Speaker 1 (00:00):
It’s podcast show. It’s show. Everybody’s welcome, peace and love. It’s podcast show. Bam. We’re live
Sevan Matossian (00:13):
Seven minutes early. I don’t think I’ve ever done that before. Mike McCaskey. What’s up, Troy Martin. What’s up? Aaron Fraser. Kenneth The Laugh, the real Kevin. Ernie Garza. I got through all the names. I’ve never done that either. Good morning guys. Good to see you guys. Always good to be a little early. What a show last night. What a show last night. Holy cow. Holy cow. My favorite part was on the way home from Greg’s. I listened to CNN the entire ride home, and I was just curious what their take was going to be on it. And wow, they’re not, they were ruthless. They were ruthless towards Biden. I didn’t hear him talk about Trump once. Kenneth, what’s up? Marco called her on Bra Wilson. Hi. Good morning, Olivia. Hi Michelle. Hey. Yo, Zach. Yo. Yo. I got to play this one clip from CNN last night. I heard this on the radio, but they actually have video of it, and this question is absolutely wild. You guys ready for this? I have to play it in seven second segments so it doesn’t, I don’t get dinged, but check this out. Basically, he’s going to ask Kamala Harris something crazy ready? This is with Anderson Cooper on CNN. Ready? I mean, all his questions were just digging straight into Joe. Here we go. And
Speaker 3 (01:57):
Just finally, Joe
Speaker 4 (01:58):
Biden was very clear. I know we have to go. He signed back into law the protections of Roe v. Wade.
Sevan Matossian (02:03):
Okay, good luck.
Speaker 3 (02:06):
The person we saw tonight, the president we saw tonight on that stage, is that how he is every
Sevan Matossian (02:10):
Day? The president we saw today, the president that we saw on stage is that the president we see every day in the White House. Wow. Wow. And then they hammered that home. That’s been the theme over and over on CNN basically, who has been running the country. And if you’ve ever been on any executive team or any high level group of people who are running an operation and there’s one person sitting at top, there’s an element of Game of Thrones to everything. Basically. Everyone’s trying to manipulate the guy who has all the power to be on their side. And you have to imagine that the Game of Thrones in the White House is the most savage ever, that the shit people are seeing there and the level of manipulation is crazy. Vindicate VNDK eight, get your CO shirts there, vdk eight.com, kill Taylor shirts are selling wildly fast. That made me happy to hear that. People saying that they set Biden up to fail to get a replacement in, and those are the type people who you want running the country. Fucking clowns. Okay, so that’s a big theory that’s going around, big meaning popular. Everyone’s saying it that basically the Dems that are pulling the strings purposely put Joe up there to fail, so that at the convention, democratic Convention coming up here soon they could get someone new in.
(03:39):
Okay? Here’s the thing though, and I’m totally open to that theory and quite possible, of course, et cetera, et cetera, but remember, this is the same party that wants to legalize children being able to make the decision without their parents to chop off their own genitalia. Think of all the crazy shit they want to do. They want to completely normalize tranny reading to kids as part of the curriculum. They’re confused about all the drug addicts and stealing. They want to make it okay to steal if you have certain skin color or you fit a certain demographic.
(04:27):
I mean, these people are absolutely batshit crazy. And so I hear you. I hear you. I mean, sure, but on the other hand, it’s like, I mean, they are dumb. Capital D. Yeah, Biden was incredible last night. Yeah, I don’t mind. What’s crazy too is I would give him so much leeway. I realized that when he stutters or mixes his words up, I just infer what I thought he was going to say. It’s like talking to a 2-year-old, but the moments where it just completely comes off the rail and he just completely loses his train of thought and it just goes into no man land. Wow. At that point, just watching him short circuit Sevan, you’re stuck on a handful of far left issues. The whole party isn’t that way,
(05:51):
Craig. Of course, the whole party’s not that way. I was in a discussion with my dad the other day, and I told my dad, Hey, do you know in the city of San Francisco, they’ve allocated $5 million to have medical professionals, nurses, and doctors serve alcohol to what they call homeless people, but they’re drug addicts. And my dad said today, my dad said to me, Hey, are you batshit crazy? Will you believe anything that is completely absurd? What is your source on that? And I said, CNN, the San Francisco Examiner and the San Francisco Chronicle. And when I said that to my dad, I just made that up. I didn’t even know what my source was. And so while we’re sitting there with my uber crazy liberal stepmom and crazy liberal dad, we all started looking on our phones and I was correct. It was in the examiner in the Chronicle and CNN, but it was worse than that. They had commandeered a hotel and the tenderloin to do it, and it only served 20 people. So it’s a $5 million project they have in the city of San Francisco that serves alcohol to 20 people.
