PBP UFC 305 Du Plessis vs. Adesanya Official Main Card PBP Discussion: Sat 8/17 at 10pm ET

Who Wins?


  • Total voters
    161
  • Poll closed .
Im going out on a limb here, but I don't think Khabib gain any respect for Conor in there sir....I could be wrong but I doubt it lol.
Oh my god, I walked right into stating a heuristic.

Ok khabib. You name me 1 and I can name 10 that "earned mutual respect."

Plus, these fighters have animosity for their next opponent and the next, ALMOST always hugging at the end.

Its bullshit. Just dont.
 
Oh my god, I walked right into stating a heuristic.

Ok khabib. You name me 1 and I can name 10 that "earned mutual respect."

Plus, these fighters have animosity for their next opponent and the next, ALMOST always hugging at the end.

Its bullshit. Just dont.

Lmao, I was just bustin balls sir, I apologize honestly.
And you're right btw.
 
No. Especially not in high school.

And not when you got a roster of fights. Paid fighters, arguing with the other fighter to sell a fight...to us! Then they hug afterward. Every time.

Its much better when they are genuine.
Honestly, every fight I can remember, there's always been some respect after all was said and done.

Unless someone just got the shit kicked out of them in a one sided way.
 
Was a pretty decent card happy to see Izzy lose.

Prates - potn
Kara-France - potn
Gamrot vs Hooker - fotn
 
Not a huge Izzy fan but glad he's not retiring, like him or not the sport and the UFC are better with him in it.

He's overrated imo, never cared for him and happy he lost. I think that horrible name coupled with a crap attitude has a lot to do with it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: YSB
Too many syllables in the second and third lines.

Haiku is always

5 syllables
7 syllables
5 syllables
Stop playing Saleiri to my Mozart. Tell it to it to a haiku master and they'll laugh at and dismiss what you said. Eminem, Ella, Prince, Sinatra could make it fit or slightly bend formal rules. Try lecturing Basquiat on what a cubist painting should or shouldn't be. Don't @ me back on this subject.
 
I can’t really deny this. But he let that choke in a little easily, imo. Then grabbed the forearm after they rolled over. No defence of any real desperation at any point.

Dricus had him dead to rights. But, just watch the back take, etc, again.
Yeah I gotcha. It wasn't a shining example of best defense in the transition... but then again he was heavily rocked seconds earlier and Dricus slapped it all on super quick. My point being there are plenty of "why didn't he defend better" examples in MMA and I really wouldn't want to die on a hill as this one being the penultimate "but he could have done this and that" example.

Honestly thought the finish (and the fight overall) was much more a case of DDP looking good rather than Izzy looking bad.
 


Fight Facts is a breakdown of all of the interesting information and Octagon oddities on every card, with some puns, references and portmanteaus to keep things fun. These deep stat dives delve into the numbers, providing historical context and telling the stories behind those numbers.

* * *



TOTAL NUMBER OF UFC FIGHTS: 7,811
TOTAL NUMBER OF UFC EVENTS: 702

The Ultimate Fighting Championship shipped out to the continent where toilets flush backward for a pay-per-view show. Local fighters and betting favorites did not have a great night, with plenty of surprises and storylines to track for months. UFC 305 featured a crushingly late submission, a strange streak for a beloved brawler and an in-fight retirement that could lead to a career retirement.


A Regular Murilo Bustamante: Dricus Du Plessis became the seventh middleweight champion in UFC history to defend his belt successfully. He did so by beating the last man to achieve this feat: Israel Adesanya.

Wonka’s Jawbreakers: Du Plessis landed a face crank in the fourth round to force Adesanya to tap. Pushing his finish rate to 91%, half of the South African’s pro wins have come by submission.

Not an RNC: The face crank for Du Plessis is his second in the Octagon. He becomes the first recorded fighter in company history to forego the standard rear-naked choke and crush his opponent’s jaw, as he previously tapped Darren Till with one in 2022.

Stillcranks: “Stillknocks” became the first fighter to attempt to perform a submission in the Octagon on Adesanya. None of his previous 16 bouts saw a foe try, while he has three official attempts on his resume.

