summaryYa, sounds like I didn't miss much reading about it. I was bummed yesterday I wasn't gonna see it
No matter what your coaches say, as a professional you have to know you can't do that.Feels really bad for Yan if that was really a bad coaching call.
Feels really bad for Yan if that was really a bad coaching call. He had that fight in the bag, just far superior. As I mentioned earlier, his defense was like something out of a choreographed fight scene. Nunes and Yan were by far the best fights for me. I told my wife I wanted to bet on Nunes, as it was the closest thing I've ever seen to a sure thing, and yup, 2 minutes no problem.
sucks too, i believe they recently changed the rules, it used to be hand and knee on ground = grounded opponent, now i think it's just a knee on ground.
sucks too, i believe they recently changed the rules, it used to be hand and knee on ground = grounded opponent, now i think it's just a knee on ground.
Does that always happen like that? I didnt see the fight, was Sterling not able to continue?
I was just wondering if an illegal knee like that always results in a DQ or if he could of just been deducted a point or two.
That said, I really think pride rules are a better approach. There are plenty of ways to concuss your opponent already, what makes kicking a grounded person special?
i replayed all i hear is "punch, just punch"
sucks too, i believe they recently changed the rules, it used to be hand and knee on ground = grounded opponent, now i think it's just a knee on ground.
If you mean full on soccer kicks to the head, that's probably a good way to lose all your TV deals and go back to being PPV only.
so concussed he saidClearly it was an illegal knee but that fake acting by Aljo makes me hate him.
I've been concussed and KO'd a few times and I just didn't know what happened or where I was.
He knew it was illegal so just take the W and say we will run it back. He wanted out and was on the path to getting put out.
oh i believe it was the old "3points of contact" rule i was sorta talking aboutA knee touching the floor has always qualified as grounded.
The rule used to be "any body part touching the ground other than the soles of the feet", which fighters were exploiting by putting a hand on the ground while otherwise standing (hence the rules discussion about hands). The rules were updated so that two feet + a single hand no longer counts as grounded, but any additional contact or any contact by other body parts still counts as grounded. There's no grey area with knees, and Sterling's knee was clearly down.
Really terrible choice by Yan.