MMA

Morning Report: Sean Strickland claims ‘Canada threatened to pull me’ from UFC 297, teases move to boxing

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Sean Strickland has had quite the mentality shift since his title loss to Dricus Du Plessis at UFC 297 in January.

“Tarzan” has been a consummate company man since he returned to action as a middleweight in 2020. The time away was a turning point of sorts for Strickland, who was a pretty well-mannered and quiet welterweight prospect before his near-death motorcycle accident in 2018. He’s been open to fighting allcomers as a 185-pound contender and now-former champion. However, Strickland, 33, is maintaining his stance on what he wants next.

The split decision loss to Du Plessis is one Strickland is adamant he should have won. Thanks to his outspoken personality, the 34-fight veteran (28-6) believes he’s being silenced, or phased out, of the spotlight now that he no longer holds the title.

“The UFC fans want me and Dricus to settle it,” Strickland tweeted. “Dricus wants to settle it. We all know I fought in a dirty liberal country who f***** me. Dana [White] knows it. The UFC knows it.

“IF IT WAS ANYONE ELSE ON THE ROSTER THE REMATCH WOULD HAPPEN! Do the right thing, UFC.”

Strickland followed up his comments, going as far as to claim Canada — where the fight was held in Toronto, Ontario — attempted to cancel UFC 297’s main event. While Strickland’s media day appearance during that fight week proved controversial, as is generally the case with him, it didn’t lead to any changes.

At the pre-fight press conference the day after, and on fight night, Strickland still received plenty of cheers from the Toronto faithful.

“No, man, it is a fact... Trust me...” Strickland replied when a Twitter user said no rematch with Du Plessis would prove he was robbed on purpose. “Canada absolutely hated me and threatened to pull me.

“You know, man, I’m not climbing that f****** ladder again..... If that isn’t it for me, [I don’t know], boxing... Go make millions beating up Jake Paul lmao (laughing my ass off).”

The country bias theory has been an interesting one throughout MMA history but is typically irrelevant regarding the biggest events in the sport. More often than not, veteran judges travel from country to country and work these pivotal matchups no matter the location, as was the case with Strickland vs. Du Plessis. Sal D’Amato, Eric Colon, and Derek Cleary are three of the most tenured judges in MMA and were assigned the middleweight tilt.

Boxing is an interesting concept for Strickland’s fighting future, but won’t happen anytime soon unless he can get out of his UFC contract. Going off of his suspicions alone, you’d have to think there’s even less of a chance of that happening than there normally would be.

In the end, Strickland signed off from his admitted complaint session in the only fashion he knows how.

“Alright y’all! I’m done b****ing!” Strickland tweeted an hour later. “Thanks for rolling with me even when I’m acting like a woman venting! Hope you are at home with a hot woman, surrounded by guns and meat.

“If you don’t have either of those settle on an ugly woman but no compromise on the guns!!!”

 

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