“It’s time to kill the master” is not the most sporting of declarations, but with six straight wins -- and only one decision -- in the UFC since 2007, Kenny Florian has sweat and bled enough to earn a little hyperbole.
Both Florian and Penn beat Joe Stevenson convincingly; Penn hammered Sean Sherk, who defeated Florian. Otherwise, Penn hasn’t been nearly as active in the lightweight division as Florian has. It’s likely he would’ve handled Florian’s opposition -- Roger Huerta, Joe Lauzon, Din Thomas -- but reputations aren’t earned on hypotheticals, only what you’re killed and eaten. And right now, Florian’s appears to be the heartier appetite.
What It Means: For Florian, the chance to monetize the status that comes with holding a UFC strap in seminars, how-to videos, appearances, and merchandise; for Penn, an opportunity to erase “Greasegate” from memory.
Third-Party Investor: Gray Maynard, an “Ultimate Fighter” recruit who holds a perfect record outside of that house and appears due for a shot.
Who Wins: Florian’s commitment to the sport and physical maturation has been inspiring, and he may even give Penn some trouble standing. But the difference here is Penn’s aversion to being controlled: he can decide where this fight happens. And if he decides he wants Florian on the bottom, it’ll go there. Penn by decision.