Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - Review of MMA 59 with Kamaru Usman
Episode Date: March 22, 2019Kamaru is the new UFC Welterweight champion after beating Tyrone Woodley in an epic 5 round battle. Usman displays a lot of character in his conversation with Rogan and is also a big fan of the podcas...t which is cool. Great conversation between these guys so check it out. Enjoy my review folks! Please email me with any suggestions and questions for future Reviews: Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com
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Hello there and welcome to another episode of the JRE review.
How the fuck are you guys?
Just watch the John Wick 3 trailer that just came out damn that movie looks sweet.
If you guys were a fan of any of the John Wick's or of the Matrix, I think they're just
combining it all now.
He's like the old man version of Neo kicking ass.
They even have Lawrence Fishburnt in it, like Morpheus is back.
Why the hell not? Fuck it, throw Trinity in.
The puck has today as I digress.
MMA show 59. Camaro Usman. Camaro is the new
Mid-Aweight champ or
No, well-to-weight champ. Yeah, he's what GSPs fight way was. He just beat Tyrone
Woodley and that UFC was pretty epic. Some controversies, that was the Ben Astron squashing
Robert Lawler's head one, but a great fight by Usman, kicked a lot of ass and now he's on
Rogan to talk about, you know, what the fuck is up? He's a cool guy, so let's start the review.
Welcome to the Joe Rogan Experience Review! Where each week I review every single episode of the Joe Rogan experience. One more do you want?
First things first we have to talk about the Tyrone Woodley Mum video with Usman.
If you're not familiar with this it was a tearjerker people.
It really was.
It's a little Instagram clip, but I think it was Instagram, that's where I saw it.
But, basically Usman is finished fighting, they're bringing him off, you know, out of the arena, ring,
whatever, octagon.
And Tyrone Woodley's mom is there.
Now remember, Tyrone Woodley's mom just watched his son get destroyed for five rounds,
crushed, just battered, and Woodley's been massively
dominant as the champion, but now he's getting destroyed by this Usman guy. Well Tyrone's
mom basically kind of announces, shouts out to Usman something, and basically they embrace and you've got to watch the video. It's so
emotional that Tyrone's mom is such a badass lady and it's a fucking great video.
She's just saying it's okay and and Usman's kind of in tears and she's like don't worry
and you did great this was your night. This wasn't his night and you're the champ now and
beat the champ and just cool shit like really really, to put yourself in that position,
she seems like the best.
She's awesome.
And you know, no wonder Tyrone is the way he is.
No wonder he's been such a great champ.
I mean, when you're raised by somebody like that,
I mean, it's very impressive.
Tyrone, what I liked about him is,
first off, he's in a ton of pain.
He's been like a world champion level wrestler.
For many, many years, he's trained and fought for a long time,
but he's had like five knee surgeries.
He's completely smashed pieces,
what he's talking about on this podcast.
Yet what I really got from it is like,
he can just put all that aside and just fight and just fucking go
He can just turn it on like a switch and it's it's one of those important things anyone to remember because
So much of the time we see these people is invincible like they're just you know
They're fighters that are just they're not built like you are and maybe they're not maybe they are super human in some ways
But they they have all the same emotions. have all the same feelings and pain receptors work
the same way. Like these guys are in agony and whenever you don't want to go train or lift
because something's hurting, yeah, there are times and places for that, but a lot of the time you
can just push yourself right through and this bad motherfucker can do it for sure. I mean, he talks
about how most of the time he walks down the stairs backwards and his daughter laughs at him because of his knee pain.
It's just like he's way more stable doing it that way. Yet when he gets in the ring he just turns
it on and you would never know that he struggles to move around. Never. If you saw somebody walking
down the stairs backwards you'd be like, I could kick that dudes ass.
Trust me, Usman would fuck in, squash you.
It's just crazy.
It really is interesting.
It's cool when he talks about how he first got into fighting.
So he knew John Jones back in the day, he lived with Richard Evans.
He's just been around like these world-class fighters and over time, they just kind of persuaded
him to work in that direction
He's trained with them like as wrestling coaches. He's a wrestling coach on the ultimate fighter and
You know after a while he's like look I don't want to make a zero money
Just doing wrestling. I want to make a bit of cash doing some
N&A
And he gets in there. He's mostly undefeated. He has one loss on his record and that loss was against
Jiu Jitsu guy and after that point
He just trained Jiu Jitsu all the time when he got a G and you know now has his black belt
So I think he was recently given his black belt too. Maybe maybe when he won the belt
But anyway, yeah, he's trained that he added that to his game
As soon as he realized that that was gonna be a problem,
that was, you know, a big part of what was missing
in his game, he just adjusted and started smashing people.
