Dominick Cruz Gives Excellent Breakdown Of McGregor vs. Diaz

UFC Bantamweight Champion Dominick Cruz, who as announced by UFC President Dana White during Friday’s excellent UFC “Unstoppable” press conference will competing in the long-awaited rubber-match against Urijah Faber in the co-main event of UFC 199 in J…

cruz-mic

UFC Bantamweight Champion Dominick Cruz, who as announced by UFC President Dana White during Friday’s excellent UFC “Unstoppable” press conference will competing in the long-awaited rubber-match against Urijah Faber in the co-main event of UFC 199 in June, recently spoke with Luke Thomas of MMAFighting.com about tonight’s UFC 196 main event.

As usual, “The Dominator” gave an incredibly technical breakdown of tonight’s welterweight headline attraction between UFC Featherweight Champion “The Notorious” Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz.

Regarding Diaz having a more storied background against southpaws than McGregor, Cruz offered the following analysis.

“The beautiful thing about this fight is that he’s a southpaw. How many rounds do you think Diaz has against southpaws, comparatively speaking, to the people McGregor has faced in the past?

One, he’s trained with his brother his entire life, who is a southpaw. Two, his brother’s bigger than him, stronger than him and big brothered him, so he’s used to being bullied. He’s used to being talked to in a demeaning manner. He’s used to everything Conor McGregor does because his brother Nick Diaz does the same thing to him day in, day out. There’s nothing that Conor McGregor could do him that his older brother hasn’t already done to him, I promise you if you know Nick.

That’s a huge step in the right direction to begin with because the mental battle isn’t nearly the same as it’s been for all of McGregor’s past opponents. Besides that, the reach doesn’t become as big of an issue also because when you face a southpaw vs. conventional fighter, the conventional fighter gives up range because of the foot placement. When you’ve got a southpaw vs. a southpaw, that evens up just like a conventional fighter vs. conventional fighter. So, that counter left hand that Conor’s so good at, it’s not taken away, but you don’t have to reach as much as his past opponents did.

You got an Aldo who you’re fighting and he has to reach in order to land the left hook, no matter what. That’s one entire side of your body that if you decide to reach with, you’re going to get countered every single time against a southpaw. None of those counter options are there against Diaz for McGregor and that’s one of his biggest weapons.”

Cruz also explained why McGregor’s motion, use of negative space and angles will be his path to victory inside the Octagon on Saturday night.

“That’s his path to winning, to be honest. It’s exactly what we were just saying a second ago. Conor does have an eye for the way that fighters are moving. What I mean by the way fighters are moving is the lines that they’re basing their styles on.

This is the best way I can explain it to the general public. If you’re racing a 700 horsepower Corvette with rear-wheel drive versus and all-wheel drive car, which can take turns because it’s all-wheel drive, the all-wheel drive car is always going to win if there’s turns involved in the race. If it’s a straight line, you might take the muscle car because it doesn’t take as much moving and it doesn’t take as much traction and as much control. But if you’re on a bobbing, weaving course that’s going to have turns, you’re going to want the all-wheel drive car. Every single time.

Conor McGregor turns these fights into windy, turny road, so that you’re forced to not be able to race on a one-way straight, narrow route. What Conor’s doing is he’s making what used to be a straight drag race into a race with a bunch of turns and curves and stops and gos. What that does is it breaks rhythm and it forces the person who’s driving that car or the person who is fighting in that body to deal with way more than just a straight line.

Conor’s movement is the key to why he’s been doing so well. And the reason why it’s been a key is because he sees the basics of everybody else that he’s fought is moving on. They’re moving in straight lines: forward and back. It’s a drag race car. You’re dealing with somebody who’s making a lot of turns.

He uses the fact that you can only go in a straight line against you. He has all these other options when you basically have to stay in a straight line. How do you beat somebody who can turn, brake on a dime, do all these other things when all you can do is go straight and backwards as fast as possible?”

Dominick Cruz Gives Excellent Breakdown Of McGregor vs. Diaz

UFC Bantamweight Champion Dominick Cruz, who as announced by UFC President Dana White during Friday’s excellent UFC “Unstoppable” press conference will competing in the long-awaited rubber-match against Urijah Faber in the co-main event of UFC 199 in J…

cruz-mic

UFC Bantamweight Champion Dominick Cruz, who as announced by UFC President Dana White during Friday’s excellent UFC “Unstoppable” press conference will competing in the long-awaited rubber-match against Urijah Faber in the co-main event of UFC 199 in June, recently spoke with Luke Thomas of MMAFighting.com about tonight’s UFC 196 main event.

As usual, “The Dominator” gave an incredibly technical breakdown of tonight’s welterweight headline attraction between UFC Featherweight Champion “The Notorious” Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz.

Regarding Diaz having a more storied background against southpaws than McGregor, Cruz offered the following analysis.

“The beautiful thing about this fight is that he’s a southpaw. How many rounds do you think Diaz has against southpaws, comparatively speaking, to the people McGregor has faced in the past?

