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Sep 24 2019 05:35am
Quote (hoipolloi @ Sep 24 2019 08:51pm)
I think gsp will kick khabib ass at 155, but what do I know I'm only about 8-1 in my last 9 picks


You need some serious help!
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Sep 24 2019 07:48am
Quote (curb @ 23 Sep 2019 20:47)
GSP is up there, I'll give you that... but in terms of what Royce Gracie accomplished vs oversized opponents, I'd give the edge to him.

I mean.. It'd be like GSP taking on a heavyweight.. and you can't tell me he'd hang in there with Stipe, I'd even give Curtis Blaydes the nod over GSP (in a fight, not in rankings of GOAT.)

Therefore, I don't believe GSP can be considered the GO"A"T , just the greatest of HIS time.

/edit I also think the Gracie of 1999 would demolish the GSP of 2015.


actually even GSP when asked who's th GOAT he mentioned Royce Gracie based on what he accomplished in his era but saying that Royce would beat the GSP of 2015 I don't know on what ground you throw something like this ?
Seriously, the game evolved so much since 1990 to 2015, GSP would just play and do what ever he wants with him.
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Sep 25 2019 02:03pm
GSP =
Wait until a belt is held by someone he knows he can beat stylistically and beg for a fight.

Win the fight.

Retire.

Rinse, repeat.


Sure sounds like the GOAT to me..... sike
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Sep 26 2019 07:32am
Quote (Katelynnn @ 25 Sep 2019 13:03)
GSP =
Wait until a belt is held by someone he knows he can beat stylistically and beg for a fight.

Win the fight.

Retire.

Rinse, repeat.


Sure sounds like the GOAT to me..... sike



another one here who needs to be educated
Let me help you junior but for that, you have to read everything below:
have a good reading and say thanks to the major who just spent 5 minutes of his time for YOU, period

----

He is one of only six UFC fighters to have held titles in multiple weight classes having also been welterweight champion for 2,204 days and won 26 of his 28 fights from 2002-17.

But what kind of legacy does the 37-year-old Canadian leave?

Here are five reasons he should be considered MMA's greatest of all time.

Champion's mentality

Throughout the 28 fights of his MMA career, St-Pierre displayed the heart of a true champion with his ability to not only go to the proverbial well to get the victory, but also by beating rivals at their own game.

He out-grappled Matt Hughes, Matt Serra and Jon Fitch, just like he out-struck Josh Koscheck, BJ Penn and Nick Diaz.

He went to war with Carlos Condit and Johnny Hendricks, and conclusively avenged the two losses he suffered inside the octagon.

Between 2007 and 2013 he dominated his weight class, defeating every leading welterweight contender the world could offer.

Even four years away from competition couldn't stop him from weathering a storm to choke out Michael Bisping in November 2017 and add a second weight-class world title to his incredible legacy.

A true martial artist

St-Pierre dedicated his life to martial arts and reaped the rewards.

In a sport, prior to GSP, littered with tough-talking street-fighting men, and more recently, with athletes as focused on the celebrity and entertainment aspect of prize-fighting as they are on training, St-Pierre bucked the trend.

He was always a true professional. Respectful, strategic and athletic, his behaviour was more reminiscent of the characters in the Bruce Lee or Jean-Claude Van Damme movies he adored than that of an overly aggressive, cauliflower-eared, toothless warrior.

Throughout his career, St-Pierre also searched out the best possible coaching to further his lifetime of marital arts education.

His journey took him to Renzo Gracie's in New York, Greg Jackson's in New Mexico, onto the mats with Muay Thai master Phil Nurse, the boxing ring with iconic coach Freddie Roach and, of course, he forged a long-time partnership with head coach Firas Zahabi.

He was always ahead of the curve, too, employing a sports psychologist early on in his title reign to stay on top.


A national hero

When Bisping retired last year, where was the reaction and tribute from British prime minister Theresa May? Likely she has never heard of MMA, the UFC or 'The Count'.

In Canada, however, GSP's career achievements enthralled the nation.

He was voted Canadian Athlete of the Year three times in a row between 2008-2010, and when he announced to the world he was walking away from the sport, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was one of the first dignitaries to take to social media to offer his admiration.

When he fought Jake Shields in April 2011, GSP proved he also didn't necessarily need the right dance partner to sell tickets, when 55,724 fans (the second biggest gate in UFC history) packed into the Rogers Centre in Toronto in to watch their hero retain his belt.

He makes his own rules

Long before Conor McGregor became the breakout superstar he is, there was another pay-per-view champion in the UFC who wasn't afraid to push back at the top brass.

When you get to the big show, most fighters are all about the three letters - UFC. But St-Pierre had three of his own that were always given priority - GSP. Once he was established as champion, he only took fights when he was ready.

He knew his worth, would push back on contract deals and danced by his own tune. He never swerved anybody, but he never took fights that weren't for the benefit of his own brand either.

He returned last year, beat Bisping and walked away from the 185lb belt. His terms. And that is part of the reason he quit for good this week.

He would have liked to face lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov, the unbeaten Russian who rag-dolled McGregor back in October. But having St-Pierre end the unbeaten reign of a fighter starting out on his PPV journey didn't appeal to the UFC.

After all, St-Pierre would only of likely stuck around for a Conor superfight in victory. Again, always on St-Pierre's terms.

He kept it clean

Long before the UFC partnered up with the US Anti-Doping Agency and employed Jeff Novitzky in a defiant move to clean up MMA, St-Pierre campaigned long and hard for a cleaner sport.

He even walked away from the octagon at one stage in protest at the lack of testing. And while that may not, on the face of it, seem relative to his GOAT potential, his legacy is untarnished. The same cannot be said of his two most decorated rivals.

Anderson Silva, a long-time potential crossover opponent for GSP, and the incredibly gifted Jon 'Bones' Jones both have comparable skill-sets, dominant title reigns and a similar long list of acclaimed opponents inside the octagon.

Yet both of their careers are now stained with multiple drug test failures. St-Pierre has never failed a test. He has never cheated, cut corners or broken the martial arts code of conduct.

And perhaps that above all else is what separates 'Rush' from the best of the rest.
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Sep 26 2019 09:45am
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Sep 28 2019 02:07pm
Quote (Majithor @ 28 Sep 2019 13:01)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Dz8nR84U0AAx9jE.jpg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKzP_Q2Jec0


lol Diaz always talk shit before and after GSP rag dolled him so, who cares really what he says.

All other sour taste bad losers plays the grease most grapplers wrestlers uses baby oil on the skin the night before the fight where they sweat and that grease your body. GSP just the best thats it !
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Sep 28 2019 02:12pm
what lol GSP didnt rag doll nick. nick stuffed all his takedowns in hte late rounds and GSP just ran away stalled and threw jabs

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Sep 28 2019 07:16pm
Im not gonna post gif of your dork running away from Nate.. but this is a very little fragment of the fight where Nick got the edge on this exchange other than that, Georges beat him in every departments for 5 rounds





5-0 for my Georges very easy fight for him



This post was edited by nekrotic on Sep 28 2019 07:17pm
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Sep 28 2019 07:23pm
The best to ever do it
GSP the legend
Thank you Georges, what you leave in this sport has no equal !
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