Nick Diaz Claims He Was ‘Framed’ In Domestic Violence Arrest

Nick Diaz claims he was framed in his recent domestic violence arrest. You buying?

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It looks like Nick Diaz is planning on fighting in the UFC again as soon as next year.

The Stockton native has been out of action since 2015 when he fought former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva. The fight was originally ruled a unanimous decision win for Silva but was later overturned to a No Contest after the Brazilian tested positive for banned substances.

Diaz also found himself in hot water with the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA). The debacle has kept him outside of the Octagon for the past several years. Upon finally putting the matter behind him, Diaz ran into another issue that kept him from booking a fight.

The Californian was arrested earlier this year for domestic violence charges. Diaz is still battling the matter in Las Vegas court. TMZ Sports recently caught up with Diaz to get his thoughts on various topics.

He was first asked how it felt to be an uncle, after his brother Nate and longtime girlfriend welcomed a baby girl into the world recently. Diaz responded by saying “I wouldn’t know” as he hasn’t been home in quite some time.

Diaz was also asked when he plans to fight again. He responded by saying he’s 100 percent fighting next year and he plans on fighting “everybody.” He was asked about a potential rematch with Georges St-Pierre and said he would beat “GSP” if he doesn’t cheat this time around and makes weight.

Finally, in regards to his domestic violence case, Diaz only had three words – “I was framed.” Check out the video here:

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Johny Hendricks Officially Announces Retirement From MMA

Johny Hendricks is calling it a career:

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The UFC just lost another former champion this week.

Two days after former light heavyweight champion Rashad Evans retired on the first episode of ‘Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show,’ former welterweight champion Johny Hendricks announced his retirement on MMAjunkie Radio.

‘Bigg Rigg’ said he was getting out of the sport and returning to his roots to focus on coaching wrestling:

“I’m done. I’m retiring. I’m getting out of the MMA world. I’ve been thinking about this long and hard for a while. I’m going to get back to my roots. I’m going to start coaching at All Saints (Episcopal School in Fort Worth, Texas). I coached a little bit of high school last year, but I’m going to make the move over to All Saints and start doing those things.”

Hendricks leaves the UFC on a highly disappointing run where he lost five of his last six fights and six of his last eight with the promotion. He won the welterweight title in a “Fight of the Year”-winning war with fellow former champion Robbie Lawler at UFC 171 in March 2014 after narrowly losing to all-time great Georges St-Pierre in November 2013, a bout that remains one of the most controversial decisions ever rendered in a UFC title fight and one many still feel “Bigg Rigg” won.

The former Team Takedown flagship member lost the title in a rematch with Lawler his next time out to the Octagon, however.

He said that he probably wouldn’t even come back for a rematch with St-Pierre, but would return if the UFC offered him a million dollars – a pipe dream that simply will not happen at this point. His goal now to coach high school wrestlers into NCAA national champs like he was at Oklahoma State, “Bigg Rigg” revealed he was telling the UFC and USADA that he was stepping down:

“Even if you threw Georges St-Pierre at me, the world knows (I beat him),” Hendricks said. “Realistically, I’m satisfied unless they say, ‘Johny, here’s a million-dollar payday. Come fight this dude.’ You can’t turn that down. That would be stupid. But everything I set my mind to, I achieved it. That’s the gist of what I’m feeling at this moment and what I’ve been feeling the last month.

“… I’ll call the UFC and tell them I’m done. I’ll call USADA and tell them I’m done. It’s never a honeymoon phase with me. My goal is to get (high school) wrestlers into national champions. I want to get wrestlers better than I was, better than I could ever be. … For me to do that, I have to put the past in the past and start moving forward.”

Hendricks seemed to have few if any regrets, expressing gratitude at those who had helped him achieve what he had and at his view he had accomplished everything he put his mind to.

With that in mind, he recalled an appearance on the exact same radio show nine years ago where he promised he would become UFC champion. After reaching that mountaintop, he said it was time to get back to something resembling a more normal family life:

“I’ve been blessed with people around me to help me get there,” Hendricks said. “What have I done with my life to be satisfied with where I’m at right now? As soon as I started doing that, I knew it was time for me to start doing something else. I’ve been very blessed to accomplish everything I’ve wanted to. Anything I’ve put my mind to, I’ve done it.

“I remember getting on (MMAjunkie Radio) nine years ago saying, ‘I’m going to be the champ.’ Everybody was probably like, ‘Who’s this joker saying he’s going to do this?’ And right now, I know what I have to do to get back to where I want to be. I got the taste of the family life, I got the taste of the normal life, and right now … I’m completely satisfied with everything that’s going on. That’s why I wanted to give it to you first, the MMAjunkie world – is because you guys have been there from the very beginning.”

There’s no reason to criticize a man who believes he accomplished everything he set out to do, and after becoming a UFC champion before suffering his downward run where he was knocked out by Stephen Thompson, Tim Boetsch, and Paulo Costa, there probably isn’t anything he could still accomplish at the highest levels of the UFC compared to what he already achieved.

“Bigg Rigg” was once feared as one of the most powerful knockout artists in all of MMA, and while his dropoff from that point was a precipitous and shocking one, he did hoist gold in one of the UFC’s toughest divisions – even if he never defended it.

