Nate Diaz Twitter



  • 4.7m Followers, 1,302 Following, 1,435 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from Nate Diaz (@natediaz209).
  • Conor McGregor and Nate Diaz have gone to war yet again after a foul-mouthed row broke out between the pair on Twitter. The duo's legendary rivalry remains tied at one win apiece, and fans were reminded of the fireworks between them on social media on Wednesday. It all kicked off after the Notorious re-posted a video before their first fight in 2016, where he called for 'The McGregor belt.
  • Nate Diaz has weighed in on the Conor McGregor and Khabib Nurmagomedov feud. Connor McGregor and Khabib Nurmagomedov are formidable foes. This week we saw them have a crack at each other on social media, and Nate Diaz has shared his thoughts on this entire battle.
  1. Conor Mcgregor Twitter

Conor McGregor has reignited his bitter rivalry with Nate Diaz after taking aim at his long-term rival in an expletive-laden tirade on Twitter.

Nate

McGregor and Diaz share one of the most heated rivalries in UFC history, with both of their fights so far accounting for two of the biggest pay-per-view buys of all time.

The latest tweets from @NateDiaz209.

With McGregor expected to face Dustin Poirier in a rematch later this year and Diaz due to meet Leon Edwards in the co-main event of UFC 262 on May 15, it looks like a trilogy fight may still be some way off, but that hasn't stopped the pair from taking pot-shots at each other on social media.

Breaking badhd series download. Their latest spat ensued after McGregor, who has a chequered history with Diaz and the rest of his teammates, responded to a comment from a fan by tweeting: 'Isn’t that crazy! Karl ristenpart fugue. Who’s the real bad m*********** anyway ? Went up two weight divisions on a weeks notice to fight him for that fight. No hesitation. Straight onto my jet. In thru the side door. Surprise, surprise.'

It didn't take too long for Diaz to respond and it's hardly surprising the former Ultimate Fighter winner took exception to McGregor's comments.

The one-time UFC lightweight title challenger blasted the Irishman for focusing on him instead of Poirier and shared a picture of his middleweight bout with Rory Markham at UFC 111 in 2010, alongside a caption which read: 'Who went up two weight classes in half a day notice no hesitation and not promotion about it just did it cause I ain’t no b**** how’s that Conor fuck u Whatever u think u did already been done by a real G Try not to get finished agaaaain [sic].'

But McGregor wasn't quite finished, however, as he poked fun at Diaz's former opponent, before sharing an image of the 35-year-old American in the aftermath of their epic bout at UFC 202, this time with the caption: 'And don’t worry on my next fight bro. You and your face know what I’m like when I go again with it.'

This prompted Diaz to reply with a foul-mouthed rant of his own, writing: 'Don’t forget Dustin f****** u up But he’s scared of me You are both some b****** And I slapped kabob he was scared with no counter And he owned you so who’s the real king Me b**** that’s who.'

The feud then continued to grow uglier as the intense back-and-forth between the former lightweight champion and Diaz escalated even further, with the pair proceeding to hurl insults about their respective records.

Diaz, of course, couldn't resist having the final word.

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Sat in a McDonald’s drive-through in Miami, Jorge Masvidal listened blissfully to the powerful voice of the late, great Kimbo Slice.

The 18-year-old was invited to drive to the other side of Miami to face Slice’s protégé on that fateful day in 2004, a feared street fighter known as Ray, in just a few hours’ time.

After polishing off the reminder of his hamburger, ‘Gamebred’ set off to the backyard brawl unaware his journey would lead him to fight on the other side of the world under the brightest of lights.

It is perhaps fitting the former street fighter earned his first ever UFC title fight on a week’s notice on ‘Fight Island’ against one of the most dominant champions in the sport. Nigel kennedy vivaldi the four seasons full.

Masvidal’s bout at UFC 251 against Kamaru Usman drew some of the biggest pay-per-view numbers for the UFC in 2020 – almost as much as Conor McGregor’s return in January.

