:11:02

Yeah.

2:11:03

You know, and I, and I feel like that's something that this is maybe where the

2:11:06

scoring criteria can be adjusted to.

2:11:08

So we keep getting what we want out of the sport.

2:11:11

Cause there are stagnant fights.

2:11:12

They do slow down.

2:11:13

People do start to think, okay, this round, this round, this round.

2:11:17

And there's not, there's not a, an instigation for a conclusion built into

2:11:21

their game necessarily.

2:11:23

But isn't that also dependent upon matchups?

2:11:25

Like sometimes people just cancel each other out skill wise and that's just

2:11:28

part of the game.

2:11:30

Absolutely.

2:11:31

But usually the ones where they cancel each other out skills, skill wise, are

2:11:34

the, are they actually the more interesting fights?

2:11:36

Because whether it's grappling or striking, it keeps moving almost always.

2:11:39

It's when there's a dominant skillset on one side and the other person just can't

2:11:43

deal with it.

2:11:44

Like look at me.

2:11:45

Like Kamzat and Drickus.

2:11:46

Exactly.

2:11:47

Me against GSP.

2:11:48

Right.

2:11:49

Like I, I didn't have the skillset to compete with him.

2:11:51

Right.

2:11:52

If I'd have been able to wrestle, I'd have forced him to strike.

2:11:54

If I'd have been better at jujitsu, I'd have maybe forced him to, to strike a

2:11:57

bit more.

2:11:57

Right.

2:11:58

But because there was a way of him to completely taking me out my game, there

2:12:02

wasn't necessarily an, an onus to, to instigate a conclusion to the fight.

2:12:07

Right.

2:12:08

So almost always when you see one person that is so dominant in wrestling and

2:12:12

the other person can't handle it, that's when the fights can sometimes be quite

2:12:15

stagnant.

2:12:16

Yeah.

2:12:17

And my argument in those scenarios is okay, well, yeah, you're winning this

2:12:21

with wrestling.

2:12:22

You're winning it with wrestling, but you're not concluding it.

2:12:25

Right.

2:12:26

Like you're going to get to the end and the judges are going to go, well, yeah,

2:12:28

you, you know, you, you controlled him for more of the fight.

2:12:31

Like the Hamzat Drick as well.

2:12:32

Yeah.

2:12:33

Yeah.

2:12:34

This is, I mean, I'd be interested to get your thoughts on this.

2:12:36

I think we should stop scoring control in MMA.

2:12:39

Right.

2:12:40

Control is scored up against the fence.

2:12:42

Right.

2:12:43

Defense is not scored in MMA.

2:12:45

Right.

2:12:46

Defense is its own reward.

2:12:47

Right.

2:12:48

Control, in my opinion, is its own reward.

2:12:50

If you're a grappler and I'm a striker, it's, it's on you to take me into the

2:12:55

range that suits you.

2:12:57

Right.

2:12:58

But if someone's taking someone down and controlling them and working towards a

2:13:02

submission, how do you quantify that?

2:13:04

Well, they're working towards a submission.

2:13:05

They might not get it, but they're working towards it.

2:13:08

So, so then if, if you consider top control as you would center control, right?

2:13:13

When everything else is even, you go to octagon control as, as one of the

2:13:18

latest scoring criteria is when the striking and the grappling, everything's

2:13:22

even.

2:13:22

Then we move into, okay, well.

2:13:24

Octagon control is weird though, because it's like, so octagon control could be

2:13:29

you're in the center of the cage and you're pressing the action.

2:13:33

But what if you're a counter striker?

2:13:35

Like what if you're Tyron Woodley versus Steven Wonderboy Thompson and you

2:13:39

spend a lot of the time just moving away?

2:13:41

Like, remember they fought to a draw, right?

2:13:43

Yeah.

2:13:44

Didn't they fought to a draw in one of their fights?

2:13:45

Yeah.

2:13:46

But, but that, that was also, that was also, I mean, I, and I don't necessarily

2:13:48

want to criticize Tyron, but I don't really think Tyron liked fighting.

2:13:51

He spent a lot of time wearing his back heel down against the fence with the

2:13:54

crowd booing in the championship rounds.

2:13:56

I never got the impression that Tyron liked fighting.

2:13:59

He was just good at it.

2:14:00

You know?

2:14:01

That's interesting.

2:14:02

And I don't know what, why you would think that.

2:14:04

I just thought that was the style to beat Wonderboy.

2:14:06

I think that's the smart style to beat Wonderboy because he didn't fight that

2:14:09

style that Darren Till.

2:14:10

Well, Dan Till, he blasted him, took him down and got rid of him quick.

2:14:15

For sure.

2:14:16

With, with Wonderboy, you cannot stand in the middle of the cage and kickbox

2:14:21

that guy because he's doing weird shit.

2:14:23

He's doing things with his legs.

2:14:24

You can't do like, and you know, like if you see a guy like Raymond Daniels or

2:14:29

MVP, like you can't, you can't.

2:14:32

You can't, yeah.

2:14:33

If you can.

2:14:34

If you can.

2:14:35

Yeah, if you can.

2:14:36

I, I, I, I hear what you're saying totally.

2:14:37

But, but like say for example in the Damian Meyer fight, he defended 26 takedowns

2:14:41

in that fight, win the distance.

2:14:43

Right?

2:14:44

Right.

2:14:45

But with the Wonderboy fight, he rocked Wonderboy and he had Wonderboy hurt.

2:14:48

Where Wonderboy didn't hurt him.

2:14:49

Which is like, because he forced Wonderboy to be offensive instead of countering.

2:14:55

So by making it boring, by backing up.

2:14:58

Yeah.

2:14:59

But, but I, I, at the same time I don't necessarily think, I don't know if that

2:15:03

was a calculation of going on.

2:15:04

I think it was.

2:15:05

Do you think?

2:15:06

Yes.

2:15:07

Cause he fought him that way the second time as well.

2:15:08

I think.

2:15:09

But I think that was intimidation from what Wonderboy could do on the feet and

2:15:11

him not wanting to waste energy trying to take him down.

2:15:13

I don't think he was intimidated.

2:15:14

I think he was waiting.

2:15:15

He was waiting for moments to explode because it's not like he was timid when

2:15:19

he blasted him and had him rocked and hurt.

2:15:21

He just, he never made a fan out of me, Tyrone.

2:15:24

That's interesting.

2:15:25

And the thing is, what was interesting is I had a similar.

2:15:27

You didn't think you, you weren't a fan after the Darren Till fight?

2:15:29

Oh, absolutely.

2:15:30

Right.

2:15:31

Like, and, and same with the Robbie Lawler fight, you know, that was an

2:15:32

incredible knockout.

2:15:33

Yeah.

2:15:34

And this was the thing that was frustrating is that he had the capability to do

2:15:37

that kind of thing.