(07:03):
And so for you to say Savon, you’re stuck on a handful of far left issues. The whole party’s in that way. That means nothing. That doesn’t matter. That’s like saying, Hey, we don’t have to stop Hitler because most Germans don’t want to kill the Jews. I truly believe that most Germans did not want to fucking throw Jews in the oven. What you’re saying, I hear you, Craig. I’m not trying to as pound you. You’re just incidentally taking some cock in the ass. But that says nothing to me. That doesn’t even matter. That doesn’t even matter at this point. The law used to be if we caught you breaking into the country, we caught you and released you back on the side you were from and gave you a court date. I mean, you don’t even deserve a court date to be honest. But now it’s we catch you and we release you into the country. And you’re saying that’s not how most Democrats want to be. Who cares? They’re voting that way.
(08:02):
What you’re saying means nothing says nothing unless you were trying to say nothing. I’m making the presupposition that you’re trying to make some sort of point. But your point is completely going over my head. If you are, and I apologize, but the way I’m reading what you’re saying is you said absolutely nothing. It’s completely irrelevant. Completely irrelevant. I don’t believe parties run the USA. It’s run by 0.005 of the wealthiest in the world in big business once again, who cares? Who cares? What’s your point? Who gives a fuck? I’d rather have Jeff Bezos spend the fucking money. I’d rather buy stuff on Amazon and give my money to Jeff Bezos than fucking give it to someone who’s starting a fucking drug program that hands out free drugs in the Tenderloin. What’s up, dude?
Dalton Rosta (08:57):
What’s up, bro?
Sevan Matossian (08:59):
You’re the man.
Dalton Rosta (09:00):
I see you’re getting right into it this morning.
Sevan Matossian (09:05):
What was that?
Dalton Rosta (09:06):
That was my dog. She was on the table.
Sevan Matossian (09:08):
Oh, I thought you had some sort of puppet on your hand. It caught you masturbating with a puppet on your hand.
Dalton Rosta (09:14):
No, a lot of windows right here and the sun comes in and my dog likes laying on the table in the sun.
Sevan Matossian (09:20):
That would be some kinky shit.
Dalton Rosta (09:22):
But yeah, I did watch part of the debate. I only caught part of it though because me and my boys were getting wings at a place in Newcastle called the Berg Bar. And then, so we missed the first 20 minutes of it or so, and I was watching on YouTube on the way home.
Sevan Matossian (09:38):
It was wild, dude. And I clicked over to CNN after the debate, and I listened to it the whole drive home from my buddy’s house. And even they were tearing Joe up. Really? Oh my God, dude. They were like, who’s running the country? That’s
Dalton Rosta (09:50):
Surprising.
Sevan Matossian (09:51):
I was blown away. Yeah,
Dalton Rosta (09:53):
Surprising. But yeah, the parts of it I saw, man, it sounds like Joe Biden has to put in an extreme amount of effort just to speak.
Sevan Matossian (10:07):
Do you think it was a setup? The common thing is that they purposely knew he was going to shit the bed so that when the Democratic convention occurred that they could swap him out.
Dalton Rosta (10:17):
Yeah, I don’t know. I don’t read that far into the conspiracies, but the dude sounded like fucking an idiot. And like I said, it sounded like he has to put in an extreme amount of effort just to speak every sentence and everything that he’s saying, it seems like he’s struggling to get it out, and he has to think very, very hard just about what he’s going to say next, the next word or the next. He can’t form a sentence together. He thinks word by word.
Sevan Matossian (10:39):
And if you’re a leader in another country, I a hundred percent agree with Trump that we need a really strong leader and someone who’s going to fucking put their foot down. And I don’t think he’s the guy, and I do think he’s probably the laughing stock of the world right now.
Dalton Rosta (10:56):
It’s the laughing stock of the world. You hear people talking about it all the time. Hey, that’s any surprised?
Sevan Matossian (11:01):
Yeah, it it’s bad. It’s bad. Hey, when someone cuts their nails, do their fingernails bug you? If you see fingernails on the table or something, does it gross you out?
