[music] Hello and welcome to the Hammer. We are presenting you a special Saturday evening edition of our show following the UFC 111 card. This was GSP vs. Dan Hardy. Very excited. We just made our way back from watching the show and we've got our broadcast for you. We're down at the CFMU-93-3 studios doing a really early morning record. I'm Greg, by the way. I'm your host, Dave, and I was all in. And this is Steve. So we begin the UFC 111 card with the welterweights in the prelims. We had a Matt Riddell vs. Greg Soto. This one ended in a DQ with an illegal upkick. Soto landed an upkick to Riddell while he had a hand on the mat, so counters a kick to the head of a downed opponent. This was not aired. This was not aired. You don't see that every day. The upkick disqualification. No. Most fighters won't take it. They were pretty win. Yeah. But Riddell took the DQ. Take what you can get. So then we go to the televised ones. We have a Rucimer Paleras vs. Thomas Drywall, this one ended in a brutal heel hook, 23 seconds into the first round. Drywall tried to land a kick, but instead slipped and landed on his back. Rucimer has great Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, jumped right on him, twist his leg, little bit of a controversial submission. Thomas immediately started tapping, and Rucimer held him for about six, seven seconds after he tapped. Which is about seven seconds too long for him to hook. He looked in a lot of pain. He looks at the most painful and dangerous submissions of them all. You can rip the ACL right off of the leg, so Thomas was in extreme pain and he could not get up after this. He was finished, and that could be a lot of severe damage for him. Yeah. I don't like the whole holding on to the submission that long. I mean, he was tapping. He was tapping. He was tapping. He was tapping. It was a body tap. Just like several, several times, so Rucimer not cool. So then we go forward to the Heavyweights. We had a fun little bout with between Rodney Wallace and Jared Hammond. This one went to decision, which Jared Hammond won. These were two fairly evenly matched fighters, and it was actually kind of entertaining one to watch. Hammond had some good wrestling and some good ground pound. Wallace had some wicked wrestling throws and a lot of wild swings, a lot of boxing shots. It could have gone either way, so entertaining fight overall. Yeah, that one aired at the end of the night after the main event. Yeah. So live on Spike TV, we have Middleweight's Ricardo Almeida versus Matt Brown. Ricardo won this one with a rear naked choke at the end of round two. Looked to be very dominant throughout the fight anyways. Then we have the drama of Nate Diaz versus Roy Markham. Nate Diaz has previously fought in the lightweight division, is moving up to Walter White because no one in the lightweight can be DJ Pan. Roy Markham tried to cut weight to make 170 pounds for Walter Waite. He failed. Did not make it. He ruckled it. We weighed in at 178 pounds, even with being severely dehydrated and dropping every ounce of water weight he had, had to almost be rushed to the hospital after making his cut just to make 178. So this was a match of a Middleweight versus a light Walter Waite. Despite this, Nate Diaz out punched Roy the entire fight, knocked him down, struck him on the ground, got back control and beat him out. So I mean Roy Markham couldn't even make weight and still lost to a much lighter fire, lost convincingly. And because Markham didn't make weight, Nate Diaz gets a percentage of his purse. So a big money night for Diaz. You guys think that Markham isn't that great or do you think it was because of the weight cut and he was fatigued? Well, first of all, I don't think Markham's that great. With that being said, neither is Diaz really. So when you give up a huge weight cut and you're feeling a little bit weak and invulnerable, everything adds up. I had called Diaz going into this fight and I thought he was going to win and he beat him very decisively and really Markham shouldn't not be in this division. I would have thought it would have been by submission. I think we all called Diaz to win and I expected him to win. But with that being said, I didn't expect him to win this decisively by a grounding pound. I mean, I think a chunk of that is just Markham being weakened by the weight cut. So look forward to not seeing Markham going forward. I imagine that this is probably one of his last fights in the UFC. So then we go forward to the live show, the main card, a little bit of drama here. Initially, John Fitch was supposed to fight Tiago Alves. Unfortunately, Tiago Alves had to pull