The Joe Rogan ExperienceJRE MMA Show #155 with Max Holloway
Joe Rogan and Max Holloway on max Holloway Redefines Greatness After Legendary UFC 300 Knockout.
In this episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, featuring Max Holloway and Joe Rogan, JRE MMA Show #155 with Max Holloway explores max Holloway Redefines Greatness After Legendary UFC 300 Knockout Joe Rogan and Max Holloway break down Max’s historic BMF-title knockout of Justin Gaethje at UFC 300, exploring the strategy, mentality, and preparation behind what Rogan calls the greatest KO of all time.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Max Holloway Redefines Greatness After Legendary UFC 300 Knockout
- Joe Rogan and Max Holloway break down Max’s historic BMF-title knockout of Justin Gaethje at UFC 300, exploring the strategy, mentality, and preparation behind what Rogan calls the greatest KO of all time.
- They discuss career perception, fighter longevity, brain health, weight cutting, and how fans misinterpret ‘decline’ when a veteran has a few losses despite still being in his athletic prime.
- The conversation ranges across divisions and fighters—Volkanovski, Makhachev, Topuria, Pereira, Gaethje, Jiri, Ryan Garcia, Ngannou, and others—using their careers to illustrate how style matchups, timing, damage, and decision-making shape outcomes.
- Max also talks about life after fighting, building parallel careers (streaming, business), and his ideal future path: reclaiming the 145 belt, chasing a second (or even third) title, and walking away before the sport retires him.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
7 ideasThe ‘Max is done’ narrative ignored his age, opposition, and performances.
Holloway notes fans saw him grow up in the UFC from age 20 and treat him like an aging veteran, despite being just 32, never being truly knocked out, and consistently performing at or above previous levels against elite competition.
Brain health should dictate scheduling and training after knockouts.
Max and Joe stress that severe KOs require long layoffs—months of no contact or even a year in extreme cases—and smarter sparring, highlighting Justin Gaethje’s choice to sit out six months and criticizing quick returns like Volkanovski’s after the Makhachev head kick.
Styles, timing, and camp conditions matter more than ‘MMA math.’
Holloway rejects simplistic logic like ‘I beat X who beat you,’ pointing to variables like damage from prior fights, short-notice camps, injuries, and stylistic matchups that drastically change outcomes.
Cardio and speed can be weaponized more effectively than raw strength.
For Gaethje at 155, Max prioritized speed and conditioning over bulking up, using movement, volume, stance switches, and shot selection to blunt Gaethje’s power instead of trying to ‘match’ his physical strength.
Rule sets and structures significantly shape what ‘the best fighter’ looks like.
They argue that bans on knees to grounded opponents, 12–6 elbows, the presence of a cage, and automatic stand-up starts each round distort ‘real fight’ dynamics; Rogan even floats ideas like restarting rounds in the same ground position and using open mats instead of cages.
Fighters need an identity and career path beyond MMA to retire on their terms.
Max emphasizes streaming, business (like his drink brand), and other interests so he can walk away in his mid-30s while still elite, rather than hanging on until decline forces him out.
One iconic moment can permanently change a fighter’s market value and narrative.
The last-second KO of Gaethje flipped the BMF belt from ‘gimmick’ to serious hardware, exploded Holloway’s global visibility (massive search spikes, viral clips), and put him at the center of multiple huge matchmaking options across divisions.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesYou’re only as good as your last fight.
— Max Holloway
I say it’s the greatest knockout of all time.
— Joe Rogan
This sport is not like basketball or baseball. You can’t shit the bed on Tuesday and fix it on Friday.
— Max Holloway
Fighting is easy. Anything you do in life is easy; people make it hard.
— Max Holloway
I want to retire the game. I don’t want the game to retire me.
— Max Holloway
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsHow should athletic commissions and promotions better protect fighters from returning too soon after severe knockouts, especially champions who insist on quick turnarounds?
Joe Rogan and Max Holloway break down Max’s historic BMF-title knockout of Justin Gaethje at UFC 300, exploring the strategy, mentality, and preparation behind what Rogan calls the greatest KO of all time.
Would changing MMA rules to allow knees to the head on the ground or to restart rounds in the same grappling position create a more ‘real’ fighting sport—or just introduce new safety and fairness problems?
They discuss career perception, fighter longevity, brain health, weight cutting, and how fans misinterpret ‘decline’ when a veteran has a few losses despite still being in his athletic prime.
At what point should a fighter prioritize legacy over money when choosing between dangerous short-notice fights, favorable matchups, and long-term health?
The conversation ranges across divisions and fighters—Volkanovski, Makhachev, Topuria, Pereira, Gaethje, Jiri, Ryan Garcia, Ngannou, and others—using their careers to illustrate how style matchups, timing, damage, and decision-making shape outcomes.
How do viral moments, like Holloway’s KO of Gaethje, distort or enhance fans’ understanding of a fighter’s full body of work and technical evolution?
Max also talks about life after fighting, building parallel careers (streaming, business), and his ideal future path: reclaiming the 145 belt, chasing a second (or even third) title, and walking away before the sport retires him.
What does Holloway’s approach—minimizing hard sparring, weaponizing cardio, and cultivating a life outside fighting—suggest about the blueprint for a healthier, longer MMA career in the modern era?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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