GSP takes on Diaz at UFC 158

By Brad Cooper / Roar Guru

I’m a fan of the UFC’s Diaz brothers, Nate and Nick. Both enter the cage with tip-top cardio and give the fans what they’re paying for with feisty in-fight posturing and a trance-like determination to press forward.

While such attention to preparation shows a deep respect for opponents and fans, it’s a regrettable fact that Nick Diaz has a reputation for being unprofessional beyond the cage.

So much so that even the normally trash-talk averse Georges St Pierre (GSP) has vented his spleen towards the elder Diaz on more than one occasion.

Ahead of his March 16 welterweight decider at UFC 158, St Pierre has labelled Diaz ”the most disrespectful person ever”.

”I’m going to give him a belting he won’t forget” St Pierre predicted in his characteristic Quebec brogue.

This match-up was first slated for UFC 137, but Diaz’ bizarre no-show at a key press conference so enraged UFC president Dana White that he pulled it.

Diaz’ excuse was that he missed several planes, and failed tests for marijuana metabolites after two previous fights (Gomi and BJ Penn) must at least hint at one possible cause of his organisational shortcomings.

While Diaz has never blamed his erratic behaviour on the absence of a biological father growing up, his taciturn grunge demeanour shows the hallmarks of the entrenched social outsider.

There have also been minor promotional no-shows for his current engagement, likely testing White’s patience further.

It’s not hard to imagine a circle of crossed fingers at UFC board meetings these days.

If you like fighters who wear their heart on their sleeve and their experience on their minced brow tissue, nose and ears, then Nick is your man. (Diaz was so prone to brow cuts he had bone surgically shaved from the area to address the problem.)

With his first pro MMA bout at age 18 back in the IFC and his first UFC event a few years later, Diaz is now one of the most experienced fighters on any circuit. Yet when he takes on St Pierre he will be just 31, and the champion 33.

Diaz has beaten some big names including Frank Shamrock, BJ Penn and Takamori Gomi.

When he faced power puncher Paul Daley in a Strikeforce promotion in 2011, many wondered if he had the hands to hurt the heavily built Brit or the chin to withstand his notoriously punishing shots.

But Diaz neutralised Daley with his typical high volume punching for a convincing knock out win.

Though Diaz has lost to GSP’s recent unsuccessful belt challenger, Carlos Condit, few see this as an algebraic clincher.

Against Condit, St Pierre returned impressively from an extended recovery period after ACL surgery to show not a skerrick of ring-rust.

A thorough professional in and out of the ring, St Pierre is rated a more versatile adversary than Diaz. He has no rigid agenda for where a fight should go, while Diaz prefers stand-up despite world class jui-jitsu and sambo skills.

St Pierre has demoralised opponents with jabs (Koscheck, Penn) and mercilessly punished them on the ground (Condit, Penn, Serra).

Diaz’ stand and trade style allowed Condit to craft a dodge-and-weave blitzkrieg of arm and leg strikes for a narrow points decision.

Few would confidently predict if the champion will choose to stand with Diaz or take him down, though he has publicly thanked Benson Henderson for giving him a template. (Henderson comfortably defended his UFC lightweight belt against the younger Diaz, Nate, in December last year.)

While both men have strengths on the ground, few have had the power to get out from beneath St Pierre when he is on top. Georges’ spectacular take-downs alone are often worth the admission fee.

That the bookies already have the affable French-Canadian a favourite is hard to argue with. But it won’t matter to me if Diaz loses.

It’s enough to know he entered the cage to fight, not just to be a contestant. The champion won’t have to go looking for him.

The Crowd Says:

2013-03-11T21:41:09+00:00

MMADoggzofwar

Roar Rookie


how about that press-coference call? the best one for ages! GSP is holding it back, holding it back and then lets loose! hahaha! Diaz knows how to get under GSP's skin

2013-03-05T20:38:16+00:00

Sam Brown

Roar Guru


I tend to agree with you Doggz, GSP doesn't really have that signature moment most champions have, something like Anderson Silva's Belfort front kick or his triangle arm-bar against Sonnen or even a moment like Randy Coulture rocking Tim Sylvia at UFC 68.

2013-03-05T06:49:59+00:00

MMADoggzofwar

Roar Rookie


Not an overly huge fan of GSP or the DIaz brothers for that matter, but this one if the intent with which they are mouthing off to each other is anything to go by, then its going to be a doozy! My opinion is certainly not reflective of what GSP's skillset is because that goes without saying, P4P one of the most complete and talented fighters in MMA history. But for me, he is overly clinical if that can be a "downer" hehehe..maybe because he hs never really been pushed other than the Condit fight (even then he showed he is still head and shoulders above the rest of the WWs) But GSP has never had to show "mongrel" that fight where you back him into a corner and he has to let loose (Hendo and Shogun/Stann and Wanderlei) and thats where we will see the makings of the champ. I hope GSP is genuinely P'doff so he can really throw down!

2013-03-04T15:23:35+00:00

Blendo

Guest


Yep, if GSP is on his game, he can't be beat. Wouldn't be surprised to see it over quickly.

2013-03-03T22:13:54+00:00

Ronnie Liddle

Roar Rookie


+1. GSP game plan: Front leg kick all night.

AUTHOR

2013-03-03T19:19:35+00:00

Brad Cooper

Roar Guru


Thanks Marla for the input. There was no failed test after BJ Penn. But we're both a little out on the Gomi test it seems. The best sources I can find say Diaz tested positive from samples taken before the Gomi fight, not after. The readings were pretty high apparently, so much so that they were judged to have been an advantage to Diaz in terms of pain thresholds. It's always a moot point whether off-the-chart pain tolerance is a great thing. Ignore pain and you're liable to choose a careless tactic. Maybe that explains Diaz' 'devil-may-care forward pressing approach.

2013-03-03T15:03:09+00:00

michael macgregor

Guest


dude nick diaz is gangsta he's the real deal! if gsp wants to get in a slugfest hell get KO'd .diaz has way better boxing and BJJ but stopping the takedown myte be his problem if he can keep it standing and GSP gets hurt its an upset lol

2013-03-03T07:55:53+00:00

Marla

Guest


Diaz tested after CONDIT and GOMI, get your facts straight.

2013-03-03T00:55:05+00:00

nickoldschool

Roar Guru


Hope GSP kicks Nick Diaz as*. Nothing wrong with the two brothers being tough, not wanting to shake hands at the weigh in and so on, but there is just spmething too cocky and disrespectful in Nick that i dont like. Nate is ok and I do like him since his TUF debut. He is just an introvert and that's ok. GSP and Lauzon for me over the two brothers.

2013-03-03T00:41:08+00:00

Sam Brown

Roar Guru


GSP is so well rounded that it feels like Diaz's only chance is to catch him ala Matt Serra and get a TKO. Even though Diaz has a number of submissions and is quite well versed on the ground GSP's wrestling is too dominant and his submission defense too strong. I'm looking forward to the fight but I'm not holding out much hope for Diaz.

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