Nick Diaz vs. Kamaru Usman, unlikely as it is to happen, would be huge
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- Nick DiazAmerican mixed martial artist
- Kamaru UsmanNigerian-American mixed martial artist
Nick Diaz told TMZ that he wants to fight Kamaru Usman for the welterweight title sometime before the end of the year. The initial reaction was that it was crazy and could never happen and was just a case of Nick being Nick.
The UFC doesnโt have a perfect record, but itโs the best there is in combat sports at protecting the integrity of its championships. Look at the vast majority of title fights the UFC has put on in the Dana White Era in the past 21 years and there is a consistency and a logic to how the promotion has made its title matches.
Fighters must win against an increasingly higher and more skilled level of opposition to get a title fight. You donโt just get to jump the line.
Usually.
White wonโt even allow Henry Cejudo, one of the greatest fighters in mixed martial arts history and a UFC champion at flyweight and bantamweight, to end his retirement and fight for the featherweight title in his return.
It would give Cejudo the opportunity to become the first three-division champion in UFC history and would be a massive story. That would also lead to big pay-per-view sales.
But White has said that if Cejudo wants to come back, it wonโt be in a featherweight title fight. He said if Cejudo wins a bantamweight belt again, he could then go up to featherweight and try for the title there.
In denying Cejudo an immediate featherweight title shot, White is following the established procedures that have been in place since the Zuffa purchase of the UFC in 2001.
This, though, is a procedure the company has most often followed. Itโs not a constitutional amendment. Itโs Whiteโs company and they're his titles. He can do with them as he wishes.
That being said, the notion of Nick Diaz fighting Usman for the title makes little sense. Diaz returned from a six-year retirement at UFC 266 on Sept. 25 to fight Robbie Lawler in a middleweight bout. Lawler won the bout by TKO in the third round.
Diaz hasnโt actually fought at welterweight since he lost to Georges St-Pierre in a title fight at UFC 158 in the infamous โwolf ticketsโ show in Montreal. He hasnโt won a welterweight fight since defeating B.J. Penn at UFC 137 on Oct. 29, 2011.
None of that bothers Diaz, though, who told TMZ heโs not interested in going through the ranks to earn a title shot.
โIโm working [on a return for] the end of the year right now,โ Diaz said to TMZ. โ โฆ If Iโm going to fight, I want to fight for the title.โ
Usman has dominated the welterweight division and has won 19 fights in a row, dating back to 2013. Heโs won 15 consecutive UFC fights and has gone 6-0 in welterweight title fights.
There are several contenders near the top of the division who are deserving of a title shot, most notably Leon Edwards, who has won nine in a row since losing to Usman in 2015.
Khamzat Chimaev has taken the UFC by storm and is ranked third, one spot behind Edwards. Belal Muhammad is ranked fifth after defeating Demian Maia, Stephen Thompson and Vicente Luque in his last three outings.
All of those guys, as well as No. 1 Colby Covington, who lost two fights to Usman, Gilbert Burns and even Luque, deserve a title fight ahead of Diaz.
But โ and thereโs always a but โ none of them have Diazโs cachet. When his return to competition was announced last year, it was one of the biggest UFC stories of the year. The fan reaction was over the top.
It was supposed to be a welterweight fight, but Diaz then asked for it to be changed to a middleweight fight on Tuesday of fight week. Lawler, ever the professional, agreed to in some respects save the show.
The card was topped by title fights between featherweight champion Alexander Volkanovski and Brian Ortega, and a womenโs flyweight title fight between champion Valentina Shevchenko and Lauren Murphy. The โrealโ main event, though, was Diaz versus Lawler. Thatโs the one that sparked so many of the pay-per-view buys.
โIf Iโm going to fight, I want to fight for the title,โ Diaz said. โ โฆ Just skip all the mess. I donโt need to go in there and get my ass whooped by one of the young guys, anyway โ and itโs not that I wonโt win. Itโs just not motivating to fight somebody thatโs โ I want to fight for the title. Iโm 38 years old.โ
Usman would beat Diaz, probably in the first round. Heโd likely take him down and finish him with ground-and-pound. Usman is 4-0 against the UFCโs top five. Chimaev is gaining the kind of cult hero status that Diaz has enjoyed for years, but Usman would be favored against him by a strong number.
An Usman-Diaz fight would not come without risk, and there would be plenty of criticism that it denigrated the titleโs value by giving a guy a title shot who hadnโt won a fight in 11 years and who hadnโt fought in the division in nine.
But it would be huge. They could sell pay-per-views to the pre-fight news conferences and it would wind up selling more than some of the PPV fight cards theyโve offered.
Usman would win emphatically, but thatโs pretty much what happens now no matter who heโs against.
It would be unconventional. Iโm not recommending it, per se, but letโs just say this: If Dana White were ever inclined to break his procedures and make an out-of-the-box title fight, I wouldnโt complain if this were it.