CM Punk Says WWE Wrestlers Were ‘Hurt’ By Conor McGregor’s Trash Talk

Shortly before his UFC 202 contest with Nate Diaz last month, UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor fired shots at World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) competitors, during a conference call to promote the bout, calling the WWE’s wrestlers a bunch of ‘messed up pu**ies’. One former WWE champion who has found a new home inside the UFC’s

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Shortly before his UFC 202 contest with Nate Diaz last month, UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor fired shots at World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) competitors, during a conference call to promote the bout, calling the WWE’s wrestlers a bunch of ‘messed up pu**ies’.

One former WWE champion who has found a new home inside the UFC’s Octagon is none other than CM Punk, who will make his mixed martial arts (MMA) debut against young welterweight prospect Mickey Gall on the main card of UFC 203 next week.

During the UFC 203 media conference call, courtesy of MMA Fighting, Punk admitted that a lot of feelings were hurt due to the brash Irishman’s comments but also admitted his former colleagues should have left emotion out of the whole affair:

“A lot of feelings were hurt, though, I can tell you that much, which I thought was a little strange,” Punk said. “You’ve gotta leave the emotion out of it. These guys still don’t know.”

McGregor’s comments sparked much controversy throughout the professional wrestling industry, with legends such as Ric Flair responding the ‘The Notorious One’s’ comments:

McGregor and Cena“I don’t know what to say to Ric Flair,” McGregor said at his pre-UFC 202 media day in Las Vegas. “This ain’t no gimmick. This is the real sh*t. I’ve gotta get in and fight a man for real.

With no script, with no nothing. He was talking about bringing some other wrestler guys out to challenge me. Come bring it, then. This is the real shit over here. You know want to come over, we can fight no problem.

A few of them are talking about the street and all. If they want to do that, come at me and see what happens.”

“What’s the main guy? John Cena,” McGregor said. “He’s 40. He’s 40 years of age. He’s walking around in a luminous orange t-shirt and a headband talking about nobody can see him.

We can see him right there. He’s a big fat, 40-year-old failed Mr. Olympia mother f*cker.”

While McGregor’s unrivaled talent on the mic makes him a perfect fit for the WWE’s platform, Punk wonders if those who responded to the 145-pound champ were told to do so by their higher-ups:

“It’s a hard thing to comment on, because the amount of people who responded to him made me feel like they were told to respond to him,” Punk said.

“[McGregor is] the biggest name in sports at the moment. There’s always grey areas when you involve that whole scene and you’re wondering, is this a work, is this not a work?”

wanderleiPunk will meet Gall on the main card of UFC 203 live on pay-per-view (PPV), from the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio on September 10, 2016.

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Nate Diaz on Conor McGregor Rivalry: I Beat Him Twice

Nate Diaz, perhaps in a joking manner, recently said that he was ‘obsessed’ with fighting featherweight champion Conor McGregor a third time. Now, however, it appears as if the Stockton native has changed his tune. Recently speaking with former UFC title challenger Chael Sonnen, Diaz said that he’s in ‘no hurry’ to book a third

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Nate Diaz, perhaps in a joking manner, recently said that he was ‘obsessed’ with fighting featherweight champion Conor McGregor a third time. Now, however, it appears as if the Stockton native has changed his tune. Recently speaking with former UFC title challenger Chael Sonnen, Diaz said that he’s in ‘no hurry’ to book a third bout, also saying that he feels as if he beat the “Notorious” one twice:

“It’s whatever to me. I won the fight. I’m not jumping for joy for round three,” Diaz said. “I think I beat him twice and it’s 2-0, as far as I’m concerned. If they’re gonna want to do it down the road, I don’t know. I’m not in a hurry. It’s all good.”

The two met for a first time back at UFC 196 in March in a bout that Diaz accepted on just over a week’s notice. Despite the short notice, however, the former lightweight title challenger submitted the Irishman in the second round, setting up a rematch for the ages that took place at August 20’s UFC 202 from Las Vegas, Nevada. At UFC 202, the two rivals slugged it out for five rounds in an instant classic, but it was McGregor who walked away with a majority decision victory.

With his future currently unclear, Diaz has said that he’s only interested in returning for a trilogy bout with McGregor, although he did also add that he’d follow the guidance of his older brother Nick, who recently served out an 18-month suspension from the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC):

“Nick is my fearless leader so I do whatever Nick tells me to do. But yeah, I don’t know what they’re doing with him right now, I don’t know what they’re doing with Nick right now,” Nate said. “I’m just over here enjoying the rest of this summer.”

