Video

Original Description

On this episode of Good Guy / Bad Guy…Could we see a brawl between the two scariest dudes in the UFC? If you ask Khamzat Chimaev the answer is yes! Find out what the guys think about Khamzat wanting to fight the Light Heavyweight Champ Alex Pereira at 205 LBS. Then, call it being salty or call it facts…but according to Cory Sandhagen don’t call it a takedown! Sandhagen is discrediting Merab Dvalishvili’s 20 takedowns in their recent fight for the Bantamweight strap, but do DC & Chael agree? Plus, if a fighter misses weight, they should take half their pay and deduct a point! It’s a hot take from one of the guys. But which one? And, we discuss the high stakes main event in Vancouver, Canada when Reiner de Ridder takes on Brenden Allen.

0:00 Welcome to the show!
1:46 Chimaev vs. Pereira?
11:01 Sandhagen discredits 20 takedowns
13:19 What is a takedown in MMA?
16:25 Harsher penalties for missing weight?
21:43 UFC FN: Reiner de Ridder vs. Brenden Allen

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Video Transcript

you know. So, let's get into this,

right? I'm going to get in trouble for

this because I always get in trouble for

this.

What's happening, guys? Welcome to

another episode of Good Guy Bad Guy. I'm

Chale. He's Daniel. Partner, I got to

tell you, you look very cozy this

morning. I like this sweater. I'm

getting cold out here in Oregon, man.

The weather's dropping. Chill. It's cold

in California, bro. Like my daughter is

now wearing sweaters to school. It's

unbelievable that it went from last week

where it was warm, it was nice, it was

in the 70s to now in the morning, Chelp,

we are 45,

50° in the morning. It is freezing cold.

But I got to be honest, that is kind of

why I like Northern California. I love

being able to feel that weather change

in Southern California. It's like never

uh never cold. Oregon's nice. Kind of

rainy a little bit. Um everything has a

great seasonal change, but I like mild

season changes. Not like Atlantic City

where it's like freezing cold sometimes.

Yes, I understand. The one good news, by

the way, when the sun's not out at 6:00

and when the sun is done being out by

6:00 p.m., that means it's wrestling

season.

It's wrestling season, baby.

Let's go, baby. Hey guys, for the

record, Chill and I just did that again.

We're like on repeat because my camera's

doing some weird stuff this morning. But

hey, full transparency as good guy, bad

guy, we don't lie to you. We do not lie

to you. Hey, one guy that's not lying to

you is Hamza Chamay. Hamza Chamay wants

to fight Alex Peda, but he wants to

fight him for the light heavyweight

championship. What do you make of that?

Okay, this isn't new, by the way. I

mean, I got to tell you, like Chamay has

had Pierre's name in his mouth for a

little while. You and I got to uh sit

down and speak with Dana the night

before Uncleia versus Pierre part two.

Pierre was given some hints that he

wanted to go to heavyweight. We just

asked Dana about that. Hey, Dana,

historically, you're not a big fan of of

of guys leaving their weight class,

particularly when they're the champion.

But this year alone, you've allowed Ilia

to do it and and Islam to do it. And

there's some rumblings that Alex would

like to do it. Dana made a point. He

just said, "Look, it's hard to tell some

guys know when they've cleaned out the

division, when they've done everything

they set out to do. It's hard to make

them do it over again. I just don't know

that Jamay is in that spot right now."

You know, don't forget a lot of Chamay's

undefeated UFC record took place at 170

lbs. He's kind of new to 185. When I go

look at those top guys at 185, they

haven't had their opportunity yet. So, I

don't think that Chamay is going to

leave anytime soon. I think he's more

just sharing with us. He's got goals.

And when you have a guy that's a

champion of the world, by the way, he

needs to have a new goal. And and and if

that's his dream and his drive and

that's what keeps him going, I don't

think we should get in Chamay's way. I'm

not ready to predict that that match is

going to happen, but I like the theme.