2:15:38

And sometimes I just felt like he, he wants to play King of the Hill.

2:15:41

He didn't want to be the smashing champion that, that other fighters did.

2:15:46

You know what I mean?

2:15:47

Well, you know, you got to think like he had some, he had some fights that didn't

2:15:53

go his way as well.

2:15:55

Strike Force, the Nate Marquardt fight.

2:15:57

The Nate Marquardt fight where he got KO'd, where Nate hit him with like a

2:16:00

video game combination with those elbows against the cage.

2:16:03

Like, so there's consequences to just wait.

2:16:06

And by the way, Nate Marquardt, boy, there, there's the guy that kind of people

2:16:10

forget how fucking good that guy was when he was in his prime.

2:16:13

Woo.

2:16:14

Yeah.

2:16:15

When he went over to Strike Force, he was a fucking monster, dude.

2:16:18

Yeah.

2:16:19

Facts.

2:16:20

That guy was good.

2:16:21

He was good.

2:16:22

You know, I had heard stories about him training at, um, in Colorado with GSP

2:16:28

with all those guys

2:16:28

are like, dude, Nate Marquardt fucked everybody up.

2:16:31

He was that good at one point in time.

2:16:33

Man.

2:16:34

So many names of fighters that have just been kind of lost to time that people

2:16:37

don't realize.

2:16:38

Yep.

2:16:39

Eve Edwards.

2:16:40

There's another one.

2:16:41

I talk about him all the time.

2:16:42

There's a point in time where Eve Edwards was the best 155 pounder on the

2:16:45

planet.

2:16:45

Facts.

2:16:46

Yeah.

2:16:47

It's just like people forget.

2:16:48

People forget how good people were.

2:16:49

You know, interesting the point you made about Counter-Strike.

2:16:52

And I've always thought this about guard playing as well.

2:16:54

Like, if you're a guard player, you've kind of got to accept that you're losing

2:16:57

until you win.

2:16:57

Yeah.

2:16:58

It's like Machida was one of the best examples of a Counter-Strike.

2:17:02

And then it, you know, you say Adesanya against Paolo Costa.

2:17:05

Paolo Costa was in the center of the cage for most of that.

2:17:07

Yeah.

2:17:08

So if you're just looking at Octagon Control, well, you're going to score it to

2:17:12

Paolo because he was in the center.

2:17:13

But there was no doubt that Izzy was just toying with him and lighting him up

2:17:17

from a distance.

2:17:18

Yeah, but you couldn't say Octagon Control because Izzy was landing all his

2:17:21

shots.

2:17:21

But that's the thing.

2:17:22

That was a very, very clear one, right?

2:17:24

Right.

2:17:25

Where you've got one person moving back and giving the center of the cage, but

2:17:28

clearly winning on the striking.

2:17:30

Whereas when it gets very even with the striking, you have to really have good

2:17:35

judges to be able to pick apart who's landing what.

2:17:39

Yes.

2:17:40

Even because like we had a fight the other week, Yakub Kasuba, he was fighting

2:17:43

Natan Schulte and he was backing up the whole fight.

2:17:46

But he was landing way more strikes than his opponent.

2:17:48

But even when it got to the end of the fight, I'm like, are these judges going

2:17:52

to score this right?

2:17:53

Because they don't have the stats that we have on the screen in front of us,

2:17:56

right?

2:17:56

They should.

2:17:57

Exactly.

2:17:58

They should.

2:17:59

But because they don't, they're going to go, oh, well, you know, he was moving

2:18:02

forward.

2:18:03

And we had a fight in Sioux Falls the other day where the female fighter,

2:18:07

Sharon Bowers, was pushing forward and she was landing.

2:18:10

But her opponent was backing up and countering a lot of the shots.

2:18:13

And the judges scored it to Sabrina.

2:18:15

It was, you know, it was the right decision to make.

2:18:17

But the crowd didn't like it because they felt like the Bowers was the one

2:18:21

pushing forward and making a fight out of it.

2:18:24

Yeah, but that's casuals.

2:18:25

Of course.

2:18:26

Yeah.

2:18:27

But it is a risky thing to be a counter striker and a guard player in MMA

2:18:30

because you have to, first of all, credit the judges to see what, you know.

2:18:34

But who's left that's a guard player?

2:18:36

Not many, right?

2:18:37

It's kind of been cycled out of the game.

2:18:38

Olivera is like the best at it.

2:18:40

But even that didn't work out for him in some times, did it?

2:18:42

No.

2:18:43

There was a lot of time he'd spend energy guard playing.

2:18:45

Yeah.

2:18:46

A lot of the time why, you know, good wrestlers decide not to wrestle.

2:18:48

Because the amount of energy it costs.

2:18:50

That's true.

2:18:51

But I mean, like, look what he did to Gamrot.

2:18:52

And that was super impressive.

2:18:53

And Gamrot's so good.

2:18:54

So good.

2:18:55

So good.

2:18:56

The fact that Gamrot was just lost on the ground with Olivera.

2:18:59

Showed you how good Olivera is.

2:19:00

Do you remember Gamrot's debut?

2:19:01

Oh yeah.

2:19:02

Against Garam Katateladze.

2:19:03

Like, both of those guys.

2:19:04

He's in karate combat now.

2:19:06

Is he?

2:19:07

Both of those guys are so elite.

2:19:08

Mm-hmm.

2:19:09

And then when they got matched up against each other in their UFC debut.

2:19:11

I'm like, man.

2:19:12

People aren't going to realize how good this matchup is.

2:19:14

Right, right, right.

2:19:15

Like, Saruqian.

2:19:16

I called his debut against Makachev.

2:19:18

Islam.

2:19:19

Yeah.

2:19:20

He was 5% behind Islam in that fight.

2:19:23

Yeah.

2:19:24

Amazing fight.

2:19:25

But that 5% was, you know, incredible fight.

2:19:27

Yeah.

2:19:28

Yeah.

2:19:29

I am very curious to see how Pereira does against Cyril Gaon.

2:19:34

Yeah.

2:19:35

Cyril Gaon's a different thing.

2:19:36

Just moves differently for a big guy, doesn't he?

2:19:38

He's also a real heavyweight.

2:19:40

There ain't a fucking time since he's been 15 where that guy's making 185.

2:19:45

No.

2:19:46

Right?

2:19:47

That's a big man.

2:19:48

And he's an incredible athlete and a really elite striker.

2:19:52

Like, a really good striker.

2:19:54

Like, and a fucking big heavyweight, man.

2:19:57

And I know Pereira weighs like 260 now.

2:20:00

I get it.

2:20:01

I get it.

2:20:02

Yeah, he's a heavyweight.

2:20:03

Yep.

2:20:04

Definitely.

2:20:05

He was 185.

2:20:06

It wasn't 185.

2:20:07

A few years ago.

2:20:08

Just a few years ago.

