All Episodes
Nov. 24, 2011 - The Joe Rogan Experience
02:13:58
JRE MMA Show #160 with Francis Ngannou
Participants
Main voices
f
francis ngannou
01:29:41
j
joe rogan
38:23
Appearances
Clips
j
jamie vernon
00:04
| Copy link to current segment

Speaker Time Text
unidentified
Joe Rogan podcast, check it out!
The Joe Rogan Experience Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day Alright, we're up What's up, man?
joe rogan
Good to see you.
You have had a lot of experiences since the last time I saw you.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
A lot of things happened.
francis ngannou
That's why I'm always about writing my book and chapter, keep adding up, adding up, adding up.
And yes, every time you feel like you're just maybe in the beginning or in the middle.
joe rogan
Yeah, I don't think so.
You're definitely only in the middle.
francis ngannou
Yeah, in the middle.
joe rogan
Somewhere.
I mean, it's not the beginning, but it's a lot of experiences.
So tell me about leading up to the Tyson Fury fight.
francis ngannou
Oh, the Tyson Fury fight, that was great.
You know, I was just there living a dream, you know, get this big moment, get that fight that I've been waiting for four years.
joe rogan
The fight that everybody said you were never going to get.
francis ngannou
Yes.
joe rogan
Which is crazy.
Like, thank God for the Saudis, because they are making things happen, which is really incredible.
francis ngannou
They are making things happen.
joe rogan
Incredible.
francis ngannou
And it's not like, who is this?
Who is who?
Who is that?
You know, it's like, okay, we want it to happen, then make it happen.
joe rogan
Yeah, because everybody wanted to see it happen, but it was one of those things where everybody dismissed it.
Everybody said, that's not going to happen.
Tyson Fury's the heavyweight champion.
Why would he fight a guy who doesn't have any professional boxing matches?
That's crazy.
That's not going to happen.
And it happened.
And then everybody said, you didn't stand a chance.
And then when you knocked him down the second round, everybody was like, holy shit!
And when you're dancing over him when he went down...
francis ngannou
Yeah.
But, you know, I think a lot of people do mistake something, you know.
And I always tell people, like, not because you're a fighter that you walk in the bar, and there's this guy coming to you, maybe this fat guy coming to you, and then you stand there, and because you're a fighter, don't think, like, he's a threat.
Everybody could be a threat.
You better take two steps back, and then, like, see your distance, and get ready to defend yourself.
You know, if everybody hits you, anybody hits you, you're gonna get hurt, you know?
So, yes, I might not have been doing boxing.
I'm not a boxer, but still, I'm a fighter.
And even if I wasn't a fighter, you know, I can hurt and I can harm somebody.
joe rogan
You're a big motherfucker!
francis ngannou
I'm a big guy!
So I was watching it and people were like, no, he's 10, no chance, he has zero chance.
I'm like, there is not a fight on earth that zero chance, that element of zero chance doesn't exist.
I mean, if you look at it, I'm a man guy and then two men together, someone might have more techniques, might know the sport.
But even if I've never been in the gym, you still better watch out.
I still have a chance.
Maybe not as much, maybe not equal chance, but I still do have a chance.
joe rogan
But you can't dismiss someone like you and drop your guard and think that you don't have any chance.
francis ngannou
You shouldn't dismiss anybody.
No.
We used to be in the...
I have seen fight that people show up and then they pretend like, oh, they're going to fight.
They have stone in their hand.
And if you dismiss them because you think like, oh, he's a small guy, he hits you with the stone in his hand.
joe rogan
Right, right, right, right.
francis ngannou
Well, by the time you find out that he has stone in their hand, you are in the ground.
joe rogan
Right, exactly.
But it was very clear to me that you had some interesting strategies when you went into that fight.
First of all, you were fighting a lot of it in Southpaw.
Why did you decide to do that?
Was that something that you guys had devised before the fight?
You thought it would be an interesting strategy?
Or is that just like the way you like to box?
francis ngannou
I like to box like that, but I also thought he was a strategy.
That he would be a good strategy as well.
Because, like, basically on the Tyson Fury fight, I think the South Pole was a big component in that fight.
Because every time that I realized that every time that I switched to South Pole, he was thinking.
But when I switched back to Orthodox, he was pressing.
So when I wanted to take a break, I switched to South Pole a little bit.
joe rogan
What was it like to, I mean, there's obviously you've had many MMA fights, you've been very successful, UFC heavyweight champion as an MMA fighter.
But what was the difference in the feel of like going into a professional boxing fight with a guy like Tyson Fury, who is the heavyweight champion of the world and one of the greatest of all time?
He's absolutely one of the greatest heavyweight boxers ever.
francis ngannou
But he was completely different.
You know, the environment is different.
The organization is different.
It's different to be stepped in the ring for the first time.
Okay, you have all this spotlight on you, but you're in the ring.
It feels different.
Sometimes you're in the cage.
You're used to the cage.
You lean on that cage.
You have that feeling.
You grab the cage.
joe rogan
Also, you have shoes on.
francis ngannou
Yes, and then in the case, you know that you can do more, you can wrestle, you can do this, and you're comfortable with that.
But you're in the ring for the very first time, somewhere that you've never been, it feels different.
And then you're thinking like, oh man, how am I going to do?
Am I going to be able to do three rounds?
Am I going to be able to do four rounds?
I don't know.
I'm going to find out just now.
There's no way back.
You're going to find out.
So by every round, you have to think about, like, okay, how am I doing?
This is the first round, then second round.
Okay, so this is the fifth round.
I'm not too bad, so I think I'm going to get there.
You know, just go like that, round after round.
joe rogan
So you were concerned about endurance?
francis ngannou
Yes, very concerned about endurance.
It was 10 rounds, and I didn't know how I was going to be feeling after the third round.
joe rogan
You turned it on in the eighth round.
In the eighth round, you hit him with some big shots.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
That was one of your best rounds.
francis ngannou
Yeah, the eighth round was pretty good.
Then I put my feet off the gas on the ninth round.
And then the 10 rounds, I'm like, You know, like, oh, I feel good.
This is the last round, right?
I feel good.
That's when I started to do, like, the Superman punch, all this stuff.
For me, he was already a win.
joe rogan
You shocked the world, that's for sure.
Did you have any mock fights in the gym?
Like, did you bring in any professional boxers and have, like, try to go 8, 10 rounds in the gym?
francis ngannou
Sparring.
joe rogan
Yeah, but like with no headgear, like smaller gloves, did you do anything like that replicated an actual professional boxing match?
unidentified
No.
francis ngannou
We just do like a normal sparring, have different sparring partner sometimes to push me, but we didn't do anything like that, you know.
As an MMA fighter, we used to spar without gloves, without headgear and stuff.
But you get into boxing.
Everything is so strict, so specific.
And then you get to the point that you kind of ask yourself, why taking a chance to hurt now and get pulled up of the fight?
I'm just going to train.
I trained the best that I could, that I can.
Then I will get there, figure out what's happened.
joe rogan
And so, but from the time the negotiations started to the time of the fight, how much time did you have to prepare for this?
francis ngannou
For the negotiation?
joe rogan
No, so you had the negotiations and then once it was signed, how much time did you have to prepare for the actual fight itself?
And were you preparing already, hoping you were going to have a boxing match?
francis ngannou
Yeah, but it's different to like think that, oh, I might have a boxing match.
I want to have a boxing match.
Then when you have a boxing match and knowing who you are going to fight is something different.
You know, you prepare.
The real preparation starts now.
And between the moment that we signed the fight, the fight itself, it was over three months.
Because I know that it wasn't my fear, you know, and I didn't have any...
And it's not like I was in the gym training, boxing every day.
So it was basically four months.
joe rogan
That's crazy.
francis ngannou
Yeah, I took a moment for a pre-camp.
I came back here because I was in Cameroon at the time.
Then I came back here.
My team and I, we work on everything, start like a pre-camp, you know, just train to get in shape, start like sparring, and then we started the sparring with three rounds.
The first sparring was like three rounds.
Move around, see.
joe rogan
Then we started to go, walk round after round. - What I thought when I saw the fight is imagine if you had just gone into professional boxing like 10 years ago, how well you would do.
No MMA, no kicking, no wrestling, just professional boxing.
For you to do that well against a guy like Tyson Fury who's that good?
francis ngannou
I don't really know and those are the stuff that I don't usually think about.
I think life sometimes just had a path for you.
You follow the path that you destiny that life.
Because regardless of the fact that I didn't start 10 years earlier, I didn't have that opportunity 10 years earlier.
Meanwhile, I had to discover MMA and have a great journey in MMA, have a great experience in MMA. So it's something that I will not regret that.
I will not beat that up over an opportunity of starting boxing early.
Things just happened.
I took my chance.
I do what I can do.
It's all about, like, figure out how far I can go, what I can possibly do.
You know, so I'm not a 18 years, 20 years old guy that I dream in to have a career into this, but I still want to know what I can possibly do at this point of my life.
joe rogan
Yeah.
What was the experience like when it was all over?
Like, what did it feel like when you just went 10 rounds and a lot of people, including myself, thought you won?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
Oh, I feel very great.
You know, like, regardless of the result, for me, knowing what I was going through, what was in my mind, like, what's going to happen into this fight?
First round, second round, then I get in the tenth round.
Good.
And I feel like I wasn't doing bad.
So for me, that was a win.
That was a satisfaction.
The result was other part of it, which didn't matter much.
But I knew already that if ever, because I couldn't guarantee that we would get in the 10th round.
But if ever we get there, I wasn't expecting to win.
joe rogan
When you dropped him...
francis ngannou
Definitely not.
joe rogan
When you dropped him in the second round, I jumped off the couch.
I jumped in the air.
francis ngannou
I will say something.
You know, like, I won this from the moment that they accepted the fight, that they signed the fight.
Because I think I was...
Very underestimated.
They didn't know that I could have done something.
If they had known that beforehand, maybe this fight would have never happened.
Because they would have seen a risk and they wouldn't want to take that risk.
So this was basically less risk, zero risk.
joe rogan
And it probably would have been different, too, because there was no footage to prepare for you, right?
Like, the only footage that he could prepare was watching you fight in MMA. Yes, he was...
unidentified
There it is.
joe rogan
Why are you dancing in front of them?
francis ngannou
When we start a fight, when the referee say, okay, you guys go to your corner, he said, let me take you to school.
So that was, the dancing was like, I think you're a bad professor.
You're a bad teacher.
That was the only reason why I did that.
joe rogan
He's a funny guy, man.
francis ngannou
He's funny.
He's very entertaining.
joe rogan
Oh, he's so entertaining.
He's so entertaining.
francis ngannou
He's just a show guy that's happened to really like being very talented in boxing, good at it, but he's an entertainer.
joe rogan
I mean, the way he sells it.
I mean, even the way he was playing with his fat, like standing next to you, like rubbing his belly.
francis ngannou
Like sometimes he will insult you.
I don't know if he's insulting you or if he's making fun.
But it's just funny that you have to laugh.
You really have to say about it.
unidentified
He kept talking about how big your dick must be.
joe rogan
He's a funny dude, man.
He's a funny dude.
francis ngannou
He said those things the first time we met.
And he would put some stuff up sometime that I'm like, what?
And I really have a hard time understanding what he's saying.
Oh, I do.
So I swear to God.
joe rogan
And English is my first language.
francis ngannou
And they have to translate to tell me what he said.
joe rogan
His English is hard to understand.
The Gypsy King, he's quite a character.
Did you hang out with him at all after the fight?
francis ngannou
No, we didn't hang out.
But I think we both respect each other.
I think he always, I mean, he was entertaining, but he always showed respect.
And I know that he respected me, even from the beginning.
You know, it's not like this was after the fight.
Even from the beginning, he could have said everything that he would say to make his show, to laugh, make people laugh, you know, but he's very respectful.
joe rogan
That's cool.
Was there any talk after the fight about a rematch?
francis ngannou
Yes.
There was even a rematch clause.
How do they call it?
First regard of rematch clause.
There was something in the contract about the rematch clause.
joe rogan
Was that if you beat him?
francis ngannou
It was if I get in the 8th round.
joe rogan
Really?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
Wow.
francis ngannou
So the deal of the rematch was if I get in the 8th round.
joe rogan
So why didn't the rematch materialize?
francis ngannou
I think it's a timing.