What I like about the you you and I both

know it, right, Cher? Like when it was

like, I want to go to college. If I can

get to college, it'll be amazing. I'd be

a D1 athlete. And the moment you get

that, you go, well, I want to be a Big

12 champion. I want to be an

all-American. I want to be a national

champion. You constantly move the line

regardless of what you want or what you

hope to get. Once you get there, you

move it back further because elite

athletes can never be satisfied. That's

Hamzad Chamay. He probably thought to

himself, if I can be a world champion,

it would mean the world to me. But now

that he is a world champion, he's like,

well, I kind of want to go up 205 and

see if I can't do it in a different

weight class. But I will also tell you

this, and this is only in theory,

because I don't believe this to be as

true as people may have thought it was a

year and a half ago. He wants to go up

because he thinks there's a matchup at

205 that suits him because he believes

that he can still take Alex Peda down

multiple times to become the world

champion. His idea is what everybody

thought of Pereira a year and a half

ago. He's a great kickboxer, but we can

take him down. I think that is why he's

more open to it today than he might have

been before because he thinks that he

can still kind of go and control Pereira

in the way that he did Dreas Duplex. I'm

just not sure that that's as easy to do

as people thought before. Well, that's

that's very compelling to look at from

the matches standpoint. I interpret it

when Jama said it. I interpret it just

to mean that he wanted to be double

champion. But if I'm taking it more

literal like you are, that is

interesting. We haven't seen Pierre in

there with an elite level wrestler. And

many people tried to present Uncle that

way. Many people were very quick to say

that Uncle was this deep wrestler, but

if you followed his history, or even if

you ask Uncle himself, he was choosing

to represent kickboxing. And though he

comes from the Caucus regions and it

turns out he's pretty darn good at

wrestling, that isn't actually what he

represented. And there is something

compelling about a highlevel wrestler

versus Pierre. I used to be of the

thought that that was the blueprint to

beat him. I'm now starting to see that

he appears to have more answers uh than

I thought, but I'm open to that idea. In

terms of could he stop the takedown?

That's interesting. For sure.

He did against Echoliah the first time.

And we did we did kind of we gave

Uncleiah some wrestling credentials that

he didn't quite have J. Correct. He his

whole life he's grown up boxing,

kickboxing. I mean, he's a striker. He

can wrestle, but

um yeah, he was never going to be he was

never going to beat the Pereira what a

Phil Davis was when he was at 205. Hell,

even a Cory Hill when he was at 205,

right? He was never going to be that guy

that just was pursuing takedowns the

whole time against Alex Pereira. Um,

when you think of these two though,

Chill, with what Peda did in his last

fight, what Hamza did in his last fight,

Halloween theme, right? As we get close

to Halloween, do you trick or treat, by

the way? Do you trick or treat? Do you

go you walk?

Not per I mean, I I walk the kids. I

don't go knock on doors like some kind

of a weirdo, but I'm I'm out there. I'm

amongst the community.

So, you do you uh stay at the the the

sidewalk while your kids run up to the

front door?

Yes. You know, there's a lot of danger

between the sidewalk to the door.

There's a lot of danger. Hey, it's

Halloween ghoul night. There kids

running around going crazy. Your kid can

get run over your daughter. But but I

would not worry about her after what she

did to that bully at school a couple

weeks ago. She ain't wor nobody's

messing with Bria. But uh

I go trick-or-treating. You know what? I

love the houses that have the fueling

stations. Have you ever Have you ever

come across a fueling station? don't

drink, but some parents will open their

garage and inside their garage, bro,

they have like alcohol stations for the

parents of the trick or treat.

Fueling stations. Y'all want to do that

in Oregon?

No, we I've never I've actually never

heard the term. If anybody was doing it

though, we would start doing We want to

be the cool house, but I've never heard

of a fueling station. You're teaching me

something.

Yeah, it was awesome. But who's the

scarier fighter? Right. Stick with this

Halloween theme. Who's scarier? Jama or

uh Alex Pedo?

Okay. So, an athletes biggest fear is

actually not losing. His biggest fear is

that he reaches exhaustion and can no

longer finish the match or defend

himself. And I think in that regard, I I

I think that Chamay and that pace that

he puts on you is very intimidating. But

you're probably not going to go to the

emergency room. You get on the wrong

side of Alex Pierra, he he'll hurt

everything. He'll kick you in the leg

hoping it breaks. He'll point you in the

nose hoping that your your uh face

shatters. So, between those two, the

scarier costume would be Alex Pier.

Yeah, I think I think I got to kind of

agree because

we were talking on the weigh-in show

about scary fighters and

Tamza just kind of takes you down,

right? And he controls you, especially

at the highest level, right? The younger

Hamzach when the competition wasn't as

scary, he was able to take him down,

submit him, dominate him, knock him out.

