1 00:00:03,600 --> 00:00:08,680 Speaker 1: Oh hi everyone, Hi, Hi, Hi. Uh what a crazy night? 2 00:00:08,960 --> 00:00:17,360 Speaker 1: Oh my god, woo wow. Hi everyone. My name is 3 00:00:17,400 --> 00:00:20,120 Speaker 1: Luke Thomas. This is the official Morning Combat UFC two 4 00:00:20,239 --> 00:00:24,279 Speaker 1: seventy five post fight show. I will be your host 5 00:00:24,320 --> 00:00:29,720 Speaker 1: for tonight's festivities. Okay, there's a lot to get to. 6 00:00:29,960 --> 00:00:32,720 Speaker 1: First things first, If you are watching this, either live 7 00:00:32,840 --> 00:00:34,839 Speaker 1: or at some point in the future whenever you're catching this, 8 00:00:35,240 --> 00:00:37,560 Speaker 1: please be so kind as to give me a this 9 00:00:38,000 --> 00:00:41,360 Speaker 1: entire channel a thumbs up if you'd be so generous, 10 00:00:41,800 --> 00:00:44,440 Speaker 1: A subscription if you are new here would also be great. 11 00:00:44,479 --> 00:00:46,479 Speaker 1: It's free. I gotta do is click the button. We 12 00:00:46,479 --> 00:00:48,199 Speaker 1: would love to have you around for more. We do 13 00:00:48,240 --> 00:00:51,000 Speaker 1: the show live, me and my co host, Brian Campbell. 14 00:00:51,159 --> 00:00:53,560 Speaker 1: We do it Monday Wednesday Friday live eleven in the East, 15 00:00:53,640 --> 00:00:56,240 Speaker 1: and we do a whole lot more. So. We will 16 00:00:56,240 --> 00:00:58,639 Speaker 1: go over all the results from UFC two seventy five, 17 00:00:58,720 --> 00:01:01,200 Speaker 1: loose all of the major results. We will go over 18 00:01:03,920 --> 00:01:06,280 Speaker 1: your questions. If you've got one, I just put a 19 00:01:06,280 --> 00:01:09,800 Speaker 1: tweet up at l Thomas News. It's near the top 20 00:01:09,800 --> 00:01:13,200 Speaker 1: of the If you go to my account, it's not pinned, 21 00:01:13,200 --> 00:01:14,959 Speaker 1: but it's the one right under the pin tweet give 22 00:01:15,000 --> 00:01:17,440 Speaker 1: me a question. We'll get to those towards the end. 23 00:01:18,440 --> 00:01:20,880 Speaker 1: And you know, standard disclaimer if you don't want spoilers, 24 00:01:20,920 --> 00:01:23,039 Speaker 1: I don't have the computer. I need to do my 25 00:01:23,200 --> 00:01:26,560 Speaker 1: normal stinger in the beginning of the video. So I'm 26 00:01:26,560 --> 00:01:30,480 Speaker 1: gonna give you a five four three two one. And 27 00:01:30,520 --> 00:01:32,039 Speaker 1: you might be like, look, who would come to this 28 00:01:32,120 --> 00:01:34,840 Speaker 1: video who already already didn't want spoilers? And I'd be like, 29 00:01:35,160 --> 00:01:37,760 Speaker 1: the world is full of fucking idiots. So there's the 30 00:01:37,800 --> 00:01:45,640 Speaker 1: answer to that, Okay. That is that is that UFC 31 00:01:45,680 --> 00:01:48,360 Speaker 1: two seventy five was great. It was great. If you've 32 00:01:48,440 --> 00:01:50,640 Speaker 1: if you followed me for some time, what I'm about 33 00:01:50,640 --> 00:01:54,160 Speaker 1: to say is something you've probably heard a number of times, 34 00:01:54,200 --> 00:01:57,560 Speaker 1: which is that I'll get my glasses here in a minute. 35 00:01:57,600 --> 00:01:59,280 Speaker 1: I think, Please tell me I have them? Yes I 36 00:01:59,280 --> 00:02:04,000 Speaker 1: think I do, Yeah, I do. Which is that UFC 37 00:02:04,040 --> 00:02:08,400 Speaker 1: two seventy five did not feature any major pay per 38 00:02:08,480 --> 00:02:10,280 Speaker 1: view talent. I mean, this was the first event in 39 00:02:11,040 --> 00:02:13,360 Speaker 1: Singapore that in fact was a pay per view for 40 00:02:13,400 --> 00:02:16,839 Speaker 1: the company. Obviously, we're gonna have nothing but nice things 41 00:02:16,880 --> 00:02:20,400 Speaker 1: to say about the people who won, but they are 42 00:02:20,440 --> 00:02:22,960 Speaker 1: not known for being major pay per view draws. It's 43 00:02:22,960 --> 00:02:25,680 Speaker 1: not a slide on them, that's just a fact. And 44 00:02:25,720 --> 00:02:30,079 Speaker 1: so you know that is a thing that people naturally 45 00:02:30,160 --> 00:02:33,600 Speaker 1: tie into their factory about how they buy pay per views. 46 00:02:33,639 --> 00:02:35,600 Speaker 1: Pay per view is a star driven business in a 47 00:02:35,639 --> 00:02:38,760 Speaker 1: large part, and so whenever there's not a major star 48 00:02:38,840 --> 00:02:40,680 Speaker 1: in it, there's always some kind of knock on it 49 00:02:40,800 --> 00:02:47,240 Speaker 1: as well, and for ostensibly lacking in quality, And what 50 00:02:47,440 --> 00:02:50,400 Speaker 1: tonight is one of those nights where you realize that 51 00:02:50,440 --> 00:02:54,960 Speaker 1: the star power issue is real, but it's not shorthand 52 00:02:54,960 --> 00:02:58,160 Speaker 1: for quality, not all the time. And certainly there's many 53 00:02:58,160 --> 00:03:00,720 Speaker 1: differences where that's or many peer is where that's not 54 00:03:00,760 --> 00:03:02,960 Speaker 1: the case. And here's one such one. I don't know 55 00:03:03,000 --> 00:03:04,720 Speaker 1: what kind of pay per view number this one's gonna do, 56 00:03:04,760 --> 00:03:08,200 Speaker 1: probably not all that high. But the quality of the action, 57 00:03:08,440 --> 00:03:11,399 Speaker 1: the fun of it. The co main event was interesting, 58 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:13,519 Speaker 1: although not as fun as the other ones, but virtually 59 00:03:13,560 --> 00:03:15,840 Speaker 1: everything else in the car for the most part, was 60 00:03:15,919 --> 00:03:18,480 Speaker 1: just tremendous. There were knockouts up and down, This thing 61 00:03:18,560 --> 00:03:21,320 Speaker 1: finishes up and down in that main event. You gotta 62 00:03:21,360 --> 00:03:25,040 Speaker 1: be shitting me. That is an all time classic. And 63 00:03:25,080 --> 00:03:28,280 Speaker 1: I'm gonna say this very carefully. If you're new to MMA, 64 00:03:28,360 --> 00:03:30,160 Speaker 1: One thing you might not appreciate is you kind of 65 00:03:30,200 --> 00:03:32,320 Speaker 1: look around now and you see, well, maybe John Jones 66 00:03:32,440 --> 00:03:34,600 Speaker 1: is gonna go to heavyweight, and you see sort of 67 00:03:34,639 --> 00:03:38,240 Speaker 1: the pre eminent divisions maybe one seventy and below, certainly 68 00:03:38,240 --> 00:03:40,520 Speaker 1: like one fifty five and below in terms of like 69 00:03:40,560 --> 00:03:42,520 Speaker 1: the talent and how deep they are and all that 70 00:03:42,600 --> 00:03:44,320 Speaker 1: kind of things. But you have to remember, for a 71 00:03:44,400 --> 00:03:47,960 Speaker 1: long time, the Marquis division in the UFC, and frankly 72 00:03:48,000 --> 00:03:51,120 Speaker 1: all of MMA was two hundred and five pounds in 73 00:03:51,200 --> 00:03:53,600 Speaker 1: the in the late nineties and certainly of the early 74 00:03:53,600 --> 00:03:57,080 Speaker 1: two thousands and even into the twenty tens, a little bit, 75 00:03:58,800 --> 00:04:03,160 Speaker 1: light heavyweight was just an apurbsolutely dominant force with Vanderley Silva, Rampage, Jackson, 76 00:04:03,240 --> 00:04:08,000 Speaker 1: Vitor Belfoor, Chuck Letdel for a time, Alistair Overeim. Obviously, 77 00:04:08,040 --> 00:04:09,720 Speaker 1: you know, John Jones came a little bit later, But 78 00:04:09,720 --> 00:04:14,080 Speaker 1: then there was Shogun Hua and Hikardo Aroona and you know, 79 00:04:15,000 --> 00:04:18,200 Speaker 1: Randy Cotore, and I mean the list went on and 80 00:04:18,320 --> 00:04:20,839 Speaker 1: on and on and on. I mean, this they're just 81 00:04:21,600 --> 00:04:25,479 Speaker 1: two of five was so good for so long that 82 00:04:27,640 --> 00:04:30,560 Speaker 1: you couldn't But in its heyday, you couldn't believe that 83 00:04:30,640 --> 00:04:34,880 Speaker 1: any other weight class would ever supersede it and Tito Ortiz, 84 00:04:34,960 --> 00:04:36,320 Speaker 1: of course you can add them there. I mean, just 85 00:04:36,600 --> 00:04:39,200 Speaker 1: the list is endless. It is endless. You know how 86 00:04:39,240 --> 00:04:41,440 Speaker 1: many Hall of Famers, how good it was. So what 87 00:04:41,480 --> 00:04:44,080 Speaker 1: I'm about to say, I'm gonna couch very carefully. I 88 00:04:44,160 --> 00:04:51,040 Speaker 1: have seen really incredible USC light heavyweight title fights. I 89 00:04:51,080 --> 00:04:53,800 Speaker 1: don't know if this is number one, but in terms 90 00:04:53,880 --> 00:04:57,240 Speaker 1: of fun, it's got an argument for number one. And 91 00:04:57,320 --> 00:05:00,480 Speaker 1: in terms of you know, I mean, yes, it was 92 00:05:00,480 --> 00:05:02,440 Speaker 1: a lot of momentum swings, but in terms of I 93 00:05:02,440 --> 00:05:08,839 Speaker 1: think the entertainment quotient and the fight that showcases what 94 00:05:08,920 --> 00:05:11,320 Speaker 1: each guy is all about. Boy, that is one of 95 00:05:11,360 --> 00:05:13,960 Speaker 1: the best UFC light heavyweight title fights ever. Now you 96 00:05:14,000 --> 00:05:17,880 Speaker 1: might put like Gustafson DC, Gustfson Jones well ahead of them, Fine, 97 00:05:18,200 --> 00:05:19,880 Speaker 1: if you wanted to do that, but I'm telling you 98 00:05:19,960 --> 00:05:21,760 Speaker 1: right now, that's one of the best title fights in 99 00:05:21,839 --> 00:05:25,200 Speaker 1: UFC led heavyweight history, which is an extremely I think 100 00:05:25,240 --> 00:05:30,200 Speaker 1: prestigious thing, and that is an that is a no doubt, surefire, 101 00:05:30,360 --> 00:05:34,280 Speaker 1: instant classic fight. I mean, I was convinced that if 102 00:05:34,360 --> 00:05:36,960 Speaker 1: Yuri won, he was gonna you know, bludgeon Glover and 103 00:05:37,000 --> 00:05:39,520 Speaker 1: I thought if Glover was gonna win, he thought maybe 104 00:05:39,520 --> 00:05:41,039 Speaker 1: he could knock him out on the feet fifth round. 105 00:05:41,040 --> 00:05:42,560 Speaker 1: He nearly did. We'll talk about in just a second here. 106 00:05:42,800 --> 00:05:47,080 Speaker 1: I'm gonna read the results first, but you know, probably 107 00:05:47,080 --> 00:05:51,680 Speaker 1: by submission. And dude, they both I mean that is 108 00:05:52,000 --> 00:05:54,800 Speaker 1: I was watching that through my fingers. Let me say 109 00:05:54,839 --> 00:05:56,800 Speaker 1: one more thing before I get to the results as well. 110 00:05:58,839 --> 00:06:01,320 Speaker 1: I tweeted this, and I mean it. It was a 111 00:06:01,360 --> 00:06:05,000 Speaker 1: privilege to watch that fight. It was a privilege, truly, 112 00:06:05,480 --> 00:06:08,320 Speaker 1: two guys doing that on this kind of a night. 113 00:06:09,279 --> 00:06:11,880 Speaker 1: That is that you That wasn't The honor was mine. 114 00:06:12,600 --> 00:06:14,400 Speaker 1: You know, if Glover or anyone in his team sees this, 115 00:06:14,520 --> 00:06:16,400 Speaker 1: or hear you on, anyone on his team sees this. 116 00:06:16,480 --> 00:06:19,640 Speaker 1: I mean this with the absolute utmost of sincerity. The 117 00:06:19,720 --> 00:06:22,800 Speaker 1: honor was mine to be able to watch something like that, 118 00:06:22,839 --> 00:06:28,920 Speaker 1: to watch two guys put themselves through that and too. Yeah, 119 00:06:28,960 --> 00:06:36,640 Speaker 1: I mean absolutely, you know, maximize skill, maximize athleticism, maximize grit, 120 00:06:36,680 --> 00:06:40,599 Speaker 1: and then maximize like what it means to live through 121 00:06:40,640 --> 00:06:44,280 Speaker 1: a gut check time over and over and over. I mean, 122 00:06:44,440 --> 00:06:49,359 Speaker 1: what they sacrificed tonight on the altar of athletic glory 123 00:06:49,520 --> 00:06:53,479 Speaker 1: is special, folks. The honor was yours and the honor 124 00:06:53,600 --> 00:06:55,520 Speaker 1: was mine to be able to watch two guys do 125 00:06:55,640 --> 00:06:58,080 Speaker 1: something like that, And I really hope you appreciate that, 126 00:06:58,600 --> 00:07:00,560 Speaker 1: especially like when we're gonna talk about your wana and 127 00:07:01,080 --> 00:07:03,800 Speaker 1: what all of the accumulation of damage and time off 128 00:07:03,839 --> 00:07:05,719 Speaker 1: probably did you know? It was a brutal fight for 129 00:07:05,760 --> 00:07:07,479 Speaker 1: Glover too at forty two. Let me get to the 130 00:07:07,480 --> 00:07:11,560 Speaker 1: results here so we can get this done in a 131 00:07:11,560 --> 00:07:14,720 Speaker 1: formal way. I am like blown away by that main event. 132 00:07:14,920 --> 00:07:18,040 Speaker 1: I was. I was watching like like like that half 133 00:07:18,080 --> 00:07:21,880 Speaker 1: the time. I couldn't believe how good that was. Okay, 134 00:07:22,120 --> 00:07:27,160 Speaker 1: so the official results, can you believe this? Euryprahchka defeats 135 00:07:27,400 --> 00:07:30,520 Speaker 1: Glover to share a via rear naked choke at four 136 00:07:31,000 --> 00:07:34,800 Speaker 1: thirty two of the fifth round. There was twenty eight 137 00:07:34,920 --> 00:07:39,720 Speaker 1: seconds left in that fight, twenty eight seconds and Euryprahtchka 138 00:07:39,760 --> 00:07:41,840 Speaker 1: did what he did unbelievable, tapped him with a rear 139 00:07:41,920 --> 00:07:44,400 Speaker 1: naked choke with no hooks. And I think Raquel Pennington 140 00:07:44,440 --> 00:07:47,040 Speaker 1: got one of those recently as well, or maybe you 141 00:07:47,040 --> 00:07:50,040 Speaker 1: know relatively recently. They're surprising. You know, it's not a 142 00:07:50,040 --> 00:07:51,800 Speaker 1: bulldog choke, because a bulldog choke would kind of be 143 00:07:51,920 --> 00:07:55,600 Speaker 1: like this. That's the one that Carlos Newton hit on 144 00:07:55,640 --> 00:07:57,880 Speaker 1: Pat Militil to a real famous bulldog choke, but it's 145 00:07:57,880 --> 00:08:00,640 Speaker 1: a no hook, rear naked choke. And I don't know, 146 00:08:01,520 --> 00:08:04,160 Speaker 1: I don't know if Glover thought, you know, because Glover's 147 00:08:04,240 --> 00:08:05,760 Speaker 1: I mean, dude, one of the things that really stands 148 00:08:05,800 --> 00:08:08,560 Speaker 1: out about Glover his jiu jitsu is awesome, and it's 149 00:08:08,600 --> 00:08:13,400 Speaker 1: awesome for a very specific reason. His positioning is very 150 00:08:13,520 --> 00:08:17,680 Speaker 1: controlled his and the reason why it's controller for a 151 00:08:17,720 --> 00:08:19,600 Speaker 1: lot of things. He knows exactly all the places he 152 00:08:19,640 --> 00:08:22,000 Speaker 1: needs to hold and where to sag and where to 153 00:08:22,040 --> 00:08:24,160 Speaker 1: press and where his elbow needs to be all that 154 00:08:24,200 --> 00:08:26,720 Speaker 1: kind of stuff. Have you noticed his spacing is always 155 00:08:26,800 --> 00:08:30,280 Speaker 1: real not perfect, obviously, but his spacing is always just 156 00:08:30,360 --> 00:08:33,840 Speaker 1: real sharp right. He never leaves his opponent too much space. 157 00:08:34,280 --> 00:08:36,760 Speaker 1: He's always passing, but he doesn't like hurry the past. 158 00:08:36,840 --> 00:08:40,160 Speaker 1: But when he goes, he goes. There's like real intentionality 159 00:08:40,200 --> 00:08:42,720 Speaker 1: from it. And dude, when he moves to positions side 160 00:08:42,720 --> 00:08:45,880 Speaker 1: and particularly amount, dude, he takes mount like an a 161 00:08:47,320 --> 00:08:50,360 Speaker 1: you know, like a like a cowboy on his favorite horse, 162 00:08:50,400 --> 00:08:54,160 Speaker 1: he's out there taking mount on these guys. He takes 163 00:08:54,200 --> 00:08:57,320 Speaker 1: it and do when he takes good jiu jitsu positions, bro, 164 00:08:57,480 --> 00:09:00,599 Speaker 1: he delivers punishment. We're gonna talk about the scoring and 165 00:09:00,640 --> 00:09:03,120 Speaker 1: the comin event, because that was really a showcase of 166 00:09:03,120 --> 00:09:06,400 Speaker 1: how grappling is just not really scored that much in 167 00:09:06,520 --> 00:09:11,000 Speaker 1: the sort of modern interpretation of the rules. But Glover 168 00:09:11,040 --> 00:09:13,200 Speaker 1: doesn't really have to worry about that, does he, because 169 00:09:13,240 --> 00:09:16,679 Speaker 1: when he gets to positions, buddy, he's raining fucking you know, 170 00:09:17,040 --> 00:09:20,040 Speaker 1: fire on these guys. But the story of the fight 171 00:09:20,200 --> 00:09:21,600 Speaker 1: is I have to pull up these stats. I mean, 172 00:09:21,640 --> 00:09:24,360 Speaker 1: this is just bananas. I need to get my glasses 173 00:09:24,400 --> 00:09:28,840 Speaker 1: here too. Oh motherfuck? Did I really live my glasses? No? 174 00:09:28,920 --> 00:09:32,199 Speaker 1: I have a secondary pair. Eat shit, I got one here. 175 00:09:34,000 --> 00:09:35,640 Speaker 1: Y'all wouldn't even believe what I had to do to 176 00:09:35,679 --> 00:09:38,839 Speaker 1: get this feed up today. You just wouldn't even believe it. 177 00:09:39,960 --> 00:09:44,000 Speaker 1: And uh, okay, let's use this, shall we? All right? 178 00:09:44,040 --> 00:09:47,679 Speaker 1: These are dirty as fuck? Hang on, the story of 179 00:09:47,720 --> 00:09:50,400 Speaker 1: the fight is it was just relentless back and forth. 180 00:09:50,800 --> 00:09:53,160 Speaker 1: Glover early on was able to get takedowns. I think 181 00:09:53,200 --> 00:09:55,360 Speaker 1: that kind of faded over time for two reasons. One, 182 00:09:55,480 --> 00:09:58,840 Speaker 1: Yuri got a little bit better about on the single 183 00:09:58,920 --> 00:10:01,360 Speaker 1: leg turning away and then kicking out or bringing the 184 00:10:01,440 --> 00:10:03,640 Speaker 1: knee up and then kicking out backwards or whatever. But 185 00:10:03,800 --> 00:10:06,839 Speaker 1: you know, finding a way to once you if someone's 186 00:10:06,840 --> 00:10:08,640 Speaker 1: trying to go in a single and then hoist it. 187 00:10:08,920 --> 00:10:11,960 Speaker 1: Obviously by turning your body away, it creates an angle 188 00:10:12,000 --> 00:10:13,959 Speaker 1: for slipping out, and you could still get lifted, but 189 00:10:14,000 --> 00:10:16,760 Speaker 1: it's not as easy and so but it creates an 190 00:10:16,760 --> 00:10:19,679 Speaker 1: angle for easy escape. And so you saw him doing that. 191 00:10:19,760 --> 00:10:21,680 Speaker 1: And even then again you can still get caught if 192 00:10:21,679 --> 00:10:24,560 Speaker 1: they run down a secondary or third effort. But if 193 00:10:24,640 --> 00:10:28,120 Speaker 1: initially Glover was doing that and then absolutely battering Yerie 194 00:10:28,240 --> 00:10:30,440 Speaker 1: on the floor. But throughout the course of the fight, 195 00:10:30,440 --> 00:10:33,079 Speaker 1: here's what Jesus could not even any better. Throughout the 196 00:10:33,120 --> 00:10:34,800 Speaker 1: course of the fight, what we ended up seeing was 197 00:10:35,040 --> 00:10:38,440 Speaker 1: two things. One Glover on the feet, you heard him 198 00:10:38,440 --> 00:10:40,880 Speaker 1: talk about it, just now getting chewed up with body shots. 