UFC 202: Neil Magny Reveals the Secrets of His MMA Durability

Since the calendar flipped to 2014, Neil Magny has competed 11 times in the UFC. That’s a high number.
After five fights per year in 2014 and 2015, his pace slowed in 2016, but in March he came back from literal unconsciousness to defeat Hector Lombard…

Since the calendar flipped to 2014, Neil Magny has competed 11 times in the UFC. That’s a high number.

After five fights per year in 2014 and 2015, his pace slowed in 2016, but in March he came back from literal unconsciousness to defeat Hector Lombard. Magny’s only fight of the year is a favorite for Fight of the Year.

He nabbed a $50,000 bonus for that performance, as well as new notoriety for his prowess, his toughness and his prolific fight production. Now No. 7 in the UFC’s official welterweight rankings, Magny is a fighter on the way up.

His sheer output is what really makes it remarkable. In MMA, injuries, drug suspensions and other things can grind fighter activity down to the nub. There’s no specific measuring stick, but at the UFC level, two fights in a year is perfectly reasonable. Three fights is “busy.” Four fights is blistering. Five fights is pretty much Magny and Donald Cerrone.

This isn’t the case of an opportunistic glutton for punishment, either. The 29-year-old Magny (18-4) is winning these bouts. His only loss in those 11 fights came to Demian Maia, who is one win away from a title shot in arguably the UFC’s best division. Magny’s 5-0 record in 2014 tied Roger Huerta for the most UFC wins in a calendar year (Huerta did it in 2007).

Fans have to be wondering what Magny’s secret is. Wonder no more.

As Magny prepared to take on blazing kickboxer Lorenz Larkin Saturday at UFC 202, he spoke to Bleacher Report about what keeps him going—and coming back. There’s no rocket science in the discussion, no magic remedies, just foresight and a little good fortune. Then again, if the formula was so obvious, a lot more UFC fighters would be drawing five paychecks a year.

So what is Magny’s recipe, then? In a nutshell: Don’t try to be a hero. Oh, and bacon. But we’ll get to that.

“Giving Each Other Concussions”

Plenty of fighters talk about listening to their bodies, of heeding physical warning signs before they blossom into something bigger. But practicing that bit of preaching is easier said than done. According to Magny, that’s because of the alpha-male culture endemic at most MMA gyms. What may seem like healthy competition in the moment, he said, has real detriments in the longer term.

“Guys want to be tough in a lot of gyms, you rock me, I rock you back,” Magny said. “Suddenly everyone’s giving each other concussions. In our gym, if I get rocked, tomorrow I have to avoid sparring. It stops there. That’s the end of the session.”

Strong coaching can protect fighters from themselves in the heat of the moment. Magny bends over backward to acknowledge the staff at Elevation Fight Team, the Colorado training headquarters led by head coach Leister Bowling.

“We take care of each other,” Magny said. “You get your bell rung, you sit out. Not only that, but my coaches are really knowledgeable. If I get rocked, tomorrow I have to avoid sparring.”

Elevation’s track record plays out in its growing fighter stable, which includes T.J. Dillashaw and Matt Brown alongside Magny and others. If a safer approach to training compromises toughness—that most vital of MMA skills—Elevation fighters have yet to show it.


“They Take Care of You”

Magny’s current run of success coincides nicely with his move to Elevation. After losing in the semifinals on the 16th season of The Ultimate Fighter, Magny’s coach on the show, Shane Carwin, plugged him in to Elevation. Magny dropped two of his first three official UFC contests back in 2013, then the rest is history. 

But it’s more than a safety culture. Elevation is part of the MusclePharm Sports Science Institute, a massive, state-of-the-art training and research complex financed by the nutritional supplement manufacturer. Space-age athletic and health machinery is stuffed in its every nook and cranny, as are doctors, scientists, nutritionists, chiropractors and about anything else a pro athlete could ever want in order to stay healthy.

This is noteworthy not just for its magnitude, but because fighters do not receive comprehensive health insurance from the UFC. They are covered for injuries sustained in fights or during training—and that’s on the lucky end, as fighters outside the UFC are rarely covered in the case of the latter.

“We have a sports network of people who take care of the fighters,” Magny said. “It’s a huge Denver sports network, and if you have a problem, they take care of you.”