But as we saw with uh Draasus Duplexi,

the scarier the challenge is going to be

a lot of control takedowns. So I uh I

think Pereira, man, he will knock your

face out. The way he the way he attacked

Uncle Goliath,

I don't know if I've ever seen a guy

fighting in a rematch that lost the

first match as the older guy look as

pissed off as Alex Pereira was walking

in the UFC 320 main event. And then for

it to go the way it did, this guy's he's

legend. He's he's a legend. Like he's a

he's

in all sport, by the way.

In all sport, not just our sport. You

bring boxing to it. Bring in the Lakers

if you want to. Bring in the Patriots if

you want to. Somebody that loses does

nothing in between. Goes and follows the

exact same rule set of the exact same

venue against the exact same opponent.

And he flips the script to that degree.

Daniel, it was incredible. Like when

Pierre's got these big goals and and

he's shooting higher, he's looking at

heavyweight or Jon Jones, he's a very

hard guy to dismiss. Even if you look at

his age of 37, just right on the heels

of 38 years old, he doesn't look like

he's slowing down. He doesn't look like

this over the hill and 40s next business

is is is stopping him. I mean, he looks

like he's getting better.

Yeah, he looks like he's getting better.

Who would win? Who do you think would

win? Shayva Pereira?

Well, gez, Pierre is so big. I do think

that size matters at a certain point.

Chamay would be a problem in certain

positions, but but ultimately Pierre's

size, even if he went down once or he

went down twice, that's a big man to

drag to the canvas for 25 straight

minutes. I think I'm not putting it the

same weight. I'm putting it what they

weigh right now. Pierre would beat him.

Yeah, it's a that's a tough fight to

choose between the two, but man, size

has to matter at some point, right? It

might not matter from 170 to 185, but

it's got to matter at some point when

you start jumping 20 pounds, jail. And

you mean like a 185 pound guy that may

weigh 210 to a to a freaking 205

guy that may weigh 245 that weighs 235

on fight night. It's got to matter at

some point when it comes to size, you

know? It has to matter. But I can't pick

the fight, so I'm happy. Hey, one guy

that did not win his last fight, but one

guy that we all thought fought very well

was Cory Sanhagen. Cory Sanhagen is now

talking. So, I spoke to Cory Sanhagen

after the fight and I asked him, "How

you feeling?" He goes, "Well, I'm just

heartbroken, right?" Cuz he had lost the

fight. But all in all, um I tried to

encourage him and tell him that he did

really well. Well, San Hagen was talking

the other day about the fight. Till he

wasn't impressed with Morab. He wasn't

impressed with the amount of takedowns

that Morav got. He goes, "Hey, it's not

like he was picking me up and slamming

me. If you just bump me down to my knees

and I just have to get back up, that to

me is not like a quote unquote MMA

takedown. Maybe it scores points in

wrestling, but I mean, you're not doing

any damage." Do you agree with Sanhagen

said or do you disagree with what

Sanhagen said?

It's it's very interesting because he's

so much uh personalizing, right? There's

so much conjecture in in that statement.

But I do think that Sandhagen was

arguably the most competitive athlete

that I've ever seen that lost every

minute of every round of a five round

contest. I mean, he never backed down. I

look at Sanhagen in a different way. I

look at him more fondly. The ability to

turn to his knees and stand up to his

feet. Couldn't quite stop the wrestling,

but that's how he chose to nullify it

was to keep on getting up. I mean, we

don't have that fight and we don't have

that great performance from Morav if it

wasn't for Sandhagen. Sandhagen was was

a very good juxaposition. It just kind

of showed us that Morav's put a gap

between himself and the field, you know.

So, let's get into this, right? I'm

going to get in trouble for this because

I always get in trouble for this. Cory

Shanhagen's a little bit off, right?

He's a little bit off in his assessment

of what was happening.

it. What he got done to him was MMA

takedowns. It doesn't score in

wrestling. When Khabib got 24 takedowns,

those are MMA takedowns. They don't

score in wrestling. What Morav did to

Cory multiple times was Matt returned

him. He Matt returned him. He never

broke his lock. He always had his hands

locked. When Cory would get up, he would

pick him up and he would put him back

down to the mat. And because Cory sit on

his feet and got taken back down to the

ground with control, it's counted a

takedown. I have long had a problem with

how they score mixed martial arts

takedowns. Kobe Cumington versus Kamaru

Usman for that matter. Kobe knocks him

down, covers him, Kamar pops right back

up. Not a takedown because he wasn't

down long enough. Whereas in wrestling,

that would have been a takedown the

moment Kamar's hands went to the mat.

