“I got frustrated and caught up in all the war of words leading up to the fight. And he’s one of the best at that, getting under your skin, making you upset. Now, that’s just noise to me.”
Chaotic fighting in silence
There will be very little noise on Fight Island in Abu Dhabi this Saturday with only 2,000 fans allowed to attend due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Having beaten Dan Hooker in front of no fans in Las Vegas last June, Poirier says he prefers the sound of silence.
“I liked fighting without a crowd. Yeah, like I know some fighters feed off the energy of the crowd and want to get pumped up and stuff like that. For the first time in my career, I fought with nobody in attendance in 2020, last year. And I thought it was calm. It was more peaceful.
“Fighting is chaotic. Your brain is moving a million miles an hour and on a regular fight night you have people hanging over the things trying to grab you when you walk into the octagon and people yelling and stuff like that. It just makes it more chaotic. And it was peaceful.
“It also makes the fight more intimate. When you’re standing across from that guy, you’re not hearing thousands of screams, you’re hearing your own thoughts, you’re hearing the announcers talking. It’s really weird, man. It was a great experience to go to that.”
Champion in his own right
A former interim lightweight champion, Poirier has won 26 out of 33 Mixed Martial Arts bouts. He’s the only man to have faced both McGregor and Khabib Nurmagomedov, losing to both.
“And I think that is incredible, man. It transcends fighting. And I don’t take that stuff lightly. I’m very thankful for the position I’m in and the platform I have to raise awareness, to be a voice for the voiceless.
Poirier is especially proud of building a children’s playground that is accessible for disabled children in his hometown, that the UFC fighter says was a young, dying boy’s wish to have a space that he and his friends could play on. “That’s a big deal to me,” adds Poirier.
“What I wear to the octagon will all be auctioned off the following week. I keep memories. And I keep piece of that goal with me that the money goes towards in my heart every time. That’s more valuable to me than a pair of bloody gloves.”
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