199 00:10:41,600 --> 00:10:45,160 Speaker 1: Yerie not having much success in open space. But when 200 00:10:45,160 --> 00:10:46,920 Speaker 1: he was able to get Glover against the fence, not 201 00:10:46,960 --> 00:10:50,200 Speaker 1: for takedowns per se, but just to keep the guy stationary. Dude, 202 00:10:50,200 --> 00:10:53,560 Speaker 1: he was bombing on him. Brilliant work up along the fence, 203 00:10:53,600 --> 00:10:55,480 Speaker 1: and he really got his best work done when he 204 00:10:55,559 --> 00:10:59,920 Speaker 1: was kind of staggering his timing on some of his punches, right, 205 00:11:00,040 --> 00:11:01,840 Speaker 1: so you know it was coming from odd angles, yes, 206 00:11:02,400 --> 00:11:04,199 Speaker 1: but the timing was really good, catching them on the 207 00:11:04,200 --> 00:11:05,920 Speaker 1: half beat a couple times. If you're familiar with my 208 00:11:05,960 --> 00:11:10,760 Speaker 1: work at all, there was just a lot and it 209 00:11:10,800 --> 00:11:13,320 Speaker 1: was constant momentum swings. Even when Glover would get them 210 00:11:13,320 --> 00:11:15,240 Speaker 1: mount a lot of times Yuria would escape or be 211 00:11:15,280 --> 00:11:17,199 Speaker 1: at the end of the round. There were times when 212 00:11:17,200 --> 00:11:18,760 Speaker 1: Glover was able to get the back and he was 213 00:11:18,800 --> 00:11:21,080 Speaker 1: able to threaten, but sometimes he got reversed, and then 214 00:11:21,120 --> 00:11:24,320 Speaker 1: he would get reversed. Glover was definitely the better grappler 215 00:11:24,360 --> 00:11:25,960 Speaker 1: of the two. It's funny that he got submitted, but 216 00:11:26,240 --> 00:11:28,760 Speaker 1: I think most would agree the better overall grappler. From 217 00:11:28,760 --> 00:11:32,920 Speaker 1: wrestling to control to passing to ground and pound. You 218 00:11:32,920 --> 00:11:34,560 Speaker 1: already had good ground of pound, but even in that 219 00:11:34,840 --> 00:11:36,760 Speaker 1: fourth round, it was like that shot cut rockmano of 220 00:11:36,800 --> 00:11:38,320 Speaker 1: ground of pound where they don't actually go to the 221 00:11:38,320 --> 00:11:41,280 Speaker 1: ground with you. They kind of let your feet not 222 00:11:41,360 --> 00:11:43,760 Speaker 1: sink into their hips, and then they just stand over 223 00:11:43,800 --> 00:11:45,880 Speaker 1: you and bomb on you. And that sounds like a 224 00:11:45,880 --> 00:11:47,720 Speaker 1: little weird because you think of ground and pound as like, oh, 225 00:11:47,720 --> 00:11:49,320 Speaker 1: you got to control the guy. But sometimes when they're 226 00:11:49,320 --> 00:11:52,240 Speaker 1: tired or for whatever reason, if they're worried about getting 227 00:11:52,280 --> 00:11:53,920 Speaker 1: up and getting cracked with something big, you can kind 228 00:11:53,960 --> 00:11:57,679 Speaker 1: of just stand over them and shotcout. Rockmanov is the 229 00:11:57,760 --> 00:11:59,400 Speaker 1: king of that. He'll drop someone and then stand over 230 00:11:59,440 --> 00:12:02,440 Speaker 1: and then pound them. Dude, Yuriy was bringing it to him. Dude, 231 00:12:02,440 --> 00:12:06,959 Speaker 1: this fight was all over the place, constant momentum, swings, 232 00:12:07,080 --> 00:12:12,040 Speaker 1: constant reversal of fortunes, reversal of position, and dude, here 233 00:12:12,120 --> 00:12:18,040 Speaker 1: was the crazy part. In the fifth round, Glover drills prahadchhka. 234 00:12:18,080 --> 00:12:21,240 Speaker 1: I mean he had him on skates and then he 235 00:12:21,360 --> 00:12:24,199 Speaker 1: jumped guillotine. He must have been tired. He must have 236 00:12:24,240 --> 00:12:26,360 Speaker 1: been tired or in pain or I mean, I mean, 237 00:12:26,400 --> 00:12:30,000 Speaker 1: I've literally done nothing but make this worse. I don't 238 00:12:30,000 --> 00:12:35,840 Speaker 1: know why that's possible, but it certainly certainly is jumps 239 00:12:35,840 --> 00:12:42,680 Speaker 1: guillotine and then and then you know, is on bottom. 240 00:12:43,000 --> 00:12:44,240 Speaker 1: I think was able to get back up. I have 241 00:12:44,320 --> 00:12:46,560 Speaker 1: to go back through what happened in my mind, but 242 00:12:47,600 --> 00:12:53,000 Speaker 1: they ended up having a bit of a moment against 243 00:12:53,040 --> 00:12:56,560 Speaker 1: the fence and they're on from turtle position. And Glover. 244 00:12:56,960 --> 00:12:58,839 Speaker 1: Glover was hitting slide bys on the ground. He was 245 00:12:58,880 --> 00:13:01,120 Speaker 1: getting out of all these and had lock escapes like 246 00:13:01,400 --> 00:13:03,840 Speaker 1: he did the famous Johnny Hendricks one where if they 247 00:13:03,880 --> 00:13:06,440 Speaker 1: go for a like, uh, if they're trying to lean 248 00:13:06,440 --> 00:13:07,599 Speaker 1: this way, you can go around the back of the 249 00:13:07,640 --> 00:13:10,000 Speaker 1: elbow by sliding it. By dude, he had I mean, 250 00:13:10,040 --> 00:13:11,560 Speaker 1: he was doing all kinds of stuff, but he got 251 00:13:11,600 --> 00:13:13,680 Speaker 1: a little bit loose or you know, I'm not gonna 252 00:13:13,679 --> 00:13:15,080 Speaker 1: say lazy, because the guy was putting on the most 253 00:13:15,120 --> 00:13:17,839 Speaker 1: amazing effort. But like you can agree that the fatigue 254 00:13:17,840 --> 00:13:19,720 Speaker 1: had set in at that point and all the damage 255 00:13:19,720 --> 00:13:21,920 Speaker 1: as well, and his defense was not as sturdy as 256 00:13:21,960 --> 00:13:25,400 Speaker 1: it needed to be, understandably, but it wasn't. And dude, 257 00:13:25,440 --> 00:13:28,120 Speaker 1: he got a no hooks, rear naked choking just like that. 258 00:13:28,160 --> 00:13:32,600 Speaker 1: He's your new champion. That is an unfreaking believable fight. 259 00:13:33,400 --> 00:13:35,880 Speaker 1: To see something like that. That was I knew it 260 00:13:35,920 --> 00:13:37,280 Speaker 1: was gonna be weird, and I knew it was gonna 261 00:13:37,280 --> 00:13:39,520 Speaker 1: be a good weird. That was even better than I 262 00:13:39,559 --> 00:13:41,280 Speaker 1: ever thought it would have been. I think most of you, 263 00:13:41,679 --> 00:13:44,040 Speaker 1: let's see how this looks. That's bouz good. Is gonna 264 00:13:44,040 --> 00:13:46,400 Speaker 1: get folks, it looks like I'm looking through a cloud 265 00:13:46,440 --> 00:13:51,360 Speaker 1: of smoke. That's bus Goody's gonna get all right, let 266 00:13:51,360 --> 00:13:55,200 Speaker 1: me pull up these numbers because that really will tell 267 00:13:55,400 --> 00:13:57,040 Speaker 1: us a lot of the story. I can't wait to 268 00:13:57,040 --> 00:13:59,360 Speaker 1: see how many times they got credited with reversals. That 269 00:13:59,480 --> 00:14:02,120 Speaker 1: is just the the numbers on This is gonna be bonkers. Yeah. 270 00:14:02,520 --> 00:14:07,200 Speaker 1: Pro Hotchka was credited with four reversals. To Share accredited 271 00:14:07,280 --> 00:14:12,920 Speaker 1: with two. To Share accredited with five of seventeen takedowns. 272 00:14:12,920 --> 00:14:14,440 Speaker 1: So it's take down percentage is not high, but they 273 00:14:14,480 --> 00:14:17,640 Speaker 1: were pretty impactful. He's credited with nine minutes and forty 274 00:14:17,640 --> 00:14:21,120 Speaker 1: seven seconds of control time. Pro Hotchka credited with four 275 00:14:21,200 --> 00:14:24,000 Speaker 1: minutes and twenty nine seconds of control time. Pro Hotchka 276 00:14:24,120 --> 00:14:28,640 Speaker 1: credited with a round of control time basically, and to 277 00:14:28,720 --> 00:14:32,880 Speaker 1: Share accredited with two rounds of control time basically. And 278 00:14:33,040 --> 00:14:36,680 Speaker 1: yet they both threw over two hundred significant strikes at 279 00:14:36,720 --> 00:14:38,560 Speaker 1: each other, two hundred and twelve attempted for to Share, 280 00:14:38,560 --> 00:14:41,720 Speaker 1: a two hundred and forty five for Prohadchka. What an 281 00:14:41,800 --> 00:14:45,520 Speaker 1: insane stat line. First round to shove again. So this 282 00:14:45,640 --> 00:14:48,960 Speaker 1: is gonna be quantitative, not qualitative. To Share a landing 283 00:14:49,000 --> 00:14:51,800 Speaker 1: twenty seven to fourteen in round one. A bit of 284 00:14:51,840 --> 00:14:54,520 Speaker 1: a different fortunes in round two. Zero takedowns for to 285 00:14:54,600 --> 00:14:57,960 Speaker 1: Share in round three. Sorry in round two and was 286 00:14:58,040 --> 00:15:00,600 Speaker 1: outstruck thirty six to twenty seven for Hotchgkey to Shia 287 00:15:01,280 --> 00:15:05,200 Speaker 1: Rown three very bad to Shia, Prohchika forty three to 288 00:15:05,640 --> 00:15:09,800 Speaker 1: twelve of landed significant strikes. Round four pretty even, twenty 289 00:15:09,840 --> 00:15:12,400 Speaker 1: four to twenty one to Share it to Prohadka and 290 00:15:12,520 --> 00:15:14,320 Speaker 1: then to Shira was beating his ass in terms of 291 00:15:14,360 --> 00:15:18,280 Speaker 1: the stats twenty one to six. In round five. He 292 00:15:18,400 --> 00:15:22,520 Speaker 1: got a takedown in round so are they only Oh, yes, 293 00:15:22,560 --> 00:15:25,040 Speaker 1: they gave him five So to Shia got two takedowns 294 00:15:25,080 --> 00:15:28,520 Speaker 1: in round one, one takedown in round three, one in four, 295 00:15:28,720 --> 00:15:30,600 Speaker 1: one in five and in the rounds where he got 296 00:15:30,800 --> 00:15:34,640 Speaker 1: just the one takedown, he had respectively one seventeen of 297 00:15:34,720 --> 00:15:37,080 Speaker 1: control time, two thirty three of control time in the 298 00:15:37,160 --> 00:15:40,280 Speaker 1: fourth and then one thirty three of control time in 299 00:15:40,360 --> 00:15:43,640 Speaker 1: the fifth. Sub attempts. They each are credited with one 300 00:15:43,800 --> 00:15:47,160 Speaker 1: sub attempt, one from to Shera in round four, which 301 00:15:47,160 --> 00:15:48,560 Speaker 1: would have been the I think the head and arm 302 00:15:48,600 --> 00:15:51,640 Speaker 1: triangle that he was trying to get didn't get wasn't 303 00:15:51,680 --> 00:15:54,960 Speaker 1: super far away, but it wasn't super close either, and 304 00:15:55,040 --> 00:15:57,880 Speaker 1: then Prahachka, I guess they're gonna credit him with the 305 00:15:58,200 --> 00:16:01,320 Speaker 1: actual sub attempt that scored sub the rear naked choke 306 00:16:01,960 --> 00:16:06,880 Speaker 1: in the end to that has bana that his bananas. Dude, 307 00:16:07,080 --> 00:16:10,040 Speaker 1: listen to this. You gotta be shitting me. This is 308 00:16:10,120 --> 00:16:14,360 Speaker 1: how you know. This fight was fucking ape shit. Both 309 00:16:14,440 --> 00:16:22,120 Speaker 1: of them identically identical nearly okay, almost identical score lines 310 00:16:22,240 --> 00:16:25,760 Speaker 1: in terms of targeting. So where were they throwing? Right? 311 00:16:26,760 --> 00:16:28,560 Speaker 1: Were they throwing at the body? Were they throwing at 312 00:16:28,600 --> 00:16:30,600 Speaker 1: the head. Were they attacking the legs? These are strikes 313 00:16:30,640 --> 00:16:32,400 Speaker 1: we're talking about here, right, So what was the other 314 00:16:32,440 --> 00:16:34,640 Speaker 1: person trying to land on? Were they leg kicking? Were 315 00:16:34,640 --> 00:16:37,000 Speaker 1: they body kicking? Were they head punching? What were they doing? 316 00:16:37,680 --> 00:16:42,120 Speaker 1: Glover to Shia eur Aprohochka eighty eight percent to the head, 317 00:16:43,680 --> 00:16:48,400 Speaker 1: to share a Emprohdka to the body ten percent. Ur 318 00:16:48,480 --> 00:16:51,240 Speaker 1: Aprohodchka is credited with one percent to the leg. I 319 00:16:51,280 --> 00:16:54,200 Speaker 1: don't know if the one for to share a is 320 00:16:54,640 --> 00:16:56,560 Speaker 1: like a little bit of a percentage wise on eighty eight, 321 00:16:56,600 --> 00:16:58,680 Speaker 1: a little bit of percentage wise on ten and a 322 00:16:58,760 --> 00:17:01,080 Speaker 1: little bit on the zero count for him on the leg, 323 00:17:01,360 --> 00:17:05,000 Speaker 1: but you get the idea. Eighty eighty eight, sorry, eighty eight, 324 00:17:05,119 --> 00:17:09,720 Speaker 1: eighty eight, ten, ten and basically one percent on the 325 00:17:09,800 --> 00:17:12,720 Speaker 1: leg each. They were throwing not exactly the same kinds 326 00:17:12,760 --> 00:17:15,280 Speaker 1: of things all the time, but they are trying to 327 00:17:15,400 --> 00:17:18,680 Speaker 1: attack each other, surprisingly in very similar ways in terms 328 00:17:18,680 --> 00:17:21,440 Speaker 1: of targeting and then landing at distance. This was a 329 00:17:21,480 --> 00:17:24,080 Speaker 1: bit of a big difference. Sixty three percent for Prohadchka, 330 00:17:24,520 --> 00:17:26,800 Speaker 1: forty percent for Glover. That makes sense, right, because he 331 00:17:26,840 --> 00:17:29,200 Speaker 1: wasn't trying to do as much at range for the 332 00:17:29,320 --> 00:17:32,520 Speaker 1: duration of that bout. And then fifty four percent targeting 333 00:17:32,600 --> 00:17:35,479 Speaker 1: on the ground versus just a thirty percent for pro Hochka. 334 00:17:35,560 --> 00:17:38,080 Speaker 1: That also makes sense. And again these are overall sort 335 00:17:38,080 --> 00:17:41,160 Speaker 1: of quantitative. You can make a different, different call about 336 00:17:41,160 --> 00:17:43,160 Speaker 1: the qualitative. Dude, I can barely remember all the shit 337 00:17:43,200 --> 00:17:45,000 Speaker 1: that happened in that fight. That's how crazy that was. 338 00:17:45,760 --> 00:17:48,560 Speaker 1: That was absolutely bonkers. The reversals happened. You had one 339 00:17:48,640 --> 00:17:51,800 Speaker 1: for Prohdchka in round one, You had one for to 340 00:17:51,920 --> 00:17:53,960 Speaker 1: Share in round three that might have been the slide 341 00:17:54,000 --> 00:17:57,199 Speaker 1: by on the front headlock. You had two for Prahdka 342 00:17:57,280 --> 00:18:00,680 Speaker 1: in round four, one for to Share in round four, 343 00:18:00,760 --> 00:18:03,800 Speaker 1: and then one for Prochka in round five. I don't 344 00:18:03,800 --> 00:18:06,000 Speaker 1: think I can't remember the last time I saw a 345 00:18:06,119 --> 00:18:10,240 Speaker 1: light heavyweight title fight that had six reversals in it. 346 00:18:10,880 --> 00:18:15,080 Speaker 1: Six positional reverses. That should tell you a lot. I 347 00:18:15,119 --> 00:18:17,280 Speaker 1: should tell you a lot. So as the fight war on, 348 00:18:17,359 --> 00:18:19,600 Speaker 1: we talked about it before. Early on you could see 349 00:18:19,640 --> 00:18:22,040 Speaker 1: he was trying to go for the single leg, and 350 00:18:22,119 --> 00:18:24,160 Speaker 1: he would run the pipe when he could, but Proadchiko 351 00:18:24,160 --> 00:18:25,399 Speaker 1: would kind of stuff it, so then he would do 352 00:18:25,440 --> 00:18:28,240 Speaker 1: what's called the tree top. Rich Crunkleton was famous for 353 00:18:28,320 --> 00:18:30,280 Speaker 1: the tree top. He did that in WC all the time. 354 00:18:30,520 --> 00:18:32,639 Speaker 1: And then he would kick out the post leg and 355 00:18:32,680 --> 00:18:34,320 Speaker 1: then he would get on top. And then from there 356 00:18:34,359 --> 00:18:37,000 Speaker 1: he was able to pass to side pretty continuously, or 357 00:18:37,000 --> 00:18:39,320 Speaker 1: at least a half guard, or press it up against 358 00:18:39,359 --> 00:18:41,200 Speaker 1: the fence, or even if he was staying in full guard. 359 00:18:41,240 --> 00:18:44,000 Speaker 1: He was pretty good. That's the other thing about to 360 00:18:44,080 --> 00:18:46,560 Speaker 1: share a Yes he passes to side, Yes he passes 361 00:18:46,600 --> 00:18:48,720 Speaker 1: to him ount, but he's actually very good about actually 362 00:18:48,760 --> 00:18:51,080 Speaker 1: doing damage just staying in guard. He can do that 363 00:18:51,160 --> 00:18:54,399 Speaker 1: as well. But as the fight wore on, it opened 364 00:18:54,480 --> 00:18:56,639 Speaker 1: up a little bit, and even though Proacuc was kind 365 00:18:56,640 --> 00:18:59,879 Speaker 1: of getting hit again and that in the second and 366 00:19:00,200 --> 00:19:02,840 Speaker 1: third round, that's when he did the vast majority of 367 00:19:02,920 --> 00:19:05,440 Speaker 1: his work. He was having uppercuts coming from the waist 368 00:19:05,600 --> 00:19:07,960 Speaker 1: going up again. He was very good about getting to 369 00:19:08,119 --> 00:19:11,680 Speaker 1: share a back along the fence line. I was actually amazed, 370 00:19:12,320 --> 00:19:15,840 Speaker 1: not at pro Hotchka's chin, right, because we kind of 371 00:19:15,920 --> 00:19:18,320 Speaker 1: knew the story on him. The story on him was 372 00:19:18,400 --> 00:19:21,160 Speaker 1: always going to be the same, which was he takes 373 00:19:21,240 --> 00:19:24,080 Speaker 1: a shitload of damage. I mean, what are his I'm 374 00:19:24,080 --> 00:19:25,840 Speaker 1: not gonna read a bunch of numbers again, but just 375 00:19:25,960 --> 00:19:29,439 Speaker 1: what is his strikes absorb per minute? Yeah? Six point eight, folks, 376 00:19:29,520 --> 00:19:32,000 Speaker 1: for a ranked fighter, six point eight strikes per minute 377 00:19:32,160 --> 00:19:36,399 Speaker 1: is a shitload. That's double or triple or even five times, 378 00:19:36,640 --> 00:19:39,640 Speaker 1: not quite five, but four times what I've seen from 379 00:19:39,720 --> 00:19:42,520 Speaker 1: some other ranked fighters. That's an absurd amount of damage 380 00:19:42,560 --> 00:19:44,840 Speaker 1: to take. So he's people call him like he's like 381 00:19:45,200 --> 00:19:49,159 Speaker 1: like two oh five Tony Ferguson. Yes, that's obviously the 382 00:19:49,160 --> 00:19:51,439 Speaker 1: closest comparison is a little Justin Gaetschee in him two. 383 00:19:51,560 --> 00:19:53,480 Speaker 1: Not the same kind of way, but in terms of 384 00:19:53,600 --> 00:20:00,160 Speaker 1: what kinds of conditions he's willing to tolerate, and uh fuck, 385 00:20:00,160 --> 00:20:02,000 Speaker 1: I forget what's going with that. But he takes just 386 00:20:02,040 --> 00:20:03,480 Speaker 1: an absurd amount of damage. Oh right, what I was 387 00:20:03,520 --> 00:20:07,680 Speaker 1: getting back to. So he takes damage, but he's so young, 388 00:20:08,560 --> 00:20:11,960 Speaker 1: he's so sturdy, and he seems naturally durable. Anyway, although 389 00:20:12,000 --> 00:20:14,040 Speaker 1: that cut was bad, the shouts to the cutman who 390 00:20:14,080 --> 00:20:16,399 Speaker 1: saved both of those guys from that one being stopped 391 00:20:16,560 --> 00:20:20,560 Speaker 1: by due to strikes from the cut. You kind of 392 00:20:20,640 --> 00:20:24,160 Speaker 1: knew he was gonna withstand, although again to Shara nearly 393 00:20:24,280 --> 00:20:25,920 Speaker 1: got him in that fifth round. I mean if to 394 00:20:26,000 --> 00:20:28,400 Speaker 1: Shera had a little bit more gas, And again, I'm 395 00:20:28,440 --> 00:20:30,320 Speaker 1: not judging him for it, and I hope you guys 396 00:20:30,359 --> 00:20:34,040 Speaker 1: aren't as well, because I really believe, you know, as 397 00:20:34,080 --> 00:20:36,000 Speaker 1: long as that fight was going, I know he tapped, 398 00:20:36,320 --> 00:20:38,200 Speaker 1: but I do believe that he gave everything he had. 399 00:20:38,359 --> 00:20:40,119 Speaker 1: I really believe that, and I thought that was an 400 00:20:40,160 --> 00:20:43,680 Speaker 1: acceptable checkmate. So you know, not that my opinion matters 401 00:20:43,720 --> 00:20:45,399 Speaker 1: in that sense, but I don't really have any issues 402 00:20:45,440 --> 00:20:47,800 Speaker 1: with the tapping, and I feel very confident in saying 403 00:20:48,200 --> 00:20:50,720 Speaker 1: I think he gave everything he had. It was to 404 00:20:50,920 --> 00:20:53,119 Speaker 1: Shera's chin that I couldn't believe, dude, if you had 405 00:20:53,160 --> 00:20:56,080 Speaker 1: told me that to Shara was gonna eat one hundred 406 00:20:56,119 --> 00:21:00,119 Speaker 1: and eleven excuse me, one hundred and twenty significt and 407 00:21:00,200 --> 00:21:02,200 Speaker 1: strikes from pro Hochka and what was going to actually 408 00:21:02,240 --> 00:21:04,040 Speaker 1: get him was a choke in the end, I'd be like, well, 409 00:21:04,080 --> 00:21:06,440 Speaker 1: I'd accept it because you just knew the pairing was 410 00:21:06,480 --> 00:21:09,800 Speaker 1: gonna be weird, but I'd be a little surprised, wouldn't you. 411 00:21:10,320 --> 00:21:12,919 Speaker 1: And that's exactly what happened, dude, mma, As long as 412 00:21:13,000 --> 00:21:16,880 Speaker 1: you watch it, it will never the instant you think 413 00:21:16,960 --> 00:21:22,960 Speaker 1: it's predictable, it becomes immediately unpredictable. That really surprised me 414 00:21:23,400 --> 00:21:25,680 Speaker 1: to share. I thought had a good job when he 415 00:21:25,800 --> 00:21:28,320 Speaker 1: wanted one again. I thought when he was able to 416 00:21:29,600 --> 00:21:32,480 Speaker 1: press the attack with you know, pro Hodchika's hands down 417 00:21:32,520 --> 00:21:34,160 Speaker 1: and when he was kind of there were times when 418 00:21:34,160 --> 00:21:35,560 Speaker 1: Procchka was trying to lead it, but there was times 419 00:21:35,560 --> 00:21:37,680 Speaker 1: when he was trying to counter not very effective on 420 00:21:37,760 --> 00:21:41,200 Speaker 1: the counter. That that's when he got pressed backwards. I thought, 421 00:21:41,240 --> 00:21:44,560 Speaker 1: to Shaa had some good punches, but dude, pro Hochka 422 00:21:44,640 --> 00:21:47,600 Speaker 1: is also pretty good, not just about eating punches, but 423 00:21:47,640 --> 00:21:50,879 Speaker 1: he kind of rolls with them. Sometimes too, and to 424 00:21:51,000 --> 00:21:53,000 Speaker 1: share his defense kind of blew me away as well, 425 00:21:53,119 --> 00:21:55,960 Speaker 1: like the fact that he has really retailored his game 426 00:21:56,800 --> 00:21:59,720 Speaker 1: towards jiu jitsu, towards wrestling and then doing it at 427 00:21:59,760 --> 00:22:02,040 Speaker 1: the appropriate time. Did you notice in the Bolhovic fight, 428 00:22:02,160 --> 00:22:04,520 Speaker 1: for example, he went for a takedown right at the 429 00:22:04,560 --> 00:22:06,800 Speaker 1: four minute mark. Sure enough, he did it here tonight. 