I think it's a matter of timing.
joe rogan
So you go from that fight to the Anthony Joshua fight?
francis ngannou
Yes.
joe rogan
So tell me about the preparation and leading up to that fight.
francis ngannou
In fact, the preparation for the Anthony Joshua fight, then I started, you know, after having like four months of training camp for the Tyson Fury fight, I had this feeling, you know, and then I get a little confident.
Now I know how it works, like 10 rounds, and then it was pretty good.
You know, the Tyson Fury fight, I think I sparred like 10 rounds for like Two weeks.
Yeah, like four sparrings of ten rounds, barely.
But the Anthony Joshua fight, six weeks before the fight, I was...
No, I wasn't ten.
No, the Tyson...
Yeah, four weeks before the fight, I was already doing like ten rounds.
And I was feeling good, you know, even...
A little lighter.
But things play out different.
And I think, unlike the Tyson Fury fight, that nobody expected me to do anything.
Here, they were expecting me to do something.
So...
Things played out a little different.
And then we get in the five weeks, and then every time that we're going to do something in the five weeks, whether it's media, they're going to pick me up, and then I get there, have to wait like one hour and a half before he arrives.
And that was like maybe the third day of the week that Dewey, Dewey Cooper, he said, Oh, he started to get really mad, upset about it.
Like, yes, this is how they do to get fired and tired.
But at the time, I didn't know what was going on.
So I'm like, No, come relax Dewey.
It's OK. I didn't know until we get to the fight day.
Friday, receive an email.
Pick up time.
I mean, this is one thing among others.
Pick up time.
10.30 from the hotel.
And then, when they say 10.30, by 10.20, there is a car in your door waiting.
We go to the supposedly fight time between midnight to 1am.
We get to the arena at 10.45.
There is a producer coming to the locker room.
Say, oh guy, we're running late on the broadcast.
Now we're going to go around 1.45 each.
I'm like, okay, 1.45.
It's 10.45.
Three hours.
Okay.
joe rogan
So what do you do?
francis ngannou
Do you eat?
joe rogan
Do you sleep?
unidentified
What do you do when you know you have three more hours?
francis ngannou
You don't know, just stay there and then you have like a drug test guy around waiting for you to pee.
joe rogan
How far before the fight do you eat?
francis ngannou
Usually, maybe like four, five hours.
Yeah, like maybe five to six hours and then you get some snacks in between, you know.
And then, yeah, it was around 1.30.
That he was, Anthony Joshua arrived.
I saw it on screen.
I'm like, so we're supposed to fight at 1.45.
He's arriving at 1.30.
What does that mean?
It's going to...
joe rogan
So they're playing games.
francis ngannou
And so we fight at 1.00, at 3.30.
joe rogan
Oh, wow!
francis ngannou
At 3.30.
I've been in Saudi for almost two months, training to fight between midnight and 1.00.
That was my training time.
By two, three...
joe rogan
So they wanted to keep you anxious, drag it on, psychologically put it in your head, you don't know when you're going to fight?
francis ngannou
Pretty much.
But even at that time, I didn't know what was happening.
It was after everything that I was like, what's going on?
Because I get to the point that I was so tired.
I was in the locker room, hitting me, then sit down, feeling asleep.
Then I tell Eric, Eric Nixik, like, bro, something wrong.
I'm asleep.
I feel like I want to sleep.
Like, I'm sweating.
But we just keep doing.
So that's fight.
I mean, not to say Anthony Joshua can win me.
You know, I think if there's somebody that you can lose against him, he is the guy, you know.
And he's one of the best of doing it, you know.
But, and this is definitely not on him because he wasn't the guy that was sending all those emails, was organizing.
So I'm not blaming about anything.
But the organization, bro, nah.
They did quite some stuff that wasn't fair.
Wish on the Tyson fight was perfect.
Everything was perfect because I wasn't a threat.
I wasn't...
Nobody cares about me.
Everything was organized.
We get there in the locker room, I think, was two hours before the fight properly.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Hmm.
francis ngannou
So then I'm like...
joe rogan
Well, Anthony Joshua is a veteran, you know.
He's been in the boxing game for a long time.
For sure.
He knows all the different tricks.
They also obviously very much prepared for your style.
They saw you fight Tyson Fury, so they had tape on you.
As Tyson Fury did not have boxing tape.
He didn't have any footage to study.
But Anthony Joshua did.
And it was very clear that he knew you had certain tendencies and there were certain things that you did with the Tyson Fury fight that he exploited in his fight.
francis ngannou
Maybe.
And then I think, again, I think he's capable to figure out everybody.
I think he's capable to win everybody.
But In this case, I feel like in some ways, they stand on my way a little bit.
joe rogan
They stood in your way.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
So they played some games.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, they wanted to get the most advantage possible, you know, which is, that's, you know, smart.
If you're their coach, their manager, that's what I would do too.
francis ngannou
But it wasn't their coach that was organizing the fight.
joe rogan
So you think it's the organization itself that they set everything up in his favor?
francis ngannou
The organization.
I mean, yes, his team was part of the organization because it was Greensberry and Mushroom.
Those emails was coming from there.
joe rogan
So those are the people that told you to get there three hours earlier than you needed to be?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
Those are the people that were sending the schedule, the fight with schedule.
And every day we send everything, like pick up time, the program, and the schedule.
joe rogan
Have you had a chance to go back and watch the Anthony Joshua fight?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
I mean, I didn't...
Yes, I watched it.
What was your question?
joe rogan
What do you remember about the fight?
What was different watching it?
francis ngannou
Oh.
Even like feeling it.
It wasn't...
Even before I went to watch it, I get in the ring Was, you know, wasn't feeling myself.
And the first round, when he knocked me down, like, I fell and I was like, did I slip?
Like, what exactly knocked me down, made me fall?
Like, this punch?
Because I felt the punch, but it wasn't the punch that wound.
Knocked me down.
So that's when I really get confused at that time.
I'm like, damn!
What?
But this is the thing.
From that moment, I get knocked down with a punch that It wasn't that hard.
joe rogan
You don't think it was that hard?
francis ngannou
No.
He hit my hand before he hit my face.
And I felt it.
I felt the punch, but I was on the floor.
The first one.
And then I get count, then stood up.
We finished the round.
I went on my corner.
But by the time I went on my corner, I never came back from that.
I kept going.
And I remember being in my corner.
And then we were like, don't go on Southpaw.
He's waiting you on Southpaw.
Do this champ.
Do this champ.
That was it.
From there, I don't remember when I left the stool to get in the second round.
joe rogan
Well, that was probably from the big punch in the second round too, right?
francis ngannou
Yeah, but I'm talking about the first round.
joe rogan
Right, but the memory afterwards is always going to be cloudy after a knockout, especially a bad knockout like that.
francis ngannou
Yeah, but I remember exactly what happened until we get to the store.
I remember being there like...
I started having blurry vision, like the guy was in front of me, my team was in front of me speaking to me, and then the voice was getting distanced.
joe rogan
So you think there was something wrong?
francis ngannou
I don't know if it was the fatigue, I don't know what was it, but something wasn't right.
joe rogan
So something wasn't right on...
Forget about the punches he landed.
Something else was wrong.
Is that what you're saying?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
Something was wrong.
joe rogan
Do you think it's something you ate?
Do you think it was something that someone gave you?
francis ngannou
I don't know.
I have no proof.
I don't know if maybe...
joe rogan
Did you get tested after the fight?
francis ngannou
Maybe it's the fact that I can...
I get there at that time.
joe rogan
So just the fatigue and the anxiety and all the hours and hours?
unidentified
I don't know if it's the fatigue.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
Yeah, but something wrong.
I wanted to get...
First of all, when all those things happen, you are in the moment, you don't get out of the fight and think about, like, go get tested.
You process things and then see to understand, to see...
How he was wrong.
But by the time, they say, I think I need, we have to do like within 12 hours to do like blood or urine, 12 and 24 hours.
That was it.
So I didn't do that.
I can't say it was that.
I don't know.
joe rogan
But it felt like something was wrong.
francis ngannou
It wasn't me, yeah.
joe rogan
So did it feel like something was wrong, like just plain fatigue or did it feel like something was wrong, like maybe you were poisoned or maybe you were drugged?
francis ngannou
Plain fatigue.
joe rogan
Fatigue.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
So just fatigue.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
On the fatigue aspect.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Well, this is also an aspect of experience, right?
Because this is only your second professional boxing fight.
It is.
There's things that people do.
They do very intelligent things.
Like Gervonta Davis, when he fought Ryan Garcia, he made him dehydrate, get down to a low weight, and then there was a clause in the contract where he couldn't gain more than 10 pounds before the fight itself.
So he went into the fight dehydrated.
Smart.
For a guy like Gervonta, who's a huge puncher.
So there's things that experienced professionals that have been in the game a long time will get a fighter to agree to that's not in their best interest.
And then there's things that they can do to you, like make you wait all day and make you wait around, which will fatigue you.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
But there wasn't a thing or something in the contract that was forcing me to do something.
The only thing was to show up on time.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
So that was everything.
Because like… Before all that, the week before, sparring, everything feels good.
I spar way more better, way more stronger than what I did on the Fury fight.
Even my sparring partner was different at that time.
On the Fury fight, we were getting somebody in maybe after the...
Six or eight rounds just to weigh me down, but the quality of boxing wasn't that impressive, right?
Here, he was different.
And I was able to hold.
I know that if I had to fall, he would take a little more to get me down.
joe rogan
Well, Anthony Joshua's a big puncher.
He's a big puncher, and he's fast.
He's fast, and he's a one-punch knockout puncher, as opposed to Tyson Fury can knock guys out with one punch, but really he wears guys out.
He beats guys up and then takes them out later.
Like the Deontay Wilder fight, he beats him up and then he takes him out.
Whereas Joshua can take people out with one shot.
He's a much bigger, physically much more powerful guy.
francis ngannou
No, I agree with that and I knew that.
I knew that.
joe rogan
What would you do differently if you could do the Anthony Joshua fight again?
francis ngannou
That's the problem.
We did everything right.
unidentified
Like...
joe rogan
Everything right in preparation?
francis ngannou
In preparation.
We did everything right.
You know, sometimes...
You know, like when, for example, I fought Stipe.
I went back and I could have released a...
I could make a whole list of what I did wrong, what I could have done better.
And that's why, even after that fight, my next fight again directly was so bad, because I was still working on the list of what I had done wrong.
But here, we were very disciplined.
We did everything.
And everybody was professional.
You can't say, this person did this wrong.
This should have been like this.
This should have been like that.
joe rogan
It's so different, too, because you're going from no professional boxing fights to two of the very best, not just in the world, but two of the very best ever.
Anthony Joshua, Olympic gold medalist, elite fighter, an incredible athlete.
I mean, he's so good.
So, did you think, like...
At all about having fights with maybe some guys that were below that level to get more experience.
Like after the Tyson Fury fight, maybe fighting a guy who's like ranked 15th or 16th, you know.
francis ngannou
I'd never...
Thought about that.
joe rogan
You just went for the money.
And the money in the big fight.
The big fight is obviously...
francis ngannou
Yes, won the big fight.
So, like, for example, after the Tyson Fury fight, if I go for another guy, top 15, like, what's the goal here?
I mean, again, I'm not 20 years old, I'm not 25, that I have a plan to grow up the ranking and get to the championship.
I won.
joe rogan
Just get that money.
francis ngannou
Yeah, get the money.
joe rogan
Get the big fights.
francis ngannou
The big fight, out of the big fight.
So, that was the goal.
joe rogan
Yeah, well, you achieved that goal.
francis ngannou
Because, like, first of all, going to the Tyson Fury fight, you didn't know if there was a plan after that, if there was another fight after that.
And then after the Tyson Fury fight, the next fight that you have a call for was an Anthony Joshua fight.
joe rogan
Were you trying to get a different fight after the Tyson Fury fight?
Like after the Tyson Fury fight, were you trying to get a rematch?
Or were you just willing to take whatever they are offering you?
francis ngannou
The rematch was there.
We know we had the rematch, but he was going to fight Yusik first.
The thing that's supposed to happen in December, and he couldn't.
joe rogan
Right, he got cut.
francis ngannou
Yeah, he couldn't fight in December.
So I wasn't really on something.
I was just there, and then I get the offer of Anthony Joshua.
Then I'm like, let's go.
unidentified
Hmm.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
So, where do you stand now?
What are you planning on doing now?
francis ngannou
What do I plan on doing now?
I think I still have copper in me.
Boxing fights?
Yeah, copper boxing fights.
Yeah, basically boxing fights.