out the last minute due to injury. Brain complications. That's some problem with his brain. Oh, some problem with his brain. Ben Saunders had it a match as well. But he called Dennis Dina White the night before and said, you know what, I don't want to fight my guy. I want to fight Fitch. He's considered the best as the title shot. I'm going to take Fitch on. Now, we don't know if that would have been the title shot if Killer B won, but at least he wanted to. He wanted to take on a very high ranked opponent. And hey, he stepped up. He stepped up. But before that fight Jim Miller versus Mark Botchak and we'll circle back around to that one. Good. So in any case, Jim Miller versus Mark Botchak, this was an entertaining fight. Bocek is the Canadian submission expert Jim Miller is a very good wrestler and striker. And for this particular fight, they switched skill sets. This one was interesting because we had Bocek wrestling for several takedowns in the first round with Miller defending himself off his back. And tried to do jujitsu counters and some issues to counter his submissions. It's like they traded skill sets. And it was really entertaining. Bocek got two big takedowns in the first round. Miller almost caught him in a guillotine in a defense of one of them. And in that guillotine landed a really, really bad cut on Bocek's forehead. Bocek is a bleeder. He was red for the rest of the fight, more so than usual. At the end of the third round, Miller caught a komura on Bocek, held him in it for a good 15 seconds. Bocek is obviously Brazilian jujitsu master himself, so he managed to survive this and got out of it. But in the second round, Bocek looked very, very dominating with some good ground and pound and some good takedowns. So I called the fight 29-28, four Miller. The judges agreed with me and gave the win to Miller. There was some booing in our crowd because Bocek's a Canadian guy but this is a fair call. And I really like the way that he was defending himself when Bocek had his back. He spent a good minute and a half defending chokes, defending strikes, defending, sorry second round. And yeah, it was excellent. Being as accomplished a wrestler as he is, I mean, he's going to defend quite well. Well, in the second round, Bocek managed to take the fight to the ground with his takedowns, got on his back and almost locked in a rear naked choke, had a complete body vice on, Miller looked to be having issues getting air, he looked to be going red, his right arm was trapped. But with his left arm, he managed to fend off the rear naked choke and strikes for good two minutes. Yeah, it was really impressive. It was very good defensive wrestling. So Miller definitely picks up an impressive win, going forward, looking forward to seeing more of him. He is a lightweight and he is, I think in my opinion, a contender at this point. Bocek did look bad in this loss. So I would imagine that he's probably going to give him a shot as well. They're not going to cut him. He's had some wins fairly recently in that, but as much talent as he has, there's no reason to cut him. And just for one loss, I mean, he'll definitely be back. So we go forward back to Ben Saunders and John Fitch. So as we said, Saunders stepped up to take this fight on one day notice. He is a striker with a lot of Muay Thai skills. And he was expecting to fight Jake Allenberger, who is another striker. So he probably did not train his counter wrestling as well as he should have. A fight that last week, we fully expected Saunders to win, definitely, to be over. And then John Fitch is known as one of the best wrestlers in the Walter Wade division. And one of the best counter wrestlers in the world, yep, absolutely. So when a wrestler fights a striker, you usually expect a striker to get mauled. A Muay Thai striker at that. And sure enough, Ben Saunders tried to clinch to land his knees, did not work out for him Fitch, pulled the fight to the ground, and mauled him, continued to maul him for the next 15 minutes. This was not a particularly entertaining fight, Saunders got clubbed. Fitch wrestled a John Fitch fight. Yeah, basically. I mean, yeah, his fights are a little bit, a little bit dry, but I still like watching him work. You know, it's not like Charles Son and Muay Thai hate everything he does. Fitch is he breaks guys down. Yeah, he breaks guys down. He broke Ben Saunders down. Oh, it's fully skilled. It's just not always exciting. It's not always exciting, but with that being said, you know, that's that's a style and it's a defensive style that works. It's offensive as well. He landed a lot of shots from the top. Saunders, I love your Muay