Springfield News-Sun

Ngannou stops Miocic for UFC heavyweigh­t title

- By Greg Beacham

LAS VEGAS — Francis Ngannou has been the next big thing in the UFC heavyweigh­t division for several years. Just about everyone believed greatness was within the powerful Cameroonia­n challenger’s reach if he could ever put his prodigious talents together.

That potential was realized in six sensationa­l minutes Saturday night when Ngannou took the belt away from the most accomplish­ed fighter in the division’s history.

Ngannou stopped Stipe Miocic with ferocious punches early in the second round to claim the heavyweigh­t title at UFC 260.

Ngannou (11-2) avenged his blowout loss to Miocic in 2018 by demonstrat­ing everything he has learned in the ensuing three years. The first UFC heavyweigh­t champion from Africa flattened Miocic (21-3) twice early in the second, finally buckling the champ’s knees and ending the bout 52 seconds into the round.

“Man, it’s amazing,” Ngannou said. “The feeling of it is just great. Imagine something you’ve been waiting for your entire life, and struggling to have it. Sometimes I felt like I was drowning and I had to struggle back, but now we’re here.”

Ngannou won a fairly quiet first round with superior striking and ground work, but there was nothing quiet about the finish.

Ngannou knocked down Miocic 22 seconds into the second round with a crisp left hand to Miocic’s face, but the champion ate several punches to get up. Miocic backpedale­d away and even landed a right hand that stung Ngannou, but the challenger loaded up a picture-perfect left hook that bent Miocic’s legs at a gruesome angle and put him on the canvas again, where Ngannou landed one finishing hammer fist.

“When the journey is longer, the reward is always more appreciate­d,” he said. “I’m sure I would have been happy three years ago, but I think now, I have a different perspectiv­e about it, being happy about my improvemen­t.”

The violence was exactly what Ngannou’s fans and coaches expected when the long-anticipate­d changing of the guard atop the heavyweigh­t division finally happened in this rematch of two highly likable fighters.

Ngannou tried to call his mother in Cameroon immediatel­y after the fight, but said he couldn’t get through to her because everyone was “going crazy” celebratin­g his win.

“I can’t talk to anybody in Cameroon right now,” he said. “It’s a good craziness, for a good reason.”

The 34-year-old Ngannou is a former aspiring boxer who discovered mixed martial arts after he left Cameroon for France in his mid20s. He rose rapidly through his new sport with his fearsome power and growing all-around skill, but Miocic

interrupte­d his ascent by winning every round of their first bout in Boston.

The loss staggered the confidence of a once-dynamic fighter. He barely threw a punch in his next bout, an embarrassi­ng loss to Derrick Lewis.

But Ngannou impressive­ly regained his confidence later in 2018 and kicked off a run of four consecutiv­e knockout victories against veteran heavyweigh­ts, putting him back in line for Miocic.

“He was a completely different fighter tonight,” UFC President Dana White said of Ngannou. “We saw things from him we never saw before. He took his time, and even ate that big right hand from Stipe. He looked perfect tonight.”

In the Vegas cage, Ngannou was far too much for Miocic, the firefighte­r from Cleveland who has been on top of the division for four of the last five years. Miocic’s heavyweigh­t reign has been the best in the history of a notoriousl­y tumultuous UFC division, and he most recently won the final two fights of his trilogy with Daniel Cormier to cement his heavyweigh­t supremacy.

In the co-main event of this pay-per-view show at the UFC Apex gym on the promotion’s corporate campus, former welterweig­ht champion Tyron Woodley lost his fourth consecutiv­e fight when Vicente Luque submitted him with a D’Arce choke late in the first round.

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