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Fight Matrix

“The Guy Doesn’t Have the Guts”: Alex Pereira’s Explosive Attack on Herb Dean

Posted on June 22, 2026 by Andrew Carswell

After a controversial White House loss to Ciryl Gane, Pereira unloads on Herb Dean, demands accountability, and makes it clear he wants the rematch.

Alex Pereira did not sound like a fighter making excuses.

He sounded like a fighter who believes something dangerous happened in front of the whole world, and nobody in charge was willing to stop it. Days after losing to Ciryl Gane at UFC Freedom 250 on the White House lawn, Pereira sat down for a long, emotional interview and delivered one of the most explosive responses of his career. The former middleweight and light heavyweight champion said he felt good at heavyweight, respected the jab that initially hurt him, and still believed the fight could have developed differently if not for what he described as repeated illegal blows to the back of his head.

The loss itself was already historic. Pereira entered the fight trying to become the first three-division champion in UFC history, moving up to heavyweight for a chance at Ciryl Gane and the interim title. Instead, Gane dropped him in the second round with a jab, followed him to the mat, and finished the sequence with punches and elbows as Pereira tried to grab a leg and recover. The official result was a TKO loss for Pereira, but the aftermath has become much bigger than the result. Pereira says the finishing sequence included illegal strikes, and his team has explored ways to have the action reviewed.

What made Pereira’s interview so powerful was not just the accusation itself, but the detail behind it. He said he and his team had already been concerned about Gane’s history before the fight. According to Pereira, he asked coach and translator Plinio Cruz to speak with Herb Dean during the rules meeting and specifically warn him about strikes to the back of the head. Pereira said eye pokes and groin strikes can happen in a fight because MMA is chaotic, but he viewed repeated shots to the back of the head differently, especially if they come during a finishing sequence when a hurt fighter is trying to survive.

That is the part Pereira kept returning to again and again. In his mind, this was not simply a missed call in a fast exchange. It was a failure to act after he says the danger had already been identified. Pereira said he warned Dean before the fight, then watched the referee fail to intervene when the exact concern appeared to unfold in real time. He argued that a referee should not be afraid to stop the action, take a point, or give a fighter time to recover if illegal strikes land. The rule exists for a reason, Pereira argued, and the referee’s responsibility is to enforce it, even during a massive event at the White House.

Pereira’s anger toward Dean was unusually direct. He said Dean should not referee his fights again and suggested that the veteran official’s time may be up. He framed the issue as one of safety, not personal revenge, repeatedly saying he was not trying to change the result just because he lost. Pereira said he is speaking because fighters’ lives are involved, because his children may fight one day, and because other athletes may not have the same platform to call attention to dangerous officiating patterns.

Still, the other side of the debate is not going away. Herb Dean released a rare public explanation defending his handling of the fight, arguing that many fans misunderstand the back-of-the-head rule in MMA. Dean said officials focus on the nape of the neck and the occipital junction, not every strike that lands near the rear side of the head. He maintained that the areas Gane struck were fair under the way the rule is enforced.

John McCarthy also gave Dean the benefit of the doubt, saying Pereira’s movement made the sequence difficult to judge in real time. McCarthy explained that when a hurt fighter is grabbing a leg and pushing forward, the target can shift as the offensive fighter is already throwing. He did not say Pereira was definitely never hit illegally, but he argued that body movement and referee positioning make these sequences more complicated than slow-motion clips suggest.

Pereira, however, rejected that defense during the interview. When told that commission officials felt the movement made the situation difficult to stop, he responded with a simple question: then why is the referee there? To Pereira, saying the action was too chaotic to judge was not an explanation. It was the problem. His point was that eye pokes, groin shots, and blows to illegal areas also happen during movement, and the referee’s job is to recognize them anyway.

The controversy also follows Gane into familiar territory. Reports noted that Gane had previously been criticized for strikes against Junior dos Santos and had a no-contest against Tom Aspinall after an eye poke. Aspinall himself reacted to the Pereira sequence by saying the shots looked very illegal. That does not decide anything officially, but it does show that Pereira’s complaint was not dismissed by everyone inside the heavyweight picture.

What Pereira wants now is clear. He wants an immediate rematch with Gane, and he wants it at heavyweight. He said he felt good in the division, loved not cutting weight, and believes the first round showed he belonged there. Pereira pushed back against fans who mocked him for being dropped by a jab, explaining that he was stepping in with his leg in the air and never actually went out. He said the illegal shots and the damage that followed made recovery harder, but the fight showed him he is a heavyweight now.

The most surprising part of the interview may have been that Pereira still praised the event itself. He described the White House experience as unforgettable, from walking through halls with portraits of presidents to stepping onto a balcony, shooting his bow-and-arrow gesture, seeing fireworks, and walking toward the Octagon. He said the event was perfect outside of what happened in his fight, calling the experience unbelievable and something that will remain part of history.

That contrast is what makes the story so fascinating. Pereira is not attacking UFC Freedom 250 as an event. He is not saying the White House spectacle failed. In fact, he seemed proud to have been part of it. His issue is narrower and sharper: he believes the biggest moment of his career was compromised by illegal blows and a referee who failed to act after being warned. That is why this interview hit so hard. It was not just a defeated fighter venting. It was Pereira trying to turn a painful loss into a larger argument about safety, accountability, and whether officials should face real consequences when fighters are put at risk.

The official record still says Ciryl Gane defeated Alex Pereira by second-round TKO. That part has not changed. But,Pereira has already changed the conversation around the fight. What was supposed to be remembered as Gane’s coronation and Pereira’s failed triple-champ bid is now being debated as one of the most controversial finishes of the year.

Alex Pereira lost at the White House, but he is not walking away quietly.

He wants Gane again, he wants Herb Dean away from his fights, and he wants the sport to answer a question that now feels impossible to ignore: when the fighter says he warned everyone before it happened, who is responsible when it still happens anyway?

Andrew Carswell

Andrew Carswell is a combat sports columnist and college writing professor, based in Las Vegas, NV, whose work examines the intersection of fighting, media, business, and culture. His commentary and analysis have been featured in various magazines, newspapers, and media outlets, including Yahoo! News, and USA TODAY. Blending journalistic insight and experience with a fan’s perspective, Carswell writes about the fight game as both a cultural phenomenon and a global business.

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