And probably as a wrestler, you know,
I've trained Jiu Jitsu with guys that have come in
and they've been wrestlers, you know,
and even when they don't know Jiu Jitsu,
they know a lot about how the
body works and how to take you down and how to hold position. And they, yeah, they're
pretty nasty, like they're, they were always fucking hard work. I just think that having
Rashad Evans as a mentor, like he lived with Rashad when Rashad was really at his height
when he was the champ and he was traveling everywhere doing, you know, all
the press conferences and hanging out meeting people and that must have been so inspiring.
I mean, really fucking cool to have a guy like Rashad just kind of showing you what's
possible out there. And that was years ago. I mean, when was Rashar champ like?
Man, Roshar must have been champ like 2010, maybe. Was it that long ago?
Eight years?
I don't know.
It seems like a long time ago now that he was the champ.
And it wasn't for all that long.
I don't even know if he defended his belt.
But anyway, he was one of the top fighters
for quite a long time. His battles were rampage
pretty epic. And yeah, he knocked out Chuck Lidell. I mean, Rashad has some incredible fights.
So for Usman to kind of have that mental, be able to throw questions off it. What do you think
of this? How should I do this? How should I orient my career I mean it's it's it's cool stuff and you know oosman has had a
tough time of it tough up bringing a tough life I guess his dad he was saying
something on the podcast I don't remember all of it but he was saying something
about his dad's in jail in Texas kind of got framed or something pretty awful
situation it's like a rough time and it has been and, you know,
his dad worked really hard for the family and blah, blah.
So he's had to deal with some real tough things
that have made him question like where he is,
and what he's doing.
These are the messages that I love
to pull out of these podcasts.
When I'm listening to it, to any good podcast,
that's what I'm listening for.
It's like, okay
How did you fucking do it when it was tough when you didn't want to get up out of bed or do whatever?
How did you get moving? What's the catalyst? You know what's the driver and it's like a lot of times that talk about well
You know when I had kids that was a driver. Well great. I don't know kids a lot of people don't so what are we supposed to do?
You know what what gets them moving?
And it wasn't just about winning with them
and paying the bills.
It was more about proving to himself
that he could do it.
He could set his mind in this direction
and accomplish the impossible through all the adversity.
Like, what, you know, why go through
so many difficult challenging things
just to sit back
and let them overtake you.
It's like, it was almost, it almost sounded like
this was his way of getting some control
over the situation and the difficult times.
Like, become this champion, become the best of the best
of the thing that you are doing, and then you can
force your way out of that,
you know, tough spot. I don't know, maybe I'm reading into it a lot, but I liked his energy
with it. And he was cool, he was chilled, he even had a lot of good stuff to say about
woodley. He wasn't talking shit. I mean, you know, I like that. I like the shit talk
as too, right? Michael Bizvings and the Conomer Greggers, of course, they're fun. The Chale Sirens, like they're great.
But it's also cooler they sit back and admire their adversaries and
recognize that the greatness in them. Because to me, it's almost like
instead of dismissing how bad our somebody is, you're saying, okay, I know
what Woodley is.
I know what kind of person he is, how tough he is.
What can I gain from learning about him and take forward?
There's some shit talking back and forth between Ben, Astron and Usman, which I like.
I think Ben's going to be like the new child summon, just talking shit and starting controversy.
I don't think Ben's a bad guy.
I think that's just Harry Rolls and it's just like a little bit of psychology.
You get inside people's heads, fuck with them a little bit.
That I thought is pretty fun and I like to see how that unfolds.
It will be a great fight between these two because they're such both epic warriors.
But the real question is after
Usman was talking is his body gonna be able to hold up? Like really? That to me was the biggest concern. And in some ways I'm like, why are you the champ now? And immediately you're talking about how you're limping
around and you need operations and you're in a lot of pain all the time. It's a very vulnerable
place to be. It really is. Get a feel for it.
Listen to the podcast and just kind of like take it in.
Like I respect his honesty with it, but I'm almost like, aren't you telling your enemy
like your weaknesses?
I don't know.
I'm not a fighter, but it seemed to me like he wasn't too worried about holding his cards
close.
He just was him anyway.
And maybe it was a bit star-struck kind of that he was on Rogan. But I'm a fan, guys. like he wasn't too worried about holding his cards close, he just was him and maybe
was a bit star struck kind of that he was on Rogan.
But I'm a fan, guys, I'm now a fan of Usman, I think he's a badass dude and yeah, I can't
wait to see what else he gets up to and hopefully he keeps winning and it'd be great to have
him back on.
I like the podcast a lot, it was great.
Anyway, check it out, thanks a lot for listening. See you later.
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