430 00:22:06,880 --> 00:22:09,400 Speaker 1: He kind of knows that, Yes, striking is a part 431 00:22:09,440 --> 00:22:10,920 Speaker 1: of it. You can't be afraid of it. You have 432 00:22:11,040 --> 00:22:12,760 Speaker 1: to embrace it, and there's gonna be ways you can 433 00:22:12,800 --> 00:22:16,240 Speaker 1: win that department, but shifting the bulk of the work 434 00:22:16,760 --> 00:22:20,360 Speaker 1: to this place where you can control these other variables 435 00:22:20,400 --> 00:22:23,200 Speaker 1: in a much more important way. I mean, dude, Glover 436 00:22:23,280 --> 00:22:26,600 Speaker 1: to Shaea's investment in his jiu jitsu, I'm not going 437 00:22:26,680 --> 00:22:28,480 Speaker 1: to say saved his career, but I think it's what 438 00:22:28,640 --> 00:22:31,160 Speaker 1: ultimately lifted him to the heights that he was able 439 00:22:31,240 --> 00:22:33,639 Speaker 1: to reach. Folks keep saying al because John Jones left 440 00:22:33,680 --> 00:22:35,760 Speaker 1: the division, Well, yeah, I think if John was still 441 00:22:35,800 --> 00:22:38,240 Speaker 1: here and still active and you know whatever, I don't 442 00:22:38,240 --> 00:22:39,680 Speaker 1: know if he'd still be champion. Who's to say, but 443 00:22:39,880 --> 00:22:42,880 Speaker 1: obviously Glover probably would still be a few whists back. 444 00:22:43,359 --> 00:22:45,040 Speaker 1: But the other part of that story, and I think 445 00:22:45,080 --> 00:22:47,080 Speaker 1: you saw a little bit that here tonight. Is he's 446 00:22:47,200 --> 00:22:49,560 Speaker 1: working on rolling with punches. His defense is a little 447 00:22:49,560 --> 00:22:51,080 Speaker 1: bit better. I know, he got lit up a lot too, 448 00:22:51,080 --> 00:22:53,400 Speaker 1: because that fight was kind of open. But I thought 449 00:22:53,600 --> 00:22:57,240 Speaker 1: in general, like the other times guys landed on him 450 00:22:57,320 --> 00:22:59,399 Speaker 1: like this, like in the gust of sn fight, they 451 00:22:59,480 --> 00:23:02,160 Speaker 1: were able to overwhelm him. He couldn't actually get out 452 00:23:02,200 --> 00:23:04,000 Speaker 1: of it. He couldn't find a way to move on 453 00:23:04,160 --> 00:23:07,680 Speaker 1: from it. He couldn't find a way to to stop 454 00:23:07,720 --> 00:23:10,679 Speaker 1: the bleeding metaphorically speaking, and he would get put out 455 00:23:10,680 --> 00:23:13,320 Speaker 1: for it. Now, obviously, Anthony Johnson's a different story because 456 00:23:13,640 --> 00:23:17,280 Speaker 1: he can punch, you know, like he's swinging the hammer 457 00:23:17,320 --> 00:23:21,560 Speaker 1: of thor. But in general, you know, the guys who'll 458 00:23:21,560 --> 00:23:22,760 Speaker 1: be able to land on him a little bit have 459 00:23:22,840 --> 00:23:25,240 Speaker 1: really given him some problems. Obviously Cory Anderson was able 460 00:23:25,240 --> 00:23:28,080 Speaker 1: to out wrestle him too. But you know, there's been 461 00:23:28,080 --> 00:23:30,040 Speaker 1: a bit of a consistent thread for that. Here's a 462 00:23:30,119 --> 00:23:33,119 Speaker 1: case where a guy landed on him pretty consistently, but 463 00:23:33,520 --> 00:23:36,760 Speaker 1: it didn't actually I mean, it fed into the investment 464 00:23:36,920 --> 00:23:40,560 Speaker 1: that enabled to choke in the fifth, but by itself 465 00:23:41,320 --> 00:23:43,240 Speaker 1: is what I'm talking about before by itself, it would 466 00:23:43,240 --> 00:23:44,960 Speaker 1: previously have stopped him. It didn't stop him here, dude 467 00:23:45,000 --> 00:23:47,840 Speaker 1: Glover to share a really figured out what do I 468 00:23:47,960 --> 00:23:50,720 Speaker 1: need to do with my game such as it is? 469 00:23:50,840 --> 00:23:52,879 Speaker 1: He's forty two? Like what skills are you really going 470 00:23:52,960 --> 00:23:55,560 Speaker 1: to add? It's more about what can you take away? 471 00:23:56,240 --> 00:24:00,560 Speaker 1: How do you re think and a portion your offense 472 00:24:00,920 --> 00:24:03,440 Speaker 1: in a five minute interval, And you can see it's 473 00:24:03,480 --> 00:24:05,399 Speaker 1: not like I mean, he's been doing high crotch lifts 474 00:24:05,520 --> 00:24:08,440 Speaker 1: and single leg takedowns for a long time. But the 475 00:24:08,640 --> 00:24:10,960 Speaker 1: urgency with which he goes for them, the setups for them, 476 00:24:11,760 --> 00:24:15,399 Speaker 1: the way in which he conceives of thinking of winning fights. 477 00:24:15,840 --> 00:24:17,800 Speaker 1: I mean, that's what tells you about that him getting 478 00:24:18,320 --> 00:24:21,520 Speaker 1: rocking pro Hotchkin in the fifth. He is so and 479 00:24:21,560 --> 00:24:23,480 Speaker 1: maybe this cost him a little bit, but he's so 480 00:24:23,760 --> 00:24:30,399 Speaker 1: focused on making sure that his jiu jitsu and the 481 00:24:30,520 --> 00:24:32,560 Speaker 1: investment that he's put in for not just pays off, 482 00:24:32,640 --> 00:24:36,080 Speaker 1: but like how much he realizes that using those skills 483 00:24:36,200 --> 00:24:38,080 Speaker 1: is critical for him to have the success he needs 484 00:24:38,080 --> 00:24:40,240 Speaker 1: at this stage in his game and in his career. 485 00:24:41,000 --> 00:24:43,480 Speaker 1: It might have cost him a little bit because the 486 00:24:43,680 --> 00:24:47,399 Speaker 1: old Glover would never have jumped guillotine. He would have 487 00:24:47,440 --> 00:24:49,520 Speaker 1: just polished him off on the feet. But of course 488 00:24:49,960 --> 00:24:51,800 Speaker 1: you're always going to make a trade off in either way, 489 00:24:51,880 --> 00:24:55,399 Speaker 1: because the old glover would have tolerated much more damage 490 00:24:55,400 --> 00:24:58,080 Speaker 1: on the feet than even this one did. He would 491 00:24:58,119 --> 00:25:01,199 Speaker 1: have been much more embracing of it, much less cognizantive defense, 492 00:25:01,640 --> 00:25:05,440 Speaker 1: much less urgency around the takedown. And now this one, 493 00:25:06,040 --> 00:25:08,920 Speaker 1: you know, he got much further making the switch. But 494 00:25:09,000 --> 00:25:12,520 Speaker 1: I do wonder if in that sequence there this re 495 00:25:12,680 --> 00:25:16,639 Speaker 1: embracing of jiu jitsu may have you know, backfired a 496 00:25:16,720 --> 00:25:19,399 Speaker 1: little bit. It's obviously, you know, very easy for me 497 00:25:19,480 --> 00:25:22,560 Speaker 1: to say in my desk here, and I don't mean 498 00:25:22,600 --> 00:25:24,920 Speaker 1: it in a judgmental way. I mean, no performance is perfect. 499 00:25:24,920 --> 00:25:27,119 Speaker 1: If you get submitted, then something went wrong, right, you 500 00:25:27,200 --> 00:25:32,560 Speaker 1: have to kind of acknowledge that. But in general I 501 00:25:32,680 --> 00:25:35,160 Speaker 1: thought that this what really made this fight so great 502 00:25:35,359 --> 00:25:37,760 Speaker 1: was that it was just it was like a love 503 00:25:37,880 --> 00:25:41,400 Speaker 1: letter to what they what makes them both so great, 504 00:25:42,000 --> 00:25:45,760 Speaker 1: you know, perhaps vulnerable as well, but what really makes 505 00:25:45,840 --> 00:25:50,000 Speaker 1: them great. Prahatchka has an unorthodox open style, but by god, 506 00:25:50,080 --> 00:25:52,360 Speaker 1: if he is not a dynamic finisher, I really don't 507 00:25:52,400 --> 00:25:54,959 Speaker 1: know who is and even when he's not a dynamic finisher, 508 00:25:55,000 --> 00:25:57,560 Speaker 1: because he has an open style, there are defensive weaknesses 509 00:25:57,640 --> 00:26:00,639 Speaker 1: there and he gets he gets lit up a fair degree, 510 00:26:00,800 --> 00:26:04,040 Speaker 1: but he finds ways to tolerate it. He finds ways 511 00:26:04,080 --> 00:26:06,440 Speaker 1: to work through it, to keep that kind of mental 512 00:26:06,520 --> 00:26:09,280 Speaker 1: focus through all he was down. You heard John Anick say, 513 00:26:09,320 --> 00:26:12,080 Speaker 1: I think all three judges had it thirty nine, thirty 514 00:26:12,600 --> 00:26:17,720 Speaker 1: six something like that heading into the fifth and for 515 00:26:17,840 --> 00:26:19,320 Speaker 1: sure to Share was going to win that round. I 516 00:26:19,359 --> 00:26:22,359 Speaker 1: mean he had again, he had a Yuriet prodchgell on skates. 517 00:26:22,359 --> 00:26:24,359 Speaker 1: I read the number to you one more time, twenty 518 00:26:24,480 --> 00:26:27,920 Speaker 1: one strikes to six plus Glover had a take down 519 00:26:27,960 --> 00:26:29,720 Speaker 1: plus a minute and a half of control time. I mean, 520 00:26:29,760 --> 00:26:31,600 Speaker 1: he was gonna win that one. He was gonna win 521 00:26:31,680 --> 00:26:38,200 Speaker 1: that one. But what really made this fight so great 522 00:26:38,480 --> 00:26:41,920 Speaker 1: was you got to see Prahadka not at his worst, 523 00:26:42,119 --> 00:26:45,480 Speaker 1: but at his most tested, and he answered it, and 524 00:26:45,560 --> 00:26:49,359 Speaker 1: he answered it. I do have to say I don't 525 00:26:49,480 --> 00:26:53,160 Speaker 1: think his style is built for longevity. I think that's 526 00:26:53,200 --> 00:26:56,800 Speaker 1: pretty fair. At some point the durability will not be 527 00:26:57,040 --> 00:26:59,680 Speaker 1: what it is now, and if there aren't enough subsequent 528 00:26:59,800 --> 00:27:02,720 Speaker 1: change between now and then, it's gonna be a problem 529 00:27:02,760 --> 00:27:05,720 Speaker 1: for him. But on this night, and with his will 530 00:27:05,960 --> 00:27:09,560 Speaker 1: and determination and plenty of strange and unusual skill, but 531 00:27:09,680 --> 00:27:12,200 Speaker 1: skill just the same, he was able to make it 532 00:27:12,240 --> 00:27:14,560 Speaker 1: work and for Glover to share a I won't say 533 00:27:14,600 --> 00:27:16,879 Speaker 1: an ageless wonder because that's not true. It's not like 534 00:27:16,920 --> 00:27:18,320 Speaker 1: you look at him and you think, Wow, that guy 535 00:27:18,440 --> 00:27:20,840 Speaker 1: must be fucking thirty. You don't. He definitely looks like 536 00:27:20,880 --> 00:27:25,960 Speaker 1: an older dude, but he is. He is. I mean, 537 00:27:26,040 --> 00:27:28,399 Speaker 1: he is what it means to be like what like 538 00:27:28,480 --> 00:27:31,240 Speaker 1: when you when someone says veteran smarts, what does that mean? 539 00:27:31,480 --> 00:27:34,520 Speaker 1: It means him, That's what it means. It means I've 540 00:27:34,560 --> 00:27:38,120 Speaker 1: got a trade off happening. I don't have my exact 541 00:27:38,240 --> 00:27:40,720 Speaker 1: peak athletic abilities, and obviously they're pretty good, but they're 542 00:27:40,720 --> 00:27:43,640 Speaker 1: not peak, right, they probably haven't been peak for some time. 543 00:27:44,240 --> 00:27:45,720 Speaker 1: But the trade off is that I got a lot 544 00:27:45,840 --> 00:27:50,720 Speaker 1: of wisdom. And more importantly, he does have that youthful 545 00:27:52,440 --> 00:27:55,080 Speaker 1: not like vinegar and piss attitude, but he still has 546 00:27:56,160 --> 00:28:00,159 Speaker 1: Age has not corrupted his desire right, Age has not 547 00:28:01,000 --> 00:28:04,600 Speaker 1: rusted over you know, the parts of his game where 548 00:28:04,720 --> 00:28:07,080 Speaker 1: he still wants to do this and wants to win 549 00:28:07,200 --> 00:28:09,720 Speaker 1: so that part is still quite youthful. And then yes, 550 00:28:09,760 --> 00:28:11,560 Speaker 1: there's a bit of a trade off athletically, but there's 551 00:28:11,600 --> 00:28:13,480 Speaker 1: all that skill building that's been behind it. And then 552 00:28:13,560 --> 00:28:16,600 Speaker 1: that veteran savvy dude, he has really embraced it. He's 553 00:28:16,720 --> 00:28:19,399 Speaker 1: leaned into it, and the results speak for himself. I 554 00:28:19,440 --> 00:28:22,960 Speaker 1: don't know if they're gonna do a rematch, because that 555 00:28:23,200 --> 00:28:26,919 Speaker 1: was absolutely fucking insane, and I think both guys need 556 00:28:27,040 --> 00:28:28,920 Speaker 1: some time off after that. They might be visiting the 557 00:28:28,960 --> 00:28:31,080 Speaker 1: hospital later tonight. I've not seen on Twitter whether or 558 00:28:31,080 --> 00:28:33,320 Speaker 1: not that's a thing. I guess we need to check 559 00:28:36,040 --> 00:28:39,600 Speaker 1: Jesus christ Man, let's see if there's anything like that. 560 00:28:42,320 --> 00:28:45,720 Speaker 1: I don't think. Okay, your Prahatschka's submission of Glover to 561 00:28:45,760 --> 00:28:48,680 Speaker 1: Share at four thirty two round five is the second 562 00:28:48,760 --> 00:28:53,160 Speaker 1: latest finish in UFC Championship history. Johnson over Horogucci at 563 00:28:53,200 --> 00:28:55,320 Speaker 1: four fifty nine of round five is the only one 564 00:28:55,960 --> 00:28:57,920 Speaker 1: later than that, and it's not gonna get much later 565 00:28:58,000 --> 00:29:08,520 Speaker 1: than that anyway. Crazy. That is crazy. I can't believe 566 00:29:09,400 --> 00:29:11,920 Speaker 1: Glover to share. I got rear naked choked by Uriprahtchka 567 00:29:12,000 --> 00:29:14,600 Speaker 1: and after he was getting pieced up in the fifth round, 568 00:29:15,520 --> 00:29:17,960 Speaker 1: and let's see. Okay, so he yay. He tries to 569 00:29:18,000 --> 00:29:20,640 Speaker 1: go for a takedown. Someone's got it here, gets the takedown, 570 00:29:21,000 --> 00:29:23,640 Speaker 1: falls through it, tries to walk around the other side. 571 00:29:24,360 --> 00:29:27,360 Speaker 1: Let me fast forward the clip here. Oop, don't want 572 00:29:27,400 --> 00:29:33,560 Speaker 1: to get my video flagged. Moves to mount, pounds on 573 00:29:33,720 --> 00:29:38,520 Speaker 1: him from mount, still pounding on him from mount. Let's see, oh, 574 00:29:38,800 --> 00:29:43,880 Speaker 1: Yuri pushes off the fence, reverses Glover, rolls to turtle position. 575 00:29:44,280 --> 00:29:46,520 Speaker 1: He gets banged on a little bit here, rolls to 576 00:29:46,600 --> 00:29:49,680 Speaker 1: his back, rolls again to his base, and then he 577 00:29:49,720 --> 00:29:52,640 Speaker 1: got oops Jesus Christ, and then he gets and then 578 00:29:52,680 --> 00:29:55,920 Speaker 1: he gets choked. That's what that fight was. That's exactly 579 00:29:55,960 --> 00:29:58,560 Speaker 1: what that fight was. One guy on top dominating another 580 00:29:58,600 --> 00:30:02,440 Speaker 1: one doing something utterly I probable, reversing his fortunes and 581 00:30:02,520 --> 00:30:04,400 Speaker 1: then doing something pretty similar to the guy who just 582 00:30:04,440 --> 00:30:07,680 Speaker 1: did that to him. Rints and repeat for twenty four 583 00:30:07,760 --> 00:30:13,479 Speaker 1: minutes and thirty two seconds. That's what that was. Crazy crazy, 584 00:30:13,800 --> 00:30:16,560 Speaker 1: But I I just have nothing but respect for both 585 00:30:16,600 --> 00:30:19,760 Speaker 1: of them. I have nothing but gratitude for the opportunity 586 00:30:19,800 --> 00:30:22,520 Speaker 1: to watch something like that in real time. I have. 587 00:30:24,360 --> 00:30:26,840 Speaker 1: I really really hope people remember this one as you know, 588 00:30:27,680 --> 00:30:29,400 Speaker 1: a lot of times, a lot of times people like 589 00:30:29,520 --> 00:30:32,040 Speaker 1: the craziness more than like what the significance of the 590 00:30:32,120 --> 00:30:34,840 Speaker 1: craziness kind of tells you. And for a forty two 591 00:30:34,920 --> 00:30:37,200 Speaker 1: year old guy and then a weird unorthodox guy in 592 00:30:37,240 --> 00:30:39,000 Speaker 1: his late twenties, when is he twenty seven, twenty eight whatever, 593 00:30:39,000 --> 00:30:41,280 Speaker 1: maybe he's in twenty nine something like that for Prohachka. 594 00:30:43,000 --> 00:30:45,120 Speaker 1: Let me let me verify that actually before I just 595 00:30:45,120 --> 00:30:48,360 Speaker 1: say that out loud, your Prohochka is twenty nine. Yes, 596 00:30:48,440 --> 00:30:52,800 Speaker 1: that's right. For them to be able to do what 597 00:30:52,880 --> 00:30:56,520 Speaker 1: they did in a night like this is extremely rare, 598 00:30:56,880 --> 00:31:01,000 Speaker 1: extremely rare and extremely special. I've seen high outputs, you know, 599 00:31:01,200 --> 00:31:04,160 Speaker 1: in terms of overall volume, I've seen more takedowns. I've 600 00:31:04,200 --> 00:31:06,400 Speaker 1: seen more sub attempts. I don't know if I've seen 601 00:31:06,440 --> 00:31:08,760 Speaker 1: that many reversals within it between two guys in a fight. 