Alex
Pereira
is a champion who pays attention to the little
things.

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“Poatan” made his second successful light heavyweight title defense
at UFC 303
on Saturday, when he dropped Jiri
Prochazka
with a head kick and sealed his victory with
follow-up punches 13 seconds into Round 2 of their rematch at the
T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. As it turns out, Pereira saw an
opening for the fight-ending maneuver while watching his footage of
his opponent’s warmup.

“I was in the locker room talking to Plinio, one my coaches, and he
showed me the video of Jiri warming up. I saw he was trying to
counter attack the calf kick, defend and counter,” Pereira said
through a translator at Saturday’s post-fight press conference. “I
told Plinio he was doing the wrong timing, the timing was not good.
So I saw that he was too focused on not taking that kick and he was
keeping his hands down and leaving the head exposed. So I told him,
I’m going to explore the high kick.”

Clearly, that exploration paid major dividends. However, in the
immediate aftermath of the finish, Pereira appeared to be adjusting
his toes, which led to speculation that the Brazilian had suffered
an injury. While that was an initial concern, he believes he
emerged from the fight in relatively good health.

“Nothing with my toes. The top of my foot I thought I had hurt a
little bit,” he said. “Compared to other fights that I had, by now
I should be limping and everything. It feels fine. I’m good.”

Pereira and Prochazka agreed to take to rematch on short notice
after Conor
McGregor
withdrew from the originally scheduled UFC 303
headliner. “Poatan” proved that he made the right decision to step
in and help save the event.

“When this fight got offered two weeks ago, many people said that
it was not the right choice to take the fight,” Pereira said. “But
I saw an opportunity. I trained hard to prepare for this, I stuck
with the strategy. A lot of people saw me driving super cars in
Australia, they started talking a lot of stuff. I said [Friday], If
I was not training, [Saturday] it’s gonna show.”

With the victory, Pereira became just the seventh fighter in UFC
history to use four different methods of strikes to finish a fight.
While he didn’t notice anything new from his opponent, Pereira is
still relatively new to the sport, which means there’s still room
to grow.

“No, nothing new on my end,” Pereira said. “I think I’m still in
the process of evolution of MMA, I keep evolving a lot. He’s a guy
that is older, been training for longer, so he probably [knew] things a lot better, but not now.”

With victories over Prochazka (twice), Jamahal
Hill
and Jan
Blachowicz
, Pereira has bested many of the top fighters in the
light heavyweight division. One notable exception is Magomed
Ankalev, who is 10-0-1 with one no contest in his last 12 Octagon
appearance. Ankalaev issued a callout to Pereira after Saturday’s
fight.

“Congratulations champ, I’m very impressed but the boss [Dana
White] always says this is the sport of opportunities and all I
want is an opportunity,” Ankalaev wrote on X. “And I don’t need
wrestling. I have enough striking to test your chin. I believe I
will knock you out.

“[Two] years ago, [Alex
Pereira
] was not ready to fight me, but I believe today he is
the hardest fight in the division for me, and I’m the hardest fight
in the division for him.”

Pereira seemed open to the possibility when it was presented to him
at the press conference.

“Everybody deserves, but I’m not the guy to ask,” Pereira said.
“You’ve got to talk to Dana White.”

During his post-fight interview in the cage, Pereira also addressed
a potential move to heavyweight. However, this decision is not
something that will come on short notice.

“For heavyweight is something I’ve got to be prepared, so I don’t
know. You guys saw that I took this fight on two week’s notice,” he
said. “For heavyweight is something that’s got to be more planned.
Right now I’m just focused on defending my title.”

IMAK ADMIN

By IMAK ADMIN

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