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Zahabi: Conor got away with SO MANY fouls vs. Khabib

Firas Zahabi: “Everybody saw it. It wasn’t something that was insignificant.”

KJ
Kirik Jenness
October 15, 2018 · 3 min read
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UFC 229 was not Conor McGregor’s finest hour. He crossed the line with his trash talk like it was his job. He got beaten silly. And as he was losing, he broke the rules over and over. 

In his post-fight analysis, TriStar gym founder Firas Zahabi was not impressed.

I know Herb Dean. He’s a great referee. The man’s a professional fighter as well, he knows what’s going on in there. He understands jiu-jitsu, he understands striking,” began Zahabi, as transcribed by Anton Tabuena for BE. “But McGregor got away with so many fouls, to the point that Khabib — he left his corner between round three and four to tell the ref ‘hey, why are you letting him get away with all these things?’

First of, the worst foul: he kneed Khabib illegally from the bottom. Khabib was in side control and McGregor knees Khabib in the head from bottom side control. He should’ve gotten a stern warning, or maybe even a point (deduction).

McGregor was holding the fence on the last takedown. When Khabib pulled to take his McGregor’s back, he was blatantly holding on to the fence. That was probably his seventh or eight foul that night.

Before that, he had held the shorts. He had grabbed on to Khabib’s shorts as Khabib was trying to take him down. He has put his toes on the fence after being told not to. He was obviously grabbing Khabib’s gloves… maybe two or three times. Khabib was talking to the referee saying ‘he is holding my gloves.’

He was doing foul over foul. I think he should’ve taken a point, or at least a stern warning. Those fouls were just one too many.

Especially holding the fence at the end. I would’ve let the action go, but if for some reason McGregor got on top, I would’ve stopped the action. I would’ve taken away a point. You cannot do anything that interferes with the fight. It was a blatant fence hold. Everybody saw it. It wasn’t something that was insignificant. Khabib still got on top of him, but it was just not a fair tactic by McGregor.

The coach also offered insight into why McGregor was cheating.

Why would McGregor do this? He doesn’t seem to do this in his other fights,” noted Zahabi. “That’s a question for him, but I think he might have been fighting for his life. He might have felt ‘look, I am being overwhelmed here, I need every single ounce of help I can get.’

He might have been in a panic mode, and I think I could understand. Being so smashed against somebody so heavy, so based, and you feel you can’t move him — you start to get desperate. You’ve never felt anything like that, a pressure like that. You might panic a little.

I assume he was getting desperate. He probably felt like he was suffocating in there. Khabib’s top game reminds me a lot of Georges’s game. I’ve felt this and know what it is. If you don’t have a good answer for that, it’s a very devastating position to be in.

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