I have copper MMA fights, and I think I have anything like I'm going to fight MMA fights by the end of the year with PFL. I'm going to have to fight in Saudi again.
joe rogan
Really?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, one of the things that has been discussed that apparently the UFC might be open to because the Saudis throw around so much money is the potential of a joint promotion, a cross promotion with you versus Jon Jones.
francis ngannou
Make it happen.
joe rogan
That is what the world wants to see.
Because when you have a guy like yourself that knocks out Stipe, becomes the undisputed UFC heavyweight champion, and then, through negotiation only, decides to relinquish the belt, everybody, even though Jon Jones is the champion now, everybody's like, yeah, but you didn't win the title against the champion.
And you were the most compelling fight in the heavyweight division, for sure, for Jon Jones.
francis ngannou
Well, that's what I wish.
But, you know, in these days, this takes a lot more than what I want or what I wish to happen.
joe rogan
There's a lot going on.
francis ngannou
Yeah, there's a lot going on.
joe rogan
So tell me, what is the status of your deal with the PFL now?
So how does that work?
francis ngannou
It's working pretty good.
We have a good relationship.
I have some fights.
Again, I will be fighting by the end of the year.
joe rogan
Do you know who you're fighting?
francis ngannou
I think Renan Ferreira is the guy.
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's the guy that knocked out Ryan Bader.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
He's dangerous.
unidentified
He's dangerous.
joe rogan
He's legit.
francis ngannou
I've been telling people about this guy for, what, almost two years?
joe rogan
He's a big dude, too.
francis ngannou
I said, watch this guy.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
But very athletic.
joe rogan
Very athletic, fast.
francis ngannou
Fast hand, one-two, knee, stuff.
Like, very athletic.
Yeah.
So, I think it's going to be him.
joe rogan
And you think that fight will be in Saudi Arabia as well?
francis ngannou
Yeah, that's what the PFA is working on.
joe rogan
Interesting.
Do you know when that will take place?
francis ngannou
October.
They're working on October.
joe rogan
It's not finalized yet, but they were talking about October 19. Isn't that around the same time the UFC has that big Abu Dhabi card?
Can you go to the UFC's website and see what their Abu Dhabi card is?
I want to say somewhere around the end of October, there's a big UFC card in Abu Dhabi.
25th?
October 25th?
So October 25th.
Yeah.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
So one week after.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I don't know if the UFC has that card finalized.
Do they have that card finalized?
They always put on a big fight when they go to Abu Dhabi.
Abu Dhabi's always a big card.
A lot of top-level fighters on that card.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
Even this Riyadh one is going to be a big card.
joe rogan
No, I'm sure.
francis ngannou
If we make it happen, they're going to stack that card.
joe rogan
Do you know who else would be on that card with you?
francis ngannou
Um...
Again, it's not finalized yet, but I think Cedrin Dumbay will be on that.
joe rogan
Dumbay, I love that dude.
I love that dude.
I've had him on the podcast before.
francis ngannou
He's an entertainer too.
joe rogan
He's a comedian.
francis ngannou
He's a comedian.
He's crazy.
joe rogan
He's funny.
He's very funny, but goddamn, he can fight.
francis ngannou
No, he can fight.
joe rogan
How crazy was that fight?
francis ngannou
He can back up whatever he said.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
He's an elite kickboxer.
He trained at my gym in LA. When I had my gym in LA, his trainer came when he did my podcast and he had a workout session.
And man, his workout sessions are crazy.
It's so cardio intensive.
They're doing like sprints on the treadmill and they run to the heavy bag, sprints on the heavy bag, run back to the treadmill.
I was like, damn.
Like watching that, I was like, no wonder why this guy has a crazy gas tank.
francis ngannou
Well, he was a champion at Glory for a long time.
That wasn't a mistake.
joe rogan
He was knocking everybody out.
Not just knocking everybody out, but the way he did it.
He melted guys.
He put pressure on them.
Knockout power, but intelligence.
Just great technique, but the cardio was crazy.
And I remember thinking, this dude doesn't get tired.
And then watching him train, I'm like, oh, well, there it is.
I mean, he's not just doing normal mitt work.
I've seen other guys work out where they do mitt work, they do their things.
His stuff is cardio-intensive, man.
He wants to have a full gas tank when he gets in there.
francis ngannou
Yeah, he knows what he's looking for.
joe rogan
How crazy was that fight where they called the fight because he stepped on a piece of glass inside the cage?
francis ngannou
I don't know, man.
And I don't even know what that referee was doing.
joe rogan
All they had to do was pull it out of his toe.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
He's like, hey, I stepped on something.
I stepped on something in my toe.
And the referee's like, fight's off!
francis ngannou
Fight's off!
Yeah, I think you stop the fight and you even check the canvas if there's no more piece of glass on the canvas.
joe rogan
That should be overturned.
francis ngannou
Because that was dangerous.
joe rogan
It is dangerous.
But that should be a no contest.
There's no way that should count as a loss.
francis ngannou
That was a no contest fight.
joe rogan
No contest at all.
No chance.
francis ngannou
How the fuck does that other guy get a win?
He's not complaining about, like, Ipok or something that didn't happen.
joe rogan
Nothing.
francis ngannou
Piece of a glass.
joe rogan
A piece of...
And he's pointing to his toe.
And he's saying, just let me get it out of my toe.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
Let me get this out of my toe.
It shouldn't be there.
And you know, things happen.
Who knows how it even got in there?
Who knows what happened?
The odds, just some random freak accident.
He steps on something that nobody...
You know what it could have been?
Stuck to someone's shoe, and someone's walking around the cage with that stuck in their shoe, and it falls out of their shoe, and it sticks in his toe.
He stands on it.
He gets in his toe, and he just points down.
They say, stop the fight!
He's like, I lost?
francis ngannou
He pointed out twice.
joe rogan
See if you can find that, Jamie.
jamie vernon
I was reading someone's explanation of what Mark Goddard did, and they said he did what you're supposed to do.
joe rogan
A fighter can't ask for a timeout.
francis ngannou
No, no, that's wrong.
It wasn't a timeout, though.
joe rogan
There's a foreign object inside the cage.
francis ngannou
Yeah, a foreign object.
unidentified
Timidity?
This is just someone's explanation.
joe rogan
Did they say timidity?
unidentified
That's what this is.
joe rogan
Oh, that's ridiculous.
See if you can find the footage though, because the footage is so obvious there's something wrong.
The referee should just say time, ask him what he's saying.
It wasn't like he was in trouble and he was looking for a timeout.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
unidentified
He was dead in the 50-50 position.
francis ngannou
Yes, yes, yes.
Break the fight.
It's not like nobody is losing position.
unidentified
Exactly.
joe rogan
So here it is.
He's standing there.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
It's not like nobody is losing position from that.
It's not like you take a punch, I want to recover from that.
joe rogan
Fucking crazy.
francis ngannou
Yes.
No.
joe rogan
I just don't understand that at all.
I mean, I haven't talked to Mark about it.
francis ngannou
That wasn't a good decision.
joe rogan
I don't understand.
I mean, maybe he's hindered by the rules.
Maybe that's just what the rules state you have to do when a fighter says you have to stop something for a second.
I don't know what the rules are in terms of that.
I've never seen that happen before.
I've never seen someone step on something inside the octagon and then point down to their foot.
I've never seen it.
So I don't...
But, man, what a shame.
But he came after that, and he won.
He won his next fight.
He's gonna fuck up a lot of people, man.
I was bummed out that he went to the PFL. I wanted that guy in the UFC. He can fuck up a lot of people.
And, you know, he's got a lot of years on the clock, too.
francis ngannou
He said he wanted to go to the UFC, and then they give him some sort of contract, and then I'm like, no, bro.
joe rogan
They gave him a bad contract?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
unidentified
That's unfortunate.
francis ngannou
I think he said that on the tweet, right?
joe rogan
I don't know.
francis ngannou
I don't know.
That doesn't make any sense.
joe rogan
Well, that's crazy.
That guy could be a superstar.
He could be a superstar.
He's so fun.
francis ngannou
He's a superstar.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
He's a superstar.
The guy filled up the Bessie Arena in Paris.
joe rogan
Yes.
In France, he's a superstar.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
I mean, and that could translate 100% to the United States and to the rest of the world.
I mean, he's that good.
He's that good.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
He's one of the best in the world.
And the fact that he's over there, just like...
Well, great for the PFL. Great for the PFL. But for the UFC, that's a big loss.
Anytime you can get an elite kickboxer, and he did a lot of training.
He did a lot of training in wrestling, went to AKA, trained there.
He's really worked on his takedown defense.
francis ngannou
He wants something.
He definitely wants something, and he's working on it.
joe rogan
And the guy has serious discipline and work ethic.
And he's just smart, man.
And the way he fights, he sets guys up.
He talks so much shit before the fight, too.
He's fun.
francis ngannou
Did you watch his first fight at the PFR? Yeah.
The guy brought a mattress.
unidentified
Like, what the fuck is this?
francis ngannou
So Jordan, go to sleep.
And he put the guy to sleep in a few seconds.
joe rogan
Well, the difference between his level of striking and most guys in that division level of striking is like this.
francis ngannou
Yeah, there's a huge gap.
joe rogan
A giant gap.
francis ngannou
The other guy was just trying to compensate with their wrestling or jujitsu or something.
Exactly.
And even if you don't have a better wrestling than him, at least you grab him, you avoid some punch.
joe rogan
Yes, and the thing about him is that every fight starts standing up.
It's one thing if you're a really good wrestler, you have to take the guy to the ground, but the fight starts standing.
With Cedric, the fight starts in his best place.
francis ngannou
And then you see how he was fighting his second fight?
He was very low.
He went very low.
Like, okay, you're a wrestler?
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
Let's see how you're going to get that level changed.
Like, I'm already down here.
So, getting very...
He's very intelligent.
joe rogan
Very smart.
Very intelligent.
And again, his level of striking.
And we see that with guys like Alex Pereira, right?
Like that level of striking.
When you're a glory champion, the level of striking is so high.
It's so above the average MMA fighter.
And when he gets in there with these guys, they don't want none of that.
francis ngannou
And then as soon as they start to get a little wrestling defense and stuff like that, they become a trouble.
You can't take him down anymore.
joe rogan
Exactly.
francis ngannou
And then you stand in front of him, he smoke you.
joe rogan
Yes.
francis ngannou
What could you do?
joe rogan
Well, you see that with Alex Pereira now.
His takedown defense is much better.
And he keeps getting better.
He's evolving so quickly.
francis ngannou
No, because he's been training.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
He's been training for so long.
joe rogan
He's been training for so long, and then he's also training with Glover.
Glover Teixeira, who's also a former champion.
Glover was a guy that was locked out of America for six years.
He couldn't come to America for six years because he had visa issues.
And he was like the boogeyman.
We would all hear about him in Brazil.
Really?
Yeah, Glover was like one of those guys, before he entered into the UFC, and I think he wasted his prime, unfortunately, in Brazil.
I don't say wasted his prime, but I think his prime years were outside of the United States.
That's why when he won the title, he was like 42. 43?
43?
francis ngannou
What exactly is the prime years for a guy that won a title at 44, at 43?
You get to the point, you get you to think that maybe 43 is the prime years.
joe rogan
If you won the title of that year, right?
francis ngannou
Yeah, you watch that and I'm like, 43?
It's not that old?
You know, I think at 43 you can still do something.
joe rogan
Yeah, well it depends on the division, right?
Like George Foreman won the heavyweight title at 45. Yeah.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
Heavyweight?
joe rogan
Different.
francis ngannou
Yeah, it's different.
Because they don't push on that gas, you know.
joe rogan
Right, right, right.
francis ngannou
They throw some punch and move.
joe rogan
How old is Cedric?
francis ngannou
Cedric Dombe?
joe rogan
Yeah.
Find out how old he is, Jamie.
I want to say he's young.
francis ngannou
Yeah, he's young.
He's young.
He might be 30 to 30. How old is he?
joe rogan
31. That's a good age.
francis ngannou
At 31. Yeah.
Yeah.
joe rogan
And with that level of kickboxing, whoo!
Empower man, you know like not just like technique but power and endurance like it's a rare combination He has a very very good endurance and extreme power.
unidentified
Yeah, he hit like a deaf guy He's a fucking killer.
joe rogan
I'm excited to see what happens.
Do you understand the PFL's point system?
