TJ Dillashaw Reacts To Cody Garbrandt Releasing Alleged Knockout Footage

Earlier tonight UFC bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt finally posted footage of him allegedly knocking out former champ and current title challenger TJ Dillashaw in training. The two onetime teammates have been engaged in a bitter rivalry that began on The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 25 this year, after which they were scheduled to fight for the […]

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Earlier tonight UFC bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt finally posted footage of him allegedly knocking out former champ and current title challenger TJ Dillashaw in training.

The two onetime teammates have been engaged in a bitter rivalry that began on The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 25 this year, after which they were scheduled to fight for the title in at July’s UFC 213. Garbrandt was forced out, however, delaying the fight to this weekend’s (Sat., Nov. 4, 2017) UFC 217 from New York City.

“No Love” teased the footage, and he took it to a new level by posting it. But some viewers weren’t so sure that it was the earth-shattering KO Garbrandt discussed, as “The Viper” was definitely knocked down but appeared to get back up rather quickly.

Not surprisingly, Dillashaw was one of those doubters, as he told MMA Junkie’s Steven Marrocco that he clearly started fighting right after the knockdown:

“Yeah, tell him to keep playing the video. I get up and start going again. There was no KO like he’s been stating.”

With accusations that Dillashaw essentially ended Team Alpha Male member Chris Holdsworth’s career in addition to performance-enhancing drug use, this footage was the final piece of a brutal all-out assault that the California-based team has mounted towards their hated former brother.

Dillashaw left the team amidst a highly-publicized and abrupt exit from Urijah Faber’s fabled squad, something that was blown out of the stratosphere when Conor McGregor predicted he would abandon Faber and his teammates when he called him a ‘snake’ on TUF.

All that’s left now is to fight with ultra-high stakes on the line this Saturday, and clearly, tensions are at an all-time high after the video tonight – even if Dillashaw appeared calm in response.

How will this affect the anticipated title fight?

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Cody Garbrandt Posts Video Of Alleged Training Knockout Over TJ Dillashaw

Heading into their anticipated bantamweight title fight in the co-main event of this weekend’s (Sat., Nov. 4, 2017) UFC 217 from Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York, champion Cody Garbrandt has made things personal with former champion TJ Dillashaw. First, he accused “The Viper” of teaching Team Alpha Male to use performance-enhancing drugs […]

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Heading into their anticipated bantamweight title fight in the co-main event of this weekend’s (Sat., Nov. 4, 2017) UFC 217 from Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York, champion Cody Garbrandt has made things personal with former champion TJ Dillashaw.

First, he accused “The Viper” of teaching Team Alpha Male to use performance-enhancing drugs at today’s UFC 217 pre-fight press conference, and now, he’s posted video of the alleged training knockout he nailed Dillashaw with when they were teammates, something he’s boasted of since the two were opposing coaches on The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 25 earlier this year.

Check out the footage from Garbrandt’s Instagram and see for yourself:

It’ difficult to say that “No Love” actually knocked out Dillashaw here, because while he most certainly did get knocked down by a huge shot, he also appeared to get right back up and continue sparring.

In any case, Garbrandt will have his chance to win the knockout bonus he predicted in the post above. Based on the short clip, do you believe “No Love” will fulfill his promise?

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Cody Garbrandt: TJ Dillashaw ‘Can’t Condition That F*cking Chin’

Once teammates at Urijah Faber’s Sacramento-based Team Alpha Male, bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt and TJ Dillashaw are now just two days away from settling their heated rivalry, as the two will square off in the co-main event of Saturday’s (Nov. 4, 2017) UFC 217 from Madison Square Garden in New York City. Leading up to […]

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Once teammates at Urijah Faber’s Sacramento-based Team Alpha Male, bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt and TJ Dillashaw are now just two days away from settling their heated rivalry, as the two will square off in the co-main event of Saturday’s (Nov. 4, 2017) UFC 217 from Madison Square Garden in New York City.

Leading up to the bout, which was originally scheduled to take place last July at UFC 213, Garbrandt and Dillashaw have repeatedly taken shots at each other, often getting personal with the trash talk. At today’s (Nov. 2, 2017) pre-fight press conference, that continued.