2:20:09

And he was a 185 pound champion and then the 205 pound champion.

2:20:11

And I don't think Cyril Gaon could even make 205.

2:20:13

No.

2:20:14

Cyril's big.

2:20:15

Yeah.

2:20:16

And he's big and fucking thick.

2:20:18

And he's good, man.

2:20:20

And I'm telling you that Tom Hardy fight, excuse me, Tom Aspinall fight.

2:20:25

Tom Hardy fight.

2:20:26

Jesus.

2:20:27

My mind sucks.

2:20:28

The Tom Aspinall fight in that first round before the eye pokes were disgraceful.

2:20:33

First of all, I think.

2:20:34

Still gotta fix the gloves.

2:20:35

Oh God.

2:20:36

You know, my solution is mittens.

2:20:39

We don't do this anyway.

2:20:41

Why are these out like this?

2:20:43

Yeah.

2:20:44

It's a good point.

2:20:45

The thing that annoyed me is like they went through all the effort to fix the

2:20:49

gloves,

2:20:50

but they never asked a fighter or a person that wraps hands like what they

2:20:54

actually thought.

2:20:55

They were getting contender series fighters to grade them.

2:20:58

And of course, they're all like, they're great.

2:21:00

They've got UFC on them.

2:21:01

I'm so happy to be here.

2:21:02

You know what I mean?

2:21:03

Like, you know, like talk to Tate, for example.

2:21:05

I'm like, they must have asked you about the hand wrapping, about the gloves

2:21:08

and stuff.

2:21:08

Because the problem is, right, like when you get there on Tuesday and you try

2:21:11

your gloves

2:21:12

on, you're like, yeah, they feel good.

2:21:14

And then you get to fight night and they put a quarter inch of padding

2:21:17

underneath.

2:21:18

Right.

2:21:19

And then you're trying to close your hand.

2:21:20

Right.

2:21:21

And like the difference between like the pride gloves or the rising gloves or

2:21:24

like the Fairtex.

2:21:25

I always used to use Fairtex if I could.

2:21:27

There's a curve in the glove.

2:21:29

Right.

2:21:30

When you try your gloves on, what the blue shirts backstage do, because they

2:21:34

know the game,

2:21:35

is they roll the glove up and then wrap it with the Velcro of the wrist.

2:21:40

So it stays rolled from Tuesday to Saturday.

2:21:43

Right.

2:21:44

And then when you get them on Saturday, they've kind of curved a little bit.

2:21:47

Right.

2:21:48

But it's not, the curve is not built into the padding.

2:21:51

Right.

2:21:52

And the new ones that they made, there was just too much technology and not

2:21:56

enough common sense.

2:21:58

Have you used Trevor Whitman's?

2:21:59

I have.

2:22:00

Veronica's just got a pair of them.

2:22:01

The best.

2:22:02

They are very, very good.

2:22:03

Absolutely.

2:22:04

They're the best.

2:22:05

That's an ownership problem though, isn't it?

2:22:06

It is.

2:22:07

I've tried to negotiate that and broker that and maybe I still can be

2:22:12

successful.

2:22:13

I just talked to them.

2:22:14

I talked to Trevor.

2:22:16

Maybe it still can be done.

2:22:17

But even with Trevor's, the fingers are still exposed.

2:22:20

Yeah.

2:22:21

And I think there's certain guys who just have this fucking impulse to do that.

2:22:25

And I think one point every time.

2:22:27

Yeah.

2:22:28

Poke somebody in the eye, one point.

2:22:29

Absolutely.

2:22:30

Every fucking time.

2:22:31

Because there's a lot of fighters that have never poked anybody in the eye.

2:22:33

Right?

2:22:34

So how come?

2:22:35

How come?

2:22:36

They've been in wild scraps, never poked anybody in the eye.

2:22:38

Yeah.

2:22:39

I mean, I watch one championship, Smugglers Muay Thai, and they are in range.

2:22:43

Right.

2:22:44

They're not poking each other.

2:22:45

No, they're not.

2:22:46

And by the way, I love small gloves Muay Thai.

2:22:48

It's so cool.

2:22:49

It's so good.

2:22:50

It's so cool.

2:22:51

North America needs it.

2:22:52

And for all these people that hate when fights go to the ground, my God, that's

2:22:55

the solution.

2:22:56

And I've been trying to sell this to the UFC forever.

2:22:58

I'm like, fuck all this slap fight shit.

2:23:00

And I know you're really interested in Zufa boxing.

2:23:02

That's great.

2:23:03

How about UFC striking?

2:23:05

How about UFC Muay Thai?

2:23:06

It'd be amazing.

2:23:07

You know?

2:23:08

Because, and even kickboxing, what they're doing with one.

2:23:10

You know, guys like Yukioza and, you know?

2:23:13

Yeah.

2:23:14

Watch out for Ben Wallace.

2:23:15

Have you seen this kid?

2:23:16

Oh, yeah.

2:23:17

He's a beast, man.

2:23:18

A little while ago.

2:23:19

Just can't get him matched.

2:23:20

Just couldn't get him matched.

2:23:21

Really?

2:23:22

Because people don't want to stand with him.

2:23:23

You click on his Instagram and he's, I mean, in my opinion, he's one of the

2:23:27

best strikers

2:23:27

in the world right now.

2:23:28

Yes.

2:23:29

And I've, you know, he trained at Renegade for a long time with the Edwards

2:23:32

brothers

2:23:33

and I would watch him just play spar with people and the level of trickery.

2:23:37

Like, that's where you, like, go back to saying about dimensions, right?

2:23:40

Mm-hmm.

2:23:41

There are rangers in fights and then there are dimensions in those rangers.

2:23:44

Yes.

2:23:45

He's at, like, a Jedi level of dimension, of understanding, of striking.

2:23:48

Mm-hmm.

2:23:49

And to see him have the success he has, I mean, stopping John Lineker with calf

2:23:52

kicks and,

2:23:53

you know.

2:23:54

Yeah.

2:23:55

Very impressive.

2:23:56

You're gonna see him go straight to the top.

2:23:57

How is one doing?

2:23:58

Are they...

2:23:59

Not good from what I can tell.

2:24:00

I mean...

2:24:01

Yeah, that's what I've heard as well.

2:24:02

And that concerns me because if we have more limited options, that sucks.

2:24:07

Yeah.

2:24:08

This is why, I mean, and I've, you know, I feel very much like I'm in the right

2:24:12

place now

2:24:12

with the PFL because we need more organizations.

2:24:15

Yes.

2:24:16

Like, we need more organizations.

2:24:17

Unfortunately, in my opinion, the UFC's not the custodian of the sport that we

2:24:21

need right

2:24:21

now, you know.

2:24:22

Well, what do you think they're doing wrong?

2:24:25

I mean, I think it's a variety of different things.