602 00:31:09,240 --> 00:31:13,960 Speaker 1: I'm sure there exists, but for a title with that 603 00:31:14,160 --> 00:31:20,120 Speaker 1: much damage, that much parody, but in totally different ways. 604 00:31:21,920 --> 00:31:29,120 Speaker 1: But also for Prahadka to Prachka is so interesting, right 605 00:31:29,240 --> 00:31:34,880 Speaker 1: because he gets pushed to, if not the brink of defeat, 606 00:31:35,280 --> 00:31:38,720 Speaker 1: the next step to that he gets As I mentioned, 607 00:31:38,760 --> 00:31:40,880 Speaker 1: he gets hit a lot. He was rocked real badly, 608 00:31:41,000 --> 00:31:42,680 Speaker 1: and I think in both the Uzdamir and certainly the 609 00:31:42,720 --> 00:31:48,000 Speaker 1: Ras fight he got rocked here really badly. But he 610 00:31:48,120 --> 00:31:49,760 Speaker 1: has just found a way to not only win all 611 00:31:49,800 --> 00:31:51,720 Speaker 1: three of his UFC fights, but to capture a title 612 00:31:51,840 --> 00:31:56,520 Speaker 1: and to finish everybody. You know, it's it's it is. 613 00:31:56,760 --> 00:32:00,680 Speaker 1: It's a it's not a frictionless style. It comes a cost, right, 614 00:32:00,920 --> 00:32:03,520 Speaker 1: It's not the smoothest thing you've ever seen. It has 615 00:32:03,560 --> 00:32:06,440 Speaker 1: a lot of friction, but by God, does he find 616 00:32:06,480 --> 00:32:09,600 Speaker 1: a way to get to the other end of that thing. Unbelievable, 617 00:32:09,920 --> 00:32:13,560 Speaker 1: unbelievable performance. All Right, I'm not going to keep heaping 618 00:32:13,600 --> 00:32:15,200 Speaker 1: praise on it. Let's move to another fight on the card. 619 00:32:15,200 --> 00:32:16,520 Speaker 1: If you guys have a question for it again, hit 620 00:32:16,600 --> 00:32:18,360 Speaker 1: me up on Twitter. I will get to it there. 621 00:32:18,440 --> 00:32:22,600 Speaker 1: Let's talk about the controversy in the comain Valentina Chevchenko 622 00:32:22,840 --> 00:32:27,600 Speaker 1: remains champion, defeats Tyler Santos. Here are the scores. Forty 623 00:32:27,640 --> 00:32:32,160 Speaker 1: eight forty seven for Chevchenko, forty eight forty seven for Santos, 624 00:32:32,880 --> 00:32:38,480 Speaker 1: forty nine forty six for Chevchenko. Okay, let's talk about 625 00:32:38,480 --> 00:32:40,400 Speaker 1: the scoring here real quickly. I know a lot of 626 00:32:40,400 --> 00:32:42,720 Speaker 1: folks think forty nine forty six is crazy. I don't 627 00:32:42,800 --> 00:32:44,240 Speaker 1: know how crazy I think it is. Now, let me 628 00:32:44,320 --> 00:32:46,840 Speaker 1: put my cards on the table here. I wasn't really 629 00:32:46,960 --> 00:32:48,720 Speaker 1: watching it like with I'm a judging eye, or like 630 00:32:48,760 --> 00:32:50,920 Speaker 1: I'm really trying to pay attention exactly how to score it. 631 00:32:50,960 --> 00:32:52,800 Speaker 1: I'm kind of watching it to see what techniques or 632 00:32:52,800 --> 00:32:55,160 Speaker 1: they're employing, and to see what's working, what's not, what 633 00:32:55,240 --> 00:32:58,160 Speaker 1: adjustments they're making, that sort of a thing. So I'm 634 00:32:58,200 --> 00:33:01,040 Speaker 1: not really watching it that closely. It was over, I 635 00:33:01,200 --> 00:33:04,240 Speaker 1: was like, I think the judges are gonna probably give 636 00:33:04,280 --> 00:33:06,960 Speaker 1: it to Valentina as like a guess about what they're 637 00:33:07,040 --> 00:33:09,280 Speaker 1: going to do, which I was right. I kind of 638 00:33:09,320 --> 00:33:11,840 Speaker 1: had a gut feeling that Santos had done it, but 639 00:33:12,080 --> 00:33:14,320 Speaker 1: I was not sure because I wasn't really watching it 640 00:33:14,480 --> 00:33:16,440 Speaker 1: that kind of way. And if you're like, oh, I 641 00:33:16,520 --> 00:33:17,840 Speaker 1: could just watch it and I can tweet and I 642 00:33:17,880 --> 00:33:19,840 Speaker 1: can hang out with my friends and still score, no 643 00:33:20,000 --> 00:33:22,200 Speaker 1: you can't. No, you can't. You cannot actually do that. 644 00:33:22,320 --> 00:33:24,440 Speaker 1: That's not really judging correctly. I bring that all up 645 00:33:24,480 --> 00:33:26,959 Speaker 1: to say, how does one come to a forty nine 646 00:33:27,080 --> 00:33:33,600 Speaker 1: forty six scorecard by the judging criteria. I actually understand it. 647 00:33:34,480 --> 00:33:36,920 Speaker 1: What you have to kind of realize is they have 648 00:33:37,280 --> 00:33:45,240 Speaker 1: made a lot of grappling goreless scoreless. What do I 649 00:33:45,320 --> 00:33:48,560 Speaker 1: mean by that? They don't score defense either, So folks 650 00:33:48,560 --> 00:33:50,200 Speaker 1: don't realize this, Like if I block a punch and 651 00:33:50,280 --> 00:33:52,200 Speaker 1: I roll in stuff a takedown, they couldn't do shit 652 00:33:52,320 --> 00:33:54,240 Speaker 1: to me, right, they couldn't do shit to you, But 653 00:33:54,400 --> 00:33:56,920 Speaker 1: you don't get points for the defense. Defense is in 654 00:33:57,040 --> 00:33:59,760 Speaker 1: the rules considered its own reward. What is the reward 655 00:33:59,800 --> 00:34:03,120 Speaker 1: for stopping a takedown? You stop the takedown, that's the reward. 656 00:34:03,480 --> 00:34:05,120 Speaker 1: But you're not gonna get ape. You're not gonna get 657 00:34:05,680 --> 00:34:08,160 Speaker 1: you know, they're not gonna consider that in terms of 658 00:34:08,320 --> 00:34:10,440 Speaker 1: the things that you need to win around that just 659 00:34:11,320 --> 00:34:15,560 Speaker 1: there's just no debt you accrue with that. Right, A 660 00:34:15,680 --> 00:34:19,680 Speaker 1: lot of grappling has become scoreless in that way, where 661 00:34:19,960 --> 00:34:22,360 Speaker 1: you can get a takedown, which is difficult to do, 662 00:34:23,200 --> 00:34:25,759 Speaker 1: You can pass, which is difficult to do. You can 663 00:34:25,840 --> 00:34:28,480 Speaker 1: get to the back, which is extremely difficult to do. 664 00:34:29,200 --> 00:34:32,719 Speaker 1: And if the other person does, you know, we know 665 00:34:32,760 --> 00:34:35,440 Speaker 1: with the rules, like they can, if the judge can 666 00:34:35,600 --> 00:34:40,080 Speaker 1: reasonably assess that the one who got positionally dominated did 667 00:34:40,239 --> 00:34:42,719 Speaker 1: more damage in some of these other contexts, either on 668 00:34:42,800 --> 00:34:45,200 Speaker 1: the ground or standing, they're gonna get the round. Now, 669 00:34:45,200 --> 00:34:47,480 Speaker 1: I'm not even necessarily arguing with that, but I am 670 00:34:47,560 --> 00:34:52,880 Speaker 1: gonna say, as a general blanket statement, I don't And 671 00:34:52,960 --> 00:34:57,719 Speaker 1: this is my big concern. I'm not telling you that. 672 00:34:58,640 --> 00:35:01,080 Speaker 1: Here's what I'm gonna say, based on the way that 673 00:35:01,440 --> 00:35:06,640 Speaker 1: judging is done, where effective striking and damage play a 674 00:35:06,840 --> 00:35:10,400 Speaker 1: key role. You know, they say that effective striking is 675 00:35:10,520 --> 00:35:13,640 Speaker 1: tantamount to effective grappling, but what they basically mean is 676 00:35:14,120 --> 00:35:16,719 Speaker 1: the only grappling that matters to them are the kind 677 00:35:16,760 --> 00:35:20,840 Speaker 1: where you can score meaningful or even any kind of 678 00:35:20,960 --> 00:35:23,960 Speaker 1: damage from or either score a submission or threaten with 679 00:35:24,040 --> 00:35:26,240 Speaker 1: one in some kind of you know, real way someone's 680 00:35:26,280 --> 00:35:29,040 Speaker 1: head turns purple. They have to you know, the arm 681 00:35:29,160 --> 00:35:30,920 Speaker 1: is hyper extended. They have to get out, Like you 682 00:35:31,000 --> 00:35:33,240 Speaker 1: didn't get the submission, but that was count as effective. 683 00:35:33,480 --> 00:35:36,400 Speaker 1: Like the only part of grappling that they count is 684 00:35:36,520 --> 00:35:41,640 Speaker 1: actually the reward that comes from dominant positional control after 685 00:35:41,760 --> 00:35:45,000 Speaker 1: you've done all the hard part already. The hard part 686 00:35:45,200 --> 00:35:49,359 Speaker 1: is not raining punches for mount right. The hard part 687 00:35:49,600 --> 00:35:52,279 Speaker 1: is not like the arm. Well, if you're sitting from 688 00:35:52,360 --> 00:35:54,080 Speaker 1: mount for an arm bar, but in general, like once 689 00:35:54,120 --> 00:35:56,120 Speaker 1: you've got the arm bar locked on, like finishing it, 690 00:35:56,600 --> 00:35:58,640 Speaker 1: it's not the hard part. The hard part is getting 691 00:35:58,719 --> 00:36:01,359 Speaker 1: to a place where you can even apply that. That's 692 00:36:01,400 --> 00:36:03,520 Speaker 1: not entirely true in jiu jitsu positions, but that's gonna 693 00:36:03,520 --> 00:36:05,360 Speaker 1: be true a lot, especially if you're trying to attack 694 00:36:05,400 --> 00:36:07,239 Speaker 1: from the back. You're gonna have to find a way 695 00:36:07,280 --> 00:36:08,719 Speaker 1: to get to the back. You're gonna have to hand fight, 696 00:36:08,760 --> 00:36:10,279 Speaker 1: You're gonna have to you know, whatever you're doing from 697 00:36:10,280 --> 00:36:13,760 Speaker 1: the back there. The easy part is the actual final 698 00:36:13,840 --> 00:36:16,160 Speaker 1: application of the submission. The hard part is everything that 699 00:36:16,239 --> 00:36:20,080 Speaker 1: comes before that. Very much of the hard part no 700 00:36:20,239 --> 00:36:24,520 Speaker 1: longer seems to matter, right. That is what has happened 701 00:36:24,560 --> 00:36:27,359 Speaker 1: to the rules, and I would need to think about 702 00:36:27,400 --> 00:36:30,240 Speaker 1: it a little bit more in detail about the specific 703 00:36:30,400 --> 00:36:34,560 Speaker 1: nature of my concerns. I understand in theory why they've 704 00:36:34,680 --> 00:36:36,439 Speaker 1: judged it the way they have, or why they've written 705 00:36:36,480 --> 00:36:37,880 Speaker 1: the rules. I should say, the way that they have 706 00:36:38,080 --> 00:36:40,759 Speaker 1: where they put this heavy emphasis on the things that 707 00:36:40,880 --> 00:36:46,040 Speaker 1: produce finishes, but I think that it overly penalizes the 708 00:36:46,200 --> 00:36:49,799 Speaker 1: hard work of grappling to the point where it's they've 709 00:36:49,920 --> 00:36:54,000 Speaker 1: created a disincentive to even use it, and I wonder 710 00:36:54,800 --> 00:36:56,560 Speaker 1: to what extent that will have an effect on what 711 00:36:56,840 --> 00:36:59,160 Speaker 1: kinds of fights we see, with what positions, with what 712 00:37:03,360 --> 00:37:06,880 Speaker 1: how much of a role while grappling play. We've been 713 00:37:06,920 --> 00:37:09,359 Speaker 1: over this before. It is alarming to me how many 714 00:37:09,400 --> 00:37:13,400 Speaker 1: of the sports luminaries, top fighters and coaches appear to 715 00:37:13,480 --> 00:37:16,120 Speaker 1: believe that they know how fights are scored, and they 716 00:37:16,320 --> 00:37:17,840 Speaker 1: do not know how fights are scored. And now, of 717 00:37:17,880 --> 00:37:20,040 Speaker 1: course that's not universally true. There are a lot of 718 00:37:20,080 --> 00:37:23,040 Speaker 1: them that do, but there are many, many, like a 719 00:37:23,440 --> 00:37:26,720 Speaker 1: very alarming proportion of them, where every time they speak 720 00:37:26,760 --> 00:37:30,760 Speaker 1: about it, you can tell they've not really kept themselves 721 00:37:30,800 --> 00:37:33,880 Speaker 1: abreast of how the changes have been instituted and what 722 00:37:34,040 --> 00:37:35,920 Speaker 1: judges are looking for. And again, you can like those 723 00:37:36,000 --> 00:37:38,080 Speaker 1: things or you can hate those things, but if those 724 00:37:38,160 --> 00:37:41,759 Speaker 1: things decide your fortunes, being in touch with what they 725 00:37:41,800 --> 00:37:44,440 Speaker 1: are should very much inform your judgment and what kind 726 00:37:44,480 --> 00:37:48,000 Speaker 1: of strategies when there's enough catch up that's happening where 727 00:37:48,080 --> 00:37:50,799 Speaker 1: folks are finally dialed into what judges want, and then 728 00:37:50,840 --> 00:37:52,960 Speaker 1: you're going to begin to see some people taylor game 729 00:37:53,040 --> 00:37:55,200 Speaker 1: plans around that. What is that going to do to 730 00:37:55,320 --> 00:37:58,400 Speaker 1: grappling in MMA, because you have to understand, like in 731 00:37:58,840 --> 00:38:03,600 Speaker 1: jiu jitsu, you get points right for takedowns, for passes, 732 00:38:03,760 --> 00:38:07,160 Speaker 1: for sweeps, for reversals, for you might get advantages for 733 00:38:07,280 --> 00:38:11,320 Speaker 1: close submissions. Right, the hard parts other than just the 734 00:38:11,440 --> 00:38:14,920 Speaker 1: sub itself, they're accounted and they're counted because they're extremely 735 00:38:14,920 --> 00:38:18,239 Speaker 1: difficult to get and it proves that if you try 736 00:38:18,320 --> 00:38:20,040 Speaker 1: to take me down and I resist it and then 737 00:38:20,080 --> 00:38:22,239 Speaker 1: I take you down, I was actually much better in 738 00:38:22,320 --> 00:38:24,080 Speaker 1: those departments. Then you might be saying, well, what does 739 00:38:24,120 --> 00:38:26,840 Speaker 1: that mean to you? Know? MMA? What's the end result? 740 00:38:26,920 --> 00:38:28,640 Speaker 1: Like you got me down, you didn't do anything with it. 741 00:38:30,480 --> 00:38:32,520 Speaker 1: I think that the bigger issue for me is not 742 00:38:33,360 --> 00:38:36,120 Speaker 1: it's again, I'm gonna say it one more time. I 743 00:38:36,280 --> 00:38:41,000 Speaker 1: really understand prioritizing damage, and I understand prioritizing things that 744 00:38:41,120 --> 00:38:43,480 Speaker 1: bring you closer to finishes. I very much do. I 745 00:38:43,520 --> 00:38:46,279 Speaker 1: think that's I think that's right, but I think not 746 00:38:47,400 --> 00:38:50,520 Speaker 1: like almost just making getting the back be like, well, 747 00:38:50,520 --> 00:38:51,800 Speaker 1: you didn't really do anything with the back, so we 748 00:38:51,840 --> 00:38:54,279 Speaker 1: can't count that, dude. Get into the back is fucking hard. 749 00:38:54,960 --> 00:38:59,080 Speaker 1: It's hard get Taking Valentina's back is extremely difficult to do, 750 00:38:59,160 --> 00:39:02,000 Speaker 1: and yeah, body trying is a little stall ish in 751 00:39:02,120 --> 00:39:07,160 Speaker 1: my judgment, but you know these are you don't see 752 00:39:07,200 --> 00:39:10,200 Speaker 1: people do these kinds of things to her by virtue 753 00:39:10,280 --> 00:39:12,600 Speaker 1: of how difficult it is. I don't recall I've ever 754 00:39:12,640 --> 00:39:15,759 Speaker 1: seen someone take her back this many times and hold 755 00:39:15,840 --> 00:39:18,200 Speaker 1: it for this duration of time. I mean, I think 756 00:39:18,239 --> 00:39:21,000 Speaker 1: Jennifer Maya had some success, but not like to this extent. 757 00:39:21,080 --> 00:39:22,600 Speaker 1: I don't remember that. I don't have to go back 758 00:39:22,640 --> 00:39:24,200 Speaker 1: and double check, but certainly it doesn't come to mind 759 00:39:24,280 --> 00:39:30,200 Speaker 1: right away and do that's extremely difficult to do. And yes, 760 00:39:30,280 --> 00:39:31,880 Speaker 1: you could say, well, the benefit should be once you're 761 00:39:31,920 --> 00:39:33,800 Speaker 1: from the back, you have open season, but it doesn't 762 00:39:33,840 --> 00:39:36,520 Speaker 1: work that way because maintaining the back, even with a 763 00:39:36,680 --> 00:39:40,640 Speaker 1: body triangle, it's difficult to do. Yes, it does create 764 00:39:40,719 --> 00:39:43,000 Speaker 1: a symmetry where it no longer are two people facing 765 00:39:43,040 --> 00:39:45,160 Speaker 1: each other, now one is facing away, and so you 766 00:39:45,280 --> 00:39:48,000 Speaker 1: have that asymmetry there, which creates a unique set of advantages. 767 00:39:48,280 --> 00:39:52,279 Speaker 1: But in mma, if a person just wants to play 768 00:39:52,400 --> 00:39:55,560 Speaker 1: prevent and defense and nullify, they can do that. And 769 00:39:55,640 --> 00:39:57,520 Speaker 1: that's a lot of times what happens in these grappling 770 00:39:57,600 --> 00:40:01,440 Speaker 1: context because it's like a only tournament where it doesn't 771 00:40:01,480 --> 00:40:03,560 Speaker 1: matter if you get the back. All that matters is 772 00:40:03,600 --> 00:40:06,080 Speaker 1: what happens, what you do with it. The problem ends 773 00:40:06,160 --> 00:40:08,080 Speaker 1: up being people don't mind getting there and just playing 774 00:40:08,120 --> 00:40:10,000 Speaker 1: prevent defense for as long as they have to, and 775 00:40:10,080 --> 00:40:13,880 Speaker 1: so it turns grappling into something other than what I 776 00:40:14,000 --> 00:40:16,359 Speaker 1: think should be more fully reflected in the rules. Now 777 00:40:16,680 --> 00:40:19,200 Speaker 1: that's just my personal opinion. You may differ, but I'm 778 00:40:19,239 --> 00:40:21,160 Speaker 1: trying to explain to you. If you're trying to understand 779 00:40:21,200 --> 00:40:23,359 Speaker 1: where a forty nine to forty six scorecard comes from, 780 00:40:23,840 --> 00:40:25,880 Speaker 1: the best explanation that I can give you is that 781 00:40:26,920 --> 00:40:30,799 Speaker 1: a lot of grappling just doesn't seem to really matter 782 00:40:30,920 --> 00:40:33,200 Speaker 1: to judges anymore. Not all of it. That's not what 783 00:40:33,280 --> 00:40:35,680 Speaker 1: I'm saying, not key portions of it. That's not what 784 00:40:35,760 --> 00:40:37,560 Speaker 1: I'm saying. I'm also not saying that there is no 785 00:40:37,680 --> 00:40:41,400 Speaker 1: benefit to grappling and MMA anymore, but the relative benefit 786 00:40:41,719 --> 00:40:44,480 Speaker 1: of all of the hard work of grappling in terms 787 00:40:44,480 --> 00:40:47,480 Speaker 1: of what the judges are being asked to tally, its 788 00:40:48,200 --> 00:40:51,919 Speaker 1: value has been majorly downgraded, and I think a little 789 00:40:51,920 --> 00:40:54,440 Speaker 1: bit too far. That being said, let's look at the 790 00:40:54,520 --> 00:41:02,400 Speaker 1: numbers for this contest. So this was a weird one. Too. 791 00:41:02,880 --> 00:41:07,040 Speaker 1: All right, So this one, Valentina Chevchenko was credited with 792 00:41:07,120 --> 00:41:10,600 Speaker 1: three of five takedowns, which she got sixty percent. Tyler 793 00:41:10,680 --> 00:41:14,080 Speaker 1: Santos got three of three takedowns one hundred percent, three 794 00:41:14,200 --> 00:41:17,120 Speaker 1: sub attempts, two reversals. She's credited with eight minutes and 795 00:41:17,200 --> 00:41:21,160 Speaker 1: forty nine seconds of control time. Valentina Chefchenko, however, numerically, 796 00:41:21,160 --> 00:41:22,680 Speaker 1: at a bare minimum, I would say, argue on the 797 00:41:22,680 --> 00:41:26,480 Speaker 1: feet qualitatively as well, certainly outstriking her seventy seven significant 798 00:41:26,480 --> 00:41:30,320 Speaker 1: strikes two fifty five. Targeting was pretty interesting too, Chevchenko 799 00:41:30,400 --> 00:41:33,120 Speaker 1: going sixty percent of the head, fifteen percent of the body, 800 00:41:33,160 --> 00:41:35,799 Speaker 1: twenty four percent of the leg. Tyler Santo's thirty two 801 00:41:35,840 --> 00:41:38,880 Speaker 1: percent of the head pretty significant downgrade twenty percent of 802 00:41:38,920 --> 00:41:41,000 Speaker 1: the body a body equivalent, but much more to the 803 00:41:41,080 --> 00:41:43,960 Speaker 1: leg forty seven percent. Youd see how often that we 804 00:41:44,040 --> 00:41:45,520 Speaker 1: First of all, they were open stance, which we'll talk 805 00:41:45,520 --> 00:41:47,920 Speaker 1: about the head but in just a second. But did 806 00:41:48,000 --> 00:41:50,160 Speaker 1: you notice how often like Santo's had a hard time 807 00:41:50,840 --> 00:41:53,640 Speaker 1: striking in mid range at all. So she could leg kick, 808 00:41:53,719 --> 00:41:55,640 Speaker 1: leg kick leg kick, kind of play on the outside 809 00:41:55,680 --> 00:41:57,200 Speaker 1: a little bit, and then she had to blitz to 810 00:41:57,280 --> 00:41:59,320 Speaker 1: the inside, and that was often how they ended up clashing, 811 00:41:59,360 --> 00:42:02,399 Speaker 1: even when Chefchenko was actually the one doing it, because 812 00:42:02,440 --> 00:42:05,719 Speaker 1: she did it as well too, so that actually makes 813 00:42:05,760 --> 00:42:09,040 Speaker 1: a lot of sense. Chefchenko was was was the better, 814 00:42:10,840 --> 00:42:13,239 Speaker 1: did the better all overall striking. However, we all know 815 00:42:13,320 --> 00:42:16,200 Speaker 1: the story is the head butt. I saw some people, 816 00:42:16,400 --> 00:42:19,040 Speaker 1: some dorks, being like, oh, did she do it intentionally? 