100% he was so concerned with his health he was probably thinking about quitting, Ik for sure I would’ve thought about it that moment. Would honestly tear up a little thinking I could’ve taken his(if that was me) life.
This is why this is sport and not a pub brawl. These guys dont hate each other, they're athletes. That's why I despise fighters who make it personal, talking about "destroying" they guy, not respecting the tap etc.
I heard an interview with Uriah later in his career where he was talking about one of his issues in fighting was having a lack of a killer instinct and I think a lot of that was rooted from this fight here.
But this is what the saying about a gardener in a war is about... Combat sports are a warriors game... Even Mike Tyson has talked about it... When he fights a monster comes out and he doesn't want to be that guy but in that situation he has to be... He has to be stronger he has to be quicker he has to be more durable... And at the end of the day he has to be ruthless because fighting is ruthless... And not everyone has the temperament to be that way
@@heli0s2003 it's not about not wanting to hurt someone. It's that in combat sports death is a real possibility. And yeah you expect to rough the guy your fighting up. However almost killing your opponent or killing them in the fight... If you aren't mentally prepared for that possibility it will end your career.
Adam, yea probably not....but Uriah stayed a beast. Was he just an all out legend? No, but I'd bet there was never one single opponent that was just jumping with joy to fight him. Knocking someone out in a controlled environment where it's understood that can happen doesn't make the winner "not be the same" in the least bit.
@@ndavis7789he always seemed to be holding back though. For me and a number of others I think that is what we mean. He was ruthless with the skill and that went
From what I saw (his whole career from around this point) and from what training partners have been quoted saying about him, he had a hard time pulling the trigger since. He was known to be the freakiest of freak athletes with immaculate technique and timing who just couldn't take his 'gym form' into the cage. Uriah is a real one. Immense talent, great guy.
And that look from Dana that said "oh fuck, did we just film a guy die?". You can see his mind just racing thinking about what he might have to do in the aftermath of that. Dana is probably the least empathetic dude on the planet. But it's clear he was shook to his core. Not something you see from Dana often.
@@cerebrix least empathetic? we must be thinking of two different people here. I'm going to just assume you're projecting with low vibrationaal thinking.
No. It’s because of his inability to fight the same way he does in practice. He’s not as good as you think. Keep sitting on the couch. This is against a scrub, not elite level talent. You’re the scrub
@@Nobody-xb4zuyes sportsmanship, let the guy be happy fof a couple of seconds after winning the fight fairly, he was clearly worried once the other guy didn't recover correctly, dolt
Look at the guy in the red physical conditioning, he looks like they found a 3 year gym bro to fight a 10 year seasoned vet. He kicked him in the head with near leathal force. Idk if “human response” or “sportsmanship” are the fitting words. Dude in the red has no clue what to expect or how to defend himself.
Man…. You could tell he just felt horrible. He celebrated for a few seconds and then looked over and saw how bad it actually was, and he just immediately stopped, and alls you saw was a look of concern and “omg, please let him be ok!”…. That shows that this man is a TRUE man. He’s dangerous, he can do serious damage to a threat, but he still has a heart and empathy for other ppl, and respect for his opponent too. This just instantly made me a fan of him, because we just need more ppl like this in the world.
@@kingcarnish9477Tired? He knocked him out. You clearly know nothing about combat. He celebrated like a asshole instead of immediately show concern and respect. In combat your life is always on the line and celebrating like you just scored a touchdown is always classless
Nah he just had to put an act on for the cameras. He's still showboating over what he considers a great victory to this day. If he cared he would have paid medical bills, supported the guys family, that sort of thing.
He wasn't worried about his opponent he was worried about going to jail for manslaughter Edit: seems I intentionally triggered everyone and it worked 😭🤣🤣
@@liampurvis Fairly certain that's waived away, but it would depend on the rules of the match and what is deemed a legal hit. It'll definitely be a pause on his career, potentially even the end of it though with all the drama that would unfold.
@@shadowamigo9506 yah no maybe if it was like a submission, but when someone gets legitimately knocked unconscious I don’t think they are gonna be worried about their pride in that moment
@@THE.OMNI.MAN.Yeah your ears are either clogged to no end or your off a perc because you can definitely hear “I’m sorry”. Also if you look at bros mouth thats definitely not what saying crap looks like.
@@ivanlakidubrava never mentioned Dana for a second moron I was talking about Hall. Go watch his fights he’s never thrown that kick since this fight you casual.
@@timothyojukwu9718 what if he dies fighting who is going to look after he's family and if he gets bed ridden who gonna take care of him this is not at all privilege
@@timothyojukwu9718 bro God did not give this human body to do these non sense things life is very short so use this body in doing good things, if Jesus was thier in today's time then do u think he would have allowed this,absolutely not and danger is in every step of the life but we r wise to choose what to do n wat not to and this fighting n all is bullshit totally rubbish and unwanted just show casing strength and people enjoying it we r human beings not wild animals to do all this thats why God kept called us human beings and gave us brain to think and did not gave brain to animals .
@@FartInYourFace234great actors? this isnt a skit man. this fight ruined Uriah Hall’s extremely promising career and obviously sent Cella’s down the hole as well. Hall could’ve been one of the scariest middleweights weve ever seen, but he never wanted to hit anybody with his full power after this fight. became a complete head case and went on to average an aggressively mediocre career
@@mwas_0 if two guys want to beat the crap out of each other why should anyone care their not forced and they know the risks. The men that join MMA obviously has a violent and brutal side to them why not let them Chanel it through sport on other brutal men, it’s much better than them being violent on the streets on unwilling victims
@@rpx10453 i mean, he did intend to do that, but he also most people can defend it and most people can atleast defend it somewhat, but this guy was afk for a whole second i guess and got the best kick in his entire life and yheaa, proboly permanant brain damage
Genuinely this moment affected Uriah for a long time. He is a good man with a good heart and as much as he loved fighting he had trouble hurting people.
