Dan Hardy on St. Pierre: "I'm convinced I can beat him."
by Giada Esposito on April 02, 2010

Dan Hardy tried to become the first British champion in UFC history when he entered the Octagon to face welterweight champ Georges St. Pierre at UFC 111. But like so many fighters before him, he left the cage frustrated at the end of the night.

Hardy spent most of the bout's 25 minutes fighting off of his back after finding no answer to St. Pierre's lightning quick takedowns, but he was able to escape two dangerous submission attempts in a fight that showed little other effective offense by either man.

Still, despite being physically dominated for almost the entire match, Hardy believes he learned some valuable lessons from the fight.

"[St-Pierre] just convinced me that he can keep me on the floor for 25 minutes," Hardy told MMAjunkie.com. "It was frustrating. I didn't feel like I had a fight. I've got no marks or injuries. But on the plus side, I know what kind of standard I'm up against on the floor, and I feel comfortable. With a little more training I can be a lot more offensive and a lot more dangerous down there."

Hardy's frustration seemed to be shared by St. Pierre as well, who apologized to the fans for being unable to finish Hardy in a fight that drew boos from the crowd as it dragged on into its later minutes. Hardy believes that St. Pierre is now fighting not to lose, rather than going in seeking to finish his opponents.

"The problem was that my gameplan was based on not stepping forward because if I stepped forward, he would change levels," Hardy said. "So I was trying to get him to commit so I could counter him. He just didn't want to play on the feet at all. I was saying this in the buildup to the fight - 'GSP' doesn't take risks in his fights anymore. He knew that my strength was striking and (within) 17 seconds of the first round, he shot in for a takedown. I think that says a lot about his approach to the fight game. He goes in there to win the fight and keep the belt and not to beat his opponent. You can only fight this way for so long before people start complaining. I think Saturday night highlighted that, and I think a lot of people have started complaining. I don't know how we're going to get around it, because as the sport is now, you can do that and win fights."

For now Hardy will take a little time off to refocus himself, but he feels that with his newly-gained insight into the champ he will be well-prepared should they meet again in the future.

"I do need a vacation, mentally, because it's been a real tough few weeks with the training camp and the 'Primetime' (TV special)," Hardy stated. "I lost my granddad during the training camp as well, which was very difficult to deal with at the time. I need to take a step away and refresh myself. When I fight him again, I'll be able to step into the Octagon with a lot more confidence. Not that I didn't go into this fight with confidence, but I'm convinced now I can beat him. With a couple more months of training and a bit of work in a couple of areas, I can get the job done. I may have lost on Saturday night, but I wasn't beaten."

Make sure to check back with us the day of the event for free, live, round-by-round coverage of UFC 111 right here at FiveKnuckles.com! Join expert analyst Mike Williams as he takes you through the entire fight card blow-by-blow and then keep it right here for all the post-fight news and notes you can handle!

 |  (33) Comments D_V: does he not realize that for the 4 and a half total minutes that he stood with GSP he was the one that took every strike and landed nothing. GSP could beat this guy at anything in MMA. K1, just boxing, wrestling (0bvious), submission wrestling, tradtional bjj, gi or no-gi. GSP's better at everything. Mtx: Great article Giada. I'm glad he is taking a little vacation to center himself a bit. Hardy showed he is a tough guy in this fight, and although he got dominated I have more respect towards him. The Hitman: dumb statement JujitsWho: Hardy would do just as well in a rematch as he did this time. I like Hardy, but GSP is on another level. There is no shame in that though, he is on another level than everyone in the WW div and most fighters in general EverlastingSpringtime: Had his arm broken he wouldn't be so confident, however his summery of GSP is sound, he takes his opponents down 90% of the time, maybe more, if Hardy could develop a crazy level of BJJ skill from the bottom, we could see GSP get submitted. Not to sure if itl be hardy that does it, but game planning this way seems the #1 option. (GSP is too smart to get caught in drag out stand up battles, he knows what he needs to do to win, why take unnecessary risks) Kable: He makes interesting points. Penn and Silva have finished most of their contenders. GSP has went to decision with most of them. D_V: I don't think anyone wants to fight him right now either. He's a nightmare. There's just no room for anything. He should be finishing guys but if you look at the big picture it's obvious that guys just aren't challenging him. It's similar to Silva looking like ass against Cote and Leites. If you know the other guy can't do anything the killer instinct isn't there. Guys just can't challenge him. Nobody is good enough to make him have a killer instinct. If he fought better fighters I think he'd finish them. When the skill level between him and Hughes wasn't as big of a disparity he came out and slaughtered the guy twice. Now that he knows these guys can't compete he just doesn't have the passion. He isn't being pushed. If they move him to 185 and push him against good fighters there I think we'll see more finishing.
HOW WILL THE THIAGO ALVES VS. MARTIN KAMPMANN FIGHT END AT UFC ON FX 2?
Alves def. Kampmann via TKO/KO
Alves def. Kampmann via submission
Alves def. Kampmann via decision
Kampmann def. Alves via TKO/KO
Kampmann def. Alves via submission
Kampmann def. Alves via decision
TAKE ANOTHER POLL!