Sherdog’s Official Mixed Martial Arts Rankings
Featherweight
Image: John Brannigan/Sherdog.com illustration
Featherweight
1. Alexander Volkanovski (23-1) [1]
In his first title bout against someone other than Max Holloway, Volkanovski delivered in the UFC 266 main event, outlanding Brian Ortega by 126 significant strikes and surviving a couple of dangerous submissions en route to a unanimous decision victory. The City Kickboxing representative has won 20 consecutive professional fights and 10 straight in UFC competition to further cement his place as one of the sport’s top pound-for-pound talents. Volkanovski had a third date with Holloway set for UFC 272 before the Hawaiian withdrew from the contest due to injury.2. A.J. McKee (18-0) [2]
McKee had a star-making performance at Bellator 263, as he rocked Patricio Freire with a head kick and then rendered his opponent unconscious with a guillotine choke in their headlining encounter at The Forum in Inglewood, Calif., on July 31. Not only does McKee claim featherweight gold, but he earned a cool $1 million for making it through the promotion’s 145-pound bracket. McKee finished all four of his opponents — Freire, Darrion Caldwell, Derek Campos and Georgi Karakhanyan — in the grand prix and now looks poised to be one of the sport’s top featherweights for years to come.Advertisement
3. Max Holloway (23-6) [3]
Holloway engaged in another classic at UFC Fight Night 197, as he outdueled Yair Rodriguez for five rounds for a unanimous decision triumph in the card’s featherweight headliner at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas on Nov. 13. “Blessed” absorbed some heavy artillery from his opponent — particularly in the opening stanza — but he effectively blended his striking and grappling down the stretch to get the nod from the cageside judges. That victory helped set up a trilogy with reigning 145-pound king Alexander Volkanovski at UFC 272 before an injury forced Holloway to withdraw from the event.4. Brian Ortega (15-2, 1 NC) [4]
For a couple fleeting moments in the third round of his UFC 266 headlining clash with Alexander Volkanovski, it appeared as though Brian Ortega might secure a Hail Mary submission. Unfortunately for “T-City,” Volkanovski was able to escape on both occasions, and the Aussie went on to batter and bloody Ortega for a unanimous decision triumph at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Sept. 25. While Ortega is unquestionably one of the top featherweights in the sport, he nonetheless appears to be a step behind the top two men in the division, Volkanovski and Max Holloway, both of whom he has lost to in 145-pound title bouts.5. Patricio Freire (32-5) [5]
Freire is a champ-champ no longer, as he was relieved of his 145-pound belt in a first-round submission loss to A.J. McKee in the Bellator 263 headliner on July 31. “Pitbull” is still arguably the greatest talent to compete under the Bellator banner, but he recently vacated his lightweight belt to pursue a rematch with McKee at 145 pounds. It’s worth nothing that Freire has bounced back from adversity before: The Brazilian has twice lost featherweight title bouts in the California-based promotion only to avenge those defeats further down the road.6. Yair Rodriguez (13-3, 1 NC) [6]
Rodriguez showed no signs of ring rust following a two-year layoff, as he battled Max Holloway tooth-and-nail in the UFC Fight Night 197 headliner before ultimately losing a unanimous decision on Nov. 13 at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. Rodriguez was the rare opponent who didn’t fade against Holloway, making for one of 2021’s best bouts. As a result, the Mexican’s stock doesn’t fall far in defeat. “El Pantera” should be in line for another high-profile booking in his next Octagon appearance.7. Calvin Kattar (23-5) [7]
One year removed from a lopsided decision loss to Max Holloway in the UFC on ABC 1 headliner, Kattar rebounded in impressive fashion at UFC on ESPN 32, as he bloodied and battered Giga Chikadze for five rounds en route to a convincing victory at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas on Jan. 15. Kattar showed no ill effects from the beating he took against Holloway, as he relied on consistent forward pressure, boxing and vicious standing elbows to end Chikadze’s nine-bout professional winning streak. “The Boston Finisher” has won three of his last four Octagon appearances and should be in line for another ranked foe in his next outing.8. Chan Sung Jung (17-6) [8]
“The Korean Zombie” proved he isn’t the brawler he used to be at UFC on ESPN 25, as he relied on takedowns and positional dominance to capture a unanimous decision triumph over Dan Ige at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas on June 19. The Fight Ready export has won three of his last four promotional appearances and rebounded from a decision loss to Brian Ortega at UFC Fight Night 180 in October 2020. Another ranked opponent is likely next for the 34-year-old South Korean.9. Josh Emmett (17-2) [9]
After a lengthy hiatus due to knee surgery, Emmett made a triumphant return at UFC 269, taking a hard-fought decision win over Dan Ige at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Dec. 11. Perhaps even more impressive was that when Emmett was unable to finish his opponent after landing a knockdown in Round 1, the Team Alpha Male product remained patient as the fight went to the judges. Emmett has now won four in a row and six of his last seven in UFC competition.10. Arnold Allen (17-1) [10]
Allen added another impressive notch to his belt at UFC on ABC 2, when he scored a decision win over fellow up-and-coming featherweight Sodiq Yusuff on April 10. That makes 10 straight professional triumphs – including eight in the Las Vegas-based promotion – for the 27-year-old Englishman, who will return to action against former lightweight contender Dan Hooker at UFC London.Other Contenders: Giga Chikadze, Dan Ige, Edson Barboza, Movsar Evloev, Ilia Topuria.
Continue Reading » Bantamweight
« Previous Fight Facts: Bellator 273 ‘Bader vs. Moldavsky’
Next ‘Comfortable’ at Heavyweight, Bader Looks Forward to ‘Unfinished Business’ vs. Kongo »
More