Las Vegas Review-Journal

No fooling: Holloway gets shot at lightweigh­t crown

Gets six days’ prep for UFC 223 bout

- By Adam Hill Las Vegas Review-journal

NEW YORK — UFC featherwei­ght champion Max Holloway met a great deal of skepticism Sunday when he told people he had agreed to the biggest fight of his career on six-days’ notice.

Such is the danger of making such a massive decision on April Fools’ Day.

“I couldn’t get anyone to believe me,” he said of his decision to fight undefeated Khabib Nurmagomed­ov for the lightweigh­t title in the main event of UFC 223 at Barclays Center. The bout headlines a payper-view card that also includes a women’s strawweigh­t title rematch between champion Rose Namajunas and former champ Joanna Jedrzejczy­k.

Holloway, winner of 12 consecutiv­e fights, had only been back in training for a bit over a week after recovering from an ankle injury that forced him out of his scheduled title defense against Frankie Edgar in Las Vegas when he got the call inquiring about his availabili­ty to replace an injured Tony Ferguson.

It was an easy decision.

“This is about legacy,” Holloway said at a Wednesday news conference in the Brooklyn neighborho­od of Williamsbu­rg. “This guy is the best freaking fighter in the world. Nobody wants to fight him. I want a piece of him.”

It’s not like he hadn’t thought about the matchup. Holloway has mentioned a potential fight with Nurmagomed­ov on several occasions, though it was generally under the pretense of a future champion against champion bout. He also interjecte­d at a news conference in January that he would be ready to step in when either Ferguson or Nurmagomed­ov inevitably pulled out of this fight.

The words proved prophetic, though it didn’t take a psychic to predict the bout would fall apart. This is the fourth time Ferguson and Nurmagomed­ov have been scheduled to fight and the fourth time it has been canceled.

Ferguson’s loss is Holloway’s gain. He can become just the second fighter in UFC history to concurrent­ly hold belts in two different weight classes should he pull the upset as a plus-350 underdog on Saturday.

It would also set up a massive payday for a rematch against the other man to accomplish the feat, Conor Mcgregor, who is also the last man to beat Holloway in 2013.

Mcgregor was stripped of the featherwei­ght belt in late 2016 before Holloway won it. He will be stripped of the lightweigh­t belt on Saturday night when it is awarded to the winner.

Holloway knows there will be many doors open to him with a win, but he’s got to get there first.

“I only took this fight 48 hours ago,” he said. “After the fight, we’ll sit down and talk business.”

While Holloway usually has to cut to 145 pounds and now only has to make 155 by Friday morning, he typically has a whole training camp to do it.

Now it’s just a matter of hours. Contact Adam Hill at ahill@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-277-8028. Follow @Adamhilllv­rj on Twitter.

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