The Daily Courier

Kelowna’s MacDonald back in spotlight for champion vs. champion fight this weekend

Headlining Bellator card in California, MacDonald can become king of 2 weight classes Saturday

- By The Canadian Press

Canadian MMA star Rory (The Red King) MacDonald has taken his lumps in title fights, with broken bones and dashed dreams.

Against Robbie Lawler three years ago in a bloody bout at UFC 189, the fight ended one minute into the fifth round with MacDonald unable to absorb any more blows to his fractured face.

By the time it was over, it looked like someone had taken a box-cutter to Lawler’s lip and MacDonald had survived a car crash.

“I never actually got rocked in my brain. It was more just like my facial structure breaking,” MacDonald said with a chuckle on the Fight Network’s 2016 “Retrospect­ive” show.

“He was hitting me and it was breaking my bones,” he added.

MacDonald’s nose, which is no stranger to breakage, bore the brunt of the abuse.

There was more pain for MacDonald last January, although this time it came with a shiny prize. The 29-year-old from Quesnel, who got his fighting start at Toshido MMA in Kelowna but now trains out of Montreal, dethroned Bellator welterweig­ht champ Douglas Lima in a bruising five-round encounter at Bellator 192.

After the judges scored it 48-47, 49-45 and 49-46 for MacDonald, the Canadian and his new championsh­ip belt left on a stretcher thanks to Lima’s punishing leg kicks.

The hematoma on MacDonald’s lower left leg was the size of a soccer shin pad.

“I think I have a person growing inside me down there by the looks of it. I can’t really walk on it,” he said in his post-fight interview in the cage. “But whatever. I got through it.”

His leg would need six to eight weeks to recover.

On Saturday, MacDonald (20-4-0) returns to action against Gegard Mousasi (44-6-2) in a main-event matchup of champions at Bellator 206 in San Jose.

The only title up for grabs will be Mousasi’s middleweig­ht crown at 185 pounds. The Dutch fighter can’t make the 170-pound welterweig­ht limit, so has no need for MacDonald’s title.

Should MacDonald win a second belt, Bellator boss Scott Coker says they will determine after the bout how to proceed with two titles. MacDonald would like to defend both if possible.

While Bellator may be seen as the No. 2 MMA promotion behind the UFC, Saturday’s title fight has real allure given the fighters’ credential­s.

The 33-year-old Mousasi, a stylish striker, went 9-3-0 in the UFC with wins over former champions Vitor Belfort and Dan Henderson and has held titles in Dream, Cage Warriors and Strikeforc­e.

“He’s a complete mixed martial artist. There’s not too many of those guys competing at the top level,” said MacDonald. “He’s got the skills.”

MacDonald, a well-rounded fighter with an iron will, was 9-4-0 in the UFC and is the last fighter to beat current UFC welterweig­ht champion Tyron Woodley.

“He comes to fight. He’s mentally strong. Technicall­y, everywhere he’s good,” Mousasi said of MacDonald.

MacDonald is looking forward to matching his skills against Mousasi.

“I think he’ll have more power and strength in the early going. But I think that my endurance will be better than his and I’ll have better speed,” said MacDonald.

While MacDonald is known for pushing himself to the very limit in his fights, he acknowledg­es that is not the preferred way to go.

“I like it when my fights go like when I fought Paul Daley,” he said, referencin­g a 2017 Bellator bout that ended in a submission win 1:45 into the second round. “I’m a competitiv­e guy. So when push comes to shove when I’m in the cage, I always push to my limits to get the victory because that’s who I am.

“I’m prepared for the worst, but hoping for the best,” MacDonald said of how Saturday’s bout might go in terms of physical toll.

Given he normally walks around at 195 pounds, MacDonald has enjoyed not having to radically restrict his diet during training camp.

Mousasi thinks he may be 10 pounds heavier fight night but says “that’s not going to decide who’s going to win.”

“I feel like I’m the better fighter and that’s going to make the difference.”

MacDonald’s welterweig­ht championsh­ip is already under threat from another quarter. Bellator is staging a Welterweig­ht World Grand Prix with eight 170-pounders including MacDonald.

The tournament starts Saturday on the same card with Lima (29-7-0) facing Andrey Koreshkov (21-2-0). The Russian won the title off Lima in 2015 only to lose it back to him the next year.

MacDonald will have to put his 170-pound title on the line each time he fights in the tournament, starting with veteran Jon Fitch (31-7-1 with one no-contest), though no date has been set for that fight.

“I’m excited to fight him too,” said MacDonald. “I’m happy that I know who I’m fighting next. It’s cool. I’m very confident about fighting him, so I think it’s great. I’m looking forward to it. But I’m definitely not looking past Gegard.

“In my opinion, he’s the harder fight for me, so my focus is on that.”

Other welterweig­hts competing in the Grand Prix are Daley, Michael Page, Ed Ruth and Neiman Gracie. Lorenz Larkin and Yaroslav Amosov are alternates.

Also Saturday, former Pride title-holder Wanderlei (The Axe Murderer) Silva takes on former UFC light-heavyweigh­t champ Quinton (Rampage) Jackson in a featured heavyweigh­t fight. The card is being shown on DAZN in Canada.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Rory MacDonald, seen here at an open workout in Ottawa in 2016, returns to action Saturday against Gegard Mousasi for the main event of Bellator 206 in San Jose.
The Canadian Press Rory MacDonald, seen here at an open workout in Ottawa in 2016, returns to action Saturday against Gegard Mousasi for the main event of Bellator 206 in San Jose.

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