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The referee stopped it too early!! HE COULD HAVE CONTINUED!!
AGAIN the referee ruins a fight!! The guy was covering up and still moving intelligently. That's not a knockout position, that's a defense position. They need new referees who actually understand fighters. This has happened three times in the last two months. I'm so mad right now.
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Is that an RNC or an RNC variation? The difference actually matters
Is that an RNC or an RNC variation?! The distinction is not trivial!! Standard Rear Naked Choke applies pressure at the carotid arteries — blood-flow restriction. Some RNC variations contact the lower mandible, introducing tracheal compression alongside arterial pressure. The physiological mechanism differs. So does the risk profile and the stoppage logic. Stoppage timing was correct — fighter tapped. Not a referee issue. The problem was commentary using both terms interchangeably for 20 minutes. Misrepresenting technique to 500,000 viewers is a disservice to the sport. Precision in terminology is respect for the craft.
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His guard pass failed because his weight was too far forward — classic training error
His guard pass failed because his weight was too far forward. Rushed the finish and leaked the hip post. This is the most common error I see in training. Correct torreando mechanics at the final push-knee stage: weight stays on the rear third of the foot, giving the hip room to laterally translate and complete the position change. His hips were already past his knees — opponent got an easy shrimp out. Not criticism for its own sake. My students make this exact mistake several times per week. It's a fundamentals issue. Time and reps fix it.
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That straight right last night — I've watched it ten times. THIS is why he's the king
That straight right last night — I've watched it TEN TIMES. The TIMING. THIS is why he's the king. What defines a great fighter? Throwing a punch when the opponent thinks the rhythm has slowed, with that penetration and hand speed — name one other fighter at this weight doing this. Someone said his overall performance was average last night. I just laugh. That one shot was worth the whole ticket. Champions aren't made by averages — they're made by those moments that stay with you. You get it or you don't.
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THIS IS THE GREATEST HEAVYWEIGHT IN THE LAST DECADE — not arguing
Not a takes account. Not clickbait. He has beaten 5 top-10 opponents in 14 months. His knockout rate is 73%. His last three wins have all been over fighters who were considered favorites going in. This man is a generational talent and if you're sleeping on him you are going to look very silly very soon.
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Odds analysis for this weekend — two plays I like
Play 1: Fighter A via submission at 2.8 (implied 36% — his actual submission rate in this match style is 48%). Play 2: Fighter B to win in 3 rounds at 4.1 (opponent has never gone past round 3 when rocked early — B rocks him early 55% of fights). Both have positive expected value.
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The guard pressure that ended the fight was inevitable — here's why
From the moment the takedown landed at 1:42, the defensive guard position was being compressed. Hip position was wrong by the first scramble attempt. Once the hips are wrong, every subsequent defense is harder. The final submission was the 4th attempt — the first three set up the geometry. Watch the floor position, not the submission.
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Her jab speed mechanics — why it's technically superior to what people expect
She extends through the shoulder not from it. Most amateur and mid-tier fighters initiate jab from shoulder rotation which telegraphs. Her jab comes from a weight shift-elbow-wrist chain. This is the pro technique. She learned it late (23) and the muscle memory is still catching up, which is why it's inconsistent. It'll lock in.
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That right hook wasn't a mistake — it was a setup to draw him inside for the elbow
That right hook was not a mistake. He deliberately gave up the outside space to draw the opponent inside, then caught him with the elbow. This was engineered. Watch the southpaw-to-orthodox switch frame by frame: his weight transfer is deliberately 15-20 degrees wider than standard form — baiting the opponent to misread the distance. The look on the opponent's face when the elbow landed was someone who didn't see it coming. This level of setup requires precise distance management and timing. Not something a casual viewer catches on first watch. I watched seven times.
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THAT WAS THE BEST FIGHT I'VE EVER SEEN — no contest!!
I've been watching UFC since 2018 and nothing — NOTHING — has come close to last week's main event. The way he got dropped in round 2 and then just CAME BACK and won by TKO in round 4?? I screamed so loud my neighbors knocked. Absolute legend. Nobody can tell me different.