He has an opportunity to right the wrongs of that night on Fight Island this Saturday night at UFC 261, with a whole camp behind him and his self-belief skyrocketing.

The journey from the back streets of Miami to box-office superstar is as entertaining and colourful as Masvidal’s career himself. But nothing has ever been handed to Masvidal and he certainly has paid his dues to get to the top.

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His parents were both immigrants, his mother arrived in the States from Peru and his father arriving from Cuba at the age of 14 after travelling 90 miles at sea on a makeshift raft made out of a tractor tyre.

The youngster moved around the 305 with his mother, but saw little of Masvidal Sr who was incarcerated for 18 years for a drug trafficking charge when his son was just four.

Despite being told his dad was in the army, Masvidal learned of his father’s whereabouts at 13 and began to visit him in prison regularly.

His childhood years were pleasant, albeit impoverished, with his hyperactive nature and desire to compete leading him to his first ever fight.

“I was about nine years old riding a bike with some friends when we got stopped by a group of guys who were three or four years older than us,” he told the BBC.

“One of the guys leans over, grabs my shirt, pulls out a knife and tells me to give him my bike. I was scared. He had a knife. But there was a fence between us so I pulled back, assessed the situation, then took off.

“Then, five or six months later, there’s this incident where my friend got slapped at school, and I asked who’s the guy that slapped you? He pointed to the kid and just by luck, I realised it was the same guy who pulled a knife on me.

“We started going at it by the side of the cafeteria. I knew how to throw punches by watching kung-fu movies, and I landed a flurry, plus a head butt which busted his nose.”

At 14, he was boxing after school and taking karate lessons to sate his hunger for violence. Although he began to wrestle for his high school team and earned a starting spot, his grades stopped him from competing.

Just four years later, he had his first ever professional mixed martial arts fight whilst still a teenager and scored a first round knockout.

A veteran of nearly 50 fights, the now 36-year-old has competed for Bellator, Strikeforce, Shark Fights and World Victory Road, but never managed to quite hit the heights in the UFC.

He was seen as something of a journeyman; a gate-keeper to the top echelons of the lightweight and then welterweight division. But a reality show saved his career.

Masvidal credits Dominican Republic game show, Exatlon Estados Unidos, for helping recharge his batteries.

“It was a restart button,” he told the UFC. “I got to know myself on a conscious level and a subconscious level.

“I got to be away from cell phones, from people, from music, from everything that we’re accustomed to.

Diaz

“And in that time, I only heard one voice, which was mine. Maybe for some people that’s scary. I loved it. I was just getting to know myself, figuring out what really drives me, what I love about this sport so much, why I do this.”

And he was back with bang in 2019, spectacularly knocking out both Darren Till and Ben Askren, then cementing his status as one of the best fighters in the game with a beat down of Nate Diaz for the BMF title at Madison Square Garden in November. The iconic venue was also the setting for his defeat to Stephen Thompson at UFC 217 which prompted the exile.

“The Ben Askren fight, that was it,” Joe Rogan said. “That was the cherry on top, and then of course the merking [sic] of Nate Diaz.

“He beat the f*** out of Nate Diaz. That was a crazy fight. He’s a monster. He’s hard for anybody to deal with.”

Masvidal himself continued: “That dude that fought that day; that guy is no longer with us. He’s resting in peace somewhere else.

“I buried that guy a long time ago. That other Gamebred doesn’t exist no more. It’s the resurrection of me.”

Conor McGregor once called a fight with him ‘red panty night’ eluding to the millions of dollars you can expect earn against him, but a fight against ‘Gamebred’ is still yet to materialise.

Rumours suggested Dana White himself blocked the fight, with Masvidal suggesting ‘they don’t want a murder charge on me’ and that ‘the president said we can’t compete because I’m too much man’.

Conor Mcgregor Twitter

Instead, he has the chance to claim the UFC welterweight title in his 50th professional fight this weekend. Strap in and enjoy the hype train for as long as it lasts as characters like Masvidal do not come along very often.