Nate Diaz Wants To Remind You He’s Only One Class Above Conor McGregor

After throughly throttling Conor McGregor by second-round submission in the main event of March 5’s monumental UFC 196 from Las Vegas, Nate Diaz isn’t exactly pleased with how the attention has still gone to the popular Irishman despite his stoppage loss. He’s now rumored to rematch McGregor in the main event of UFC 200, and

The post Nate Diaz Wants To Remind You He’s Only One Class Above Conor McGregor appeared first on LowKick MMA.

After throughly throttling Conor McGregor by second-round submission in the main event of March 5’s monumental UFC 196 from Las Vegas, Nate Diaz isn’t exactly pleased with how the attention has still gone to the popular Irishman despite his stoppage loss.

He’s now rumored to rematch McGregor in the main event of UFC 200, and the buzz for that fight is already building (even if a lot of it comes in the form of backlash).

Making the media rounds with several appearances this week, Diaz described how the inaccurate portrayal of McGregor moving up two weight classes bothers him on ESPN’s SportsNation:

In the interview, Diaz spoke up about McGregor’s perceived move up to welterweight, where he met Diaz on short notice, to face champion Robbie Lawler. But the popular veteran said that is unlikely despite all the credit McGregor’s been given, as he is a natural lightweight:

“Yeah, it does bother me. He was already talking about going up and fighting the welterweight champ and taking him out and even fighting at 185 and all these things. When he lost the fight, he’s getting all this credit for going up two weight classes. But I’m really only one weight class above him. I’m a lightweight.

“I’m only one class ahead of him. He’s moving up and he already talked about being the welterweight champ. Now he fought a lightweight contender and he’s talking he went up two weight classes.”

As for the rematch, Diaz understandably questioned if McGregor would be able to sell the fight with as much quote-worthy smack talk now that his previous aura of invincibility has dissipated:

“He’s got his little moves, so he’s probably got a bunch of stuff lined up. But there’s not much to say.”

With one stoppage win over McGregor already, it’s tough to argue that the Irishman’s brash brand of trash talk will have the same effect the second time around, and there are also some serious questions about his ground game, an area Diaz where clearly excels.

Overall, it appears the UFC is going to go with Diaz vs. McGregor II in UFC 200’s main event, so for better or worse, McGregor is going to have to learn how to deal with iron-chinned Diaz’s multitude of ways to stop a fight.

Will he be able to in four months’ time?

The post Nate Diaz Wants To Remind You He’s Only One Class Above Conor McGregor appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC 200: Five Reasons McGregor vs. Diaz II Is The Right Move

The Conor McGregor hype train was temporarily derailed when the reigning UFC featherweight champion was unable to thwart the toughness and submission skills of Nate Diaz at UFC 196. While it’s easy to entirely dismiss the defeat considering the Irishman was jumping up 25 pounds in weight to fight Diaz on 11 days’ notice, he

The post UFC 200: Five Reasons McGregor vs. Diaz II Is The Right Move appeared first on LowKick MMA.

The Conor McGregor hype train was temporarily derailed when the reigning UFC featherweight champion was unable to thwart the toughness and submission skills of Nate Diaz at UFC 196.

While it’s easy to entirely dismiss the defeat considering the Irishman was jumping up 25 pounds in weight to fight Diaz on 11 days’ notice, he did in fact suffer his first promotional defeat. One that yet again shed light on a rather average ground game, seeing as his other two professional losses came by way of submission.

Nonetheless, the 145-pound king is more determined than ever to regain any steam he lost to the Stockton brawler early this month. The two are nearing an agreement to officially fight again at UFC 200 this July, which makes sense considering UFC 196 presumably broke all promotional pay-per-view records.

While some will scuff at the idea of a rematch, due in part to McGregor taking two fights out of division before he defends his featherweight title at least once, the UFC would be ill-advised to pass up such an opportunity. In fact, there are more selling points on why this reboot should take place than one might think.

Here are five reasons why McGregor vs. Diaz II is the right choice to bolster the biggest mixed martial arts fight card of all time.

The post UFC 200: Five Reasons McGregor vs. Diaz II Is The Right Move appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Nate Diaz: Conor McGregor’s Trash Talk Sounded Like Bulls**t To Me

While the fight itself turned out to be an amazing affair, the build-up to March 5’s UFC 196 main event between featherweight champion Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz was something else. Serving as two of the most iconic trash talkers in the history of the sport, McGregor and Diaz repeatedly went at each other in

The post Nate Diaz: Conor McGregor’s Trash Talk Sounded Like Bulls**t To Me appeared first on LowKick MMA.

While the fight itself turned out to be an amazing affair, the build-up to March 5’s UFC 196 main event between featherweight champion Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz was something else.

Serving as two of the most iconic trash talkers in the history of the sport, McGregor and Diaz repeatedly went at each other in a verbal war of attrition during the eleven days leading up to the bout after the Stockton native stepped in on short notice.

