Dominick Cruz vs. Cody Garbrandt at UFC 207: The Complete Breakdown

While Ronda Rousey’s return fight against Amanda Nunes is garnering most of the headlines in the lead-up to UFC 207 on Friday, December 30, the co-main event featuring a bantamweight title fight between Cody Garbrandt and Dominick Cruz is an even more …

While Ronda Rousey’s return fight against Amanda Nunes is garnering most of the headlines in the lead-up to UFC 207 on Friday, December 30, the co-main event featuring a bantamweight title fight between Cody Garbrandt and Dominick Cruz is an even more compelling matchup.

Cruz has made a career, as he pointed out in a segment of trash-talking (warning: NSFW language) at December 17’s UFC on Fox event, of beating up fighters who train out of Team Alpha Male in Sacramento, California, from founder Urijah Faber to Joseph Benavidez to their former teammate TJ Dillashaw. Can Garbrandt, the latest representative of the team, snap that five-fight losing streak?

Garbrandt has risen quickly since debuting in the UFC in January 2015, knocking out four of his five opponents in the promotion in devastating fashion. Only Henry Briones has survived the 15-minute distance with him, and Takeya Mizugaki, Thomas Almeida and Augusto Mendes all fell in the first round in 2016 to cap off his current streak.

The 25-year-old Ohio native has picked his matchups well and delivered on his promise, which has put him in position to take on Cruz in a high-profile fight. 

Cruz has rebounded from a rough four-year stretch that was marred by injuries. He defended his bantamweight title for the last time in October 2011, defeating future flyweight great Demetrious Johnson, but then missed the next three years with a series of knee and groin injuries. He returned with a first-round finish of Takeya Mizugaki in September 2014 but promptly lost the next 16 months to still more ailments.

Dillashaw, the reigning and defending bantamweight champion, put up a tough fight in their January 2016 meeting, but Cruz came out on top in a razor-thin split-decision win. He defended his reclaimed crown in a third fight with Faber in June to set up the fight with Faber’s protege, Garbrandt.

This is a great matchup on paper and a compelling meeting of new school and old school. Garbrandt might be the future, but is he the present as well?

    

Dominick Cruz

Record: 22-1 (7 KO, 1 SUB, 14 DEC)

Height: 5’8″

Reach: 68 inches

Cruz’s game is built on his constant movement. Sidesteps, shuffle steps, backward and forward steps, pivots, and stance switches all combine into a seamless whole that creates a flow chart of available options. This variety of potential responses is constantly in motion, depending on the precise angle and distance Cruz occupies relative to his opponent.

There’s no division between the different phases of the fight, or even between offense and defense, in Cruz’s approach to MMA. The same angle that allows him to land a combination also has built-in head movement to avoid a counter—and instead of a combination, he might change levels and shoot a takedown. Moreover, his flow chart builds on itself over the course of the fight. 

Consider a simple pivot in the face of an opponent who’s trying to pressure Cruz. Once he executes the movement the first time, Cruz might use the opportunity to escape into open space. The second time, he can stop, plant his feet and throw a combination. The third time, he might change levels and shoot a takedown from a dominant angle. The fourth time, he might fake a level change and then come up with a combination.

That’s just one example of a basic movement, and it’s not even an exhaustive list of everything Cruz can do with that one pivot. Cruz’s game provides an almost infinite variety of those movements and options for building on top of them.

In terms of what he actually does in the cage, Cruz is fairly meat and potatoes. He throws a consistent jab from both stances, cracks away with round kicks, and mixes in the occasional straight and hook. But he isn’t a big puncher and rarely sets his feet long enough to dig in and throw with power. Volume and offensive output make up for that, and he’s so hard to hit that it’s not difficult for him to pile up big edges in landed strikes.

Wrestling is a strength of Cruz’s game. His blending of strikes and takedowns means he usually starts in on his opponent’s hips, and from there he can finish chains of authoritative singles, doubles, knee taps, trips and suplexes with ease. It’s difficult to take him down and even harder to hold him there.