Thai. I think your greatest standing knees are great. I love watching you knock people out with him, but he's not the right type of guy to fight Fitch. Don't take on the best wrestler in the division on one day's notice. Yeah. You are insane. This was a foolish, foolish decision from you. Doesn't make you look too bad because Fitch is such a high rate guy, but I say he had nothing to lose. I don't agree with the foolish decision. We know Rallenberger or a decision with John Fitch and plus he gets he gets cool points for for for trying, you know, I guess on the map. Yeah, I think it's I think it was a fine decision. He had no chance of winning that fight, though. Yeah. Well, I mean, unfortunately, getting cool points for a fight where you look like you have no chance of beating a guy who has no chance of beating GSP. But here's the thing that I mean, Dana and these guys, I mean, they like guys who want to step off. They like cool points. Cool points mean a lot with Dana. That's it. And you know what? I don't think he lost. I think that he made the right decision with winning the fight. I mean, Dan Hardy got this GSP match based on cool points, really, like when it all comes down to it. It's true. These are good. These are guys who are willing to step out. So going forward, we have the lightweight Kurt Pellegrino versus Fabrizio Comoas. Now this one was originally undercard, but because Saunders and Ellenberger was merged with Fitch and Elves into Saunders and Fitch, Pellegrino and Comoas got the bump up to the main card. A little bit of an unusual decision that they went on so late, but Pellegrino is a hometown boy fighting before the New Jersey crowd. And the fight was good. Fans were really into him. There was a great fight. Comoas showed some incredible Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, achieved a lot of backlocks. Pellegrino fought out of them and showed a lot of elusiveness, got out of a rear naked choke like crazy, and then irony of ironies in the second round he managed to achieve his own renegade choke, choked Fabrizio out. This one won submission of the night. And did some jumping jacks afterwards. Pellegrino was very, very excited. The crowd was very responsive. Pellegrino with a win impressive. So Pellegrino, not quite on the contender level yet, but he is an up-and-comer. Fabrizio looked good. I won't mind seeing more of him, but loss is a loss, so I mean. Especially at that level. I mean, he did look fine, but he's going to have to do some work to get back. I mean, you lose at a level where you're not even in the back. Losing to curb Pellegrino is, you know, that's trouble. It's just a hard loss. It was in a tangent of fight, and it was on the main card, so I don't think he's fired. No, no, no, no. It is a loss. Yeah, Pellegrino looked good, but there are a lot of guys higher than the division, but a win on a big pay-per-view card that a lot of people are going to be seeing. Hey, it's been good for the career. Yep. So then we go forward to Frank Amir versus Shane Carwin. Now, we had initially thought that Carwin was going to win this fight. All three of us called that. With that being said, we mentioned that Frank Amir has really, really bulked up. Now, during the weigh-ins, people noticed that Frank Amir has bulked up even more since his fight with Cechongo. He went from being 235 to about 250. This fight, he came in at 270 and had to cut weight for the first time in his career to make the 265 cap on heavyweight. He came in looking huge. He came in looking ripped, he looked very, very powerful, and has a little bit worried for Shane Carwin. In addition, all the pro picks on this one for all the other fighters and trainers of the 14 picks, 13 called Amir, one called Carwin. That surprises me. That really does. I mean, you could see, yes, Amir's big and he's gotten a lot bigger, but even when they were standing in the middle of the ring, Carwin still looked bigger. Well, Carwin still looked bigger because he's 65, but with that being said, you have to figure, Carwin has not fought in a year because of the lesser drama. He's just coming off his knee surgery and he looked a lot quite in his best shape because he hasn't been able to do the road work that he normally does. And Carwin's destroyed 11 guys, but I mean 11 guys that we probably can't name most of them. Yeah. Other than Gabriel Gonzalez. Harder than Gabriel Gonzalez. So with that being said, you know, all the pros were figuring it was Amir. Carwin came out, wrestled with Amir a little bit, managed to push him against the fence, landed an alternate between giving him shots to the face and knees to the leg. Frank