Kamaru Usman and Jorge Masvidal had an intense rivalry that is now settled for good |
Usman put a stamp on his rivalry with Masvidal on Saturday
night, dropping Masvidal with a crushing right hand and following up on the
ground for a knockout victory at 1 minute, 2 seconds of the second round in the
main event of UFC 261 in Jacksonville, Florida.
With the victory, Usman defended his 170-pound title. It was
the first time the famously durable Masvidal had been finished by KO/TKO since
2008.
"There's two setups to that right hand that I just
envisioned them landing. That was one of them. ... I just had to stay composed
and I was going to find it," Usman said of the knockout blow.
"I needed to put a definitive finish on that chapter,
and I did that tonight," he added.
At the postfight news conference, UFC president Dana White
said Colby Covington is next for Usman in what would be a rematch of their
December 2019 bout, which Usman won via fifth-round TKO at UFC 245.
"With my fundamentals, I am the pound-for-pound best
fighter on the planet right now," Usman said.
Kamaru Usman slept Jorge Masvidal |
Jorge Masvidal was out as soon as Usman landed |
White went even further, saying Usman is "one of the best ever, and he's on his way to probably being the greatest of all time."
"When you go in and you beat the guys who are looked at
as the best in the world at that time and you beat them twice and you beat them
convincingly, it's all part of cementing that legacy that this guy is going to
have some day," White said.
The bout took place at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena, the
first UFC event with a capacity crowd during the COVID-19 pandemic, as 15,269
people were in attendance, according to the UFC.
At UFC 251 last year, Usman (19-1) beat Masvidal via
unanimous decision in fairly one-sided fashion. But Masvidal came into that
fight on just six days' notice, after Usman's initially scheduled opponent,
Gilbert Burns, tested positive for the coronavirus.
Usman, 33, now has his fourth straight title defense and his
14th straight UFC victory. He has the second-longest winning streak in UFC
history; only Anderson Silva has more consecutive wins (16).
"You elevated me," Usman said of Masvidal.
"You made me get into the workshop. ... I told everybody I'm still getting
better. The sky is the limit for me as long as I'm doing this."
Saturday's title defense was especially emotional for the
Nigerian fighter. In the Octagon after the bout, Usman put his welterweight
belt on his father, Muhammed, who got to see Usman fight in the UFC for the
first time in person. Muhammed was in jail for nearly 10 years on insurance
fraud charges, before being released in February 2020.
"It was amazing," Usman said. "My family is
finally complete, and to have him experience that, especially in front of a
crowd like that and feel that energy, there's nothing like it. There's
absolutely nothing like it."
Masvidal (35-15) is one of the biggest stars on the UFC
roster. The Miami native was on a three-fight winning streak before falling to
Usman last year. In 2019, Masvidal knocked out Darren Till, Ben Askren and Nate
Diaz in a span of eight months to become one of the hottest MMA athletes in the
world. The latter was for the mythical BMF title at Madison Square Garden.
Masvidal, 36, has been a pro fighter for almost 18 years, but he has just
recently become one of the most popular MMA stars in the world.
"He's got my number, man," Masvidal said of Usman.
"He beat me fair and square. God bless him, man."