
Joe Pyfer apologizes for critical comments of Mexico following UFC 316 win
Show Caption
Hide Caption
UFC 316: Joe Pyfer post-fight interview
UFC 316 winner Joe Pyfer spoke to MMA Junkie and reporters post-fight after his unanimous decision victory over Kelvin Gastelum.
NEWARK, N.J. – Joe Pyfer back tracked on the comments that got in hot water with many of the fans ahead of his bout against Kelvin Gastelum.
Pyfer (14-3 MMA, 5-1 UFC), who was critical of Mexico and called the country a "sh*thole" after getting sick and pulling out of his original booking with Gastelum in Mexico City in March, apologized to the Mexican fan base for the way he went about things following the conclusion of UFC 316. Pyfer defeated Gastelum (20-10 MMA, 13-10 UFC) by unanimous decision this past Saturday in their re-scheduled bout. The fight was part of the pay-per-view main card of UFC 316, which took place at Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.
"Ultimately, things did not go well, PR-wise, for me in Mexico," Pyfer said at his UFC 316 post-fight news conference. "And again, I want to apologize to my Mexicans out there that may hate me. It was not anything toward Mexican culture or people. I should've rephrased it a lot kinder and I didn't, so it is what it is. But I do stand that I will never fight there again. It's too big of a risk for a b*tch like me."
Pyfer was not only critical of what he said in the build up to the fight, but also of his own performance on Saturday. He promised to be the first person to KO Gastleum, and wasn't able to come through with his prediction.
"I really thought he was going to come forward more," Pyfer said. "That was our game plan: Make him miss, make him pay. I think that's what led to it. It was both of our faults. It takes two to tango. Every time that he would come in, I would swing – but he didn't come in very often. Ultimately, it shows I have a lot to work on still. At the end of the day, this is a neverending job of improvement and skill-building and base-building.
"But f*ck it – I got the win, and I got two checks and I beat a guy who fought for the title and is getting inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame, deservedly so."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Indianapolis Star
an hour ago
- Indianapolis Star
How close was Tony Kanaan to driving? Nolan Siegel's status, possible backup drivers for Toronto
NEWTON, Iowa — As he's claimed numerous times, Tony Kanaan has no desire to race again in IndyCar. And yet, the 50-year-old Arrow McLaren team principal, who spent parts of 26 seasons racing in the highest levels of American open-wheel racing, slipped into one of Pato O'Ward's spare fire suits, pulled the young Mexican driver's race seat out of the No. 5, placed it in the No. 6 and climbed in. The few minutes of contemplating coming out of retirement came after the team's 20-year-old driver Nolan Siegel was found to have suffered a 'mild concussion' from his severe one-car crash on Lap 248 Saturday afternoon in Race 1 of IndyCar's doubleheader weekend at Iowa Speedway. Siegel initially underwent concussion testing with IndyCar's medical team Saturday in the moments after his crash, and due to the severity indicated by the G forces measured the accelerometer in the drivers' earpieces, Siegel was required to be rechecked early Sunday morning in order to determine whether he'd be cleared to run at 1. At 9:30 a.m., the team learned their first-year full-time driver would not be allowed to race, and not long after, the team determined it would not run the No. 6 Chevy that Siegel had qualified fifth for the race. An hour before Sunday's green flag, Kanaan sat down with select reporters to explain why the team elected not to run the race, why neither Kanaan nor anyone else would start the car and the process the team will undergo in the coming days to have someone, Siegel or otherwise, ready to pilot the No. 6 machine come Friday's event-opening practice on the streets of Toronto. Kanaan said he went to bed expecting Siegel to be cleared, but given the tight timeline around the doubleheader weekend and the lengths the team had to go through just to ready the car for Sunday, and the risk of a new, last-minute driver crashing after starting last (27th) on the grid due to the driver change and the tight turnaround ahead of Toronto, the risks outweighed the rewards of starting a substitute driver. What Kanaan said he didn't immediately think of Saturday evening while solidifying his decision not to have anyone else but Siegel start Sunday's race was the team's Leaders Circle battle and the points impact the No. 6 would suffer by not starting Sunday's race if Siegel was not cleared. Drivers and cars that qualify for a race, but don't start, receive half points for the effort, meaning three points for finishing 27th instead of the minimum of five for pulling off pit lane and taking part in the parade laps. After crashing from seventh place Saturday and dropping to finish 24th , a 20-point points reduction, the No. 6 car sat 21st in entrant points after Race 1, just one spot above the cutline of the top 22 charter-holding entrants that will be slotted in at the end of this season to receive the roughly $1.2 million payout from the series — deemed the Leaders Circle program. At that point, the No. 6 was 19 points clear of 22nd (the No. 45 of Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing) and 40 points clear of the first car on the outside looking in (the No. 77 of Juncos Hollinger Racing). So Sunday morning, after having been made aware of that and learning that Siegel would not be cleared to race, Kanaan inquired to series race director Kyle Novak about the ability of setting up that emergency on-track session last minute, in order to give Kanaan the opportunity to start and park and earn the No. 6 the extra two points, points Kanaan hopes and believes won't be make-or-break in the team's pursuit to hold onto a Leaders Circle spot, but available points nonetheless. It was in those few minutes as Arrow McLaren waited to hear whether IndyCar would go one step further in making an exception for the unique circumstances that Kanaan entertained the idea of hoping into the cockpit of a racecar again on the grid and took the initial steps of preparing himself for such an endeavor. 