Dalton Rosta (11:11):
No, I don’t look at people’s fingernails.
Sevan Matossian (11:13):
Yeah, it doesn’t bug me either, but I feel like that’s a common theme. If I see someone cutting their toenails or cutting their fingernails, there’s fingernails. There’s always one person that’s always like, Ooh, that’s disgusting. And the other day, one of my buddies who’s way, way into anal, and I think anal is disgusting. He’s way into anal. He loves it. I hear him talk about it once or twice a month, but yet he’s disgusted by someone cutting their fingernails. And I’m like, dude, you put your dick in people’s poopers.
Dalton Rosta (11:43):
Yeah, it’s a little weird, but
Sevan Matossian (11:45):
You freaked out by a fingernail cuttings. And I’m like, dude, we all got fingernails.
Dalton Rosta (11:51):
Yeah, mine’s not quite that, but people tell me all the time, whenever I say something’s nasty, they’ll be like, bro, you roll around the mat with sweaty men for hours upon hours in a day about X, Y, and Z. And I’m like, okay, you make a fair point. But
Sevan Matossian (12:10):
I like Dalton’s backsplash. Yeah, it is nice. Are you at home?
Dalton Rosta (12:15):
No. I’m actually a Gina’s parents. It’s not mad backsplash, unfortunately.
Sevan Matossian (12:18):
Oh yeah. That’s nice. Look at you. I thought the guy that you were going against Norbert Navini, I seriously thought he was the next Conor McGregor. I watched his five fights and I was like, oh, fuck. Oh, fuck. This guy has it all. He’s explosive. He’s young. He’s got the karate stance. He’s got the wrestling lineage from fucking God knows. You know what I mean? His dad’s an absolute stud. His dad is the most winningest world champion in the history of all combat sports, had more titles in world championships, in combat sports than any other man who’s ever walked the planet. He surrounded himself crazy, confident, right? That’s his fucking,
Dalton Rosta (13:06):
You got to be in the sport. You know what I mean? If you’re not, you’re not going to fucking win. Period.
Sevan Matossian (13:12):
And you went in there, and the two things that just screamed at me, Dalton, were how ridiculously what appeared to be strong. You are. I mean, ridiculous. The guy would get on your back and you would just stand up, and then your timing was nuts. It’s like you cracked the code on that karate style. It’s like you crack venom Paige’s code just right before our eyes, like, Hey, dude, if you see that fucking lunging, pseudo superman punch come in, like that paw punch flying in, you just kept going underneath it and just rag dolling this fucking kid. I was like, holy shit. I got to ask him about, because now he’s going to fight. Norbert’s Mentor is now going to fight this tomorrow night. Yeah,
Dalton Rosta (14:02):
He and Gary,
Sevan Matossian (14:03):
Yeah, is going to fight. And I think Norbert’s faster than Venom Page.
Dalton Rosta (14:09):
You think so?
Sevan Matossian (14:09):
I do. I mean, you would know better than me, and I think he’s more confident than Page Michael Venom page. I mean, I think Michael Venom page is confident, but I was watching the press conference and man, I think Ian, Gary is in his head a little bit.
Dalton Rosta (14:26):
Yeah, maybe. But I mean, MVP is a confident individual too, and he’s very fast. I don’t think Norbert is faster.
Sevan Matossian (14:32):
You don’t
Dalton Rosta (14:33):
MVP? No, I don’t think so
Sevan Matossian (14:35):
Because of the size. You think just that weight class is just generally they’re just moving less mass and they’re a little quicker
Dalton Rosta (14:42):
Sometimes. But I’m fasting a lot of the one 70 pounders that I train with at the gym too. So sometimes there’s outliers and I don’t know, I’d have to fight both of ’em to see, but to me, he was more explosive than he was fast, you know what I mean? And he covered distance. Well, that’s what it was for me. He didn’t seem that fast. And I know there wasn’t a lot of boxing in that fight or anything like that, but I feel like I, watching the fight back and thinking about the fight right after, and even during the fight probably could have boxed a little bit more. You know what I mean? I fell faster. My hands were quicker than his were, and I probably could have boxed a little bit more, but anytime he jumped at me, he lunged at me. Like you’re talking about with the one, two, he covered so much distance that even if I wasn’t trying to wrestle, if I ducked, you call it slipping, rolling and ducking and boxing, whenever you’re not doing a roll, you’re doing a slip. Sometimes you just go straight down. So I was going under the punch. And even if I did want to counter, our bodies are colliding because covering so much distance. So even if the attention wasn’t to wrestle, he’s landing on my shoulder and then I mean, it kind of ends up like that. Yeah. So I don’t know. With MVP, it is a little bit different. I mean, he covers distance well too, but the way he strikes and ties things together is a little bit different.
