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Alexander Volkanovski stays UFC champ with TKO of Yair Rodriguez

Yair Rodriguez had his best moment of the fight, landing a grazing kick that snapped Alexander Volkanovski’s head back then following with a combination, including a left that landed flush to Volkanovski’s jaw.

Volkanovski nodded his head in acknowledgment of the blows. Then he delivered a bruising right hook of his own that hurt Rodriguez badly. Volkanovski went in for the takedown and fired off a barrage of big punches from top position en route to a TKO at 4 minutes, 19 seconds of the third round Saturday in the main event of UFC 290 at T-Mobile Arena.

With the triumph, Volkanovski retained the UFC featherweight title. Rodriguez came in as the interim featherweight champion.

“I’m the king of this division,” Volkanovski said in his postfight interview in the Octagon. “No one is ever stopping me.”

Before UFC 290, ESPN had Volkanovski tied for No. 1 on its pound-for-pound MMA list with UFC lightweight champion Islam Makhachev. At featherweight, Volkanovski was ranked No. 1, and Rodriguez was No. 3.

“The guy is an absolute freak,” UFC president Dana White stated of Volkanovski. “He’s incredibly talented.”

Volkanovski stated some “fear” crept in during his training camp because of how potent and creative Rodriguez’s offense can be. Rodriguez, taller than Volkanovski, is a striking specialist who attacks from all angles with all of his weapons, from fists to elbows to knees and whipping kicks. It certainly did not help Volkanovski that the crowd was overwhelmingly in favor of Rodriguez with several Mexican fighters like Rodriguez on the card in an area with a large Mexican American population.

But Volkanovski said he was able to turn a switch this week and focus on the task at hand.

“You’ve gotta expect the unexpected,” Volkanovski said. “That’s Yair. Anyone who knows this game knows how dangerous he was.”

Volkanovski got takedowns in the first and second rounds and controlled things on the ground.

Volkanovski cut Rodriguez near his left eye and by his left ear with elbows on the ground in the second round. In the third, Volkanovski kept things on the feet, a risky proposition, but was able to hurt Rodriguez with the big right hook.

“I think Volkanovski came up with an incredible game plan and implemented it perfectly,” White said.

Volkanovski (26-2) moved up to challenge Makhachev in his previous fight, losing in a close unanimous decision. He stated he still wants another shot at Makhachev and the 155-pound belt down the road, but he likely needs surgery on his right arm. Volkanovski said he still would like to fight before the end of the year.

“The guy has proven himself so many times,” White said. “A lot of people think he won the Islam fight. Whatever he wants to do, we’ll probably roll with it.”

Makhachev is likely to headline UFC 294 on Oct. 21 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, and top contender Charles Oliveira, the former lightweight champ, has said he probably wouldn’t be able to return to action by then after his knockout win over Beneil Dariush in June. Asked about the possibility of fighting Makhachev in October, Volkanovski said he’s “not ruling that out.”

“These people want extra time, and I’m telling you I need surgery and I’ll probably turn up there in October,” Volkanovski said.

The Australian-born fighter had won 22 consecutive fights before the loss to Makhachev, including his first 12 in UFC. Volkanovski, 34, has been UFC featherweight champion since beating Max Holloway at UFC 245 on Dec. 14, 2019. This was his fifth successful UFC featherweight title defense. Volkanovski is 11-0 in UFC at 145 pounds.

“You talk about well-rounded,” Volkanovski said. “I’ve shown I could grapple and wrestle and strike with the best of them. I’m coming for all the records. … The sky is the limit.”

Volkanovski outlanded Rodriguez 66-40 in significant strikes, including a 37-2 differential on the ground, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Volkanovski now has the second-most title-fight wins (six) in UFC featherweight history after Jose Aldo (eight).

Rodriguez (15-4, 1 NC) won the interim title by defeating Josh Emmett via second-round submission at UFC 284 in February. The fighter from Chihuahua, Mexico, had won two in a row and three of four coming in. Rodriguez, 30, had only one loss since 2017 before Saturday.

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