Daily Press

Champion Khabib returns to octagon to fight Gaethje

- By Greg Beacham

Although Khabib Nurmagomed­ov hasn’t been inside the UFC octagon in 13 months, the life and mind of the unbeaten lightweigh­t champion have been fully occupied.

He was scheduled to take on Tony Ferguson in April in the culminatio­n of their epic fighting feud, but he couldn’t get out of Russia due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Nurmagomed­ov then endured the tragic loss of his father and lifelong coach, Abdulmanap, in July to a heart problem exacerbate­d by COVID-19.

Although he kept his grief mostly private, Nurmagomed­ov reportedly returned to training only a week after the death of his beloved father. He returns to the cage today to face interim champion Justin Gaethje in the main event of UFC 254 in Abu Dhabi.

“Of course, it’s a little bit difficult when you have so much pressure on your shoulders,” Nurmagomed­ov said. “But it’s never easy.”

Nurmagomed­ov (28-0) cemented his superstar status in 2018 by stopping Conor McGregor, and he gained worldwide notoriety a few seconds later by jumping out of the cage to fight members of McGregor’s entourage. Known mostly for his wrestlingb­ased dominance before that raucous night in Las Vegas, Nurmagomed­ov’s bravado caught millions of fans’ attention, while his vocal Muslim faith endeared him to millions more sports fans not often reached by mixed martial arts.

But Nurmagomed­ov had already earned the respect of fighters like Gaethje (22-2), who see the champion’s discipline and determinat­ion as examples. The two fighters have been mutually respectful throughout their promotion of this bout on Fight Island, the UFC’s secure Middle East bubble.

“I know he’s ultimately confident in what he does,” Gaethje said. “He’s done it 28 times. I expect him to believe that’s going to happen again. (But) I’m a performer. I always show up under the lights. I’ve been doing this as long as he has. It’s ingrained in us. I’m going to give everything I have and be proud of my performanc­e.”

The UFC’s ninth show in the United Arab Emirates over the past 15 weeks is headlined by the single most anticipate­d bout in recent months, and Nurmagomed­ov’s global celebrity ensures it will be widely seen.

With heavy European and Asian interest in Nurmagomed­ov, the promotion scheduled UFC 254 for those audiences’ prime-time viewing hours, rather than North America. That means the payper-view portion of the UFC 254 card starts in the early afternoon on the U.S. East Coast and in the late morning in Las Vegas, the UFC’s hometown.

Nurmagomed­ov’s striking abilities have been responsibl­e for only two of his UFC victories. Instead, the Dagestan-born champion wears down his opponents with wrestling and persistent, mauling pressure, leading invariably to submission wins or onesided decisions.

“He has a lot of good skills, and everything is unorthodox,” Gaethje said of Nurmagomed­ov.

“Everything in there is (about) timing and space, and I believe he’s worldclass in that regard. Doesn’t sound like he’s planning on striking much, though. He said (we’ll spend) 25 minutes on the ground, so we’ll see.”

Though Gaethje is a former NCAA All-American wrestler, he has earned fortune and fame in MMA through his spectacula­r brawling predilecti­ons. He rolled from a World Series of Fighting title into the UFC with a series of electrifyi­ng knockout victories, and he has rebounded from back-toback stoppage losses to Eddie Alvarez and Dustin Poirier with four more consecutiv­e knockout wins over elite UFC opponents.

Gaethje earned his interim belt and the title shot in May with his impressive stoppage of Ferguson, the long-standing contender whose five previously scheduled bouts with Nurmagomed­ov had all been called off due to injuries or other problems.

Gaethje realizes his good fortune to be in this big-money bout against arguably the best lightweigh­t in MMA history. The copper miner’s son from Safford, Arizona, flew his parents to Abu Dhabi — in business class for the first time in their lives, he said gleefully — for the big event and his chance at UFC history.

“I’ve never been to a place like this before,” Gaethje said. “I’m not even supposed to be here. This is supposed to be Tony Ferguson. Thank God I got that opportunit­y, and I took his soul. We’ll both go out there and we’ll fight for our lives. It’s who we are.”

 ?? MAHMOUD KHALED/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Khabib Nurmagomed­ov, right, will risk his unbeaten record and his UFC lightweigh­t title today against interim champion Justin Gaethje at UFC 254 in Abu Dhabi.
MAHMOUD KHALED/ASSOCIATED PRESS Khabib Nurmagomed­ov, right, will risk his unbeaten record and his UFC lightweigh­t title today against interim champion Justin Gaethje at UFC 254 in Abu Dhabi.

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