No watch Napoleon Blownapart tuf documentary uriah hall has injured multiple training partners the whole “too strong for his own good” is complete bullsh*t
From the words of Chris Tucker “you just got knocked the fuck out” Im a boxer and that is literally my worst nightmare glad he’s all right keep fighting buddy
I feel like all fighters like hurting people on some level. He was proud of what he did there for a moment, and that moment says a lot about him. Anybody can feel bad after the fact, He's a fighter. He hurts other fighters.
@@qapqwizzle5141 I feel it's less of the enjoyment of hurting people, and more of being proud in a showcase of his skills. If you work on something for years, you're gonna feel good when it pays off.
@@qapqwizzle5141 you don't like hurting others, you like overcoming adversity and knowing you're capable of hurting others. Only weak people like hurting people for real. And I don't mean physically weak, I mean insecure people. I'm obviously not a fighter to their level but I can tell you that from my experience.
@@qapqwizzle5141yeah he was proud because fighting is an art and adrenaline was pumping as he executed that move perfectly. His initial response was one of the victor, and you see his humanity when he looks concerned that his opponent might be seriously damaged.
He actually said this in an interview on a podcast. I can’t remember which podcast it was. Be he definitely said it changed him forever…. He thought he killed the man. That’s alot to take on being on national tv and all
Absolutely, he was technically amazing, he just had a heart. That kick was so perfect, his head came round before he landed it, he could have run through his whole division if he was only a psychopath.
@@vbounce07know what’s cringe bud, A gym pic in your youtube profile your a washed up lan gamer who gets 10 views a video. You mad this guys comments got more likes than any of your videos?
The "I'm sorry" completely broke my heart. It shows just how violent this sport is and how dangerous it can be. Everything can change in the blink of an eye. It's a common move, but it can have dangerous results.
Sport? It's not a sport. One of the victory conditions is rendering your opponent unconcious. Do you see tennis players get into a fight at the press conference before a game? It's a fight, not a sport.
@@matszz since you’re too lazy to use a dictionary sport noun 1. an activity involving physical exertion and skill in which an individual or team competes against another or others for entertainment. And as a former tennis player we also get into fights all the time so that’s just a bad analogy regardless.
He immediately realise there was something wrong he immediately stopped celebrating and said sorry.breathing heavily,feeling guilt for those seconds it was seen in his eyes. True sportsmanship ❤❤
If you've ever hurt someone like that, then you know exactly what he was feeling when he had the "death stare". It's like your soul just got snatched from you.
I agree. Only ever thrown one punch at someone and went through the same emotions. Never gotten into a fight again and probably won't unless it's a life or death situation. It's just not worth it.
i knocked this kid out when i was 17 and he started breathing a little heavier than this guy, fingers tensed and a bit shaky. i will ALWAYS avoid fights now, it haunts me. i think about it everyday. and its one of those things "if you had a time machine", id go back and do the right thing by avoiding the fight. havent fought since that day, 25 now, if anything gets to that point i will avoid it at all costs. doing something like this sticks with you
This is why I hated Deontay Wilder for repeatedly saying "bout to catch a body" in the build up to fights. If that ever happened the reality isn't glorious, it's horrible for everyone.
@@musicwithj1759they aren't, I do boxing and muay thai, and I don't think my opponent is an enemy since its just a sport, I think of them as an opponent.
A true warrior knows when to celebrate a victory over his mortal enemy and when to remain humble. Truly, only real warriors understand. If you know, you know.
You could see the guy who kicked him, he was loosing his breathe, he really thought he had done wrong and was there 100% to make sure everything was okay. Thats a great man with a great heart
It ended up hurting his career in a way. Once he was in the ufc he always seemed tentative and it almost seemed he didnt wanna hurt someone like this again. He did have some good wins but he didnt really live up to the potential shown by that spinning kick. I always supported him though. He seems like a solid guy. His names Uriah Hall if you're interested.
Yes we were all looking at the guy who kicked him. In fact, I think this short was made to show the attitude of the guy who kicked him. Very clever of you!😊
@@steel2572 Nah you wrong. His opponent here is from a TUF episode not even a real UFC match. That guy much smaller than the guys at the top in 185 so ofcourse he's gonna take more damage vs a real 185er top 15 guy in UFC and Uriah actually had a heart attack from a weight cut once and passed out in an elevator on his way to the weigh ins. A heart attack, you're not the same anymore. Uriah was always a 205er and his heart attack passing out weight cut proved this. This type a KO common when fighting guys below your weightclass.
Great sportsmanship. You can see the empathy in his face. That's a man with sympathy. Others would have kept celebrating, but not only did he feel regret for his actions, but he also apologised. What a beautiful act of sportmanship
He was more of a friend then the man I called a 'friend' who slapped me for a disagreement. I returned the slap but a moment later apologized. He never apologized.
I love this because it shows this is not just about violence but also about competition he didn’t want to injury or kill this man yes he’s going in there to hurt him it’s a fight but nobody wants someone to have any life altering consequences from this type of competition
Uriah Hall used to train my brother and i got to meet him a couple times. Amazing guy, super down to earth. He loved the sport but absolutely would never want to harm another person outside of it. You can see the pain and fear on his face over what he might have done.
@@Inhale_Burrito No, but he had a lot of psychological issues after this incident. It also derailed his career as he saw the damage he can do, so he held back and was never able to get back that fighter mentality.
Justifiably. The people who fight themselves and watch these fights celebrate it, but then realize that from start to finish it was all about following their desires and harming people at the same time. It's the same as when 2 people drink alcohol and a lot of people cheer on them destroying themselves. Some drink their heads off and others smash it away
@@efn_38stop. Dana cares because he cares about money. Someone dying there could cause the ufc to become banned in some States. The damages to the brain and mental health isnt directly visible so Dana doesnt care about These Things for example
He immediately realise there was something wrong he immediately stop celebrating and said sorry. breath fastly feeling guilty for those seconds it was seen in his eyes True sportmanship ❤
If you watch the full video even the guys watching were crying And when he won he still had fear in his eyes he also hugged him and asked what happened Turns out he was ok
You can see the genuine shift in his eyes. He is telling himself, "I never want to do this again to anyone" And for that his career was shaped totally different. Respect. Many men are to worried about looking tough, and less about compassion to another human. He knew his power and his ability to hurt someone was true. It's better to be a warrior in a garden than a gardener at war.