Do you understand that system?
francis ngannou
What do you mean?
joe rogan
You know how they have points, like if you get a knockout in the first round, you get one point or three points.
What the fuck are they doing?
francis ngannou
Why are they doing that?
That's for the regular season.
I think it's just to push people for a better fight.
Everybody knows that you get a knockout, you deserve something better.
You get a finish, you get something.
joe rogan
Right, but you can't always get a finish.
But what if you're fighting a guy that's like your level?
Like you're both elite and you're both fighting in like this incredible fight.
You shouldn't be penalized because you can't take out a fighter who's the best in the world in the first round.
That seems crazy to me.
francis ngannou
Yeah, but either way, if you win a fight, you're winning something.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
You just win more.
It's like having a win bonus or something.
joe rogan
I don't like win bonuses either.
I hate win bonuses.
francis ngannou
Yeah, me too.
joe rogan
I don't like win bonuses.
I like boxing's setup better, where you have a contractual, you have a contract.
You're going to get paid $10 million, whatever it is.
That's what you get.
You don't get $10 million, but you only get $5 million if a shitty judge gives it to the other guy, which we've seen so many times in the UFC. Guys lose half their paycheck because of a bad decision.
francis ngannou
Yeah, but who does that benefit?
Well, who does it benefit?
joe rogan
I don't know who it benefits.
I don't think it benefits anybody.
I think it's bad for everybody.
I think it's bad for the audience because they're like, what?
Because it makes them angry.
It's bad for the fighter, for sure.
If a fighter loses their paycheck, loses half their paycheck because of a bad decision.
francis ngannou
How about the promotion?
joe rogan
I don't even think it's good for the promotion.
I think it's unfair.
I don't think it makes any sense.
At the elite level, everyone's trying to win.
They're all trying to win.
No one's not trying to win.
francis ngannou
Absolutely.
joe rogan
No one's going to just coast.
francis ngannou
For the most part, you get there by winning.
joe rogan
Yes.
The whole thing is the glory of victory.
It's what you're trying to do.
You're not going to fight less hard.
I just don't understand the logic behind it.
I think it's a flawed concept.
I think it's something that never existed in combat sports before MMA and really shouldn't exist.
I think fighters fight their best, especially at the elite level.
They fight their best.
francis ngannou
Yeah, I agree with you because when you lose a fight, At least you should get your full pay on that fight.
joe rogan
Yes.
francis ngannou
But that won't, the loss won't help you, will advantage you on the next fight.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
You know, on next negotiation.
I'm like, oh, you lose two fights in a row.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
So you don't have a power position anymore.
Exactly.
But like, just to pick half of your purse because you lose a fight.
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's crazy.
I don't like it at all.
francis ngannou
No.
joe rogan
I don't like it at all.
It just doesn't make sense to me.
I've heard people try to argue it, and every time they try to make an argument for it, I'm like, I don't get it.
It's not fair for the fighters.
Fighters only have if they're really lucky.
Like, what's the most fights that an elite fighter in the UFC has?
unidentified
Like 50, 45, 50 fights?
joe rogan
You know, maybe.
francis ngannou
50 fights?
joe rogan
Maybe.
There's a few guys that have that level of fights.
Most guys, they top off way less than that.
francis ngannou
Way, way less.
joe rogan
Yeah, way less.
francis ngannou
By the time you start your career, if you already have an injury, good luck.
joe rogan
Good luck to reach 25. Especially ACL surgery, you're out for a year.
Shoulder surgery, you're out for a year.
Broken hand, you're out for five months.
francis ngannou
It might never be the same.
And most people, it's not like there's an age to start.
Like, oh, you start at 20 or 25. Some people will get there at 30, over 30. How old were you when you started training so late?
joe rogan
How old were you when you started training?
francis ngannou
27?
joe rogan
Yeah, that's crazy.
francis ngannou
Yeah, it was 27. But that was only when I could have trained.
joe rogan
You only have a certain amount of years.
francis ngannou
Yeah, but just want to do the best out of those years.
joe rogan
Of course, but for you to be fighting on a system that penalizes you if there's a bad judge and you miss half your paycheck.
Does the PFL do win bonuses too?
Do they do the same thing?
francis ngannou
I don't know exactly.
joe rogan
Your contract is probably different than everybody else's.
francis ngannou
Yeah, my contract is different.
Either way, I wouldn't go for that win bonus stuff.
I have nothing against bonus, but don't split my paycheck into talking about winning bonus.
No, give me my paycheck.
If you want to give a bonus for the win, let's do another deal on that one.
joe rogan
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, that makes sense.
francis ngannou
Because whether I lose or I win, I train, I get prepared for the fight, I come, I give everything for that fight.
I should get paid.
joe rogan
Yes.
francis ngannou
And the same thing that I give in that fight to lose could have get me to win.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
No, I agree.
I agree.
And so now the PFL and Bellator are one organization now, right?
The PFL acquired Bellator.
Is that what's going on?
unidentified
Yes.
joe rogan
Do the Saudis have something to do with that as well?
Don't they own part of it?
francis ngannou
They invest in the PFL, yes.
In the main PFL, because there's a main PFL, a house PFL that has the PFL and the Bellator now.
And now they're having a regional PFL, like the PFL Miner that launched this year, and the PFL Africa that's launching next year.
joe rogan
And that's your shirt.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
And so you're a part of that as well, right?
francis ngannou
Oh yeah, that was the biggest reason for me in that contract.
The PFA Africa part was the most important one in that contract.
Before that, I was trying to, even to the UFC, I have requested to be like, oh, I want to be the UFC ambassador in Africa.
I want to do something out there.
I'm like, oh no, we don't know, you know, this is not, we don't.
And then I get a PFL, they say, okay, we're doing this, we'll do that.
They show me the roadmap, like, okay, we launched PFL Africa 2025, you are the PFL Africa chairman.
I'm like, which extent?
Because I don't want that bullshit of...
Paper chairman or whatever it is.
At which extent?
What exactly are you seeing in PFR Africa?
And then they put it out and show me some elements.
I'm like, good.
Then I'm on board.
joe rogan
Well, that is one good thing about going over to the PFL because you have so much value to them.
Like for you coming over, you were the undisputed heavyweight champion of the UFC. You come over to the PFL. Everybody knows who you are.
Now it elevates the PFL. So it's nice because it will allow you to do more things.
francis ngannou
And to be honest, one thing, I have a healthy relationship.
You know, it's peaceful.
I get to the point of my life that I really get tired or sick of drama.
Sometimes I just get into something, find myself in the middle of some drama, and then I just walk away.
Whatever you want to say, you might say, I disrespect you.
You say, oh, I this, I that.
Bro, I don't have so much energy to give into that.
joe rogan
So that was part of what was going on with the UFC. There was a lot of drama.
francis ngannou
And that will take a lot out of you.
You get to the point that I'm like, I just want this to be over.
I just want to get to be over.
Get back to my life.
But you're already in the middle.
Whether you want to go back, you have to deal with drama.
If you have to go forward, you have to deal with drama.
So you better keep going forward.
joe rogan
Yeah, especially, I mean, like, how much time do you have left, right?
I mean, how many more years do you think you're going to be fighting?
francis ngannou
It doesn't matter.
I mean, soon, 38, and I think I'm going to be...
I really want to retire in my...
As they say, I want to leave the sport before the sport leaves me.
joe rogan
Smart.
francis ngannou
Yeah, so I'm thinking in my average, like, 41. Yeah.
joe rogan
So three more years.
francis ngannou
Yeah, 41 by that.
joe rogan
Do you have a thought of how many more boxing fights versus how many more MMA fights you want to do?
francis ngannou
Not exactly.
I think I would take it how it comes.
I take it how it comes.
joe rogan
And so the next fight will be MMA definitely or maybe boxing?
francis ngannou
Maybe in a...
Maybe in my 40s, I still feel like I have it, you know?
If I feel like at 41, I feel like I have it.
joe rogan
Well, you keep going a ways to well.
francis ngannou
Yeah, exactly.
Keep regenerating and then take one at a time, you know?
But what I really don't want to do is to wake up and go to the gym like I'm forced.
If I feel like I have it, or I'm excited, or today is a sparring day, I'm going to get there.
Whether I'm going to beat somebody up or they're going to beat me up, either way I'm excited.
If I still have that, I keep going.
joe rogan
Right, right.
francis ngannou
But as soon as I don't have that, even if I'm not 40 yet, I think it's a sign, it's a call out.
joe rogan
Yeah, well that's intelligent.
That's smart.
That's the way you phrased it.
I like the way you phrased it.
Leave the sport before the sport leaves you.
francis ngannou
Yeah, that's...
joe rogan
Because we've all seen guys who hung around too long.
francis ngannou
I would still always do the sport.
I would never really leave the sport.
But the competition at that level, you know, you need to be ready.
You need to be into it.
You need to want to be there.
You don't just want to do it because, okay, I have to.
No.
You don't go play with punches because you have to.
No.
joe rogan
Right, right, right, right, right.
You want to be enthusiastic.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
So do you know for sure that you'll be fighting MMA next or is it possible that a big boxing match could present itself and you would do that next?
francis ngannou
I would say MMA next.
joe rogan
Definitely.
francis ngannou
Yeah, I would say MMA next.
Because I'm supposed to fight, it's been over a year, a little over a year now, since the PFR agreement, and then supposed to have a fight in a year.
So now we're getting a little out of the timeline, for sure.
And by the time we were figuring out who should be my opponent, and I think things are very clear now.
Renan Ferreira made himself very clear that he's a challenger that should make the fight.
He's the opponent that can make that fight happen.
joe rogan
And let's assume you get past that.
Will you then decide whether or not you're going to fight MMA next or boxing next?
Because one of the things about the PFL is there's not a lot of very compelling challenges for you there, unfortunately.
At least now.
They could sign some more top fight heavyweights.
I mean, who knows what happens with many people.
Who knows what happens with Jon Jones?
I mean, I don't know.
What happens to any of these guys?
I mean, he could wind up going to the BFL. Who fucking knows?
francis ngannou
He could.
joe rogan
If they come up with some big money, you know, you could get a lot of people that will be willing to go over there.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, like, after...
I think after this fight, I'll see what's happened.
I don't really have a clear mind on what will happen.
But I will say most likely boxing.
joe rogan
Most likely boxing after that?
francis ngannou
Yeah, most likely boxing.
joe rogan
Do you have an opponent in mind?
francis ngannou
No, absolutely not.
We will see the landscape and what I can get.
Who I can get.
Because my expectation, as you were asking me earlier, how many fighters do I think I can do in MMA or boxing?
I think if I get to a good four-fight plan in boxing, I think that could be good.
You get a good full fight, and then you build, like, who should be next.
That could be my...
My potential retirement plan.
joe rogan
Well, it sounds like you already made a good amount of money.
francis ngannou
Yeah, I've made a good amount of money, but you also have to remember that I started this sport for passion.
You don't start the sport for the money because at first there's no money.
At first it's just punch flying over your head all over and you have to dodge and then fight and not get paid.
Fight for free for quite some time.
I love the sport.
I still love the sport.
I love combat sport.
I love fighting.
And I think I'll do it until I feel like I cannot do it anymore.
joe rogan
Is boxing more unique to you because it's a new challenge?
francis ngannou
Boxing is different to me because even the muscles' memory are not the same.
The functionality of my body is not the same.
Unlike MMA, I know every single action in MMA, every single moment.
I've been there tens of times.
I know.
I get this.
But boxing, you're still like, okay, you know, you might get even in some position and get stressed because you've never been there.
You don't know.
You have to figure it out.
joe rogan
Right.
Instead of it being instinctual.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
Until you get there two, three times, then you're like, oh, it's okay.
I can deal with it.
You know, MMA, I go MMA fight with a knee injury.
I'm still like, I get this.
But boxing, a little different.
You basically know that questioning yourself about if you can handle this.
It's not like, I get this.
joe rogan
Right, right, right.
francis ngannou
It's different.
joe rogan
There's a lot of thinking because it's a new thing for you.
When you trained for boxing, I know you have Dewey Cooper, you have Eric Nixick.
Did you bring other people in to help train you in boxing?
francis ngannou
Yeah, I brought John Bumba from France.
He assists Dewey sometimes because he has a very good amateur style, which I think is something that I still need to build in my game.
Other than that, I have a trip which is my strength and conditioning coach, so I put those elements down.
joe rogan
Did you get a chance to spar any top heavyweights in America?
francis ngannou
Top heavyweight like who?
I would say Carlos Takam.