“Nick’s the leader. If Nick tells me to go fight Joe Blow, I’ll fight Joe Blow. I’m a soldier man and that’s the general.”

How did you score the main event of UFC 202?

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Cowboy Lands Role On New Netflix Series

Coming off of his impressive R2 TKO win over Rick Story at UFC 202 earlier this month, Donald ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone has landed himself a role on a brand new limited Netflix series called “Godless” which was created by Scott Frank and Steven Soderbergh. Cerrone announced the news on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast yesterday (August 30, 2016)

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Coming off of his impressive R2 TKO win over Rick Story at UFC 202 earlier this month, Donald ‘Cowboy’ Cerrone has landed himself a role on a brand new limited Netflix series called “Godless” which was created by Scott Frank and Steven Soderbergh.

Cerrone announced the news on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast yesterday (August 30, 2016) revealing he would be part of a train robbery gang:

 “It’s a Netflix series. I got six episodes. Going to do cowboy (expletive),” Cerrone said. “It’s called “Godless”.

“I’m part of a gang, a train robbery gang. I’m excited. We start on the 12th.”

One of the show’s creators, Scott Frank, is an Academy Award nominated writer as a result of his work on the film “Get Shorty”.

Co-creator Steven Soderbergh is a former Academy Award winner himself for Best Director back in 2000, and will also serve as the show’s executive producer as well.

The show will star actors Jeff Daniels, Jack O’Connell, Merritt Weaver and Scoot McNairy.

You can check out a quick synopsis of the show from The Hollywood Reporter here:

The project, from Steven Soderbergh and Scott Frank, is set in 1884 and centers on Frank Griffin (Daniels), a menacing outlaw who is terrorizing the West as he hunts down Roy Goode (Unbroken’s Jack O’Connell), his son-like partner turned mortal enemy. While Roy hides at Alice Fletcher’s ranch, Frank’s chase leads him to the quiet town of La Belle, N.M. — which is mysteriously made up of entirely women.

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Alistair Overeem: Conor McGregor & Floyd Mayweather Lie About Their Fight Purses

Alistair Overeem is steadily approaching his opportunity at making a bit of personal history for himself, as he aims to secure his first UFC title when he takes on current heavyweight title-holder Stipe Miocic in the main event of UFC 203 later this month. ‘The Reem’ recently participated in a media lunch in Downtown Los Angeles to

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Alistair Overeem is steadily approaching his opportunity at making a bit of personal history for himself, as he aims to secure his first UFC title when he takes on current heavyweight title-holder Stipe Miocic in the main event of UFC 203 later this month.

‘The Reem’ recently participated in a media lunch in Downtown Los Angeles to promote his upcoming title bout, courtesy of MMA Fighting, in which he discussed the mega-fight purses of combat sports superstars Conor McGregor and Floyd Mayweather.

Mayweather is known as ‘Money’ for a reason, as he raked in $100 million disclosed for his highly-anticipated fight with Manny Pacquiao, and ‘The Notorious’ Irish champ McGregor was given a UFC record $3 million for his most recent scrap with Nate Diaz at UFC 202.

Overeem, however, is not buying the fact that the two stars were able to pull in such huge paydays, calling for bank statements as proof to the wealth the two men enjoy to flaunt:

USATSI_9494101_168382968_lowres“My answer to that, to Mayweather and to Conor, let me see some bank statements,” Overeem said.

“You can talk, you can say it, you can put it out there in tweets, but let me see a bank statement that says UFC wired X amount of money, because it’s always going to be this way. People lie. It’s the 21st century. Social media is fake.”

While the No. 3-ranked UFC heavyweight acknowledges that he himself also enjoys to bask in the fruits of his labor, Overeem credits his roots for not being one to parade his wealth to all that he can, as he believes it does nothing but attract problems:

“I’m from Holland,” Overeem said. “In Holland, we like to dress up, we like to do our thing, we like to be cool. But we what we don’t like is to have stacks of cash on the table and the cars.

To us, in our culture — and in that respect I’m very proud to be Dutch — that’s just attracting problems, attracting difficulty.”

A volatile key to both McGregor and Mayweather’s success has been they’re un-rivaled ability to thrash their opponents on the microphone, making it a must-see for fans across the globe to tune in and witness if the two brash competitors can back up what they are preaching.

Overeem, however, has no aspirations to take any plays from the McGregor-Mayweather playbook, as he will simply continue to stay true to himself and speak his mind:

“I am my own guy and I’ve always kind of followed my own path. I do what I think is right. That brings me happiness. If I’m going to do something because somebody else is doing it, I see that as fake.

