Alexandre Pantoja is sweet. Perhaps even nice, however he’s not particular.
Coming off a profitable albeit difficult protection in opposition to Steve Erceg in Might, ‘The Cannibal’ will put his flyweight world title on the road when he welcomes two-time RIZIN champion Kai Asakura to the Octagon at UFC 310.
Asakura getting a title shot in his first profession struggle below the UFC banner got here as fairly a shock to many struggle followers, however anybody aware of Asakura’s work can actually perceive why Dana White and Co. handed him the moment alternative.
Primarily competing in RIZIN, Asakura is 21-4 with 13 of his victories coming by way of KO/TKO, and held the promotion’s bantamweight belt on two separate events.
Some would say that the 31-year-old veteran is a particular form of athlete. Too dangerous he can’t say the identical about Pantoja.
“Pantoja is great at everything, but he’s not special at anything; he doesn’t have a unique skill in one area that makes him better than anyone else,” Asakura instructed E. Spencer Kyte of UFC.com. “What makes him higher than anybody else is his coronary heart — he’s acquired nice coronary heart, and that’s what makes him an awesome champion, however I don’t see him representing any issues for me wherever. He’s somebody I don’t suppose I’ll have any downside coping with.
“The benefit I maintain over Pantoja is that I’ve one-shot knockout energy, so it solely takes one shot. And I’m anticipating this struggle to be over with one shot. I do know within the historical past of the UFC, there have been many well-known knockout scenes, however I’m hoping that at UFC 310, I can add my end to these spotlight reels.
Kai Asakura plans on beating Pantoja to turn into the uFC’s first Japanese World champion
Over the UFC’s 31+ years of existence, the promotion has hosted a slew of top-tier expertise from The Land of the Rising Solar — Kyoji Horiguchi, Yushin Okami, Takanora Gomi, Yoshihiro Akiyama, and Tatsuro Taira, to call a couple of.
Nevertheless, none of them ever held UFC gold. In truth, no fighter from Japan has ever turn into a UFC champion within the fashionable period — one thing Asakura plans to treatment on December 7.
“Until now, there have been many fighters In the UFC from Japan who have fought and tried to win a title, and none of them have been successful,” Asakura stated. “I really feel like there’s an impression amongst struggle followers that Japanese fighters aren’t that robust, so my purpose is to go there and show that the Japanese fighters are amongst the very best fighters on this planet.
“I want to bring back MMA’s popularity in Japan, and provide a place where my friends, teammates, and other fighters are able to earn a living in Japan. I feel like someone has to bring the MMA scene back to Japan, and I’m very proud that I’m part of the Japanese generation that will bring MMA popularity back to Japan.”