JohnSBG wrote: » The personal attacks towards me on this thread i genuinely dont mind. On my personal twitter account I'll hold on to my right to block who i choose but on an open forum i accept the bad with the majority thats good being in the spotlight I'm lucky enough to hold right now for this brief period of time. However the recent attacks towards charlie are really saddening and disappointing. I had just posted the dangers of believing the 'absolute' style posts of someone who actually doesn't have the slightest notion of whats actually going on and so many of you are so fast to immediately assume the worst. Do none of you actually have any friends who are not obsessed with social media? If you do, thats Charlie. He has zero idea about Facebook, Twitter or Instagram. As difficult as that might be for you to imagine. As of today ive taken over his page so posts moving forward I'll accept responsibility for. As for twitter, whoever set up his account is ignoring my dms. As some of you may know i had to follow it so i could dm. Kinda sad the worst is immediately assumed, then accepted as a given. Bizarre you would think dollery following it, who i dont think has even met Charlie, would somehow lend weight to the assumed fact Charlie has any control over it. Guys, just try a small bit of critical thinking before jumping to utmost offence.
wonderfullife wrote: » I'm also the unofficial 'President of the Boards McGregor fanclub' and advised regularly to get off his balls and your balls.
John_D80 wrote: » Not even close laddy. You've a long long way to go yet before you can challenge the seasoned campaigners around here for that title. The force is quite strong in you though, to be fair.
Killergreene wrote: » If conor was pulling strings to get guys into ufc would he not have already got queally and James Gallagher in the door?
Lukker- wrote: » Charlie Ward should get in touch with Twitter to get the page shut down. If the fauxrage was bad here imagine what it would be like if the mainstream media picked up on it(I'm pretty sure some journos get info from these threads). Could take the shine off his debut in the UFC.
.ak wrote: » As John said, Charlie doesn't use social media. At all. John is currently trying to get in touch with Twitter to get it shut down on his behalf.
Tinie wrote: » Amazing analysis there. How did no one think of that before. Stop take downs with knees...woah
Gamebred wrote: » Good point you make there,very deep.
wonderfullife wrote: » Your point was pretty ridiculous. You want Conor to abandon his karate-based, striking attacks to become a muay-thai specialist.... purely because Cowboy landed a knee that winded Eddie? Jesus wept. Conor winded Nate in the rematch with a TEEP!!! a TEEP! Nate buckled over and took 4 steps backwards. From a traditional karate stance. Conor doesn't (and shouldn't) need to change his style for Eddie. Whatsoever. His counter-striking will hurt Alvarez from his existing style. Brimage fights very similar to Eddie. That head-first punching style, biting down on mouth-shield, means he's very easy to hit for an accurate striker. Conor destroyed him on the back-foot with uppercuts and check-hooks. If Alvarez comes in against Conor swinging wildly, it'll be Goodnight Vienna rather quickly.
Gamebred wrote: » Can you post examples of these teep kicks Conor landed on Nate for example the video is on youtube there so please just get back to be with the relevant times first of all because I cant remember 1 teep kick troubling Nate Diaz,Mendes yesbut I dont recall any in either Diaz fight that were significant, If he throws any sort of teep at Eddie hes getting takedown with ease btw, Again at no point did I say he needs to fight in a trad muay thai style so dont put words in my mouth please,If you watch Alvarez fight the front knee has done him damage (numberous times in the cowboy fight while shooting takedowns) Eddie is fond of the thai plum too so anyone fighting him and ignoring the muay thai side of training for Alvarez will be in for a serious surprise.
Gamebred wrote: » You made out the teep was successful in the Diaz fight and thats the best example you could come up with? really? If you said the Mendes fight I'd agree considering hes a orthodox smaller wrestler in Eddie's mould and the teep's took the wind from him,they however had zero to do with the win over Nate imo,
wonderfullife wrote: » 23:09 4th round. Nate was coming forward for the previous 20 seconds Conor threw a teep and Nate started moving backwards, winded. If you listen to the corner audio of the fight, Owen Roddy says "that hurt him" about that teep. If you watch the Mac Life video, in the dressing room after the fight Peter Queally says "that teep buckled him". Knees are effective for Cowboy against Eddie because he's an orthodox fighter. His knees are coming in from his left knee against the mid-section Eddie can't protect because he's got his right hand kept low ready to swing. Conors knees would be coming in off the right leg to the area Eddie always holds a high guard with his left hand. I.e. Cowboy using knees means he's vulnerable to a counter LEFT hand from eddie. Conor using knees means he's vulnerable to a counter RIGHT hand from eddie. Given all the power is in his right hand, regular use of knees would be a very risky strategy. And if Muay-Thai was his gameplan, he'd be in the gym 24-7 with Cian Cowley and Johnny Dargan - not with Dillon Danis and Sergey.
thewheel2.0 wrote: » Cowboy is also 6' 1", much easier for him to land knees to that area...
wonderfullife wrote: » Well Owen Roddy and Peter Queally disagree with you. They both said that teep changed the momentum of the fight. Conor lost round 3 and Nate was marching forward in round 4. That small little teep changed the whole momentum of the fight. It winded Nate, he slowed down, and Conor took over the Round. That teep had a lot to do with the win over Nate - certainly in the opinion of Roddy and Queally. And i agree with them.
Gamebred wrote: » Clutching at straws here,If it changed the momentum of the fight how did Nate win the 5th? Anyways im not arguing the effect one kick had in a 33 minutes of war we will agree to disagree.
wonderfullife wrote: » I don't necessarily agree Nate won the 5th. It was an incredibly tight round with the cleaner strikes by Conor. They secured one takedown each and Nate had 10 seconds of control with his takedown. You can say "clutching" all you want but the bottom line is Owen Roddy was sat 10 feet from that teep and said it changed the momentum of the fight. Conors path to victory isn't through muay-thai knees, clinch work or wrestling. His clear path to victory is his elite striking and left hand. Eddie is very easy to hit. Conor hits very hard and is scarily accurate. That's what this fight boils down to. Eddies chin is extremely suspect. If he can't get his hands on Conor to tie him up against the fence, this will be a very short nights work.
Gamebred wrote: » You can say his chin is suspect,Im not sure I agree he might get dropped often but he hasnt a glass suspect chin hes been tko'd once in his career over 13 years fighting some very good strikers anyone who has been in there with RDA Pettis Gil cowboy and chandler(in a row) and not been ko'd doesnt have a suspect chin.