May 2, 2024
5 Next Best Opponents for Israel Adesanya After UFC 287 Win | News, Scores, Highlights, Stats, and Rumors

5 Next Best Opponents for Israel Adesanya After UFC 287 Win

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    HOUSTON, TEXAS - FEBRUARY 12: Israel Adesanya of Nigeria celebrates after defending his middleweight championship against Robert Whittaker of Australia during UFC 271 at Toyota Center on February 12, 2022 in Houston, Texas. Adesanya won by unanimous decision. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

    Carmen Mandato/Getty Images

    And, we’re back.

    Just five months after he’d lost his title in shocking fifth-round fashion to longtime nemesis Alex Pereira, former pound-for-pound ace Israel Adesanya regained championship footing with a second-round knockout defeat of Pereira atop the UFC 287 pay-per-view show in Miami.

    It was the Nigerian-born and New Zealand-based operator’s first win over the Brazilian strongman in four tries after losing twice to him as a professional kickboxer and again by KO when Pereira seized control of the 185-pound ranks at UFC 281 last November.

    It also puts Adesanya back into the rarified air he’d occupied for better than three years between winning the belt from Robert Whittaker in 2019 and defending five times prior to the upset defeat. He’d lost one other fight during that stretch via an unsuccessful challenge of then-light heavyweight champ Jan Błachowicz at UFC 259 in 2021.

    Naturally, “The Last Stylebender’s” reascension got the B/R combat team to thinking about his next move now that he’s a two-time champion. We took a look at the competitive landscape at middleweight and beyond and compiled a list of five possible options.

    Take a look at where we wound up and drop a thought of your own in the comments.

Alex Pereira

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    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12: (L-R) Alex Pereira of Brazil punches Israel Adesanya of Nigeria in the UFC middleweight championship bout during the UFC 281 event at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)

    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

    Who doesn’t love a good pentalogy?

    For those suddenly scrambling for online dictionaries, that’s a combination of five closely related things. Or, in other words, two steps past the far more recognizable trilogy.

    And it’s exactly what Adesanya and Alex Pereira find themselves on the brink of now that the old champion is again the new champion.

    They’ve now fought four times in various combat sports settings, but it’s all even at 1-1 in the Octagon, which means it’s not too much of a reach to suggest Dana White might put the two together yet again to at least settle the chain-link fence side of the rivalry.

    It’s a tried and true matchmaking approach.

    Let’s not forget, the Adesanya-Pereira main event Saturday was just one PPV show removed from a trilogy capper at UFC 286 that matched Leon Edwards and Kamaru Usman for a third time at welterweight.

    That came on the heels of a fourth between Brandon Moreno at flyweight at UFC 283 and a third between featherweights Alexander Volkanovski and Max Holloway at UFC 276.

    Pereira’s issues with making 185 pounds may be the biggest obstacle to extending the hostilities because legitimate venom between the two doesn’t seem to be an issue.

Dricus Du Plessis

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    LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - MARCH 04: Dricus Du Plessis of South Africa celebrates his win over Derek Brunson during the UFC 285 event at T-Mobile Arena on March 04, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images)

    Cooper Neill/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

    Sixth-ranked middleweight contender Dricus du Plessis is another graduate of the kickboxing ranks who’s made the crossover to mixed martial arts.

    He’s 19-2 since turning pro a decade ago and has won five straight, all but one inside the distance, since debuting for the UFC on a Fight Night show in 2020.

    That’s all well and good, but the South African ratcheted things up a bit with a verbal grenade lobbed toward Adesanya and Usman, both born in Nigeria, that suggested his African street cred is more legitimate than theirs.

    Adesanya has lived in New Zealand and Usman in the U.S. since they were kids.

    “Did those belts ever go to Africa? As far as I know, they came to America and New Zealand. I’m going to take a belt to Africa,” Du Plessis said prior to his appearance at UFC 285.

    “I’m the African fighter in the UFC. Myself and (teammate) Cameron (Saaiman), we breathe African air. We wake up in Africa every day. We train in Africa, we’re African born, we’re African raised. We still reside in Africa, we train out of Africa.”

    White has long suggested the company will produce a show in Africa, and it would be hard to imagine a more authentic main event grudge match.

