Stipe Miocic has weighed in on the debate around the UFC heavyweight title picture, as his title shot against Jon Jones looms.
Miocic, a former two-time champion, is the consensus greatest heavyweight in UFC history, while Jones is held in the same regard at light-heavyweight, where he was a two-time title holder before moving up a division.
The Americans will square off in the main event of UFC 309 on 16 November, a year after Jones suffered an injury that postponed their fight. Thanks to that delay, Jones has not fought in 20 months – and before his last fight, he had not competed in three years. Furthermore, Miocic has not fought in almost four years.
All the while, Tom Aspinall has gone on a searing run, claiming the interim heavyweight title 12 months ago and retaining it in July. Those first-round knockouts of Sergei Pavlovich and Curtis Blaydes have earned the Briton the right, in the eyes of many fans, to call himself the best heavyweight in the UFC – regardless of what happens between Jones and Miocic.
Now Miocic has addressed the convoluted situation, telling MMA Fighting: “It wasn’t my choice. It’s a fight I wanted, and the UFC gave it to me. They didn’t have to. They gave it to me.
“I believe [there’s a reason why it’s happening]. I believe people want to see that. I think a lot more people want to see [this] fight than [Jones] fight Aspinall.
“I don’t listen to anything on the outside. I used to when I was younger. When I started I was like: ‘Why would you say that? How dare you?’ I was real sensitive. I literally stopped caring anymore. I don’t care what anyone says. I really don’t care.
“[Aspinall is] tough, he hits hard, big boy. It’s what people want, he knocks people out.”
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Fans have not only expressed frustration that Jones isn’t defending his title against the interim champion, but also that Jones, 37, and Miocic, 42, might retire after UFC 309 – leaving Aspinall without a chance of a legacy fight against either.
“I think every fight, I’m always preparing for my last one,” Miocic said. “I always thought about retiring after my first UFC fight. I say that all the time. Who wants to get beat up for 10 weeks, 12 weeks [in training camp], come back and do it again?
“I love what I do and it’s fun, so we’ll see, but right now my task at hand is Jon. That’s all I care about. That’s what I’m thinking about.”