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11th September 2016
11:01am BST

After speaking to the reigning champion, Rogan turned his attentions to a visibly shaken Overeem who made a bizarre suggestion that he felt his opponent tap to a guillotine choke earlier in the round but that the referee hadn't seen it. Using the technology available to him, Rogan pointed to the big screen and showed the sequence in question twice, with neither angle showing anything close to a tap from Miocic. Confused and embarrassed, Overeem thanked the crowd and left the Octagon before Rogan retook his seat in the commentary booth and explained why he feels it isn't right to speak to fighters who are trying to come to their senses after a knockout. "Alistair believed that he tapped from the guillotine but part of that had to be the fact that he just got knocked unconscious," Rogan said.#AndStill! @stipemiocicufc KOs @Alistairovereem after a thrilling fight! ? #UFC203 https://t.co/aIkMfmtw2m
— #UFC203 (@btsportufc) September 11, 2016
"There's a lot going on in your mind after you just get completely shut off... You can't really fault Alistair for having a distorted memory after that.
"I probably shouldn't even interview people after they get knocked out. It's not my call.
"I honestly believe that when someone gets knocked out, you should just leave them alone for a few days because there's so much missing as far as their memory [is concerned]."
In the hours following the pay-per-view, Rogan continued to discuss the point and revealed that he had spoken to the UFC and asked if his new plan was possible to put into action.
https://twitter.com/joerogan/status/774851385791803392
https://twitter.com/joerogan/status/774851654084599808

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