In the meantime, the Perry fight represented a more appealing opportunity. "The UFC is like, 'OK, we want you to come back, and maybe later we’ll do that,'" Diaz said. "I’m like, OK, well, you know who’s doing a good job? Close to the same amount offer for Mike Perry, who’s the f***ing most violent motherf***er around right now. Doing things, taking over the business, running s***, doing his own promotion. I’m a lot more enthusiastic to get up and run and get ready to train for this motherf—er who’s going to knock me out, or I’m going to knock his ass out, and we’re going to take who’s the bigger dog".
Diaz also distanced himself from MVP as a promotional entity, framing his May 16 appearance as a Netflix fight under his own Real Fight Inc. banner rather than a commitment to the promotion itself. His longer-term plans include returning to the UFC on his own terms and hunting Jake Paul. "Me and Conor will fight again when the time is right, and it’s to fight, but it’s going to be when we’re both on the uprising," Diaz said. "Not when someone’s dying out. I’m nobody’s comeback story either".