Amir's leg is taped. It looks like he's a little bit injured from training. The referee stood him back up. Carwin managed to pull it off again with a couple more knees. And then then Carwin kind of looked up at Amir and was like, why am I really even toying with you? Reared back, gave him a left hand shot to the jaw, followed by five left uppercuts. Frank Amir went jelly leg, dropped. Yeah. Carwin continued to feed him. Frank Amir rolled onto his face to protect himself from the damage he's taking. Carwin jumped on his back, pounded him. The ref gave Karwin or gave Amir every chance to defend himself. Yeah. Amir couldn't even raise his hands. Carwin annihilated him one round, four minutes. Amir looked hopeless. You can look at him. Amir took far more damage than he needed to take at the end. I love watching Carwin punch. I just, it's art. It's absolute art. He just turns in and he's got no space, but he's still just, just massacres. Yeah. And he's got such heavy hands. It's like trucks hitting you over and over and over again. He's an incredible Hulk. He is totally. He has such long arms. It's just a long torso that even with no space, he just twists back and torques his fist into you. It's great. And they just come. It's a rapid succession. Those little, those little, little uppercuts didn't have all that much distance on them and they just, they just mastered him. Amir, Amir went completely limp. Like he looked like he was almost dead. I think Amir worked way too much on bulking up. The fact that his knee was, was taped, that he had a brace on. He was, he did too much deadlifting, man, too much deadlifting, too many weights, too much bulking up. You know, he didn't look good. I don't think Amir looked good in that match. He didn't look good because Carwin decimated him and Amir looked like he had no prayer whatsoever. Yeah. And he's pointing this match. But with that being said, another big mistake of Amir, and I've said this about Amir before, probably will end up saying it again, he is arrogant. Yeah. He looked past Carwin saying, this is what I got to do to fight Brock Lesnar. Well, you weren't fighting Brock Lesnar. You're fading Shane Carwin. You were not prepared to deal with the wrestling and the striking that Shane Carwin does. You expect me to be taken down and fighting on your back. Yeah. Unfortunately, Carwin, unlike Brock Lesnar, is a knockout fighter and he knocked you out. Frank Amir got knocked out, clogged like a seal. This was ridiculous. He, he's. There was no point to bulk up to be as big as Shane Carwin. Amir was going to win this fight by technique, not power. Yep. He needed to do what he does when he wins. He needed to just focus, sit there and center himself like he did when he fought Brock Lesnar the first time. He needs to channel that and work on what he does best and stop trying to play everybody else's game and play his own. This whole like him knocking out no Garro was the worst thing he could have done for his career because it made him think that he's this amazing striker. Plus when he did it's a congo, it really sunk into him. Yeah, I know that was, yeah, that was even worse, but congo is overrated, I think, to be honest. Well, with that being said, you know, getting, getting a knockout punch over congo, that is an impressive feat. Getting a knockout punch over Shane Carwin is one step short of a miracle. Yeah. And he didn't even come close to that. Carwin, he didn't even land a punch on Carwin. Carwin clubbed him. Yeah. As I said, Amir had gotten no offense in. He threw one jab, Carwin countered him, you know, we got a little bit excited because it looked like Amir is trying to rally a flurry and Carwin just countered him through him up against the cage and just wailed on him. So I mean, you know, Amir tried to make himself a monster to take on the biggest monsters in the division. Before this match, Carwin said, hey, Frank's been training the weights for one year to get big. I've been training the weights for 20 years since I was 13 years old and wrestling in high school and becoming a national champion. So 20 years, this doesn't match up to one year. You can't become a monster overnight, and lifting weights is just like any other sport or athletic competition. You have to do it right and practice makes perfect. You have to lift weights the right way or else, I mean, I think Amir did hurt himself with that knee. I really do. You're spent that entire count zone special bragging about how much he's lifting. Check out all the check out the numbers on these weights. Yeah. Exactly. Well, he also talked about how he dreams about Lesnar and has nightmares and wants