Those takedowns mostly serve as a change of pace for Cruz, an opportunity to break his opponent’s rhythm and confuse him, and he rarely looks to control from top position for long periods. He’s happy to let his opponent scramble out, which creates opportunities for Cruz to land punches and knees as his opponent stands up.

Cardio is the foundation of this game. Cruz can fight five hard rounds with ease while working at an incredible rate, and only Dillashaw has succeeded in keeping pace with him into the latter part of a championship fight.

    

Cody Garbrandt

Record: 10-0 (9 KO, 1 DEC)

Height: 5’8″

Reach: 65 inches

Garbrandt is a puncher with exceptional speed, athleticism and raw power. The veteran of 33 amateur boxing matches is far from a wild brawler, however, and backs up his physical gifts with strong fundamentals. His punches are crisp and technical, and he has sharp footwork that allows him to move efficiently and cut angles from which to throw his devastating shots.

Everything Garbrandt throws carries fight-ending power, and he has a few technical tricks that allow him to place his power on his opponent. Garbandt does a good job of jabbing on the outside to gauge the distance and draw the opponent’s eyes and hands out of position, and for the most part, he works his way into his preferred range slowly and methodically behind his active lead hand.

Given a choice, Garbrandt prefers to operate in the pocket, where his quick hands and crushing power can most easily be applied. Though he excels at taking small steps and pivots to create angles, he’s not especially crafty in exchanges and mostly relies on a quick trigger and his length to avoid the worst of what his opponent throws. Head movement isn’t a strength, and he’s hittable in these ranges.

That’s the best of what Garbrandt has to offer. He can operate at range for brief periods—sticking his opponent with jabs and the occasional kick or hitting big, forward-moving combinations—but whether he can do that for rounds at a time against a technically sound outside fighter is still an unanswered question.

We don’t know much about the rest of Garbrandt‘s game. He has a background in wrestling and shoots explosive, technical takedowns from time to time, preferring doubles, knee taps and trips in clean chains. His takedown defense hasn’t been tested, though, and neither has his grappling repertoire. On top, he hits hard and can control, but that’s about all we can comfortably say.

    

Betting Odds

Cruz -210 (bet $210 to win $100), Garbrandt +175 (bet $100 to win $175)

    

Prediction

Garbrandt is a quick starter with huge power, and if he lands cleanly, he can put anyone in the division to sleep. He has a few tricks up his sleeve, and given how little we’ve seen him truly pushed in his UFC career, he may well have things in his game that we haven’t seen yet. Cruz is getting older and has never faced someone with Garbrandt‘s combination of speed and pop.

With that said, this is Cruz’s fight to lose. He has a great chin and is hard to hit in the first place, especially to the head; if he were more inclined to work the legs and body, Garbrandt might open up the big shot upstairs, but he’s almost exclusively been a headhunter.

Unless that changes, he’ll do a lot of swinging and missing. That’s bound to get frustrating, especially because he’s never shown the kind of pressure game that can pin Cruz against the fence and make it easier to track him down for a big punch.

After the first few minutes, Cruz is bound to figure out what Garbrandt is trying to do, and when that happens, the fight will turn into a long process of Cruz darting in and out of range, landing shots and takedowns and avoiding Garbrandt‘s attempts to counter. 

The champion will have to overcome a few scary moments, but Cruz will walk away with a 49-46 or 50-45 decision victory.

    

Odds courtesy of OddsShark.

