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Morning Report: Sean Strickland says UFC ‘wants me to shut the f*** up’ after Dricus du Plessis ‘gift from God’ title win

Drake Riggs https://ift.tt/p1tNlW0
UFC 297: Strickland v Du Plessis
Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Sean Strickland is starting to feel censored by the UFC.

2023 was the biggest year of the 33-year-old middleweight’s 34-fight career (28-6) and it’s not close. Strickland started his run in MMA as an unbeaten 15-0 prospect and put together a strong six-fight UFC winning streak from October 2018 to July 2022. However, that latter run didn’t culminate in a world title like his three-fight stretch last year did.

Strickland captured 185-pound gold over Israel Adesanya with a wildly impressive unanimous decision effort this past September. Unfortunately for him, Strickland lost his first title defense in January when tasked with Dricus du Plessis. The split decision result was a competitive one that the former champion still believes should have gone his way. Now that an immediate rematch with du Plessis is in question, Strickland sees it as a way of the promotion potentially keeping his extremely unfiltered personality out of the mandatory spotlight.

“I don’t really talk to UFC much,” Strickland told The Schmo (h/t MMA Mania). “All the UFC [does is] tells me to shut up. But let me tell you something about the UFC. I deserve that rematch, and if they don’t give me that rematch, they’re just not one of us. If they don’t give me that rematch, understand it’s for one reason and one reason alone: they want me to shut the f*** up. We all know what will happen, we’ll find out.

“[UFC CEO] Dana [White] is the definition of free speech, he supports it to such a degree. But UFC is financed by — you got Bud Light, all these massive corporations that even though Dana might be like, ‘Hey, I let Sean say what he wants,’ there’s a lot of very wealthy people telling him to shut me up. And not just shut me up, shut you guys up. Because everything I say is things you say. Everything I say is what UFC fans say. So when they reprimand me, understand they reprimand you guys.”

Ahead of his most recent bout at UFC 297 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Strickland had one of the more controversial media days in recent memory. The now-former title holder bashed the country and hurled some insults at the media while sharing some thoughts on the LGBTQ community. Ultimately, no repercussions came Strickland’s way, and business carried on as usual during fight week.

Well, except for the loss, which wasn’t on Strickland’s agenda.

“I won. Dana said I won, [Joe] Rogan said I won, we all know I won,” Strickland said. “I went to Canada and I fought in front of the commies and they shafted me. Dricus wants it, I want it. Win your title like a man, my friend. You know you got a gift from God. Let’s run this s*** back, settle it like men. That’s all I’m trying to say. Settle it like a man.”

Despite his masculine demeanor and alpha mentality, Strickland highlighted his reoccurring mental struggles in a social media video this week. He hasn’t been shy to be vulnerable in the public eye since his rise to fame late last year, and after a brief run with the title, Strickland hasn’t seemed to let things change him, which was a part of his message.

Circling back to the mention of Adesanya, the former two-time champion looks like the likely first challenger for du Plessis even though his last fight was the Strickland loss. Always down to fight any opponent sent his way, Strickland is more concerned about redemption against the South African than anything else.

“I’m at a good point in my life, I don’t even have to fight,” Strickland said. “I don’t give a f*** about the belt. I want to fight Dricus, it needs to happen, and we need to find out who won. Bottom line. I never cared about the belt and I still don’t. I just know you didn’t win. The world thought I won, the striking thought I won. Just run this s*** back, let’s handle it. You beat me fair and square, I’ll put the belt around your waist myself.”


TOP STORIES

Training. Rafael Cordeiro details viral pad sessions with Mike Tyson: ‘If I don’t move back, oh lord

Callout. Dricus du Plessis to Israel Adesanya: ‘Be a man of your word’ and fight me

Whoops. Jake Gyllenhaal: Conor McGregor accidentally ‘clocked me in the face’ preparing for Road House movie

Troubles. Sean Strickland shares mental health struggle: ‘I have everything I’ve ever f****** wanted, and I still am mentally unwell

Viewing. Bellator strikes deal with Warner Bros. Discovery to air events on Max starting with Belfast card

Opportunity. Matt Brown laments how much easier it is to get into the UFC these days: ‘The barrier of entry is so much lower

Desire. Conor McGregor still wants to fight soon, but ‘there’s been no talk about anything’ from UFC


VIDEO STEW

Sound & Pound.

Canelo vs. Mungia Presser Staredown.

Golden Rose.

UFC Journey.

Bellator Belfast Fight Camp Confidential and Fight Week Vlog.

Puppy time.

Surf’s up.


LISTEN UP

Heck of a Morning. MMA Fighting’s Mike Heck reacts to Alexandre Pantoja vs. Steve Erceg, Jose Aldo’s return at UFC 301.


MORNING MUSIC


SOCIAL MEDIA BOUILLABAISSE

Maxed.

Ugh. Sorry, guys.

Talks.

Absence.

Jokes.

Work-room.

Royalty.

Throwback.

Superstar.


FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Robelis Despaigne (5-0) vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta (11-1); UFC St. Louis, May 11


FINAL THOUGHTS

It’s pretty interesting to see Sean go in this direction after his title loss. Sure, he believed he beat Jared Cannonier as well, but this is a bit different. Is he just being a smart businessman? That feels weird to assume.

Thanks for reading!


EXIT POLL


If you find something you’d like to see in the Morning Report, hit up @DrakeRiggs_ on Twitter and let him know about it. Also, follow MMAFighting on Instagram and like us on Facebook.



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