Under en lång intervju med Bloodyelbow.com, gav Anthony Johnson, potentiell framtida utmanare till UFC:s lätt tungviktstitel, nyligen sin version av varför Alistair Overeem inte längre är välkommen hos ”The Blackzilians.” Sanningsenligt eller ej är det sannerligen intressant läsning, då ”Rumble” delar med sig av en rad tidigare okända incidenter, där holländaren alltsomoftast figurerar som en oerhört osympatisk individ.
Det är inte första gången Anthony Johnson (18-4) attackerar den forne träningskamraten Alistair Overeem (37-14) efter att holländaren lämnat gymmet i Boca Raton, Florida. Dock kan det mycket väl vara den mest utförliga beskrivningen av ”The Demolition Mans,” beroende på sanningshalten i intervjun, ibland chockerande beteende. Hur som helst lär Overeem, som nu tränar hos Greg Jackson och Mike Winkeljohn i Albuquerque, New Mexiko, inte precis jubla över situationerna som beskrivs i intervjun, vilken i sin fullständighet kan läsas nedan.
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”When Alistair was here, he would have his own camp, basically. To me, the bottom line is this, he wasn’t a part of the Blackzilians. We do this stuff as a team, as a family. We push each other, and we don’t bring 10 extra guys in that weren’t helping any of us elevate our skill level.
He came in a couple of times and trained with us, but not enough to really make a mark in my memory. I’d say maybe 5 times in total. I don’t know, I’m just throwing up a number, but it wasn’t that many times. I sparred with him a couple of times, but overall, it wasn’t a team thing. It was the Blackzilians and then there was Alistair and his crew. He would always come up in conversation when people talked about our team, but to me, he wasn’t doing shit.
He never hurt me personally, but I did hurt myself training with him. I hurt my hand. I had just come back to training after I fought Arlovski. I had broken my hand during that fight and it was my first week back off that injury. Alistair came in on Meat Night, and I had already heard about him so I told my coaches, ‘I don’t want to train with him.’ I had seen how he treated people and I didn’t like him.
He would belittle people, and wasn’t respectful at all. A lot of other people noticed it, too. It was like we were all in his world. Anyway, we sparred, and it was right when he had come back from Thailand in preparation for the Travis Browne fight. It was the last round of our sparring practice, and he had been after me to spar with him, so I was like, ‘Fuck it, let’s go.’ That’s what I said in my head.
First punch, I was trying to kill him, because I had heard that if you don’t set the tone with him, he won’t respect you. Right off the bat, I hit him with some good combos. That’s how I hurt my hand. He got off some shots, but never hit me flush with anything. If he did, I would say that he did, but he didn’t. I’m not trying to brag, but he just didn’t. He’s hit me with some good leg kicks before, but he’s never hit me with anything from his hands that mattered.
There was another reason I didn’t want to work with him that day. My trainer, Henri Hooft was training with us. Now Henri has a bad stomach; he’s had a lot of stomach issues, had surgery and whatnot. He had been working with Alistair, and everyone in that gym knows Henri has a bad stomach, so we know not to go hard, especially in his midsection.
Right off the bat, Alistair got him in a clinch and threw a hard knee, BAM! right in his stomach. I’m like, ‘Okay, strike 20.’ Then, I seen him in there, and Henri got out of position. Alistair moved where he was on Henri’s left side, but behind him, and he threw a punch. That punch was straight at the back of Henri’s head. That was the moment I knew that I fucking hated this guy. I don’t have respect for anybody like that.
My partner, Guto Inocente was sparring with him. Guto is really smooth and technical. You wouldn’t know it by his last fight, but he is. I wasn’t there, but the guys in the gym said that Guto was piecing Alistair up. They said Alistair got frustrated and grabbed him by the knee and took him down hard. When he did that, he blew out Guto’s knee. He had to have surgery and everything after that. This was during stand-up practice. Why would you take him down when it’s just a striking session?
Stuff like that is hard to respect. He might have changed by going to Greg Jackson’s. His losses may have humbled him, because that’s what happened to me. You lose a couple times, you get humble, quick. Maybe he’s changed, but as soon as I heard that he hurt Jon Jones and where he kneed Andrei Arlovski, I was like, ‘Damn that shit sounds familiar.'”