817 00:42:19,120 --> 00:42:21,480 Speaker 1: First of all, if you just watched the replay, yes, 818 00:42:21,560 --> 00:42:24,239 Speaker 1: they're both kind of leaning, But I thought Santos was 819 00:42:24,280 --> 00:42:27,360 Speaker 1: doing more moving into that position number one, So like 820 00:42:28,000 --> 00:42:29,880 Speaker 1: it wasn't like a head butt in the like that 821 00:42:30,040 --> 00:42:31,320 Speaker 1: kind of a way. It was more like it was 822 00:42:31,440 --> 00:42:35,520 Speaker 1: clearly like incidental contact. And more to the point, it's like, dude, 823 00:42:35,560 --> 00:42:39,840 Speaker 1: if you watch boxing at all at all, this happens 824 00:42:40,080 --> 00:42:42,799 Speaker 1: all the time, all the time, to the point now 825 00:42:42,840 --> 00:42:45,759 Speaker 1: where I've seen it where referees before fights if their 826 00:42:45,800 --> 00:42:47,600 Speaker 1: open stance being like watched the head butts, you know, 827 00:42:47,640 --> 00:42:49,360 Speaker 1: blah blah blah blah. I've seen them give warnings for 828 00:42:49,400 --> 00:42:51,239 Speaker 1: that now, not like warnings like I'm gonna take a point, 829 00:42:51,280 --> 00:42:53,200 Speaker 1: but like just be careful out there, notice that you 830 00:42:53,239 --> 00:42:55,439 Speaker 1: guys are gonna be standing apart. Blah blah blah, dude, 831 00:42:55,440 --> 00:42:57,200 Speaker 1: when you have two people like that because their heads 832 00:42:57,239 --> 00:43:01,120 Speaker 1: come in on the same line basically, right, versus being 833 00:43:01,280 --> 00:43:03,680 Speaker 1: like this where they don't come in on the same line. 834 00:43:04,080 --> 00:43:08,040 Speaker 1: That's it happens constantly in boxing all the time, so 835 00:43:08,160 --> 00:43:13,280 Speaker 1: there's no there's no issue there for me, there's no intentionality. 836 00:43:13,560 --> 00:43:16,239 Speaker 1: That is just a byproduct of what happens. And when 837 00:43:16,280 --> 00:43:19,239 Speaker 1: her eye got shut, the whole shit changed. I could 838 00:43:19,360 --> 00:43:22,520 Speaker 1: not believe after the end of the fourth round that 839 00:43:22,640 --> 00:43:26,160 Speaker 1: they didn't stop that. I was shocked. The doctor did 840 00:43:26,200 --> 00:43:28,320 Speaker 1: one of these, he goes, hey, you can see, and 841 00:43:28,440 --> 00:43:30,360 Speaker 1: you know what a Santo's gonna say, Like, no, of 842 00:43:30,400 --> 00:43:33,000 Speaker 1: course he's gonna say, yes, most fighters do. She goes, yeah, 843 00:43:33,000 --> 00:43:34,800 Speaker 1: I can see. He's like, okay, good enough for me. 844 00:43:35,080 --> 00:43:37,400 Speaker 1: I was like, yo, remind me to not have you 845 00:43:37,640 --> 00:43:41,839 Speaker 1: like look for any of my medical ailments ever. I mean, 846 00:43:42,040 --> 00:43:45,160 Speaker 1: just not even given the slightest of fucks about her 847 00:43:45,200 --> 00:43:50,640 Speaker 1: medical condition. So they let it go. But for basically 848 00:43:50,760 --> 00:43:55,680 Speaker 1: two rounds she couldn't see shit. She was still able 849 00:43:55,719 --> 00:43:59,440 Speaker 1: to get takedowns. In fact, she got takedowns Tyla Santos 850 00:43:59,480 --> 00:44:01,600 Speaker 1: did and the fourth round I was an incredible one. 851 00:44:01,680 --> 00:44:04,960 Speaker 1: She got didn't get any in the fifth, but she 852 00:44:05,080 --> 00:44:09,120 Speaker 1: got barely outstruck numerically fourteen to eleven. Although I would 853 00:44:09,160 --> 00:44:12,600 Speaker 1: certainly grant that the two takedown Shipchenko had and it 854 00:44:12,680 --> 00:44:15,040 Speaker 1: looked like her striking again was even her ground pound 855 00:44:15,600 --> 00:44:17,840 Speaker 1: looked to be a lot better. In fact, Santos's biggest 856 00:44:17,880 --> 00:44:19,440 Speaker 1: issue to me was not the ground. She had just 857 00:44:19,480 --> 00:44:21,040 Speaker 1: had a lack of ground and pound. And this is 858 00:44:21,080 --> 00:44:22,840 Speaker 1: gonna hurt her, dude, this is really gonna hurt her. 859 00:44:22,960 --> 00:44:25,880 Speaker 1: Argument number one in round one, you know how many 860 00:44:25,880 --> 00:44:30,439 Speaker 1: strikes she landed significant strikes five in round two, four 861 00:44:31,080 --> 00:44:35,280 Speaker 1: in round three, seven. Even if I am willing to argue, 862 00:44:35,320 --> 00:44:37,640 Speaker 1: and I am that too much of grappling no longer 863 00:44:37,719 --> 00:44:42,000 Speaker 1: has any value. Dude, you cannot go into of course, 864 00:44:42,040 --> 00:44:44,200 Speaker 1: it's easy for me to say, I understand that, but 865 00:44:44,440 --> 00:44:47,400 Speaker 1: just I've been watching these a long long time. You 866 00:44:47,560 --> 00:44:50,600 Speaker 1: cannot go into a UFC title fight and have three 867 00:44:50,719 --> 00:44:54,440 Speaker 1: rounds in a row where you hand out single digit offense, 868 00:44:55,040 --> 00:44:58,480 Speaker 1: right and no sub attempts? She would she get a 869 00:44:58,520 --> 00:45:02,760 Speaker 1: sub attempt? Oh, a couple of those were on the jaw. Okay, 870 00:45:02,960 --> 00:45:06,279 Speaker 1: those count for something too. She's credited with two of 871 00:45:06,360 --> 00:45:09,239 Speaker 1: those in round one, zero in round two, one in 872 00:45:09,400 --> 00:45:11,560 Speaker 1: round three, and then that's it. I think it was 873 00:45:11,560 --> 00:45:12,879 Speaker 1: the one in a round three where she had two 874 00:45:13,080 --> 00:45:14,759 Speaker 1: and a half minutes of control time. She had three 875 00:45:14,800 --> 00:45:16,760 Speaker 1: minutes and forty seconds of control time in the second 876 00:45:18,560 --> 00:45:20,440 Speaker 1: she was on the jaw. First of all, I think 877 00:45:20,520 --> 00:45:23,120 Speaker 1: Chefchenko would just let her jaw get broken before she 878 00:45:23,239 --> 00:45:25,800 Speaker 1: ever tapped number one number two. You know, there's a 879 00:45:25,840 --> 00:45:27,279 Speaker 1: lot of different ways to do that jaw. One you 880 00:45:27,320 --> 00:45:29,040 Speaker 1: can pull to the side, you can pull straight back. 881 00:45:29,280 --> 00:45:30,600 Speaker 1: There's like, there's a couple of ways you can do it, 882 00:45:30,680 --> 00:45:32,560 Speaker 1: but neither of those were exactly. What was happening was 883 00:45:32,600 --> 00:45:35,320 Speaker 1: just kind of on top. It wasn't It wasn't she 884 00:45:35,360 --> 00:45:37,279 Speaker 1: didn't there's a certain way that once you get on 885 00:45:37,440 --> 00:45:39,879 Speaker 1: top that you have to either pull or pull straight 886 00:45:39,920 --> 00:45:42,920 Speaker 1: back or pull backing up once his face. Drew Weatherhead 887 00:45:42,960 --> 00:45:45,000 Speaker 1: has a video on this shouts at Drew Weatherhead. He 888 00:45:45,000 --> 00:45:47,040 Speaker 1: has a really great video breaking down the different ways 889 00:45:47,040 --> 00:45:49,279 Speaker 1: to pull from there. She wasn't really doing either of those, 890 00:45:50,200 --> 00:45:52,440 Speaker 1: So it was you know, you couldn't, like, if you're Shiftchenko, 891 00:45:52,480 --> 00:45:55,840 Speaker 1: you have to address it. But the bigger story for me, 892 00:45:55,960 --> 00:45:58,800 Speaker 1: there is five strikes in round one, four strikes in 893 00:45:58,880 --> 00:46:01,279 Speaker 1: round two, seven strikes in round three, and you might 894 00:46:01,320 --> 00:46:03,640 Speaker 1: be asking war her strike totals in rounds four and five. 895 00:46:04,280 --> 00:46:07,080 Speaker 1: Totally different ballgame, at least in terms of the numeracy. 896 00:46:07,920 --> 00:46:11,000 Speaker 1: In round four twenty nine to twenty eight, Chefchenko de Santos. 897 00:46:11,280 --> 00:46:14,480 Speaker 1: In round five fourteen to eleven, As I mentioned, Chefchenko Desantos, 898 00:46:15,000 --> 00:46:17,759 Speaker 1: it was pretty commensur right there. But round one Chefchenko 899 00:46:17,880 --> 00:46:20,920 Speaker 1: ten to five, Round two neither had much seven to four. 900 00:46:21,200 --> 00:46:23,320 Speaker 1: How about round three, right, that's a bit of a 901 00:46:23,480 --> 00:46:26,160 Speaker 1: round that could go potentially some different ways, I depending 902 00:46:26,160 --> 00:46:29,520 Speaker 1: on how you want to score it. Seven strikes for Santos, 903 00:46:29,680 --> 00:46:34,560 Speaker 1: seventeen for Chefchenko. Dude, Like, if you're just going to 904 00:46:34,680 --> 00:46:37,080 Speaker 1: rely on positional control, you better make sure you have 905 00:46:37,200 --> 00:46:39,440 Speaker 1: sub attempts that have these people on the run for 906 00:46:39,480 --> 00:46:41,560 Speaker 1: their lives. Otherwise these judges are just not going to 907 00:46:41,600 --> 00:46:43,640 Speaker 1: give it to you. The only parts of jiu jitsu 908 00:46:43,719 --> 00:46:46,960 Speaker 1: that they're counting anymore is the very last part of it, 909 00:46:47,400 --> 00:46:49,640 Speaker 1: the hardest part to get, the only part. It's like, 910 00:46:49,880 --> 00:46:51,600 Speaker 1: all of that work that you did to get there 911 00:46:51,719 --> 00:46:53,480 Speaker 1: means jack shit to them. At this point. Again, you 912 00:46:53,560 --> 00:46:54,800 Speaker 1: can like that or you can hate that, but that 913 00:46:54,920 --> 00:46:57,920 Speaker 1: is really how it is. And so she kind of 914 00:46:58,040 --> 00:47:00,520 Speaker 1: left it there a little bit. Now, if you're asking me, 915 00:47:01,040 --> 00:47:05,680 Speaker 1: how do I view that as a personal thing, I 916 00:47:05,880 --> 00:47:08,200 Speaker 1: view that if someone has your back for over three minutes, 917 00:47:08,239 --> 00:47:10,719 Speaker 1: you fucking lost. That's my view. My view is that 918 00:47:11,480 --> 00:47:15,200 Speaker 1: that is not only like I can I have to 919 00:47:15,280 --> 00:47:18,080 Speaker 1: do work to maintain that position, but if I can 920 00:47:18,160 --> 00:47:20,960 Speaker 1: put you in a state of fighting for three minutes 921 00:47:21,320 --> 00:47:26,160 Speaker 1: where you basically have nothing to do except urgent defense, 922 00:47:26,560 --> 00:47:31,200 Speaker 1: that should be counted to. That should be counted as significant. 923 00:47:31,400 --> 00:47:33,800 Speaker 1: That is to me what the rules do not account for. 924 00:47:33,960 --> 00:47:37,200 Speaker 1: They do not account for. I use three minutes of 925 00:47:37,239 --> 00:47:40,920 Speaker 1: a fight to maintain a condition where you only in 926 00:47:41,400 --> 00:47:42,680 Speaker 1: If they were standing and they had the back and 927 00:47:42,680 --> 00:47:44,040 Speaker 1: you could jump, that would be one thing. But if 928 00:47:44,080 --> 00:47:46,560 Speaker 1: we're already now grounded and I have your back and 929 00:47:46,600 --> 00:47:48,680 Speaker 1: I'm threatening chokes and they're not all that close, but 930 00:47:48,800 --> 00:47:50,520 Speaker 1: all you can do is hand fight. Now, again, there 931 00:47:50,600 --> 00:47:52,360 Speaker 1: was one round where she was throwing punches behind her, 932 00:47:52,440 --> 00:47:54,480 Speaker 1: but that was not in all the cases. So I'm 933 00:47:54,480 --> 00:47:56,080 Speaker 1: just trying to make a point here. If I can 934 00:47:56,160 --> 00:47:58,040 Speaker 1: put you in a condition like that where you have 935 00:47:58,320 --> 00:48:02,480 Speaker 1: basically nothing but defense. That should count for something pretty 936 00:48:02,480 --> 00:48:04,319 Speaker 1: significant as well, but I don't think that it does. 937 00:48:06,000 --> 00:48:08,839 Speaker 1: But there you have it. So once her eye got 938 00:48:08,960 --> 00:48:13,920 Speaker 1: cracked from the headbutt, it was there was no chance 939 00:48:14,040 --> 00:48:17,320 Speaker 1: on earth she could see out of that thing. Not possible, 940 00:48:17,480 --> 00:48:19,600 Speaker 1: no way, even if they let her go. So I 941 00:48:19,680 --> 00:48:21,239 Speaker 1: give all the credit in the world to Santo's for 942 00:48:21,400 --> 00:48:23,719 Speaker 1: being a dog and fighting that out. She got a 943 00:48:23,800 --> 00:48:27,000 Speaker 1: takedown even with that, I think in around four I 944 00:48:27,040 --> 00:48:29,480 Speaker 1: think is the one she got, just gutting it out 945 00:48:29,520 --> 00:48:32,080 Speaker 1: and finding a way to get it. It was extremely impressive, 946 00:48:32,120 --> 00:48:35,640 Speaker 1: the effort she was able to turn in. Imagine her 947 00:48:35,719 --> 00:48:38,520 Speaker 1: to be versus who she actually is. And she is 948 00:48:38,719 --> 00:48:42,920 Speaker 1: extremely talented, right, She's very, very, very good. She has 949 00:48:43,040 --> 00:48:47,680 Speaker 1: now seven title defenses, not accidentally. On the other hand, 950 00:48:48,719 --> 00:48:50,239 Speaker 1: you know, I had tweeted and if you look at 951 00:48:50,239 --> 00:48:54,200 Speaker 1: the stats, like Tyler, Santos's numbers were pretty commensurate with 952 00:48:54,440 --> 00:48:58,000 Speaker 1: hers in virtually every department, in some cases better granted 953 00:48:58,000 --> 00:49:01,359 Speaker 1: a different competition, but still good competition. She had very 954 00:49:01,360 --> 00:49:03,719 Speaker 1: good numbers and a lot of striking numbers. Just a 955 00:49:03,800 --> 00:49:06,239 Speaker 1: little tick off, just a little tick behind. It was 956 00:49:06,280 --> 00:49:08,719 Speaker 1: what I tweeted, and folks were like, oh, this is blasphemy. 957 00:49:08,800 --> 00:49:12,719 Speaker 1: She's gonna knock her out in a round, And I'm like, you, 958 00:49:13,120 --> 00:49:16,200 Speaker 1: you're just buying into the mythologizing here, or you just 959 00:49:16,360 --> 00:49:19,440 Speaker 1: utterly dismissed Santos like some combination of the two or whatever. 960 00:49:20,760 --> 00:49:23,560 Speaker 1: I didn't think that Santos had that kind of positional 961 00:49:23,600 --> 00:49:25,000 Speaker 1: control in her, but I knew it was going to 962 00:49:25,040 --> 00:49:27,920 Speaker 1: be competitive on one level of the other, and it was, 963 00:49:28,200 --> 00:49:30,200 Speaker 1: and that's exactly what it was. There's a big question 964 00:49:30,239 --> 00:49:32,239 Speaker 1: of like, is there going to be a rematch? What 965 00:49:32,320 --> 00:49:35,080 Speaker 1: would have happened? But for the eye, I don't know. 966 00:49:35,160 --> 00:49:36,799 Speaker 1: I've not been on Twitter. It's hard for me to tell. 967 00:49:37,080 --> 00:49:42,960 Speaker 1: My producers texted me at all. No, you know, they 968 00:49:43,000 --> 00:49:44,839 Speaker 1: have not, so I don't know. I don't know what's 969 00:49:44,840 --> 00:49:54,120 Speaker 1: happening there. But I think that Chevchenko is utterly deserving 970 00:49:54,840 --> 00:49:57,120 Speaker 1: of the acclaim that should happen when you get seven 971 00:49:57,160 --> 00:50:00,120 Speaker 1: title defenses. But at some point, like dude, I've We've 972 00:50:00,120 --> 00:50:02,759 Speaker 1: seen this over and over and over again. We fall 973 00:50:02,840 --> 00:50:05,880 Speaker 1: in love with fighters, male or female, for what they 974 00:50:05,920 --> 00:50:07,920 Speaker 1: are able to do at their very very best. And 975 00:50:08,040 --> 00:50:10,400 Speaker 1: it's true that fighters at their very very best have 976 00:50:10,600 --> 00:50:14,720 Speaker 1: these inspired moments that are hard to just put into words. 977 00:50:14,760 --> 00:50:17,560 Speaker 1: They're so magical, But what they're not really able to do, 978 00:50:17,719 --> 00:50:21,920 Speaker 1: because they're human, is to do that consistently. It's just 979 00:50:22,080 --> 00:50:25,440 Speaker 1: not possible to be a magician in that cage consistently. 980 00:50:25,520 --> 00:50:29,080 Speaker 1: It's not possible to inspire greatness in that cage consistently. 981 00:50:29,200 --> 00:50:33,120 Speaker 1: And there's a lot of Schevchenko supporters who are simply 982 00:50:33,360 --> 00:50:35,719 Speaker 1: unwilling to recognize the other side of the coin, which 983 00:50:35,800 --> 00:50:38,680 Speaker 1: is she does have weaknesses. She is beatable. You saw 984 00:50:38,800 --> 00:50:40,920 Speaker 1: some of that tonight. She nearly lost it depending on 985 00:50:41,000 --> 00:50:44,520 Speaker 1: how you who knows if that headbutt didn't happen, how 986 00:50:44,560 --> 00:50:49,960 Speaker 1: this would have gone. And that should also be acknowledged 987 00:50:49,960 --> 00:50:51,840 Speaker 1: as well. There should be a little bit of acceptance 988 00:50:51,920 --> 00:50:56,360 Speaker 1: that there's been this weird mythologizing about her constant ability 989 00:50:56,440 --> 00:50:59,560 Speaker 1: to score knockouts. She doesn't score knockouts all the time. 990 00:51:00,239 --> 00:51:03,880 Speaker 1: She has, you know, no weaknesses. She has plenty of weaknesses. 991 00:51:04,600 --> 00:51:06,680 Speaker 1: You know. No one can do anything to her, Yes 992 00:51:06,880 --> 00:51:09,040 Speaker 1: they can. Now no one has really shown to be 993 00:51:09,200 --> 00:51:12,160 Speaker 1: the kind of total package necessary to really get over 994 00:51:12,200 --> 00:51:14,600 Speaker 1: the hump. But can they test her, can they show weaknesses? 995 00:51:15,000 --> 00:51:17,080 Speaker 1: Can they make her really suffer and put her in 996 00:51:17,160 --> 00:51:20,120 Speaker 1: bad positions and any number of other things. Yes, of 997 00:51:20,200 --> 00:51:22,040 Speaker 1: course they can, and they do. And Tyler Santo's did 998 00:51:22,080 --> 00:51:23,640 Speaker 1: a bunch of that, not all of it, but did 999 00:51:23,680 --> 00:51:25,520 Speaker 1: a bunch of that tonight. The big thing missing for 1000 00:51:25,600 --> 00:51:28,359 Speaker 1: Tyler Santos was one the headbutt changing the last two 1001 00:51:28,480 --> 00:51:32,560 Speaker 1: rounds basically uh and before that, this is the part 1002 00:51:32,560 --> 00:51:36,480 Speaker 1: where she bears some responsibility, just not enough of the 1003 00:51:36,680 --> 00:51:40,040 Speaker 1: kind of jiu jitsu that speaks to what current judges 1004 00:51:40,200 --> 00:51:43,480 Speaker 1: are asked to judge on. Remember before you like these 1005 00:51:43,520 --> 00:51:47,360 Speaker 1: fucking judges, remember they are told by the Commission and 1006 00:51:47,520 --> 00:51:51,040 Speaker 1: the rules. These are how we are telling you how 1007 00:51:51,120 --> 00:51:54,920 Speaker 1: to judge. We're not telling you give us your fucking opinion. 