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12th January 2018
09:36am GMT

"I don't really even like fighting, to be honest. I'm just good at it. I don't like the politics behind it, I don't like the martial arts aspect being taken away from it, I don't like the disrespect, guys that are not really training hard, they don't look the part - I think professional athletes should look a certain way. I really don't like this generation of fighters that watch a move on TV or YouTube and go in and try to do it. They don't want to drill repetitions. They don't want to actually put in the work."The only fighter's name he dropped during this tirade was SBG fighter Artem Lobov. "The Russian Hammer" entered into the UFC through the Ultimate Fighter with a 11-10-1-1NC record. Woodley believes Conor McGregor's influence in this signing is disrespectful to the sport and its competitors.
"It affects me because the sport is also the fans and the fans culture who we get to fight. If the guys who are talking enough shit start wearing fly suits then, in this day and age, that's good enough for a title shot. That's disrespectful to everybody that came before. Remember when you had to go 10-0 then you get the 'call' from the UFC? If Conor won, Artem Lobov with a 500 record is going to be in the UFC. It's ways that the sport is taking the love out of it."https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/950401873361735680 After that harsh swipe at his main sparring partner, Woodley then paid McGregor a compliment. 'The Chosen One' praised the Dubliner for his abilities behind the mic coupled with his fighter's mentality. In his eyes, his penchant for backing up the talk sets him apart from the great trash talkers such as Chael Sonnen.
"Chael's probably better than Conor at it (trash talk). Conor's very close, but Conor actually delivers on more of what he says he's going to do than Chael did. If you got to think of anybody who brought both worlds together the best, I would have to say Conor." "He knocks a lot of guys out, tries to call the round, he's only lost a few fights total and even in those fights it was risk/reward. Fighting a guy, switched opponent, this notice, different weight class. He's taking on risk/reward that if he loses, it's not really that big of a deal."Woodley then went on to criticise McGregor's lemmings for failing to put in the hard work to deliver on their shit talk. He believes this was one of the keys to McGregor's unprecedented success.
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