UFC 158: Will We See a Dark Side in Georges St-Pierre?

Most MMA fights are about two people utilizing their techniques, their discipline and other talents to see who comes out on top. They indulge themselves in interviews on their opponent whether it will be a fight between two respected fighters or if the…

Most MMA fights are about two people utilizing their techniques, their discipline and other talents to see who comes out on top. They indulge themselves in interviews on their opponent whether it will be a fight between two respected fighters or if there is bad blood between them. It is all about building the hype.

Then they will talk about how they will win their fight whether it be by a spectacular knock out or a beautiful submission. The hype is partly what makes the fight exciting.

Once the fight starts, it is all business. All the talking is now replaced with action. With No. 1 UFC Welterweight Contender, Nick Diaz, the hype and talking doesn’t stop, but neither does the action.

Nick Diaz has been calling out UFC Welterweight Champion Georges “Rush” St-Pierre for some time now. Before Georges was placed on the shelf due to a serious knee injury last year, the fight between GSP and Diaz was suppose to happen.

Instead we ended up with Condit vs Diaz for the Interim Welterweight Championship, which was a great match, but it didn’t quite have the electricity of a GSP vs Diaz fight.

Even while GSP was on the injured list, Diaz was still talking trash to him. GSP took Condit to a five round beating in his last fight and Diaz still continued the trash talking.

That is how Nick Diaz is. He is a trash talking fighter that can back it up with a sick ground game to go along with an unorthodox, yet effective, stand up game.

Just like his little brother, Nate, Nick has that unique stand up game in which he doesn’t throw all of his power into one punch. Instead he will unload with a barrage of what UFC commentator Joe Rogan calls “50% punches”.

 

 

Combine those punches with the fact that Diaz is a cardio freak and you have someone that will not stop until your face is messed up.

If you don’t want to get beat up by Diaz standing up, do you take a gamble and take the fight to the ground with a Jiu Jitsu wizard? It is almost a lose/lose situation.

The result equals a mangled face and bruised ribs for the opponent. For Diaz, it is a win. Just ask UFC legend BJ Penn. I have never seen Penn get beaten up the way Diaz beat him up at UFC 137. It was hard for me to watch because Penn is one of the fighters I looked up to when I competed.

And the trash talking to GSP still continued for Diaz.

Diaz finally got what he wanted when St-Pierre expressed himself about the Stockton Native during an interview. The Canadian born fighter stated on how he is offended on how Diaz is and that he deserves a beating and that you will see a Dark Side of the Welterweight Champion.

Dark Side? Does that mean we will see an angry GSP?

The last time a fighter got under the skin of the Welterweight Champ it was in December of 2010 at UFC 124 when he fought Josh Koscheck. Georges busted him up for five rounds with some wicked jabs that resulted in a fractured orbital bone in Koscheck‘s face.

Georges was mad, but he has never been this mad. 

 

 

Last year, I wrote an article about Diaz and GSP. The article was about Diaz and could he be the one that brings out the finisher in GSP?

I still hope that happens. I want the GSP that made my idol, Matt Hughes, verbally tapout. I want the GSP that broke the nose of Sean Sherk. 

I want the GSP that finishes fights in spectacular fashion.

Well those are my thoughts. Now it is time to hear yours. Did Nick Diaz make the biggest mistake of his life by awakening the Dark Side of St-Pierre? Will we see the GSP that finishes fights? Or is this all part of Diaz‘s plan to use Georges’s anger to throw him off his game? 

This Saturday in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, we will find out.

Until then, this is Balistik signing out.

 

PEACE OUT

“MMA ALL THE WAY”

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Josh Koscheck Healing From Eye Surgery, Still Needs a Head Check

MMAJunkie spoke to Josh Koscheck in his first interview since his expected devastating loss to UFC Welterweight Champion, Georges St. Pierre at UFC 124. Koscheck seems to concede that GSP is the better fighter yet claims:
I think that the first punch of the fight was when I broke my eye. So I thought […]

koscheck-eye-closed
MMAJunkie spoke to Josh Koscheck in his first interview since his expected devastating loss to UFC Welterweight Champion, Georges St. Pierre at UFC 124. Koscheck seems to concede that GSP is the better fighter yet claims:

I think that the first punch of the fight was when I broke my eye. So I thought that it was definitely bad luck on my behalf. That’s life. He threw the punch, and it was a good punch. I definitely think the fight would have been a lot different if that wasn’t the case.