Championship Rounder: Du Plessis’ submission in Round 4 is the third fourth-round finish in UFC middleweight title history. Rich Franklin previously forced the doctors to intervene against Evan Tanner in 2005, and Luke Rockhold busted up Chris Weidman in 2015.

Good Numbers, Bad Result: Adding 97 significant strikes to his total, Adesanya passed former foe Robert Whittaker to retake the no. 3 spot at middleweight for the most sig. strikes landed. His 1,167 are 207 shy of Michael Bisping’s leading 1,384.

A Meteoric Fall: With the setback, Adesanya landed on the first losing streak of his MMA career. It is the first time he has lost two bouts in a row in any combat sport since dropping back-to-back kickboxing outings against Jason Wilnis and Alex Pereira in 2017.

Eh, Steve! Sending Steve Erceg crashing to the canvas twice in a little over four minutes, Kai Kara-France registered the first-round knockout and upset. His eight knockdowns at flyweight trail only Deiveson Figueiredo’s 11.

50KKF: The knockout for Kara-France earned him an extra $50,000 for “Performance of the Night.” He has now pocketed six post-fight bonuses, earning him third place for the most in UFC flyweight history. Demetrious Johnson’s nine stand above the pack.

By Hooker by Crooker: In a losing effort, Mateusz Gamrot took Dan Hooker down five times across 15 minutes. He has landed a takedown against all 10 opponents in the Octagon while boosting his total to 43 as a UFC lightweight. Although Gleison Tibau (84) celebrates nearly double his amount, the Polish contender is one takedown shy of holding the fifth-highest tally at the weight class.

A Very Jairzinho Type of Fight: For the second time in his career, Jairzinho Rozenstruik needed all three rounds to get the job done. “Bigi Boy” took Tai Tuivasa to the scorecards, earning his first decision win since 2018—also a split decision.

The Ultimate Streaker: Tuivasa saw his UFC record fall to .500 with the loss. He began his tenure with three straight wins and then lost three in a row. This five-fight skid has now matched his previous five-fight winning streak.

Wild Comparisons Emerge: Carlos Prates wrecked Jingliang Li to emerge as a potential contender at 170 pounds. He has now earned 90% of his wins by stoppage while pulling off three-quarters of his wins with strikes.

Tafa the Lesser: Forcing Junior Tafa to shout out and verbally surrender, Valter Walker performed a rare heel hook as a heavyweight. He is the sixth among big men in UFC history, joining Justin Martin, Scott Adams, Christian Wellisch, Mike Ciesnolevicz and Ciryl Gane.

The King is Back: Casey O'Neill returned to the win column with a decision over Luana Santos. In 10 fights in a row, the Aussie by way of Scotland has reached the second round.

Burns the Lesser: Driving his losing streak to four in a row, Herbert Burns could not continue early into the third round against Jack Jenkins. His technical knockout defeat via retirement is his second as a UFC fighter, making him the only competitor in organizational history to fall short this way more than once.

Reyes the Lesser: Since debuting in the UFC in 2017, Alex Reyes has gone 0-3 in three outings, losing by decision to Tom Nolan. It is his first bout to go the distance since he battled Josh McDonald in 2007.

Don’t Mess with the Jesus: Among all UFC matches scheduled at flyweight, Jesus Santos Aguilar is the ninth competitor to put a foe to sleep with a submission. It is the second guillotine choke to do so.

Your Prize is Forfeit: Aguilar’s guillotine rendered the previously unbeaten Stewart Nicoll unconscious. Due to his weight miss, Aguilar is the first of those nine not to claim a post-fight bonus check.

Never Say Never Again: Coming into UFC 305, Adesanya (27 fights) and Tafa (seven fights) had never been submitted, Erceg had never been finished (14 fights) and Li had never been knocked out (27 fights).

South African Hard Rock: Mixing up his walkout a smidge, Du Plessis started with the South African National Anthem before transitioning to “Live It Up” by Airbourne. He has selected the latter in all eight entrances and won every time.

Instructional Audio: Before getting put to sleep by a choke, Nicoll walked to the cage accompanied by Eminem’s “Go to Sleep” featuring DMX and Obie Trice. He is the first competitor in company history to get slept after using this tune.
 
Back
Top