Michael Chandler Feels Bad About Making Tony Ferguson A Meme

Michael Chandler feels bad about turning Tony Ferguson into a meme at UFC 274. Chandler knocked Ferguson out in devastating fashion on the main card of the UFC 274 pay-per-view (PPV) from the Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona this past weekend. The victory ended a two-fight losing skid for Chandler, who has quickly established himself…

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Michael Chandler feels bad about turning Tony Ferguson into a meme at UFC 274.

Chandler knocked Ferguson out in devastating fashion on the main card of the UFC 274 pay-per-view (PPV) from the Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona this past weekend. The victory ended a two-fight losing skid for Chandler, who has quickly established himself as one of the more exciting fighters under the promotion’s banner. As for Ferguson, this marks his fourth-straight loss in a row.

Speaking to Ariel Helwani on “The MMA Hour” this week, Chandler discussed his win over Ferguson, explaining that he actually feels bad for turning “El Cucuy” into a meme with the still image of the knockout shot going around.

Photo: The moment of impact from Chandler's KO of Ferguson at UFC 274 -  MMAmania.com
Tony Ferguson, Michael Chandler

“I feel more bad for him than I do feel proud of myself, to be honest with you. It’s one of those pictures where it’s just like, gosh, dang, man. That could be any of us. Mixed martial arts is such a ruthless, tough game, man.

“And we’ve all been on the wrong side of those exchanges. We’ve all been on the right side of those exchanges. It’s just is your card gonna be called? Is your number gonna be called tonight? Is it my number or your number that’s getting called tonight?

“And luckily for me, it was his number that got called. Unfortunately for him but lucky for me, those pictures will live on the internet forever, and he has become a meme and that kind of stuff.”

Chandler went on to explain that the vulnerability that fighters put themselves in when stepping into the Octagon should make people love the sport even more.

“If anything it should make people love the sport more that we’re braving the unknown and braving the embarrassment every single time we put those gloves on. Because the internet is ruthless, it’s undefeated, and the trolls be everywhere.”

With his big win, Chandler has put himself back in the mix at the top of the lightweight stack. Of course, with the title now vacant the possibilities are endless matchup-wise. It will be interesting to see who “Iron” gets paired with next time around.

Would you feel bad for Tony Ferguson if you were Michael Chandler?

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Pat Barry Shares His One Regret In Rose Namajunas’ UFC 274 Strategy

Pat Barry has attempted to provide an explanation for Rose Namajunas’ lackluster performance against Carla Esparza at UFC 274. Heading into her first appearance of 2022, many expected Namajunas to record a second title defense, which would have extended her reign beyond the length of her first championship rule a number of years ago. But…

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Pat Barry has attempted to provide an explanation for Rose Namajunas’ lackluster performance against Carla Esparza at UFC 274.

Heading into her first appearance of 2022, many expected Namajunas to record a second title defense, which would have extended her reign beyond the length of her first championship rule a number of years ago. But while “Thug Rose” brought fans a memorable knockout and an entertaining five-round affair in 2021, the UFC 274 co-main event was a far cry from her previous contests.

Against former opponent Esparza, Namajunas played her part in what is widely being branded the worst title fight in UFC history. Following a bizarre five-round display, Namajunas lost the strawweight gold on the scorecards after falling on the wrong side of a split-decision verdict.

During and after the result, Barry, who largely led the corner efforts for his partner, received flak for the advice and words he gave Namajunas in the corner. Despite the remarkably low level of output, the former UFC heavyweight assured the 29-year-old that she was doing everything right.

Now, days beyond the disappointing end to Namajunas’ second reign on the 115-pound throne, Barry has assessed what went wrong inside Arizona’s Footprint Center.

Pat Barry: Namajunas Was Too Disciplined

During an appearance on The MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani, Barry appeared to defend the game plan that was driven into Namajunas during fight camp. Rather than the strategy being the issue, the 42-year-old suggested that the problem was “Thug Rose” being unable to deviate from it late on.

Barry suggested that even when he instructed the former champion to “freestyle” in the final round, Namajunas was too disciplined to stray from the plan. With that in mind, Barry said that his mistake was drilling too much control into the Wisconsin native.

“Now, where I blew it is all of the training to have control, all of the training that I did, all of the training that we put together, to stay in control of your emotions, stay in control of yourself — we never once went over how to come out of that,” said Barry. “Because at the end of Round 4, myself, when I got in the ring, and people are going to have comments always, when I got in the ring, I pretty much said, ‘Hey man, I think we’re up 4-0. You can feel free to kind of let go a little bit now and freestyle.’ … That was the whole training camp, is not to [freestyle]. The whole training camp was not to do that, expecting her to do it.