@@rrdtI agree it had an impact on his career. It's a dog world, if he would have had that instinct the rest of his career he would have been terror to beat.
This is such narrative changing bs 😂 Uriah threw a flying knee at mousasi after hitting with a spinning kick to the face DoSeNt LiKe HuRtInG pEoPlE added to the fact that he has 13 career knockouts
Nah nobody enjoys fighting they do it anyways look at what sugar ray Robinson said about his boxing career he said he never enjoyed it it's just a business@@daniel43046
The people who fight themselves and watch these fights celebrate it, but then realize that from start to finish it was all about following their desires and harming people at the same time. It's the same as when 2 people drink alcohol and a lot of people cheer on them destroying themselves. Some drink their heads off and others smash it away
This is one of the reasons I love the sport. The people are real. Raw. This right here is real. The emotion in the eyes of everyone. The fear and dread. Tge sadness. The hope. All real. No gimmicks. No special effects. No words needed. Just skill, emotion and luck. Reality in a world of plastic.
We can all have that epyphany at some point , when i was very young i had a spiked bracelet and always though i'll use it on a fight on my fist , it happened once and i didnt even strike hard or in a dangerous place but i imediatly got very scared , not of the fight but to hurt the drunk that attaked me . I realized that day i dont need that but also how worse when going for the maximum harm you can inflict , its a double edge sword you cut yourself very deep each time you hurt someone ( if you have empathy of course ).
@@Grady-gu9sfAbsolutely bro! The fact they can’t empathize with the people around them is incomprehensible to me. And the fact they have insane superiority complex’s makes it 10 times worse.
Dude had so much talent and should have been a champion, this definitely impacted him and made him think about how he impacted someone's health going forward. Which being a professional fighter you cannot have that thought process, you can have respect but you have to be a killer. Im not built that way and i give any professional fighter props for stepping into the ring or cage.
Yup that's why every champion have a cocaine fueled life to deal with this bs steroids and other stuff make you able to cope and go over the fact that you're paid to hurt people.
Fighting like these guys do, this probably was always going to happen. You just don’t know when, where, and that you’re going to land the exact perfect spot to get this serious of a KO or even worse. At least he has the compassion to know how serious the situation was.
@@KILIMANjauri I think you are mistaking real life encounters with organized fighting events. 2 very different scenarios. I love watching UFC, kickboxing and other sorts, but even I have to agree that it's stupid. Why do you think some professionals retire from it after they have made a good living... Because continuing this sports puts your life at constant harm mentally and physically. The ones who do retire are smart.
Support is free 🤝: 🤍goatpeak.myShopify.com🤍
This edit restores my faith in humanity
His opponent got messed up
@@AedenBoothbywhat a shitty response, have some respect man.
“Not everyone that you fight is an enemy, and not everyone who helps you is a friend” -Mike Tyson
I literally saw him say this in the short before this one😂😂
@@kozmoz5172 nah that’s perfect timing 😭
Damn Tyson is so wise, i always see some of his quotes
Literally... Dana white is no friend to any fighter.
Punches the doctor
That was the most human response without saying a word. It was written all over his face. That’s the sign of a good man.
he says "im sorry adam"
@@KumoPlaysWoWlol guess he missed that part
100% he was so concerned with his health he was probably thinking about quitting, Ik for sure I would’ve thought about it that moment. Would honestly tear up a little thinking I could’ve taken his(if that was me) life.
@@rayjenkins9669uriah hall is always such a class act
This is why this is sport and not a pub brawl. These guys dont hate each other, they're athletes. That's why I despise fighters who make it personal, talking about "destroying" they guy, not respecting the tap etc.
He didn't want to kill him or even hurt him. He just wanted to win and show his skill. His expression said it all.
I heard an interview with Uriah later in his career where he was talking about one of his issues in fighting was having a lack of a killer instinct and I think a lot of that was rooted from this fight here.
Yes but they are doing a brutal sport.. so you have to expect that
But this is what the saying about a gardener in a war is about... Combat sports are a warriors game... Even Mike Tyson has talked about it... When he fights a monster comes out and he doesn't want to be that guy but in that situation he has to be... He has to be stronger he has to be quicker he has to be more durable... And at the end of the day he has to be ruthless because fighting is ruthless... And not everyone has the temperament to be that way
How do you win in mma without hurting someone?
@@heli0s2003 it's not about not wanting to hurt someone. It's that in combat sports death is a real possibility. And yeah you expect to rough the guy your fighting up. However almost killing your opponent or killing them in the fight... If you aren't mentally prepared for that possibility it will end your career.
Both fighters were never the same again after this fight.
Adam, yea probably not....but Uriah stayed a beast. Was he just an all out legend? No, but I'd bet there was never one single opponent that was just jumping with joy to fight him. Knocking someone out in a controlled environment where it's understood that can happen doesn't make the winner "not be the same" in the least bit.
@@ndavis7789he always seemed to be holding back though. For me and a number of others I think that is what we mean. He was ruthless with the skill and that went
That's a man with empathy and a soul
Bro got 1.9k likes but no comments 😂
@@korunarozario3417shut up
Uriah Hall is the fucking man. Was honored to train with / meet him at Fortis MMA
Comment
He actually taught me how to fight when I was a teenager. Genuinely one of the greatest humans on this planet.
You can clearly see his concern for his opponent... Good sportsmanship. Nobody wants to kill each other in this sport.