2:24:29

I mean, underpaying the fighters, killing the sponsorship market, they buried a

2:24:33

lot of

2:24:34

growth of the subculture.

2:24:35

You know, you remember the old UFC Expos that we used to do?

2:24:38

I'd do like five, six hours a day signing.

2:24:40

Tap out, over to Silver Star, over to Zions.

2:24:43

And like, as soon as that was all killed off, a lot of that subculture died off.

2:24:47

And all those subcultures offer jobs outside of fighting, you know.

2:24:53

It allows people to then start a brand and sponsor some young fighters.

2:24:57

Like, Charles Lewis, Mask, paid me double what I was getting paid for my purse

2:25:03

when I was

2:25:03

in Japan.

2:25:04

Double.

2:25:05

Just to wear tap out shorts in a tournament and cage force.

2:25:10

Like, he didn't need to do that.

2:25:11

But he was a fan of the sport.

2:25:13

He loved it.

2:25:14

And he wanted to support it.

2:25:15

And back in the day, like, I had sponsors like Earache Records and stuff that

2:25:19

was on my

2:25:20

banner.

2:25:21

From, like, my local town.

2:25:24

Like, the idea of being able to have these personal sponsors that would help

2:25:28

you out was massive.

2:25:29

Yeah.

2:25:30

And then the other thing, the other issue that we've got is that we don't have,

2:25:33

we don't

2:25:33

have enough events now for a lot of fighters to get experience.

2:25:37

So then a lot of the people that get signed to contenders are like five, six,

2:25:40

seven fights

2:25:41

into their career.

2:25:42

I was talking to somebody about this the other day, and there's good, clear

2:25:45

examples.

2:25:46

Like, I was 19 and six when I joined the UFC in 2028.

2:25:50

So, like, John McGregor had already built a brand and-

2:25:53

Wait a minute.

2:25:54

You just said 2028.

2:25:55

Sorry.

2:25:56

2008.

2:25:57

Yeah.

2:25:58

Maybe there's a return on the car.

2:25:59

2008.

2:26:00

So, I-

2:26:01

I was like, are you a time traveler?

2:26:03

I feel like I am here a little bit with the UFO.

2:26:06

Yeah.

2:26:07

So, in 2008, like, there was, where was I going?

2:26:12

I lost my train of thought.

2:26:13

Sponsors.

2:26:14

Sponsors.

2:26:15

Yeah.

2:26:16

So, like, we had sponsors.

2:26:17

There was a subculture that was growing around the brand.

2:26:19

There were shows that would host you long enough for you to develop a brand,

2:26:24

right?

2:26:24

Right.

2:26:25

So, like, I didn't have nearly as big of a following as Conor McGregor or Paddy

2:26:29

Pimlet,

2:26:29

but I had a similar platform, right?

2:26:31

I was Cage Warriors champ, then Conor was Cage Warriors champ, and he was an

2:26:35

established

2:26:35

fighter with a game and a following before he came to the UFC.

2:26:38

Right.

2:26:39

Same with Paddy.

2:26:40

We don't see that as much anymore, right?

2:26:42

We don't see the fighters growing on their local scene and building a local fan

2:26:46

base that

2:26:47

really starts to grow the sport on a grassroots level, you know?

2:26:50

Right, but why is that the UFC's responsibility?

2:26:52

No, I'm not saying it is.

2:26:53

What I'm saying is that, unfortunately, I think the UFC is now kind of paying

2:26:58

for the control

2:26:59

that they took many years ago because the industry has been stifled around it.

2:27:04

Like, the sponsorship industry for a start was massive, you know?

2:27:08

The problem with it was there was a lot of sponsors that weren't paying, so a

2:27:12

lot of

2:27:13

fighters would wind up in lawsuits, and there was a lot of bullshit that was

2:27:16

going on.

2:27:17

Some of them were, and it was great.

2:27:19

Yeah.

2:27:20

You know, like, you know, I'm really good friends with Brendan Schaub, and

2:27:23

there was a point

2:27:24

in time where he was making X amount for a fight, but he was making, like,

2:27:28

three times

2:27:29

that in sponsors.

2:27:30

Yeah.

2:27:31

I mean, I doubled my show money on the GSP fight because of my banner.

2:27:33

I only got 22,000 for that fight.

2:27:35

Which is crazy.

2:27:36

Crazy.

2:27:37

It's crazy.

2:27:38

World title fight.

2:27:39

But that's what I signed up for.

2:27:40

I wasn't doing it for the money, you know what I mean?

2:27:41

But in hindsight, when I look at it, and GSP was getting, I mean, you get like

2:27:45

six million.

2:27:45

He spent a quarter of a million on his training camp.

2:27:48

How could I compete?

2:27:49

Like, he would book out a whole hotel and bring guys in from New York.

2:27:52

Yeah.

2:27:53

I had Aldo in my corner, who at the time was a brown belt, you know?

2:27:56

Yeah.

2:27:57

And I had a Thai boxing coach that was telling me to knee him in the head on

2:28:01

the ground from bottom

2:28:02

position, you know?

2:28:03

Oh, Jesus Christ.

2:28:03

Like, bless him.

2:28:04

He just didn't know the rules.

2:28:05

I didn't have the support network because I just, I couldn't afford what I

2:28:08

would have

2:28:08

really needed for that, you know?

2:28:10

Right.

2:28:11

But if I go back to, you know, I mean, the sponsorship process was interesting

2:28:16

because the

2:28:17

first thing that they did was they brought in the fees that the sponsorship

2:28:19

companies had

2:28:20

to pay.

2:28:21

So it was like, if you're a clothing brand, you have to pay $50,000 a year to

2:28:25

sponsor UFC

2:28:26

fighters.

2:28:27

And that goes to the UFC.

2:28:28

Now, before that, as long as it wasn't offensive and it wasn't a conflict in

2:28:32

sponsor, the UFC

2:28:33

would take it and you'd carry on.

2:28:36

Condom Depot.

2:28:37

Oh man.

2:28:38

Remember that?

2:28:39

No.

2:28:40

I turned them down a few times, but like, if you think about it, like say Eric

2:28:44

records,

2:28:45

right?

2:28:46

They, they couldn't afford to pay the UFC $50,000.

2:28:48

They would pay me 300 pounds to have the thing on my banner.

2:28:52

Right?

2:28:53

Right.

2:28:54

So if you're bringing in this, okay, everybody has to pay 50,000 to be a

2:28:57

sponsor in the UFC

2:28:58

cage, almost all of the sponsors then fell out the market straight away.

2:29:01

Right.

2:29:02

And then you've only got a few that are lingering.

2:29:04

And then if you're a, if you're a clothing distributor, if you sell a variety

2:29:08

of different

2:29:09

brands, it was a hundred thousand dollars that you had to pay.

2:29:12

Right?