Sevan Matossian (16:10):
Jessica Valenzuela. Dalton is pretty, I think she’s a cop. She has handcuffs. Careful Olivia. He sure is Jessica, Jesus. Everyone’s settled down. Jesus Christ. Luke Parker vibes. Geez
Dalton Rosta (16:23):
Louise. Who the hell’s Luke Parker?
Sevan Matossian (16:25):
Luke Parker is a CrossFitter who’s just stunning. He was on the Bachelor. God, I love your computer. That’s so cool how it does that.
Dalton Rosta (16:34):
Yeah, I don’t know why it does it sometimes. It bothers me.
Sevan Matossian (16:36):
Oh, I like it. It changes his perspective. Oh, here, look, Bria Wilson. Dalton is the love child of Luke Parker and do Pepper. Oh, two dudes, two dudes made ’em. Huh? Those are both really good guys, by the way. They’re both great CrossFitters and great men and beautiful men. When you go into that fight, can you tell me what the plan is now, what the plan was now, was that the plan just to go under and just toss ’em up?
Dalton Rosta (17:07):
No, the game plan was back ’em up to the cage, which we did during the fight a lot, and then just open up my boxing. But
Sevan Matossian (17:20):
How would you do that if you, oh, not clinch ’em, but just back him up to the cage so he can’t do that running. And a
Dalton Rosta (17:26):
Couple times that we were there and he was circling away from me, and then I could have cut the cage off a little bit faster, and I did cut the cage off and he’s sitting there and the next thing you know, I fucking wrestle. But I mean, sometimes it happens like that. I mean, it is what it is. What I did worked out, if we fought again, we’d probably go with a different game plan than just boxing. We’d probably mix it up more. I don’t fucking know. We could fucking go in there and do the same fucking thing. Who knows? I don’t know. But the game plan was to just box really, essentially in the open against the cage everywhere. We felt like I was the better striker. And I still, after the fight, I felt like I was too, but the wrestling exchange just seemed so easy and they were just coming to me. So you know what I mean? So that’s the route we went. Path of least resistance. And even though I was a better striker, he’s a good striker himself. He’s explosive. Like he said, fast. He has power. So why essentially played to his strength when I have a clear advantage somewhere else?
Sevan Matossian (18:36):
You made it look easy wrestling him, grabbing him and throwing him to the ground. Was it easy?
Dalton Rosta (18:42):
It did feel easy. I’m not going to lie. And to be honest with you, I wasn’t using all of my strength. I know they were talking about how strong I looked and all this other shit during the fight, but believe it or not, when I was in on double legs on him, I wasn’t squeezing at all. You know what I mean? I don’t know if he felt it or not, but I wasn’t squeezing because I was trying to conserve energy and I didn’t want to put all my eggs into one basket and use all my energy for a takedown and then not get it at the end of the day. So I was trying to, when I was in those positions where I’m holding him against the cage and he’s defending, I’m trying to cause him to use a little bit more energy, then I was, you know what I mean? So I could have used more strength. I feel like if I used a hundred percent of my strength, I mean, I think it’s a landslide, but there’s risk with that. You know what I mean? If he gets out, turns into a scramble, and then you’re exhausted. I was in the third round, in the first and the second round, then different story. You know what I mean? So I was probably using about 50% of my strength, and I still felt like there was a huge gap.
Sevan Matossian (19:49):
You get through the first two rounds, and do you think you’ve won the first two rounds? And does your corner tell you that?
Dalton Rosta (19:55):
I mean, after each round they told me that I won. They told me I won the first round easy. They told me I won the second round. They’re like, you’re up to zero. But I even told one of them in the round, I said, I don’t care if I’m winning the rounds. I want to finish the fight. And that was my game plan, and I wanted to go in there and either get a submission victory or a TKO knockout, whatever it ended up being, but it didn’t turn out that way. You know what I mean? I could have pulled the trigger more. I feel like I had him hurt in the second round. I may have. I may not have. I might’ve just been in my head looking back on it and during the fight when I felt it, but I didn’t pull the trigger. I told myself I was trying to be more mature, but I feel like I’m still making a little bit of mental mistakes in there more than I’m making physical. I mean, I’m making physical and technical errors, but I feel also making mental mistakes. And I felt like that’s what happened in the third round.