That last part is false lol
@@user-ji4lg5yb3r his bad captain fucking obvious, there are some shitty people. No shit.
no they dont. most people just fight because they are out of options and the world hurt them and gave them the ability.@@user-ji4lg5yb3r
Protect yourself better than the next guy
Strickland has said otherwise numerous times
From what I saw (his whole career from around this point) and from what training partners have been quoted saying about him, he had a hard time pulling the trigger since. He was known to be the freakiest of freak athletes with immaculate technique and timing who just couldn't take his 'gym form' into the cage. Uriah is a real one. Immense talent, great guy.
And that look from Dana that said "oh fuck, did we just film a guy die?". You can see his mind just racing thinking about what he might have to do in the aftermath of that. Dana is probably the least empathetic dude on the planet. But it's clear he was shook to his core. Not something you see from Dana often.
So true, Uriah Hall was on another level
@@cerebrix I disagree with your assessment of Dana. We don't have to agree. That's ok. Who knows anyway. I don't know the guy.
@@cerebrix least empathetic? we must be thinking of two different people here. I'm going to just assume you're projecting with low vibrationaal thinking.
oo so a real life main character from jinx
This truly changed him. He really never recovered, his fights afterwards never had that edge. Truly an honorable man. We love you Uriah
When Uriah says “I’m sorry” so quietly that broke my heart
You can see his emotions going trough his eyes, no blinks, no tears, just sadness running through...
He said It with a broken heart, that's why
yo the song is MAD SUS bro.... ''i wanna kiss you'' BRO WHAT THEY PUTTING ON THIS VIDEOS CUH
Cuando lo dijo, se me hizo un nudo en la garganta 😢
@@scoper7897😑
That fear of losing even after winning is scary.
This is probably the only fear a fighter has
Who is cutting these god damn onions?
Agreed. I would fucking quit if something like that happened to me. Way too traumatizing
@@FweakaI am😢
Foi exatamente isso que ele fez, desistiu depois de perceber que poderia mat4r alguém dentro do ringue @@bblunder
When they say, "Winning isn't everything." THIS is what they meant. Humanity is larger than any sport.
I heard he's one of the most kind hearted person you'll ever meet. Those loses he suffered is because of him holding back
No. It’s because of his inability to fight the same way he does in practice. He’s not as good as you think. Keep sitting on the couch. This is against a scrub, not elite level talent. You’re the scrub
Dude deserves a ton of respect. He immediately recognized something was wrong and had a completely human response. Thats sportsmanship.
I think you don't understand what "immediately" means
Actually what he immediately did was some Dragon Ball Z shit pose. But sure. Sportsmanship.
@@Nobody-xb4zuall fighters do something after they win u clearly don't watch fighting
@@Nobody-xb4zuyes sportsmanship, let the guy be happy fof a couple of seconds after winning the fight fairly, he was clearly worried once the other guy didn't recover correctly, dolt
Look at the guy in the red physical conditioning, he looks like they found a 3 year gym bro to fight a 10 year seasoned vet. He kicked him in the head with near leathal force. Idk if “human response” or “sportsmanship” are the fitting words. Dude in the red has no clue what to expect or how to defend himself.
That quiet "I’m sorry” hit hard
Jesus is king ❤
wrong post bro@@DAYJAYC
@@krishnsingh5477 Its never the wrong post, bro.
@@Goodnews4manfr
@@fuzzforbreakfastyou don’t make sense!
Man…. You could tell he just felt horrible. He celebrated for a few seconds and then looked over and saw how bad it actually was, and he just immediately stopped, and alls you saw was a look of concern and “omg, please let him be ok!”…. That shows that this man is a TRUE man. He’s dangerous, he can do serious damage to a threat, but he still has a heart and empathy for other ppl, and respect for his opponent too. This just instantly made me a fan of him, because we just need more ppl like this in the world.
Bro lost the match but kept fighting for his life. You can hear the effort it took to hold on and come back
His eyes spoke a thousand words, his concern said it all. What a man.
He celebrated thinking his rival was just too tired to get up
@@kingcarnish9477Tired? He knocked him out. You clearly know nothing about combat. He celebrated like a asshole instead of immediately show concern and respect. In combat your life is always on the line and celebrating like you just scored a touchdown is always classless
Relaxxx@@SaintBison209
@@SaintBison209behave, all the fighters celebrate their win after knockout especially one as impressive as that
Nah he just had to put an act on for the cameras. He's still showboating over what he considers a great victory to this day. If he cared he would have paid medical bills, supported the guys family, that sort of thing.
I stopped breathing fine until he started breathing fine.
That's also probably the most genuine "I'm sorry" I've ever heard.
Eu não gosto desta merda de luta
he said crap
@@miisefabraziiian1002 alright don't watch it then
Shut it.
🤡
Respect to Chael too. Later on in the season he talks to Uriah and really tries to help him through this
Even in victory you can see genuine care and empathy for his opponent. That man would have been scarred for life if that man died right there. ❤
Oh man that scared me. . . I'm glad he lived. The winner was genuinely worried about his opponent as well.
Uriah hall, hes had a cupple knockouts like this one, hes a savage fighter
He wasn't worried about his opponent he was worried about going to jail for manslaughter
Edit: seems I intentionally triggered everyone and it worked 😭🤣🤣
You don't go to jail if someone dies in a fighting sport when everything he did was legal, it's a fighting sport accident @@liampurvis
@@liampurvisthey both signed a contract ain’t nobody going to jail for shit. What are they both gonna get charged for assault too? Fuckin idiot
@@liampurvis Fairly certain that's waived away, but it would depend on the rules of the match and what is deemed a legal hit.
It'll definitely be a pause on his career, potentially even the end of it though with all the drama that would unfold.
That was the most Fucking sincere "Im sorry" ever said. No ammount of respect can go too far. 💚🖤💚
and he knows too well that if he said im sorry to him, it will hurt his pride as much as the KO
Ahahah wtf
@@shadowamigo9506 yah no maybe if it was like a submission, but when someone gets legitimately knocked unconscious I don’t think they are gonna be worried about their pride in that moment
He said crap?? No point in the video did he say I'm sorry ??