Hey, the MMA takedown is a problem. The

way that they score MMA takedowns is the

problem. Chale, a takedown should be

when you go to the mat. A takedown

should not be when you get back up and

the guy picks you up and just puts you

back down. He never lost control. He

they they see

until I don't know why. And I I dude I

went they they called me in. They called

me in jail. They sat me with the people

that do the takedowns and I still walked

out of there going, "Well, it ain't a

takedown. It's not a takedown. You're

not going to convince me of what it is.

You They should get us in the room. Let

us tell them what a takedown is and then

those numbers won't seem so like big."

Morav didn't get 20 takedowns. Moral

probably got five or six taked downs and

he got 14 map returns.

Yes. No, you're you're completely right.

Look, there's three styles of wrestling

which is very heavy in takedowns from

collegiate to Greco Roman uh to

freestyle. It's got to be a takedown in

one of those three or it can't just be a

takedown.

And you were right. What he was doing is

called a mat return. Until control is

completely lost and the opponent has

turned and faced you. It's the same

position. It's a continuation of the

same position. I agree. Look, I don't

know what a significant strike is. I've

been I've been covering significant

strikes for 20 years. If a fist reaches

out and touch somebody, that's pretty

significant. I I don't know. I mean, you

even hear octagon control. I would love

for that to be explained. I mean, one

guy's against the fence and one guy's

not, or one guy is stalking him, and the

other guy's backing up like Floyd

Mayweather. Floyd Mayweather showed us

you could do some pretty good damage

going backwards. So, there's a few terms

that are thrown out there that I must

tell you, I don't quite know who came up

I don't quite know who came up with the

definition of them, but I would

disagree.

Y a a a a significant strike is things

that's not a jab. A jab hurts.

Yes.

You know what it always makes me feel

like the person that's saying or making

these rules have not been hit with a

really good jab. That's like you haven't

been hit with a really good jab. If you

think a jab is not a sign, hey, when I

was fighting Jon Jones and he popped me

in the nose and my nose started

bleeding, I was like, "Well, that seemed

pretty dang significant to me because my

nose is bleeding."

I didn't know that till you just said

that. So any that lands

any strike that lands that is not a jab.

Hey.

Okay. All right.

That that that was at least that's how I

interpret it. But I did go to Oklahoma

State, so maybe I don't have the best

interpretation skills, but yes, not a

takedown. I do believe that San Hagen

was was I I get his point, but it was

still super impressive because even

doing 20 Matt returns jail is tough,

right? It's tough when you're lifting

someone up. Hell, when I'm trying to do

conditioning with my team, I make them

do mat returns. Pick down, up, down, up,

down, then the other guy does it. So,

yeah, it's uh it's uh it's it's very

difficult to do. So, hats off to the

champ for doing that on so many

occasions. Now, speaking of rules,

I believe that, and this is laughable

coming from me, but I believe

the penalty for missing weight should be

harsher. I believe there should be taken

more money from people. Jiannisto, she

beat Mason Shasson, but Mason Shass miss

weight. Uh, and and um let me see this.

If we get a 50% fine and a point

deduction, there will be much less

people missing weight. This is what Jana

Santos said. Let me just give you this

as a background. She has the ability to

say this because like five of the last

six people she's fought has missed

weight. Five of the last six people that

this woman has fought has missed weight

and she just fights them over. Should we

be harsher with uh with weight, Mrs.

Chill?

I didn't want to miss weight. Wait,

wait, wait, wait, chill. I didn't want

to miss weight so bad that I touched

that towel. That's how much it meant to

me to not miss weight that I just openly

cheated and got away with it. Don't miss

weight. Should we be harsh on those

penalties? I I hear you on that. Yes.

What do we do? I mean, the golden rule

is in show business is the show must go

on. So, it's very hard to step in and

interfere. But I will tell you, in

college wrestling, that match will not

take place. If somebody misses weight,

not only will it not take place, the

other person that did make weight will

go through the process. They'll walk out

there. They'll have their hand raised.

the team, it it'll rectify it. Uh on

your record, it will reflect it is the

word I'm looking for. So, I I don't know

what we do in MMA. I mean, in all

fairness, I follow wrestling. I can't

remember an NCAA tournament, if it's

ever happened, I can't think of it where

a person has ever missed weight, but

there seems to be something when you get

into the pros, the NCAA tournament, you

got to make weight three days in a row.