One, he’s trained with his brother his entire life, who is a southpaw. Two, his brother’s bigger than him, stronger than him and big brothered him, so he’s used to being bullied. He’s used to being talked to in a demeaning manner. He’s used to everything Conor McGregor does because his brother Nick Diaz does the same thing to him day in, day out. There’s nothing that Conor McGregor could do him that his older brother hasn’t already done to him, I promise you if you know Nick.

That’s a huge step in the right direction to begin with because the mental battle isn’t nearly the same as it’s been for all of McGregor’s past opponents. Besides that, the reach doesn’t become as big of an issue also because when you face a southpaw vs. conventional fighter, the conventional fighter gives up range because of the foot placement. When you’ve got a southpaw vs. a southpaw, that evens up just like a conventional fighter vs. conventional fighter. So, that counter left hand that Conor’s so good at, it’s not taken away, but you don’t have to reach as much as his past opponents did.

You got an Aldo who you’re fighting and he has to reach in order to land the left hook, no matter what. That’s one entire side of your body that if you decide to reach with, you’re going to get countered every single time against a southpaw. None of those counter options are there against Diaz for McGregor and that’s one of his biggest weapons.”

Cruz also explained why McGregor’s motion, use of negative space and angles will be his path to victory inside the Octagon on Saturday night.

“That’s his path to winning, to be honest. It’s exactly what we were just saying a second ago. Conor does have an eye for the way that fighters are moving. What I mean by the way fighters are moving is the lines that they’re basing their styles on.

This is the best way I can explain it to the general public. If you’re racing a 700 horsepower Corvette with rear-wheel drive versus and all-wheel drive car, which can take turns because it’s all-wheel drive, the all-wheel drive car is always going to win if there’s turns involved in the race. If it’s a straight line, you might take the muscle car because it doesn’t take as much moving and it doesn’t take as much traction and as much control. But if you’re on a bobbing, weaving course that’s going to have turns, you’re going to want the all-wheel drive car. Every single time.

Conor McGregor turns these fights into windy, turny road, so that you’re forced to not be able to race on a one-way straight, narrow route. What Conor’s doing is he’s making what used to be a straight drag race into a race with a bunch of turns and curves and stops and gos. What that does is it breaks rhythm and it forces the person who’s driving that car or the person who is fighting in that body to deal with way more than just a straight line.

Conor’s movement is the key to why he’s been doing so well. And the reason why it’s been a key is because he sees the basics of everybody else that he’s fought is moving on. They’re moving in straight lines: forward and back. It’s a drag race car. You’re dealing with somebody who’s making a lot of turns.

He uses the fact that you can only go in a straight line against you. He has all these other options when you basically have to stay in a straight line. How do you beat somebody who can turn, brake on a dime, do all these other things when all you can do is go straight and backwards as fast as possible?”

UFC 196 Results – Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz (IN PROGRESS NOW)

Tonight, MMANews.com is your source for UFC 196 Results and live coverage. UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz takes place live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada and we will be providing the absolute best live results coverage of the high…

sanchez-miller

UFC 196 Results

Tonight, MMANews.com is your source for UFC 196 Results and live coverage. UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz takes place live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada and we will be providing the absolute best live results coverage of the highly anticipated pay-per-view featuring Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz and Holly Holm vs. Miesha Tate in the two main events.

UFC 196 kicks off live tonight with a three-fight preliminary card on UFC Fight Pass starting at 6:30pm ET. / 3:30pm PT., featuring Diego Sanchez vs. Jim Miller in the main event, as well as a four-fight preliminary card headlined by Brandon Thatch vs. Siyar Bahadurzada on FOX Sports 1 starting at 8pm ET. / 5pm PT. After the FS1 prelims, starting at 10pm ET. / 7pm PT., it will be time for the UFC 196 pay-per-view headlined by Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz.

MMANews.com will be providing live, quick-match UFC 196 results coverage of the two preliminary cards this evening, and the fastest, most detailed round-by-round results coverage of every fight on the pay-per-view portion of the show from start-to-finish. We welcome fans to test our updates against the competition this evening, as it will not take long for you to figure out where you want to be when the big fights get started. We hope to see everyone here later this evening!

UFC 196 Results — UFC Fight Pass Preliminary Fights

– Julian Erosa (144.5) vs. Teruto Ishihara (146) (In Progress Now …)

STILL TO COME …

UFC 196 Results — UFC Fight Pass Preliminary Fights

– Justin Salas (156) vs. Jason Saggo (155.5)
– Diego Sanchez (156) vs. Jim Miller (155.5)

UFC 196 Results — FOX Sports 1 Preliminary Fights

– Darren Elkins (145.5) vs. Chas Skelly (145.5)
– Vitor Miranda (185.5) vs. Marcelo Guimaraes (185.5)
– Erick Silva (170) vs. Nordine Taleb (170)
– Brandon Thatch (170) vs. Siyar Bahadurzada (170)