'My stuff isn't even here; that's how badly I don't want to (race), but Pato's suit fits me, as well as his seat, so I put his seat in the car and sat in it just in case,' Kanaan said. 'We were pending (IndyCar's) decision and thought, 'Why wait and rush it? Let's just sit there and get started.'' 'A lot of salt to get rid of.' How will Pato O'Ward celebrate Synk 275 win? Gifting Josef Newgarden Kit-Kats But when Novak reaffirmed IndyCar's position that they had needed to know by Saturday night in order to schedule the session and that one was necessary for Kanaan or anyone other than Siegel to start the race, Arrow McLaren was fine living with how the process had taken place. 'Internally, I've said, 'I'm not even thinking about (not making the Leaders Circle) because we're not a team that shouldn't be in the top 22,' Kanaan said. 'Sometimes, IndyCar does something where 'This is the rule, but it's up to our discretion,' but I'll pick my battles. It's fine. I'm not here to create more chaos. 'Would it be cool for you guys to talk about me being on the grid and (Scott) Dixon making fun of me (for coming out of retirement again)? Sure, but really, I truly, truly love what I'm doing now. I always loved driving an Indy car, but I have no desire to go against these guys and get beat, cause I'll get mad.' According to the rule book, drivers who have not participated at any point in on-track activities during the weekend are not allowed to even take the green flag – a rule that came into play a year ago at Iowa Speedway as Jack Harvey was balancing a debilitating back injury between qualifying and Race 1, but Dale Coyne Racing was not allowed to have anyone else start Race 1. Kanaan said he only would've performed a start and park, meaning he'd take the green flag and immediately pull into pit lane and retire the car, as the only option instead of pursuing another driver. 'I don't disagree with the rules, and rules are rules,' Kanaan said. 'I didn't want to think Nolan wouldn't be in the car, and I didn't think I was going to field a car and run the whole race starting from dead last. 'And even if that wasn't me, to do what? And then if you do more damage, you have to turn (the car around for Toronto), so the decision was made to not run the car if Nolan wasn't going to run it. That was pretty much set in my mind.' As Siegel heads back to Indianapolis from a disappointing weekend at Iowa Speedway, his next 72 hours or so will include almost constant round-the-clock work, recovery efforts and evaluation that will ultimately determine whether he's back in the car Friday afternoon in Toronto. It's a moment where Siegel and Arrow McLaren will really lean on its head of human performance, health and wellness Ryan Harber, who for years and years had been Kanaan's physiologist and who the team hired in the offseason away from Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. 'You feel that intensity.' Will IndyCar return to Iowa Speedway? Pivotal weekend may decide future '(Siegel) needs to rest. We need to keep an eye on if he's sleeping more. (He'll do) mild workouts, and we'll put him on the simulator,' Kanaan said. 'And then Thursday morning, he's going to get his evaluation to (possibly) be cleared.' Kanaan said the team doesn't yet have a backup driver lined up in case Siegel isn't cleared for Toronto, but he expects to have that settled by Monday and have said backup driver in the shop to begin the preparation process. Essentially, Arrow McLaren will ready both Siegel and his potential stand in this week so both possibilities are covered. Among the names mentioned include recent Indy 500 one-off drivers Ryan Hunter-Reay and Harvey, who is in his first year as pit reporter for Fox's IndyCar broadcasts, as well as 2024 IndyCar Rookie of the Year Linus Lundqvist, who raced last year for Chip Ganassi Racing and who achieved one pole and two podiums but whose ride was lost as the team scaled back from five full-time cars to three due to the series' launched charter system. Lundqvist has been in attendance at most IndyCar races this season, including this weekend, both to try and continue conversations and remain visible in hopes of future full-time opportunities coming together, while also remaining a possible stand in for an injured driver. Kanaan also name-dropped Theo Pourchaire, who made his IndyCar debut a year ago with Arrow McLaren at Long Beach in injury fill-in duty for David Malukas, and who then made five starts with the team through mid-June and had been announced as the driver of the No. 6 for each remaining race in 2024 after the Indy 500. Pourchaire was then unceremoniously cut to make room for the team to hire Siegel full-time, though the young Frenchman filled in for an injured Alexander Rossi last year at Toronto. Pourchaire is racing in ELMS in the LMP2 class while also serving as a test and development driver for Peugeot, and his calendar next weekend would appear to be open if called upon. History at Iowa: Myles Rowe becomes first Black driver to win IndyCar or NASCAR race at Iowa Speedway 'I'm going to sleep on it and think about what's the best fit, because it's also going to be a guy who's going to sit there all week and who then might not drive,' Kanaan said. Since the team will have to leave for Toronto on Thursday before knowing the results of Siegel's reevaluation, and because there's always a chance his symptoms flare up after getting back in the car, Kanaan said the team will bring that backup driver with them for the entirety of the Toronto race weekend. 'I don't want to go through what I did last year, staying up all night flying Pourchaire in from Europe,' said Kanaan, referring to the real-life planes, trains and automobiles episode he lived a year ago to secure a replacement for Rossi at Toronto. 'So we'll have a backup in place.'


