Ferguson on Khabib: We’ll fight ‘before he retires’

MMA

It’s the most cursed fight in UFC history, but former interim lightweight champion Tony Ferguson swears the world will still see him fight Khabib Nurmagomedov one day.

Ferguson (25-4) was supposed to challenge Nurmagomedov (28-0) for the 155-pound championship in April, but the event was canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It was the fifth time in five years that a matchup between the two fell through, due to various circumstances. Ferguson ultimately lost to Justin Gaethje by fifth-round TKO in May, and now Gaethje is set to face Nurmagomedov this weekend at UFC 254.

Last week, Nurmagomedov told ESPN he doesn’t believe Ferguson, 36, will ever be the same after the damage he suffered in his loss to Gaethje. Ferguson responded by guaranteeing the two will still fight.

“I see fear in his voice if he thinks he has to talk bad about people,” Ferguson told ESPN. “He can’t put that s— in my head. I will fight Khabib at one point or another. He will see me before he retires. We’ll make that a point.

“I think everybody is writing me off after one loss, and f— them. The casual fanbase is trying to, but my hardcore fans are too much. They know too much. My value is way too much.”

In the meantime, Ferguson, of Oxnard, California, says he’s training consistently and keeping his weight down in anticipation of a potential fight in December. He confirmed that former Bellator MMA champion Michael Chandler appears to be whom UFC president Dana White “wants me to fight,” but said he wants the UFC to renegotiate his contract first.

Ferguson strongly implied Chandler (21-5), who has never fought in the UFC, would currently make more than him if they fought, based on their current contracts. When asked how he knows exactly what Chandler’s pay would be, Ferguson responded, “I don’t know, but it sounds interesting, right?”

Ferguson believes he was a “company man” in May, when he agreed to face Gaethje in the main event of UFC 249, which was the first event held after the UFC was forced to cancel five events due to COVID-19. That decision, and the result of the fight, ultimately cost Ferguson a title shot in 2020, and he says he should be compensated fairly to take on an opponent new to the organization.

“Michael Chandler hasn’t earned his way to the top,” Ferguson said. “But if that’s who Dana White wants me to fight, you know me, I put my boots on and I go to work. When it came to COVID, I made weight and I went to work. There was a point, 72 hours, it was myself, Dana, [UFC matchmaker] Sean Shelby, and my wife, just trying to make that s— happen. If I hadn’t taken that fight, how many people would not have gotten paid?

“Do I want to fight? Yes. I want to fight in December. I’m f—ing training. Let’s go. But I don’t think somebody who doesn’t even belong here should be paid more than me. That’s what I’m saying.”

Ferguson emphasized that he and White are in a healthy place, adding that the two exchanged text messages on Tuesday. He said he is optimistic he will fight in December, against Chandler or someone else, and said he will return from his first loss since 2012 a better lightweight.

“I learned a lot about myself in that fight,” Ferguson said. “I learned I’m not going to put myself in that position again, to take damage like that. I wanted to see how tough I was, and now I’ve found out. That scares people to do that, so I’ve learned how to work much better and more efficiently.”

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