Time for champion’s fists and feet to do the talking
Israel Adesanya has the otherworldly fighting ability and the personal charisma necessary to become mixed martial arts’ next crossover superstar.
What the UFC middleweight champion doesn’t have are the highlight-reel performances that would make him famous in the wider world of sports, and it’s time to wonder whether he can provide them.
Adesanya’s tepid title defence against Jared Cannonier at UFC 276 on Sunday was another missed opportunity for perhaps the UFC’S most impressive overall athlete to reach the next level of stardom.
In fact, Adesanya’s last three middleweight title defences since his failed run at the light heavyweight belt have been decision victories in what MMA experts call technical, tactical performances.
Many others call them dull, no matter how earnestly Adesanya (23-1) objects.
“They don’t know what real fighting is, or real finesse,” Adesanya, who was raised and educated in Whanganui and Rotorua, said afterward when asked about the fans who booed, whistled and left early during his final two rounds in Las Vegas.
“The greats all get to this point,” Adesanya added. “Anderson Silva, GSP (Georges St. Pierre), I’d see them and say, ‘That was a fantastic fight,’ and people would boo them. Same with (Muhammad) Ali, (Floyd) Mayweather. You get to this point where you’re so great, people just want to see you fall.”
But as a media-savvy fighter whose love of anime inspired his nickname — The Last Stylebender — Adesanya knows the importance of iconic moments. With his gravitydefying athleticism, he is among the few MMA fighters who can create them solely from his own talent.
He hasn’t really done it since he knocked out Robert Whittaker to claim the undisputed UFC 185-pound title in 2019. Adesanya has earned one stoppage victory in his five title
defences while doing nothing that would put him in front of everyone on a social network for days.
Before he faced Cannonier, Adesanya promised to do something spectacular — something worthy of the hefty Vegas ticket prices or the pay-per-view price.
He didn’t do it, and he didn’t take any risks to give himself a better chance to do it — and then the New Zealander called fans “dumb,” “drunks” and “drongos” for expecting him to do what he said he would do.
He pre-emptively shrugged off any criticism by saying he had “an off night”.
“But on my worst day, I can kill the
best man,” Adesanya said.
It’s not all Adesanya’s fault, of course. He is a brilliant counterpuncher, and when an opponent like Cannonier is tentative and sparing with his strikes, Adesanya can’t do what he does best.
But the split between Adesanya’s personal magnetism and his cage strategy in Las Vegas was jarring.
The matchup seemed to provide Adesanya with the opportunity to unleash some stunning head kick or a combination never seen. Instead, he grinded out a comfortable win, picking apart Cannonier from a distance in another point-fighting performance.
That style can win belts, but it rarely wins legions of fans outside of hard-core fight circles. Unless he develops a cult of personality along the lines of Mayweather’s antihero persona, it won’t take him to the top level of fame and fortune that only the greatest fighters ever reach.
It’s no secret the UFC is in a prolonged superstar drought behind Conor Mcgregor, still easily the most bankable star in MMA even though he has won exactly one fight since former President Barack Obama’s administration.
A new generation of champions sits atop the sport, but nobody in that cohort has anything near the celebrity of Mcgregor or Ronda Rousey. Jon Jones is the closest, but the self-sabotaging champ hasn’t fought in 21⁄2 years and has nothing on deck while he moves up to heavyweight, a division in turmoil around absent champion Francis Ngannou.
Adesanya wants it all, and he has one of the biggest personalities in the sport. He ascended to the middleweight throne in swift, impressive fashion, and he has the charmingly combative attitude of a fighter who should be known in households worldwide.
“It’s an acquired taste to thrive under this spotlight,” Adesanya said. “I thrive. I don’t melt.” —AP