Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Holloway breaks own strikes record

Former champ wins dominant unanimous decision over Kattar

- By Adam Hill Contact Adam Hill at ahill@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ AdamHillLV­RJ on Twitter.

The chants started rising late in the second round and reached a crescendo as the action peaked in the fourth round of a wild main event.

“Holl-o-way. Holl-o-way,” the crowd of about 2,000 inside Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi chanted in unison in recognitio­n of former UFC featherwei­ght champion Max Holloway, who turned in one of the most impressive performanc­es of his career Saturday.

Holloway won a dominant unanimous decision over Calvin Kattar in the UFC’s first event on ABC and first before a live audience since March.

Holloway landed a UFC record 445 significan­t strikes in the five rounds, breaking his record of 290 set against Brian Ortega in 2018. The Holloway-Ortega fight had the record for most combined significan­t strikes with 400, meaning Holloway’s total Saturday exceeded that mark. He connected on a record 141 in the fourth round alone.

The judges scored the fight 50-43, 50-43, 50-42. It was only the second 50-42 scorecard in UFC history.

The former champion added style points throughout, posing and smiling and even landing a no-look punch for good measure.

Kattar had referred to himself as a senior and Holloway a freshman because of his age and experience edge, a slight Holloway took to heart.

After a particular­ly flashy striking display, Holloway stopped and turned to the cageside commentato­rs.

“The freshman came to play today,” he said.

Holloway wasn’t ready to let the comment go after the victory.

“Sometimes there are freshmen that come up and take your girlfriend,” he said. “I’m one of those ones. You don’t want to mess with me. I’ll take your girlfriend.”

Referee Herb Dean and Kattar’s corner would have been justified in stopping the fight, but Kattar stayed on his feet and mounted sporadic periods of effective offense in what was a bloody debut on the network.

“You have to kill me to get me out of there,” Kattar said. “I ain’t gonna take a knee for anybody. Max Holloway is an animal. If you ain’t a Max Holloway fan, you’re a hater. Kid’s a beast, did what he had to do, and good luck to him. Hopefully he’s the champ next, because he deserves another shot.”

Holloway lost a controvers­ial split decision to Alexander Volkanovsk­i in July, but is still considered the best featherwei­ght in UFC history.

He most likely is next in line after an expected title bout between Volkanovsk­i and Ortega in March.

Also on the main card, Carlos Condit defeated Matt Brown by unanimous decision in a welterweig­ht fight. Condit, a 36-year-old former interim welterweig­ht champion, is now 2-0 since a two-year absence that followed a five-fight losing streak.

The fight between the two had

been postponed several times in the past decade.

Las Vegan Punahele Soriano remained undefeated with a firstround knockout of Dusko Todorovic.

Soriano dropped Todorovic with punches, finally finishing him with less than 15 seconds remaining in the first round after Todorovic’s mouthpiece was knocked loose.

“I was nervous,” said Soriano, 2-0 in the UFC with two first-round knockouts. “My heart just felt like a speaker. I swear I could hear it beating just standing there. It almost hurt, it felt like a side pain in my chest, but I just fought through it. I knew as soon as the cage door closes, I’m going to be at my best no matter what.”

 ?? Jeff Bottari Zuffa LLC ?? Max Holloway, right, punches Calvin Kattar during the featherwei­ght bout he won overwhelmi­ngly at UFC Fight Night on ABC 1.
Jeff Bottari Zuffa LLC Max Holloway, right, punches Calvin Kattar during the featherwei­ght bout he won overwhelmi­ngly at UFC Fight Night on ABC 1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States