2:29:13

So if you're MMA warehouse and you're sponsoring Alistair Overeem and your

2:29:17

sponsorship budget

2:29:18

for the year is $250,000 and straight away a hundred grand has been taken out

2:29:23

because the

2:29:23

UFC need it, just your pool's gone down.

2:29:25

Right.

2:29:26

So you've got less money to give to the fighters and then you're sponsoring

2:29:28

less fighters overall.

2:29:30

I get that.

2:29:31

I get that argument.

2:29:32

And I definitely agree about fighter pay.

2:29:35

Like I'm always in favor of fighters getting paid more.

2:29:38

It's very dangerous job.

2:29:39

And it's the only thing that people are paying to see.

2:29:41

They're not paying to look at the cage.

2:29:43

They're not paying to look at the ring card girls and not paying to hear me

2:29:46

talk.

2:29:46

They're paying to watch the fights.

2:29:47

Fighters should get the majority of the money.

2:29:50

And it is a problem when they don't have leverage.

2:29:52

And I think that it's great that you have things like MVP getting involved with

2:29:56

the Netflix

2:29:57

card.

2:29:58

I wish the card was a little stronger, but it's difficult.

2:30:01

Like, Lin's fighting against Francis Ngannou.

2:30:05

Like, you know, you need, like, who the fuck is even available that's not

2:30:09

signed to a contract

2:30:11

that you can get Francis to fight?

2:30:12

Yeah.

2:30:13

That's not a goddamn execution.

2:30:15

You know, you know, Francis is the legitimate heavyweight champion of the world.

2:30:19

Absolutely.

2:30:20

And the thing is, the heavyweight division is always going to be more of a

2:30:23

victim of the

2:30:23

underpayment than any other industry.

2:30:25

Right.

2:30:26

Is Francis no longer with the PFL?

2:30:27

No.

2:30:28

What happened there?

2:30:29

I just think it was, I just think it was a bad deal done by the previous owner,

2:30:33

by the previous

2:30:34

CEO.

2:30:35

Oh, it was a previous CEO?

2:30:36

Yeah.

2:30:37

So I'm not aware.

2:30:38

So he fought Henning Ferreira in that one fight.

2:30:41

Yes.

2:30:42

Is that the only fight that he had in the PFL?

2:30:43

The only one he had, yeah.

2:30:44

That's kind of crazy.

2:30:45

Yeah.

2:30:46

It was just, I mean, it was a bad deal for the PFL.

2:30:48

And we've done a lot of, we've done a lot of bad deals, bad decisions.

2:30:51

Who's that guy that just knocked out Henning Ferreira?

2:30:53

Oh, Sergei Bilisteni.

2:30:55

Woo!

2:30:56

Used to train with Fedor and, yeah.

2:30:59

Woo!

2:31:00

That guy is fucking legit.

2:31:01

Yeah.

2:31:02

And very, very fast.

2:31:03

Yeah, man.

2:31:04

Like him vs. Tom Aspinall is an interesting fight.

2:31:06

That is an interesting fight.

2:31:07

Him vs. anybody is interesting.

2:31:08

Him vs. Cyril Gant.

2:31:09

He moves a lot like Cyril Gant, but he's got Sambo background.

2:31:12

Bro, that guy is legit.

2:31:14

I watched that Ferreira fight and I was like, holy shit.

2:31:17

Spun his head around, didn't he?

2:31:18

Yeah, dude.

2:31:19

And, you know, I mean, this cat.

2:31:21

Yeah.

2:31:22

He moves like Fedor, too.

2:31:25

He trained with Fedor, which is interesting.

2:31:27

Yeah.

2:31:28

Yeah.

2:31:29

You want to get through to the third.

2:31:30

Yeah, that's that little body shot.

2:31:32

So, third round was the finish.

2:31:34

And he catches him with this massive shot.

2:31:35

But it just looked so dominant.

2:31:37

He looked so dominant, like, throughout the fight, man.

2:31:40

Like, right away.

2:31:41

He's a beast, isn't he?

2:31:42

This kid is very, very legit.

2:31:44

Oh, my goodness.

2:31:45

Look at that.

2:31:46

The speed.

2:31:47

Yeah.

2:31:48

So, the world needs another fucking big heavyweight, man.

2:31:51

Yeah.

2:31:52

And this is awesome that this guy exists.

2:31:54

What's his name again?

2:31:55

Sergey Bilestani.

2:31:56

I just saw this yesterday.

2:31:58

I'm guilty of not watching enough PFL.

2:32:01

But the thing is, it's like the fights are legit.

2:32:05

The talent is legit.

2:32:07

But man, it is just not getting the attention that it deserves.

2:32:11

Look, the thing is, as a UFC fan, I get it.

2:32:14

Right?

2:32:15

Because you want to watch one promotion where all the fighters are so you can

2:32:17

find out who the best is.

2:32:19

Because that's what ultimately it was about, right?

2:32:21

It was about finding out who's the best.

2:32:22

Listen, man.

2:32:23

That guy can kind of compete with anybody.

2:32:24

Of course.

2:32:25

Of course.

2:32:26

Absolutely.

2:32:27

And we've got guys that can across the sport.

2:32:28

I mean, you know, across the promotion we have.

2:32:31

I mean, you know, Dakota, Thad Jean.

2:32:33

You know, we've got some real, real good fighters.

2:32:35

And even in, like, if you've not watched Lewis McGrill and Dean Garnett, it is

2:32:40

one of the best fights you'll ever see.

2:32:42

There were 13 knockdowns in it.

2:32:43

It was carnage.

2:32:45

But then we're also seeing really interesting things like the Scottish Twister.

2:32:49

Have you seen the Scottish Twister?

2:32:50

Yes.

2:32:51

So that was Stevie Ray, who hit it against Pettis.

2:32:54

And then he hit it against Lewis Long in Glasgow.

2:32:58

And then he's passed it on to Jake Hadley.

2:33:01

And then Jake Hadley's just submitted Matthias Matos with it.

2:33:04

And it's fascinating because it's kind of a twister.

2:33:07

Uh-huh.

2:33:08

It's like it's...

2:33:09

Have you tried it?

2:33:10

Yeah.

2:33:11

I mean, I struggle with it.

2:33:12

So here it is.

2:33:13

But look at this.

2:33:14

The key is the foot in the thigh.

2:33:15

It's like an offside triangle.

2:33:17

You can see that that right foot is just hooked in.

2:33:19

Uh-huh.

2:33:20

And he's going to threaten with an arm triangle.

2:33:22

He's kind of holding Matthias here.

2:33:23

There's a bit of a hand fight going on.

2:33:25

He's going to keep hitting Matthias and Matthias is going to go to an arm

2:33:28

triangle position.

2:33:29

Then he's going to start to try and force that right elbow down.

2:33:33

So he's not in an arm triangle and turn into the body triangle.

