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That intro
Masvidal is such a tryhard tough guy.
Masvidal is such a tryhard tough guy.
...He's literally fought that guy in the cage, got his ass kicked, and I promise you if they offered it again he'd be in the cage with him tomorrow
Definitley not.
The guy has had some blood and guts fights. But when given the brass ring,the guy just wont reach out and take it,just deflates.
Its a personality flaw,but id call him more unfocused and inconsistent.
LOL come on now, we all know you subbed to his channel
What do you mean you don't believe in it? In nature there's always a pack leader, be it wolves liones or dogs. There's the one that gets priority in the resources e.g. the food and puss (They refer to that as alpha) and then there's the bottom feeders who barely survive hanging on by a thread. And everyone else is inbetween. This isn't something that requires belief, you can just observe it in social situations for example.I don't believe in the alpha males concept but if I did, Cerrone would be a beta.
YoutubeWhere did you get that from that video?
Nah he probably fold faster than he did with Conrad for half the priceThe threads you guys make about the way this guy acts....
Stop projecting your insecurities on to someone else. Just because you'd shit your pants, doesn't mean that Cerrone gives a shit. He's literally fought that guy in the cage, got his ass kicked, and I promise you if they offered it again he'd be in the cage with him tomorrow
Cerrone claimed he didnt know who he was....He did look intimidated by Jorge. Didnt Jorge call him a bitch too for being scared before fights?
In the past, the prevailing view on grey wolf packs was that they consisted of individuals vying with each other for dominance, with dominant grey wolves being referred to as the "alpha" male and female, and the subordinates as "beta" and "omega" wolves. This terminology was first used in 1947 by Rudolf Schenkel of the University of Basel, who based his findings on researching the behaviour of captive grey wolves.[18] This view on gray wolf pack dynamics was later popularized by the researcher L. David Mech in his 1970 book The Wolf. He later found additional evidence that the concept of an Alpha male may have been an erroneous interpretation of incomplete data and formally disavowed this terminology in 1999. He explained that it was heavily based on the behavior of captive packs consisting of unrelated individuals, an error reflecting the once prevailing view that wild pack formation occurred in winter among independent grey wolves. Later research on wild gray wolves revealed that the pack is usually a family consisting of a breeding pair and their offspring of the previous 1–3 years. In the article, Mech wrote that the use of the term "alpha" to describe the breeding pair adds no additional information, and is "no more appropriate than referring to a human parent or a doe deer as an alpha." He further notes the terminology falsely implies a "force-based dominance hierarchy." In 13 years of summer observations of wild wolves, he witnessed no dominance contests between them.[19]What do you mean you don't believe in it? In nature there's always a pack leader, be it wolves liones or dogs. There's the one that gets priority in the resources e.g. the food and puss (They refer to that as alpha) and then there's the bottom feeders who barely survive hanging on by a thread. And everyone else is inbetween. This isn't something that requires belief, you can just observe it in social situations for example.
"Being nice" is also compensation.Not shook at all. Just being nice. Not everyone needs to try to act hard as nails to compensate.
Dunno about Cowboy, but that intro from Masvidal was very cringey.
Youtube