Even with such considerable resources at his disposal, responsibility still comes back to the athlete to maintain top form. As with taking precautions in sparring, Magny said he makes a conscious effort to nip any problem in the bud, whether that involves a visit with one of Elevation’s health professionals or simply taking time off when it’s needed.

“When I do get injuries, I don’t try to battle through them or tough it out,” Magny said. “We get them taken care of right away. Whatever we need to do. I’m blessed to have coaches and teammates where we look out for each other and if we’re hurt, we don’t try to be tough, we just take care of it.”


“You Can Get Too Wrapped Up in Eating”

If it takes a village to raise a fighter, individual consciousness is still indispensable.

But you know what? Sometimes, plain old luck doesn’t hurt, either.

Magny works hard in the gym to keep his weight under control, and that’s by design. The careworn MMA mantra—”Stay ready so you don’t have to get ready”—definitely applies. At the same time, one of the most draining physical activities in all of sports—cutting weight—is a relative breeze for Magny.

By his own estimation, Magny walks around at 185 or 190 pounds. Getting down to the 170-pound welterweight limit is a relatively easy proposition for him. Staying ready and a formidable metabolism are a potent combination, and it keeps Magny from having to break too much of a sweat, literally, over hitting the right number on the scale.

“You can get too wrapped up in eating, so that you’re training just to make weight, not training to get better,” Magny said. “I’m more focused on technique, getting into the gym and keeping my weight down.”

He has that privilege because of his relatively easy cut.  

“I’ve got it down to a science,” Magny said. “Coming into fight week, I’m 182, 183 [pounds]. Then it’s just cleaning [nutrition] up.”

That’s when it’s time to pull out the true secret weapon.

“I stop having bacon in the morning,” a chuckling-but-serious Magny said of his fight-week weight cut. “And that’s it.”

Magny has another stiff test in Larkin on Saturday, when they serve as the UFC 202 featured bout on UFC Fight Pass, the company’s subscription streaming service. If history has taught anyone anything, it’s that Magny will be ready.

“I don’t think I’m underrated,” Magny said. “Things are unfolding the way they should be. I’m heading in the right direction…I’m right there in my career. I could be fighting for the title at any given moment.”


Scott Harris writes about MMA for Bleacher Report. For more, follow Scott on Twitter. All quotes obtained firsthand.

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Diaz vs. McGregor 2: Career Stats, Highlights for Both Before UFC 202

UFC 202 will be anchored by one of the most anticipated rematches in the organization’s history when Conor McGregor attempts to earn some redemption against Nate Diaz in the main event.
The narrative behind the first matchup is well known at this point…

UFC 202 will be anchored by one of the most anticipated rematches in the organization’s history when Conor McGregor attempts to earn some redemption against Nate Diaz in the main event.

The narrative behind the first matchup is well known at this point. 

The stage was set for McGregor to launch himself into the pantheon of great fighters. With the featherweight title in tow, he was set to fight Rafael Dos Anjos for the lightweight title. Then, Dos Anjos was pulled due to injury and replaced by Diaz on short notice at the welterweight limit of 170 pounds. 

All of a sudden, McGregor‘s stock depended on beating an entirely different challenge. After a solid first round, the Irishman fell behind Diaz‘s blistering pace and ultimately succumbed to a rear-naked choke before the second-round bell rang. 

Now just what will happen with both fighters getting a chance at a full training camp is one of the most intriguing questions in the MMA landscape, and we’re about to get some answers. 

           

How Conor McGregor Got Here

Detractors of McGregor will say that he got to this point with his mouth. He’s the most interesting character in the game right now and knows how to sell a fight. 

But that would undersell the fact that McGregor is a phenomenal fighter.

Since coming to the UFC, The Notorious has lived up to his moniker. Time after time in the featherweight division, he has predicted the demise of an opponent and followed through in the cage.

Dustin Poirier? Gone before the first round ended.

Chad Mendes? Finished just before the second round came to an end, as predicted.

Jose Aldo? Starched in 13 seconds. Just like he called it

Mystic Mac’s penchant for calling his shot got him in trouble against Nate Diaz, though. McGregor predicted that he would knock out Diaz in the first round, which led to a strategy that ultimately gassed him. That led to his demise in the second as Diaz‘s well-known cardio kicked in while McGregor faded. 