@@THE.OMNI.MAN.Yeah your ears are either clogged to no end or your off a perc because you can definitely hear “I’m sorry”. Also if you look at bros mouth thats definitely not what saying crap looks like.
He’s really kind hearted , he apologies on the stage.
Him saying "I'm sorry" hit hard❤
Not as hard as that spin kick though 😂
@@josephlittlefield2256 🤣 naw u wrong🤣🤣🤣
That's my pfp
@@twxtimbot2316chickem man smoking a fish. 😂
@@josephlittlefield2256😂😂😂
I remember watching that I honestly thought he killed him on TV. One of the most terrifying knockouts witnessed on ultimate fighter.
he hasn't been the same ever since he knocked him out
Matt Riddle has a great KO too
@@blowfish8203I believe it that’s serious serious trauma to you’re brain
If you want to be the one of the greatest fighter that's the consequence
Wins a win.
This black dude is a kind man. We can see it in his face. It's not his fault he's doing everything to win for his family
Watched this like 5 times...what a genuine man😢
Man that was so brutal. Dana’s face ,he looked so worried like a dude was going to die right in front of everyone.
It looked like it, especially since his eye rolled on the back of his head. They were all worried. That probably changed, Uriah after that
@@blazenmessiah2211it did if you haven’t noticed in his fights he doesn’t throw that kick anymore and if he does he doesn’t throw at the head.
Do you believe Dana cared about anything more than bad pr and possible law changes ?
The fuck you talking about 😂 dana smirked a little smile because he knew if the fighter dies its a huge publicity stunt
@@ivanlakidubrava never mentioned Dana for a second moron I was talking about Hall. Go watch his fights he’s never thrown that kick since this fight you casual.
You could see in his eyes the moment he knew something was wrong that’s real concern for his opponent big props to him
I dont understand why humans need this fighting n all 😂God is crazy for making these type of humans who fight unnecessary
@@navmNavm-nc2yzcuz they need to feed their families? Very priviliged take
@@timothyojukwu9718 what if he dies fighting who is going to look after he's family and if he gets bed ridden who gonna take care of him this is not at all privilege
@@navmNavm-nc2yz so we should ban certain jobs based on danger?
@@timothyojukwu9718 bro God did not give this human body to do these non sense things life is very short so use this body in doing good things, if Jesus was thier in today's time then do u think he would have allowed this,absolutely not and danger is in every step of the life but we r wise to choose what to do n wat not to and this fighting n all is bullshit totally rubbish and unwanted just show casing strength and people enjoying it we r human beings not wild animals to do all this thats why God kept called us human beings and gave us brain to think and did not gave brain to animals .
Nothing but respect for the fighter. You could hear the pain in his voice when he said sorry.
A fighter sure. That's the look of a man with a heart and good soul .. he was hurting deep n praying the best
He's dead serious when he said he was sorry! That's a real man showing a 100% sportsmanship 🤍
Just been human
When did he say sorry is that on the full clip or am I missing something
@@timedfornoreason758You probably missed it, if you watch again you'll probably see him say it
@@timedfornoreason758 ig u deaf
@@timedfornoreason758are you deaf? He literally said “Sorry” lmfao
When Chael is concerned, you know summin heavy is happening.
of course you're fooled, they're great actors
Summin? Really? We ain’t even trying to grammar anymore
@@brysonsmith9746As you say, “ain’t” and forget to end your sentence with the appropriate punctuation.
@@FartInYourFace234great actors? this isnt a skit man. this fight ruined Uriah Hall’s extremely promising career and obviously sent Cella’s down the hole as well. Hall could’ve been one of the scariest middleweights weve ever seen, but he never wanted to hit anybody with his full power after this fight. became a complete head case and went on to average an aggressively mediocre career
He couldn’t let him get too close
Pulled at the heart strings right there. So much love in his heart.
He celebrated but showed respect and apprehension for the wellbeing of his adversary.
I respect this man.
That’s a real man when he realized he didn’t just win he actually hurt that guy, you could could see his heart felt concern for him, that’s a good man
I’m the 500th like, and true
your right it sad
yeah i agree we need more people like him who actually cares
MMA should be banned 🚫
@@mwas_0 if two guys want to beat the crap out of each other why should anyone care their not forced and they know the risks. The men that join MMA obviously has a violent and brutal side to them why not let them Chanel it through sport on other brutal men, it’s much better than them being violent on the streets on unwilling victims
I’ve never seen Chael like that in my life.
All the jokes aside and his funny personality, he knows how tough the sport can be. He'll honestly be a great coach even years from now.
@@DSP-gh5eiabsolutely right
You have never seen him like that because he cant let u get close to him
@@Jcota8 lol!
@@Jcota8😂😂😂😂
Man apologized thats honor
That "im sorry" was just too heartbreaking to hear bro..
Huge respect to the fighter for showing such respect and Humanity for his opponent.
kinda basic level respect and common decency to be worried about something like this...
@@ZZubZZero Exactly. It is also sadly lacking in many, so it is refreshing to see.
Uriah Hall is his name
@@shikatsuwu thank you
@@shikatsuwuthx
He didn’t want to hurt him like that and showed that he cared for human life.
Tf you mean? He did indeed mean to do that, tf you expect to happen?
@@rpx10453🤦🏽♂️go sleep you 🔔 end.
He knew what he was doing, but afterward, he regretted it. I’m not blaming him tho, it’s combat sports for a reason.
bro literally emoted on him asoon as he kod him
@@rpx10453 i mean, he did intend to do that, but he also most people can defend it and most people can atleast defend it somewhat, but this guy was afk for a whole second i guess and got the best kick in his entire life and yheaa, proboly permanant brain damage
A true champion, he wanted to win, but not seriously injure. That is the pedigree of a good sportman
Genuinely this moment affected Uriah for a long time. He is a good man with a good heart and as much as he loved fighting he had trouble hurting people.
