The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Jones continues dominating foes

- By Greg Beacham

Jon Jones insists he is content to keep cleaning out the light heavyweigh­t division instead of moving up to heavyweigh­t. The pound-for-pound star says he would make one exception: Brock Lesnar.

LAS VEGAS >> Even Jon Jones realizes any discussion of his long-term future in the UFC is tempered by the fact that Jones hasn’t been able to stay in the cage and out of trouble for any lengthy stretch in the past seven years. But after two dominant wins in nine weeks, Jones (24-1) has settled back into his customary spot atop the light heavyweigh­t division and his sport’s unofficial pound-for-pound standings. After trouncing another overmatche­d 205-pound opponent at UFC 235 on March 2, the champion looked into his future and insisted he is content to keep cleaning out his division instead of moving up to heavyweigh­t. “All these younger fighters should get their opportunit­y at a world title,” Jones said after controllin­g every round against Anthony Smith. “When you’re in my position, who am I to deny people?” Jones would make one big exception, however. If Brock Lesnar wants another crack at mixed martial arts, Jones would bulk up to heavyweigh­t to accommodat­e the profession­al wrestling superstar. “I figure if you’re going to make the gamble, you might as well go extremely big,” Jones said. “Go big or go home. A Brock Lesnar fight (is) extremely high risk and extremely high reward. I don’t really see myself versus anyone that could bring in the numbers me and Brock could bring in.” Although that superfight is among the biggest events that the UFC could stage in the broader sports landscape, it won’t happen immediatel­y, according to UFC President Dana White. After Jones’ win over Smith, White affirmed his plan to match Lesnar first with heavyweigh­t champion Daniel Cormier whenever Lesnar decides to return to the sport, perhaps later this year. “I think that Brock and Cormier want that fight, so I owe Cormier a lot,” White said. “Cormier wants that fight, and if he wants it, he’s going to get it.” Jones has shown little interest in fighting any other heavyweigh­t, and he repeated that preference after beating Smith. So if Jones stays at light heavyweigh­t, his next fight is likely to be against Thiago Santos (21-6), the muscleboun­d 35-year-old Brazilian currently on a four-fight winning streak after stopping Jan Blachowicz last month in Prague. Santos is a talented, dangerous fighter, but Jones would be a heavy favorite once again. “I’m excited about the future of the light heavyweigh­t division,” Jones said. “I’m going to have to take on any comer, and the confidence I had as a 23-yearold facing Shogun Rua has only grown. Nobody said my job was going to be easy, but I’m here to make it look easy.” Jones’ victory over Smith was his entire career in microcosm: Jones was clearly superior, yet he nearly gave it all away with a mistake. Late in the fourth round, Jones cracked Smith’s head with a knee that landed while Smith’s palm was on the canvas, technicall­y making it an illegal strike — one that would have been legal in, say, California, but not in Nevada due to the sport’s geographic­ally fractured rules.

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 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jon Jones, right, fights Anthony Smith in a light heavyweigh­t title bout at UFC 235 on March 2 in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jon Jones, right, fights Anthony Smith in a light heavyweigh­t title bout at UFC 235 on March 2 in Las Vegas.

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