Dustin "The Diamond" Poirier Does it Again

Imaging typing all this bullshit to hate on someone who does something you couldn't aspire to on your best day and clearly cannot fathom what it takes, and they don't even know you exist. Pathetic keyboard warrior response from a shit fight fan.

Is normal.
 
I love Doostin but why this dumbass so obsessed with getting a Guilly?
 
Imaging typing all this bullshit to hate on someone who does something you couldn't aspire to on your best day and clearly cannot fathom what it takes, and they don't even know you exist. Pathetic keyboard warrior response from a shit fight fan.

Is normal.

Dam broh.
 
What a terrible fucking take. We really need a thumbs down.
 
Clicking on this thread was like stepping in dog shit.
TS you're a dirty dog for taking such a steaming stinking dump at the Poirier retirement celebration. Bad dog.
 
...disappoints his fans and comes up short when it matters most. Literally the theme of his entire career going back over a decade.

UFC 178, Dustin and McGregor on a collision course for UFC featherweight contendership. Dustin gets absolutely smoked in round 1 face down ass up, McGregor goes on to beat Siver, Mendes, Aldo and eventually Alvarez to win the title in two divisions. Dustin never sniffs featherweight contendership again, moves to lightweight.

conor-mcgregor-mcgregor.gif


UFC 242, Dustin and Khabib meeting for the lightweight title. Dustin's 5-0-1 in his last 6 with notable wins against Justin and Max (details below). Khabib absolutely dominates him with a mixture of 10-8 and 10-9s on the scorecards in the first two rounds and then chokes him to unconsciousness in the 3rd.

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UFC 269, facing Charles after freshly beating the ghost of McGregor twice and the venerable never-champion Dan Hooker, Dustin actually wins the first round and then fumbles the fight away by losing the second round and getting finished in the 3rd round (again) by a standing rear naked choke. This finish has only occurred in about a dozen UFC fights in history, and the only time in a men's UFC title fight to my knowledge.

0*-z2iEmZQtscXE6ll.gif


UFC 291, against Justin who he had already beaten much earlier in his career, Dustin was destined to get UFC gold of sorts (BMF) as a consolation prize to always losing the biggest fights in his career and never winning a title. Dustin wins the first round, and again, fumbles his way to a highlight reel KO by someone he had previously beaten:

justin-gaethje-head-kick.gif


UFC 302, Dustin gets another questionable title shot against champion Islam, Khabib's disciple. He gets finished, again.

islam-makhachev-dustin-poirier.gif


UFC 318, against Max who he was 2-0 against in featherweight and short notice fights, Dustin loses to him for the BMF title in his retirement fight, again coming up short. When Max points at the canvas to have a final round, 10 second melee to end his career on a memorable note, Dustin gets outworked handily, struggling to stay on his feet and avoid getting finished, and in the last few seconds ties Max up and ends the fight struggling for an underhook.



The thing is, if you look at Dustin's resume, you assume the dude is one of the GOAT LW's to ever grace the sport when you see the names.

McGregor x 2 (former champ) (Lost to McGregor in their first meet when they were both contenders, 3-3 in his last 6 before facing Dustin)
Holloway (former champ, x1 at FW, moved up to LW on 2 months notice, beat Dustin in their final match)
Gaethje (Justin's 3rd UFC fight, great win for Dustin in his 20th UFC fight, beat Dustin in the rematch with a highlight reel KO)
Alvarez (former champ, 4-2-1 leading up to this fight in the UFC, 1-3-1 including this fight and after to end career)
Pettis (former champ, 2-4-0 leading up to this fight and went 5-8 including this fight and after to end career)
Chandler (2-2-0 leading up to this fight since joining UFC, finished 2-5 in the UFC to date)


Heartbreaking as a Dustin fan. Not the individual performance level of Dan Marino or Charles Barkley of course, but still disappointing to have such promising performances only to lose whenever it mattered most. I'm never getting fooled into investing my emotions by this type of journeyman fighter again, so I thank Dustin for that. Today, we pour one out for The Diamond boys, we may never have the chance to be disappointed this many times by a premier fighter again.

giphy.gif


“Diamond Dogs” would have been way cooler.

Honestly, the only one of these fights that disappointed me was the Charles loss. I always thought Dustin had the tools to beat him. To lose like that to a standing rnc was like wtf?

The Gaethje loss stung a bit, but I couldn’t be disapponch. That was a beautifully timed kick.

I never thought for a second that Dustin was going to beat Khabib or Islam. Dustin just had the misfortune overlapping with two of the greatest (if not THE greatest) LW champions the sport has ever seen. He’d have been a defending champ if Khabib and Islam didn’t exist imo.
 