Guido is at top right now.
He's my other sparring partner.
But in America, not other top...
I get Jeremiah Milton as well.
But no, the big name in America.
joe rogan
Which is even more impressive, your performance against Tyson Fury, when you consider like you really didn't even spar elite heavyweights.
francis ngannou
Listen, I think sometimes we don't give credit to some people because they don't just have a name.
Because they haven't had a stage to play on.
And we think like, oh, he's nobody.
Oh, he's not an elite.
Let me take you some example.
Before Andy Ruiz fought Anthony Joshua, would you think about him as an elite fighter?
joe rogan
No, a lot of people had no idea.
francis ngannou
But he was still there and he was just good at as he is right now.
But because he didn't have the scene to be seen, to be exposed, so nobody cared about him.
And if you say, oh, I spar with N.G. Reese, I'm like, yes, but you haven't sparred with N.G. Reese.
You see?
joe rogan
Yes.
francis ngannou
And there's a lot of people like that out there.
joe rogan
Right.
A lot of people that haven't got their shot yet.
francis ngannou
Yeah, they haven't got their shot, but they are there.
They are present.
They are elite.
joe rogan
Well, when you first made your way and, you know, when you told that story on the podcast of your journey leaving Cameroon and making your way and getting turned back so many times, when you first arrived and you finally got to France, you wanted to be a boxer.
francis ngannou
No, even before I left, I wanted to be a boxer.
Even decades before I left, I wanted to be a boxer.
That wasn't even a question.
I always knew what I wanted.
joe rogan
So when it finally went full circle and you became a boxer again, did it feel like, oh, this is how it was supposed to be?
francis ngannou
I was living my dream.
There is no way that, I don't think there is a way that things are supposed to be.
You get what you get and then you be grateful and then you make the best out of it.
So I was living the dream.
I ended up having the fight, having to fight two best boxers in the world.
After having a great MMA career, not bad for me, a guy coming from where I came from.
joe rogan
No, it's amazing.
francis ngannou
Basically from having the path that I had.
And who knows?
Some good things might still happen.
joe rogan
Oh, some good things I'm sure will still happen.
But your path is incredible, and I encourage anybody that hasn't heard it to go back and listen to the first podcast you and I did together, where you explained it.
I was stunned.
I remember for the rest of the day, all I could think about was your story and how insane it is that what you had to go through to finally make it to Europe.
Incredible story.
francis ngannou
You know, just as I was saying earlier, because some people haven't been exposed, they haven't got a big stage, like they don't care about them.
There are a lot of people out there with a better story than mine, with a better, stronger than mine, that even me, I'm impressed.
I'm like, bro, how do you do that?
I don't think I could have done that, you know?
But, and there are a lot, you know, like one or like two, three, a lot of people, you know?
But I think I happen to be the one that have The scene and have been exposed.
My story has been exposed to the world.
joe rogan
You went through that struggle.
francis ngannou
I have the Joe Rogan experience to tell my own story, which they don't have.
joe rogan
Well, I'd be happy to have them on too if they had a story like yours and the success that you've had from that.
It's very inspiring and it speaks to the human spirit.
Because that's what people love to hear about someone who did not give up and struggled so hard.
How many times did you get sent back?
Seven, eight times?
francis ngannou
Six times.
In the ocean, six times.
And then I made it the seventh time.
joe rogan
Crazy.
francis ngannou
Seven is a magic number.
joe rogan
It is a magic number, right?
It's a lucky number.
francis ngannou
I made it the seventh number.
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's an incredibly inspirational story.
And I love the fact that you're dedicated to doing this thing in Africa now and to give more people an opportunity and to give them a path towards a career.
francis ngannou
You know, regardless of what you might think of my life, I think I'm a very blessed guy.
I think I'm a very lucky guy.
First of all, I think even when I explain, you might not really understand where I came from.
And to imagine that I'm here today, Calling a shot, bro.
It's crazy.
It's just insane.
So I think I'm a very lucky guy.
God has really blessed me.
And then I also think those blessings come with a lot of opportunity that I can bring back.
Because when I was there for so many times, I can't tell you how many times that my hope It was to somebody to come do something.
To some good Samaritan to take some action that I would take advantage of.
Then it happened that I have been blessed to be the guy that can do that.
And even without taking anything out of me.
So I'm like...
He will be a sin not to do something.
For example, for the PFA Africa, my dream about that, what gets me excited about that is just seeing myself not have to leave Africa as I did and then have to compete in a good platform like that, have to make a living, have to fight in the world-class fighter in that level and just stay home.
I don't have to risk all this life, go through all this stuff, through the ocean, the barbwire, the prison stuff that I've been through to do that.
I just have to stay home and do that.
So now, it's a platform that's going to give opportunity to many people that maybe have a plan to go through that same path and that might not have made it.
They're just doing it at home.
joe rogan
That's beautiful.
francis ngannou
How could you not think of doing something like that when you have an opportunity?
And it's not like, oh, it's a war that they carry and put on your head and a burden that you have to carry.
It's an opportunity that you can just help participate and make it happen.
joe rogan
So tell me, how does this play out?
Do you establish gyms in Africa?
Are you going to put a gym in Cameroon?
How are you going to do this?
francis ngannou
I have two gyms in Cameroon already.
joe rogan
Oh, you do?
francis ngannou
Yeah, through my foundation.
I have one gym for six years now.
joe rogan
Oh, wow.
francis ngannou
Yeah, and then the second gym has been around for almost two years.
And we built that one with a partner.
I mean, a partner helped us to build.
They like our project with the foundation, and then they joined us, Premier Bet.
They joined us to that, to build that gym for us.
A very big, big-ass gym.
So we have that too and we were in the project to build the third one.
But with the PFL, one thing that I requested and then it was granted was that everywhere that we're going to do, we're going to try to build gyms around.
Because yes, it's good to bring PFL, to bring competition around.
But remember, so many of those people, they have nothing.
Many of those kids that want to fight, They might be training on the beach.
They don't really have a gym to train at, but yet you're expecting them to compete at the highest level.
So it's at least good to have a system that will help them.
It's like having a garden.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
Yeah, having a garden to create talent that you need for your organization, you know.
So, helping them to help you because at the end of the day, you need talent.
At the end of the day, talent needs organization.
So, the thing is that with PFA Africa, we're going to build gyms That fighter will use and develop and then we're going to also help get experienced coaches that can go and teach and also teach another coach how to properly train at that coach at that level, stuff like that.
That's the goal.
It's about building something.
It's not like here that you come and everything is established and you have your promotion and go.
No.
It's like building something, working from the grassroots.
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's beautiful.
So Africa is obviously a huge continent and there's so many countries in it.
francis ngannou
Full of talent.
joe rogan
What is the scene like in Africa right now in terms of like what are the local promotions and how many of them are there and how many like how many like young talented fighters do you see that are coming out of there that could eventually come over to PFL or the UFC or Bellator or 1FC or any of the large organizations?
francis ngannou
Okay.
So you asked me the question, like many Americans, what is the scene in Africa?
joe rogan
In the different countries.
francis ngannou
Africa is 52 countries.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
And I've never been in five of them.
joe rogan
So I know South Africa has a large scene.
You know, obviously, Drekka's Duplicy is from South Africa.
There's a lot of good fighters from South Africa.
francis ngannou
They have an organization that I think is EFC, something like that.
Nigeria has been doing good.
They also have, I think it's African Knockout that Ousmane Kamaru is part of.
And there are also some regional organizations that might be smaller or not quite popular.
joe rogan
Is there one large organization over there at all?
francis ngannou
No, not yet.
joe rogan
So most of them are fairly small?
francis ngannou
Yeah, because again, you have to build everything from the scratch.
So everybody is trying to do the best out of what you get.
To have a good organization, you need to build a gym, you need to give those fighters a way to train, you need to help them get experience, get training, even get top coaches, and then more people training, at least they have training partners, Which is not, they don't have.
You have seen, I have seen a lot of some African fighters that are really good, but they don't have, they'll have to go somewhere else because they don't have training partners, you know.
But with this program, they're going to have, it's going to be a whole ecosystem.
A health ecosystem in the fact that you're going to have a gym that you're going to train and then maybe provide a fighter who's going to fight in a promotion and that might have money and then that money will attract people, you know, will attract other people to training because he has seen other ones making a living out of training.
He has seen that it's possible.
He has seen the opportunity right next to his door.
Right.
They are here.
I don't have to travel.
It's not in America anymore.
It's not in Europe anymore.
Right.
It's here.
I just have to stay here and get dedicated.
So it's possible.
joe rogan
And it's interesting, too, if the PFL has a, I mean, if they establish PFL Africa, the beautiful thing is that if they have top level fights over there and then they take those fights and they broadcast them all over the world, then there's so much opportunity.
francis ngannou
Yes.
I mean, the fighter of PFL Africa will not only be seen in Africa.
Not to mention that the champions of the PFL Africa, just as PFL MENA and PFL Europe, they will all come together to fight for the main PFL title.
joe rogan
That's exciting.
francis ngannou
Everybody is getting that big stage.
They are all still under the main PFA, which is something that is very interesting.
And then we give more spotlight, more opportunity.
Also get attention of media.
And then who says media says attention of sponsor that will go maybe to gym, to fighters, and that will create an ecosystem around that media interests.
Sponsor come around, and then fighter get paid, and then maybe his sparring partner get paid, or I don't know, he has an assistant or somebody working for him get paid, and the money is now in the loop.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Do you see yourself, after you retire from fighting, going into a coaching and mentoring role for fighters?
Do you see yourself being more of an executive position, like working with either the PFL or whoever?
francis ngannou
I never see myself as a coach.
I don't have a vocation for that.
It's not something that I'm looking forward to.
Although, I see myself, like, maybe stay in the spot somewhere, like, I also don't see myself as a manager.
joe rogan
That's a hard job.
francis ngannou
A lot of bullshit.
unidentified
A lot of bullshit.
francis ngannou
Like, I just think that to be a good, it's a job that you think to be good at it, you need to be screwing somebody.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
Most likely.
Not always, but most likely.
joe rogan
Might be on the table.
francis ngannou
I don't see myself like that, but I see myself really working on the growth of the sport, basically in Africa.
And again, that's why the PFA Africa comes to me like the right thing.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
You know, the retirement plan.
Things that I could be focused on, be working on.
I know how Africa works perfectly.
I know how PFA works perfectly.
I know Pete Murray and Don Davis.
They are very excited about it.
But bro, they are white people from America and they don't know how Africa works.
I am from Africa, and I know the deep ground of Africa, and I know the challenge there.
I know the problem there as an athlete, and I think that's where I will impact.
I think a role of an executive will be like, it's some fancy thing that, yes, I might have, but I think my good job is to work on the field, because I know the problem on the field, the route.
And the problem there, what could be done, what needs to be done, what they need.
I think that's what I would be best at.
joe rogan
Also, for young fighters.
francis ngannou
Yeah, it's cool to be chairman of PFR Africa, but I'm not going to sit in the office, I'm like, oh, I'm a chairman, and then wear suit and tie every day to run staff.
joe rogan
No, it doesn't seem like it.
But I think, like, for you, for a young fighter, there's no greater source of inspiration than a guy like yourself.
I mean, if you look at your career, you've only been fighting for 10 years.
Look at all you've accomplished.
UFC heavyweight champion, fought two of the best boxers alive, you're an international superstar, you made millions of dollars.
Like, that is the height of inspiration.
francis ngannou
Don't say that on mic, Joe.
Sorry.
joe rogan
Everybody knows.
francis ngannou
Yeah, but when you say that out loud, maybe you get some lawsuit.
You know, money is like honey.
You always attract bees.
unidentified
That's so true.
joe rogan
That's so true.
A lot of stingers out there.
Hmm, so let's forget about the money, but just look at the accomplishment and just knowing that you came and especially again if someone hears your story of how hard it was for you to literally essentially walk from Cameroon to Morocco and then make it all the way over to Europe and then make a career and fight it and then make it to the United States Get into the UFC and then in a matter of a few short years become the UFC heavyweight champion for young fighters that's like That guy did it.
He did it.
He came from where I came from.
I can do it now.
Once someone has done it, it makes it more accessible, at least mentally, to a lot of people.
francis ngannou
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think that's the fundamental idea about my foundation.
The reason why I did the foundation, for me, he was just so, not only those kids can have access in the gym, which is something that me growing up, I was just dreaming about it.
