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View Full Version : Johny Hendricks: The Sport Of MMA Has Changed



Kemo
07-03-2018, 09:07 PM
Former UFC welterweight champion Johny Hendricks has retired from the sport of mixed martial arts.

“Bigg Rigg” leaves the sport on a two-fight losing streak. Hendricks might have been able to get himself out of the hole he was in and get back to title contention. That’s easier said than done nowadays in the UFC.

Back when Hendricks was considered one of the elite fighters at 170 pounds, a few consecutive victories likely would’ve been enough to earn you a title opportunity. Instead, in today’s UFC you have to be able to talk trash as well, and that’s something Hendricks refuses to take part in.

He had this to say about it on Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show:

“Sometimes it’s not even about how good a fighter you are, it’s about how good you learn to run your mouth. I’m just a southern kid that likes to do something, That’s really the gist of it,” Hendricks said.

“Then you start throwing in this guy who is doing this, that guy who is doing this, and you know what, for me, it’s not the same sport I wanted to be involved with five or six years ago. It’s changing. I knew it would one day but I would’ve hoped it would be longer than that.

“Now that it has evolved into what it is, there are some people that are very good at what they do, run their mouth, and I can’t take nothing away from them because that’s the easiest part. So I ask myself, if I wanted to get back to where I was before, could I have done it without running my mouth?”

Upon making the decision to retire, Hendricks admits that his contract with the UFC was expired but he opted not to seek a renewal or sign elsewhere:

“Realistically, I’m over it. I’m over the sport. I did my part and I can say I’m out of the MMA world and I don’t have to worry about something else happening,” Hendricks said.

“I’ve been thinking about it, should I give it another shot, should I not? And with that big question being taken away now I felt a lot of relief and I’m feeling really good about my decision.

“I still get to wake up, I train once a day, I’m still training wrestling, I’m still working out with guys. The only difference is, I don’t have somebody sitting here saying, ‘Oh, you’re walking around at 208 right now, you’re fat, you need to lose weight.’”

Hendricks also took issue with the judging in MMA. He claims to have more controversial losses on his record as opposed to good wins due to the lack of experience of those judging the fights:

“You’re looking at these judges, what do they want?” Hendricks explained. “Now that I am retired, I can say whatever I want, and that’s the beauty of it. What are these refs looking for? Why is it not regulated? In Nevada, why do we have boxing judges doing MMA? They don’t understand jiu-jitsu and why are they in the same arena? We have technology nowadays.

”If I’m sitting here and I’m fighting somebody, and I hit him hard and the crowd goes ‘oh’ but it really wasn’t that hard of a hit, the judges are going to count that as something better.

“I don’t know how many fights I have been to where I’ve sat behind the judge. They are back here texting and not even looking at the fight. Now that I am retired I don’t have to worry about a judge judging my fight the wrong way because he’s pissed off that I called him out.”