This time, McGregor is adjusting his prediction, per Shaun Al-Shatti of MMA Fighting:

This time, I’m still going to march forward, I’m still going to press him, I’m still going to bust him. There’s just going to be a lot more in my tank. I’m just going to be a lot more prepared for a man who can stay in there with me, but even still, I struggle to give him past round three. If I was to make a prediction, which I will right now, I believe I will repay the favor and KO him inside the second round.

Living up to that prediction is going to be a tall order for McGregor. The same pitfalls exist in this matchup. Even with a full training camp to focus on Diaz, his opponent is still the rangier, more experienced fighter with great cardio and a strong submission game.

If McGregor lives up to his prediction, his legacy will receive a huge boost.

         

How Nate Diaz Got Here

Much like McGregor, Diaz‘s reputation as a trash-talker precedes his reputation as a fighter. 

The 31-year-old has been fighting in the UFC since 2007, when he won The Ultimate Fighter 5. In all those years, he’s only had one title shot and has a record of 14-8. At face value, that’s not much of a record, yet here he is still getting big fights.

Why? Entertainment value.

Diaz brings the heat both inside and outside the cage, and he knows it. He talked about his role as an entertainer, via the UFC’s Twitter account:

Diaz is adept at getting under his opponent’s skin and then capitalizing on that frustration. Whether it be from his talk or his penchant for striking from distance and walking through punishment, he’s great at getting fighters to be desperate and then countering with consistent boxing or a submission on the ground. 

McGregor isn’t the only man he’s submitted. Diaz has an amazing nine wins by submission in his career, including wins over Marcus Davis, Takanori Gomi and Jim Miller. 

Entertainment value is what got Diaz a shot at McGregor despite a 2-3 record in the five fights leading up to the bout, but his skills as a fighter are what earned him the win in the first fight.

In the rematch, Diaz won’t need to change what he is. He’ll just need to do it again. 

          

Prediction

Nate Diaz isn’t some kind of mythological beast. He’s beatable. As previously mentioned, he has eight losses in the UFC and has never reached the championship level.

However, if you look at his losses, a definite type of fighter emerges as his foil: strong wrestlers who can control Diaz in the clinch and on the ground:

That’s simply not McGregor‘s game, which is why he runs into trouble in this matchup. McGregor is already an all-timer as a featherweight. His astronomical rise to champion and dethroning of Jose Aldo have already sealed that distinction before he even hit 30.

The question is whether his ability can transcend weight class. As great a champion as he is, he’s combating a size disadvantage, the specter of a loss against his opponent and an apparent talent disparity on the ground.

McGregor can win. His power might be a lesser weapon at 170 pounds, but it’s still a weapon. He’s still a technical marvel when it comes to his timing and positioning. 

But the fact that he’s still calling his own shot for an early knockout is a troubling sign. McGregor‘s path to victory entails drawing Diaz into a technical kickboxing match. Going for the knockout often means forsaking that for a brawler’s approach.

That will not end well for the featherweight champion. 

He might drag it out longer this time—and for the sake of everyone who got to witness what was an awesome first fight, let’s hope he does—but it’s hard to shake the feeling that the stylistic matchup is simply too much for him to overcome at this point.

Prediction: Diaz via fourth-round submission.

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UFC 202: Diaz vs. McGregor 2 Odds, Tickets, Predictions and Pre-Weigh-In Hype

Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz battle once again in the Octagon at UFC 202 on Saturday as Notorious attempts to gain revenge after the Californian humbled and defeated the Irishman via submission.
The huge upset came at UFC 196. Diaz filled in …

Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz battle once again in the Octagon at UFC 202 on Saturday as Notorious attempts to gain revenge after the Californian humbled and defeated the Irishman via submission.

The huge upset came at UFC 196. Diaz filled in for the injured Rafael Dos Anjos at short notice, taking advantage of an overconfident and gassed superstar.

McGregor had packed on muscle for the bout with Dos Anjos, and his lack of mobility, stamina and sharpness was his downfall in the welterweight fight in March.

The rematch has been delayed by farce and rescheduling, but the mixed martial artists are now ready to lock horns once again in one of the most anticipated fights in recent MMA history.

Here is a look at the latest betting numbers, according to Odds Shark:

For the latest ticket information: ScoreBig.com.

