Cruz Resets for Title Bout, While Johnson Hopes to Complete Underdog Story

Filed under: UFC, NewsOn the surface, Dominick Cruz has settled into the role of champion nicely. He’s successfully defended the bantamweight title three times, established himself as one of the sport’s pound-for-pound best fighters, and headlines his …

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On the surface, Dominick Cruz has settled into the role of champion nicely. He’s successfully defended the bantamweight title three times, established himself as one of the sport’s pound-for-pound best fighters, and headlines his second straight UFC event at Saturday night’s UFC Live: Cruz vs. Johnson.

Yet Cruz seems to go out of his way to remind himself that it can all change in an instant. He hasn’t splurged on a big house or fancy car. Instead, he lives on the cheap and saves his money for a rainy day that might never come. Those reminders serve as motivation for training, and the mindset extends even to his most prized possession: his title belt.

“Really, I’m not going out there to defend anything. I’m going out there to win something new every single time I go out and fight for a title,” he said in a Thursday press conference from the Newseum in Washington D.C. “I don’t own anything. It’s always up for grabs, so I have to always stay on top and stay focused and go out there to win something new, so that’s it. This will be like my first time winning it.”

Should Cruz beat Demetrious Johnson (10-1) on Saturday, it may feel like a first time for him, but it would mark his fourth straight defense of the 135-pound belt, surpassing the three successful defenses made by Miguel Torres when the belt was a WEC property.

Cruz has done it with a style all his own, mixing active striking and strong wrestling with endless stamina to wear down opponents over time. Overall, he’s won nine straight, and on the strength of his 18-1 overall record, his .948 winning percentage is among the best in major MMA.

Rather than falling complacent though, Cruz continually surveys the landscape of his division and considers the oncoming challengers.

“Success feels good,” he said. “I’m a fighter and this is what I do. I love to do it. I love my job. It’s easy to stay motivated if you see all these maniacs coming up in my division. They all want to beat me up. What other motivation do I need?”

In Johnson, Cruz may be facing the fastest opponent he’s ever faced. At just 5-foot-3 and with a 66-inch reach, Johnson has some distance to navigate, but if anyone can figure it out how to make an unlikely journey, it’s the man that’s nicknamed “Mighty Mouse.”

Johnson’s rise to one of the division’s best has been a largely untold story, though it is one worth telling. He’s not a pedigreed athlete with a following who got major breaks along the way. Though he wrestled throughout high school, he was never a state champion, and he had no other martial arts training when he first walked into a gym in October 2005, after watching the first season of The Ultimate Fighter.

Johnson grinded his way through the northwest regional circuit before debuting tin the WEC, and then he promptly dropped his first fight by decision. The setback hardly set him back, however, and he ran off a streak, winning four straight to earn a shot at Cruz. In his last two fights, he beat Miguel Torres and Kid Yamamoto, who were at one time the best lighter weight fighters in the world. Now Johnson has a chance to join those ranks, but there aren’t a lot of believers out there; Cruz is as much as a 5-to-1 favorite.

“Story of my life,” Johnson said. “I’m the smallest guy probably in the UFC. It is what it is. Everyone sees me as an underdog. I don’t mind. It is what it is. Like I say, story of my life.”

Yet Johnson is every bit the story of determination as Cruz. Until recently, he held a full-time job in a Tacoma, Washington recycling plant. During his May win over Torres, he suffered a broken bone in his leg, but he was still back to work at the plant on the following Monday. After accepting the title bout with Cruz, he gave up the job to prepare for the biggest opportunity of his life.

Like an underdog out of central casting, Johnson is quiet and polite in addition to being small. The UFC sat him next to 6-foot-11 Stefan Struve on Thursday, further highlighting just how small he is. He didn’t say much on Thursday, and even when he was asked questions, he often clipped his answer short when you had the feeling he might have had a little bit more to say. Like Cruz, perhaps he is holding it back for when it truly matters.

“You guys have all seen me fight, and you know what I do,” he said. “I come out and bring the pace and I do my job. I prepare myself to win.”

 

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