“So now we get into the ring, we get into the fight, it’s about to start Round 5 and we’re pretty much saying, ‘Hey, we’ve seen what we need to see. We know where you are and what you’re capable of. You can open up now.’ And it was almost as if you could see Rose go, ‘Ah, ah, no, no, no. No, you’re trying to trick me.’ We’re not,” continued Barry. “She was so prepared to stick to the game plan that she actually stuck to the game plan when we were telling her, ‘Alright, you can ditch it and go to something else now.’ She stuck to it. She stayed completely disciplined. She stayed completely disciplined the entire time, and so did Carla.” (h/t MMA Fighting)

It’s interesting to note that Barry admitted to that advice coming along with the belief that Namajunas was four rounds up. It’s perhaps that idea that demands further explanation, especially given Namajunas’ post-fight belief that defense should have scored her points in the eyes of the judges.

Understandably, the question on the lips of many following Barry’s comments will surround why it took until the fifth round for him to instruct Namajunas to let loose. On two of the three judges’ scorecards, Namajunas had already lost hope of securing a decision, with one even giving all of the first four rounds to Esparza.

What do you make of Pat Barry’s explanation for Rose Namajunas’ lackluster performance at UFC 274?

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Tony Ferguson Reflects On UFC 274 KO Loss, Details Momentary Memory Loss Following Defeat

Tony FergusonFormer interim UFC lightweight champion, Tony Ferguson has reflected on his stunning second round front kick knockout loss to Michael Chandler at UFC 274 last weekend in Phoenix, Arizona – detailing how he experienced momentary memory loss following the devastating knockout defeat. Tony Ferguson, who returned for the first time in a year in a […]

Tony Ferguson

Former interim UFC lightweight champion, Tony Ferguson has reflected on his stunning second round front kick knockout loss to Michael Chandler at UFC 274 last weekend in Phoenix, Arizona – detailing how he experienced momentary memory loss following the devastating knockout defeat.

Tony Ferguson, who returned for the first time in a year in a high-profile UFC 274 showing against fellow contender, Chandler, suffered his fourth consecutive defeat, dropping a massive second round knockout defeat to the latter courtesy of a front kick stoppage just 17 seconds deep into the second round.

The Oxnard native had started relatively well against the Sanford MMA trainee, landing a left hand counter which dropped Chandler early in the first round, as well as eventually landing a series of slicing elbows off his back during a lengthy grappling exchange.

However, within the first couple exchanges of the second frame, Tony Ferguson suffered a devastating knockout loss after Chandler sprung with a massive right front kick. 

Suffering his fourth straight loss, Ferguson added his loss to Chandler to prior defeats against Beneil Dariush, as well as UFC 274 headliners, Charles Oliveira, and Justin Gaethje

Tony Ferguson praised Michael Chandler on his knockout win over him at UFC 274

Reflecting on his loss to Chandler, Ferguson congratulated the veteran former Bellator lightweight champion on his victory, and insisted that he was happy to have the hunger back to compete – and was happy to compete after his extended layoff.

Delving into the aftermath of his loss in a lengthy post on his Instagram account, Ferguson recounted how when he had suffered from memory loss following the knockout defeat to Chandler.

“”New Energy”, Thanks coach for takin’ the time to keep me Active Crew,” Tony Ferguson posted on his official Instagram account. “I took a big kick to the dome this past Saturday inside that Ocagon… it put me out for a long time it was a scary feeling not remembering anything from beginning of second round all the way until I walked up to the ambulance. Thank God EVERYDAY I made the trip back to reality.”

“All jokes aside, I didn’t mean to scare you all, should have done things different like keep my “Hands Up & Chin Down”. My fault I lost, props to (Michael) Chandler for the highlight reel (sic) finish. I have many things to work on, not just competing. One Battle At A Time. I’m not perfect by any means, but I’ll continue to strive for it in-N-out of the practice room.”

“(Perfection: an unobtainable goal),” Tony Ferguson continued. “Someone wise once told me, “Perfect practice makes perfect”. There’s always more to learn & being coachable is big. I’m beyond grateful my movements are ok, my bones are intact & except for a slight headache in the mornings, I’m glad to be back & doing what I love (light duty). I want to be better than yesterday for sure… not for anyone but for me. Making good adjustments daily, and will continue to do so- Champ – XTA2 – Hometeam. #ThanksForBeingGreat. You’re the best crew. A type of guy like me could ask for *respect*. Gonna watch my fight now for the first time Cleared and ready to learn again.”