Gee, Kos was the first punch when you broke your eye? We figured that was when GSP broke it, but why mix words? We just hope that the five months of recovery will heal his swelled head eye, once and for all.

Matt Hughes Thinks Georges St. Pierre Is Boring, Overpaid

Filed under: UFCMatt Hughes and Georges St. Pierre had a great trilogy of fights in the Octagon, but their rivalry died down a bit after they fought for the third and final time, with Hughes seeming to have gained a grudging respect for the man who bea…

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Matt Hughes and Georges St. Pierre had a great trilogy of fights in the Octagon, but their rivalry died down a bit after they fought for the third and final time, with Hughes seeming to have gained a grudging respect for the man who beat him twice.

Or maybe not.

A month after the fact, Hughes has weighed in on St. Pierre’s unanimous decision victory over Josh Koscheck at UFC 124, and Hughes is telling St. Pierre the same thing that St. Pierre once told him: “I’m not impressed by your performance.”

Sean McCorkle Felt Like He Couldn’t Breathe at UFC 124

Filed under: UFCIt didn’t seem like a bad situation for Sean McCorkle at first. Minutes into his UFC 124 fight, McCorkle had already secured himself a kimura against favorite Stefan Struve.

But to McCorkle’s disbelief, Struve wouldn’t tap.

“I cannot …

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It didn’t seem like a bad situation for Sean McCorkle at first. Minutes into his UFC 124 fight, McCorkle had already secured himself a kimura against favorite Stefan Struve.

But to McCorkle’s disbelief, Struve wouldn’t tap.

“I cannot believe I’m about to win two fights and be undefeated in the UFC as soon I wrapped his arm,” McCorkle told Ariel Helwani Monday on The MMA Hour. “I was really excited about it and when it didn’t happen, I didn’t believe it.”

And Now He’s Fired (Again): Joe Doerksen

("So if you lose two in a row, you’re still OK, right?")
Despite logging a tough split decision loss to Dan Miller at UFC 124, Joe Doerksen yesterday had insult added to the injury of losing in front of his fellow Canadians in Montreal Saturd…


("So if you lose two in a row, you’re still OK, right?")

Despite logging a tough split decision loss to Dan Miller at UFC 124, Joe Doerksen yesterday had insult added to the injury of losing in front of his fellow Canadians in Montreal Saturday night when he was informed by the UFC that he was being let go by the promotion.

Fiveouncesofpain was first to report the New Bothwell, Manitoba native’s firing.

The loss was Doerksen’s second in a row since handing Tom Lawlor his second loss in a row in his Octagon return at UFC 113. He was submitted in his last bout at UFC 119 by C.B. Dollaway.

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Dominance of Georges St. Pierre Is in the Details

Filed under: UFCLast Friday, the night before UFC 124, company president Dana White ran into Josh Koscheck in the host hotel, just a block away from the Bell Centre in Montreal. The two shared a few words, and during the conversation, Koscheck shared h…

Filed under:

Last Friday, the night before UFC 124, company president Dana White ran into Josh Koscheck in the host hotel, just a block away from the Bell Centre in Montreal. The two shared a few words, and during the conversation, Koscheck shared his prediction that Georges St. Pierre would refuse to strike with him during their championship fight.

The belief that St. Pierre has become a wrestling-dependent, “safe” fighter has become so widespread that even Koscheck — before the biggest moment of his life — felt sure it was his opponent’s likeliest course of action. It turned out to be the wrong assumption. The fight spent just 68 seconds on the mat, as St. Pierre kept the action standing, where he out-struck Koscheck over five rounds, bloodying him and breaking his right orbital bone en route to a division record-tying fifth straight title defense.

While statistics don’t tell the whole story, they help illuminate the fallacy of many criticisms lobbed against the UFC’s welterweight champion.