Russian bantamweight Petr Yan has had a grueling debut year in the UFC but hopes that a win against top contender Jimmie Rivera at UFC 238 this weekend will propel him towards championship gold in the 135lb division.
The 26-year-old Russian fighter has had an impressive debut year inside the octagon. Four men have been tasked with attempting to curb his rise through the bantamweight rankings and all four have failed. On Saturday, though, Yan will face down his sternest challenge to date, when he tangles in Chicago with top contender Jimmie Rivera, winner of 22 of his 25 bouts thus far in his career.
How this fight transpires inside the UFC's eight-sided cage will go a long way towards proving (or indeed disproving) the pre-fight hype focused squarely on Yan, in a bantamweight division that is wide open following the two-year suspension of former champ T.J. Dillashaw for being found to have ingested a performance-enhancing drug.
And a convincing win against Rivera would go a long way to underscoring Yan's credentials, even on a card in which another pair of top bantamweight contenders, Aljamain Sterling and Pedro Munhoz, will clash.
"I want the next one to be for the title," Yan said to MMA Fighting's Eurobash podcast, via translation. "Sterling has never been in an exciting fight. I didnt know [Munhoz] fought in the UFC for such a long time, I just saw his last fight, I didnt even know that man existed in the division until his last fight. Obviously, thats why Im on the main card.
"I dont know what the UFC will decide. It will be my fifth fight inside one year and it took these other guys a lot more fights to get to the same place in the division as me."
This point is hard to argue. Yan has displayed almost no weaknesses in his UFC run to date, save for a moment in which his last opponent, John Dodson, briefly stunned him with a punch, but even if that was the most mortal he has appeared in the cage to date, he was still awarded a unanimous decision victory.
However, the rankings aren't exactly on his side just yet. His first four wins have placed him in ninth position in the official standings at 135lbs, behind both Sterling and Munhoz, and regardless of what happens on Saturday night he will remain behind one, or both, of those fighters.
Nonetheless, Yan suggests that rankings are little more than ink on paper.
"Of course Im ready for the title," he said emphatically. "I dont care if its Cejudo or Moraes, I dont see me lacking anything compared to them. Theres nothing special about them; of course I want to fight the winner of their fight.
Russian bantamweight Petr Yan has had a grueling debut year in the UFC but hopes that a win against top contender Jimmie Rivera at UFC 238 this weekend will propel him towards championship gold in the 135lb division.
The 26-year-old Russian fighter has had an impressive debut year inside the octagon. Four men have been tasked with attempting to curb his rise through the bantamweight rankings and all four have failed. On Saturday, though, Yan will face down his sternest challenge to date, when he tangles in Chicago with top contender Jimmie Rivera, winner of 22 of his 25 bouts thus far in his career.
How this fight transpires inside the UFC's eight-sided cage will go a long way towards proving (or indeed disproving) the pre-fight hype focused squarely on Yan, in a bantamweight division that is wide open following the two-year suspension of former champ T.J. Dillashaw for being found to have ingested a performance-enhancing drug.
And a convincing win against Rivera would go a long way to underscoring Yan's credentials, even on a card in which another pair of top bantamweight contenders, Aljamain Sterling and Pedro Munhoz, will clash.
"I want the next one to be for the title," Yan said to MMA Fighting's Eurobash podcast, via translation. "Sterling has never been in an exciting fight. I didnt know [Munhoz] fought in the UFC for such a long time, I just saw his last fight, I didnt even know that man existed in the division until his last fight. Obviously, thats why Im on the main card.
"I dont know what the UFC will decide. It will be my fifth fight inside one year and it took these other guys a lot more fights to get to the same place in the division as me."
This point is hard to argue. Yan has displayed almost no weaknesses in his UFC run to date, save for a moment in which his last opponent, John Dodson, briefly stunned him with a punch, but even if that was the most mortal he has appeared in the cage to date, he was still awarded a unanimous decision victory.
However, the rankings aren't exactly on his side just yet. His first four wins have placed him in ninth position in the official standings at 135lbs, behind both Sterling and Munhoz, and regardless of what happens on Saturday night he will remain behind one, or both, of those fighters.
Nonetheless, Yan suggests that rankings are little more than ink on paper.
"Of course Im ready for the title," he said emphatically. "I dont care if its Cejudo or Moraes, I dont see me lacking anything compared to them. Theres nothing special about them; of course I want to fight the winner of their fight.