Michael Chandler Distances Himself From Dustin Poirier Fight: ‘I’ve No Interest’

Michael ChandlerMichael Chandler has admitted that when it comes to a potential future fight with former interim UFC lightweight champion, Dustin Poirier, he is wholly disinterested – claiming the Lousiana native disregarded him upon his initial landing in the promotion. Michael Chandler, who managed to land his second UFC victory last weekend on the main card […]

Michael Chandler

Michael Chandler has admitted that when it comes to a potential future fight with former interim UFC lightweight champion, Dustin Poirier, he is wholly disinterested – claiming the Lousiana native disregarded him upon his initial landing in the promotion.

Michael Chandler, who managed to land his second UFC victory last weekend on the main card of UFC 274, stopped former interim lightweight titleholder, Tony Ferguson with a spectacular second round front kick knockout – adding the Oxnard to a debut stoppage success against Dan Hooker.

Previously challenging for vacant lightweight spoils, the Sanford MMA staple suffered a second round knockout loss to now-former gold holder, Charles Oliveira last May, before dropping a unanimous decision loss to another former interim champion, Justin Gaethje at UFC 268 in November.

Issuing a series of call outs following his second round win over Ferguson in Phoenix, Arizona – Chandler welcomed rematches with both Oliveira and Gaethje, as well as offering to fight former two-weight champion, Conor McGregor, as well as Nate Diaz at the welterweight limit.

Appearing on The MMA Hour this week, Chandler broached the subject of a pairing with the above noted, Poirier, first claiming that he had no interest in fighting the American Top Team puncher, before questioning if he was actually a big enough draw.

“I have no interest in fighting Dustin (Poirier), honestly,” Michael Chandler said on The MMA Hour. “I got asked the other day who I would see as a champion if it wasn’t me or (inaudible) and I completely forgot about him. To be quite honest, man, I think he’s a great dude, I think I like him for the sport, but I also think I was completely disregarded and pushed aside when I came into the organization.”

“He (Dustin Poirier) completely disregarded me, acted as though I didn’t deserve to be where I was,” Michael Chandler said. “So maybe it’s a little bit more of a personal issue but, I also don’t think Dustin – is Dustin a draw, you know? I guess, he is the number two guy – ranked number two now, but he’s kinda just stayed at number two.

Dustin Poirier initially voiced his displeasure with Michael Chandler fighting for a vacant title last May

Chandler then claimed that Poirier’s lack of clarity on his continued fighting future following his December title challenge loss to Oliveira also makes him cautious regarding the possibility of chasing a fight with him.

“And, you know, I don’t know how active he’s gonna be,” Michael Chandler said. “But I did see he tweeted I was saying everybody else’s name but his, as if I didn’t want to fight him because of technical reasons, or whatnot. I just forgot about him to be honest with you. Hats off to him for what he’s done in his career and I respect the heck out of him – he makes some good hot sauce, but as of right now, I don’t really have a desire to fight him.”

With the stripping of Oliveira as the undisputed lightweight champion, the rankings at 155lbs took a tumble across the board, however, Chandler managed to land the #5 spot in the official stack with his win over Ferguson.

UFC 274 Secures Top Spot For 2022 PPVs, Surpasses 400,000 Buys

Despite rivaling a major boxing match on DAZN, UFC 274 reportedly recorded the most pay-per-view buys of the year to date on ESPN+. Last Saturday, the MMA leader took over Phoenix, Arizona with a card topped by two exciting-looking championship contests, as well as a blockbuster lightweight bout and a host of entertaining preliminary bouts….

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Despite rivaling a major boxing match on DAZN, UFC 274 reportedly recorded the most pay-per-view buys of the year to date on ESPN+.

Last Saturday, the MMA leader took over Phoenix, Arizona with a card topped by two exciting-looking championship contests, as well as a blockbuster lightweight bout and a host of entertaining preliminary bouts.

While both title fights had some element of disappointment involved, Charles Oliveira’s missed weight and ineligibility to keep the title in the main event, and the rematch between Rose Namajunas and Carla Esparza being widely branded as dull, the event appears to have been the promotion’s most successful of 2022.

According to Sports Business Journal reporter Adam Stern, the May 7 event recorded over 400,000 buys on ESPN+, marking it as the UFC’s leading card of the year. That’s despite rivaling DAZN’s Canelo Álvarez vs. Dmitry Bivol fight.

With UFC 274 representing the first instance of leaked PPV numbers this year, we now have a ceiling in place for 2022’s first four major events.

