Advertisement
Advertisement
Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC)
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Max Holloway says he is ‘a couple of weeks ahead’ in his return from a hand injury. Photo: USA TODAY Sports

UFC: Alex Volkanovski happy to give Henry Cejudo ‘a bit of a hiding’ after call-out

  • Australian says he would ‘pick apart’ bantamweight champion – ‘I don’t know if he really wants that or he’s just trying to stay relevant’
  • Featherweight champ ‘weeks ahead’ in return from hand injury as he lines up UFC Perth title defence in June

The stars seem to be aligning for UFC featherweight champion Alex Volkanovski.

On Wednesday, the UFC confirmed widespread reports that they’d be returning to Australia in June, setting up a potential blockbuster homecoming for Volkanovski’s maiden title defence.

While rumours already abound that a rematch with Max Holloway is as good as a lock for the main event, that may still depend on the 31-year-old being medically cleared to fight.

“The Great” is working his way back from a hand injury suffered during his shutout unanimous decision win over Holloway at UFC 245 in December, and has only recently returned to light training duties.

“I’ve been training a little bit,” Volkanovski told the Post. “I’ve still got to ease into it.”

“But I’m starting to do wrestling, drilling, and even punching with it very lightly now, which is good. I’m already a couple of weeks ahead.”

Khabib hails ‘toughest opponent’ Ferguson as UFC announces presser

Combine those factors with Volkanovski’s relentless competitive nature, and the signs are encouraging.

“I’m going to do whatever I can to be on that card,” he stressed. “I don't want to sit on the sidelines too long. But I think that’s really realistic. I think I can make it. I haven’t properly talked to my doctors about that, but they reckon I’ll be doing a fair bit more pretty soon. I think it’ll be plenty of time.

“If I hadn’t done anything the whole time it would’ve been harder but I’ve been keeping a bit of a base. These legs are strong, these legs are ready, my left hook is down pat. I’m ready.”

Alexander Volkanovski hits Max Holloway at UFC 245. Photo: AP

The more pressing question may lie in exactly who Volkanovski will be sharing the Octagon with come June, and judging by his recent social media activity, he has plenty of suitors.

The most notable of those is bantamweight champion Henry Cejudo, who took to Instagram earlier this month to make the newly-crowned champion the latest in a strong of targeted opponents, referring to him as an “overgrown midget”.

Volkanovski shrugged off Cejudo’s challenge as a “bit of fun”, but said he’d be more than willing to oblige if it ever came to fruition.

Henry Cejudo, celebrates after defeating Marlon Moraes for the vacant bantamweight title at UFC 238. Photo: AP

“I’m sure I’d make a lot of people very happy if I gave him a bit of a hiding, and I know I would,” he said, laughing. “It sounds cocky but I’m very confident. He’s a good athlete, but this is a different level.

“I’ve got long enough reach already, and then fighting someone else even shorter than me? I’d pick him apart, no dramas. I don’t know whether he really wants that or if he’s just trying to stay relevant.

“At the end of the day, if that comes to me and it’s what the UFC really want, then I’ll take him out. I’ll defend and then see what happens. If some big fight comes my way in a different weight class, I might take it on.”

 

The “Korean Zombie” Jung Chan-sung has also fired some shots in Volkanovski’s direction, although eye surgery is likely to put paid to any hopes he may have had of a date in Perth.

“He’s just trying to get himself a fight, good on him,” the Australian said. “I’m not going to hold that against him. As I say, earned not given – that’s what I’ve done.”

All signs seem to point towards a Holloway rematch, despite Volkanovski’s earlier reservations about whether the Hawaiian deserves one, given the lopsided nature of their first bout.

 

“I have a lot of respect for him because he was always the type of guy that, whoever was best or the next in line, he wanted that fight,” Volkanovski said.

“Even early in his title reign he was saying he wanted to defend his belt and didn’t care about all these other silly fights – moving up or holding up the division. That’s something that I said I’d do as well.

“Everyone knows I’m a gamer, and whoever they put in front of me, whoever really deserves it, bring it on. I’ll make sure I get it done – and in wild fashion too.”

Post