Sevan Matossian (20:45):
What’s the distinction between a physical error and a mental error?
Dalton Rosta (20:49):
A lot of the time, a physical error is a technical mistake, something you’re physically doing. But mental errors is just the way you’re thinking about things, the way you’re approaching doing a technique or the way you’re approaching putting a combination together and stuff like that. And that’s why at the end of the fight where I said I got to step it up with a performance like that, I mean, I had all the tools to go in there and dominate that fight and make it look easy, and I did the first two rounds, but I could have made it even look more dominant the first two rounds. I probably could have got ’em out there, could have got ’em out of there earlier. You know what I mean? If I would’ve just been all right upstairs, if I would’ve been making the right decisions upstairs, and I wasn’t, and ended up going to the scorecards, I ended up winning, but it was an ugly third round.
(21:37):
You know what I mean? I got exhausted in the third round. And there’s two sides of that coin, you know what I mean? It’s like people in the future, they’re going to cardio and conditioning something you can fix. You know what I mean? It’s a hole that you can fill. But people are going to probably in the future try to take me there. They’re going to be like, okay, this guy beats everybody when he’s fresh. And I don’t think there’s a person on the planet that can beat me whenever I’m fresh in the first round. I don’t think there’s anybody on the planet, period that can beat me. But a fight’s three rounds, and whenever you start fighting title fights is five rounds, obviously. Second round I felt great too, but third round I got exhausted. For whatever reason, I’m not sitting here. I’m not sitting here making excuses or going to speculate why a lot of people would be like, oh, it was my weight cut. It was the time change. I’m not going to do that. You know what I mean?
Sevan Matossian (22:32):
How about just all that extra muscle you carry?
Dalton Rosta (22:34):
That’s the possibility too.
Sevan Matossian (22:38):
That’s the common thought, right? You have all that extra muscle, not extra. You have all that muscle. It’s not that it’s extra. You have all that muscle and it consumes a lot of oxygen to keep all that going, all that strength going.
Dalton Rosta (22:50):
That is true. But if you look at my fight where Romero Cotton, I fought at a higher pace than I fought that fight. Now, the difference this fight is I wrestled very, very hard. You know what I mean? Like I said, I wasn’t squeezing in those clinches and everything. I was trying to conserve energy. You’re still using the energy no matter what. It’s just the rate at which you’re using it. So even though I’m conserving energy, I’m still using it by putting myself in those wrestling positions, carrying his weight, lifting him, squeezing my muscles, even if it’s not hard, holding him against the cage, driving my legs into him.
(23:28):
At the end of the day, the way I fought was different, I guess Romero Cotton, I had a boxing heavy approach, and I was boxing at a very high pace. I probably threw 300 punches in that fight close to it. I mean, 250 punches. You don’t see anybody at 185 pounds throw that much volume. But I did, and I was throwing big punches. I was landing big punches and I was missing big punches. And when you miss big punches, it makes you tired. You know what I mean? And you go back and watch that fight, and for three rounds, I put it on him. You know what I mean? No breaks. So I’m capable of doing that. I just got to fine tune it and get back to that. You know what I mean? And I don’t know, it could be a variety of things.
(24:09):
And like I said, I’m not here to analyze it or make excuses, so I’m not going to. So I’m just going to go back to the gym and try to figure it out. And if I have to lose a few pounds of muscle, I will. I’ll get on my roadwork, start jogging more. And that necessarily doesn’t help your gas tank at all for fighting. It’s different energy sources, but maybe it’ll help me lose a little bit of muscle over a longer period of time and change my body a little bit. So then it doesn’t take as much energy
Sevan Matossian (24:37):
At the end of the fight. When you gave your talk, you were really hard on yourself. Is that sincere? How hard you are on yourself in your post-game interview, post-fight interview?
Dalton Rosta (24:51):
Yeah, man, to be honest with you, you don’t want to end a fight like that. Even if I won, I don’t want to end the fight like that. I want to end the fight strong. And it’s still even the first two rounds, even though I won them clearly and I dominated the first round, I felt like I could have got ’em out of there. And at the end of the day, I hold myself to a certain standard and I felt like I didn’t live up to that standard. You know what I mean? And it’s like you even take the third round out of it. I feel like I didn’t live up to my standard in the first two rounds, and then you add the third round in, and I feel like I really didn’t live up to my standard, you know what I mean? And I didn’t finish the fight strong.