UFC 196 Results — Pay-Per-View Fights

– Amanda Nunes (136) vs. Valentina Shevchenko (134)
– Corey Anderson (204) vs. Tom Lawlor (204)
– Gian Villante (205) vs. Ilir Latifi (205)
– Holly Holm (134.5) vs. Miesha Tate (135)
– Conor McGregor (168) vs. Nate Diaz (169)

Video: UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz Weigh-In Results

https://youtu.be/4-oOhty5oy0

The final piece of pre-fight business for Saturday’s UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz pay-per-view took place on Friday evening, as the official weigh-ins for this weekend’s big event went down live in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Fo…

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https://youtu.be/4-oOhty5oy0

The final piece of pre-fight business for Saturday’s UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz pay-per-view took place on Friday evening, as the official weigh-ins for this weekend’s big event went down live in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Following the UFC “Unstoppable” press conference (full video archive here) earlier in the evening on Friday, the UFC 196 weigh-ins were held featuring Conor McGregor, Nate Diaz, Holly Holm, Miesha Tate and the rest of the fighters scheduled to compete on Saturday’s fight card.

The scheduled lineup — including the official weights from the weigh-ins — for Saturday’s pay-per-view is listed below.

MAIN CARD (PPV- 10 PM ET/7 PM PT):
– Conor McGregor (168) vs. Nate Diaz (169)
– Holly Holm (134.5) vs. Miesha Tate (135)
– Gian Villante (205) vs. Ilir Latifi (205)
– Corey Anderson (204) vs. Tom Lawlor (204)
– Amanda Nunes (136) vs. Valentina Shevchenko (134)

PRELIMINARY CARD (FOX SPORTS 1- 8 PM ET/5 PM PT):
– Brandon Thatch (170) vs. Siyar Bahadurzada (170)
– Erick Silva (170) vs. Nordine Taleb (170)
– Vitor Miranda (185.5) vs. Marcelo Guimaraes (185.5)
– Darren Elkins (145.5) vs. Chas Skelly (145.5)

PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC FIGHT PASS- 6:30 PM ET/3:30 PM PT):
– Diego Sanchez (156) vs. Jim Miller (155.5)
– Justin Salas (156) vs. Jason Saggo (155.5)
– Julian Erosa (144.5) vs. Teruto Ishihara (146)

Don’t forget to keep MMANews.com in mind for your source of UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz live round-by-round results coverage on Saturday evening. As we always say, we’ll gladly take the proverbial “Pepsi Challenge” against any other MMA website in the world for the fastest updated and most detailed round-by-round live coverage of a UFC event. No one can match MMANews.com for live MMA results coverage, something we will proudly put on display yet again on Saturday evening.

The UFC’s “Unstoppable” Press Conference Created Some Intense Moments

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4esBOaRzEE[/embed]

What happens when you put a whole bunch of testosterone-driven fighters into a small room for a couple hours?

Intensity, that’s what happens.

On Friday, the UFC held a special pres…

cormier-jones-staredown

What happens when you put a whole bunch of testosterone-driven fighters into a small room for a couple hours?

Intensity, that’s what happens.

On Friday, the UFC held a special press conference entitled “Unstoppable” to promote a series of upcoming fights. Once the face-offs happened, things got really interesting between the fighters, as UFC president Dana White was forced to step in on a number of instances.

Video: McGregor Says He’ll “Breeze Past” $10 Million Mark At UFC 196, Diaz Walks Off

Another joint interview between Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz on Friday didn’t go as “smoothly” as this one did.

“Woooo! I’ll take over from here Nate, you can bounce!” is how the live via satellite split-screen interview between the two started …

mcgregor-diaz-walks-out

Another joint interview between Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz on Friday didn’t go as “smoothly” as this one did.

“Woooo! I’ll take over from here Nate, you can bounce!” is how the live via satellite split-screen interview between the two started off after “The Notorious” one was told by the host of the program that they would be talking about money since they were on CNBC.

From there, things only went downhill.

After some early business talk, the UFC Featherweight Champion spoke about “breezing past” the ten million dollar mark at UFC 196 on Saturday.

For his part, Diaz wouldn’t disclose his salary. He wouldn’t reveal much of anything, actually.

A visibly hostile and/or uninterested Diaz wouldn’t divulge much information at all and remained pretty short with his responses. So, when he got annoyed to the point that he took his microphone off and stood up and walked out on the interview before it was over, by that point, it certainly didn’t come as a surprise.

Diaz will be walking out to the Octagon to fight UFC Featherweight Champion “The Notorious” Conor McGregor in the main event of UFC 196 later this evening from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Don’t forget to keep MMANews.com in mind for your source of UFC 196: McGregor vs. Diaz live round-by-round results coverage later this evening. As we always say, we’ll gladly take the proverbial “Pepsi Challenge” against any other MMA website in the world in terms of having the fastest-updated and most-detailed round-by-round live results coverage of a UFC event. No one can match MMANews.com for live MMA results coverage, something we will proudly put on display yet again later this evening. We hope to see you here!