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UFC 218 Results: Max Holloway Beats Jose Aldo Via TKO in Main Event


DETROIT, MI - DECEMBER 2: (R) Max Holloway punches Jose Aldo during the UFC 218 event at Little Caesars Arena on December 2, 2017 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Rey Del Rio/Getty Images)
Rey Del Rio/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

UFC 218 brought the violence. 

That was the expectation, and it didn't fail to deliver. In all, there were nine finishes out of 13 fights from the Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. Chamatkar Sandhu of MMA Junkie summed up the night of violence:

The main event brought about one of the most impressive performances of all. 

Max Holloway once again defeated former featherweight kingpin Jose Aldo to retain his UFC featherweight championship belt via third-round TKO. 

Aldo came out looking like he was primed to put on a vintage performance. He once again turned to the leg kicks that made him famous as a dominant WEC and UFC champion. It didn't matter. 

Holloway just walked right through everything Aldo had to offer and kept slinging combinations to body and head. Eventually, the volume and pressure paid off. 

After two back-and-forth rounds that were difficult to score, Holloway broke through. Once Aldo's counters turned into simple survival, Holloway smelled blood and went in for the finish. Although the Brazilian nearly held on to see the fourth round, Holloway swarmed and drew the TKO before the bell. 

After the fight, Holloway gave credit to boxer Vasyl Lomachenko for the inspiration, per MMA Fighting:

Wherever he got the inspiration from, he needs to keep going back to that well. The champion is only 25 years old and now holds two wins over the greatest of all time in his weight class. That's a strong start to a title reign that looks as though it could last a while. 

Holloway wasn't the only one getting in on the violence, though. Here's a look at the complete results and a closer look at all the main card action. 

Main card

  • Max Holloway def. Jose Aldo via third-round TKO (4:51) 
  • Francis Ngannou def. Alistair Overeem by first-round KO (1:42) 
  • Henry Cejudo def. Sergio Pettis via unanimous decision 
  • Eddie Alvarez def. Justin Gaethje via third-round TKO (3:59) 
  • Tecia Torres def. Michelle Waterson via unanimous decision 

Undercard 

  • Paul Felder def. Charles Oliveira via second-round KO (4:06) 
  • Yancy Medeiros def. Alex Oliveira via third-round TKO (2:02)
  • David Teymur def. Drakkar Klose via unanimous decision 
  • Felice Herrig def. Cortney Casey via split decision
  • Amanda Cooper def. Angela Magana via second-round TKO (4:34)
  • Abdul Razak Alhassan def. