Daniel Bryan Still Confident About Beating CM Punk's Last UFC Opponent In MMA

At UFC 225 UFC welterweight Mike Jackson toyed with former WWE Superstar turned MMA fighter CM Punk. After beating the former WWE Champion, Jackson was briefly involved in Twitter war with Daniel Bryan. Bryan remarked that he could beat Mike Jackson in an MMA fight, which did not sit well with the former UFC fighter. Mike's performance drew criticism from all corners, and UFC President Dana White announced during the post ? fight press conference that Jackson would not fight in the UFC again.

Advertisement

Bryan recently appeared on Heated Conversations with Booker T, and elaborated on the origins of the rivalry between the two.

"What was happening was, my wife (Brie) was on Instagram, and she was doing a live thing, to promote Total Bellas", Bryan explained. "And it was like, 'Oh, Bryan is here with me. Does anybody want to ask him a question?' And somebody popped up and said, 'Do you think you could beat Mike Jackson?' And it wasn't like I've been sitting around thinking, 'I guess this is my shot. I'm going to call him out on Brie's Instagram story.

"And this is what I said. I said, 'Yeah, I think so. If it went to the ground, I think I could'."

Booker T then chimed in, and asked Bryan if he really thought he could submit a former UFC fighter in an MMA fight. Daniel admitted that it could be false confidence.

Advertisement

"Yes (I could submit him), but that could be false confidence. I'm very open to that (idea). I think most people who know me know this. If I were to say like, 'Yeah, I think I could beat Mike Jackson', it's that. It's not me being like, 'Oh, I would kill that man! I would go out there and destroy that man!' It's no disrespect to him, it's no disrespect to CM Punk. It was the first time I ever actually watched a UFC show where somebody won a fight, and I thought, 'You know what? I think I could beat that guy'. And just say that, 'Oh, I've toyed around with jiu ? jitsu' or whatever it is, and I've been training grappling and stuff for a lot of years. I've been training kickboxing and stuff for a lot of years.

"That said, that doesn't make me an MMA fighter, and I'm well aware of it. I'm also well aware of the fact that, okay, I've been training this month in takedowns, right? And I'm doing double legs, and guess what? I'm kind of old! And so, here I am, shooting double legs and when you're shooting double legs, you're tilting your neck to finish this double leg takedown, and me with my neck problems, I probably shot 15 double legs, and they were still doing double legs. And my neck all of a sudden, my thoracic spine was like, 'What am I doing? We don't do this!'"

Advertisement

Bryan is no stranger to mixed martial arts or MMA fighters. He once shared an apartment with former UFC Light Heavyweight Champion and MMA legend Lyoto Machida. During the conversation, Bryan dwelled on how he wouldn't be as aggressive if he were to dabble in MMA.

"So, my thinking is, if I could survive a six month camp, I think I could beat him. But that said, he also has a lot of experience, he's gone out there and done? like, I've never gone out there and done any real combat fighting. I've done a lot of sparring with a lot of high level people, but that's not the same thing as a fight. And I think one of the things a lot of people will say about me, and I will say about myself? for example, I hated games in high school football. I loved practice, right? Because then I'm just hitting my buddies. I loved practicing, and if I hit somebody, I could talk crap to them next day in school. You get me out there in a game, I don't care about hitting these people. I don't know them! It's a stupid game, and that's kind of my attitude in sports in general.

"You see these UFC fighters, and you see their attitudes when they get into the cage, and they're ready to fight. I've had that a couple of times in my life when it's been a real fight, a personal confrontation, but as a sport, I don't know if my mind would ever switch like that."

Advertisement

Comments

Recommended