Patrick Wyman is the Senior MMA Analyst for Bleacher Report and the co-host of the Heavy Hands Podcast, your source for the finer points of face-punching. For the history enthusiasts out there, he also hosts The Fall of Rome Podcast on the end of the Roman Empire. He can be found on Twitter and on Facebook.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Cody Garbrandt: I’ll Give Dominick Cruz Rematch After I Knock Him Out

Dominick Cruz is now just four days away from making yet another 135-pound title defense, as he prepares to defend his throne against the heavy-handed Team Alpha Male product Cody ‘No Love’ Garbrandt in the co-main event of Friday’s (December 30, 2016) UFC 207 event. Garbrandt is confident that he’ll leave Vegas’ T-Mobile Arena as

The post Cody Garbrandt: I’ll Give Dominick Cruz Rematch After I Knock Him Out appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Dominick Cruz is now just four days away from making yet another 135-pound title defense, as he prepares to defend his throne against the heavy-handed Team Alpha Male product Cody ‘No Love’ Garbrandt in the co-main event of Friday’s (December 30, 2016) UFC 207 event.

Garbrandt is confident that he’ll leave Vegas’ T-Mobile Arena as the new ruler of the UFC’s bantamweight division, and during a recent interview with MMA Junkie, ‘No Love’ stated that he’ll give ‘The Dominator’ a rematch after what he predicts to be a knockout victory Friday:

“He’s getting ready to relinquish his belt to me,” Garbrandt said. “He’s already getting ready in his mind. He’s like, ‘Hey, I’m setting up a nice career. I’m setting up my next chapter in my life.’ That’s just smart.

“He knows what’s going to happen in this fight. I’ll knock him out, so yes, I’ll give him a rematch because I know he’ll cry and bitch about it. So I’ll give him an immediate rematch right away. And then do the same thing that I did the first fight. And then he’ll be ready for his next chapter in his life.”

Cruz has stated before that he doesn’t need the UFC strap to be happy, but Garbrandt isn’t buying it and believes that the longtime 31-year-old champ is ‘insecure’:

“He said before he didn’t need the belt to be happy, that he didn’t need the world championship to be happy,” Garbrandt said. “But really, he does. He does, and he’s such a mental midget about it and so insecure that he’d have to have the gold belt to show he’s the best.

“That’s his argument, ‘I have the championship. I’m the best. I’m the greatest ever. I’ve beat all these people.’ You’ve been winning by split decisions. It’s crazy to me.”

While Cruz has been dominating the 135-pound weight class in the sport of mixed martial arts (MMA) for eight years now, Garbrandt has been watching intently since his adolescence and has longtime dreamed of being to one to hand Cruz his first professional loss since 2007:

“I’ve pictured knocking Dominick Cruz out since I was a teenager,” Garbrandt said. “I faced this guy in my head over a million times since that first time I saw him becoming a champion in the WEC. I knew that I was going to fight him. I knew I was going to fight him for the world title when I was a teenager. So I’ve been preparing mentally for Dominick Cruz for over a decade.

“And as it draws near, I just see it more and more. And I get goosebumps, and I can see it and feel it more and more each day I get closer to the fight.”

GarbrandtDebutsOnRankingsMany combatants view their work inside the Octagon as a sport, however, Garbrandt shares no such distinction as he goes into the Octagon to do damage to the adversary standing across the cage from him.

When Garbrandt finally gets his shot against Cruz he’ll look to extend his knockout streak to four, as ‘No Love’ says the UFC champ crossed the line as soon as he signed the contract to throw-down:

“The line was crossed, for me, as soon as we signed the line,” Garbrandt said. “To me, all my adversaries have the same mindset as me when I signed the dotted line, and my mindset is that I’m going to go in there and hurt you. I’m going to go in there and knock you out.

“The fight game is not a sport to me. It’s not a sport. This fight, yes, it’s for the world title, but the other fights – you’re not fighting for trophies or ribbons, you know what I mean? You’re in there really to do damage. And I think some fighters are just fighting to win, like Dominick. He’s just trying to get that W. Me, I go in there to finish my opponents in devastating fashion.

“I’ve got to put them on the same mindset than me going into the fight.”

Cruz and Garbrandt will meet in the co-main event of UFC 207 live on pay-per-view (PPV) for the UFC bantamweight title, from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Friday (December 30, 2016). The card is headlined by the return on ‘Rowdy’ Ronda Rousey, who is making her Octagon return after over a year since suffering her first ever loss in MMA.