In the professional MMA, you got to make

weight three times a year. And it is

very confusing to me when the other guy

doesn't make weight. You know what? What

did you not know? And why should we

believe that next time is going to be

any different? And perhaps that would be

uh one of the solutions to this. If you

miss weight, you can no longer go that

weight class. You you must go up. And

that's going to create all sorts of

problems for our matchmakers. I don't

know how realistically my suggestion is,

but instead of taking 10% in some

jurisdictions, you take 20, perhaps you

should be taking 50 or you should be

taking 75. There's something that the

athlete needs to know. And it is an

advantage. It for sure it is. There's a

reason that we only write so many things

down and we and we sign the bottom of

the page agreeing to do a very few

amount of things. If we can't trust you

with the very first one, which was

making weight, it does beg the question,

should you be competing, Jill, when we

step on that scale in wrestling, you're

terrified because you know an ounce an

ounce will take you out of the fight.

Macy Shaw had an hour to lose a pound

and a half and she chose not to. Bro,

Kelvin Gastlin missed by seven pounds.

25 30% ain't enough. You got to take

half of their money. I believe I think

that you take half the money, right? And

I believe that they start chill start

round one. The best they can get is a

99. Uh, no, sorry. the best they can get

is a draw in the round. They can't win

that round. They're starting on a

nine-point uh ruling. If they lose, they

lose 108. Now they're down two rounds

and they got to go finish. But if they

win, then it's just 99. We start the

fight in the second round. I believe

that it needs to be that harsh because

then people will go, "Man, if I don't

make this weight, it's bad." Because

Kelvin Kelvin and I've been hard on

Gassum about this because he's had a lot

of weight misses. Um he won that last

fight. He won the last fight. So he got

70% of his money. He went home with 70%

of his money, Ko. Like it just didn't

feel like

enough of a punishment for missing by

that much weight. So I think 50%

one point deduction to start round one.

Your best hope in round one is to get a

draw in that round and then you got to

win the next two to win the fight or you

get beat. I think it's I think it's that

simple. I don't hate that idea. I've

never heard that before, but I I don't

hate that idea. There there is something

that needs to be done. And by the way,

there are other sports that weigh people

in, and these other sports that weigh

people in don't have the same kind of

pandemic. So, I don't know what it is

that goes through MMA. We had a guy

named Olivea Saturday in in Rio, smaller

Olive, not Charles, and he misses weight

by eight pounds. He shows up to the

scale at 144. His opponent makes the

agreed upon weight of 136. And my

biggest takeaway is Olive, 144 lb.

Olive. How did you not call and let your

opponent know? Why did you let him

suffer? You knew you weren't going to

make weight. You knew you were going to

have to catch weight. Why didn't you

call and tip him off? Ortega did that at

3:00 in the morning. At 3 in the

morning, Ortega calls Diego Lopez's team

and says, "Look, I've screwed up here,

but if you're going through suffering,

stop. I'm going to have to change the

way." I respect that. I don't know how

the little Olive shows up eight pounds

over and doesn't say anything to the

opponent.

Did they fight? Did they fight?

Yeah, they fought. They fought little

Olive lost, which the UFC looks at as a

double loss that you lost to the scale

and you lost to the opponent. Isis,

he might be suspect he's gone.

Yeah, but you know, chill the uh

cuz he cuz you know that the last few

pounds are the hardest ones. Those are

the ones that just kill you. You let

that man go through that. Unbelievable.

Chill. I'm in Vancouver this weekend for

Reineer Derritter versus Brennan Allen

main event in UFC Vancouver. Uh what do

you make of this fight? Chill. If you're

Rainineer Ditter, you are about to fight

Fluffy Hernandez, which could have

ultimately earned you a title

opportunity. One, does a win for him

this weekend still accomplish that over

Brendan Allen? And two, would you have

taken the fight? Like, would you have

been so open to just going, "Yeah, sure.

I just beat the former champion. and now

I'll fight Brennan Allen.

Yeah, I definitely I definitely would

have taken the fight. I think when

fighters start doing the math and go,

"Well, this doesn't make sense." Don't

worry about what makes sense, fighter.