It will traumatized him surely.
Man actually hasn't fought the same since
Can't blame him cause I can't imagine doing that to an innocent man who's probably a good person
No watch Napoleon Blownapart tuf documentary uriah hall has injured multiple training partners the whole “too strong for his own good” is complete bullsh*t
i use to live in the same complex as him in Cali, he was a giant sweetheart
Uriah Hall a true gentleman... his sincere response after realizing that he may have permanently damaged his opponent is truly heart wrenching.
Interior crocodile alligator, I drive a chevrolet, movie theatre,
@@Fwidge_What in the gpt r u on about?
@@mar10gamingthat was a meme from almost 6 years ago now…
@@WildandWonderfulFishingK. So what's the relevance?
@@Fwidge_Cringe
From the words of Chris Tucker “you just got knocked the fuck out”
Im a boxer and that is literally my worst nightmare glad he’s all right keep fighting buddy
U always wanna win as a man
But u never wanna see someone permanently hurt!
I feel like all fighters like hurting people on some level. He was proud of what he did there for a moment, and that moment says a lot about him. Anybody can feel bad after the fact, He's a fighter. He hurts other fighters.
@@qapqwizzle5141 I feel it's less of the enjoyment of hurting people, and more of being proud in a showcase of his skills. If you work on something for years, you're gonna feel good when it pays off.
@@qapqwizzle5141 you don't like hurting others, you like overcoming adversity and knowing you're capable of hurting others.
Only weak people like hurting people for real. And I don't mean physically weak, I mean insecure people.
I'm obviously not a fighter to their level but I can tell you that from my experience.
@@qapqwizzle5141yeah he was proud because fighting is an art and adrenaline was pumping as he executed that move perfectly. His initial response was one of the victor, and you see his humanity when he looks concerned that his opponent might be seriously damaged.
The other person sign up for it they know what they getting into
This KO is what changed uriahs career forever, he became afraid of accidentally killing someone, so he always held back
I believe this. I've always felt like he was second guessing shit
@@50250 for sure. In his fights you can see him pulling power last second.
@@mackdigest Not surprised at all, look at his face. Those eyes say it all.
He actually said this in an interview on a podcast. I can’t remember which podcast it was. Be he definitely said it changed him forever…. He thought he killed the man. That’s alot to take on being on national tv and all
Absolutely, he was technically amazing, he just had a heart. That kick was so perfect, his head came round before he landed it, he could have run through his whole division if he was only a psychopath.
Dude was like: come on man, come on! Stand up! Please! Come back! Come back! Come back!
From the very bottom of his heart.
We need more Brothers like him😢💪
Thank you brothers🙏
The "I'm sorry adam" hits the soul, damn
We can hear the video don’t worry
@@vbounce07don’t be that guy.
you cant talk about cringe then say bud lol@@vbounce07
@@vbounce07 You do realise there was a whole sentence OUTSIDE of the quotation marks, right?
@@vbounce07know what’s cringe bud, A gym pic in your youtube profile your a washed up lan gamer who gets 10 views a video. You mad this guys comments got more likes than any of your videos?
Finally a fighter who isn't a maniac and actually has empathy.
There are reasons not to enter a ring
This is Uriah hall. The one who threw the kick .It was during a reality TV show called the ultimate fighter. This happened years ago
Tell me you don't know combat sports or train martial arts without telling me you don't.
@@DIEgestthisDumb comment, literally saying nothing but yapping
Most fighter actually understand that could be them and have empathy and respect for their opponents
The "I'm sorry" completely broke my heart. It shows just how violent this sport is and how dangerous it can be. Everything can change in the blink of an eye. It's a common move, but it can have dangerous results.
I've always been so impressed with Uriah in his interviews. I had never seen this before and my respect just grew.
Uriah is a genuinely good guy. He has a huge heart and a empathetic soul.
Hell of a fighter, hell of a compassionate man, Uriah Hall made a special impact on th3 sport simply for being who he is.
Its a sport no matter how intense or aggresive it is. This shows a real sportsman showing a sportmans respect and compasion for an injured opponent
Sport? It's not a sport. One of the victory conditions is rendering your opponent unconcious.
Do you see tennis players get into a fight at the press conference before a game?
It's a fight, not a sport.
It’s a stupid “sport”
The objective is to injure your opponent my guy he straight up sent his entire foot into man’s jaw wtf did he think was gonna happen 💀
@@matszz since you’re too lazy to use a dictionary
sport
noun
1.
an activity involving physical exertion and skill in which an individual or team competes against another or others for entertainment.
And as a former tennis player we also get into fights all the time so that’s just a bad analogy regardless.
@@RandomChannel-eg3wxPhysical combat is one of the oldest activities known to man. Who are you to judge it?
Bro, the concern in this man’s eyes, you know he apologized a million times after this
He immediately realise there was something wrong he immediately stopped celebrating and said sorry.breathing heavily,feeling guilt for those seconds it was seen in his eyes. True sportsmanship ❤❤
Damn, this guy is a true sportsman.
Ok another note, that’s the cleanest kick I have ever seen.
You should have seen the spider then he was all about kicking
would not have done that stupid dragon ball shit if he was
@@kallesven3749
It's a celebration. Everybody celebrates when they win.
@kallesven3749 this wasn't even close to as disrespectful as celebrations typically are in mma lmao.
@@kallesven3749 Don’t think he realized just how badly he had flatlined the other guy when he done that celebration
If you've ever hurt someone like that, then you know exactly what he was feeling when he had the "death stare". It's like your soul just got snatched from you.
I agree. Only ever thrown one punch at someone and went through the same emotions. Never gotten into a fight again and probably won't unless it's a life or death situation. It's just not worth it.
Its genuine fear. Like you can't breathe until they atleast move or get up.