UFC 274 Bests A Unification Clash & An Intense Grudge Match

In taking top spot, Charles Oliveira and Justin Gaethje, who drew most of the attention ahead of the event as the headliners, UFC 274 certainly didn’t outdo poor slates.

Opening the year in Anaheim, MMA’s premier promotion put on two title bouts at UFC 270, including a heavyweight unification showdown between champion Francis Ngannou and then-interim titleholder Ciryl Gane. In the co-main slot, Deiveson Figueiredo and Brandon Moreno battled for the flyweight belt for the third time in just over a year.

February’s event saw a rematch between middleweight king Israel Adesanya and Robert Whittaker take center stage in Houston, while entertaining behemoths Tai Tuivasa and Derrick Lewis delivered a powerful appetizer in the co-featured bout.

It’s perhaps most surprising that last weekend’s event was able to outdo the numbers drawn by UFC 272 in March. In the main event, former friends Jorge Masvidal and Colby Covington collided, looking to settle a history of bad blood and animosity. The matchup’s apparent failure to surpass 400,000 buys perhaps suggests the trash-talking build-up wasn’t to everyone’s taste.

Last month’s UFC 273 event, meanwhile, saw Alexander Volkanovski defend his title for the third time against “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung Jung in Jacksonville. Petr Yan and Aljamain Sterling also collided in a rematch, settling their feud and unifying the bantamweight titles.

Despite four solid-looking events on paper, it was the latest fight in Oliveira’s incredible resurgence that has leapfrogged them all. With the title now vacant after his weight miss, perhaps the extra stakes of his vacant championship fight later this year will draw even more eyeballs.

The first event that’ll look to surpass the tally Oliveira vs. Gaethje achieved will be UFC 275, set for June 11 in Singapore. At the top of the card, Glover Teixeira will defend his light heavyweight title against Ji?í Procházka, while Valentina Shevchenko will be targeting an extension of her flyweight dominance against Taila Santos in the co-main.

Are you surprised that UFC 274 recorded the year’s highest number of PPV buys?

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Chandler On Oliveira: Making Weight Is Your First Commitment As Champ

Michael Chandler has voiced his opinion on Charles Oliveira’s UFC 274 weight miss. Oliveira was scheduled to defend his 155-pound title against Justin Gaethje in the pay-per-view (PPV) main event. However, Oliveira weighed in half a pound overweight and was thus stripped of the title, which was rendered vacant. As a result, Gaethje was the…

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Michael Chandler has voiced his opinion on Charles Oliveira’s UFC 274 weight miss.

Oliveira was scheduled to defend his 155-pound title against Justin Gaethje in the pay-per-view (PPV) main event. However, Oliveira weighed in half a pound overweight and was thus stripped of the title, which was rendered vacant.

As a result, Gaethje was the only man eligible to win the belt in their fight. Despite this, Oliveira pulled off the first-round submission win via rear-naked choke. Now, Oliveira is guaranteed a shot at the vacant belt in his next fight. The only thing left to determine will be his opponent.

Also on that card, Michael Chandler got himself back in the contender’s mix with a massive second-round knockout win over Tony Ferguson.

Speaking on “The Pat McAfee Show,” Chandler offered his thoughts on Oliveira’s weight miss. Chandler said there’s no excuse for missing weight, and the cut truly starts weeks out from the contest.

“I will definitely never, never, ever, ever, give the benefit of the doubt that it’s a possibility, man. You got a contract and you signed that contract and the contracted weight. I have weighed in now 30 times in mixed martial arts, and 100 and something times before that in the sport of wrestling, I have never missed weight.

“The weight cut started way before that last morning. The weight cut started way before that last week. The weight cut starts 10 weeks, 12 weeks before the fight, when you consistently are disciplined inside of the kitchen, consistently disciplined with your supplementation… your roadwork, cardio, the extra work you need to do.”

Chandler noted that Oliveira probably isn’t too down on himself since he won the fight, but the fact that he’s no longer champion certainly has to sting. With that being said, Chandler remains firm that your first commitment as a UFC champion is making weight and believes Oliveira will clean things up moving forward.

“I would never kick a man while he’s down. I mean, Charles is not exactly down, he still won the fight. But it was unfortunate for him that he is not the champion anymore because he missed weight.

“But there was obviously a sentiment that everybody was just dumbfounded, especially as a champion. When you become the champion, you have even more of a reputation to uphold, and making weight is the first commitment that you make, that you have to see through… I’m sure Charles will clean it up, hopefully in the future.”

What do you make of Chandler’s stance on Oliveira’s weight-miss situation? Do you agree? Let us know in the comments section below!

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