When you get a call from from the second

floor of the UFC, those are the guys

that have already decided what makes

sense. But I will say this, I listened

to a very compelling interview by RDR

and he just laid out the timeline. He

laid out why he agreed to Fluffy

Fernandez, how he began training for

Fluffy with that cardio that he's got to

deal with specifically. He talked about

when Fluffy came off the board and Paulo

Costa was a possible option and then

ultimately they landed on Brendan Allen.

But one thing RDR never mentioned and he

was pretty specific with his timeline.

He never talked that he was promised or

told it could be a number one contenders

match. And I personally am curious if I

has already been told that he'll be next

for Jama. We've got nothing to talk

about here. But if that phone call

hasn't happened, that means RDR is still

alive. He's still alive and well I in

this little game and it looks like

Fluffy's coming off the board. He got a

pretty strong call out by Shawn

Strickland. I predict for you that fight

happens. So it is still down to Emanov

and RDR. Should RDR have success over

Allen? I think that's an extra

motivator. And I think that is what RDR

is looking at. And by the way, to your

second question, yeah, you deserve

things like that. When you go out there

and you make that walk at times that

other people won't, it's a win. This is

nothing against Fluffy, but Fluffy and

RDR had an agreement. One of them stuck

to the agreement and one of them didn't.

So, in the world of just arguing

positioning, it's a it's a boost to RDR

in my opinion.

Absolutely. Absolutely. I agree with

everything you said and I believe that

Brennan Allen is tough and he's good and

he looked good in New Orleans and went

over him should at least keep him in

line with the rest of the guys in the

division because he's actively fighting.

But boy, you said Sean Strickland and

Father Hernandez. Ooh, that I

immediately said, "Ooh, that's a good

one." I don't give that reaction very

often. Hey, before I let you go, our boy

Robbie Lawler, Robert Glenn Lawler was

in Brennan Allen's corner in New

Orleans, but now he's went right the

Ritter. He's cornering the Ritter. He

like switched camps. What are your

thoughts on that?

That's interesting. Whenever that

happens, I'm glad that you brought that

to my attention. I like the drama. I

will now look for that on the cameras

and I'll look for body language. Let's

see where that goes. That's a very good

mind. If you can get Robbie's mind, not

with your team and with your own, I

think that it's a a very good move. By

the way, I feel like you're rushing me.

I have two truths and a lie. Can you

team me up at some point? Can you

Okay. Yes. Yes. Yes. I will definitely

lie. Did you want to share your opinion

on Robbie Lawler? Did you

I want to share my opinion. I want to

share my opinion. I think Robbie Lawler

was like uh Robbie Lawler went and

picked the he picked the he picked up

the the horse that's closer to the

finish line, right, Phil? Hey, it's only

smart business if you have two

stallions, right? One has to get one has

to run 50 yards to win, one has to run

20 yards to win. Hey, which one do you

pick? You take the one that's 20 yards

away. And that's exactly what Robbiey's

doing because if Rainineer Derritter is

able to win and he stays in line with

the title opportunity, there you go. I

mean, these guys are are right in line

because when you look at the top six,

obviously it's Immob or Reineer Ditter

if he wins this weekend cuz I'm looking

at Draus not getting it. Strickland not

getting it. Izzy not getting it. Fluffy

not getting it. The the the winner not

the winner. Uh Rainard Derritter has a

strong case for a title opportunity if

he beats uh Brennan Allen this weekend.

Hey J, two truths in a lie. Give it

two truth. I I wanted to make sure we

got this. All right, here's the two

truths in lie. You ready? Serena

Williams is great at tennis. Lionel

Messi is great at soccer. Daniel Cormier

is great at golf. Now, I'm not going to

tell you what's the truth. I'm not going

to tell you. It's just one of these

questions just for the universe to

decide on its own. Oh, you're the worst.

You're the worst, man.

You are You are the absolute worst. But

let me tell you this. I don't care if

I'm good at it when I look that good in

my gear, I'm good at it, chill. So, when

I got my head or I am straight, guys, no

show on Monday. Chill and I get a day

off. We will see you guys next Thursday

for Chail Sunday. I'm Daniel Cormier.

Sorry for the camera. Sorry for the

light, but guys, if I didn't close this

blind, you literally would be motion

sick right now. Until next time. Oh, we

have a show on Wednesday because I'm

going to Abu Dhabi next week. So, show

next Wednesday. Until next time. Chill.

And plus also, I have no more chills

time. So, I got to let him go. Until

next time. Peace.