Gregory Rodrigues Felt ‘Dizzy’ and ‘Kind of Blind’ After Knee from Chidi Njokuani
Gregory Rodrigues had to dig deep to earn victory at UFC Fight Night 210.
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“I know I was dizzy,” he said at Saturday’s post-fight press conference. “I was like, ‘Man what happened?’ The blood starting coming down. i was kind of blind, trying to figure out [what I was going to do] … After that cut, everybody is gonna be confident to try to finish the fight. Then I started to throw my hands to show him I’m still there.”
Rodrigues did exactly that. His rally began in the second half of
Round 1, as he hurt and dropped the Bellator veteran. That set the
stage for a relatively quick finish in the second frame, when he
tripped Njokuani to the canvas and unloaded with ground strikes for
a stoppage at the 1:27 mark of the period. Rodrigues said he could
feel Njokuani fading early in Round 2.
“When I finished the first round I came back to my corner. I was worried about the cut…When the second round started, he tried to pressure me. I said, I need to pressure him more,” Rodrigues said. “In one part of the fight, I felt he [was] tired. His breath was different … When I grabbed him in the clinch for the takedown, I felt his body a little bit weak. Then I took him down and said, now I’m gonna finish the fight. It was a big war. I love that fight.”
Rodrigues needed a quick finish because if the cut had gotten any worse, the cageside doctor might have waved off the contest. He joked at the presser that he now has “like three eyebrows” while praising his opponent for a bout that received “Fight of the Night” honors.
“Chidi is a warrior. He’s a great fighter,” Rodrigues said. “He showed that to me inside the Octagon. A win against a guy like that makes me proud of myself. I want to say thank you to Chidi for the fight, we got the bonus, we deserve that.”
In five UFC appearances, Rodrigues has quickly established a reputation as an all-action fighter. He plans on delivering each time he steps into the Octagon.
“I can say one thing. Always when I’m inside the Octagon, I’m there 100 percent and I give everything I have,” he said. “I leave everything there. Always expect the best from me.”
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