The post Cody Garbrandt: I’ll Give Dominick Cruz Rematch After I Knock Him Out appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Updated UFC 207 Fight Card, Start Times & How To Watch

Rounding out a wild year for MMA is the blockbuster UFC 207 on December 30. Taking place in the mecca of the world’s largest MMA promotion, UFC 207 will be hosted by Las Vegas, Nevada. Headlining the monster card is a women’s bantamweight title fight that has everybody talking. Amanda Nunes will look to defend

The post Updated UFC 207 Fight Card, Start Times & How To Watch appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Rounding out a wild year for MMA is the blockbuster UFC 207 on December 30. Taking place in the mecca of the world’s largest MMA promotion, UFC 207 will be hosted by Las Vegas, Nevada. Headlining the monster card is a women’s bantamweight title fight that has everybody talking. Amanda Nunes will look to defend the belt that was wrapped around her opponent’s waist for over three years. Ronda Rousey returns in the hopes of overcoming her sole career loss, after being smashed by Holly Holm last year.

Shutting out the media for her long-awaited comeback, questions both about her ability against Nunes, and her mental readiness have been tensely debated. Men’s bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz will take on yet another Team Alpha Male standout in the form of Cody Garbrandt. ‘No Love’ faces ‘The Dominator’ as the UFC 207 co-main event. Their fierce rivalry and elite skills could make this one a FOTN scrap between Cruz and Garbrandt.

UFC 207

Is She Back?

Originally meant to feature a heavyweight rematch betwee Cain Velasquez and Fabricio Werdum, UFC 207 did take a big knock this weekend. That said, the card still has plenty of star power and potential. Arguably the biggest talking point is still Rousey vs. Nunes. Is she back? Guess we’ll find out very soon.

Full UFC 207 fight card, start times and how to watch, courtesy of MMAMania.com:

Event: UFC 207 “Nunes vs. Rousey”
Date: Fri., Dec. 30, 2016
Location: T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada
Broadcast: Pay-Per-View (PPV)

UFC 207 PPV Main Event:

135 lbs.: UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion Amanda Nunes vs. Ronda Rousey

UFC 207 PPV Main Card (10 p.m. ET):

135 lbs.: Bantamweight Champion Dominick Cruz vs. Cody Garbrandt
265 lbs.: Cain Velasquez vs. Fabricio Werdum cancelled
135 lbs.: T.J. Dillashaw vs. John Lineker
125 lbs.: Ray Borg vs. Louis Smolka

UFC 207 “Prelims” Undercard on FOX Sports (8 p.m. ET):

170 lbs.: Johny Hendricks vs. Neil Magny
170 lbs.: Tarec Saffiedine vs. Dong Hyun Kim
185 lbs.: Marvin Vettori vs. Antonio Carlos Jr.
170 lbs.: Mike Pyle vs. Alex Garcia

UFC 207 “Prelims” Undercard on UFC Fight Pass (7 p.m. ET):

170 lbs.: Tim Means vs. Alex Oliveira
170 lbs.: Brandon Thatch vs. Niko Price

5655881847144448[1]

The post Updated UFC 207 Fight Card, Start Times & How To Watch appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Top 10 Most Exciting MMA Fights Of 2016

With another year coming to a close, everyone embarks on their annual year-end traditions. Many gather with family and friends at this festive time of year, exchanging gifts and holiday cheer. Some concoct a new strategy for keeping their New Year’s resolution, for real this time. Others overindulge in delicious food and drink too much

The post Top 10 Most Exciting MMA Fights Of 2016 appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

With another year coming to a close, everyone embarks on their annual year-end traditions. Many gather with family and friends at this festive time of year, exchanging gifts and holiday cheer. Some concoct a new strategy for keeping their New Year’s resolution, for real this time. Others overindulge in delicious food and drink too much egg nog.

