After fifth "fight night" bonus, Tyson Griffin focused on future, not past
Tyson Griffin's (13-2 MMA, 6-2 UFC) UFC fight career is beginning to be defined by one phrase: "Fight of the Night."
In his latest effort at "UFC Fight Night 18: Condit vs. Kampmann," the lightweight standout earned an unprecedented fifth "Fight of the Night" award in a bout defined by a 30-second stretch of the first round that saw him withstand a brutal-looking leg compression applied by opponent Rafael Dos Anjos (11-4 MMA, 0-2 UFC).
"I think they are trying to make me earn all of these bonuses," Griffin joked while a recent in-studio guest of MMAjunkie.com Radio (www.mmajunkie.com/radio).
The Xtreme Couture fighter covered a variety of topics, including the results of his post-fight MRI, his thoughts on the WEC's Urijah Faber, and how he was able to escape Dos Anjos' submission attempt during an in-depth, two-hour interview.
Just after the three-minute mark of the opening round of his UFC Fight Night 18 bout, the difference between a potential submission loss to Don Anjos and later earning another "Fight of the Night" victory became a matter of inches to Griffin.
And heart.
"I was able to just slide [my leg] a little bit out, so he only had a hold of my calf," Griffin said. "At that point, it's just pain, and the (other) guy is going to literally burn out.
"He's not going to be able to squeeze harder; his squeeze is going to get weaker and weaker like it did, and he finally decided to give up on it."
While Griffin seemed amazingly nonchalant about a submission that nearly caused serious injury, the lightweight did admit he was close to being in serious trouble.
"If he had his shin a little deeper in my calf, right behind my knee, then that would have been the knee-blowing-out feeling," Griffin said. "(It felt) like a steel bar in my calf, so that's why when I got up I had that stiff leg for a few minutes."
After surviving the submission attempt, Griffin began to settle into his rhythm and win rounds with his stand-up - a stylistic choice he made due to Dos Anjos' submission prowess. The well-rounded fighter explained that he tried to take the fight to where he felt his opponent was weakest.
"It comes down to the style of fight, and who my opponent is," Griffin said. "Plus, I didn't want to necessarily get twisted up again."
Despite the unusual pretzel that his leg was contorted into, Griffin is optimistic about his health.
"I just got some MRI results and I do have some partial tears, but nothing big," Griffin said. "I am able to walk fine, I didn't limp out or anything like that.
"My calf is what got crushed the most, I had a pretty stiff calf for at least a day or two."
Griffin's time in the UFC has bee spent facing some of the sport's best lightweights. But as the 24-year-old looks forward, it is a voice from his past that has started to surface in recent months.
Griffin owns a 2005 win over former WEC champ Urijah Faber (22-2). With "The California Kid" recently suggesting he's like to move up and down in weight classes, Griffin speculated Faber's camp may eye a potential rematch more for money than for vindication.
"I don't see a reason for us to fight," Griffin said. "I think his reason may be to make a big payday.
"Talk is cheap with Urijah. He's been saying a lot of things since the first day I beat him and he hasn't done any of them. I think he should be a little more worried about (current featherweight champ and WEC 41 opponent) Mike Brown than me right now."
While a potential rematch with Faber could lie in the distance, for now the five-time "Fight of the Night" winner has his sight sets solely on improving his position in the crowded UFC lightweight title picture.
And another bonus check probably wouldn't hurt, either.
For more with Tyson Griffin, including his thoughts on a potential rematch with Sean Sherk, whether he would consider a fight with any of his Xtreme Couture training partners, how he's spent his five "Fight of the Night" bonuses and more, download Tuesday's episode of MMAjunkie.com Radio.
Tyson Griffin's (13-2 MMA, 6-2 UFC) UFC fight career is beginning to be defined by one phrase: "Fight of the Night."
In his latest effort at "UFC Fight Night 18: Condit vs. Kampmann," the lightweight standout earned an unprecedented fifth "Fight of the Night" award in a bout defined by a 30-second stretch of the first round that saw him withstand a brutal-looking leg compression applied by opponent Rafael Dos Anjos (11-4 MMA, 0-2 UFC).
"I think they are trying to make me earn all of these bonuses," Griffin joked while a recent in-studio guest of MMAjunkie.com Radio (www.mmajunkie.com/radio).
The Xtreme Couture fighter covered a variety of topics, including the results of his post-fight MRI, his thoughts on the WEC's Urijah Faber, and how he was able to escape Dos Anjos' submission attempt during an in-depth, two-hour interview.
Just after the three-minute mark of the opening round of his UFC Fight Night 18 bout, the difference between a potential submission loss to Don Anjos and later earning another "Fight of the Night" victory became a matter of inches to Griffin.
And heart.
"I was able to just slide [my leg] a little bit out, so he only had a hold of my calf," Griffin said. "At that point, it's just pain, and the (other) guy is going to literally burn out.
"He's not going to be able to squeeze harder; his squeeze is going to get weaker and weaker like it did, and he finally decided to give up on it."
While Griffin seemed amazingly nonchalant about a submission that nearly caused serious injury, the lightweight did admit he was close to being in serious trouble.
"If he had his shin a little deeper in my calf, right behind my knee, then that would have been the knee-blowing-out feeling," Griffin said. "(It felt) like a steel bar in my calf, so that's why when I got up I had that stiff leg for a few minutes."
After surviving the submission attempt, Griffin began to settle into his rhythm and win rounds with his stand-up - a stylistic choice he made due to Dos Anjos' submission prowess. The well-rounded fighter explained that he tried to take the fight to where he felt his opponent was weakest.
"It comes down to the style of fight, and who my opponent is," Griffin said. "Plus, I didn't want to necessarily get twisted up again."
Despite the unusual pretzel that his leg was contorted into, Griffin is optimistic about his health.
"I just got some MRI results and I do have some partial tears, but nothing big," Griffin said. "I am able to walk fine, I didn't limp out or anything like that.
"My calf is what got crushed the most, I had a pretty stiff calf for at least a day or two."
Griffin's time in the UFC has bee spent facing some of the sport's best lightweights. But as the 24-year-old looks forward, it is a voice from his past that has started to surface in recent months.
Griffin owns a 2005 win over former WEC champ Urijah Faber (22-2). With "The California Kid" recently suggesting he's like to move up and down in weight classes, Griffin speculated Faber's camp may eye a potential rematch more for money than for vindication.
"I don't see a reason for us to fight," Griffin said. "I think his reason may be to make a big payday.
"Talk is cheap with Urijah. He's been saying a lot of things since the first day I beat him and he hasn't done any of them. I think he should be a little more worried about (current featherweight champ and WEC 41 opponent) Mike Brown than me right now."
While a potential rematch with Faber could lie in the distance, for now the five-time "Fight of the Night" winner has his sight sets solely on improving his position in the crowded UFC lightweight title picture.
And another bonus check probably wouldn't hurt, either.
For more with Tyson Griffin, including his thoughts on a potential rematch with Sean Sherk, whether he would consider a fight with any of his Xtreme Couture training partners, how he's spent his five "Fight of the Night" bonuses and more, download Tuesday's episode of MMAjunkie.com Radio.