    

McGregor Must Prove Himself Once Again

Diaz shocked the world when he took on McGregor at the height of his powers and defeated the global icon. Notorious had an invincible edge to him, and his stock was inflated when he came crashing back to earth at the hands of his American nemesis.

McGregor attempted an early finish of Diaz when they first met, but the Californian’s defence was vital and indestructible, allowing him to counter with menace and aggression.

The rematch is at 170 pounds, once again lending a disadvantage to the charismatic fighter from Dublin.

McGregor would certainly be suited to a lower weight classification and cannot afford another defeat, which would potentially ruin his brand image.

The touchpaper was lit as the two men faced off in a press conference to promote the contest on Wednesday. As expected, McGregor was full of his usual rage and bravado. The scene descended into anarchy, as both fighters threw water bottles and cans at each other as tensions exploded.

The exchange can be seen here, via MMAjunkie (warning: NSFW language and hand gestures):

MMA journalist Chamatkar Sandhu gave his verdict on the altercation: 

The pre-fight press conference has added more hype to an occasion that doesn’t need it, but the Notorious One is clearly motivated and ready to prove his doubters wrong.

When you remove the trash-talking element of McGregor’s personality, he is an individual who has helped deliver a new audience to the UFC, and his continued success is in the interest of both the company and the fighter.

Diaz is not the box office name MMA fans want to see drawn with Notorious after UFC 202, but it is vital the Irishman wins, and in a convincing manner.

With the contest at a weight that doesn’t suit McGregor, it is impossible to say with full conviction he will win. Diaz has already proved he has his opponent’s number, and he will want to show the world the depth of his talent.

However, McGregor’s knockout success is legendary, and he rarely loses, stretching back to his pre-UFC days.

If the Irish kingpin can knock out Jose Aldo with one punch, he can do the same to the Cesar Gracie product. 

Prediction: McGregor by TKO

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From UFC Gym to UFC 202: Florida Welterweight Debuts on Las Vegas Pay-Per-View

Mike Perry couldn’t even take advantage. He had to sit there and watch everyone else do it for him.
“I get these buffet cards. You get a free buffet,” Perry said. “My coaches use them. I can’t even use them. I’m cutting weight.”
It’s a good thing there…

Mike Perry couldn’t even take advantage. He had to sit there and watch everyone else do it for him.

“I get these buffet cards. You get a free buffet,” Perry said. “My coaches use them. I can’t even use them. I’m cutting weight.”

It’s a good thing there were other benefits available as he settled himself into Las Vegas, a few floors up and four days out from his UFC debut.

“It’s the beginning of a dream come true,” Perry told Bleacher Report in an exclusive interview. “They treat you so well. I feel like the greatest. …They give you a per diem, so they’re paying for you. You get a duffel bag full of clothes every time you walk in your room. The hotel room is beautiful.”

The 24-year-old welterweight from Altamonte Springs, Florida, is a +230 underdog in his bout with Korean bruiser Hyun Gyu Lim, according to betting site OddsShark.com. It’s not unusual for someone who has fought only once outside Georgia or Florida—unless you count that amateur bout in the Bahamas—and worked and partially trained at the UFC Gym in Winter Springs, Florida.

It is a bit out of the ordinary, though, for that debut to come on the pay-per-view main card of a major Las Vegas event. It came about thanks to Sultan Aliev’s injury barely two weeks before his date with limb, forcing UFC matchmakers to scramble. With a little quick thinking and elbow grease, Lady Fortune smiled on Perry.

It’s quite a coup for the young prospect. But as Perry spun his tale in a thick Southern drawl, it became clear he’s staying in the moment by remembering what got him here.

“I plan to bring it,” he said. “Show up and show out.”

And to think it all started with a screenshot.

“Someone wrote me on Facebook, asking about the UFC,” he recalled. “I guess he was a manager or with management or something. So I screenshotted the message and sent it to my manager. …Fifteen minutes later, he calls me and tells me. I kind of screamed a little bit. Like a weird scream.”

Perry’s stock in trade is the knockout. In fact, he has earned himself a 6-0 pro career—sorry, Mike, that Bahamas fight doesn’t count—based entirely on his prowess in that area. All six of his wins came at the ends of his fists. He’s only left the first round twice. 

“I’m not afraid to get in there and get hit to give a hit,” Perry said. “I’m cool with the battle part of it. Blood for blood.”