2:33:36

But that right foot caught in his thigh doesn't allow him to turn fully into

2:33:40

the guard.

2:33:41

So look at this.

2:33:42

How he turns in.

2:33:43

Clears the head and there's the crank.

2:33:44

Look at the foot on the inside of the thigh.

2:33:46

Oh, that's nasty.

2:33:47

So that is, I mean, I've had this done to me as well as I've done it.

2:33:50

So you've got compression into the neck, pressure into the lower back, your

2:33:54

hips being lifted.

2:33:55

Yeah.

2:33:56

It's a horrible submission.

2:33:57

It looks horrible.

2:33:58

And this is the Cheesecake Assassin demo in it.

2:34:02

Interesting.

2:34:03

And this is what's fascinating still to me about MMA is that I still feel like

2:34:08

these technologies that we've not yet discovered.

2:34:11

The calf kicker being a good example.

2:34:13

Right.

2:34:14

Scottish Twister being another good example.

2:34:15

What comes next?

2:34:16

Right.

2:34:17

There's going to be some shit.

2:34:18

I've got books and books and martial arts books and I feel like if I dug, I

2:34:22

might find something.

2:34:23

Yeah, I don't know what's missing.

2:34:26

Here's something that I think might be missing.

2:34:29

Front leg roundhouse kick to the face.

2:34:32

Guys who are fast with that, I used to see that a lot in Taekwondo.

2:34:37

I used to see that a lot.

2:34:38

There's guys that just throw it out there like a jab and if it hits you in the

2:34:42

face, you're fucked.

2:34:43

And we've seen it a few times in MMA.

2:34:45

We've seen a few guys get dropped.

2:34:48

We saw Rose Namajunas and Zhang Weili.

2:34:50

You just don't see it very often.

2:34:52

And man, if you're good at that, if you have a fast one, that is a devastating

2:34:57

kick.

2:34:58

Yeah.

2:34:59

See, that is a good example because that's a great technique and a great setup.

2:35:03

Because the reason why the head kick landed was because she just landed an

2:35:06

inside low kick.

2:35:07

Yes.

2:35:08

So Weili had pulled her lead leg back and pitched her head forward.

2:35:11

Yeah.

2:35:12

Beautiful set.

2:35:13

I totally agree with you.

2:35:14

I think there's a lot that's still to be discovered.

2:35:16

It's just stunning to me how few people get cracked with that.

2:35:19

I mean, I feel like that was a major weapon when I was doing Taekwondo.

2:35:24

A lot of people use that.

2:35:25

Yeah.

2:35:26

Crescent kick as well.

2:35:27

Oh, yeah.

2:35:28

There's a few guys that use that still.

2:35:29

Anderson used that a few times.

2:35:30

Yeah.

2:35:31

There's a cat.

2:35:32

I'm so sorry, man.

2:35:34

I forget your name.

2:35:35

But there's a dude who's got a video on Instagram where he knocks this guy out

2:35:37

with an inside

2:35:38

crest and kick to the face.

2:35:40

There's a few people that are pulling it off.

2:35:42

You know?

2:35:43

Yeah.

2:35:44

There's definitely more to come.

2:35:45

Yeah.

2:35:46

There's definitely a lot more.

2:35:47

There are a lot more techniques.

2:35:48

I also think there are going to be a lot more targets on the body that can be

2:35:52

exploited that

2:35:53

we're not yet exploiting.

2:35:54

Right.

2:35:55

You know?

2:35:56

The guys in kickboxing in particular in one are using that toe kick to the body.

2:36:01

Yes.

2:36:02

Apchagi.

2:36:03

Right?

2:36:04

There's this cat.

2:36:05

Yes.

2:36:06

What is his name, Jamie?

2:36:07

I've actually congratulated this guy.

2:36:08

I apologize, sir, because I went back and forth with him.

2:36:13

Sick.

2:36:14

Jason Barry, is that what he just said?

2:36:16

Back it up a little bit.

2:36:18

Before that.

2:36:19

Before that.

2:36:20

Before that.

2:36:21

See, look at those Cage Warriors gloves.

2:36:22

Justin Barry.

2:36:23

Justin Barry.

2:36:24

That's it.

2:36:25

Look at the curve in those Cage Warriors gloves.

2:36:27

Mm-hmm.

2:36:28

So they're basically...

2:36:29

They're either Fairtex gloves or they're a copy of the Fairtex gloves that they

2:36:33

use.

2:36:33

Look at how he does that.

2:36:34

It's crazy.

2:36:35

That's slick, isn't it?

2:36:36

Crazy.

2:36:37

Very cool.

2:36:38

Crazy.

2:36:39

Yeah.

2:36:40

Cage Warriors is another great organization that's really producing elite

2:36:42

talent.

2:36:42

It's just...

2:36:43

I agree with you.

2:36:44

There's not enough of them.

2:36:45

But it's like, what does the PFL have to do to get more attention?

2:36:48

You know?

2:36:49

Because it seems like they're throwing a lot of money at fighters.

2:36:51

Yeah.

2:36:52

Is that million dollar thing still happening?

2:36:53

No.

2:36:54

The tournament.

2:36:55

We've gone to regular shows now.

2:36:57

So we have main and co-main.

2:36:58

We've got rankings now done by combat registry.

2:37:00

They don't have all the crazy point system where you...

2:37:03

No.

2:37:04

All that's gone.

2:37:05

That didn't make any fucking sense.

2:37:06

Honestly.

2:37:07

I'll be honest.

2:37:08

I love the PFL, but PFL has been its own worst enemy for many, many years.

2:37:11

Right?

2:37:12

We've got a new CEO, John Martin, who's been on Ariel's show a couple of times.

2:37:15

He does great interviews.

2:37:16

He loves the sport from a fan's perspective.

2:37:19

Doesn't know it quite as much as other people, but he's making the right moves

2:37:24

and making the right decisions.

2:37:25

Previously, I mean, I love Don Davis, but he was like Willy Wonka of MMA.

2:37:29

He was like, I've got a great idea.

2:37:31

Let's do this and blah, blah, blah.

2:37:32

And then you had Pete Murray, who just was consistently making bad deals and

2:37:36

bad decisions.

2:37:37

Yeah.

2:37:38

All the point things were like, I didn't understand any of it.

2:37:40

So I was running PFL Europe for a couple of three years.

2:37:44

I stepped in at the end of 2022 as commentator.

2:37:47

In 2023, I became the head of fighter ops for Europe.

2:37:51

So I was doing all the signing and matchmaking.

2:37:53

I only had four shows a year, but I mean, it was a passion project for me to

2:37:58

sign all these young guys and match them.

2:38:00

And my argument was every single...

2:38:02

And I always used to say this to the fighters because remember when Dana used

2:38:05

to do this back on the old weighing days where he'd get all the fighters, no

2:38:07

cornermen, no coaches, just translators and the fighters.