But fight fans are different. Now is the time to look back and reflect on the past 12 months, and then argue about who had the best knockout, submission, or fight of the year. In this installment of the annual year-end awards from LowKickMMA, we pick and rank the ten best scraps of 2016.

From title shots and super fights with sky-high stakes to undercard tussles that unexpectedly turned into thrilling wars, these were the all-time classics of 2016. Read on for the must-see list of brawls to show that uninitiated family member this holiday season.

10. Michael Bisping vs. Dan Henderson

UFC 204 on October 8, 2016 – Manchester, England:

“The Count” began his unlikely title reign with a most unlikely defense, and it turned into one of the best fights of the year. Many fans and pundits – and other top contenders – maligned Henderson getting a title shot after going 3-6 in his previous nine fights. But the story was too good to pass up.

Bisping sought revenge on the man to hand him his most devastating loss, the infamous, brutal knockout at UFC 100. “Hendo” had been hinting at retirement for some time, and when the fight was announced, he claimed that it would be his swan song. The narratives were set: would Bisping redeem himself or suffer another humiliating loss to his greatest rival? Would Hendo finally capture the UFC belt that had eluded him during his hall of fame career and go out on top?

The bout was extremely tense from the outset. The stakes could not be any higher, a loss for either man a crushing blow. As many expected, the champion had success with his diverse and high-volume kickboxing, while the challenger had his bazooka right hand cocked. Toward the end of the first round, Henderson detonated his famed “H-Bomb” on Bisping’s chin, but the Brit hung on, clinging to consciousness as his American counterpart hammered him relentlessly.

The pattern repeated in round two. Bisping got out to a lead before being felled by another massive right hand. Again, he refused to go away. Henderson failed to connect with a third “H-Bomb” and thus saw his lead slip away over the final three rounds. Observers were split as to who should emerge with the victory, many even scoring the fight a draw. When the judges’ scores were announced, it was Bisping who escaped with his title reign intact.

The post Top 10 Most Exciting MMA Fights Of 2016 appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

TJ Dillashaw: Dominick Cruz Is Scared To Fight Me Again

Former UFC bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw has been campaigning for a rematch with current division champ Dominick Cruz since the ending of their initial bout, in which Cruz took home a split decision win over Dillashaw to recapture the title he never lost after being held outside of the Octagon after a string of injuries.

The post TJ Dillashaw: Dominick Cruz Is Scared To Fight Me Again appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Former UFC bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw has been campaigning for a rematch with current division champ Dominick Cruz since the ending of their initial bout, in which Cruz took home a split decision win over Dillashaw to recapture the title he never lost after being held outside of the Octagon after a string of injuries.

Instead of an immediate rematch, however, Dillashaw was instead handed Raphael Assuncao at UFC 200 in which the former champ took home a lopsided unanimous decision victory. Hoping the win would be enough to get him the rematch he desired, Dillashaw was confident he’d get the next crack at the belt, but instead the UFC would give his former Alpha Male teammate Cody Garbrandt a shot at the gold.

Now Dillashaw will compete against knockout artist John Lineker at UFC 207, the same card in which Cruz and Garbrandt will co-main event with their bantamweight title contest. During a recent interview with FOX Sports, Dillashaw shared his thoughts on the match-up between Cruz and Garbrandt, stating that the pairing is ‘bull sh*t’:

“Really it’s all just kind of bull (expletive),” Dillashaw said. “It makes no sense at all how they give the No. 8 guy, who skips over seven guys to get a title shot. It’s kind of whatever the UFC wants to do and they’re letting Dominick Cruz hand select his fights right now.

“They’ve built this up ever since Cody’s fight (with Thomas Almeida), they watched them talk crap about each other since May and built this whole thing up. They’re letting him pick the guys he wants to fight.”

