Per reports, the man reportedly began harassing two women outside of a club. Luckily, he quickly learned exactly why he messed with the wrong women. The story quickly went viral, with many praising one of the woman for teaching the man a lesson. “You go girl. He got what he deserved,” one reader commented on Facebook. “Maybe you taught him to keep his hands to himself. If not he might get worse if he tries this again. But I doubt he will I believe he will remember you.”
This incident reportedly involved Leslie, a popular UFC fighter. Leslie’s friend was reportedly groped by the man, and she and fellow UFC fighter Heather quickly stepped in to help. Leslie approached the man and said, ‘Hey you can’t do that’ at which point the larger male responded, ‘f*** you I can do whatever I want,'” her friend said. “Leslie retired, ‘no motherf***er you can’t.’ At this point the man became irate and spat on Leslie’s face. He then proceeded to take a punch at what he thought would be an indefensible woman. Wrong.”
It was then that a fight broke out, and Leslie immediately made the man regret his decision to harass her friend. “Leslie ducked the punch and shot in for a takedown. She quickly got to the mans back and applied a choke but decided he needed some elbow strikes and punches to learn a valuable lesson. The man unable to fend off the better fighter, desperately grabbed at Leslie’s hair and in vain resorted to fighting like a girl,” her friend said.
Heather, without missing a beat, delivered a running soccer kick to the man’s nether regions. Leslie again achieved mount and delivered a series of elbows until the man, now having his face looking more like hamburger meat, yelled out that he was sorry and that he respected them, according to The Mirror. At this point Leslie disengaged and allowed the man to get up and go. He left having learned a valuable lesson and the women returned to the club.” “I never meant to fight him but I couldn’t let my friend get disrespected like that and he escalated it from there. I make mistakes but I try (and sometimes fail) to live by a policy of non initiation of violence,” she said.