...disappoints his fans and comes up short when it matters most. Literally the theme of his entire career going back over a decade.

UFC 178, Dustin and McGregor on a collision course for UFC featherweight contendership. Dustin gets absolutely smoked in round 1 face down ass up, McGregor goes on to beat Siver, Mendes, Aldo and eventually Alvarez to win the title in two divisions. Dustin never sniffs featherweight contendership again, moves to lightweight.

conor-mcgregor-mcgregor.gif


UFC 242, Dustin and Khabib meeting for the lightweight title. Dustin's 5-0-1 in his last 6 with notable wins against Justin and Max (details below). Khabib absolutely dominates him with a mixture of 10-8 and 10-9s on the scorecards in the first two rounds and then chokes him to unconsciousness in the 3rd.

960x0.jpg


UFC 269, facing Charles after freshly beating the ghost of McGregor twice and the venerable never-champion Dan Hooker, Dustin actually wins the first round and then fumbles the fight away by losing the second round and getting finished in the 3rd round (again) by a standing rear naked choke. This finish has only occurred in about a dozen UFC fights in history, and the only time in a men's UFC title fight to my knowledge.

0*-z2iEmZQtscXE6ll.gif


UFC 291, against Justin who he had already beaten much earlier in his career, Dustin was destined to get UFC gold of sorts (BMF) as a consolation prize to always losing the biggest fights in his career and never winning a title. Dustin wins the first round, and again, fumbles his way to a highlight reel KO by someone he had previously beaten:

justin-gaethje-head-kick.gif


UFC 302, Dustin gets another questionable title shot against champion Islam, Khabib's disciple. He gets finished, again.

islam-makhachev-dustin-poirier.gif


UFC 318, against Max who he was 2-0 against in featherweight and short notice fights, Dustin loses to him for the BMF title in his retirement fight, again coming up short. When Max points at the canvas to have a final round, 10 second melee to end his career on a memorable note, Dustin gets outworked handily, struggling to stay on his feet and avoid getting finished, and in the last few seconds ties Max up and ends the fight struggling for an underhook.



The thing is, if you look at Dustin's resume, you assume the dude is one of the GOAT LW's to ever grace the sport when you see the names.

McGregor x 2 (former champ) (Lost to McGregor in their first meet when they were both contenders, 3-3 in his last 6 before facing Dustin)
Holloway (former champ, x1 at FW, moved up to LW on 2 months notice, beat Dustin in their final match)
Gaethje (Justin's 3rd UFC fight, great win for Dustin in his 20th UFC fight, beat Dustin in the rematch with a highlight reel KO)
Alvarez (former champ, 4-2-1 leading up to this fight in the UFC, 1-3-1 including this fight and after to end career)
Pettis (former champ, 2-4-0 leading up to this fight and went 5-8 including this fight and after to end career)
Chandler (2-2-0 leading up to this fight since joining UFC, finished 2-5 in the UFC to date)


Heartbreaking as a Dustin fan. Not the individual performance level of Dan Marino or Charles Barkley of course, but still disappointing to have such promising performances only to lose whenever it mattered most. I'm never getting fooled into investing my emotions by this type of journeyman fighter again, so I thank Dustin for that. Today, we pour one out for The Diamond boys, we may never have the chance to be disappointed this many times by a premier fighter again.

giphy.gif

He's got a great resume, just never got over the top. There's a vast, expansive gulf between that and "journeyman."
 
Agreed with OP about Dustin not rising to the occasion in championship fights but a lot of people going to defend Poirier because it is Dustin’s last fight. Can’t rain on a retirement party. Unwritten rule.
 
I guess you could say that he was never really able to win the big one unless your count the interim title win over Max. But there's no question that he had a great career and fought at a high level for a long time. He also had exciting fights and was a fan favorite. I didn't realize how popular he really was until last night. We had the biggest crowd in years at my local BWW where I have been watching UFC for a long time. Lots of younger age kids too, which really surprised me, and they were all cheering heavily for Dustin.
 
He went out in his last fight desperately trying to grab ahold in what was supposed to a throwdown to close out a fight for the BMF belt LMAO. He looked ridiculous. At least Gaethje stuck out to the etiquette and went down swinging
People have been justifying it by saying "look at what happened to Justin".

This completely ignores that Dustin DID initially accept it and THEN backed down when he was getting his ass kicked. He's the one who went back on his word instead of just saying no from the start if he wasn't prepared to accept the potential consequences.

Which included him KOing Max. Cause it also ignores that both Justin and Dustin needed a finish and were given the opportunities for one by Max. Max opened himself up to to taking such a bad loss. Only Justin saw the opportunity handed to him and chased it to the bitter end with the urgency he needed if he wanted to win.

They don't want to accept that it was loser mentality.
 
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