O’Malley dishes out ‘clinic’ in dominant victory against Vera
UFC president Dana White hailed Sean O’Malley as “the biggest star ever in bantamweight history” as the 135-pound champion put on a masterclass to take a unanimous decision over Marlon “Chito” Vera at UFC 299.
O’Malley controlled the main event from the opening bell with precision striking and footwork to extend his MMA record to 18-1.
The champion landed more than 50 per cent of his 344 punches. He was the more active fighter throughout, hurting Vera (23-9-1) with shots to the body, knees to the face, and countering nearly every one of Vera’s connections with one of his own.
It was O’Malley’s first defence of his bantamweight title after stopping former champion Aljamain Sterling 51 seconds into the second round at UFC 292 last August.
UFC boss White called the performance a “clinic” by O’Malley, who is fast becoming one of the biggest stars in the sport. White added that the card was the fourth-highest grossing UFC event ever, with a gate of $14.14 million.
“He’s on his way,” White said of O’Malley. “He’s the biggest star ever in bantamweight history. You can say that right now.”
Vera handed O’Malley the only defeat of his career nearly four years ago by landing a leg kick that caused O’Malley’s right foot to go numb in the first round of UFC 252.
O’Malley has always downplayed that loss – the kick shut down the peroneal nerve in his lower leg, causing temporary loss of feeling – and vowed to dominate in the rematch.
“That one feels good getting that one back,” O’Malley said. “I’m guessing we can all agree that I’m undefeated still.”
He added that he wants to fight featherweight champion Ilia Topuria next.
“Dana give me a jet to Spain baby, I’m coming for Ilia Topuria. I want Ilia, give me Ilia,” said O’Malley.
“He’s a scary dude, he excites me, going up a weight class excites me, but honestly I’m here for whatever. If you guys want me to knock out Merab Dvalishvili I’ll do that too but Ilia is an exciting fight for the people.”
Immediately after the fiveround fight, O’Malley sat down on the canvas after Vera hurt him late with a shot to the body – one that could have been much more significant if it had been landed earlier in the match.
“I tried to stay toe-to-toe with him and catch him,” said Vera, the Ecuadorean fighter who received a massive amount of cheers from the fans at Kaseya Centre in Miami.
“At the end of the fifth round I landed a nice body that hurt him, but I ran out of time.”
Former interim lightweight champion Dustin Poirier knocked out up-and-comer Benoit Saint Denis with a right hand in the second round of their lightweight match. Saint Denis had hurt Poirier with punches in the first round before
Dustin Poirier knocked out up-and-comer Benoit Saint Denis in the second round of their lightweight match
the veteran dropped him with a right hook at 2:52 in the second round.
The victory moved Poirier into a tie for the fourth most wins in UFC history with 22.
“I was getting beat up a little bit, I got him at the end,” said Poirier. “He was pretty strong. I took this fight because he finished his last five opponents. He’s dangerous, every win in his professional career, he’s finished. I said I’ve got to take this fight because I honour this game that we do.
“I’m just a man and I’ve got a lot of respect for Benoit Saint-Denis.”
Jack Della Maddalena stretched his winning streak to 17 with the biggest victory of his career. He stopped Gilbert Burns in the third round of their bout with a crushing knee to the head, moments after it appeared Burns had secured a fight-clinching takedown. Della Maddalena followed the knee with a series of elbows on the ground for a TKO victory at 3:43 in the final round of the 170-pound fight.