Sean Strickland feels he’s reaching point of protection in UFC — ‘I can say a lot more offensive s—t’


Sean Strickland has risen to the elite of the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s (UFC) 185-pound middleweight division. Along the way, he’s expressed literally whatever is on his mind.

In many cases, this could be problematic when working on such a public platform as the athlete he is. However, as the 30-year-old New Bern, North Carolina native now finds himself firmly in a UFC top 10 with a growing fanbase, he believes with it comes protection.

“I’m getting to a point where I can say s—t and not get cut from the UFC,” Strickland told media during UFC Vegas 47 media day (h/t Yahoo! Sports/MMA Junkie). “Before, it’s like — oh man, I wasn’t good. Like, I couldn’t say s—t because Dana White would be like, ‘Hey, go f—k that white trash motherf—ker. Get him out of here.’ But now, since I’m growing a little bit more like, you know, fan base, people want to watch me fight, I can say a lot more offensive s—t.”

Strickland’s lack of a filter has cost him on social media as he recently found himself banned from Instagram. It wasn’t long before he then became more active on Twitter where he sparked up some controversy for his thoughts on “failing as a man” if he had a gay son.

The No. 7 ranked middleweight would go on to explain his reasoning in follow-up tweets. He wouldn’t quite walk it back though and gave a similar explanation on Wednesday.

“I love gay men,” Strickland said. “Gay men are awesome. Lesbians, not so much. Lesbians hate me. Lesbians look at me like the guy that hurt them. I’m not the guy. I’m not your father. But gay men — gay men look at me like they want to f—k me, and I respect that. You know, they compliment me. They slide in my DMs. I get some d—k pics every now and then. I respect that s—t, so I’m not homophobic.”

Riding a solid five-fight winning streak heading into this Saturday night’s main event against Jack Hermansson, it’s not at all out of the realm of possibility to see Strickland challenging for UFC gold in 2022.

If Strickland can achieve champion status, he equates his potential outside the octagon to that of Conor McGregor’s.

“No, it’s even better then because when you’re a champion, I could go full, like, Conor McGregor,” He said. “I could go f—king hit an old guy in a bar. F—king throw a f—king — trying to f—king assault Khabib [Nurmagomedov’s] manager, Ali [Abdelaziz]. You know, it’s f—king even better, dude.”

The timing of Strickland vs. Hermansson comes perfectly for the American. At UFC 271 next weekend on Feb. 12, the division’s title will be on the line when Israel Adesanya looks to defend against the man he took the belt from, Robert Whittaker.

Also competing that night will be fellow top 10 staples, Derek Brunson and Jared Cannonier.

The reigning “Last Stylebender” has already bested Brunson when meeting in Nov. 2018. Therefore Strickland sees himself with a better shot at the UFC 271 main event winner if Brunson can defeat Cannonier.

“I mean, ideally, Brunson beats Cannonier, and maybe if I do an impressive performance, I can, you know, dump and dodge and get a title shot,” Strickland said. “That’d be the perfect world, but at the end of the day, man, I’m just here to fight, make some money.

“But yeah, if I get a title shot, f—k, let’s go. I’ll make fun of ‘Stylebender’s’ f—king titty all day long.”



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