“No Love” has previously accused Dillashaw of using performance-enhancing-drugs (PEDs), but he took those accusations even further earlier today:

“You showed everyone how to do it on Team Alpha Male,” Garbrandt told Dillashaw.

As expected, Dillashaw shook off the accusations:

“Yeah, I’m on everything,” Dillashaw said sarcastically. “They test me every day, so I’m on everything.”

“I don’t understand the animosity coming from him,” Dillashaw added. “it’s a little bit ridiculous. Do I need to hold his hand and tuck him in at night? … I’m not your daddy. Urijah [Faber] is your daddy. He’ll be there to hold your hand.”

As always with rivalries such as this one, the bad blood, the insults, and the accusations will soon be put to rest.

Ultimately, UFC 217’s co-main event will play host to a battle between two of the very best bantamweights in the world, with both being in the primes of their careers. The back story is just an added bonus.

As far as the fight goes, Garbrandt is currently undefeated and coming off of a dominant win over ex-champion Dominick Cruz last December. Dillashaw, on the other hand, has won two straight bouts since dropping a closely fought decision to Cruz in January 2016.

Both men are supremely talented, and somewhat similar fighters, but many would argue that “No Love” has the power advantage, and the champion seems to be predicting a knockout:

“You can do all the conditioning in the world with your new coach,” Garbrandt said. “You can’t condition that f*cking chin of yours.”

Who do you expect to come out on top?

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Forget GSP’s Return: Garbrandt vs. Dillashaw Is the Best Thing Going at UFC 217

An ultimate truism of mixed martial arts is that feuds sell tickets.
Sure, there’s a case to be made that stars or maybe sound bites or maybe even athletic merit (as if) sell tickets, but if butts in seats are what you’re looking for, it’s tr…

An ultimate truism of mixed martial arts is that feuds sell tickets.

Sure, there’s a case to be made that stars or maybe sound bites or maybe even athletic merit (as ifsell tickets, but if butts in seats are what you’re looking for, it’s truly a good feud that will do it.

UFC 217 is setting out to prove as much, creating a dichotomy illustrative of the need for a proper feud in the way the main and co-main events of the pay-per-view have been structured.

In the featured bout Saturday evening, all-time welterweight great Georges St-Pierre is returning from a four-year absence to challenge middleweight champion Michael Bisping. The fight, while it will likely be interesting once the cage door shuts, has been largely dead on arrival from a promotional standpoint.

Bisping has done plenty to cajole St-Pierre into some mudslinging, but the pristine image of Canada’s favorite son cannot be soiled so easily.

The Brit has tried everything obvious one might think of: mocking St-Pierre’s clothes, his size and his accent, and even squeezing his biceps at a presser, getting little more than a smile and a playful shove in response.

That utter absence of heat between the parties is palpable, and fans can sense it. Beyond the abject curiosity of seeing two athletes who remain surprisingly capable in their late 30s fight for a title, not many people seem overly excited to watch.

You can chalk that up to the lack of a real feud. The fight is just a manufactured, money-chasing headliner.

Not long before Bisping and St-Pierre meet though, a real feud will be settled. That feud is the one that has people talking.

The co-main event between bantamweight champion Cody Garbrandt and former champion TJ Dillashaw pits former Team Alpha Male teammates against one another. The two best 135ers alive, each has a thrilling style and anyone who has followed their careers sees the tantalizing potential of those styles clashing.

That would almost be enough on its own, but the pure hatred they have for one another takes things to another level entirely.

Garbrandt has made no secret of his disdain for Dillashaw, whom he sees as a traitorous snake deserving of a public throttling. Dillashaw, with just the appropriate degree of smug smirking, thinks Garbrandt is a young hothead who can’t get a thought out without exploding.

There’s been talk of gym battles, daddy issues, bad tattoos and, of course, being afraid to fight. And it all appears to be coming from a genuine place.

What’s not to love?

It’s everything that makes MMA fans salivate, to not only contemplate coughing up their hard-earned $60 on a Saturday night, but to do so with enthusiasm.

Yet while Bisping and GSP are on the marquee in pictures and font almost as big as can be expected to physically fit on a poster, the good stuff is relegated to a tiny corner. That hardly seems befitting the culmination of a top-end feud years in the making.