1008 00:51:55,280 --> 00:51:58,640 Speaker 1: We're telling you. This is the criteria. This is how 1009 00:51:58,719 --> 00:52:01,000 Speaker 1: you weigh it. This is the end of the story. 1010 00:52:01,080 --> 00:52:03,640 Speaker 1: They're told and to instruct, and they're instructed to judge 1011 00:52:03,719 --> 00:52:07,440 Speaker 1: a certain way a certain way, and you're gonna get 1012 00:52:07,640 --> 00:52:10,400 Speaker 1: responses like that, Which is why I understand. Even if 1013 00:52:10,400 --> 00:52:11,640 Speaker 1: I think then there should be a little bit of 1014 00:52:11,640 --> 00:52:14,800 Speaker 1: a dialing back of the fervor and enthusiasm for the 1015 00:52:15,360 --> 00:52:19,200 Speaker 1: invincibility of Chevchenko, I also understand that a forty nine 1016 00:52:19,200 --> 00:52:22,680 Speaker 1: to forty six scorecard for her is legitimate. It's a 1017 00:52:22,800 --> 00:52:26,880 Speaker 1: little bit strong, I think, but I understand it based 1018 00:52:26,960 --> 00:52:29,719 Speaker 1: on the scoring criteria. I actually think there should be 1019 00:52:29,760 --> 00:52:31,600 Speaker 1: a rematch. I think there should be a rematch. I 1020 00:52:31,640 --> 00:52:33,440 Speaker 1: would love to see one. I actually think that it 1021 00:52:33,480 --> 00:52:37,120 Speaker 1: would actually make Schifchenko's chances better because now she kind 1022 00:52:37,160 --> 00:52:40,120 Speaker 1: of knows what situations to work around and avoid, and 1023 00:52:40,239 --> 00:52:42,600 Speaker 1: someone is clever and experience as her is going to 1024 00:52:42,600 --> 00:52:45,040 Speaker 1: be able to work through probably a lot of those challenges. 1025 00:52:45,120 --> 00:52:48,840 Speaker 1: But I think there should be a rematch personally, but 1026 00:52:48,920 --> 00:52:51,319 Speaker 1: I hope that folks can expl what everyone was doing 1027 00:52:51,480 --> 00:52:52,759 Speaker 1: was like. And I did this a little bit on 1028 00:52:52,840 --> 00:52:55,440 Speaker 1: MK at first, which was, oh, you know, they had 1029 00:52:55,480 --> 00:52:57,320 Speaker 1: to go to the fifth ranked fighter in the division 1030 00:52:57,320 --> 00:52:59,960 Speaker 1: before they could find someone who Schefchenko hadn't beat already, 1031 00:53:00,080 --> 00:53:01,719 Speaker 1: which is true, And now they might have to go 1032 00:53:01,760 --> 00:53:03,160 Speaker 1: to six and I'm gonna have to see if someone 1033 00:53:03,280 --> 00:53:04,680 Speaker 1: moves up. But you get the idea, like they had 1034 00:53:04,680 --> 00:53:07,359 Speaker 1: to go way down the list to find someone, dude. 1035 00:53:07,360 --> 00:53:09,680 Speaker 1: But then when you look at the tape and then 1036 00:53:09,719 --> 00:53:11,640 Speaker 1: you look at the numbers, you're like, Okay, there's actually 1037 00:53:11,640 --> 00:53:13,959 Speaker 1: something going on here. Her takedown defense was nearly ninety 1038 00:53:14,040 --> 00:53:17,240 Speaker 1: percent heading into this contest. She had excellent takedowns herself. 1039 00:53:17,560 --> 00:53:19,560 Speaker 1: She doesn't get hit a lot. She actually does a 1040 00:53:19,600 --> 00:53:22,279 Speaker 1: decent amount of hitting. She has good striking defense, she 1041 00:53:22,320 --> 00:53:24,879 Speaker 1: has good striking accuracy. She was nineteen and one heading 1042 00:53:24,920 --> 00:53:27,400 Speaker 1: into this. Yeah, she's a threat. You got to take 1043 00:53:27,480 --> 00:53:31,640 Speaker 1: that seriously. You know you can. You can turn fighters 1044 00:53:31,840 --> 00:53:34,560 Speaker 1: into Marvel superheroes in your mind if you want. But 1045 00:53:34,640 --> 00:53:37,520 Speaker 1: you're setting yourself up for disaster with that shit. Dude. 1046 00:53:37,680 --> 00:53:41,920 Speaker 1: Mma is crazy and it is unpredictable. And they're just human. 1047 00:53:42,600 --> 00:53:46,040 Speaker 1: They're just human. They're special humans, and they're exceptional humans, 1048 00:53:46,160 --> 00:53:49,160 Speaker 1: and that's why we celebrate them. But they are human. 1049 00:53:50,360 --> 00:53:55,200 Speaker 1: Speaking of which, how about this one Jean Wi Lee 1050 00:53:55,320 --> 00:53:59,760 Speaker 1: taking on Yowanni and Jcheck. She stops her ko spinning 1051 00:53:59,760 --> 00:54:05,120 Speaker 1: backfist at two twenty eight of round two. Dude, Jong 1052 00:54:05,200 --> 00:54:07,320 Speaker 1: Wi Lee beat the fuck out of her, not the 1053 00:54:07,560 --> 00:54:11,359 Speaker 1: entirety of the fight, but for important stretches. First round 1054 00:54:11,440 --> 00:54:14,120 Speaker 1: gets a takedown. Understand something that happened in the first 1055 00:54:14,160 --> 00:54:15,920 Speaker 1: shift in the first excuse me, the first n J 1056 00:54:16,080 --> 00:54:18,960 Speaker 1: Check fight And understand this was in the second Rose fight, 1057 00:54:19,320 --> 00:54:21,480 Speaker 1: one of the big things is that Jong Wi Lee 1058 00:54:21,560 --> 00:54:24,920 Speaker 1: has clearly been a very good athlete. I think, you know, 1059 00:54:25,000 --> 00:54:28,280 Speaker 1: her power was obvious before, her strength was obvious, before 1060 00:54:28,840 --> 00:54:33,279 Speaker 1: she can thump. She's durable, she's explosive, she's strong. You know, 1061 00:54:33,480 --> 00:54:35,960 Speaker 1: she athletically gets into and out of position. She has 1062 00:54:36,040 --> 00:54:39,480 Speaker 1: good balance, like she's a great athlete. But one of 1063 00:54:39,520 --> 00:54:42,120 Speaker 1: the problems she had in the first n J Check 1064 00:54:42,160 --> 00:54:44,399 Speaker 1: fight and in the second Rose fight was she could 1065 00:54:44,440 --> 00:54:47,880 Speaker 1: get takedowns or whatever initiate ground exchanges. She had a 1066 00:54:47,920 --> 00:54:49,840 Speaker 1: hard time controlling them. And there was a little bit 1067 00:54:49,840 --> 00:54:50,960 Speaker 1: of hard time with this one too. I'll pull the 1068 00:54:51,040 --> 00:54:53,320 Speaker 1: numbers up here in just a second, but not nearly 1069 00:54:53,360 --> 00:54:56,440 Speaker 1: as much. She was having a field day in that 1070 00:54:56,600 --> 00:54:59,440 Speaker 1: first round, banging on her face like it was a drum. 1071 00:55:00,360 --> 00:55:04,640 Speaker 1: Jeong wy Lee has clearly improved, clearly clearly improved. Now 1072 00:55:04,719 --> 00:55:06,640 Speaker 1: on the feet, it was a bit of a different story, 1073 00:55:07,320 --> 00:55:09,640 Speaker 1: which is to say, in the first fight, in the 1074 00:55:09,719 --> 00:55:12,440 Speaker 1: first round, Yan j Check is landing leg kicks, and 1075 00:55:12,560 --> 00:55:17,600 Speaker 1: so the way in which Jeong why Lee tests that 1076 00:55:17,760 --> 00:55:20,080 Speaker 1: and changes it is that she begins to blitz off 1077 00:55:20,160 --> 00:55:23,040 Speaker 1: of the leg kicks with punches straight forward, and it 1078 00:55:23,160 --> 00:55:26,360 Speaker 1: actually didn't make yan j Check stop throwing leg kicks. 1079 00:55:26,560 --> 00:55:28,719 Speaker 1: But it made her switch to more middle and headkicks 1080 00:55:28,880 --> 00:55:30,759 Speaker 1: because it was a little bit easier to not get 1081 00:55:30,840 --> 00:55:33,320 Speaker 1: countered with either the distance or the setups or whatever. 1082 00:55:34,320 --> 00:55:36,640 Speaker 1: It was a safer alternative for her. She was getting 1083 00:55:36,719 --> 00:55:38,920 Speaker 1: she was getting countered constantly. Now again she weaved him 1084 00:55:38,920 --> 00:55:41,080 Speaker 1: back in. It wasn't like she fully abandoned them, but 1085 00:55:41,200 --> 00:55:43,359 Speaker 1: she had to really make a switch there. You saw 1086 00:55:43,440 --> 00:55:45,000 Speaker 1: some of that right away, some of those leg kicks 1087 00:55:45,040 --> 00:55:46,359 Speaker 1: were coming. And we talked about her on an MK 1088 00:55:46,480 --> 00:55:49,839 Speaker 1: on Friday. The kicking game is the most potent part 1089 00:55:50,040 --> 00:55:52,320 Speaker 1: of Yanjcheck's offense, and so if that's going to be 1090 00:55:52,400 --> 00:55:56,960 Speaker 1: the case, what happens if she can't do that much kicking. 1091 00:55:57,920 --> 00:55:59,640 Speaker 1: That was sort of the big central question to me, 1092 00:55:59,800 --> 00:56:02,000 Speaker 1: And and you saw that here on the ground, Dude, 1093 00:56:02,200 --> 00:56:05,600 Speaker 1: Jack scrambling has always been excellent, and her take down defense, 1094 00:56:05,719 --> 00:56:08,040 Speaker 1: certainly along the fence line, has been really really good. 1095 00:56:08,520 --> 00:56:12,720 Speaker 1: Fucking Jong Way Lee is a is a a gorilla. 1096 00:56:12,880 --> 00:56:16,000 Speaker 1: It's unbelievable how good she is and strong. All right, 1097 00:56:16,080 --> 00:56:19,600 Speaker 1: let's pull these numbers up. Man takedowns three of six 1098 00:56:19,680 --> 00:56:23,160 Speaker 1: for Jeong wy Lee. She got three in the first 1099 00:56:23,480 --> 00:56:27,359 Speaker 1: and then a zero sorry, three of six, yes, three 1100 00:56:27,400 --> 00:56:29,800 Speaker 1: of six takedowns. She went three of five in the 1101 00:56:29,880 --> 00:56:34,160 Speaker 1: first and then zero of one in the second. Two 1102 00:56:34,239 --> 00:56:36,000 Speaker 1: minutes and thirty nine seconds of control time in the 1103 00:56:36,040 --> 00:56:39,239 Speaker 1: first round forty seven to twenty two strikes Jong to 1104 00:56:39,520 --> 00:56:41,879 Speaker 1: Yan j Check. And then it was even in terms 1105 00:56:41,880 --> 00:56:43,960 Speaker 1: of striking numbers twenty one to twenty two or twenty 1106 00:56:43,960 --> 00:56:46,719 Speaker 1: two to twenty one, respectively. Let me see where the 1107 00:56:46,760 --> 00:56:48,880 Speaker 1: targeting went, because that would be the interesting one. You 1108 00:56:48,920 --> 00:56:51,280 Speaker 1: want to j check targeting the leg thirty two percent? 1109 00:56:51,400 --> 00:56:53,919 Speaker 1: What did she target the leg in the first fight. 1110 00:56:54,880 --> 00:56:57,439 Speaker 1: Let's see in the first fight she targeted the leg 1111 00:56:59,400 --> 00:57:02,439 Speaker 1: thirty one pretty similar for her here, interesting, yeah, because 1112 00:57:02,480 --> 00:57:03,640 Speaker 1: I think a lot of that got taken away in 1113 00:57:03,640 --> 00:57:06,200 Speaker 1: the first round as well. Or again change she had 1114 00:57:06,239 --> 00:57:08,200 Speaker 1: to make some changes. Couldn't get away from it, but 1115 00:57:08,320 --> 00:57:10,239 Speaker 1: had to make some changes way around it. Twenty percent 1116 00:57:10,320 --> 00:57:12,840 Speaker 1: of the body forty percent of the head for Yan Jcheck. 1117 00:57:12,920 --> 00:57:15,080 Speaker 1: And this speaks to Jean Wiley's strategy with the with 1118 00:57:15,200 --> 00:57:18,600 Speaker 1: the blitzing, with the punches seventy five percent of the targets, 1119 00:57:18,840 --> 00:57:21,480 Speaker 1: where the head seventeen percent of the body. Seven percent 1120 00:57:21,520 --> 00:57:24,600 Speaker 1: of the leg. But how did that finish happen? Basically, 1121 00:57:24,720 --> 00:57:27,640 Speaker 1: you know the still story on the feet. This fight 1122 00:57:27,840 --> 00:57:30,240 Speaker 1: looked a lot like the last one, which was they 1123 00:57:30,320 --> 00:57:34,040 Speaker 1: kind of went back and forth. Yan j Check would 1124 00:57:34,040 --> 00:57:35,640 Speaker 1: eat a big shot and then she would come and 1125 00:57:35,800 --> 00:57:38,440 Speaker 1: land you know, a good combination or whatever on her own, 1126 00:57:38,480 --> 00:57:41,560 Speaker 1: and it was kind of back and forth, mostly a 1127 00:57:42,000 --> 00:57:45,080 Speaker 1: wash ish kind of scenario. The differences were some of 1128 00:57:45,120 --> 00:57:48,120 Speaker 1: the clinching positions and then obviously the wrestling positions that 1129 00:57:48,280 --> 00:57:51,440 Speaker 1: was the that was the big one. How did that 1130 00:57:51,560 --> 00:57:53,800 Speaker 1: finish happen? If you guys noticed, she was throwing a sidekick, 1131 00:57:53,840 --> 00:57:57,360 Speaker 1: which Whitely throws a lot of those, but she kind 1132 00:57:57,360 --> 00:58:00,480 Speaker 1: of missed. So now she was standing this way, and 1133 00:58:00,600 --> 00:58:02,560 Speaker 1: now you and Jhick is off to the to the 1134 00:58:02,640 --> 00:58:05,280 Speaker 1: back of her right. So this is my strong side, 1135 00:58:05,320 --> 00:58:06,680 Speaker 1: this is the weak side. She's actually getting to the 1136 00:58:06,760 --> 00:58:10,400 Speaker 1: weak side. So if you're gonna like in boxing, this 1137 00:58:10,520 --> 00:58:12,760 Speaker 1: is where pivoting is so central, because if someone takes 1138 00:58:12,800 --> 00:58:14,960 Speaker 1: that angle on you, you have to be ready to 1139 00:58:15,000 --> 00:58:17,880 Speaker 1: follow and turn, and you can't you can't throw spinning 1140 00:58:17,960 --> 00:58:20,920 Speaker 1: backfists in boxing. You can't attack with the back blade 1141 00:58:20,960 --> 00:58:22,680 Speaker 1: of the box of the glove. It has to be 1142 00:58:23,000 --> 00:58:24,600 Speaker 1: I've seen on the front and then a little bit 1143 00:58:24,600 --> 00:58:26,720 Speaker 1: on the side, depending on how it was targeted. But 1144 00:58:26,840 --> 00:58:28,760 Speaker 1: you can't you can't turn around and then just you know, 1145 00:58:28,920 --> 00:58:32,080 Speaker 1: jack someone up like that. So pivoting becomes really important skill. 1146 00:58:32,520 --> 00:58:35,240 Speaker 1: But at MMA, none of that matters. So if someone 1147 00:58:35,360 --> 00:58:38,200 Speaker 1: is behind you this way, they've actually given you the angle, 1148 00:58:38,240 --> 00:58:40,400 Speaker 1: because if I'm gonna be in that way, I have 1149 00:58:40,520 --> 00:58:44,000 Speaker 1: to step across with whatever foot leads my stance. I 1150 00:58:44,080 --> 00:58:47,919 Speaker 1: have to step across both of your feet to bring 1151 00:58:48,120 --> 00:58:51,080 Speaker 1: my elbow or my arm back. But if they've already 1152 00:58:51,200 --> 00:58:54,919 Speaker 1: moved there, they moved into position for you. My guess 1153 00:58:55,000 --> 00:58:56,760 Speaker 1: is she has that dialed up as her go to 1154 00:58:56,920 --> 00:58:59,080 Speaker 1: when they move past her. If they like, if the 1155 00:58:59,160 --> 00:59:01,880 Speaker 1: kick and they go this way, you have one set 1156 00:59:01,920 --> 00:59:04,280 Speaker 1: of responses. If the kick slides and then they go 1157 00:59:04,400 --> 00:59:07,320 Speaker 1: this way, you have another set of responses. I guarantee, 1158 00:59:07,520 --> 00:59:10,480 Speaker 1: I guarantee that that spinning backfist is the go to 1159 00:59:10,680 --> 00:59:13,240 Speaker 1: response for when they slide off to the side like that. 1160 00:59:13,400 --> 00:59:15,000 Speaker 1: And then she wants to come around the side, and 1161 00:59:15,120 --> 00:59:17,800 Speaker 1: she face planeted her. She face planeted her. She put 1162 00:59:17,840 --> 00:59:19,800 Speaker 1: her right on her face and didn't follow up, and 1163 00:59:19,840 --> 00:59:22,880 Speaker 1: then the ref called it there and then you want 1164 00:59:22,920 --> 00:59:25,280 Speaker 1: to and Jcheck decided to retire. She said she wanted 1165 00:59:25,320 --> 00:59:27,560 Speaker 1: to be a mother. She's thirty five years old. She 1166 00:59:27,640 --> 00:59:31,040 Speaker 1: wanted to be a businesswoman, and she wanted to embrace it. 1167 00:59:34,120 --> 00:59:36,760 Speaker 1: She is one of the most important fighters, I think 1168 00:59:36,800 --> 00:59:40,360 Speaker 1: you could say in MMA history. Certainly one of the 1169 00:59:40,360 --> 00:59:46,080 Speaker 1: most important female fighters in UFC history. She is arguably 1170 00:59:46,400 --> 00:59:48,800 Speaker 1: the most important female fighter in strawweight history. And that's 1171 00:59:48,800 --> 00:59:50,960 Speaker 1: obviously debate about that given what Rose has done. But 1172 00:59:51,000 --> 00:59:53,000 Speaker 1: you know what is she number two at worst or something. 1173 00:59:53,840 --> 00:59:58,040 Speaker 1: And she really brought I think a lot to women's 1174 00:59:58,120 --> 01:00:00,400 Speaker 1: MMA for the time that she was in it. She 1175 01:00:00,560 --> 01:00:03,280 Speaker 1: brought a lot of She represented a lot of the 1176 01:00:03,360 --> 01:00:06,840 Speaker 1: games development. You know, being able to strike the way 1177 01:00:06,880 --> 01:00:09,120 Speaker 1: that she could was really important. Having the tie background, 1178 01:00:09,160 --> 01:00:11,360 Speaker 1: but on top of that, you know, having that lights 1179 01:00:11,360 --> 01:00:13,880 Speaker 1: out takedown defense and what she was able to show. 1180 01:00:13,920 --> 01:00:15,760 Speaker 1: She was showing a lot of advancements. And again she 1181 01:00:15,840 --> 01:00:17,919 Speaker 1: was stuffing all the Carla at Spars's takedowns. As Spars 1182 01:00:17,920 --> 01:00:20,680 Speaker 1: it was a you know, a decorated wrestler and everything. 1183 01:00:21,920 --> 01:00:24,720 Speaker 1: She was stuffing all of that. She had a certain 1184 01:00:24,800 --> 01:00:27,520 Speaker 1: meanness and a vibe, and everyone was on. They loved it, 1185 01:00:27,560 --> 01:00:30,400 Speaker 1: and they loved her her swag and then her face 1186 01:00:30,480 --> 01:00:34,000 Speaker 1: offs and then her pronouncements, and then she just brought 1187 01:00:34,040 --> 01:00:38,120 Speaker 1: a lot of dynamism to the game. She was incredibly successful, 1188 01:00:38,760 --> 01:00:41,920 Speaker 1: a highly decorated champion. I am certain she will go 1189 01:00:42,000 --> 01:00:43,760 Speaker 1: into the Hall of Fame. I think she is worthy 1190 01:00:43,800 --> 01:00:46,880 Speaker 1: of it, and she had a fantastic career of this. 1191 01:00:46,960 --> 01:00:48,880 Speaker 1: Actually truly is the end. Thirty five, by the way, 1192 01:00:48,880 --> 01:00:51,080 Speaker 1: I think is a good time to get out like 1193 01:00:51,160 --> 01:00:54,120 Speaker 1: she had never been Certainly in the UFC, she'd never 1194 01:00:54,160 --> 01:00:55,880 Speaker 1: been well. I guess Rose put her out like that, 1195 01:00:56,120 --> 01:01:01,240 Speaker 1: but I don't know. Something about this one felt a 1196 01:01:01,280 --> 01:01:04,120 Speaker 1: little bit worse. I mean, listen, folks, there is no 1197 01:01:04,320 --> 01:01:07,000 Speaker 1: free lunch, right. Every economist will say it. There is 1198 01:01:07,200 --> 01:01:09,920 Speaker 1: no such thing as a free lunch. Now. Joan Wi Lee, 1199 01:01:10,240 --> 01:01:14,240 Speaker 1: for whatever reason, was able to endure the difficulties of 1200 01:01:14,440 --> 01:01:17,400 Speaker 1: their first fight, not without incident, right, because she came 1201 01:01:17,440 --> 01:01:19,160 Speaker 1: back and got crushed and then had to work her 1202 01:01:19,200 --> 01:01:21,480 Speaker 1: way back and then it's it's been trying for her. 1203 01:01:22,360 --> 01:01:25,520 Speaker 1: But you know, I just think she's naturally quite durable. 