Yuma Sun

Model fighter: Rockhold back at new weight class

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LAS VEGAS — Luke Rockhold is a successful model with a Ralph Lauren contract and New York Fashion Week experience.

He’s also an elite competitor in a sport where terrible things can happen to pretty faces.

Rockhold has taken remarkably little permanent damage during his 12 years in profession­al mixed martial arts, but he has dished out plenty while winning middleweig­ht titles in Strikeforc­e and the UFC.

After getting stopped by an overweight opponent last year, Rockhold decided to do something else to protect his moneymaker: He would no longer starve himself to get down to the 185-pound middleweig­ht limit.

“Feels different,” he said Thursday. “Feels like the old days. I’m not so focused on weight. I can go back to who I am. I’m a hunter.”

When Rockhold (16-4) returns to competitio­n against Poland’s Jan Blachowicz (238) at UFC 239 on Saturday night, he will be a 205-pound light heavyweigh­t. The 6-foot-3 Rockhold plans to show his new division he’s a violent force, even if he doesn’t have cauliflowe­r ears.

“My body didn’t want to do it anymore,” Rockhold said. “I’m a light heavyweigh­t. I’ve been a light heavyweigh­t for many years. I stopped killing myself and compromisi­ng who I am, just to fight a middleweig­ht. Letting go of that title was tough. I (messed) up. I wanted to get it back, but I needed to let it go, and I needed to move on.”

Rockhold is referring to the loss that will haunt him forever. In his first UFC title defense in June 2016, he got too comfortabl­e against a seemingly overmatche­d Michael Bisping and allowed the English veteran to knock him out in a shocking upset.

Rockhold felt humiliated by a loss to an inferior opponent, and he spent two years determined to get his belt back. He tried to push through the morass of competitor­s at 185 pounds, but had injury setbacks before ending up in another miserable situation in early 2018. Rockhold cut weight yet again for a shot at new middleweig­ht champ Robert Whittaker, who had to drop out with an injury. Rockhold agreed to fight Yoel Romero for an interim belt even after Romero missed weight, but he lost by third-round knockout.

Meanwhile, Rockhold’s modeling career was taking off. He landed a job as the face of Ralph Lauren’s popular Polo Blue fragrance, and he booked a steady stream of jobs that could have pulled him away from fighting for good — but he wasn’t interested.

“I love fighting, and the only reason I do outside what I do is so I can love fighting more,” he said. “Sometimes the business (of fighting), it takes the love away. And when you’re able to come back and leverage yourself, it brings back the love. It’s all about the love. And so I can stand my ground. I can fight when I want. I can have fun doing it, and that’s what it’s all about.”

By finally giving up on his middleweig­ht dreams last year, Rockhold chose a clear path back to the top. He sees the UFC’s light heavyweigh­ts as easy pickings — at least below long-reigning champion Jon Jones, the headliner at UFC 239 against Thiago Santos, another longtime middleweig­ht who moved up.

“Skill-wise, the middleweig­ht division is much deeper,” Rockhold said. “That’s the problem with light heavyweigh­t. You see these guys like Santos, they’re not top middleweig­hts. They can’t even crack the top 10. Can’t sniff it, but they’re here at the very top of the (light heavyweigh­t) division. It’s weak. The technique is just not there. The skill is not there. These guys get away on their toughness and their size and their strength.”

Rockhold hasn’t been in a fight that went the distance in his entire UFC career. All nine of his bouts ended in stoppages, including his debut loss to a testostero­neladen version of Vitor Belfort in 2013.

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