The only gym that I have seen until I was 22 was the gym that I saw, whether in my dream or in the TV. I never see a real gym, even though I always want to do combat sport.
But I thought, like, if you build, like, Night Gym, not only those kids have access, it makes them have this feeling, this connection with reality, like, oh, the thing that I always see in TV is here, it's possible, you know, and then the guy that maybe I have seen on TV or heard about, he's also here, like, he's around, he came here, so it's possible, you know, because...
So the idea of the foundation was just to motivate kids, allow them to believe in themselves.
And I think it's still what we're working on, to help them believe, trust, have a trust in themselves, a self-believing, have a self-confidence in themselves.
And this doesn't matter what they want to do in life.
You might want to be a doctor, you might want to be a lawyer, accountant.
Journalist, whatever you want to do, but I do think that a guy that believes, somebody that believes in himself, success for that guy is just a matter of time.
And you can be a champion in whatever you do.
You don't have to be a fighter to become a champion.
joe rogan
I'm glad you brought that up because there's another question I wanted to ask you.
Do you have any other aspirations of doing things outside of fighting once you've retired?
Because one of the things you were talking to Jamie about before the show started was producing.
You were talking about production, like film and filming things.
Do you have other aspirations?
francis ngannou
I have a lot of aspirations, but not like a job.
I have a lot of passion.
I'm passionate about a lot of things.
Today, I have quite a resource to have some hobbies.
You know, stuff that I'm excited about, I'm passionate about.
I create a small production in Cameroon, in my village, just to train kids so they can have to touch cameras like this.
All those stuff that we have here, I have it back home.
They touch, they learn on it.
You know, I just want them to be able to operate a good camera.
If somebody wants to do a movie, they have somebody that can operate a nice camera, just home.
They don't need to go to Europe or in America to bring people, because local, they can do, and they have been trained on good cameras.
So I have started stuff like that a lot.
joe rogan
What inspired you to do that, in terms of cameras and production and stuff?
francis ngannou
I always love cameras.
I always love, I see, and I always impress, and then I see stuff here, and then I see the challenge, the difference that are, you know, like you see somebody that make a film, a movie that might be on Netflix with a very low quality of camera, then I'm like, what if this guy has access on a good camera?
What can he do?
Right.
joe rogan
Well, that's one of the things you were talking about with fighters, that there's a lot of people out there that are very talented that just haven't had their shot yet.
francis ngannou
Absolutely.
joe rogan
There's a lot of people like that with filmmaking and with stand-up comedy and writing, literature.
francis ngannou
Everything.
joe rogan
Yeah, they just haven't had their opportunity.
francis ngannou
And I always say this.
I think we might have become the first African champion just because there wasn't so many people that have a chance.
I mean, like, when you look at Kamaru, Adesanya, I, I'm sure if you go to Africa, you can find some motherfucker who can beat us up.
unidentified
But lucky us, you didn't have that chance yet, so...
joe rogan
That's very humble of you.
unidentified
We took the opportunity, right?
joe rogan
But you open the door, though, and it makes it possible for others, which is one of the more important things about accomplishment.
francis ngannou
But when time goes by, the challenge will become tougher and tougher, and we will come around, and we might come very short.
joe rogan
Well, look at Brazil.
You know?
I mean, look at Brazil.
There's so many champions, so many elite fighters coming out of Brazil now.
It's because Hoist Gracie opened that door, and then the UFC just became a place for it.
francis ngannou
And then if you take even that Roy Gracie on his prime, put him here, He's going to get beat up, maybe by some kickboxing.
But he was the one that opened that door, that gave that opportunity, that made the path through that.
joe rogan
Yeah, it's just, it's so important that you recognize that.
That like, your position is not just as an individual, but your position is as an inspiration to others.
And to give people this, this, they see it.
Like, I can do it.
He did it.
It's possible.
francis ngannou
Yeah, I think in life we take every opportunity that we have.
We get to the point again that we have an opportunity to affect other life.
How many people affect other life?
How many people in their lifetime walk around and parents walk to their mom like, oh my kid want to be like you.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
I think it's something really cool.
It's really great.
joe rogan
It's very cool.
francis ngannou
Like a parent that wants the best for their kids.
Yes, kids want to be like you.
Yes, it's different because he's not very smart.
He's not wise.
And even kids want to do some dumb shit.
So you might be a bad guy and kids still want to be like you.
joe rogan
A drug dealer.
francis ngannou
But a parent that's really protective about their kids, like, want the best for their kids...
And then they'll come like, oh, your son is such an inspiration.
My kid wants to be like you.
So that's basically him approving that his kid should be like you.
He hopes for his kid to become like you.
That's a big statement, which is pretty cool.
joe rogan
Yeah, it is pretty cool.
It's really cool.
It's really cool and there's such a unique time for people too because internet is available pretty much all over the world now.
So kids in all these countries, especially if they have phones, they have access to all of this information.
francis ngannou
And it's messy.
It's coming from all over.
And they can find everything.
Everything.
Now, how to help them pick what's good and what's not good?
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
That's the problem.
unidentified
Yeah.
francis ngannou
Because information is good, but...
joe rogan
A lot of it's bullshit.
unidentified
Yeah.
francis ngannou
A lot of it is bullshit.
You have to filter.
Because some of them are just bad seed.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's true too.
Have you seen what's happening in the Amazon?
There's this very small, uncontacted tribe and they got internet access.
And now a lot of them are just on their phones all day.
And then the tribe leaders are like, well, what the fuck?
Everyone's lazy.
You guys are becoming like Americans now.
You're just on your phone all day.
They're looking at tits and looking at porn and like, you know.
francis ngannou
Of course.
joe rogan
And this thing that they thought would be a beautiful thing, oh, this would be so great.
We're going to get access to information.
People are going to get educated.
Instead, you know, a lot of them are just looking at TikTok videos.
francis ngannou
Yeah, but...
joe rogan
They got to have to figure out how to manage that.
francis ngannou
Educated people, for the most part, are lazy.
joe rogan
Really?
You think so?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
I think people, for the most part, are lazy if you give them an opportunity to be lazy.
francis ngannou
No.
joe rogan
It's hard to be disciplined, especially if you don't have examples of other disciplined people around you.
francis ngannou
You know, some people might just have been educated, keep going to school.
Because they choose school over work.
joe rogan
That's true.
francis ngannou
And some people choose work over school.
joe rogan
That's true as well, yeah.
francis ngannou
And then you go to school, and after being graduated or have your PhD, and then you're like, oh, he's educated.
He's this.
In fact, you were running away from a job.
unidentified
Ha ha ha!
joe rogan
I'm sure that's educators.
That's the problem with our universities.
Those people, why not teach?
francis ngannou
At the end of the day, yes, you are educated, but in reality, you are lazy.
If you have a job that is going to wear a suit and act like a boss every day, you can't do it.
But if you have to start something and work really hard, you can't stand it.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
Yeah, you can't stand it.
joe rogan
There's a lot of truth in that.
francis ngannou
also be a worker because they had a vision, they want to do that, they're excited of a knowledge to implement into something, and then after that, they just start a business, and this, you know, because starting a business is never easy.
unidentified
Right.
francis ngannou
You have to be a worker.
When you start a business, it's not like a nine to five job, you know, you don't have Sometimes you have to wake up at midnight or at 2 a.m.
to pick up a call because this guy is, I don't know, in China, in Europe, and the time is different, and you have to keep going.
You have to be on this time.
You have to be in a meeting at this time.
So that's where you know if you're a worker or not.
But if you sit at the office, 9 to 7, wear your suit, I'm a manager of this, I'm that, I'm that.
joe rogan
You might be lazy.
francis ngannou
And lazy people do a good job too because lazy people find a strategy of avoiding work.
joe rogan
That's true!
francis ngannou
Which is very intelligent.
joe rogan
Yes!
francis ngannou
Yeah, they find ways.
joe rogan
Yes, that's true.
francis ngannou
To get things done without really putting in the work.
joe rogan
That is true.
Yeah, there's so many books like that.
The 4-Hour Work Week, you know?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
There's a lot of books on people just trying to avoid work.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
But they still have to move to wash their dishes, their clothes.
Like dishwasher, for example.
I think it's the idea of some lazy person that didn't want to wash dishes.
Are you agree with me?
joe rogan
So a lazy person didn't want to wash dishes, so they hired a dishwasher.
francis ngannou
No, they invented.
joe rogan
Oh, they invented a dishwasher.
Oh, a machine.
francis ngannou
Yeah, they thought about it.
Like, how can I get my dishes clean without having to wash it?
joe rogan
Also, it's more efficient because you can put them in the dishwasher.
francis ngannou
No, it's efficient, but the idea comes from laziness.
joe rogan
Interesting, interesting.
francis ngannou
I mean, he might be.
unidentified
I'm not saying he's the thing, but he might be coming from laziness.
No, no, no, you have a point.
joe rogan
You have a point.
francis ngannou
I don't want to wash my clothes anymore.
How can I? But I still need to wear a clean clothes.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
How can I do to get my clothes clean without washing them?
unidentified
Wash machine.
Make a machine.
joe rogan
That's true, right?
Because you only wear like one piece of clothes a day, and you only use one plate when you eat.
How hard is it to wash that one plate?
It takes 30 seconds.
You get some soap, you get a sponge, rinse it off, put it in the dryer, you're done.
That's a good point, man.
I never thought of it that way.
francis ngannou
I get in my house, and this is something that I still don't understand.
Sometimes I'll leave plates around, and then if I have my housekeeping coming, they'll always take them and put them in the dishwasher, and everything in the dishwasher.
And I don't know what happens.
If it's the dishwasher, something wrong with it, it never gets things cleaned.
Properly.
joe rogan
Well, you kind of have to clean them before you put them in the dishwasher, which is crazy.
Because if you just cleaned them a little bit more, you wouldn't have to put them in the dishwasher.
You'd probably save time.
francis ngannou
Okay.
Personally, I never use a dishwasher.
I don't know how it works.
The easier thing for me is after using one or two plates, I wash it, I put it there.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
It's easier.
Or even if I stack, like, three, four plates after I come, take five minutes, clean it, put it there.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
It's easier for me than running machine and this, which I don't even know how it works too much, and sometimes it might be loud.
I just want to watch my TV, and that shit is running behind me.
unidentified
True.
joe rogan
That's true.
Yeah, that's true.
That's a good point.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
That is a lazy person's invention.
A smart, lazy person.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
People are very creative.
Very.
unidentified
I never thought about it that way, but I think you're right.
joe rogan
Yeah.
But then there's some things like vacuum cleaner.
You need that.
How the fuck are you going to get anything out of a carpet without a vacuum cleaner?
francis ngannou
You need that.
joe rogan
Yeah.
There's some inventions that clean that make sense.
But I think...
francis ngannou
No, no.
I mean, everything makes sense.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
Even, like, a washing machine makes sense.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
You know, after training, you come, you put your clothes there, you train twice a day, you put your clothes after two days, you press that button on the machine when you're leaving.
unidentified
Yeah.
francis ngannou
Because it starts out.
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
Come back, it's done, you put it in the dryer again.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
No, that's a very good point, though, about inventions and also about how lazy people avoid work and about a lot of educated people are just avoiding work by continuing their education.
I know personally people that have done that.
They get their PhD.
They get grants.
They get loans.
francis ngannou
Oh no, you go in like a family house, and then there are like maybe four kids.
There's dishes, they have to clean the house, and then someone have a homework.
And even if he does have a homework, he's reading a book.
He's in the middle of the book.
So that means he's not cleaning anything.
Because it's reading.
You guys are not reading.
You have to clean.
So how easy is that?
joe rogan
Well, people love to put off things they're supposed to do.
It's an interesting thing, too, about fighters.
Because the difference between...
There's a lot of factors involved in being a fighter.
There's the mentality.
There's the ability to focus and to perform under pressure.
It's very difficult to do.
But there's also the ability to prepare properly.
So like to have the discipline to do everything that you're supposed to do.
And it's even more difficult sometimes for talented people.
francis ngannou
Yeah, I think fighting is more about discipline.
Because not always talented people will make it.
And you might have talent as much as you want if you don't work, if you don't put some work in and then get discipline.
You will not get there.
If you look like the champions of every weight class, every promotion, most likely they are not the most talented guys.
But they are very hard workers.
And they have something very special that distinguishes them.
joe rogan
Do you know the expression, hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's it.
francis ngannou
That's true.
joe rogan
Yeah, it is.
Absolutely.