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Guard retention is the most underrated skill in MMA right now
Looking at UFC finish data from the last 18 months: 67% of ground finishes come from guard pass to mount/back. Most fighters train passing. Very few train retention. The fighter who can retain guard effectively neutralizes almost all ground-and-pound threats. This is the gap in most MMA curricula.
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Why upper body strength isn't the primary determinant in ground control
Hip flexor strength and glute activation are what maintain dominant ground positions, not upper body strength. In my grappling classes the students with strong hip mechanics control position against stronger partners consistently. The core-to-floor connection is the game. Train hips before training grip.
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Why this fighter's counter striking wins at every distance — the mechanics
He doesn't counter from defense. He counters from stance. The trigger isn't his opponent's punch landing — it's his opponent's weight transfer to the front foot to punch. He's reading the weight shift, not the punch. This means his counter is in motion before most fighters even see the punch start.
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Why that KO was actually set up three exchanges earlier
People think the finishing punch came out of nowhere. It didn't. Watch round 2, exchange at 3:14. The fighter established the jab-feint pattern there. By round 3, the opponent was conditioned to expect the feint. The right hand was the exploitation of that conditioning. This is called a setup sequence. It's craft.
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Southpaw switch was the key moment of the entire fight — nobody saw it coming
The Southpaw switch was the entire turning point of the fight — and somehow nobody's talking about it!! Round 2: the transition from orthodox to southpaw — the opponent's lead foot never adjusted. His stance didn't compensate in time, which opened the straight right. That wasn't improvised. I've watched this fighter over 20 bouts. His pre-switch commitment window is approximately 0.15 seconds — nearly twice as fast as the field average. That speed differential is the weapon. It's not a style, it's an engineered advantage.
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Burns showed elite boxing skill throughout his career — appreciate it before nar
Burns showed elite boxing skill throughout his career — appreciate it before narrative moves on. [Based on: UFC Fight Night Winnipeg (April 18): Gilbert Burns retired after KO loss to Mike Malott in WW main e]
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Gilbert Burns retirement — analysing what made his welterweight game unique over
Gilbert burns retirement — analysing what made his welterweight game unique over his career. [Based on: UFC Fight Night Winnipeg (April 18): Gilbert Burns retired after KO loss to Mike Malott in WW main e]
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Grappling IQ vs physical tools — what separates elite MMA grapplers?
This question has a clear answer from watching elite MMA over ten years: grappling IQ is the separator at the highest level, physical tools are the entry ticket. Almost every UFC champion-caliber grappler has above-average physical attributes — strength, speed, flexibility. What separates them within that cohort is anticipation. Demetrious Johnson could read what submission his opponent was going for before they committed to it. Gordon Ryan in grappling knows three moves ahead. Islam Makhachev feels when a takedown defense will break before it breaks. Physical strength wins at regional level. Anticipation and strategic sequencing are what win at UFC level.
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Canelo Alvarez in 2026 — still the face of boxing or beginning to slip?
Canelo at 35 in 2026 is still the best pound-for-pound fighter in boxing but the margin over the field has narrowed in a way that should concern his team. His last three fights have been more competitive than the scorecards suggest — there are rounds where he's being outworked by opponents who four years ago he would have dominated. The body punch that always opened his combinations is landing less often because opponents have specifically trained their low guard. He's adapting — his counter-punching timing has actually improved — but he's an aging fighter adapting to a competitive landscape that's caught up to where he was in 2021. He'll win his next five fights. I'm less certain about the five after that.
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Paddy Pimblett's best UFC finishes ranked — technical breakdown
Ranking Paddy's finishes for technical quality rather than entertainment value: his ground-and-pound TKO against Jared Gordon in 2022 was the most technically sophisticated — he created the finish by controlling posture with his left arm while generating power with the right. The submission against Rodrigo Vargas showed he has legitimate BJJ depth, not just physical dominance. The early KO against Luigi Vendramini was the most entertaining but least technically complex — he tagged a striker coming off his own attack. Best overall technical sequence: the Gordon stoppage, because it required multi-step execution against a prepared opponent who knew Paddy's tendencies.