- Liittynyt
- 13.8.2010
- Viestejä
- 754
Mitä vittua jengi selittää? Sehän nyt on ihan selvää että Silva oli primessaan ekassa Weidman matsissa, vai voiko joku sanoa missä se lasku alko? Onko joku ollu training kämpillä seuraamassa koska, ei sillä mitään häviöitä ollut ja hakkas tosiaan edelliset aika nätisti levyks. Ihme paskaa.
Saattashan Silva olla vieläkin primessaan jos jalka ei olis hajonnut. Ekassa matsissa weidmania vastaan ainakin oli ja tokassakin otteleminen näytti ihan jees, ennen kuin jalka meni. Saattasko myös olla niin et weidman on helvetin hyvä ja samalla huono matchup silvalle.
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Ite ainakin löin isosti Woodleylle.
UFC Embedded cameras caught Gastelum at 179 pounds Friday morning. Farrar said Gastelum got down to 174 a few hours later, only three pounds off the welterweight maximum and well within striking distance of the mark.
When Gastelum and his team returned to the hotel room, though, things went horribly wrong.
Farrar, the head coach of Yuma MMA, said Gastelum "became non-responsive" and began vomiting.
"He wasn't vomiting food," Farrar told MMAFighting.com. "It was more like mucus. He was in a bad state where he couldn't get himself off the floor. I had to pick him up."
Obviously, that was a worrisome situation and Farrar rightly took Gastelum to the emergency room. This was a little more than 24 hours before Gastelum was supposed to meet Tyron Woodley at UFC 183 on Saturday night at the MGM Grand.
"I was scared," said Farrar, a former WEC fighter. "I've never had an athlete do that before. That's the long and short of it.
"I was thinking the fight was off. There's no way this guy is fighting, it's done. ... That was kind of the attitude. Maybe it was a little bit quick to the make the decision, but that's how I felt at the time."
When Gastelum saw doctors, Farrar said they confirmed the team's original fear: that an illness Gastelum had earlier in the week had not gone completely away and he had a frightening relapse. Doctors told Gastelum that he had flu-like symptoms.
While at the hospital, Gastelum was rehydrating and taking medication. Farrar had given him a jug of water and gel packs. Later, the UFC doctor had Gastelum drink Sprite to replenish for sugar intake. The weight-cutting process was long over.
"I'm not saying it was an easy weight cut, it never is," Farrar said. "But it was going as well as it could until that happened. People can say what they want, but that's the only difference in my book for this weight cut."
Saattashan Silva olla vieläkin primessaan jos jalka ei olis hajonnut. Ekassa matsissa weidmania vastaan ainakin oli ja tokassakin otteleminen näytti ihan jees, ennen kuin jalka meni. Saattasko myös olla niin et weidman on helvetin hyvä ja samalla huono matchup silvalle.
- - - Updated - - -
sori mut gastelum vie
Ite ainakin löin isosti Woodleylle.
UFC Embedded cameras caught Gastelum at 179 pounds Friday morning. Farrar said Gastelum got down to 174 a few hours later, only three pounds off the welterweight maximum and well within striking distance of the mark.
When Gastelum and his team returned to the hotel room, though, things went horribly wrong.
Farrar, the head coach of Yuma MMA, said Gastelum "became non-responsive" and began vomiting.
"He wasn't vomiting food," Farrar told MMAFighting.com. "It was more like mucus. He was in a bad state where he couldn't get himself off the floor. I had to pick him up."
Obviously, that was a worrisome situation and Farrar rightly took Gastelum to the emergency room. This was a little more than 24 hours before Gastelum was supposed to meet Tyron Woodley at UFC 183 on Saturday night at the MGM Grand.
"I was scared," said Farrar, a former WEC fighter. "I've never had an athlete do that before. That's the long and short of it.
"I was thinking the fight was off. There's no way this guy is fighting, it's done. ... That was kind of the attitude. Maybe it was a little bit quick to the make the decision, but that's how I felt at the time."
When Gastelum saw doctors, Farrar said they confirmed the team's original fear: that an illness Gastelum had earlier in the week had not gone completely away and he had a frightening relapse. Doctors told Gastelum that he had flu-like symptoms.
While at the hospital, Gastelum was rehydrating and taking medication. Farrar had given him a jug of water and gel packs. Later, the UFC doctor had Gastelum drink Sprite to replenish for sugar intake. The weight-cutting process was long over.
"I'm not saying it was an easy weight cut, it never is," Farrar said. "But it was going as well as it could until that happened. People can say what they want, but that's the only difference in my book for this weight cut."