payback on Lesnar. And as I said, you can want the championship, you can have that in your sights. You can't look past Shane Carwin because you knew because you knew it has Lesnar in their sights now. Shane Carwin. Amir has to hope that he can rally together a couple of wins to get a match with one of those guys down the line from the title. He's based out for now. I think next up for Amir should be junior. I would think junior would be a good pick. As I said, I think Minotaro would also be an okay pick, but yeah, I would honestly, that's actually I would not mind seeing them rematch because Minotaro was not at his best that the last time they thought I would like this. I actually would like to see that and I do think that Minotaro is still slightly ahead of junior. I mean, I would say that division goes, you know, Brock Kane or Brock Carwin Kane, Minotaro or certain mirror Minotaro and then junior. Yeah, no, no, that makes sense. I didn't even consider that. I think that mirror versus a new girl could be a very good rematch. And I mean, certainly I'd like to see them when Minotaro was healthy to see how Amir does with that striking. So Carwin won this match. As I said, he becomes the interim heavyweight championship. They strapped the belt on his waist, Brock Lesnar came in and said, "Hey, you've got the show belt. That's a fake belt. I'm the real champion. We'll see what happens when you face me." You didn't expect anything last from Brock. Very, very pro wrestling, very, very, very Brock. This fight is going to draw like crazy big, not as much as Mirror Lesnar would have, but still pretty huge. Well, with that being said, he was on that card too though. After Carwin decimated Mirror, the crowd went wild. They cheered him vociferously. They loved him when Brock came in and brought the crowd booed him. This is Heroes versus Villain. Oh yeah. He's a classy, classy guy and he's a great fighter. Lesnar is a clown shoe a lot of times. He acts like a jerk. Part of that is his persona, but he's not a popular guy unless MMA fans. And that's just the way he likes it. And with that being said, Lesnar is a really, really powerful wrestler with some heavy hands. Carwin is an even more powerful wrestler with even heavier hands, who's bigger and heavier. I think if anyone's going to stop Lesnar, Carwin's a guy. I think Carwin knocks him out. He's definitely got a shot. I'm going to have to, I think I'd call Lesnar. I think I'm going to call Lesnar because Lesnar, I don't think that, I think that Carwin is big, but Lesnar, he's a little bit shorter, but he is an absolute monster. And the guy is huge. He cuts from, what, 300 pounds? He's not going to throw Carwin around, but this is going to be a very, very close fight and I think Lesnar could do it. I really do. Well, it looks like that's going to be happening hopefully in July. Yeah. I can't wait. Look forward to hearing us cover that in the future, but for now, we're going forward to the UFC welterweight title belt. This is George St. Pierre versus Dan Hardy for the welterweight championship of the world. Now, I think last week, we all call George St. Pierre. Dan Hardy was in theory being trained by Matsura. Matsura also called George St. Pierre. So most people thought that Dan Hardy didn't have much of a chance. Both of my esteemed colleagues here and co-host thought that G.R. George St. Pierre would win by submission. I felt that he'd go for the decision as he likes to do against strikers, which is to say take him down and smothering him. I was wrong. George St. Pierre did go for submission, so this was whether this was a strategy going to the fight. Look, Dan Hardy down at Will, I think this was 11 takedowns in this fight. Whenever Dan Hardy got this feed. Dr. George went to work. This is surgery. Yeah. Just Dan Hardy couldn't get on his feet at all. Every time he goes out taking his round, George St. Pierre either clogged him or looked to develop submissions, including a beautiful armbar in the first round that went on for about 30 seconds before the bell rang and GSP just kind of let him go. He almost developed a rear naked choke in the second round. In the third round, he from the top position, postured up and landed an incredible hard shot to Hardy's eye. You could see for the rest of the match that the left eye was bothering Hardy. Hardy just kept matching his eye, touching his eye. When you're on the ground with GSP on top of you, you can't free up a hand to keep touching your eye. There was a visible mouse under his eye, and it got more pronounced as the fight went on. There was a lot of eye swelling. He was having issues seeing it as I do. In