UFC 317
29
Jun

UFC 317: Spain’s Topuria makes history with brutal KO of Oliveira

Topuria says he represent the new generation of mixed martial arts

Spain’s Ilia Topuria delivered a statement performance at UFC 317, securing a spectacular first-round knockout win over Brazilian veteran Charles Oliveira to claim the vacant UFC lightweight title.

The bout, held late Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena, saw the undefeated Topuria rise to the challenge of a new weight class with remarkable composure and striking precision.

The 28-year-old fighter, who stepped up from featherweight following Islam Makhachev’s move to the welterweight division, needed less than five minutes to fulfill his pre-fight prediction of a first-round finish.

“I represent the new generation of mixed martial arts,” said Topuria in his post-fight interview. “This is the next level of the game.”

Despite Oliveira’s significant experience and size advantage inside the cage, Topuria weathered an early grappling exchange on the mat before separating and landing a brutal combination. A clean right hook stunned Oliveira, and a powerful left followed — sending the 35-year-old crashing to the canvas. The referee swiftly stepped in, ending the contest and handing Topuria his 17th professional victory.

The Georgian-Spanish fighter, who was born in Germany to Georgian parents, has now firmly established himself as a force in the lightweight division. With this victory, he becomes the first Spaniard to hold a UFC title, continuing an undefeated streak that began in the featherweight class.

“I did exactly what we had planned,” he added. “A lot of jabs, right hand, left hook — and boom, his lights were out.”

Oliveira, who was stripped of the lightweight title in 2022 after missing weight ahead of his scheduled defence against Justin Gaethje, was returning to the title picture after a turbulent period in the division. He entered the octagon with 34 wins and 9 losses, widely regarded as one of the most dangerous submission artists in the sport’s history.

In the co-main event, Brazil’s Alexandre Pantoja retained his flyweight crown with a third-round submission win over New Zealand’s Kai Kara-France. Pantoja dominated much of the contest before taking Kara-France’s back and locking in a rear-naked choke at the 1:55 mark of the third round.

Courtesy By: samaa.tv