Still, it’s hard to go so far as to call it a misstep for the UFC.

The promotion is gambling on a big name from a relatively bygone era storming back to reclaim his superstar legacy, and they can’t be faulted for it given the lack of big names they’ve been able to promote this year.

But there remains nothing truer than the idea that feuds sell tickets. Feuds put butts in the seats.

Garbrandt and Dillashaw have done all they can to put butts in the seats leading into Saturday night. 

The payoff is all that’s left, and given the stakes and the talent involved, you can expect it to be the talk of the MMA world come Sunday morning.

       

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder!

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Live: UFC 217 Pre-Fight Press Conference Video

We’re only two nights away from this weekend’s (Sat., Nov. 4, 2017) blockbuster UFC 217 from Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. The biggest MMA card of 2017 so far features an unprecedented three title fights when middleweight champion Michael Bisping takes on returning former welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre in the main event, […]

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We’re only two nights away from this weekend’s (Sat., Nov. 4, 2017) blockbuster UFC 217 from Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York.

The biggest MMA card of 2017 so far features an unprecedented three title fights when middleweight champion Michael Bisping takes on returning former welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre in the main event, while bantamweight champ Cody Garbrandt meets archrival TJ Dillashaw and dominant women’s strawweight champ Joanna Jedrzejczyk battles Rose Namjunas.

To kick things into full swing, the fighters are set to participate in a pre-fight press conference today (Thurs., November 2, 2017).

Watch the action unfold live starting now:

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The Complete Guide to UFC 217: Michael Bisping vs. Georges St-Pierre

It seems the Georges St-Pierre unfreezing process went exceedingly well. As he emerged from the cold-storage chamber, his musculature, accent and haircut were almost impossibly well-preserved.
Then came the hard part.
In March, with all the stealth he …

It seems the Georges St-Pierre unfreezing process went exceedingly well. As he emerged from the cold-storage chamber, his musculature, accent and haircut were almost impossibly well-preserved.

Then came the hard part.

In March, with all the stealth he could muster, unfrozen GSP slipped into the warmth of the active-fighter pool. Within minutes, a blockbuster bout with middleweight champ Michael Bisping was simmering on the stove. Then it was off. Then it was back on. St-Pierre, for his part, publicly proclaimed he was absolutely game to face Bisping—any time after October.

As everyone puzzled over how to shoehorn unfrozen St-Pierre into a title picture he was never part of to begin with, fresh, never-frozen middleweights grew frustrated over what they viewed as a divisional logjam. UFC brass set up an interim title to ease the pressure.

Ultimately, the match was made. And now it’s here. Saturday at UFC 217, the train lurches into the station right under Madison Square Garden in New York City. Bisping vs. St-Pierre is the main event.

It has been four years since St-Pierre, the greatest welterweight of all time, went into self-imposed exile. Now he’s back, and no one has any idea how to react. Cheering? Cake? Eight months later, it’s still a head-scratcher, and GSP isn’t helping.

In his way, Bisping tried to instill some meaning with a bit of his trademark bad-movie trash talk, mainly stuff about how he thinks GSP is a bad fighter. St-Pierre was never a microphone dynamo, but some after-effects of the unfreezing process were evident in his grimacing and sputtering about how he will do his talking in the cage.

So no help there. Neither is the total mystery over his fighting abilities as a 36-year-old debuting at middleweight. Neither is his name recognition. Formerly a safety net for his charisma shortcomings, his fame as a fighter has diminished with time, and he hasn’t exactly killed himself restoring it since his return.

Yet he’s the welterweight GOAT and is arguably the most fascinating story of the event, though perhaps not for the desired reasons.

That’s saying something because UFC 217 is a pretty fascinating event. Of the 12 scheduled bouts, three are title fights—and the other two might be better, maybe a lot better, than the big one. None of them deserve footnote status, but I had to get some GSP stuff off my chest. Sorry.

Let’s go beyond the headlines for a complete guide to UFC 217.

          

All betting odds accurate as of Wednesday and courtesy of OddsShark. MMA record information courtesy of Sherdog

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