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Max Holloway '100 percent sure' Dustin Poirier obliges to point-down brawl at UFC 318
Max Holloway has no doubts what will happen if his UFC 318 trilogy bout with Dustin Poirier reaches the final 10 seconds. Holloway (26-8 MMA, 22-8 UFC) has become famous for pointing to the center of the octagon and recklessly exchanging in the closing moments of his fights, if they go that long, with no moment being bigger than his epic last-second finish of Justin Gaethje at UFC 300. If that situation arises again on Saturday, "Blessed" is confident Poirier (30-9 MMA, 22-8 UFC) will plant his feet and exchange until one of them goes down or the closing horn sounds in his retirement bout. "(I'm) 100 percent sure he would," Holloway told MMA Junkie. "Last dance. Last 10 seconds. Point down to the ground. He might even do it. I'm 100 percent sure he's going to bring it." Poirier submitted Holloway in their first meeting at UFC 143 in February 2012. The rematch at UFC 236 in April 2019 was an instant classic, with both men scrapping hard for 25 minutes and being bloodied in the process. In fact, before the fifth round began in the rematch, Poirier was the one who pointed to the ground and invited a scrap for the final five minutes. He closed it out strong to win a unanimous decision and an interim title, and now the pair will close out their trilogy at Smoothie King Center in New Orleans (ESPN+ pay-per-view, ESPN, ESPN+), with the winner taking home the BMF belt. Poirier recently told MMA Junkie that he wants one last war for his final fight and will go out like a "knuckle head." He wants to bleed with Holloway one more time before laying his gloves down for good, and that is music to the ears of "Blessed," who will gleefully give Poirier what he wants. "Hearing those words excites me," Holloway said. "If it's a war he wants, it's a war he's going to get. It's going to be a bunch of knuckleheads in there. I wouldn't want it any other way, especially with the BMF title on the line."
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
UFC Nashville video: All eight finishes – including historic ones – from 'Music City'
The fighters at UFC on ESPN 70 had particular tunes in mind in "Music City," and most of them didn't include long outros. There were eight finishes in 12 fights at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, with four each on the prelims and main card. Included among those stoppages was a bonus-winning heel hook for Valter Walker that gave him an astonishing three heel hook wins in three UFC fights – which never has been done before. Advertisement Another of those eight finishes came in the main event – and extended Derrick Lewis' UFC record for knockouts. But it didn't come without controversy when some decried referee Jason Herzog's stoppage as too early 35 seconds into Lewis' heavyweight fight with Tallison Teixeira. Check out those two finishes and all the rest in the video above. UFC on ESPN 70 finishes Derrick Lewis def. Tallison Teixeira via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 0:35 Morgan Charriere def. Nate Landwehr via knockout (punches) – Round 3, 0:27 Vitor Petrino def. Austen Lane via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 1, 4:16 Tuco Tokkos def. Junior Tafa via submission (arm-triangle choke) – Round 2, 4:25 Jake Matthews def. Chidi Njokuani via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 1, 1:09 Valter Walker def. Kennedy Nzechukwu via submission (heel hook) – Round 1, 0:54 Mike Davis def. Mitch Ramirez via TKO (punches) – Round 2, 4:08 Fatima Kline def. Melissa Martinez via TKO (head kick) – Round 3, 2:36 This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: UFC Nashville video: All eight finishes from Lewis vs. Teixeira