Windsor Star

Lure of MSG reels in Cormier and Lewis

- DAN GELSTON

Sure, the heavyweigh­t championsh­ip is on the line at UFC 230. But for Daniel Cormier and challenger Derrick Lewis, their biggest beef is over chicken.

Their chicken challenge goes back to July when the fighters shared the dais after they both fought on the same pay-per-view card. Cormier was feeling great after he flattened Stipe Miocic and won the heavyweigh­t crown. Lewis also won and continued his ascent into contention.

The fighters joked for a while before Lewis could finally find a reason to dislike Cormier: “He disrespect­ed that Popeye’s chicken on a commercial a few years ago.” A shirtless Cormier had starred in a parody video of All About That Bass, and danced with drumsticks out of a Popeye’s box. Lewis mimicked Cormier’s moves from the video at the news conference and both fighters erupted into laughter. This kind of hype wasn’t exactly brimming with the nastiness of Conor McGregor throwing a hand truck at a bus to get at his foe. But Lewis (21-5) showed he’s no chicken when comes to accepting title fights on short notice: He’s fighting Cormier for the belt Saturday at Madison Square Garden just one month after his knockout win at UFC 229.

“I’ve got into the octagon into this quicker before I made it into UFC,” Lewis said. “It’s not going to be a problem at all. I just had to stay longer in the gym.” Cormier (21-1, 1 no-contest) fights for now as both the UFC heavyweigh­t and light heavyweigh­t champ, though his days as a dual champion are numbered no matter the outcome against Lewis. Cormier will be stripped of his light-heavyweigh­t title and the 205-pound crown will go to the winner of the Jon Jones-Alexander Gustafsson bout at UFC 232 on Dec. 29 in Las Vegas. Cormier was a bit of a surprise main eventer in a card that has been shuffled because of injuries and the dire need to find a quality main event at MSG. He broke his right hand in the Miocic fight and had been posturing for a potential fight against former heavyweigh­t champion Brock Lesnar.

But with UFC desperate for a worthy main event, Cormier was offered a payday he could not refuse. Plus, the allure of putting his name on the top of the marquee for a title defence at MSG appealed to his ego. “It’s massive to me to headline the Garden,” Cormier said. “Stuff like that means something to me, which is a bit dangerous because the UFC knows, if they dangle the carrot, they know they can get me to bite by putting all that historical stuff in front of me. Legacy matters to me.” The 33-year-old Lewis also can’t wait to get to the Garden. “It’s where all the famous fighters put down their mark in the sport,” he said.

Lewis fights weeks after he took 129 significan­t strikes (78 to the head) in his win against Alexander Volkov. He’s won eight of his last nine fights (three straight) on the strength of his significan­t knockout power that makes him a threat should he connect on that one devastatin­g punch.

But Cormier has solidified himself as one of MMA’s greatest fighters and most dominant wrestlers. Cormier has never lost to anyone except Jones, the star-crossed former light-heavyweigh­t champion who beat him twice.

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Daniel Cormier

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