2:38:11

And we'd gather in one of the changing rooms in the arena and Dana give us this

2:38:15

speech and it was stirring.

2:38:17

Like we're all there to murder each other.

2:38:19

But for like five minutes, we all felt like we were in it together.

2:38:23

And I loved that feeling.

2:38:24

I missed it.

2:38:25

Even walking out with like fist bumping each other and we're all hyped.

2:38:28

And that's where he'd announce the bonus amounts and stuff.

2:38:31

So I would do that with PFO Europe.

2:38:32

I'd gather all the fighters together and I'm like, look, there's not a single

2:38:36

fight on this card that has been matched for one person to win.

2:38:39

Every single person stepping into the cage has got a fair chance of winning.

2:38:43

Your destiny is in your hands, right?

2:38:45

And with PFO Europe, I was able to build a good roster and to...

2:38:51

I mean, we had some fantastic shows, but when I first inherited it, we had four

2:38:55

tournaments, right?

2:38:57

So I had to sign 16 fighters, sorry, eight fighters per weight class.

2:39:02

So I had 32 fighters on my roster that was done already before the year started.

2:39:06

And then I'm having to get loads of different flags.

2:39:09

So we're going into a place and I've got a bunch of fighters on the card that I

2:39:11

don't need that aren't going to sell any tickets.

2:39:14

And it was just working against me constantly.

2:39:16

So I pushed to go down to two tournaments and have just a normal MMA show for

2:39:20

the rest of it.

2:39:21

And that worked out well, but they loved the tournament format because it was a

2:39:25

distinguishing factor.

2:39:27

And the question is, you know, what do we have to do to make a difference?

2:39:32

Like, I mean, I think we are doing those.

2:39:34

We are making those moves.

2:39:35

We have to make more content and tell the fighters stories better for sure.

2:39:39

Maybe you guys should start a fucking Muay Thai small gloves.

2:39:42

I'm down for it.

2:39:44

UFC is fucking up with that.

2:39:46

I sent Dana all these different fights.

2:39:48

I sent him all these.

2:39:49

Iman Gazeliev.

2:39:52

That dude, Asadullah Iman Gazeliev.

2:39:55

Holy shit is that guy good.

2:39:57

I'm like, look at this.

2:39:58

Like, this is what people want to see, man.

2:40:01

Like, everybody boos when the fights go to the ground if it gets boring.

2:40:05

This shit's never boring.

2:40:06

Maybe you guys should pick up the slack.

2:40:08

100%.

2:40:09

I mean, I've thrown hundreds of ideas on the table.

2:40:12

I always am.

2:40:13

That might be the move, man.

2:40:14

That might be what differentiates.

2:40:15

Yeah, I think so.

2:40:16

Because look how big it is with one.

2:40:18

I mean, it's essentially become most of their fights now.

2:40:20

Yeah.

2:40:21

And it's accommodating fighters that have got two or three hundred fights in

2:40:24

another discipline

2:40:25

that don't want to learn how to wrestle or grapple.

2:40:27

Exactly.

2:40:28

But they are the elitest of elite strikers.

2:40:30

And so easy to translate.

2:40:32

Absolutely.

2:40:33

Everybody knows what's going on.

2:40:34

Yeah.

2:40:35

A kick to the face is a kick to the face.

2:40:36

Yeah.

2:40:37

I agree with you.

2:40:38

I mean, I'm always throwing ideas at the PFO.

2:40:40

The one that stuck was introducing elbows.

2:40:42

When I first started working for the PFO, we didn't have elbows.

2:40:45

Crazy.

2:40:46

Crazy.

2:40:47

Crazy.

2:40:48

And I hated it.

2:40:49

And I'm like...

2:40:50

Well, it's pride.

2:40:51

Pride didn't have elbows.

2:40:52

Yeah.

2:40:53

Did Bellator?

2:40:54

Bellator had elbows.

2:40:55

So what the fuck?

2:40:56

Well, see, that was my selling point.

2:40:57

That was the way I managed to convince them.

2:40:59

I said, OK, right.

2:41:00

We've taken on Bellator now.

2:41:02

We've inherited Bellator and everything that it was.

2:41:04

Take the rules too.

2:41:05

Right?

2:41:06

Yeah.

2:41:07

Well, this is how I pitched it to them.

2:41:08

One of my biggest opponents was Ray Sefo.

2:41:11

He did not want elbows added in.

2:41:12

I could not get my head around it because he's always coaching elbows from the

2:41:15

corner.

2:41:16

Right?

2:41:17

Why didn't he want elbows?

2:41:18

I'm not sure.

2:41:19

I couldn't get my head around it.

2:41:20

But the thing that pushed it over the line was me going, OK, right, we've just

2:41:24

taken on Bellator.

2:41:25

We've got Bellator and we've got PFL.

2:41:27

Imagine in a world where we now apply PFL rules to Bellator.

2:41:31

What are the fans going to say?

2:41:33

They're going to be like, well, that'd be terrible.

2:41:34

They'd hate it because you're taking elbows out.

2:41:36

I'm like, you've illustrated my point.

2:41:38

Exactly.

2:41:39

So clearly that's not the right way to go.

2:41:41

So then we need elbows.

2:41:42

Well, I'm glad they listened to you because that's ridiculous.

2:41:44

Yeah.

2:41:45

You know, what really needs to happen is knees to the head on the ground.

2:41:47

100%.

2:41:48

Absolutely.

2:41:49

It's crazy that someone could just huddle in a turtle position and not get pummeled.

2:41:53

Like you shouldn't be in that position.

2:41:55

The only thing I can do without and I loved it in Pride and I wanted to fight

2:41:59

in Pride for the soccer kicks as well.

2:42:00

That's the only thing I can reasonably do without.

2:42:04

And the reason why.

2:42:05

No ring.

2:42:06

The ring is different.

2:42:07

You can move.

2:42:08

Yeah.

2:42:09

The problem with being planted into the cage and stomped or soccer kicked.

2:42:13

For sure.

2:42:14

Do you remember Wes Simms' Frank Mir?

2:42:15

Oh, I do.

2:42:16

Stomped him.

2:42:17

Yeah.

2:42:18

The thing with, and I've watched every single Pride fight that's ever existed,

2:42:22

I'm sure.

2:42:23

I only ever see people get involved in the head when the fight's already pretty

2:42:26

much done.

2:42:26

Right.

2:42:27

Right.

2:42:28

So it's...

2:42:29

Malvin Manhoof and Sakuraba.

2:42:30

Exactly.

2:42:31

It's like the icing on the cake that we don't necessarily need when you can

2:42:34

just hit them with one more shot.

2:42:35

Right.

2:42:36

And they tried something in cage rage when cage rage existed back in the day

2:42:40

where the referee would decide that you could stomp on or kick him in the head.

2:42:44

Let me ask you this.

