Max Griffin ‘Started Crying’ Upon Learning He Would Be in UFC on ESPN 21 Co-Main Event

A last-minute cancellation led to an emotional pre-fight moment for
Max
Griffin
on Saturday.

When a scheduled lightweight clash between Gregor
Gillespie
and Brad
Riddell
fell through due to COVID-19 protocols, Griffin’s
matchup against Kenan Song
was elevated to the
UFC on ESPN 21
co-main event. It was something Griffin had
envisioned with his team heading into 2021.

“When I got the call that I was going to be the co-main event, I
started crying,” Griffin said. “This New Year’s, I had a
conversation with my team and we said I’m going to get a co-main
event and then take it over. God made it happen. To be on ESPN,
then be bumped to co-main and knock him out bad like that? It
doesn’t get any better than this.”

Griffin laid waste to Song, sending his foe face down to the canvas
with a flurry of power punches 2:20 into the opening stanza of
their welterweight bout. The 35-year-old former Tachi Palace Fights
and West Coast Fighting Championship title holder has won two
straight bouts within the Las Vegas-based promotion. Griffin had a
specific game plan in mind to exploit Song’s weaknesses.

“I watched his fights and he doesn’t like pressure. Alex Morono
was able to back him up with pressure,” Griffin said. “He only does
well when he’s moving people back. So I put the pressure on him. He
has a big right hand, but I have a better right hand. I have a
longer right hand. If he wants to engage, I have five inches of
reach on him. I was going to make him pay. I hit him with that
right and saw him [wobble], then zapped him.

“He’s a a good guy, but he hasn’t fought anybody. All the guys he’s
beat aren’t good.”

Griffin has just a 5-6 record in UFC competition, but he points out
that he has faced a difficult level of opposition in the
Octagon.

“I’ve fought everyone,” he said. “I’ve fought Colby
Covington
, Elizeu
Zaleski dos Santos
, Mike Perry,
Alex
Oliveira
and Zelim
Imadaev
—I’ve fought some killers. He wasn’t one. I proved
it.”

With a co-headlining fight already under his belt, Griffin has
bigger plans for the rest of his year.

“I want a main event this year. I want to be ranked this year,” he
said. “When I’m happy and smiling, I waste guys. I’m nasty. The
authentic me is having fun and joking around, but focused. I have
to flow. That’s what came out tonight.”

Martial Arts Videos

By Martial Arts Videos

Melde dich an und werde ein kostenloses Mitglied