Absolutely insane Merab Dvalishvili using social media presence to connect with fans

They call Merab Dvalishvili “The Machine” for his relentless cardio.Make no mistake: Not only is the Georgian — who was slated to defend his bantamweight crown in the UFC 316 main event against Sean O’Malley — an animal, he’s more than happy to eat food meant for the animals.Kayla Harrison, the challenger to Julianna Peña’s women’s bantamweight crown Saturday night at Prudential Center, witnessed firsthand during a UFC remote filming session last year in Point Pleasant, N.J., the time the affable Dvalishvili ate a fish — not an order of salmon, but a whole fish meant to be fed to the penguins at Jenkinson’s Aquarium.“He’s absolutely insane,” Harrison told The Post during the lead-up to the event in Newark.“He was eating the sardines, or the fish that we were feeding the penguins.
He literally ate one.I was like, ‘You’re an animal.’ ”Dvalishvili, despite English not being his first language, has found a way to connect with fans thanks to his friendly demeanor and his humbleness — not to mention the silly social-media videos he frequently produces, a staple of the lead-up to his capture of O’Malley’s UFC gold last September that returned ahead of their rematch.Those clips generally are planned and canned, but the 34-year-old may be even funnier in moments of spontaneity.In the case of sampling the penguins’ snack, the former New York construction worker, who still owns homes in Long Island and Nevada, says he was just “a little bit hungry.”“I guess these penguins [were] full, and they [were] not hungry.
The food we [were] giving, it was small fish — washed, clean,” Dvalishvili recalled to The Post earlier this week.“I was a little bit hungry, you know.
They [were] not hungry.I was hungry, and I ate healthy food, which was the fish.”Dvalishvili and Harrison — who were joined that day at Jenkinson’s Boardwalk by former two-division champion Alex Pereira and Hall of Famer Robbie Lawler — bumped into o...