San Diego Union-Tribune

TRYING TO ELEVATE FLYWEIGHTS

Figueiredo, Perez fight to earn fans’ respect at UFC 255

- BY GREG BEACHAM Beacham writes for The Associated Press.

The UFC added male flyweights to its roster eight years ago, and it has struggled to get people interested in the 125-pound fighters ever since. While they are skilled and fast, flyweights frequently lack the brute strength and knockout power that many fans demand.

New champion Deiveson Figueiredo has the swagger and the finishing skills to possibly change his division’s fortunes — if Alex Perez doesn’t interrupt his reign at UFC 255 before it really begins.

“I’m coming to bring back excitement to this division,” Figueiredo said at a news conference, the Brazilian’s shock of neon-blond hair offset by dark glasses. “I plan to knock out every fighter. I’m going to bring the audience back to the flyweight division.”

With three straight finishes in his four-fight winning streak, Figueiredo (19-1) is the favorite tonight when he makes his first title defense against Perez (24-5) in Las Vegas.

The ESPN pay-per-view show’s co-main event features women’s flyweight champion Valentina Shevchenko (19-3) against Brazilian challenger Jennifer Maia (18-6-1) at the UFC Apex gym on the promotion’s hometown campus.

Shevchenko is a heavy favorite against Maia, who only has this title shot because she stunned top contender Joanne Calderwood in August with an armbar. But the UFC is expecting a crackerjac­k fight from Figueiredo and Perez, two small-town boys who have overcome long odds

to accomplish big things in the mixed martial arts promotion’s smallest weight class.

Figueiredo has finished six of his eight victories in the UFC, including three stoppages with punches. Perez, one of 10 siblings from Lemoore, has come too far to get discourage­d before his late-notice shot at the rising star.

“If he’s underestim­ating me, that’s good,” Perez said. “Most of my opponents do, because I’m not a big-name guy. I didn’t get signed straight to the UFC. I worked my way in here. If he’s underestim­ating me, that’s on him.”

Nobody underestim­ates Figueiredo, who won his belt in July with a first-round submission of veteran Joseph Benavidez. Figueiredo also knocked out Benavidez in a bout for the vacant title last February, but he missed weight and couldn’t win the title.

The setback and subsequent triumph fit the winding

career path of the 32-year-old Figueiredo, who was born and raised in a tiny town at the mouth of the Amazon. After moving down the road to much larger Belem as a teenager, he studied capoeira and worked as a hairdresse­r’s assistant and a sushi chef before earning enough money to fight full-time.

When Figueiredo joined the UFC in 2017, interest in the flyweight division was near an all-time low.

Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson was a dominant champion for nearly six years, but his cerebral style and aloof personalit­y never earned widespread love from fans.

Henry Cejudo, who dethroned Johnson in 2018, had more personalit­y than Mighty Mouse and eventually became a two-belt champ, but UFC President Dana White was noticeably unperturbe­d when Cejudo retired last May.

Figueiredo could be more exciting than both of his fel

low flyweight champions, but he’s just beginning a six-fight UFC contract in which he’ll have to prove it repeatedly.

Figueiredo’s only UFC setback was a decision loss to Jussier Formiga, who was then stopped by Perez five months ago. That connection gives hope to Perez, a former community college wrestler who got into MMA while helping his friends to train for fights with his wrestling expertise.

Perez worked his way up through local shows, moved to Orange County for better training, and eventually caught White’s eye in the Contender Series developmen­t program.

Perez would be the first Contender Series alumnus to win a UFC title.

He’s also eager to make history as only the third UFC champion of Mexican descent: Perez’s father and some of his brothers live in Mexico, and he would love to stoke the country’s nascent interest in MMA.

Brazilian veteran Mauricio “Shogun” Rua also will have his 40th career fight when he takes on Paul Craig. Shevchenko’s older sister, Antonina, appears on the undercard against Ariane Lipski.

 ?? JASON FRANSON AP ?? Deiveson Figueiredo(right) will take on Azlex Perez tonight in a UFC f lyweight title fight in Las Vegas.
JASON FRANSON AP Deiveson Figueiredo(right) will take on Azlex Perez tonight in a UFC f lyweight title fight in Las Vegas.

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