When asked who is to blame for him being passed up for what he feels is his deserved rematch against Cruz, Dillashaw believes the blame is to share between the UFC and Cruz himself:

“It’s both but I know for sure Cruz doesn’t want to fight me. I know it 100-percent,” Dillashaw said. “Everything that I possibly did to hype up the fight to try and get it, he just wouldn’t acknowledge it, he wouldn’t talk to reporters about a rematch between me and him and he did everything possible not to even mention my name.

“That’s just an obvious sign that he doesn’t want to fight me. He knows I won that fight and he knows I’m going to be able to figure him out even better the second time and he’s going to do whatever he can to avoid me.”

Dillashaw believes that Cruz will attempt to retire from mixed martial arts (MMA) competition before granting him his rematch, and is baffled by the UFC’s insistence on keeping the rematch from happening:

“I truly believe he’s going to try and retire before he fights me again. That’s just my bet,” Dillashaw said. “It’s going to be ridiculous if that ends up happening. I don’t know what’s behind it for the UFC with Dominick Cruz cause it’s not like he’s an entertaining fighter. He’s good but he’s not one of those guys everyone’s waiting in line to watch. So I don’t understand that.

“When you look at my fights and my title defenses and the knockouts I’ve had and the exciting fights it doesn’t make sense they’re going to want someone like him other than Dominick Cruz is in the media and he’s on FOX all the time and maybe that helps out their brand. I have no idea.”

CruzBeatsDillashawOne aspect of the sport that Dillashaw isn’t too big a fan of is the transition of MMA becoming for entertainment that an actual sport. The former 135-pound king believes that the days of being rewarded for professionalism are over in the UFC:

“It doesn’t make sense but there’s definitely some politics behind it. I’m just not the kind of guy that’s going to go out of my way to be a (expletive) head and that’s what the UFC wants. They want these drama queens,” Dillashaw said. “They want guys that are going to act like they’re on “Days of Our Lives” and create a bunch of drama and turn this into a bunch of bull (expletive) rather than an actual sport.

“If you act like a professional and you do your job and act the way you should be, then you’re not going to get hyped up.”

Despite not having the title around his waist anymore, Dillashaw believes the differences in opponents between he and Cruz show who the real champion of the 135-pound division is:

“Dominick Cruz is going to keep selecting guys out of the top 10 while I keep fighting No. 1 contenders,” Dillashaw said. “I beat Raphael Assuncao, the No. 2 ranked fighter in the weight class while I’m ranked No. 1 and now I’m fighting John Lineker, the No. 2 ranked fighter in the weight class and I’m ranked No. 1.

“You tell me who’s the one acting like the champion, fighting the toughest guys, while Cruz will hand select top 10 guys.”

Dillashaw and Lineker will clash at UFC 207 in what is expected to be a pivotal bout in the 135-pound title picture, while Cruz and Garbrandt will clash in the co-main event of the card on pay-per-view (PPV), from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on December 30, 2016.

The post TJ Dillashaw: Dominick Cruz Is Scared To Fight Me Again appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Cruz: Cody Garbrandt Is Just Begging For Attention

Longtime UFC bantamweight champ Dominick Cruz will once again defend his throne when he takes on rising star Cody ‘No Love’ Garbrandt in the co-main event of UFC 207. Cruz and Garbrandt have been heavily exchanging words with one another through social media, and also partook in quite the verbal exchange during the UFC Sacramento

The post Cruz: Cody Garbrandt Is Just Begging For Attention appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Longtime UFC bantamweight champ Dominick Cruz will once again defend his throne when he takes on rising star Cody ‘No Love’ Garbrandt in the co-main event of UFC 207.

Cruz and Garbrandt have been heavily exchanging words with one another through social media, and also partook in quite the verbal exchange during the UFC Sacramento event earlier this month, in which the FOX production truck had to hit the bleep button a few more times than they would have cared to. Cruz recently spoke to FOX Sports to discuss his issues with ‘No Love’, claiming that the Team Alpha Male product is simply looking to get as much attention as he can:

“There are cameras around and he knows it. It’s not hard to find me. That’s what you’ve got to understand. All this ‘we bumped into each other’ stuff is not we bumped into each other. It’s he goes and looks for me and finds me because he wants camera time,” Cruz said. “This guy loves the limelight. He loves attention. Look at him, he’s just begging for attention in everything he does. He wants attention, attention, attention.

