The Province

Pettis looking to make up for lost time

UFC lightweigh­t aiming to bring more ‘Showtime’ to 2015 campaign

- Greg Beacham

Anthony Pettis already has a UFC championsh­ip belt and his face on a Wheaties box.

He still wants to be the biggest name in mixed martial arts and he knows he must stay busy to do it.

Just three months after Pettis ended a lengthy injury absence with his first lightweigh­t title defence, the stylish fighter known as “Showtime” was back in the cage at UFC 185 in Dallas on Saturday against top contender Rafael Dos Anjos.

Many champions of the so-called combat sports prefer long recuperati­ve breaks between fights.

Pettis (18-2) intends to have a big, busy 2015 after injuries slowed his career right when it was taking off.

“The pressure is on, man,” Pettis said.

“When you have all of these people supporting you, you better perform. I love it. I embrace that role and that’s what I want. I want people to want to watch me fight, to pay for the pay-per-views, buy the tickets to come watch me fight. It’s my job to make sure they’re happy when they leave.”

Saturday night’s pay-per-view card at American Airlines Center also featured UFC strawweigh­t champion Carla Esparza’s first defence against Joanna Jedrzejczy­k.

Former welterweig­ht champion Johny Hendricks, who lives in the Dallas area, returned to the cage against Matt Brown after a bout between heavyweigh­ts Alistair Overeem and Roy Nelson. Pettis’ brother, Sergio, also had a flyweight bout on the early undercard.

Pettis used part of his winnings from his victory over Gilbert Melendez last December to buy a house and a car for his mother, but the 28-year-old from Milwaukee otherwise stayed focused on a quick return from that dynamic second-round submission victory.

“I just went from camp to camp,” Pettis said. “Took a couple of weeks off, got right back in the gym ... Now this is time to perform. I want four fights this year, from December to December.”

He didn’t take an easy bout, either. Dos Anjos (23-7), a Brazilian based in Southern California, revitalize­d his career with eight wins in his last nine fights after a .500 start to his UFC tenure.

Dos Anjos stopped former UFC champion Benson Henderson last August and added a decision win over Nate Diaz in December, but Pettis sees little that will slow his roll to the top of the sport.

“There’s a lot of good fighters in the lightweigh­t division, but I’m a great fighter,” Pettis said.

“I just have this willpower and this confidence when I go in there.”

Esparza (11-2) faced a difficult task in the first defence of the title she won in the UFC’s newest weight class during the promotion’s longrunnin­g reality show.

Jedrzejczy­k (8-0), who didn’t compete on The Ultimate Fighter, is a sixtime world champion in muay thai who hadn’t lost an MMA fight heading into Saturday night’s bout.

Hendricks (16-3) had not fought this far down a UFC card since December 2011, but the hard-hitting wrestler took the bout to jump-start his comeback after losing his belt to Robbie Lawler three months ago.

 ??  ?? Three months after ending a lengthy injury absence with his first title defence, UFC lightweigh­t champ Anthony Pettis was back at UFC 185 on Saturday night in Dallas.
Three months after ending a lengthy injury absence with his first title defence, UFC lightweigh­t champ Anthony Pettis was back at UFC 185 on Saturday night in Dallas.

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