(25:28):
I made mistakes. I got tired. I got put in those positions because I was tired. And it’s like people will be like, oh, yeah, but I just told you when I’m fresh, nobody can compete with me. The fight wasn’t even close whenever I was fresh, when I wasn’t tired. But the thing is, is I did get tired. So it’s like that doesn’t make me feel good. You know what I mean? It makes me think like, okay, I really got to fucking work on this. I got to fix this. You know what I mean? I do. I got to figure it out. I got to get back to the point where I was putting that pace on Romero Cotton, and I did it for three rounds straight, and I wasn’t tired, you know what I mean? And I need to get back to that every single fight. And I think that’s really mentality.
Sevan Matossian (26:11):
How bad was it in the third round your gas tank, and is that just the worst feeling that you could possibly be? You’re in there with a guy who’s fighting and you just have no energy to fight back.
Dalton Rosta (26:25):
It’s not that I didn’t have energy to fight back, but yeah, it is a shitty feeling whenever you’re in there with somebody who’s Norbert’s, a very good fighter. You know what I mean? He was seven and oh for a reason. And even though I was a better fighter, like I said, whenever you get tired, shit, you know what I mean? And now the playing field’s even, and it ended up tilting in his favor. Whenever I got tired and you’re tired and you still have five minutes of it, left, four minutes left, three and a half minutes,
Sevan Matossian (26:55):
Whatever. Did you know when you got off the stool in the third round that you were in trouble? No. No. You didn’t know?
Dalton Rosta (27:02):
No. I still felt okay. You know what I mean? I felt like my muscles were starting to get really heavy, my shoulders, but my lungs felt good, and I still felt fine. Hey, I still felt fine. It was like the, so I think what started it all, I watched the fight back a little bit. HBO Max took it off. So I didn’t get to watch it too many. I only got to watch it once, and I skimmed through it. I threw a lazy high kick because, so I’m going to tell you mentally where I was at the beginning of that round, I didn’t think that cardio was an issue. I seen that he was starting to gas a little bit in the second round, and there was a point in the second round and his eye looked at him and it looked like he was about to quit.
(27:45):
You know what I mean? But I didn’t capitalize off that. And then the third round I thought, I was like, I’m going to go out there and I’m going to put him away. So I’m walking him down and I could tell he’s still a little either tired or scared, one of the two. And I’m like, alright, I’m going to fucking throw something big. If it fucking lands, it’s going to put him out. You know what I mean? And I threw a fucking high kick and it was lazy. I stepped really hard forward whenever I did it. So I kind of telegraphed it. And then whenever I stepped hard and I threw it, I kind of slipped. I went under myself. And then that’s where everything started to go bad. I don’t know if that was 45 seconds into the round or something. He jumped on top of me.
(28:24):
I scrambled out. We got back to our feet. He landed a big elbow. That elbow didn’t hurt me, but it was a good shot. And he knew it was a good shot because he started trying to pour it on. I covered up and then I shot on him. Whenever I got out again, we were up against the cage at this point. He landed another elbow, but this one was to the back of the head. And this is where I was watching one of my interviews on YouTube post-fight press conference. And I see in the comments, people tried to, let me word this the right way, because people try to overanalyze things and they try to translate things however they choose to, thinking there’s some ulterior meaning to it. Or sometimes they just take things too literally. So when I was talking to this post fight press conference, I talked about the illegal elbow to the back of the head.
(29:11):
There was two of them. This is the first one where it buzzed me in the post-fight interview. I said, that hurt me. And they’re like, oh yeah, you looked tired. I said, it wasn’t so much being exhausted right there as it was that I was hurt. And when I say hurt, buzzed, my equilibrium was still under me. My legs were still under me. You didn’t see me wobbled walking around all crazy. You see people in UFC when they get hurt or other fights, boxing, whatever, wasn’t blacked out, wasn’t seeing stars. I got hit in the back of the head. It was illegal shot right back here, and it buzzed me. It was one of those ones where it’s like, I’m not wobbled. I’m not stunned, but it was a good shot. I’m like, okay, this hurt me. You know what I mean? I got to defend myself. I got to fucking figure this shit out. So that’s whenever I shot on him again.
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