One of the things that's unfortunate about talent is that when you're talented, you're better than everybody else in the gym.
And so you can kind of get away without.
Training is hard.
Maybe you have physical gifts.
Maybe you just have an understanding of fighting.
francis ngannou
And then you take it for granted because you didn't have to work to get it.
You don't even have the feeling that you need to work more to improve it because he was just there.
So you don't even understand that they work for it.
You just happen to have it.
And then they say you have to work for it.
Come on, bro.
For what?
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
I didn't do anything, but I still get it.
joe rogan
And if you can get away with it for a while, you develop habits of not training 100%.
Not really putting 100% into it, but still being successful because you're talented.
But then you run into someone who's talented and has discipline.
And that's when you get fucked up.
francis ngannou
Okay, and that's the problem.
joe rogan
Right.
When you get talent and discipline, you get a Michael Jordan.
You get Mike Tyson.
Talent and discipline, you get Mike Tyson.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
And then you also get some people that are not talented, but they are just the best worker in the room.
unidentified
Mm-hmm.
francis ngannou
At some point, talent will have a limit.
joe rogan
Yes.
francis ngannou
Yeah, talent has a limit.
joe rogan
Especially if someone is willing to really outwork you, really outwork everyone.
francis ngannou
Yeah, he has to because when you don't have talent, You basically start from nothing.
Then you have one, then you have two.
Then you know that you have those two because you've been working.
So you have to keep working, not only to maintain, to keep the two, but to get the three and the four.
And then you get into that process and then you get to work.
But when you get talent, you wake up someday, you have five out of ten without working.
You don't understand that you need to work to get the six and seven.
But the guy that...
Ole has the two.
He already understood that.
He already knew that he needs to work to get those two to get the three.
So at some point, he's going to catch you at five.
And if you're not improving, he's going to keep going up.
joe rogan
He's going to get to six and seven.
And you'll be like, this motherfucker was below me.
francis ngannou
And you're going to stay at five or barely go at six, seven.
joe rogan
Yeah.
And then there's guys that are really good in the gym.
And then when they get to the bright lights, they can't perform.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Which is the craziest thing.
There's these superstars in the gym.
And I remember from my kickboxing days, there was guys that were just so good in the gym.
And then they would get into that ring and they would just...
You could see it.
They just diminished.
They were 50% of themselves when they competed.
francis ngannou
Why do you think that?
joe rogan
I don't know.
Maybe there's something about anxiety, their inability to manage stress.
Maybe.
I don't know.
I mean, I don't know what it is.
I always feel like some people can overcome it.
And they don't, and some people do.
Some people, they start off as great gym guys and then they perform badly, but then eventually they figure it out.
They just keep growing and learning.
francis ngannou
But there are also a lot of people that go to the gym to become a world champion at the gym.
You know, I have seen a lot of, there's a lot of people that you get even in the gym, they are coming to try to figure out that guy.
He's good, so I might have to check him out.
You know, they have that mentality.
So in the gym, while you, maybe as a professional fighter, you are there to train, have a good training to learn.
joe rogan
Yes.
francis ngannou
Because you know that you only have one place that you want to show up.
In the fight.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
The two other months, You're in the gym and sometimes if you have somebody in front of you that you feel like he's not catching up with your level, you give him an advantage.
I'm like, okay, let me start on the back.
Right.
Start on this position.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
You give him an advantage so he can challenge you more.
joe rogan
Yes.
francis ngannou
You know what you're doing.
You know why you're doing that.
joe rogan
That takes a healthy control of your ego.
francis ngannou
You see a guy that is a good wrestler or a good jujitsu but has...
Very bad striking.
You know that you always start on a stand-up.
You always start up.
And then he might not be able to take you down.
I'm like, okay, let's go.
Let's start on the ground.
Step on me.
Half guard.
joe rogan
Full guard.
francis ngannou
Stuff like that.
Because you know that you want to work that position.
You're taking advantage on him.
But some people are there to prove that, oh, I'm something.
joe rogan
They're competing instead of training.
francis ngannou
They're competing.
And they don't usually gain more on that.
And those people will get in the fight and it's different.
joe rogan
Yeah, it's different.
That is a very interesting thing, right?
It's like some people understand it objectively.
Like, I'm here to learn and grow, and I need to work on my weaknesses to make them my strengths.
And some people want to avoid their weaknesses, so they only work on their strengths so they look good in the gym.
francis ngannou
Yeah, because they care about how they look.
joe rogan
Yeah, I used to see that a lot with kickboxers that didn't want to do jujitsu because they didn't like to get tapped.
Because on the feet, they were a killer.
And then they go to the ground, they're like, they're like a beginner.
They don't like that.
They don't like getting dominated on the ground.
So they would just like skip jujitsu classes, skip wrestling training.
They didn't want to have anything to do with that.
francis ngannou
I think it was also about a generation that people around the gym wasn't understanding also.
There's a gym, there are people that if you're training with them and something happens and you tap, they'll be like, oh, you're a pussy.
joe rogan
Right.
francis ngannou
You know, and I think those kind of people, they don't help their teammate to improve, you know?
No.
Instead of like, oh, no, you shouldn't do this, or you should do this instead to avoid that.
I'm like, oh, no, bro, you don't tap.
Like, yeah, you don't tap, then what?
You go to sleep?
joe rogan
Or you break your arm.
francis ngannou
Or you break your arm?
joe rogan
Yeah, if you don't tap in the gym, you're a moron.
Yeah, it's a stupid thing to not tap in the gym, and I've been stupid before.
It's like a thing that people do where they think that they're...
Yeah, and all you're doing is getting injured.
And if you don't tap to an arm bar, you're going to fuck your elbow up, and then you might not be able to train right for months.
francis ngannou
Yes.
joe rogan
Yeah, you have to.
You know, the Gracies have a great perspective on that.
They always say, keep it playful.
They always say that when you're in the gym, you're just training and learning, and you've got to keep it playful.
Marcelo Garcia says that all the time, who's one of the greatest jiu-jitsu guys of all time.
He says you have to open up your game in the gym.
You can't be closed off and be too defensive.
You have to open up your game and learn what happens if you get stuck in bad positions.
Yeah, learn when you get caught.
If you get caught, you tap.
francis ngannou
And even if you don't get caught sometimes, get yourself in a position to get caught.
Let somebody caught you and try to defend.
Understand how to get out of there.
That's why they call it practice.
joe rogan
Do you think you'll ever compete in jiu-jitsu?
You ever think that's something that's interesting to you?
francis ngannou
Me?
joe rogan
Yeah.
francis ngannou
No.
I don't think so.
I don't have any knees or ankles to give up.
joe rogan
That's a good point.
Man, I watched a video this past weekend of a guy getting his leg broken.
francis ngannou
If I was 25, yes.
joe rogan
I'm going to send you this, Jamie, because this is horrific.
francis ngannou
If I was 25, 20, 25, I would take those chances, do all those stuff, fun.
I don't have anything to give up.
joe rogan
Yeah, I'm going to show you something, Jamie.
This video scared the fucking shit out of me.
This video is this guy gets caught in this heel hook.
Hold on a second.
Where is it?
Yeah, I'm gonna send it to you, Jamie.
Yeah, I'm sending it to you, Jamie.
This shit's horrible.
This guy gets caught in an inside heel hook like 10 seconds into the match and he doesn't tap and his leg snaps in half.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
unidentified
Backstep.
joe rogan
Watch this.
francis ngannou
That's stupid.
joe rogan
Check this out.
So this guy, they scramble.
unidentified
By Austin.
Oh!
francis ngannou
My goodness.
unidentified
Oh my goodness.
joe rogan
That sound.
Play that again so I can hear that sound.
unidentified
Austin holding out a very long time.
francis ngannou
That's in South Africa.
unidentified
Backstep by Austin.
francis ngannou
That's South Africa.
unidentified
Oh!
Oh!
francis ngannou
Punch me in the face, bro.
joe rogan
Yeah, that leg might not ever be the same again.
francis ngannou
No, punch me in the face.
No, not the leg.
Yourself.
Like, do you imagine, like, just thinking of the day that your leg make this sound?
joe rogan
Oh, god damn.
unidentified
It snapped right here, right?
joe rogan
Like right there?
Yes.
unidentified
Like the spiral?
joe rogan
Yeah, spiral fracture of his shin.
Horrible.
And the sound was like a baseball bat breaking.
I'll never forget the sound when Chris Weidman kicked Uriah Hall and snapped his shin in half.
The sound was so horrible.
And he's never been the same again.
Those breaks, especially the shin break, I wonder if Conor McGregor is ever going to come back again.
It's very difficult to come back from that break.
That's one of the worst injuries.
francis ngannou
I think for that kind of injury, the most difficult part is the mental part.
You don't know if he's going to be there again.
To try to get to Obviously, you have a rehab, right?
But you rehab the part that is injured.
But the rehab of your mind to be able to trust that again, that is a problem.
I'm like, I don't know about that.
Maybe we just skip this part.
joe rogan
Well, even when you're not injured, like your fight with Stipe and then you fight Derrick Lewis, in the back of your mind, you're still thinking about the Stipe fight, right?
francis ngannou
Yeah, yeah.
I'm still fighting Stipe.
I'm still like, what?
Damn, why did I do this?
No, I should be patient.
I should do this.
You know, I'm there fighting Stipe.
And then I get surprised when the fight was over.
And I'm like, okay, this is it.
We still have one more round, right?
No, it's over.
It's been three rounds.
Because I was just being patient.
joe rogan
Well, you came back from that, though.
How did you come back from that?
How did you get your mind straight?
francis ngannou
I mean, I think I get to the point that I just...
Let it go, and I'm like, okay.
Because I'm like, if this is the end, at least let's finish how we started.
At the beginning, it was all fun.
joe rogan
Right, right, right.
francis ngannou
Like having fun.
I feel like at some point along the way, I lost that fun.
I don't know when, but I lost that fun.
And it's about like, oh, winning, you have to win, you shouldn't lose, this, blah, blah, blah, blah.
joe rogan
So did you make a decision in your mind to go back to having fun again?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
He was just like, have fun, and then whatever happens, happens.
Don't care.
And if this is it, if you lose again, and then maybe have to get caught or whatever, at least enjoy it.
And then I get in China, have to fight Curtis Blade.
45 seconds, it was over.
I'm like, not bad, having fun.
joe rogan
Fun for you.
francis ngannou
Yes.
The performance of the night, then keep going.
joe rogan
So, did you ever work with a psychologist or a performance coach, or did you figure it out yourself?
francis ngannou
I tried, but I think I have a personal blockage.
I don't believe in that.
joe rogan
Really?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
I don't know.
I talk to myself a lot.
I spend time with me, with myself.
I mean, most of the time I'm by myself.
I'm a lonely person.
So I spend time with myself and I talk to myself a lot.
I figure out, I analyze.
And this was just me growing up.
Didn't have friends, didn't have people to hang out with.
I wasn't welcome among kids.
So I created my own world in my mind, my own friends and everything in my mind.
So I just used to hang out with myself.
So I get used to Just like that.
joe rogan
Well, that's so much better for a person in your position in life than to have an entourage.
So I know a lot of guys, when they get very successful, they have an entourage.
So they're surrounded by yes men all the time.
And that is one of the worst things that happens to a successful person.
francis ngannou
But for them, for some people, it's cool.
You know, like even now, I think no later than last week, I was in the restaurant and I walked there by myself, take a table, sit down.
joe rogan
Do people look over there like, is that fucking Francis Ngannou?
francis ngannou
Yeah, order my food and eat.
joe rogan
Do people freak out?
Like, is that Francis Ngannou sitting by himself?
francis ngannou
Yeah, some people recognize you.
I'm like, yeah, are you expecting somebody?
And most of the time, the answer is yes.
Basically, like, leave me alone.
joe rogan
Right.
So you generally like being by yourself?
francis ngannou
Yeah, I like to.
I do that a lot.
And people are like, are you leaving here by yourself?
Are you by yourself?
I'm like, what's the problem by being by yourself?
It's being independent.
I'm free.
I don't need anybody to decide on my happiness or me having fun or whatever.
Sometimes I will spend two days in my house without going out.
And I'm good with it.
And I can go out.
I can do whatever I want, but I just want to be there.
joe rogan
I did that recently.
You know, my family was out of town, and I was home by myself for three days.
It was glorious.
I loved it.
It gives you time to think about things.
francis ngannou
I do that a lot.
But recently, I've been changing a little bit, because staying home a lot will make me think and will make me sad.