1204 01:01:25,560 --> 01:01:27,600 Speaker 1: At thirty five years of age, with all the damage 1205 01:01:27,640 --> 01:01:31,880 Speaker 1: that she incurred. Dude, this was a very, very extremely 1206 01:01:31,920 --> 01:01:34,840 Speaker 1: difficult task for you want to and jcheck to take 1207 01:01:34,920 --> 01:01:36,840 Speaker 1: the kind of beating that she took in that fight. 1208 01:01:36,920 --> 01:01:38,760 Speaker 1: And again, I thought she won the first fight, I 1209 01:01:38,880 --> 01:01:41,560 Speaker 1: really did. I thought she won it, but she didn't. 1210 01:01:41,880 --> 01:01:45,240 Speaker 1: And that's life. And dude, she turned the color she 1211 01:01:45,360 --> 01:01:48,200 Speaker 1: turned into like an eggplant. And I don't I'm not 1212 01:01:48,240 --> 01:01:50,480 Speaker 1: even making a joke about it, like it was scary, 1213 01:01:50,720 --> 01:01:53,560 Speaker 1: how bad the bruising was and what it did to her. Dude, 1214 01:01:54,160 --> 01:01:56,320 Speaker 1: I'm telling you, folks, that's why you need to respect 1215 01:01:56,640 --> 01:01:58,680 Speaker 1: what these guys do, like in the main event and 1216 01:01:58,720 --> 01:02:00,440 Speaker 1: all the fights, but really in that main event. This 1217 01:02:00,560 --> 01:02:03,080 Speaker 1: is why fighter pay is really important to through their 1218 01:02:03,160 --> 01:02:07,240 Speaker 1: window is very very narrow. And listen, Jean, why Lee 1219 01:02:07,520 --> 01:02:10,760 Speaker 1: clearly improved from the last time. The takedowns by themselves 1220 01:02:10,800 --> 01:02:13,840 Speaker 1: told you everything you need to know, right, much more 1221 01:02:13,920 --> 01:02:16,560 Speaker 1: dynamic on the feet in terms of the surprise element, obviously, 1222 01:02:19,200 --> 01:02:22,040 Speaker 1: and you know two years off plus could not have 1223 01:02:22,080 --> 01:02:24,160 Speaker 1: been easy for you JJX. So there's a ring rust factor, 1224 01:02:24,200 --> 01:02:27,200 Speaker 1: there's an improvement factor from the opponent. But I'm sorry, dude, 1225 01:02:27,240 --> 01:02:29,080 Speaker 1: you do not go into a five round fight like 1226 01:02:29,120 --> 01:02:31,560 Speaker 1: that and come out exactly the same as fresh as 1227 01:02:31,600 --> 01:02:33,440 Speaker 1: you were before. I do think that the amount of 1228 01:02:33,480 --> 01:02:36,000 Speaker 1: time she took off was probably very smart for both 1229 01:02:36,040 --> 01:02:40,720 Speaker 1: her health and some competitive rejuvenation as well. So I'm 1230 01:02:40,720 --> 01:02:42,360 Speaker 1: glad she did. I think that was the right call. 1231 01:02:42,480 --> 01:02:45,120 Speaker 1: But dude, you can't fight like that. You cannot take 1232 01:02:45,160 --> 01:02:47,200 Speaker 1: a beating like that and think everything is going to 1233 01:02:47,240 --> 01:02:49,720 Speaker 1: be the same afterwards. Not suggesting that she did. Who 1234 01:02:49,760 --> 01:02:51,280 Speaker 1: the hell knows what kind of conversations she had with 1235 01:02:51,360 --> 01:02:53,280 Speaker 1: her coach, But I know a lot of fans again, 1236 01:02:53,320 --> 01:02:55,200 Speaker 1: they're just they treat them like the Avengers, where all 1237 01:02:55,240 --> 01:02:57,000 Speaker 1: they have to do is just shoot some serum into 1238 01:02:57,000 --> 01:03:01,480 Speaker 1: themselves that you know that Nick Fury comes from, comes 1239 01:03:01,560 --> 01:03:05,440 Speaker 1: with when he's trying to fight Hydra. Here's take this 1240 01:03:05,640 --> 01:03:07,080 Speaker 1: and you know everything will be great and then they 1241 01:03:07,120 --> 01:03:09,480 Speaker 1: go back to normal. Doesn't work that way, man. Whenever 1242 01:03:09,520 --> 01:03:11,240 Speaker 1: you go into one of those fights, dude, you come out, 1243 01:03:11,280 --> 01:03:13,440 Speaker 1: you leave a piece of yourself in that octagon that 1244 01:03:13,600 --> 01:03:15,919 Speaker 1: night you do it's you don't come out the same. 1245 01:03:16,560 --> 01:03:18,600 Speaker 1: And given that she had already had a long career 1246 01:03:18,640 --> 01:03:20,600 Speaker 1: before that, she would she say today she's been fighting 1247 01:03:20,640 --> 01:03:24,120 Speaker 1: for twenty years more than half her life. Dude, you 1248 01:03:24,200 --> 01:03:26,200 Speaker 1: know that bill comes due. I say it on MK 1249 01:03:26,320 --> 01:03:28,560 Speaker 1: all the time. The bill comes due. So while I 1250 01:03:28,640 --> 01:03:31,200 Speaker 1: can certainly grant that, we have to acknowledge that shot 1251 01:03:31,240 --> 01:03:35,640 Speaker 1: would have put out probably anybody or you know, caused 1252 01:03:35,720 --> 01:03:37,520 Speaker 1: major damage in a lot of different ways. I think 1253 01:03:37,560 --> 01:03:40,320 Speaker 1: it's a fair way to put it. And certainly her 1254 01:03:40,360 --> 01:03:43,439 Speaker 1: opponent had improved. There's the ring Russ factor. I count 1255 01:03:43,520 --> 01:03:46,360 Speaker 1: all of those. That's all absolutely the same story. But 1256 01:03:46,520 --> 01:03:48,600 Speaker 1: you take a beating like that, it affects your mental, wealth, 1257 01:03:48,840 --> 01:03:53,640 Speaker 1: health and a competitive psyche. The damage your body just 1258 01:03:53,680 --> 01:03:56,200 Speaker 1: doesn't recover from it the way it did before. It's 1259 01:03:56,320 --> 01:03:58,720 Speaker 1: just hard to get back on the horse. It's why 1260 01:03:58,800 --> 01:04:00,000 Speaker 1: guys like Glover. I don't know if he ever took 1261 01:04:00,120 --> 01:04:01,880 Speaker 1: beating quite like what YO wanna took in that fight, 1262 01:04:01,960 --> 01:04:05,400 Speaker 1: but you know, to be this for like, he's seven 1263 01:04:05,560 --> 01:04:07,920 Speaker 1: years older than you want. That's seven more years of 1264 01:04:09,080 --> 01:04:10,960 Speaker 1: UFC fight and he's been doing I mean, I don't 1265 01:04:10,960 --> 01:04:13,520 Speaker 1: know how long their resumes really compare, but you get 1266 01:04:13,560 --> 01:04:16,040 Speaker 1: the idea to be fighting that late into your athletic 1267 01:04:16,160 --> 01:04:20,360 Speaker 1: life is crazy. It's crazy because dude, it's a grind 1268 01:04:20,600 --> 01:04:25,160 Speaker 1: on these people. It's brutal on them, and you just 1269 01:04:25,240 --> 01:04:27,360 Speaker 1: can't escape it. It's going to get everybody. You do 1270 01:04:27,440 --> 01:04:29,760 Speaker 1: it long enough, it will get everybody, including the people 1271 01:04:29,840 --> 01:04:32,360 Speaker 1: that you love the most, including the fighters that have 1272 01:04:32,480 --> 01:04:35,640 Speaker 1: done incredible things like she has, including the fighters that 1273 01:04:35,920 --> 01:04:40,360 Speaker 1: had a hardcore fan base like she did. Dude. She 1274 01:04:40,480 --> 01:04:43,680 Speaker 1: made the sport better, right, She made the sport better. 1275 01:04:43,720 --> 01:04:46,120 Speaker 1: She made she made the women's divisions better. She made 1276 01:04:46,240 --> 01:04:48,920 Speaker 1: MMA better. I think she taught a lot of people 1277 01:04:49,480 --> 01:04:51,400 Speaker 1: who may have not like a lot of people came 1278 01:04:51,440 --> 01:04:53,720 Speaker 1: over to the sport with Ronda. I think even some 1279 01:04:53,840 --> 01:04:56,480 Speaker 1: other people came over when they saw her. I think 1280 01:04:56,520 --> 01:04:59,040 Speaker 1: there's probably a lot of fans male or female, who 1281 01:04:59,320 --> 01:05:01,520 Speaker 1: you know, everyone's got a certain vibe that they like 1282 01:05:01,600 --> 01:05:03,160 Speaker 1: and a certain attitude they like. I think a lot 1283 01:05:03,200 --> 01:05:04,880 Speaker 1: of people liked what she offered, and I think a 1284 01:05:04,960 --> 01:05:08,520 Speaker 1: lot of fans became real MMA fans because of her. 1285 01:05:08,960 --> 01:05:11,000 Speaker 1: Add into the fact that she was a decorated champion 1286 01:05:11,120 --> 01:05:13,000 Speaker 1: for you know, a considerable amount of time, dude. She 1287 01:05:13,040 --> 01:05:15,920 Speaker 1: had a fantastic career, a fantastic career. So if this 1288 01:05:16,040 --> 01:05:20,520 Speaker 1: really is the end, I will I will give her 1289 01:05:20,560 --> 01:05:22,240 Speaker 1: her respect. I will take my hat off to her 1290 01:05:22,320 --> 01:05:25,960 Speaker 1: and say she has done simply tremendous for herself. But 1291 01:05:27,080 --> 01:05:30,200 Speaker 1: that was that was going to be, you know, that 1292 01:05:30,360 --> 01:05:31,560 Speaker 1: was going to be too big a hole to dig 1293 01:05:31,600 --> 01:05:35,520 Speaker 1: yourself out of. I just firmly believe that. And obviously 1294 01:05:35,640 --> 01:05:38,600 Speaker 1: for Jean Wili, dude, she's you know, I was not 1295 01:05:38,720 --> 01:05:40,280 Speaker 1: that high on the idea of her getting a title 1296 01:05:40,280 --> 01:05:42,640 Speaker 1: shot off of one win. And I guess I'm still not. 1297 01:05:43,600 --> 01:05:45,760 Speaker 1: I'm a little higher. I'm a little higher. That was 1298 01:05:46,520 --> 01:05:49,760 Speaker 1: pretty sensational performance, like something had to be different this time, 1299 01:05:49,840 --> 01:05:52,760 Speaker 1: and she did it. She did it. She made it different, 1300 01:05:53,320 --> 01:05:54,880 Speaker 1: and she made it different in a couple of different, 1301 01:05:55,080 --> 01:06:00,240 Speaker 1: really important ways. I'm a little bit more accept of 1302 01:06:00,320 --> 01:06:03,440 Speaker 1: that reality now at this point very quickly, and we'll 1303 01:06:03,440 --> 01:06:05,120 Speaker 1: get to some of your questions here and again, if 1304 01:06:05,160 --> 01:06:08,480 Speaker 1: you're watching Thumbs Up, please hit subscribe. Jake Matthews defeating 1305 01:06:08,480 --> 01:06:10,800 Speaker 1: Andre Fialio. We'll talk about this probably. If you're wondering 1306 01:06:10,800 --> 01:06:12,480 Speaker 1: where extra credit was last week. I had a whole 1307 01:06:12,520 --> 01:06:14,960 Speaker 1: computer debacle. It's a fucking thing. It'll be out this week, 1308 01:06:15,000 --> 01:06:19,240 Speaker 1: don't worry. Jake Matthews defeating Andre Fialio. That's the best 1309 01:06:19,360 --> 01:06:22,400 Speaker 1: Jake Matthews I've ever seen by a million miles, and 1310 01:06:22,480 --> 01:06:24,600 Speaker 1: not just because he showed skills in a department he's 1311 01:06:24,640 --> 01:06:27,320 Speaker 1: not really known for. Dude, his decision making was great. 1312 01:06:27,360 --> 01:06:30,360 Speaker 1: He had some fucking verb when he was out there moving. 1313 01:06:30,840 --> 01:06:34,920 Speaker 1: There was just a certain poise and deliver how do 1314 01:06:35,040 --> 01:06:38,160 Speaker 1: want to say this deliverance? There's just he had a 1315 01:06:38,240 --> 01:06:41,880 Speaker 1: certain kind of execution and attitude tonight that was that 1316 01:06:42,120 --> 01:06:48,880 Speaker 1: was amazing, amazing. And then Jack Dala Madelena, who's got 1317 01:06:48,880 --> 01:06:51,760 Speaker 1: a really strange and long name, but boy, what a 1318 01:06:51,800 --> 01:06:54,680 Speaker 1: hell of a fighter he is, huh defeating Ramazan and me, 1319 01:06:55,040 --> 01:06:57,400 Speaker 1: holy shit, how about those ribs now, no excuse me. 1320 01:06:57,440 --> 01:07:00,880 Speaker 1: The liver shots, bunch of liver shots. Jocelyn Edwards got 1321 01:07:00,920 --> 01:07:03,240 Speaker 1: doubled over from Ramona Pasqual in the first round with 1322 01:07:03,320 --> 01:07:06,480 Speaker 1: two of them. Then a knee and she was doubled over. 1323 01:07:06,520 --> 01:07:08,960 Speaker 1: And then old Jack Dala Madelena was just crushing him 1324 01:07:08,960 --> 01:07:12,040 Speaker 1: switch stances and then was able to pursue it from 1325 01:07:12,040 --> 01:07:14,240 Speaker 1: a different stance from what he was standing normally, and 1326 01:07:14,320 --> 01:07:16,800 Speaker 1: then took an angle on a meve along the fence 1327 01:07:16,880 --> 01:07:19,560 Speaker 1: line and then just bodied him with those vicious, vicious 1328 01:07:19,600 --> 01:07:22,160 Speaker 1: liver punches. Boy, that kid looks like he is about 1329 01:07:22,200 --> 01:07:25,000 Speaker 1: to turn some people into Hamburger. He looks like he 1330 01:07:25,120 --> 01:07:29,360 Speaker 1: is the genuine article. Jack Dala Madelena is a force 1331 01:07:29,760 --> 01:07:31,480 Speaker 1: to be reckoned with. But dude, you gotta love it. 1332 01:07:31,720 --> 01:07:33,600 Speaker 1: Jake Matthews was left on the side of the road, 1333 01:07:33,680 --> 01:07:35,440 Speaker 1: and there was a good reason for that. Like, look 1334 01:07:35,480 --> 01:07:37,040 Speaker 1: at him. I know you're like, oh, he's only twenty seven. 1335 01:07:37,080 --> 01:07:39,320 Speaker 1: How could you say that? Well, you know, I'm the 1336 01:07:39,360 --> 01:07:44,000 Speaker 1: first guy to be like someone as young as Marvin Vettori. 1337 01:07:44,080 --> 01:07:46,360 Speaker 1: Marvin Victory's like twenty seven to twenty eight, and I 1338 01:07:46,520 --> 01:07:48,400 Speaker 1: just think he's only going to get better. He's already 1339 01:07:48,440 --> 01:07:51,160 Speaker 1: pretty goddamn good. But he had had, you know, a 1340 01:07:51,280 --> 01:07:53,520 Speaker 1: lot of success that you could really count on. Jake 1341 01:07:53,560 --> 01:07:57,400 Speaker 1: Matthews had lost to Kevin Lee, James Vick, Andrew Holbrook, 1342 01:07:57,560 --> 01:08:00,520 Speaker 1: Anthony Rocco Martin, and Roco Martin finished with a fucking 1343 01:08:00,560 --> 01:08:03,480 Speaker 1: a ConA choke, I remember that very distinctly. And then 1344 01:08:03,520 --> 01:08:06,760 Speaker 1: he had wins after that, like Diego Sanchez and so forth. 1345 01:08:07,160 --> 01:08:10,120 Speaker 1: But dude, he lost to Sean Brady. Now, Sean Brady's awesome, 1346 01:08:10,240 --> 01:08:12,920 Speaker 1: as we all know. But Sean Brady just smoked him, 1347 01:08:12,920 --> 01:08:14,640 Speaker 1: you know, finished him off with a head norm triangle. 1348 01:08:14,720 --> 01:08:17,000 Speaker 1: So my whole point is like every time he went 1349 01:08:17,080 --> 01:08:19,840 Speaker 1: up against somebody good, you were like, okay, well, you 1350 01:08:19,920 --> 01:08:22,000 Speaker 1: know he gives him a fighter, you know, has his moments, 1351 01:08:22,040 --> 01:08:25,960 Speaker 1: but you just can't quite get over the humph boy. 1352 01:08:26,080 --> 01:08:28,280 Speaker 1: Not today. You could say what you want about Failiuo 1353 01:08:28,360 --> 01:08:31,920 Speaker 1: being maybe, depending on your viewpoint, something of a favorable 1354 01:08:32,080 --> 01:08:34,680 Speaker 1: ish matchup, or that he has his own limitations as 1355 01:08:34,720 --> 01:08:36,680 Speaker 1: a striker, which he does, of course all of them do. 1356 01:08:37,400 --> 01:08:41,679 Speaker 1: But the kind of dude he just had a real 1357 01:08:42,640 --> 01:08:45,840 Speaker 1: killer attitude the whole time. Not killer like a killer 1358 01:08:45,880 --> 01:08:49,080 Speaker 1: as in like American psycho killer, like real strategic about it, 1359 01:08:49,160 --> 01:08:52,200 Speaker 1: but still absolute violent intentions the whole time. He was 1360 01:08:52,280 --> 01:08:54,360 Speaker 1: phenomenal by him. All right, let's take up a bunch 1361 01:08:54,360 --> 01:08:56,720 Speaker 1: of questions and then we shall call it a night. 1362 01:08:58,320 --> 01:09:03,960 Speaker 1: Let's see how all right, what do you guys got 1363 01:09:04,080 --> 01:09:09,400 Speaker 1: for me? I can't remember a fight where the offense 1364 01:09:09,680 --> 01:09:12,080 Speaker 1: was so varied in terms of striking, wrestling and grappling, 1365 01:09:12,120 --> 01:09:15,760 Speaker 1: but also so bad in terms of striking, wrestling and grappling. Really, 1366 01:09:15,800 --> 01:09:17,240 Speaker 1: I can think of out the fights on this card 1367 01:09:17,320 --> 01:09:21,760 Speaker 1: where the defense was worse. Oh, most of the big 1368 01:09:21,840 --> 01:09:24,960 Speaker 1: reversals and subs or sort escapes were caused by slipping 1369 01:09:25,040 --> 01:09:27,160 Speaker 1: due to sweat or blood and or Yearie and Glover 1370 01:09:27,320 --> 01:09:30,320 Speaker 1: being exhausted. Yes, and the defense on the feet wasn't 1371 01:09:30,320 --> 01:09:32,200 Speaker 1: there for either guy, but especially in Yuri in particular. 1372 01:09:32,240 --> 01:09:35,280 Speaker 1: He's always been that way. He's always been that way, dude. 1373 01:09:35,320 --> 01:09:38,360 Speaker 1: I go over everyone's numbers on Fridays when we preview 1374 01:09:38,400 --> 01:09:42,360 Speaker 1: these fights, like I watch Friday's MK, like, we went 1375 01:09:42,439 --> 01:09:44,759 Speaker 1: over the fact that he gets hit a lot in detail. 1376 01:09:46,760 --> 01:09:49,240 Speaker 1: Does the fight like that encourage or discourage John from 1377 01:09:49,280 --> 01:09:51,280 Speaker 1: returning to light heavyweight? I think he's just looking for 1378 01:09:51,320 --> 01:09:53,479 Speaker 1: biggest money, biggest Yeah. No, I don't think it makes 1379 01:09:53,479 --> 01:09:57,200 Speaker 1: any difference. Is to Sheriff versus PROHDGKA the best championship 1380 01:09:57,200 --> 01:09:59,840 Speaker 1: fight in UFC history? No, how long do you think 1381 01:09:59,880 --> 01:10:02,559 Speaker 1: you can hold the belt? I don't know, dude, Because 1382 01:10:02,560 --> 01:10:04,600 Speaker 1: he is young, and he's durable, and he's tough, and 1383 01:10:04,640 --> 01:10:08,080 Speaker 1: he's really athletic, and he's crazy and Jesus, he's got 1384 01:10:08,200 --> 01:10:13,240 Speaker 1: mental fortitude, you know, for weeks. But dude, he takes 1385 01:10:13,320 --> 01:10:15,879 Speaker 1: a lot of damage. He takes a lot of damage. 1386 01:10:15,920 --> 01:10:19,519 Speaker 1: His strikes absord per minute was above six before heading 1387 01:10:19,560 --> 01:10:22,960 Speaker 1: into this. Now it's almost seven. I'm telling you, folks 1388 01:10:23,040 --> 01:10:27,000 Speaker 1: like Chevchenko is less than two. She's like one point 1389 01:10:27,080 --> 01:10:29,760 Speaker 1: eight or something. Michael Kisa is less than two. A 1390 01:10:29,840 --> 01:10:33,800 Speaker 1: lot of people are less than three. He gets hit 1391 01:10:33,840 --> 01:10:36,040 Speaker 1: a lot. He gets hit a shitload like that. There's 1392 01:10:36,240 --> 01:10:38,800 Speaker 1: that train. I'm telling you. If he doesn't fix the 1393 01:10:38,840 --> 01:10:41,519 Speaker 1: other parts of his game, for all the wonderful things 1394 01:10:41,560 --> 01:10:43,560 Speaker 1: we can say about him, if he doesn't fix the 1395 01:10:43,600 --> 01:10:46,760 Speaker 1: other parts of his game, once the chin goes, the 1396 01:10:46,960 --> 01:10:50,200 Speaker 1: whole shit is gonna come apart. His game is predicated 1397 01:10:50,320 --> 01:10:56,559 Speaker 1: on taking damage. What would have happened if the clash 1398 01:10:56,600 --> 01:10:58,320 Speaker 1: of heads had ended the fight? Who would have won 1399 01:10:58,400 --> 01:11:00,400 Speaker 1: the technical decision? It would have gone to the judges, 1400 01:11:00,439 --> 01:11:04,280 Speaker 1: I think, right, I think that's right. Oh yes, if 1401 01:11:04,280 --> 01:11:08,479 Speaker 1: it's an Jesus okay. So if it's an intentional foul, 1402 01:11:08,720 --> 01:11:11,120 Speaker 1: then he would win. She would have won via TKO 1403 01:11:12,040 --> 01:11:16,920 Speaker 1: right if she couldn't continue. If it's unintentional, I think 1404 01:11:16,960 --> 01:11:18,240 Speaker 1: they go to the scorecard. I have to look this 1405 01:11:18,280 --> 01:11:22,080 Speaker 1: shit up. I think they go to the scorecards. Did 1406 01:11:22,120 --> 01:11:24,479 Speaker 1: you see the scorecards? One judge gave Yeeri a ten eight, 1407 01:11:24,560 --> 01:11:26,599 Speaker 1: and it was set up for a possible split decision 1408 01:11:26,720 --> 01:11:29,400 Speaker 1: draw had it gone the distance. No, I didn't see that. 1409 01:11:29,479 --> 01:11:32,240 Speaker 1: That's fucking crazy. You know what? Which round was gonna 1410 01:11:32,240 --> 01:11:35,600 Speaker 1: give him? A ten eight in? I don't remember there 1411 01:11:36,000 --> 01:11:42,720 Speaker 1: being one, but I wasn't judging like that. Am I 1412 01:11:42,840 --> 01:11:45,240 Speaker 1: crazy and thinking Cory Anderson can probably beat YERI? No, 1413 01:11:45,400 --> 01:11:48,200 Speaker 1: everyone was talking shit about Corey and then vadem Nemkov. 