I think it’s a bit different to hurting someone. He was thinking he potentially just paralysed another man for life.
i knocked this kid out when i was 17 and he started breathing a little heavier than this guy, fingers tensed and a bit shaky. i will ALWAYS avoid fights now, it haunts me. i think about it everyday. and its one of those things "if you had a time machine", id go back and do the right thing by avoiding the fight.
havent fought since that day, 25 now, if anything gets to that point i will avoid it at all costs. doing something like this sticks with you
This is why I hated Deontay Wilder for repeatedly saying "bout to catch a body" in the build up to fights. If that ever happened the reality isn't glorious, it's horrible for everyone.
Accurate. He was never really the same after this. Felt like he was worried about doing it again to someone and never really fought the same
the look on his face broke my heart. thats a good sportsman. thats a good man, period.
They're fighters not enemies ❤
@@musicwithj1759for that short time sure but they’re both on the same boat here my guy
@@musicwithj1759they aren't, I do boxing and muay thai, and I don't think my opponent is an enemy since its just a sport, I think of them as an opponent.
so i am guessing youre not a fighter@@musicwithj1759
Opponent and Enemy is different….
@@itZ_D___1 opponents you beat enemies you break there's a huge difference
That is exactly what a true warrior looks like.
Bs
Not a true warrior no mercy he's a genuine person
A true warrior knows when to celebrate a victory over his mortal enemy and when to remain humble. Truly, only real warriors understand.
If you know, you know.
You do know what Warrior means right? This is Sport. @@rocklambs3908
Like a seizure?
Just got reminded that even though it’s a sport, it’s still combat.
You could see the guy who kicked him, he was loosing his breathe, he really thought he had done wrong and was there 100% to make sure everything was okay. Thats a great man with a great heart
It ended up hurting his career in a way. Once he was in the ufc he always seemed tentative and it almost seemed he didnt wanna hurt someone like this again. He did have some good wins but he didnt really live up to the potential shown by that spinning kick. I always supported him though. He seems like a solid guy. His names Uriah Hall if you're interested.
Yes we were all looking at the guy who kicked him. In fact, I think this short was made to show the attitude of the guy who kicked him. Very clever of you!😊
@@ewill69 good one bro 🤓
@@steel2572 Nah you wrong. His opponent here is from a TUF episode not even a real UFC match. That guy much smaller than the guys at the top in 185 so ofcourse he's gonna take more damage vs a real 185er top 15 guy in UFC and Uriah actually had a heart attack from a weight cut once and passed out in an elevator on his way to the weigh ins. A heart attack, you're not the same anymore. Uriah was always a 205er and his heart attack passing out weight cut proved this. This type a KO common when fighting guys below your weightclass.
@@mystermont2019 Thats why I said once he was in the ufc. If you think that spinning kick wouldnt have kod a 205er then your crazy
This is a good depiction of being able to be a warrior in a garden. There’s a time and place to be dangerous, and other times to be compassionate.
Not that overused quote again.. he's just being compassionate
@@perenpureeyou mad as hell 😂
@@perenpureewhat quote I haven’t seen of being over used…
It's a good quote @@perenpureeoh no not another person being an asshole because that never gets old nor is there enough of you shit stains
@@whyyoumad4686 true, people tend to regurgitate and parrot everything they see and hear until it loses its meaning, like what happened here
That fighter has a good heart. He knows , doesnt need to say words 💯💯
The guilt after realizing what had happened, we need more good men like that.
Uriah was never the same after that. He knew he could hurt people and actually held back.
A good human beinh
His heart is pure
Dumb
Ur a bozo
@@John.0117how?
Great sportsmanship. You can see the empathy in his face. That's a man with sympathy. Others would have kept celebrating, but not only did he feel regret for his actions, but he also apologised. What a beautiful act of sportmanship
He was more of a friend then the man I called a 'friend' who slapped me for a disagreement. I returned the slap but a moment later apologized.
He never apologized.
@MistahBryan Dang man, hope u find a better friend than him
@@bonaventurebeida5957
Haven't talked to him in 2 years.
911 likes
thats called realizing how bad you can hurt people by accident.
it sucks a lot.
I'm glad ol dude is alright but let's appreciate the power and accuracy of that kick tho
I love this because it shows this is not just about violence but also about competition he didn’t want to injury or kill this man yes he’s going in there to hurt him it’s a fight but nobody wants someone to have any life altering consequences from this type of competition
Uriah Hall used to train my brother and i got to meet him a couple times. Amazing guy, super down to earth. He loved the sport but absolutely would never want to harm another person outside of it. You can see the pain and fear on his face over what he might have done.
I would always ask my trainer to go see the opponent after a match ,mainly because to make sure they’re alright
@@753studios6ur a very good man
Damn he really regretted that match u can see it in his eyes a true man with a heart
Did he retire after that?
@@Inhale_Burritono
He felt fear, uncertainty, maybe regret. Emotions that most will face upon kill for the very first time.
@@Inhale_Burrito
No, but he had a lot of psychological issues after this incident. It also derailed his career as he saw the damage he can do, so he held back and was never able to get back that fighter mentality.
Well he emoted, then saw reality. Shocking isn't it.
Uriah is like a mini Cheick Kongo, very lethal in his performance but always carries a humbling heart
"Not everyone that you fight is an enemy, and not everyone who helps you is not a friend" -Mike Tyson
Dana shitting his pants the whole time
Justifiably. The people who fight themselves and watch these fights celebrate it, but then realize that from start to finish it was all about following their desires and harming people at the same time. It's the same as when 2 people drink alcohol and a lot of people cheer on them destroying themselves.
Some drink their heads off and others smash it away
More like Dana creaming his pants the entire time
Nah, he don’t care.
@@efn_38stop. Dana cares because he cares about money. Someone dying there could cause the ufc to become banned in some States. The damages to the brain and mental health isnt directly visible so Dana doesnt care about These Things for example
@@Thebutcher91 he scared of the potential legal fees 🤑
Chael showed true sportsmanship in that moment. It's a powerful reminder of the responsibility that comes with being a warrior.