Despite the obvious entertainment that it provided, Diaz isn’t so sure that the “Notorious” one believed everything he was saying. In fact, Diaz felt as if some of McGregor’s talk was planned:

“It seemed like a lot of scripted stuff was going on,” Diaz told FOX Sports’ At The Buzzer on Wednesday. “Maybe he was serious about what he was saying, but it sounded like some bullsh*t to me.”

No matter the result of the trash talk battle, it was Diaz who, in the end, ultimately prevailed when the cage door closed. The long-time UFC veteran shocked the world, submitting the Irish title holder in the second round of their headlining bout.

It may have been the biggest fight of his life, and undoubtedly the biggest victory of his lengthy career, but Diaz claims that his life hasn’t changed too much in the aftermath, implying that he’s been famous for years now:

“My life is exactly the same, just with a little more press so far,” Diaz said. “It’s only been a few weeks, but it’s pretty much (the same). I don’t let it take a hold of me or anything. I’ve been in the UFC for nine years. I was famous nine years ago. I couldn’t walk through the mall or Wal-Mart at two in the morning and not get noticed. It’s been going like this so it’s pretty much the same.”

With a rumored rematch between the two potentially in the works for July’s UFC 200, fans may end up being treated to a full build up, while Diaz may be in for yet another huge payday.

How would you predict a second bout between Diaz and McGregor to play out?

The post Nate Diaz: Conor McGregor’s Trash Talk Sounded Like Bulls**t To Me appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Video: Diaz Says “A Lot Of Scripted Stuff Was Going On” With McGregor Before UFC 196

nate-diaz-the-buzz

Come hang LIVE with @TheBuzzer’s Andy Nesbitt and UFC star Nate Diaz! 󾍘🏼

Posted by UFC on FOX on Wednesday, March 23, 2016

According to Nate Diaz, something was fishy about some of the pre-fight trash-talk between himself and “The Notorious” Conor McGregor leading up to their UFC 196 mega-fight earlier this month.

Diaz appeared on FOX Sports’ “The Buzz” on Wednesday and claimed that it seemed like “a lot of scripted stuff was going on.”

“It seemed like a lot of scripted stuff was going on,” Diaz said. “Maybe he was serious about what he was saying, but it sounded like some bullsh*t to me.”

Regardless of whether or not McGregor’s pre-fight trash-talk was scripted or not, Diaz knew the two would eventually share the Octagon together and because of his training, Diaz was confident that it was in the cage where he would shine.

“No matter what people say, no matter if he’s winning the argument battles or losing the argument battles … at the end of the day we’re still gonna get in there and fight,” Diaz said. “I know what I train with and what I work with and what he’s working with. And yeah.”

Although the UFC has yet to officially announce the rematch, Diaz-McGregor II is expected to be announced as the main event of UFC 200 on July 9, 2016 at the new T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

nate-diaz-the-buzz

Come hang LIVE with @TheBuzzer's Andy Nesbitt and UFC star Nate Diaz! ????????

Posted by UFC on FOX on Wednesday, March 23, 2016

According to Nate Diaz, something was fishy about some of the pre-fight trash-talk between himself and “The Notorious” Conor McGregor leading up to their UFC 196 mega-fight earlier this month.

Diaz appeared on FOX Sports’ “The Buzz” on Wednesday and claimed that it seemed like “a lot of scripted stuff was going on.”

“It seemed like a lot of scripted stuff was going on,” Diaz said. “Maybe he was serious about what he was saying, but it sounded like some bullsh*t to me.”

Regardless of whether or not McGregor’s pre-fight trash-talk was scripted or not, Diaz knew the two would eventually share the Octagon together and because of his training, Diaz was confident that it was in the cage where he would shine.

“No matter what people say, no matter if he’s winning the argument battles or losing the argument battles … at the end of the day we’re still gonna get in there and fight,” Diaz said. “I know what I train with and what I work with and what he’s working with. And yeah.”

Although the UFC has yet to officially announce the rematch, Diaz-McGregor II is expected to be announced as the main event of UFC 200 on July 9, 2016 at the new T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Diaz Coach: I’d Tell Conor McGregor To Go Back To 145

It may not be official, but Nate Diaz is rumored to rematch featherweight champion Conor McGregor in the main event of July’s blockbuster UFC 200 from Las Vegas, Nevada. Since that somewhat surprising news broke last week, there has seemingly been an uproar from MMA fans given that Diaz wholly destroyed McGregor in the second round

The post Diaz Coach: I’d Tell Conor McGregor To Go Back To 145 appeared first on LowKick MMA.

It may not be official, but Nate Diaz is rumored to rematch featherweight champion Conor McGregor in the main event of July’s blockbuster UFC 200 from Las Vegas, Nevada.

Since that somewhat surprising news broke last week, there has seemingly been an uproar from MMA fans given that Diaz wholly destroyed McGregor in the second round of their massive main event at March 5’s UFC 196, rocking him with a crisp combo and a flurry of follow-up strikes that lead to a shocking rear-naked choke submission win.