Since I lost my kid, my boy, then he will make me think and make me sad.
And if I stay there, I will keep having those thoughts, those sadness around.
It's like the energy around me is just sad.
I understand.
So then what I do is when I start to feel something like that, I just have to force myself to get out, grab the car key, get the hell out of here.
I'm running away from something.
Then by the time you even find the car key, you find your shoes, you do this, your mind is already thinking of something.
joe rogan
Instead of sorrow, just sorrow.
francis ngannou
Yeah, if you just sit in your couch, then it keeps going, keeps going, then it's sad, then you're pissed, then you're like, hate life, everything.
joe rogan
Your son was 15 months old?
francis ngannou
15 months old.
joe rogan
What happened?
francis ngannou
Bro.
I think he has some malformation on his brain, which is something that we didn't know.
He fainted.
He passed out twice.
The first time was in Khmerun.
We took him to the hospital.
They didn't find anything.
The second time was in Saudi.
We took him to the hospital.
They ran a lot of exams.
They didn't do anything.
They did the EEG. They didn't do the scan or the MRI because I think according to them, their conclusion was that he has a swollen lung,
you know, and that was what was pressing his chest and stopping him from breathing and create that So, after all those exams, they give him some medicine that is going to be okay.
Nothing to worry about.
Because at first, they even thought about asthma.
They give like a ventilator.
And then afterwards, after some result, they took him out.
And then, you know, it put me in confidence.
Even though like...
I don't know.
Sometime, I think...
Somewhere in my mind, I have to think that, yes, but he didn't show any stress respiratory if he was something from his lung.
But I'm like, bro, those were professional doctors and this, and then I trust that.
So I basically put my gut down.
And I remember just getting in Dubai, and that day I was thinking, like, oh, life is...
Meanwhile, I'm not doing bad.
Life is good.
You know, I went to the gym.
I'm like, maybe I should go to club tonight.
I don't go to club.
I don't go out.
Like, man, come on.
Which kind of guy are you?
I went to the gym to work out.
I'm in the bike cycling.
Then I tried to call.
I wanted to talk to him when I was on the phone, on the bike.
Then I called his mom.
His mom didn't pick up the phone.
And I'm like, after I'm done, I'm going to go take my shower, lay in the bed and call him.
And 30 minutes after I was on the leg machine, my phone rang.
It was my little brother.
He said, bro, things are not going well here.
I'm like, what?
He said, Kobe passed out.
He's not breathing.
We are at the hospital.
They kicked me out from the room.
And I'm like, what happened?
And then as we are talking, he's also trying to get information.
So I lost him for like three, four minutes.
I called again, and then I'm talking to him while he's talking to the nurse.
And the nurse was like, who are you?
Are you his dad?
He said, no.
Then who are you?
I'm his uncle.
Where is his dad?
His dad is not here.
Where?
He's gone.
Just like that.
He's gone.
What do you mean?
He's gone.
How come he's gone?
This kid was 15 months.
He was bigger than 15 months.
He was growing.
He was the most joyful, happy kid around.
Hey!
What do you mean he's gone?
Gone where?
Bro, that was it.
I thought I was dreaming.
I thought they're going to say something.
No, that's not true.
Then I keep calling again.
And everybody is confirmed.
I call my mom.
My mom is just on tear.
Like, bro, what the fuck is this?
And that was it.
And I never realized, I have been in the situation that I have seen people losing their kids, mourning maybe, definitely older kids, but I'm like, man, this must be hard, even though I can't feel it.
At that moment, I mean, you don't know what could be your reaction.
You don't know.
I've been in this situation where I'm like, Bro, I don't cry.
I never cry.
I mean, not like I never cry, but it doesn't just happen.
I don't know why.
No.
Maybe because you don't have a reason.
When you feel like something really hurts inside you, like you can't breathe.
It's hurting.
That was it.
unidentified
And when did this happen?
francis ngannou
April 27th.
joe rogan
So this was before the Joshua fight?
francis ngannou
No, after.
joe rogan
After the Joshua fight?
francis ngannou
Yeah.
April 27th.
Almost two months after.
That was it.
And then all of the sudden you realise how a kid that wasn't there two years ago has become a If it's a major part of your life, or if it's not your life, then you realise that all the things that you were worrying about didn't mean shit at all.
Nothing means nothing.
It was the only thing at the time that really mattered.
But it's not there anymore.
but you know one thing is that you know my dad passed away uh i was 15 and he got sick just stay at home for like months and couldn't even go to the hospital and get to the point that he couldn't even go to the bathroom on his own nothing but i was 15 i was still at school You know, I always tell myself, like, I was a kid, what could I have done?
And then, after a couple of years, I left school, and then I started to think, I'm like, okay.
I had an excuse when my dad passed away.
I think I'm becoming an adult, and I said, Powerless.
I still can do anything if something like that happens.
What happens if my mom gets sick?
What happens if I have my own kids?
Some days, and they need me, or I will provide for them, or protect them?
And that was one of the thoughts that I always have, pushing me to leave.
Like, no, I need to do something.
I need to take action.
Then, after years, you get to the point that you feel like you have it figured out.
Like, okay, I can afford a healthcare for my family.
I can take care if somebody needs to go to the hospital or whatever it is.
I'm going to make it.
I'm going to do it.
Then, all of a sudden, your own kids, which is the one that rely on you, only you, You couldn't even do anything for him.
By the time he got to the hospital, he was gone.
You couldn't fight for him.
I'm like, bro, let me fight.
Let me say I have tried.
Let me say I did something.
Let's make all this work.
What's the point if after all this, I get to the point that I'm still this powerless in front of a real situation?
And that...
That's hurt.
That's hurt a lot.
joe rogan
I'm sorry to hear that, man.
I can't imagine.
It's also the pain of knowing there's nothing he could have done.
It's just a medical thing that he was born with.
francis ngannou
Yeah, he was born with it.
Because when it happens, everybody was confused.
Nobody knows.
So, get home, then what should we do?
unidentified
That's the way of autopsy.
francis ngannou
That one was tough because you think that they're going to tear him, cut him, cut his head.
I mean, a kid that yesterday you were excited to talk to him, now they're talking about like, cut him this way, this way.
How come that is like?
But, you know, it's at least good to know what happened.
Maybe that might save somebody in the future, because there's still a mystery there.
So, say, let's do the autopsy.
That's why they find all this out.
The last time I saw him was me leaving Cameroon, going to the elevator.
And he was with my little brother.
He didn't want me to go because he became My body so much that when I'm around, he don't want me to leave him alone.
I can take him wherever I go.
He might not eat.
He doesn't care as long as he's with me.
That was it.
He was my mate, like 15 months.
He's barely working, but you know, When I walked in, you know that I walked in.
They don't have to ask, like, who walked in?
They know that it's his dad, you know, his reaction.
Then you start to think about all those little things, all those little things that you guys have, just you and him.
Then it's over.
Then it's over.
When it was the day that I was leaving, he was crying, like he wanted me to go with him.
But I kept going.
I knew that I was going to be back.
I had no clue that that was it.
unidentified
Wow.
francis ngannou
I always said, I should have gone back one more time, spent one more day, you know, talking one more time.
joe rogan
Man!
unidentified
That was it.
francis ngannou
And then he get back in the apartment and see all his toys, the stuff that he was playing, the things that you take from him the other day and put here, it's right there.
But he's not there anymore.
unidentified
And will never be there anymore.
Yeah.
Kobe.
francis ngannou
Kobe.
Kobe was his name.
I named him after Kobe Bryant because I had a great memory of Kobe Bryant.
The day that the UFC was announcing the partnership with Buddy Amon was in New York.
I just arrived in the US at a time.
My English was so bad.
I'm in New York.
We have to meet in this room, this event, to make the announcement.
And I'm there a little early.
Then Kobe came a little early too.
Meet me in the waiting room.
Just go be a night there for like 30 minutes.
My English is very bad.
I'm embarrassed.
I don't want to speak.
And then I keep talking, asking questions, talk about my story.
Ask me where I came from and how do I get.
And I'm like, wow, this is impressive.
I'm like, this is Kobe, right?
I don't want to bother him, but he's questioning me.
Really excited about it.
Get me to talk.
Then I feel bad.
I'm like, oh no, your English is really good.
I understand what you're saying.
And then how about this, that?
Like for 30 minutes.
Until then Dana White was the next guy that walked in the room.
And he said, wow, do you know this guy's story?
Do you know his story?
He did this, he did that.
And I said, yes, I know.
Like, wow, this is crazy.
Wow.
It's crazy how we in America, we don't know what's going on around the world.
And Kobe was there talking like that.
I'm like, This is Kobe Bryant!
So that was my moment with Kobe.
So when he passed out, when he died, You know, I was in LA when I heard about the news and it hit me really bad.
And I decided, I'm going to make Kobe.
I'm going to have a Kobe.
So that's it.
The day that he passed away, just the day before, they were just making a little basketball court that I have for him, a playground for him.
Because I was so awake for him to start to be strong on his feet so we can go work, we can do this, we can play soccer.
I've been looking for soccer clit for him.
This, that, you know, you have all the projects.
I have thought of like, which school should he go?
Like, think, oh, what should I do?
You know, you never know.
Maybe something happened to me.
I should set up something to keep him safe.
You think like that, but it never crossed your mind that he would be the one living first.
From the moment that he was born, when he was born, when he started to react and you really see a living person, you really started to plan out how to Protect him, how to build a security around him.
You know, he wasn't just a kid.
He was a project.
He became a huge project.
Everything that you think of that's good, that you want, oh, it's for Kobe.
It's for him.
All of this sudden, then he's gone.
unidentified
Wow.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
unidentified
You've been through a lot in your life, Francis.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
joe rogan
You've been through it a lot.
francis ngannou
A lot of people have been through it.
You didn't just know.
Then after that, you look at people that have been through, that lost a kid.
You respect them more.
You give them some more respect.
Like my older brother lost two kids.
And I feel so bad not really being there for him, because I didn't understand.
I know that he lost kids, but I didn't know what exactly that means.
Now that I understand, I'm like, I should have been there more.
I feel bad that I didn't connect to his suffering, to his pain.
And you respect him more for being through that, to overcome that twice.
Then you start to think like, no.
In fact, I think I'm not the toughest one, though.
I've been put in tests and realised that I'm not as tough as I think.
unidentified
Hmm.
francis ngannou
Yeah.
unidentified
Whew!
joe rogan
There's nothing anybody can say.
That's the craziest thing.
There's no comfort that anybody can give you.
francis ngannou
If they ask you, What do you want?
What can comfort you, you don't know.
It's nothing.
joe rogan
Nothing can happen.
francis ngannou
It's really about facing it daily.
Take it one at a time.
joe rogan
Do you have other children?
francis ngannou
Yeah, I have another girl.
I have another girl.
But when it happens like that, you feel like I don't know.
Even though in your mind you think like you still have a lot going on, a lot of things to be grateful about, but in your heart you feel like you're broke.
You have nothing.
Nothing is worth it.
I mean, I always love life and know that I have everything of suicide, but at least for once, I'm like, at least whenever I die, I'm going to go see my kid.
I'm going to see him.
I'm not afraid of it.
I still want to live, but at least whenever you get to that point, to think like that.
So, some way you're looking forward for whenever that happens.
Wow.
Yeah.
joe rogan
I'm very sorry for your loss, man.
I really am.
I wish I could say something, but there's nothing to say.
francis ngannou
There's nothing to say to you.
Thank you.
joe rogan
Thank you.
Thank you for being here, man.
Thank you for everything.
You're an inspirational man.
You really are.
francis ngannou
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
joe rogan
I appreciate you being here, and best of luck to you in everything in life.
francis ngannou
We'll see.
That's why, like, I really want to come back and do something, you know, like, because I really think, like, maybe I should...
I get to the point that I'm like, why do I fight for?
You know, I don't...
Even have to, I don't want.
But bro, that boy for only 15 months, I think he He taught me something.
He was active, full of life, and I think if there's one thing that he would have been doing, he would have been doing something, not staying there, not being a reason of giving up or whatever.
And I think that's the only way to honour him, his memory, keep him alive.
Get a purpose.
Make him a motivation.
unidentified
Yeah.
francis ngannou
I think so.
We will see.
We will see how it plays out.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Again, thank you, Francis.
Thank you for being here, man.
I really appreciate you.
francis ngannou
Thank you, Joe.
unidentified
Alright.
Export Selection