Robert Whiteford has reached the stage of his career where any assignment could be his last.
As Whiteford moves ever closer to his catchweight clash with Huerta at a 150-pound catchweight, a look at five of the many moments that have come to define him:
1. Gold Standard
Whiteford laid claim to the Vision Fighting Championship featherweight title when he took care of Martin Svensson with punches in the first round of their VFC 4 attraction on Sept. 12, 2012 at Kelvin Hall in Glasgow, Scotland. Svensson succumbed to blows a mere 43 seconds into Round 1. Whiteford blitzed the Swede out of the gate, pressured him onto the back foot and ultimately corralled him along the cage. From there, he cut loose with enough unanswered punches to warrant the stoppage. It remains one of three sub-minute finishes—he put away Jonny Goodall with punches in 15 seconds under the Headhunters MMA banner in 2011 and choked Nam Phan unconscious with a guillotine in 21 seconds at an Absolut Championship Berkut show in 2017—on the Whiteford resume.
2. Not-So-Warm Welcome
AMA Fight Club’s Jim Hettes spoiled Whiteford’s long-sought Octagon debut, as he choked the Scotsman unconscious with a triangle in the second round of their UFC Fight Night 30 featherweight prelim on Oct. 26, 2013 at the Phones 4U Arena in Manchester, England. The end came 2:17 into Round 2. Hettes found the grappling exchanges to his liking. He threatened Whiteford throughout the first round—a modified keylock utilizing his legs had the arena abuzz—and closed him out in the second. There, Hettes struck for a takedown, progressed to the back and ensnared “The Hammer” in the fight-ending triangle during a scramble. The setback was Whiteford’s first in in more than four years and snapped his career-best 10-fight winning streak.
3. Hook Shot
Whiteford wiped out Paul Redmond with first-round punches as part of the UFC Fight Night 72 undercard on July 18, 2015 at the SSE Hydro Arena in Glasgow, Scotland. Redmond wilted 3:04 into Round 1. Operating in the shadows of the Michael Bisping-Thales Leites main event, Whiteford countered effectively, worked behind crisp body-head combinations and waited for an opening to present itself. The Scottish judoka folded Redmond with a left hook, trailed him to the mat and finished him there, firing off punches until referee Marc Goddard had no choice but to step in and save the Irish grappler.
4. Services No Longer Needed
Chute Boxe export Lucas Martins escaped with a split decision over Whiteford in their three-round UFC Fight Night 86 prelim on April 10, 2016 at Zagreb Arena in Zagreb, Croatia. Judges Jadranko Cacic and Andreas Gruner scored it 29-28 and 30-27 for Martins, while Ben Cartlidge saw it 29-28 for Whiteford. Neither man did much to set himself apart in the 15-minute engagement. Martins staggered his counterpart with a straight right hand late in the first round, bottled up the American Top Team-trained Scotsman along the fence, utilized accurate punches and mixed in occasional kicks to the legs and body. Whiteford was ineffective with his takedowns and struggled to generate meaningful output, often circling on the perimeter with his hands cocked but not firing. Even so, he managed to secure the only takedown of the bout, accrued 1:36 of control time and built a 45-30 advantage in the significant strikes landed department. Whiteford was later released by the promotion.
5. Perseverance Personified
Whiteford dazzled in his Bellator MMA debut, where he dismissed “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 15 alum Sam Sicilia with third-round punches as part of the Bellator “MVP vs. Melillo” undercard on Nov. 23, 2019 at The SSE Arena in London. Sicilia checked out 4:54 into Round 3. Lost in the hullabaloo surrounding the Michael Page-Giovanni Melillo main event, Whiteford flexed some next-level resilience while staging a remarkable comeback. The notoriously brick-fisted Sicilia staggered him with a multi-punch burst and flying knee in the second round, then sat him down with a left hook and swarmed for a potential finish in the third. Whiteford somehow survived. He managed to regain his faculties on the ground and made his way back to his feet, at which point it became clear Sicilia was a spent force. Whiteford pressed the issue in the waning moments, decked the Sikjitsu product with a mean right uppercut and drew the curtain with just six seconds left on the clock.