There are also, on the other hand, of course the voracious McGregor faithful who contend that their man was lighting up Diaz on the feet in the first round, bloodying him at two weight classes above his normal 145 pounds. And they’d be right, at least in a certain sense, because ‘The Notorious’ did apparently win the first round before appearing to tire from fighting at 168 pounds when originally signed on to fight injured lightweight champion Rafael dos Anjos at 155.

USATSI_9161343_168380322_lowres

Of course the counterargument (and they could go on for days in this electric rivalry) is that Diaz took the fight on only 11 days’ notice when ‘RDA’ broke his foot, and he was still able to rock, throttle, and submit McGregor even though he was on a yacht sipping tequila in Cabo barely two weeks before the fight. That’s the stance that Diaz’ boxing coach Richard Perez took in a recent appearance on the Deep Waters Podcast (via FOX Sports), noting that a rematch with Diaz would be even worse for McGregor after the popular Stockton persona had ample time to prepare:

“It would be better because we only had 11 days and we only trained for nine. Usually, when someone gets two weeks’ notice, chances are they are going to lose. But I had a lot of confidence in Nathan and Nathan had a lot of confidence in the way we train, and in the way he trains — he does bicycle riding, running, swimming.”

Well known for always staying in some kind of fight shape thanks to his competing in triathlons and vegan lifestyle, Diaz said that he would have been next to flawless if he had a full camp to train for McGregor, and obviously Perez agrees. He predicted that the rematch will be much more in favor of Diaz, so he and his team should perhaps reconsider:

“If I were McGregor’s trainer, I’d say, let’s go back to 145,” Perez continued. “You’re awesome there. Fight Frankie Edgar or some top guy like that. But I guess they want a rematch. That’s going to be different. In a full camp, Nathan don’t mess around.”

Indeed the odds would dictate that Diaz would thoroughly control the rematch based on how he opened up McGregor’s glaring weakness on the ground with his black belt Brazilian Jiu-jitsu pedigree. McGregor could easily much better at his original home of 145 where he holds a monstrous size advantage, but his head coach John Kavanagh has repeatedly stated he doesn’t want the Irish superstar putting his body through the depleting cut down to featherweight anymore. Indeed, he looked a bit different at his last two respective weigh-ins:

ConorWeigh-InSideBySide3

 

If that is the case, however, many of the fans who are in opposition rematch think that McGregor should be forced to vacate the featherweight belt if he can’t defend it. Of course, the active Irishman hasn’t fought at featherweight for a grand total of three months and 11 days, hardly holding the division in limbo after Jose Aldo’s illustrious but inconsistent reign where he defended much less frequently.

If he does rematch Diaz, it’s going to get a lot longer than that, so the UFC obviously has a lot of thinking to do. Do you think that this would be a fight should go down in the supposed biggest card of arguably the UFC’s biggest year, and if so, is that because you believe McGregor would lose even worse?

The post Diaz Coach: I’d Tell Conor McGregor To Go Back To 145 appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Nate Diaz Calls McGregor Rematch “Funny” Since He Got Worked

Fresh off the heels of a somewhat shocking second round submission victory over Conor McGregor earlier this month, long-time veteran Nate Diaz has never been in a better position. Taking the bout with McGregor on just 11 days notice, Diaz, although eating some damage in the first round, appeared to have outworked and simply outclassed

The post Nate Diaz Calls McGregor Rematch “Funny” Since He Got Worked appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Fresh off the heels of a somewhat shocking second round submission victory over Conor McGregor earlier this month, long-time veteran Nate Diaz has never been in a better position.

Taking the bout with McGregor on just 11 days notice, Diaz, although eating some damage in the first round, appeared to have outworked and simply outclassed the brash Irish champion.

According to Diaz, the “Notorious” one was on his way to getting knocked out had he not shot in for a takedown:

“[The fight with] Conor — that was on the way to being a knockout,” he told Rolling Stone.

“He was getting handed some solid (expletive). He got on me for the takedown because he was done.”

As for what lies ahead for the younger Diaz brother, reports had actually surfaced late last week implying that both he and McGregor had verbally agreed to rematch at July 9’s UFC 200 despite the clear cut finish in the first bout.

To Diaz, the idea of a rematch seems “funny”, especially given the fact that Jose Aldo has not yet been awarded his second shot at McGregor after losing his title to the Irishman in just 13-seconds last December:

“I lost plenty of decisions and I’ve never got a rematch, to this day,” he said.

“So, that’s crazy. Conor got worked over and now they’re saying, ‘rematch,’ which makes sense. I understand that. I just think it’s funny because, it’s like, Jose Aldo didn’t get a rematch.”

At the end of the day, Diaz has always lobbied for the “big” fights, or the money fights so to say, and a rematch with McGregor would obviously draw in millions of eyes. The magnitude of a possible second go with the “Notorious” one hasn’t kept the thought of a potential title fight away from Diaz, however:

“I would like to fight the lightweight title,” he said.

If you’re Diaz, are you agreeing to a rematch with McGregor, or searching for a second shot at 155-pound gold?

The post Nate Diaz Calls McGregor Rematch “Funny” Since He Got Worked appeared first on LowKick MMA.