the fourth round, GSP managed to lock into Camora. This one was ridiculous. Hardy's arm was twisted so back, I think it was one step away from breaking. I thought he was going to break his arm really up. He didn't tap and he did not break his arm, and GSP blotted him out. I think that, yeah, I mean let him out is the term that I would use as well, and it's apropos because I really do think GSP let him out. I don't think GSP wanted to break his arm. I think GSP is such a respectful fighter and I mean GSP says, you know, when I go in there, I go in to kill just like every other UFC fighter, but I think that he had so much respect for what Dan Hardy was doing, and he wasn't as worried about losing. So he wasn't thinking, he think I'm going to win this fight by a decision. I don't think he wanted to break the arm. He just wanted to make Hardy tap. Hardy didn't tap. He was like, all right, you know what, I'm not going to break his arm. He knew that he could just beat him another way, or the decision was his. He knew he didn't need to do that to win. Exactly. And with that being said, it was pretty obvious from the arm bar and from the comor that if you really wanted to snap that arm, he could have. Yep. And he just kind of said, you know what, Dan's showing a lot of heart and I'm not going to. One thing that I thought was kind of funny, in the third round before the takedowns and a chunk of the fourth round, a lot of people speculated that Dan Hardy's best shot was in his stand-up. All throughout the stand-up of this fight, Hardy did not manage to land a single punch on GSP, not one, including not even a jab. GSP landed shots on him at will, including a couple of low kicks, a couple of punches, and a one-tee combination that looked stung him. So I mean, Hardy just got beaten solidly throughout this match, didn't look at any point to have any chance of a prayer. However, he did go the distance, GSP wins by decision, unanimous decision, two judges call it, or three judges call it, 50, 43, 50, 44, and 50, 45. So it's not a question of, did Hardy lose? It's just a question of how badly. Yeah. How many 10-8s were there? So one judge said that Hardy showed a lot of heart and gave him a 45. Yeah. The other two judges both saw at least one eight round. It was a massacre. It was really. GSP opened up the toolbox and used everything in there. He really did. It was art. Absolutely wonderful to see a really great fight. And yeah, I still like Dan Hardy. I've always liked Dan Hardy. He's a great character, but he's not anywhere close to GSP. Well, nobody is. Really, nobody in that weight class is. It's not even funny. All Dan Hardy's really taking from this is one, he lasted the five rounds and he didn't tap, and GSP gave him some props at the end. Yeah, really. That's it. He's got to go back down. He's got to go back down the division. He was not ready for GSP. Nobody knows what. No, he wasn't. Especially not him. Yeah. When you think back and everyone's talking about, "Oh, you've just got to punch your chance." Really. In hindsight. GSP's one of the best counter strikers in the UFC. The guy is quick and he moves his head. The way he moves his head. The way he counter strikes. I mean, nobody even had the punches chance, cliche, doesn't really apply to GSP. Any more. The punches chance applies to pretty much anyone, but the thing with the punches chance is this. GSP got caught and he learned from it, which means everyone else has less of a punches chance of knocking them out. And with that being said, to have a punches chance, you got to punch. Yeah. And Hardy did not. Every punch that Hardy threw GSP, every time he reared back to throw punches, GSP just took the fight to the ground. You also need to have knockout power against skilled fighters. I mean, Hardy's got knockout power. But knocking at Rory Markham, I mean, he couldn't knock out Marcus Davis, he couldn't knock out Mike Swick. What makes him think he's going to knock out GSP? Just really. He was a tough guy. He could take a punch, but there was no way he was ever going to stop GSP in a stand-up battle and anything. What do you guys think would be next for Hardy? It's hard to tell at this point, but I would imagine that it might well be daily or possibly polytiago, just because they're going to be looking for dance parties and I would imagine that Fitch or the other one of those two will have GSP going forward. So with that being said, at the end of this fight, GSP, very classy, complimented Hardy so that he respected his heart and his courage. He also apologized profusely to his fans. He said that he was very disappointed in the fight. He said he wanted