2:42:45

What do you think about sidekicks to the knees?

2:42:47

I don't mind it.

2:42:48

The problem with that is it's one shot and you're out for a year.

2:42:53

But then heel hooks are just as dangerous, aren't they?

2:42:55

But they're not because you can tap.

2:42:57

You can tap and you can hold on to the arms before it gets to that position.

2:43:00

You can tap.

2:43:01

The thing about the sidekick to the knee, like, what's his face?

2:43:07

Khalil Roundtree.

2:43:08

Yeah, but the guy, Modestus.

2:43:09

Oh, Modestus.

2:43:10

Modestus Bocacus.

2:43:11

When you watch his knee go sideways like that, you're like, good lord.

2:43:14

You're done for a year.

2:43:16

If you're ever the same again.

2:43:18

I mean, I know Shavkat's in a similar situation right now, isn't he?

2:43:22

But you can't hit to the back of the head.

2:43:23

But you do hit to the back of the head.

2:43:25

Because if it's a roundhouse kick and it goes over the shoulder, guess where it

2:43:28

lands?

2:43:29

Absolutely.

2:43:30

But the thing is, the back of the head is more protecting from the bottom of

2:43:33

the base of the skull downwards.

2:43:34

That's real.

2:43:35

Right, but if someone throws a roundhouse kick and it goes over the shoulder,

2:43:38

it's going bong right to the back of the head.

2:43:41

But then how many football players in a season are taken out with a low tackle?

2:43:46

I mean, it's the same in rugby as well.

2:43:47

It's like, for me, that is a risk of the sport.

2:43:50

That is a part of the...

2:43:52

But it's a victory with an illegal move that we all allow.

2:43:56

It's only illegal because you can't strike to the knee.

2:43:59

But then...

2:44:00

No, no, no.

2:44:01

Back of the head kick.

2:44:02

Oh, yeah, yeah, for sure.

2:44:03

You know what I'm saying?

2:44:04

The back of the head kick, you win by knockout and you shouldn't have hit them

2:44:07

there.

2:44:08

Yeah, but then also you've got to go into, well, did they turn their head?

2:44:12

What was the circumstance of it?

2:44:13

Et cetera, et cetera.

2:44:14

That's true.

2:44:15

I mean, the thing is, in the rules, you can't strike joints, right?

2:44:18

But then it was the same thing when we had elbows.

2:44:20

And I'm like, we're doing shows in France and I'm saying to the French

2:44:22

commission, we don't have elbows.

2:44:24

And they're like, okay, so where does the elbow start and where does the...

2:44:28

Where is it forearm?

2:44:29

Right, where is it forearm?

2:44:30

Right.

2:44:31

But the thing about attacking the knees, you would have to say, well, it's got

2:44:35

to be a straight

2:44:35

kick where you hyperextend the knees because you can't say don't leg kick the

2:44:39

knees because

2:44:39

you're going to be able to leg kick the back of the knee always.

2:44:42

If you take that out, you're taking out a giant chunk of all techniques.

2:44:46

But the side kick to the knee, the problem with that is you're going to ruin

2:44:50

careers.

2:44:51

Like, there's a lot of guys that are just not the same.

2:44:53

Tiago Silva, I don't think it was ever the same after the Jon Jones fight.

2:44:57

In my mind, it's the game we play.

2:44:59

I agree with you.

2:45:00

I see your point.

2:45:01

I see it.

2:45:02

No one's dying from a knee injury.

2:45:03

It's very unusual too.

2:45:04

Yeah.

2:45:05

It's like the Modestus fight was one fight that you can name and Khalil's

2:45:08

obviously a very

2:45:10

elite striker.

2:45:11

Yeah.

2:45:12

I don't mind it.

2:45:13

I genuinely don't.

2:45:14

I mean, I'm more interested in making sure the fighters are protected when they

2:45:18

can't

2:45:19

protect themselves.

2:45:20

That's where we need to raise everyone's understanding of what's happening.

2:45:23

Yeah.

2:45:24

I agree with you.

2:45:25

Um, always good to talk to you.

2:45:27

We should do this more often.

2:45:28

We should absolutely.

2:45:29

Except for every six years.

2:45:30

We should.

2:45:31

Yeah.

2:45:32

We're back in Austin soon though.

2:45:33

We're back in Austin soon.

2:45:34

Oh, when are you guys here?

2:45:35

Martin Costello-Van Stinas in the rematch at the Moody Center.

2:45:38

When in July?

2:45:39

Uh, July 19th.

2:45:40

Saturday.

2:45:41

Saturday, July 19th.

2:45:42

Is that the right day?

2:45:43

Oh, motherfucker.

2:45:44

I'm out of town.

2:45:45

I know where you are.

2:45:46

God damn it.

2:45:47

I'm out of town.

2:45:48

Yeah, I know.

2:45:49

I know where you are.

2:45:50

I'll be there.

2:45:51

You'll be there?

2:45:52

Yeah, I think I'll be there.

2:45:53

We'll be there afterwards.

2:45:54

I don't know what we're talking about.

2:45:55

Yeah.

2:45:56

But that's, but yeah.

2:45:57

Johnny Ebelin, Costello-Van Stinas.

2:45:58

That's too bad.

2:45:59

I want to see that.

2:46:00

Fuck.

2:46:01

Yeah.

2:46:02

And I will say like, for me, our middleweight division is probably the most

2:46:04

competitive with

2:46:06

the UFC's middleweight division.

2:46:07

Johnny Ebelin's a bad motherfucker.

2:46:08

Costello-Van Stinas, the current champ.

2:46:11

Did you watch that fight?

2:46:12

No.

2:46:13

So Johnny Ebelin, undefeated in 17, 18 fights, was beating the brakes off Costello

2:46:18

for most

2:46:18

of it.

2:46:19

Oh, he got submitted.

2:46:20

Like last 10 seconds.

2:46:21

Yes, I did see that.

2:46:22

Yes, that's right.

2:46:23

So Costello's defended his belt.

2:46:24

He beat Fabian Edwards, Travis Brown elbows.

2:46:27

Yes.

2:46:28

And then Johnny Ebelin just ragdolled Brian Battle like it was nothing.

2:46:32

I saw that too.

2:46:33

That was insane.

2:46:34

No, he's a beast dude.

2:46:35

Those two boys are going to rematch.

2:46:37

Austin at the Moody Center, middle of July.

2:46:39

It's going to be a good one.

2:46:40

I wish I was here.

2:46:41

Me too.

2:46:42

All right.

2:46:43

Thank you, brother.

2:46:44

Thank you, man.

2:46:45

Very good to see you, always.

2:46:46

Dan Hardy, what's your Instagram?

2:46:48

Dan Hardy MMA.

2:46:49

Dan Hardy MMA.

2:46:50

All right.

2:46:51

Bye, everybody.