Photo by Mike Roach/Zuffa LLC
Dana White finally confirmed Aljamain Sterling as the #1 contender for the 135 pound belt.
Dana White was more nebulous than a magic 8-ball after UFC on ESPN 15 when it came to fight announcements. Eschewing any solid ‘Yes’ for the most part, we got a lot of ‘Probably’ and ‘Most Likely’ answers during Saturday’s post-event press conference. ‘Probably’ when it came to Tony Ferguson vs. Dustion Poirier, and then ‘Most Likely’ when it came to Petr Yan’s next bantamweight title challenger.
Unfortunately for Frankie Edgar, it’s not gonna be him based on his gutsy split decision win over Pedro Munhoz in the main event (watch the highlights here).
“There’s some things that have to play out and there’s people ahead of him,” White said. “He put on a good showing tonight and put himself in a good position, but … he’s got some work to do there … Two [more fights] or one, we don’t know, it depends on who he fights next.”
That’s very good news for Aljamain Sterling, who has been the consensus #1 contender at bantamweight according to pretty much everyone BUT White. After weeks of waffling and ‘Ask Again Later’ answers, the UFC president finally gave Sterling his due.
Dana White says “it’s more than likely gonna be @funkmasterMMA” as the next challenger for @PetrYanUFC‘s bantamweight crown pic.twitter.com/yEbCGqHDrI
— ESPN MMA (@espnmma) August 23, 2020
“It’s more than likely going to be Sterling,” he told Heidi Androl on the ESPN+ post-show.
A very happy sounding Sterling took to Twitter to celebrate that mild acknowledgement.
About time!! I’m coming for you soon my Russian friend https://t.co/KIkctPL1ct
— Aljamain Sterling (@funkmasterMMA) August 23, 2020
No one. https://t.co/QZV7TlAOwG
— Aljamain Sterling (@funkmasterMMA) August 23, 2020
December will work great for the both of us.
Yan can get his shit together.
I can get my shit together.
Bring the perfect and focused storm from both sides. https://t.co/CRTwCrOkTj— Aljamain Sterling (@funkmasterMMA) August 23, 2020
Of course, all of this is contingent on the UFC being able to get Yan and Sterling to sign on the dotted line. We’re sure Yan’s management probably want a more bankable name that isn’t likely to drag him to the mat and dominate him with wrestling. And we’re sure Sterling wants to get paid, something the UFC is surprisingly reluctant to do when it comes to lower weight contenders (example: Henry Cejudo taking a pay cut to rematch Demetrious Johnson).
Let’s hope the UFC manages to put the pieces together, cuz this would be one hell of an end of year scrap.