to win by the submission and he was displeased with himself that he wasn't more dominating. So apparently for GSP, a loss is not winning the way that his coaches have told him to win before the fight and just winning in a devastating decision. So GSP is next fight. He's probably going to kill the guy in the ring. Now, he's not not only is he this dominant, but he's also fired up because he's disappointed. I don't really want to see it because I like the idea of fighters staying in their division and defending their titles until they are beaten, but it's looking more and more likely like he's got to go to middleweight GSP is going to go up to middleweight and vacate the welterweight title. I'd hate to see it, but I think it's going to happen. Well, one thing for GSP, he apparently gained about 10 pounds of lean muscle and he's walking around at 195 at this point. So he mentioned that this was one of the harder cuts he's had to do because normally he cuts from 185. No, he cut from 195. With BJ Pence saying that he wants to move up to welterweight, GSP saying that he wants to move up to middleweight, and Anderson Seyal-Lusova saying that he wants to move up to 205. It looks like we might actually see an organic shift where all the champions move up one weight category with the exception of Brock. Hey, and you know what? It actually sort of makes sense because these are guys who, they've dominated their division for long and a half. Now they can move up and now they can be some of the few fighters who have potentially ever held two titles in two different weight classes and that's received just as well. It is very much so. I mean, that's the thing is GSP is no longer really concerned with being a champion. He's concerned with his legacy. I think that they mentioned in five years he's only been defeated once by that lucky shot by Sarah. He wants to fight Anderson Seyal-Lusova. He wants to see who the best pound for pound fighter in the world really is and he thinks it's him. And honestly, I think it might be him too because Seyal-Lus struggled with wrestlers before. So if anyone's got shots against taking down the spider, it's probably Rush. That looks like there might be some dream champion matches coming up. Yeah. You can do B.J. versus GSP again, GSP versus Anderson Silva versus Liodo. I mean, there's- Well, they won't fight. Oh, they won't. Yes, sorry. Against- However, you know, aside from Anderson and Liodo, you could do Anderson versus Shogun. That's right. You could do GSP versus- And I mean, I think Shogun is going to be the champion. I think Shogun is going to be the champ soon. I think he's going to take out Liodo. I'll find out in a minute. Yep. And I mean, even in one, in 185, there's a bunch of guys that are great fighters. The GSP has not fought before, that I'd love to see him against. I mentioned one like Silva. I think that fight would be an incredibly fun fight to watch. Vidor. Vidor Belfort, isn't that division? I would really like to see Vidor striking against GSP. Mm-hmm. And Markort? Markort would be a great fight. They'll fight, I don't think. Oh, yeah. Right, yeah. But the one that I think would be really, really interesting, I'd love to see him against Chalconan to see how he handles another great wrestler, which I think Greg would love to see. He all to make good versus evil battle. And I would also love to see him versus Damian Maya, who's a great ground submission expert, so. I don't think Maya would be a match for him. He's two of those firsts around me. It'd be an interesting fight. Interesting, but I think he'd dominate Maya. But yeah, I'd have a real hard time watching GSP Sunan, because I love GSP so much, and I can't stand Chalconan, so this would be him. That would be a right. If Chalconan won, I would like be in a bad mood for four years. It would be just, it would be ridiculous. So with that being said, that is the Saturday night at the fight, UFC 111, thank you for tuning in and joining us. Oh, and you'll be able to, we'll have a new show on Wednesday, which we'll be covering, be previewing the fight night. We'll be doing fight night, we'll be going over the tough, the ultimate fighter, which is coming up, and we'll also be talking about some of the follow and consequences of UFC 111 with. Not to lose, et cetera. Got to fight the night and whatnot, which we don't know yet, but we will by then. So thank you for tuning in and watching us. Remember to check us out on iTunes or at our webpage. That is www.thehammer.com, hammer with an A. We also have a Facebook group up, so check us out. Hammer with two A's. Hammer with two A's. H-A-N-A-R. Goodbye. Have a good week.