Between them, Lim and Perry have earned 84 percent of their 19 wins by knockout. Is it the most glamorous fight on the UFC 202 pay-per-view? Nope. It may be the least glamorous fight on the entire card. But with stats like this, it’s at least easy to understand why it’s there.

Is Perry concerned about Lim‘s knockout power? On top of his willingness to batter, he said he may have another to neutralize the big Korean.

“I’ve heard of him, but I’ve never seen him before,” Perry said. “I never saw him on [UFC] Fight Pass because I don’t have an account…[But] he’ll try to keep his distance. I think I’m the best in the world at getting inside. It’s MMA, and I can push him against that wall.

At the same time, Perry’s skills outside of his hands are unknown at best, and he hasn’t exactly torn through top competition en route to this moment. In his last fight, he bested David Mundell at a show in Kissimmee, Florida, called Battleground MMA. His biggest win to date was probably a flying-knee knockout last November of Jon Manley at Premier FC 18 in Springfield, Massachusetts. You may remember Manley from his role as the semifinalist who lost to Colton Smith on season 16 of The Ultimate Fighter.

So, no, not a lot of great names on the hit list. Still, although Perry did train at UFC Gym, it’s not his only training home. He’s also spent time at American Top Team Orlando—also home to elite veteran Ben Saunders—and Fusion X-Cel in Ocoee, Florida. In July, he cornered ATT teammate and middleweight Alex Nicholson for Nicholson’s win at UFC Fight Night 91 in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

Perry still realizes he’s the underdog. But for now, he’s just enjoying the buffets. Or at least his friends are. And he’s certainly not afraid.

“F–k Lim,” Perry said when asked for a fight prediction. “I’m going to kill him. I don’t know. That’s all.”

Scott Harris writes about MMA for Bleacher Report. For more stuff like this, follow Scott on Twitter. All quotes obtained firsthand.

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The Complete Guide to UFC 202: McGregor vs. Diaz 2

After five months of drama, Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz meet again at UFC 202 on Saturday. Their first matchup was an epic upset, as Diaz stepped up on just 11 days’ notice to face the featherweight champion. In one of the best fights of the year, Dia…

After five months of drama, Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz meet again at UFC 202 on Saturday. Their first matchup was an epic upset, as Diaz stepped up on just 11 days’ notice to face the featherweight champion. In one of the best fights of the year, Diaz capitalized on McGregor’s fatigue in the second round by burying him under a stream of punches and then choking the Irishman out on the mat.

It was a shocking outcome in one of the biggest fights of 2016, and the rematch promises every bit as much drama.

The two men were scheduled to meet again at UFC 200, but McGregor’s unwillingness to travel for press obligations led to a back-and-forth tug-of-war between the Irish superstar and the UFC that led to the fight’s being pulled and moved to UFC 202.

All of that is behind us now, and McGregor and Diaz will duke it out Saturday night.

The rest of the card is studded with interesting fights. In the co-main event, Anthony Johnson and Glover Teixeira meet in a nearly certain top-contender matchup at 205 pounds, and the winner will face Daniel Cormier for the light heavyweight strap. Donald Cerrone takes on Rick Story in a fantastic welterweight matchup that promises serious action on the main card.

The Fox Sports 1 and Fight Pass headliners are likewise excellent. On FS1, blue-chip up-and-comer Cody Garbrandt takes on the experienced Takeya Mizugaki in a classic prospect vs. veteran matchup. Lorenz Larkin and Neil Magny will meet on Fight Pass in an outstanding welterweight fight.

The rest of the card is forgettable but should produce a great deal of action.

Let’s take a look at each matchup.

Begin Slideshow

UFC 202: Cody Garbrandt Calls Shot for Mizugaki, Doubles Down on ‘Bully’ Cruz

On fight week, you hear a lot of bold talk from fighters toward their opponents.
Leading up to his fight Saturday at UFC 202, Cody Garbrandt may be going above and beyond the call of duty with the boldness.
Garbrandt will take on well-traveled UFC vete…

On fight week, you hear a lot of bold talk from fighters toward their opponents.

Leading up to his fight Saturday at UFC 202, Cody Garbrandt may be going above and beyond the call of duty with the boldness.