Again, you look at these other guys and they’re making the stacks of cash. Who was the first doing that? Muhammad Ali was doing that. So you’re copycatting another guy. I’m just being me. I feel very comfortable being me.

FLoyd Mayweather vs. Manny PacquiaoI don’t feel obliged to be somebody else at all. I’m very proud of being me. People lie all the time,” Overeem said. “Personally, I have a hard time believing both of them about their income.

Overeem will meet Miocic in the main event of UFC 203 for the UFC heavyweight title live on pay-per-view (PPV), from the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio on September 10, 2016.

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Dana White: Georges St-Pierre Shouldn’t Fight Anymore

The Octagon return for former UFC welterweight kingpin Georges St-Pierre has never been closer, as news came this week that ‘Rush’ could return as soon as December’s UFC 206 from Toronto in his home country of Canada. St-Pierre has been teasing a return to mixed martial arts (MMA) for some time now; however, nothing concrete has

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The Octagon return for former UFC welterweight kingpin Georges St-Pierre has never been closer, as news came this week that ‘Rush’ could return as soon as December’s UFC 206 from Toronto in his home country of Canada.

St-Pierre has been teasing a return to mixed martial arts (MMA) for some time now; however, nothing concrete has yet to surface indicating that the return is officially in the books. While the former 170-pound champ has a plethora of supporters across the world, one man who is not on the ‘GSP’ support team is UFC President Dana White.

In a recent appearance on ‘The Herd’ on Thursday courtesy of FOX Sports, White admitted that he just doesn’t believe ‘GSP’ possesses the ‘drive and that desire that he once had’ to be the best in the combat sports world.

“I don’t care how big you are or how much money you make or how much money you bring into the company — if you don’t want to fight anymore, you shouldn’t fight anymore. This is a sport you’re all in, you can’t be wishy-washy.

“That’s why when people talk about, ‘Oh, Georges St-Pierre’s coming back; Georges St-Pierre doesn’t have that ‘I want to be a world champion’ attitude anymore.
“He doesn’t have that drive and that desire that he once had. And if you don’t have that, no, you shouldn’t fight.”
GSP ConditThe UFC President clearly doesn’t have the confidence that his former top pay-per-view (PPV) draw will once again reign as the undisputed pound-for-pound best mixed martial artist in the world like he once did, but we may get the opportunity to find out if White’s views are in fact correct if St-Pierre decides to step into the Octagon at UFC 206 in his native Canada.
What are your thoughts? Do you agree with White’s statements that ‘GSP’ will return ‘wishy-washy’? Or will the Canadian phenom return just as dominant a force as he was when he left nearly three years ago?

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Quote: Rousey Return Bigger Than McGregor vs. Diaz

It’s been nearly a year since mixed martial arts (MMA) rockstar Ronda Rousey has competed inside of a UFC Octagon, as the formerly undefeated 135-pound women’s juggernaut suffered the first loss of her professional career at the hands of former kickboxing champion Holly Holm in the main event of UFC 193 in Melbourne. Rousey fell

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It’s been nearly a year since mixed martial arts (MMA) rockstar Ronda Rousey has competed inside of a UFC Octagon, as the formerly undefeated 135-pound women’s juggernaut suffered the first loss of her professional career at the hands of former kickboxing champion Holly Holm in the main event of UFC 193 in Melbourne.

Rousey fell victim to an emotional downwards spiral following the devastating loss, with thoughts of suicide lingering in the back of the former champion’s mind as well.

‘The Rowdy One’ has put that all behind her, however, as she is expected to make her return sometime in 2017 according the UFC President Dana White.

During a recent appearance on ‘The Herd’, courtesy of FOX Sports, White went as far as claiming that when Rousey once again steps inside of the Octagon she once ruled with an iron fist, it will be the biggest pay-per-view (PPV) event the organization has ever put on.

Bigger even than the massive UFC 202 event in Las Vegas that just transpired this past Saturday (August 20, 2016) in which UFC featherweight champion Conor McGregor avenged his only loss under the promotion’s banner against rival Nate Diaz:

“I think Ronda Rousey’s return will be the biggest pay-per-view we’ve ever done.

Ronda had a bunch of minor surgeries and they’re healing up and when they are, I’m assuming she’s going to fight,” White said.

While it is still unclear if Rousey will ever return to Octagon action it will certainly be a tall order to topple the monstrous UFC 202 event headlined by McGregor and Diaz, but if anyone can get it done it’s ‘Rowdy’.

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