Weekend Herald

Everywhere man ready for ‘veteran moves’

- Christophe­r Reive

Israel Adesanya is everywhere.

From addressing New Zealand’s culture of tall poppy syndrome in his acceptance speech at the Halberg Awards, appearing on billboards and buses advertisin­g ESPN, to sharing the stage with Six60 at Western Springs, the UFC middleweig­ht champion is out there. And heading into the biggest fight of his career against Cuban Yoel Romero at UFC 248 in Las Vegas next week, the unbeaten Kiwi was taking every experience as an opportunit­y to evolve.

“I danced on stage with Six60 in front of 60,000 people — I’ve done it before, no big deal — but that was all practice feeling that. Even the little insecuriti­es I had beforehand — like what if they all boo me? — I was just like, ‘get over it’.

“That’s all practice for next weekend. I’m taking everything as reps; not just the fighting, not just the training.”

Adesanya (18-0; 7-0 UFC) will put his title on the line in the headline bout at UFC248 next Sunday (NZ time), in his first fight since being crowned the undisputed king of the middleweig­hts in October last year.

Against Romero (13-4; 9-3 UFC), he meets a wily and experience­d campaigner who has shown he’s willing to pull out “veteran moves” to help his chances.

The 42-year old, who claimed freestyle wrestling silver at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, has made a name for himself as one of the most damaging fighters in the middleweig­ht division. In his nine UFC wins, seven have come by stoppage.

The bout will be the second time Adesanya defends the belt he won against American Kelvin Gastelum last April — with the bout against Whittaker unifying the interim and full-time title. Gastelum gave Adesanya the biggest test of his mixed martial arts career to date, and Adesanya said that fight taught him a lot about himself.

“I learnt where I can go to. I learnt the power of my mind. Romero — I’ve seen him quit,” Adesanya said.

“Seeing him cheat — grab the inside of the gloves, grabbing the fence — they call these veteran moves. I’ve played against one of the best and most crafty veterans in Anderson Silva. It doesn’t work on me, I’m too clued on to it. This guy’s a tough test, but I’ve seen it before.”

In the fight against Gastelum, the American found success rushing Adesanya and putting pressure on him from the outset, which could be a tactic Romero tries. However, Romero’s stamina has been an area of concern for the Cuban in the past, even in three-round fights, so stepping up to a five-round championsh­ip bout will pose a lot of questions of the challenger on top of those presented by Adesanya’s unique and shifty style.

“If he tries to do what Gastelum did and rush me, or if he wants to play safe and keep a distance — feel free. But whatever he’s doing, I know I’ve got way more in the tank than him; substantia­lly more.

“I feel great. You can put a bet on who gets tired first. I’ll bet my whole purse — I know who is getting tired first.”

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