    “That’s an African champion,” Du Plessis said, “and that’s who I’ll be.”

Khamzat Chimaev

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    LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - SEPTEMBER 19: Khamzat Chimaev of Chechnya celebrates after his knockout victory over Gerald Meerschaert in their middleweight bout during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on September 19, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

    Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

    It’s not an African grudge, but Khamzat Chimaev has still got plenty of heat to spare.

    The Chechen-born and Swedish-based chatterbox has been a polarizing figure at welterweight and middleweight since his sensational Octagon arrival in the pandemic escape hatch known as “Fight Island” in the United Arab Emirates.

    He finished two fights inside of 10 minutes across less than two weeks in the summer of 2020, returned two months later to dust off respected veteran Gerald Meerschaert in 17 seconds and hasn’t stopped promising mayhem toward any would-be foe since.

    He upped his pro record with wins over Saturday pay-per-view participants Gilbert Burns and Kevin Holland last year and has had Adesanya’s name in his mouth in the past, suggesting to former UFC champ Henry Cejudo that he’d “take off his head” if they were to fight.

    Adesanya took the verbal bait and said Chimaev was an intriguing possibility thanks in part to his unique ability to draw attention.

    “He’ll bring in a lot of eyes,” he told True Geordie. “That’s how it all starts, those are the ones who are crazy enough to make it happen.”

Jamahal Hill

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    RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA - JANUARY 25:  Jamahal Hill celebrates his victory over Darko Stosic of Serbia in their light heavyweight bout during the UFC Fight Night event at PNC Arena on January 25, 2020 in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images)

    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

    It’s a path Adesanya has shown a willingness to travel.

    As mentioned earlier, he interrupted his initial middleweight reign with a leap to 205 pounds to take on then-champ Błachowicz with an eye toward earning rare dual-title status.

    The effort failed via unanimous decision against the bigger and more ground-adept champion, but Adesanya has said repeatedly since that he’d re-entertain the idea.

    The loss to Pereira stopped his momentum, but now that Adesanya has regained the belt—and considering he’s already a combined 6-0 against the fighters ranked 2-5 (he entered Saturday at No. 1) at 185 pounds—another outside-the-box challenge may be in order.

    Enter Jamahal Hill.

    The lanky American became the latest champion in a tumultuous few years at 205, punishing veteran Glover Teixeria over five brutal rounds at UFC 283 in January to win a belt vacated when Jiří Procházka (who’d beaten Błachowicz) stepped aside because of an injury.

    He spent some of the run-up to Saturday’s fight insisting to Inside Fighting that he’d dominate Pereira if the Brazilian moved up. That fight may still happen if Pereira’s work at middleweight is done, but Adesanya might be first to put in a claim.

    “I just like testing myself,” he said at UFC 281 media day.

    “Again, there’s heavyweight. I’m not saying I can beat every 205 guy or every f–king heavyweight, but they’ll have problems with me.”

Bo Nickal

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    LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - MARCH 04: Bo Nickal celebrates his win over Jamie Pickett in a middleweight fight during the UFC 285 event at T-Mobile Arena on March 04, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images)

    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

    OK, unless White totally changes the game, Bo Nickal won’t be next.

    But we get the feeling it won’t be long.

    The highly decorated NCAA wrestler blew through two appearances on the Contender Series show in less than two combined minutes, then he made his official Octagon debut with a bonus-worthy squash at UFC 285 that lasted exactly two minutes and 54 seconds.

    He’ll return to the spotlight at UFC 290 during International Fight Week this summer, and it would surprise precisely no one if the uber-confident Penn State product starts turning up the volume on the claims he’s already made that he’s ready for anyone in the elite class.

    “I would be absolutely confident in that fight,” Nickal said on The MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani. “That’s a fight to me, I’ll say again styles make fights, and I would be extremely happy with that matchup right now.”

    Yes. That’s a guy with four pro fights and one UFC win suggesting he’s a title threat.

    But given the retread vibe emitting from the top contenders in the division, who wouldn’t want to see it just as a novel alternative to Adesanya-Vettori III?

    “I’d like to see more,” Adesanya said on Morning Kombat.

    “He’s only just got here, and I know he’s a decorated wrestler but this is not wrestling, this is MMA. There’s ways to exploit wrestlers in MMA.”