"No major injuries, just swollen and a few nicks and he is in good spirits. Just another day in the office," McRae told the Herald. "He's just spending the time with family, friends and colleagues today."
It's understood Hunt's weight cut - he usually drops weight to squeeze under the 266 pound (120.6kg) heavyweight limit for non-title bouts - provided complications, which left him dehydrated when the bell rang yesterday.
Referee John Sharp let the bout proceed in to the fifth and final frame despite Hunt struggling at times to defend himself as Miocic landed a UFC-record 361 strikes, while Hunt could only muster 46 - it was the most lopsided bout in UFC history based on those statistics.
Some people questioned on social media whether Hunt's corner should have thrown in the towel and Hunt - known for his toughness - refused to quit when he had his swollen eye examined after the fourth round.
"Mark knows his own limits and he wasn't ready to give up," McRae said.
UFC president Dana White tweeted that he felt the bout should have been stopped earlier - the third round was particularly rough - and Tom Wright, UFC director of operations for Australia, Canada and New Zealand, said he thought the bout went on too long.
"I'm not a referee, but from my perspective, I think they probably could have stopped it earlier," Wright said.
Miocic, who has pushed himself in to the heavyweight title frame with the dominant display, said he was just doing his job.
"I felt like I got it in the early rounds, but he's a tough guy.," Miocic said of Hunt. "That's why the ref let it go as long as he did. But I was going to keep digging and digging and they stopped it, which is fine."
Hunt has three left fights left on his UFC contract but it could be a while before he will pull on the gloves again as he takes time to rest up.
He could fight at the UFC 193 show in Melbourne in November when the MMA promotion makes its first appearance in the Victorian capital.
Hunt was fifth in the divisional rankings before the weekend to Miocic's fourth but the Super Samoan may slide down the pecking order given the one-sided nature of the loss.
One fighter who could find himself in the rankings when they're updated this week is Kiwi-born Australian middleweight Robert Whittaker (14-4) who produced an impressive first-round knockout win over the 14th-ranked Brad Tavares (13-4) in yesterday's co-main event.
"I love the doubters. I love proving them wrong, and it's like the topping on a piece of cake," Whittaker told Submission Radio. "And yeah, besides that, putting in the length of the camp, the weeks and weeks of training, the weeks and weeks of sacrifice, saying no to things, and then coming out like this is just the best result."