The Slap That Changed the Match #ufc
2026 · Wrestling · Wrestling
The Slap That Changed the Match #ufc
The Slap That Changed the Match #ufc
2026
0m
Wrestling
A slap. A receipt. And a rule most fans don’t fully understand. Giorgi Meshvildishvili slaps Arman Andreasyan. Arman fires back instantly. In wrestling, there’s a code: If a guy does something to you — you do it back. As hard or harder. Immediately. But here’s where it gets messy. An open-hand strike lives in a gray area. Sometimes it’s legal hand fighting. Sometimes it’s a collar tie. Sometimes it’s a foul. The difference? Contact. If you strike and keep contact, it can pass as a tie-up. Hit and release? It looks like a slap. And that’s when officials step in. Now the ref is stuck in a nightmare scenario: Was it hand fighting? Was it retaliation? Was it unsportsmanlike? At one point, a point goes up for one side. Moments later, a point goes up for the other. And suddenly the scoreboard is moving for reasons that have nothing to do with takedowns — the very thing the match was supposed to be decided on. That’s the controversy. Not who’s tougher. Not who hit harder. But whether technical fouls and judgment calls should influence a match built on control, position, and scoring action. This is where rules, culture, and competition collide. And when they do, one moment can change everything. Subscribe for sharp fight analysis, wrestling breakdowns, and real combat sports insight. #Wrestling #FreestyleWrestling #CombatSports #FightBreakdown #ArmanAndreasyan #GiorgiMeshvildishvili