Wrestling will be his passion now, and we wish Hendricks all the best in his post-UFC undertaking.

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Video: GSP’s Sensei Throws Him Around In Training

This is the most vulnerable GSP has looked in a long time.

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UFC fighters from lightweight to middleweight can rejoice, as we have finally found a weakness in Georges St-Pierre’s arsenal – wrist locks.

While most mixed martial arts (MMA) purists might find wrist locks ridiculous, and something you’d typically see inside of a professional wrestling ring rather than an MMA cage, Georges St-Pierre’s “crazy old school sensei” Kristof Midoux proves they can actually work.

GSP took to Instagram and posted a video of himself moving around with Midoux, who tossed the former Canadian UFC champ around on the mat with various wrist lock techniques.

Rush can be seen wincing and yelping in pain throughout the video, all in good fun of course. Check it out here:

As for St-Pierre’s Octagon future that remains unclear. He is currently on a 13-fight win streak after winning the middleweight title in November from Michael Bisping in New York. He has been linked to rumors of a possible fight with Nate Diaz, however, those never came to fruition.

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Georges St-Pierre Gets Handled By Sensei With Wrist Lock

Former UFC welterweight and middleweight champion Georges St-Pierre is one of the greatest mixed martial artists of all time – and he just got dominated by a wrist lock. Rush recently took to Instagram and shared a video of himself and his sensei…

Former UFC welterweight and middleweight champion Georges St-Pierre is one of the greatest mixed martial artists of all time – and he just got dominated by a wrist lock. Rush recently took to Instagram and shared a video of himself and his sensei Kristof Midoux messing around on the mat. Midoux used what most would describe […]

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MMA’s Top 10 Strangest Pre-Fight Rituals

These MMA stars have the strangest pre-fight rituals in the fight game:

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When it comes to mentally preparing themselves to be locked inside the Octagon with another highly trained fighter, UFC stars have tried all kinds of weird and wonderful methods to get in the right frame of mind for the battle ahead.

In this article, we’ll look at 10 of the strangest pre-fight rituals adopted by MMA stars over the years; from those born out of superstition and habitual behavior, through to those undertaken just for the sheer hell of it!

Matt Lindland

Matt Lindland went to extreme lengths to try and gain an advantage over his opponents during both his wrestling and mixed martial arts career’s.

‘The Law’ would avoid showering in the week leading up to his fights in an attempt to repulse his opponents and make their lives misery whenever they got near to him in the cage.

Given that Lindland was an expert grappler who once won an Olympic wrestling silver medalist, that meant that a lot of fighters ended up being forced to get up close and personal with him over the years, whether they wanted to be or not.

Most competitors just grinned and bore it, silently suffering through the stench, but after earning a split decision victory over Lindland at WFA: King Of The Streets in 2006, Quinton ‘Rampage’ Jackson couldn’t resist calling out the wrestler over his hygiene, or lack thereof.

”Man, that was like fighting a big-ass smelly skunk,” Rampage declared in his post-fight interview. “Matt you need to take a shower man.”

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Early Georges St-Pierre vs. Nate Diaz Betting Odds Will Surprise You

The betting odds for Georges St-Pierre vs. Nate Diaz probably aren’t what you thought they’d be:

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Yesterday the MMA world was bombarded with the news that former two-division champion Georges St-Pierre was rumored to be fighting fan favorite Nate Diaz at August’s UFC 227.

The bout is yet to be finalized, and it seems like somewhat of a far-off possibility based on the fact that the fight will supposedly be contested at 155 pounds, a weight class GSP has never participated in and one Diaz essentially left in 2015.

There are a whole list of reasons the fight doesn’t make sense, in fact, yet those probably won’t matter much based on UFC owners Endeavor’s recent strategy of focusing on the biggest over-the-top spectacle regardless of the future ramifications it may have on the division(s) and fighters involved. We saw that with Mayweather vs. McGregor last year, a fight which, despite producing huge short-term pay-per-view success that was shared with SHOWTIME Sports, essentially put the UFC lightweight arena in a logjam that it’s still attempting to climb out of.

St-Pierre vs. Diaz, if contested at lightweight, would only further complicate that mess. Don’t be surprised to see it go down regardless, however, and if and when it does, the early betting odds may surprise you quite a bit.

According to sports betting site Bovada via MMA Mania, St-Pierre is only a -200 favorite over +160 underdog Diaz, a surprising number considering the dominant St-Pierre handled Nate’s older brother Nick with relative ease using his wrestling at UFC 158. The youngest Diaz brother has had trouble with wrestlers like Benson Henderson and even Rafael dos Anjos in the past, so his chances to topple the all-time great St-Pierre, who last fought at middleweight and won the belt from Michael Bisping at last year’s UFC 217, would seem a lot less than two to one.

St-Pierre vacated that title shortly after winning it, citing a bout with digestive issues from the diet he used to fight at 185 pounds. He’s apparently got over those and is rumored to be cutting down two full weight classes to face Diaz.

Perhaps that huge cut is playing into the seemingly low betting odds, or maybe the faith in Diaz is a bit misplaced considering his track record at welterweight, where he’s gone 3-3 since 2010.

What do you think? Is Diaz being given too much of a chance against “Rush,” or are the odds right on for this reported ‘super fight?’

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