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Johnsburg graduate moves down a class to featherweight division in UFC

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Doing so will make Guida a “force to be reckoned with,” according to his trainer Greg Jackson, who said the drop to featherweight makes sense although his toughness and talent allowed him to compete as a lightweight for seven years.

But ironically, it was his camp’s decision to move away from that approach that factored into Guida’s most recent loss – a 48-47 split decision to Gray Maynard. It’s a fight that Guida said avoided being taken down by Maynard while out-striking him “top to bottom from the first minute to the 25th minute.”

Despite saying the fight spoke for itself, Guida claims the judges fell short in their duties, handing Maynard the win. Afterward, though, White disagreed, saying the fight wasn’t even close. White also questioned the tactics of Guida spending much of the night eluding Maynard rather than attacking him.

“Some goof put it in his head that running around in circles would win him the fight and they were dead wrong,” White said in a post-Main Event interview “This is a fight and the thing about Clay Guida is that he’s a fighter. He’s not the most talented Mixed Martial Artist in the world – he’s an aggressive, in-your-face guy that wears you out and ends up beating you.”

The loss and the negative reaction – both by fans and by his fellow UFC fighters – to Guida’s performance have only motivated Guida since. While he admits he could have taken a more physical approach to the fight than he did, he still feels like he accomplished what he wanted to despite coming up short on the judge’s scorecard.

Guida insists those who couldn’t see him frustrate Maynard throughout the five-round bout either need “some sort of glasses or a new flat-screen”. But just as quickly, he refers to the loss as a chapter that’s behind him and that he has moved on to beginning his competitive life anew as a featherweight.

“I’m sure he wants to prove he’s exciting and prove that he’s still the same Clay,” Jackson said. “He wants to show everybody that he can still get in there and mix it up. If he puts on a great show [in Chicago], I think it will be business as usual.”


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