The big loser on the night was Dana White. Holm-Rousey II probably would have sold close to 2 million PPVs. Tate-Rousey III will be punching above weight if it does half that.
But Tate exposed Holm's lacklustre ground game. She defended poorly on the second round take-down (turned into Tate, giving up her neck in the doing) and was lucky to escape. If R3 had played her trump card instead of fighting Holm on her feet, I don't think Holm would have had an answer. Her striking attack isn't effective if the opponent doesn't keep challenging it, and I don't think there's a woman on the planet who can withstand R3's arm bar (something Tate knows full well, because she's certainly never learnt the knack of it).
And I think McGregor fought a silly fight (as if there was anything rational about moving up two weight classes for a single fight). His plan wasn't to defeat Diaz, it was to fulfill his prophecy of a first-round knock-out. He threw between 69 and 78 punches in the first round (depending on who's counting). Every one of them with bad intentions but more than half hit nothing but air. He's never been to the fourth round in a professional fight, and I suspect Diaz would have had his way with him, if it had lasted that long.
In the end it was his failure to respect Diaz's punching ability that did him in. Every time Nate tagged him, he'd use the schoolyard defence -- "That didn't hurt" -- and proceed to walk right back into them, hands down. By the mid-point of the 2nd, Diaz found his range and regularly was making McGregor see stars. Nate lit him up several times before the clench against the cage, two or three more times during the clench, and a couple more after. At which point McGregor somehow came by the idea that that was the opportune moment to test Diaz's ground game.
::facepalm::
But wait, there's more. Just like the opera isn't over until the fat lady sings, no Diaz brothers fight is over until the drug test results come back.
But Tate exposed Holm's lacklustre ground game. She defended poorly on the second round take-down (turned into Tate, giving up her neck in the doing) and was lucky to escape. If R3 had played her trump card instead of fighting Holm on her feet, I don't think Holm would have had an answer. Her striking attack isn't effective if the opponent doesn't keep challenging it, and I don't think there's a woman on the planet who can withstand R3's arm bar (something Tate knows full well, because she's certainly never learnt the knack of it).
And I think McGregor fought a silly fight (as if there was anything rational about moving up two weight classes for a single fight). His plan wasn't to defeat Diaz, it was to fulfill his prophecy of a first-round knock-out. He threw between 69 and 78 punches in the first round (depending on who's counting). Every one of them with bad intentions but more than half hit nothing but air. He's never been to the fourth round in a professional fight, and I suspect Diaz would have had his way with him, if it had lasted that long.
In the end it was his failure to respect Diaz's punching ability that did him in. Every time Nate tagged him, he'd use the schoolyard defence -- "That didn't hurt" -- and proceed to walk right back into them, hands down. By the mid-point of the 2nd, Diaz found his range and regularly was making McGregor see stars. Nate lit him up several times before the clench against the cage, two or three more times during the clench, and a couple more after. At which point McGregor somehow came by the idea that that was the opportune moment to test Diaz's ground game.
::facepalm::
But wait, there's more. Just like the opera isn't over until the fat lady sings, no Diaz brothers fight is over until the drug test results come back.