1414 01:11:48,680 --> 01:11:51,439 Speaker 1: You really think that Corey and or vadem Nemkov can't 1415 01:11:51,479 --> 01:11:55,920 Speaker 1: beat either Glover and or YERI. I don't think that 1416 01:11:56,760 --> 01:12:01,599 Speaker 1: Corey already beat Glover. You know why would that? Like, yeah, 1417 01:12:01,640 --> 01:12:05,280 Speaker 1: of course it's competitive. Do you believe that Yoanna will 1418 01:12:05,360 --> 01:12:08,120 Speaker 1: legitimately remain retired? Well, we all know the story, right, 1419 01:12:08,240 --> 01:12:12,120 Speaker 1: Like MMA retirements is just the biggest joke because they 1420 01:12:12,280 --> 01:12:13,680 Speaker 1: retire for like a year and then they come back 1421 01:12:13,760 --> 01:12:17,320 Speaker 1: or something. So with that caveat in mind, I tend 1422 01:12:17,360 --> 01:12:20,960 Speaker 1: to think though that, like, I don't know, I think 1423 01:12:21,040 --> 01:12:27,240 Speaker 1: she's probably done, but I'd say sixty forty. Is it 1424 01:12:27,320 --> 01:12:29,599 Speaker 1: better for a division to have a dominant champion like Jones, 1425 01:12:29,640 --> 01:12:32,160 Speaker 1: gspr Anderson. It's always better to have a star as 1426 01:12:32,200 --> 01:12:34,720 Speaker 1: a champion leading a division that's the answer to your question. 1427 01:12:35,439 --> 01:12:38,719 Speaker 1: With the competitiveness, competitiveness of this fight and sheer entertainment, 1428 01:12:38,800 --> 01:12:40,840 Speaker 1: is it likely we see an immediate rematch? And if so, 1429 01:12:41,400 --> 01:12:43,200 Speaker 1: do you like the idea for Glover? Well, Glover at 1430 01:12:43,240 --> 01:12:46,000 Speaker 1: forty two do that was a shitload of damage, you know, 1431 01:12:46,160 --> 01:12:49,080 Speaker 1: not the most I've ever seen, but like, ugh, Like 1432 01:12:49,760 --> 01:12:52,519 Speaker 1: if you were twenty four versus forty two, you would 1433 01:12:52,520 --> 01:12:54,560 Speaker 1: still say that's a lot of damage at forty two, Like, 1434 01:12:55,760 --> 01:12:58,720 Speaker 1: you know, the amount that wears on you is you know. 1435 01:12:59,840 --> 01:13:01,560 Speaker 1: I had a friend write me today on Instagram. But 1436 01:13:01,560 --> 01:13:02,880 Speaker 1: buddy of mine I went to high school with, he 1437 01:13:02,960 --> 01:13:04,360 Speaker 1: was like, dude, I hurt my neck. I was like, 1438 01:13:04,360 --> 01:13:05,840 Speaker 1: what'd you do? He was like, I took a nap, 1439 01:13:06,840 --> 01:13:08,439 Speaker 1: I slept wrong, and then you woke up and then 1440 01:13:08,479 --> 01:13:09,760 Speaker 1: you know, you have to be in a wheelchair for 1441 01:13:09,800 --> 01:13:11,920 Speaker 1: the next week because your fucking spine doesn't work. That's 1442 01:13:11,920 --> 01:13:14,400 Speaker 1: what getting old means. So whatever you can tolerate at 1443 01:13:14,439 --> 01:13:19,320 Speaker 1: twenty four, your body cannot tolerate the same at forty two, Well, yo, 1444 01:13:19,360 --> 01:13:21,439 Speaker 1: wanna way, Lee was hard to predict another war, blah 1445 01:13:21,479 --> 01:13:24,080 Speaker 1: blah blah blah. The safest bet was right. Too many 1446 01:13:24,160 --> 01:13:27,280 Speaker 1: questions regarding Juanna's layoff, Yes, and damage taken. Yes, we 1447 01:13:27,360 --> 01:13:29,840 Speaker 1: knew from Wiley Rose two that Wiley could still take 1448 01:13:30,280 --> 01:13:36,360 Speaker 1: and give lots of damage. Yep. Fair. Yeah. Someone says 1449 01:13:36,400 --> 01:13:38,559 Speaker 1: we got to stop assuming every fighter in a given 1450 01:13:38,880 --> 01:13:42,920 Speaker 1: weight class is invincible. Yeah, I yes, strongly encourage you 1451 01:13:42,960 --> 01:13:45,719 Speaker 1: to not do that. Can you think of a significant 1452 01:13:45,800 --> 01:13:50,200 Speaker 1: MMA fight with more accumulated damage across both fighters? Bigfoot 1453 01:13:50,320 --> 01:13:55,800 Speaker 1: Silva versus Mark Hunt one that was real bad. That 1454 01:13:55,960 --> 01:14:02,800 Speaker 1: was real bad. Yuri Glover proved a lot of narratives correct. 1455 01:14:02,880 --> 01:14:05,559 Speaker 1: Glover could get the takedowns, and he did land big hooks. 1456 01:14:06,080 --> 01:14:08,280 Speaker 1: Yuri won the striking but was too wild at times. 1457 01:14:09,720 --> 01:14:12,519 Speaker 1: But URI's grappling is underrated, and his work with Sehudo 1458 01:14:12,560 --> 01:14:16,160 Speaker 1: and John only improved it. I was not super impressed 1459 01:14:16,200 --> 01:14:19,360 Speaker 1: with his grappling. I was impressed with his like intuitiveness 1460 01:14:19,640 --> 01:14:26,120 Speaker 1: and pressure and poise under fire. I was not like, 1461 01:14:26,400 --> 01:14:28,320 Speaker 1: I did not walk away being like, wow, is grappling 1462 01:14:28,479 --> 01:14:32,600 Speaker 1: is like some of the best I've seen. I did not. 1463 01:14:32,680 --> 01:14:34,479 Speaker 1: I don't think it's poor by any stretch. Don't please 1464 01:14:34,479 --> 01:14:38,040 Speaker 1: don't mist understand me. But like I you know, Glover 1465 01:14:38,080 --> 01:14:41,960 Speaker 1: took him out for a reason. Do you prefer a 1466 01:14:42,120 --> 01:14:44,559 Speaker 1: Chandler Getchee type of war or a Yuri Glover where 1467 01:14:44,600 --> 01:14:46,720 Speaker 1: we see all the martial arts mixed other than a 1468 01:14:46,760 --> 01:14:48,400 Speaker 1: striking battle. Yeah, I like it when they mix it 1469 01:14:48,479 --> 01:14:50,880 Speaker 1: up personally, But you know that's just an opinion. You know, 1470 01:14:56,040 --> 01:14:58,640 Speaker 1: Glover was what was winning thirty nine thirty seven. Excuse me, 1471 01:15:01,080 --> 01:15:03,439 Speaker 1: Someone says, finally, I think you guys are agreeing with me. Finally, 1472 01:15:03,880 --> 01:15:06,400 Speaker 1: I think the narrative by fans that chev is perfect, 1473 01:15:06,600 --> 01:15:09,320 Speaker 1: Chevchenko or quote, the most complete fighter male or female, 1474 01:15:09,360 --> 01:15:12,240 Speaker 1: should finally die. Yes, of course it's crazy. Nunez or 1475 01:15:12,320 --> 01:15:14,840 Speaker 1: Maya showed she had holes in her wrestling and back game. 1476 01:15:15,160 --> 01:15:19,759 Speaker 1: I thought she fixed this, But they still exist. Chances 1477 01:15:19,800 --> 01:15:22,360 Speaker 1: that Glover can make or get another title run. He 1478 01:15:22,520 --> 01:15:24,639 Speaker 1: might get a rematch, but other than that, it's probably over. 1479 01:15:28,400 --> 01:15:31,040 Speaker 1: Did Singapore have an effect on Wiley's win. I'm not 1480 01:15:31,120 --> 01:15:33,360 Speaker 1: sure if her travel situation. I think if she had 1481 01:15:33,400 --> 01:15:35,920 Speaker 1: to do less traveling that probably affected her. But yes, 1482 01:15:36,080 --> 01:15:40,800 Speaker 1: also probably not having Americans boo her was probably nice. 1483 01:15:42,520 --> 01:15:44,639 Speaker 1: That could be the greatest title fight in MMA top ten. 1484 01:15:44,800 --> 01:15:48,040 Speaker 1: It's it deserves to be considered highly. I have to 1485 01:15:48,080 --> 01:15:50,920 Speaker 1: think more about its actual placement. But yes, I think 1486 01:15:50,920 --> 01:15:53,040 Speaker 1: Glover abandoned his stand up a little too much. YEP, 1487 01:15:53,080 --> 01:15:56,799 Speaker 1: I agree. Should they run back chevchenk O versus Santos? 1488 01:15:56,800 --> 01:15:59,800 Speaker 1: I'd like to see it more than like that wasn't 1489 01:15:59,800 --> 01:16:01,200 Speaker 1: the fight that I was like, Oh, I want to 1490 01:16:01,200 --> 01:16:06,160 Speaker 1: see Schipvchenko versus Nonaz again. Can you think of an 1491 01:16:06,240 --> 01:16:14,639 Speaker 1: MMA title fight with more dominant momentum swings? Oo? I mean, 1492 01:16:15,160 --> 01:16:19,880 Speaker 1: what would you say about about Johanna and Wiley the 1493 01:16:19,920 --> 01:16:22,479 Speaker 1: first time? And we didn't have this kind of momentum swing, 1494 01:16:24,000 --> 01:16:25,799 Speaker 1: but it certainly had a lot of back and forth 1495 01:16:27,920 --> 01:16:29,840 Speaker 1: momentum swings. I have to think about that a little 1496 01:16:29,880 --> 01:16:37,000 Speaker 1: bit more. Is a forty three year old Glover embodying 1497 01:16:37,080 --> 01:16:40,200 Speaker 1: the warrior spirit, warrior spirit, excuse me, only to get 1498 01:16:40,240 --> 01:16:42,719 Speaker 1: choked out? And the most is it the most poetically tragic? 1499 01:16:42,760 --> 01:16:44,960 Speaker 1: It's simultaneously inspiring thing you've ever seen in a while. 1500 01:16:45,040 --> 01:16:47,840 Speaker 1: There's nothing tragic about it, dude, Nothing tragic about it, 1501 01:16:48,080 --> 01:16:51,160 Speaker 1: poetic or otherwise. Glover to share, I gave everything he 1502 01:16:51,200 --> 01:16:53,439 Speaker 1: had tonight, I don't. I mean, who could possibly say, 1503 01:16:53,439 --> 01:16:57,000 Speaker 1: oh he tapped, he tapped because he was defeated. He 1504 01:16:57,120 --> 01:17:03,200 Speaker 1: was gonna either get completely choked out, uh, or he 1505 01:17:03,400 --> 01:17:09,840 Speaker 1: was someone was texting me, or or he was gonna 1506 01:17:09,880 --> 01:17:15,240 Speaker 1: tap it was. It was surrender by virtue of fair acknowledgement. 1507 01:17:15,280 --> 01:17:17,960 Speaker 1: It's not surrender like, oh I just can't take this anymore. 1508 01:17:18,560 --> 01:17:20,320 Speaker 1: I think it was surrender like the end is here. 1509 01:17:20,600 --> 01:17:24,479 Speaker 1: He got me. You know, I have this as the 1510 01:17:24,560 --> 01:17:26,840 Speaker 1: most exciting light heavyweight title fight of all time. It's 1511 01:17:26,920 --> 01:17:28,800 Speaker 1: up there. As I said at the beginning of the show, 1512 01:17:28,960 --> 01:17:32,640 Speaker 1: it's up there. Should Glover have ended his career with 1513 01:17:32,680 --> 01:17:35,679 Speaker 1: an awesome, albeit title losing effort, Fuck that dude. Based 1514 01:17:35,680 --> 01:17:38,120 Speaker 1: on what he turned in today, I'm so glad he 1515 01:17:38,240 --> 01:17:43,080 Speaker 1: took this fight. How do I think a year he 1516 01:17:43,160 --> 01:17:45,320 Speaker 1: matches up with Izzy after watching that fight? Well, he 1517 01:17:45,560 --> 01:17:48,680 Speaker 1: is fucking huge, so that's an X factor. But I 1518 01:17:48,720 --> 01:17:53,960 Speaker 1: think as long as it's on the Feetaigna lights him up. 1519 01:17:54,560 --> 01:17:56,519 Speaker 1: I think he lights him up. But how much he 1520 01:17:56,600 --> 01:18:01,040 Speaker 1: can maintain that is an open question. How much fun 1521 01:18:01,080 --> 01:18:03,240 Speaker 1: are you having seen the light heavyweight belt change hands 1522 01:18:03,240 --> 01:18:05,200 Speaker 1: between contenders that are all so easy to cheer for. 1523 01:18:05,280 --> 01:18:08,439 Speaker 1: It's great, Listen, I love it when you know for 1524 01:18:08,640 --> 01:18:10,519 Speaker 1: the sport, it's better when there's a dominant figure at 1525 01:18:10,560 --> 01:18:16,680 Speaker 1: the top. But I love situations where, yes, we have 1526 01:18:16,840 --> 01:18:19,360 Speaker 1: one division where there's like this towering figure and it's 1527 01:18:19,400 --> 01:18:21,720 Speaker 1: so fun to figure out, you know, how long they 1528 01:18:21,720 --> 01:18:23,160 Speaker 1: can hold it and all the things that they've done 1529 01:18:23,200 --> 01:18:25,920 Speaker 1: and to talk about it. But I also love situations 1530 01:18:25,960 --> 01:18:29,360 Speaker 1: where do there's just parody and if it's one person 1531 01:18:29,479 --> 01:18:31,640 Speaker 1: on the right night has an inspired performance, they're going 1532 01:18:31,680 --> 01:18:33,519 Speaker 1: to be the champion. I love both. I love both 1533 01:18:33,560 --> 01:18:36,519 Speaker 1: for what they offer. I don't think I don't have 1534 01:18:36,640 --> 01:18:39,200 Speaker 1: to believe it's an either or situation. I can accept 1535 01:18:39,240 --> 01:18:41,479 Speaker 1: both for what they are and be happy about it. 1536 01:18:41,600 --> 01:18:43,400 Speaker 1: I love that it's happening right now. I think it's great. 1537 01:18:43,600 --> 01:18:45,800 Speaker 1: I wouldn't want every division to be like this all 1538 01:18:45,880 --> 01:18:48,519 Speaker 1: the time. You would want some stability, But I like 1539 01:18:48,640 --> 01:18:56,360 Speaker 1: this a lot. Have you ever seen two fighters make 1540 01:18:56,400 --> 01:18:58,840 Speaker 1: bigger blunders? Yeah, Jesus, I've seen a lot of that. 1541 01:19:01,600 --> 01:19:05,040 Speaker 1: Where does Glover rank among super impressive old dudes in 1542 01:19:05,120 --> 01:19:09,000 Speaker 1: MMA history higher than Katur? No? No? Katur did it 1543 01:19:09,040 --> 01:19:13,440 Speaker 1: across multiple weight classes. I mean, think about this, who 1544 01:19:13,560 --> 01:19:16,360 Speaker 1: took Kator's heavyweight title? Do you remember chocolatel took his 1545 01:19:16,439 --> 01:19:19,599 Speaker 1: light heavyweight belt? Or I think it was the Yes, 1546 01:19:19,760 --> 01:19:21,400 Speaker 1: he took it from him, and then they had the 1547 01:19:21,439 --> 01:19:26,000 Speaker 1: rematch of the trilogy. Who took his? Uh? Who took 1548 01:19:26,040 --> 01:19:28,840 Speaker 1: his heavyweight belt? You remember this? It was Lesner? I 1549 01:19:28,920 --> 01:19:30,760 Speaker 1: mean that, dude, Think about that. Think about how many 1550 01:19:30,760 --> 01:19:33,120 Speaker 1: I mean, this guy was fighting in the late nineties 1551 01:19:33,920 --> 01:19:36,040 Speaker 1: and it wasn't until Lesner came along that he took 1552 01:19:36,080 --> 01:19:39,639 Speaker 1: his heavyweight belt after he recaptured it against Tim Sylvia 1553 01:19:39,640 --> 01:19:44,200 Speaker 1: after previously retiring at light heavyweight. Yeah, dude, that's different. 1554 01:19:44,520 --> 01:19:47,559 Speaker 1: That's different, but like relative to like an Alexi Olenic. Yeah, 1555 01:19:47,560 --> 01:19:52,000 Speaker 1: he's much more accomplished than that. Someone says, am I 1556 01:19:52,040 --> 01:19:55,160 Speaker 1: misinterpreting the Unified Rules quote top and bottom position fighters 1557 01:19:55,160 --> 01:19:57,600 Speaker 1: are assessed more on the impactful effective result of their 1558 01:19:57,640 --> 01:20:00,760 Speaker 1: actions more so than on their position. Why is this 1559 01:20:00,840 --> 01:20:04,040 Speaker 1: overlooked when giving rounds for top control like round two 1560 01:20:04,160 --> 01:20:07,760 Speaker 1: for Santos. Yeah. I just don't agree that the rules 1561 01:20:07,760 --> 01:20:10,800 Speaker 1: should say that, but they do say that. I don't 1562 01:20:10,880 --> 01:20:13,120 Speaker 1: think that's the right way to look at things personally, 1563 01:20:13,680 --> 01:20:16,800 Speaker 1: But if that's what's written, then you have to accept it. 1564 01:20:19,000 --> 01:20:21,640 Speaker 1: Was Yerie out on Glover's chest for like ten to 1565 01:20:21,680 --> 01:20:25,559 Speaker 1: fifteen seconds in the fifth no over under that Brian 1566 01:20:25,640 --> 01:20:29,320 Speaker 1: Campbell shed some tears during Monday's episode after yo Wana's retirement. No, 1567 01:20:29,439 --> 01:20:32,280 Speaker 1: he won't cry, but we'll say nice things about her. 1568 01:20:35,240 --> 01:20:39,439 Speaker 1: Was the Singapore crowd quiet? I had my video feed 1569 01:20:39,520 --> 01:20:52,519 Speaker 1: turned down a little bit. I'm not sure how good 1570 01:20:52,680 --> 01:20:55,360 Speaker 1: was Dona versus Strong? Incredible? We'll talk about that later. 1571 01:21:00,120 --> 01:21:03,400 Speaker 1: Jan beats YERI does Yan Belokovich beat Eerie? He might? 1572 01:21:04,120 --> 01:21:12,720 Speaker 1: He might, it's competitive, he might. And then lastly, yeah, 1573 01:21:12,760 --> 01:21:15,479 Speaker 1: that's it, all right? How long do we go? Minute 1574 01:21:15,479 --> 01:21:20,160 Speaker 1: in twenty three? It's a long time, bro. All right, folks, 1575 01:21:20,640 --> 01:21:23,360 Speaker 1: let's call it a day, shall we. That was insane? 1576 01:21:24,400 --> 01:21:28,560 Speaker 1: That was truly insane. H I hope you enjoyed it. 1577 01:21:29,360 --> 01:21:32,880 Speaker 1: Monday back in studio, Yes, we're trying to go regularly now. 1578 01:21:33,040 --> 01:21:35,160 Speaker 1: So Brian and I will be back in the Bomb 1579 01:21:35,200 --> 01:21:39,720 Speaker 1: Shelter on Monday, and we will do I will have 1580 01:21:40,120 --> 01:21:42,840 Speaker 1: I will have, I promise, I apologize, I will have 1581 01:21:43,160 --> 01:21:45,720 Speaker 1: a extra credit and we're gonna be shooting I think 1582 01:21:45,760 --> 01:21:48,920 Speaker 1: our video where we watch Max Invulke one and two 1583 01:21:49,360 --> 01:21:51,160 Speaker 1: and then score it and then talk about the scoring. 1584 01:21:51,320 --> 01:21:53,160 Speaker 1: So that should be a lot of fun as well. 1585 01:21:53,280 --> 01:21:56,120 Speaker 1: But Monday Live eleven am in the East. We'll do 1586 01:21:56,160 --> 01:21:58,200 Speaker 1: a Monday morning comment. We'll get all of Brian's reactions. 1587 01:21:58,200 --> 01:22:00,320 Speaker 1: We'll talk about the Heimimoon Gia fight as well a 1588 01:22:00,360 --> 01:22:02,960 Speaker 1: lot of different stuff. Okay, thumbs up on the video, 1589 01:22:03,400 --> 01:22:05,760 Speaker 1: Please hit subscribe. Thank you so much for joining me. 1590 01:22:05,920 --> 01:22:09,000 Speaker 1: I greatly appreciate it. This was a lot of fun. 1591 01:22:09,360 --> 01:22:11,559 Speaker 1: It's a late night, so everyone you get some sleep. 1592 01:22:11,880 --> 01:22:15,160 Speaker 1: But if you were an MMA fan who watches MMA 1593 01:22:15,240 --> 01:22:17,880 Speaker 1: because you love good MMA, not just big names like 1594 01:22:17,960 --> 01:22:21,360 Speaker 1: the casual fuckheads out there, this was your reward tonight. 1595 01:22:21,439 --> 01:22:24,160 Speaker 1: You get to watch the good stuff that those dumbasses 1596 01:22:24,280 --> 01:22:28,200 Speaker 1: don't have the awareness to make time for. And you did, 1597 01:22:28,520 --> 01:22:30,439 Speaker 1: and that's why you get to have the best stuff. 1598 01:22:30,800 --> 01:22:32,560 Speaker 1: Thank you so much for watching. I will talk to 1599 01:22:32,600 --> 01:22:34,600 Speaker 1: you at eleven am in the East on Monday, and 1600 01:22:34,760 --> 01:22:36,800 Speaker 1: until then, get some sleep.