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7th November 2017
01:45pm GMT

"Someone said that I tapped, I never tapped. Are you kidding me? It was probably that I was trying to stand up, but I didn’t. It was a piece of a second for me.” “Who said that? Who said that? I didn’t tap. I didn’t tap. I heard this, like two times, but come on. I didn’t tap. I didn’t tap. It was probably I was trying to stand up.”The defensiveness of the denial was a little upsetting, especially when you consider other elite fighters who have tapped from strikes in the past.
Georges St-Pierre, arguably the greatest fighter to ever grace an Octagon, famously tapped out when Matt Serra overwhelmed him with strikes in that upset knockout at UFC 69. After the fact, GSP didn't try to hide the fact that he submitted, in fact, he owned it.
"A lot of people blame me because they said I tap, but the thing is, when you get caught in a submission and you know you get caught in armbar, I prefer to tap and come back stronger next time than not tapping and getting my arm broke and not having my arm 100%." "It's the same thing. I knew I was finished. I lost my equlibrium, I was going to get knocked out, I didn't want to lose conscious and have cerebral damage for the rest of my career, so I just said, 'I'll go for another time.'"There is absolutely no shame in tapping to striking. We sincerely hope that the former champ understands this.
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