How….. how are you here
True warriors choose the path they walk down and have to bear all possibilities. Only a warrior can live this life.
If you know, you know.
bot
@@masonjones2898it’s a bot
you comment on everything wtf
Every time i see chael sonnen the dude genuinely seems to care about everything going on. Good man right there!
Win or loose or die fighting, these are real men in a cage risking it all every time the bell rings.
‘The warrior does not fight because he hates what’s in front of him, he fights because he loves what is behind him…’
Bro this is MMA not a war
I keep seeing this quote everywhere
@@sandarsoe6763in a way, but as a professional fighter that’s how they make their money, to provide for whomever
@@sandarsoe6763it still applies.
@@YakmonSaysItLikeItIswhat is behind the guy that knocked him?
No it doesn't apply
@@-foxwint-3140 Dreams of becoming the best? Idk bro, it was the best i could think of.
He immediately realise there was something wrong he immediately stop celebrating and said sorry. breath fastly feeling guilty for those seconds it was seen in his eyes True sportmanship ❤
If you watch the full video even the guys watching were crying
And when he won he still had fear in his eyes he also hugged him and asked what happened
Turns out he was ok
You can see the genuine shift in his eyes. He is telling himself, "I never want to do this again to anyone"
And for that his career was shaped totally different. Respect. Many men are to worried about looking tough, and less about compassion to another human. He knew his power and his ability to hurt someone was true.
It's better to be a warrior in a garden than a gardener at war.
It kinda ruined his career. You can tell he doesn't like hurting people.
@@rrdtI agree it had an impact on his career. It's a dog world, if he would have had that instinct the rest of his career he would have been terror to beat.
This is such narrative changing bs 😂 Uriah threw a flying knee at mousasi after hitting with a spinning kick to the face DoSeNt LiKe HuRtInG pEoPlE added to the fact that he has 13 career knockouts
@@smittywerbenjagermanjensen4737 narrative change from 10 years ago.
@@rrdt yep
Just because you can inflict pain doesn't mean you enjoy doing it.
they probably wouldent be mma fighters if they did not enjoy it
@@daniel43046 no, it's about win a fight not necessarily makes them dying.
Nah nobody enjoys fighting they do it anyways look at what sugar ray Robinson said about his boxing career he said he never enjoyed it it's just a business@@daniel43046
The people who fight themselves and watch these fights celebrate it, but then realize that from start to finish it was all about following their desires and harming people at the same time. It's the same as when 2 people drink alcohol and a lot of people cheer on them destroying themselves.
Some drink their heads off and others smash it away
Some people would
That's the worst for a fighter being so good that you unintentionally hurt your opponent. You could see the concern in his eyes
This is one of the reasons I love the sport. The people are real. Raw. This right here is real. The emotion in the eyes of everyone. The fear and dread. Tge sadness. The hope. All real. No gimmicks. No special effects. No words needed. Just skill, emotion and luck. Reality in a world of plastic.
Damn, you can see his relief when they sit up the guy and everyone starts clapping.
Took him years to get back that instinct. I always felt for Hall after this. This immediately changed how he viewed the sport.
Heart of gold that one. This changed the man and his career forever.
We can all have that epyphany at some point , when i was very young i had a spiked bracelet and always though i'll use it on a fight on my fist , it happened once and i didnt even strike hard or in a dangerous place but i imediatly got very scared , not of the fight but to hurt the drunk that attaked me .
I realized that day i dont need that but also how worse when going for the maximum harm you can inflict , its a double edge sword you cut yourself very deep each time you hurt someone ( if you have empathy of course ).
Thats why psychopathy is such a scary concept to me
@@Grady-gu9sfAbsolutely bro! The fact they can’t empathize with the people around them is incomprehensible to me. And the fact they have insane superiority complex’s makes it 10 times worse.
@@infinite1135 Yeah I can't emphasize the importance of being able to empathize.
Ya it retired him from the sport 😂😂😂
Uriah is a good dude and a very respectful and professional fighter. You can see the emotion on his face. He definitely feels bad.
He's only happy with a win if it means the other person is standing in the end too. Sportsmanship.
That's one of those rare fully connected hits that resets someone instantly. Love his concern once he realized what just happened, shows he's human
Dude had so much talent and should have been a champion, this definitely impacted him and made him think about how he impacted someone's health going forward. Which being a professional fighter you cannot have that thought process, you can have respect but you have to be a killer.
Im not built that way and i give any professional fighter props for stepping into the ring or cage.
This KO ruined Hall. He probably would’ve been a champion if this never happened. After this he fought like he was scared of hurting people.😢
He was truly too nice to be a champion. Respectable and slightly sad at the same time.
100%
Yup that's why every champion have a cocaine fueled life to deal with this bs steroids and other stuff make you able to cope and go over the fact that you're paid to hurt people.
Fighting like these guys do, this probably was always going to happen. You just don’t know when, where, and that you’re going to land the exact perfect spot to get this serious of a KO or even worse. At least he has the compassion to know how serious the situation was.
It was traumatizing
Even as a die hard fan and someone who just loves the art of fighting, this makes me borderline cry…
It's stupid
@tonys8448 if u think fighting is stupid ur wrong in more ways than u could ever imagine it goes so far beyond fighting.
@@tonys8448it’s stupid till you get beat up, or until this comfortable place you call life falls and you need to fight and be fit to survive
@@KILIMANjauri I think you are mistaking real life encounters with organized fighting events.
2 very different scenarios.
I love watching UFC, kickboxing and other sorts, but even I have to agree that it's stupid.
Why do you think some professionals retire from it after they have made a good living...
Because continuing this sports puts your life at constant harm mentally and physically.
The ones who do retire are smart.
@@tonys8448It's very stupid.
That headkick was fcken scarry,respect to fighters
He's a great respectful human being
Nice to see a fighter with a heart