Garbrandt will take on well-traveled UFC veteran Takeya Mizugaki in the event’s undercard headliner. And you know what? He’d like to make a little prediction.

“I’m going to knock him out in the first round,” Garbrandt said Tuesday in an exclusive interview with Bleacher Report. “The first exchange. The first head shot.”

It’s Tuesday afternoon and Garbrandt is doing a phone interview in a Las Vegas hotel lobby, checking in to the place where he’ll stay through his fight. 

As it turns out, Garbrandt had company. Someone was listening to him give his pick for Saturday. You know, the one about the knockout after the first head shot.

“He’s actually right here,” Garbrandt said, meaning, of course, Mizugaki. “He’s looking at me right now, like a few feet away from me right now.”

Um…can he hear you?

“Oh, yeah, he understands,” Garbrandt said, after a pause. “Yeah, he can hear me. Look, he’s smiling now.”

Garbrandt is dishing out a lot of disrespect this week. Doing it in a hotel lobby was just the latest chapter.

He first did it at a Monday media luncheon, where he waxed poetic on his ability and willingness to face and knock out bantamweight champ Dominick Cruz—”he loses everything” in that fight, Garbrandt proclaims—after he’s done with Mizugaki. He then unveiled his own personal “hit list” of Cruz, former Team Alpha Male teammate T.J. Dillashaw and headhunter extraordinaire John Lineker. In that order.

As far as Cruz goes, yes, he’s the champ, and assuming a win at UFC 202 (where Garbrandt is a heavy -550 favorite, according to sports betting site OddsShark.com), this title fight would be a big deal. Maybe the pay-per-view-main-event kind of big deal, which would come with a big paycheck.

But this is about more than a fancy way of keeping pants up. Cruz (22-1) has a habit of irritating, even angering his opponents, then beating, even embarrassing them a little later.

A few of those opponents came from Team Alpha Male, the famous Sacramento gym headed by Urijah Faber (who lost to Cruz twice) and previously frequented by former champ Dillashaw (who lost to Cruz once, relinquishing his title) and other elites like Joseph Benavidez (who lost to Cruz twice). 

There’s also the fact that Cruz did it first, naming Garbrandt in August during a conversation about who he might want to fight next.

Cruz told MMAjunkie Radio on August 8 (h/t Mike Bohn of MMAjunkie):

I like Garbrandt because one, he’s Team Alpha Fail, and two, he runs his mouth, he’s an emotional guy, he’s got a goofy part in his hair and a ton of tattoos so he thinks he’s tough. All of those things together make for an interesting fight. The fans get behind Cody. I’ve gotten a lot of tweets about him, he’s got a lot of fans because he’s been riding the coattails of Urijah Faber for a while now.

Attach revenge, then, to Garbrandt‘s list of possible Cruz incentives. That’s a pretty good trio. 

“It’s something I’ve visualized since I was teenager, fighting Cruz, but he’s never really faced a sound physical and emotional fighter like myself,” Garbrandt said. “The other opponents have been weak. I’m emotional but I fight with passion. …[Dillashaw] is an emotional dude. A lot of fighters, Cruz got under their skin. The guy’s a dork and he tries to be a bully.”

Garbrandt is pretty confident. As a fighter, he has earned that right. He’s 25 years old and 9-0 as a pro. That includes 4-for-4 in UFC bouts and eight overall wins by knockout, including a flattening of even-hotter-at-the-time prospect Thomas Almeida in the main event of UFC Fight Night 88 back in May. (Garbrandt also grabbed his first career $50,000 Performance of the Night bonus.)  

That ability comes from more than power. An accomplished amateur boxer in his native Ohio, he has solid footwork, hand speed and takedown defense. He blends it all inside a barely controlled aggression, which sees him darting forward to slam his fist against his opponent’s skull.

Back to Mizugaki for a second. Perhaps you forgot that Mizugaki (21-9-2) is the name of the man Garbrandt fights on Saturday. He’s a man with an 8-4 UFC record and a reputation for toughness.

Is Garbrandt looking past him?

“Not at all,” he responded. “I don’t put things to the side. I’ll address that problem as it comes. He’s a man who’s standing in the way. From the opening bell to the end bell, I’m gonna be swinging.”

Scott Harris writes about MMA for Bleacher Report. For more, follow Scott on Twitter. All quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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