
“With that same situation with the arm going limp with that type of a choke on someone, I would think the arm should be doing something else. So I see someone go limp, and I know that on top of it, they’re no longer putting tension on their neck, and their neck is just being bent, I can’t see that I should do something different than that.” “A bulldog choke – anytime you have a choke where there’s pressure on the neck and to see the spine backwards like that, that’s a rough situation for me. And then let it go out and he’s not gonna take any other damage. He may go out, I’ll have a second to make sure – not even a second – a half a breath, to make sure he’s OK.

It’s not like he’s gonna go out and in a second, take some extreme amount of damage. “When I see some chokes, a rear-naked choke, especially with the guy on the back face up, I take a sigh of relief. However, in a recent appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, he explained his side and how with a choke like the bulldog choke, no risks can be taken due to the stress placed on a fighter’s neck.

When Robbie sprung back up directly after the fight was called, instantly Dean knew something was wrong.

At the time, it looked as though it had gone limp.