“So he finds me because I’m the champion and I’m the guy who he wants to fight and I’m the guy that can get him the most attention in the division and he knows where I’m going to be at. Why? Because I’m doing my job. I’m working. I’m doing something he doesn’t do. I’m doing more than just talk. I’m following through with action. I’m doing my job and it’s easy to find me. All you’ve got to do is find where FOX is at. He goes and he looks for me and he goes and makes a bunch of loud noises and screams and yells and tries to look as tough as he can and that’s how he’s gotten in this position. Well I see right through that. He just wants attention. It’s nothing more than that.”

Besides the title, Cruz feels that Garbrandts biggest motivation for calling him out to throw-down is because it’s the best way to get the attention and paycheck he seeks:

“He wants to fight me because I’m the ticket to the most attention he can get. I’m the ticket to how he gets paid the best, according to the division obviously so that’s what he wants,” Cruz said.  “He’s too immature and too dumb to understand that part of things. It’s just him, him, him, ‘I need attention, I need to look cool, I need to look tough’ and that’s the end of it.

“It’s all a big facade. Really that’s what it comes down to. He finds me and makes a bunch of loud noises around me and that’s how he got put into this position. It’s really common sense if you think about it. If you think about it, there’s no reason for me to go looking for a guy that’s No. 6 of the bantamweights. He talked himself into this. He asked for this ass whooping I’m going to give him and so that’s what I’m going to do.”

Cruz says that the moment Garbrandt rubbed him the wrong way was immediately after the conclusion of his bout with Urijah Faber at UFC 199, where Garbrandt immediately began firing off verbal shots at ‘The Dominator’ by telling him to ‘get his belt ready’:

“I literally got done beating up Faber and was walking back to do my interviews with FOX, well it’s pretty easy to find me back there obviously. You know I’m coming from the cage, you just run over to where I’m at and you just start talking, but he kind of made it all about him right away,” Cruz said.

“He gave no respect. It was just ‘hey I’m here, you better get my belt ready’ and this and that. I get that he’s trying to promote and I get that he’s mad that I beat up his coach but it just shows how immature and how much he just needs to take a beating and how badly I need to beat him up. I literally got done with a fight and he was already trying to fight me again. It just showed what a wuss he is to me. It just showed how weak he is to me. I want to prove that. Right off the bat it got me watering at the mouth to put a beating on him because I think he’s an idiot.”

Dom CruzThe 135-pound champ claims that this isn’t the first time he’s fought a style of opponent similar to Garbrandt, as he believes Brian Bowles, who he fought back in the WEC in 2010, is cut from the same cloth as ‘No Love’:

“What’s the difference between Cody Garbrandt and the man who I took my WEC title from in 2010, Brian Bowles? What’s the difference in style between those two gentlemen? Not much. I’ll help you out. There’s not much of a difference,” Cruz said. “The only difference is Bowles might have a little bit better guillotine (choke) than Garbrandt.

“I know everything about this guy’s game. I can dissect every single movement he does and why he does it and I understand it. He cannot do that with me. Again, that makes this a very tough style for him and he knows that. So the biggest thing he can do is scream and yell and look as scary and tough as he thinks he can for his fans so they can get behind him and he can get more attention put on him. Because Cody ‘No Love’ is nothing more than an attention whore.”

While Garbrandt has shown some of the most vicious power the bantamweight division has seen in some time, do you think it will be enough to de-throne Cruz’s longtime reign on top?

Cruz and Garbrandt will meet in the co-main event of UFC 207 live on pay-per-view (PPV) for the bantamweight title, from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on December 30, 2016.

The post Cruz: Cody Garbrandt Is Just Begging For Attention appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.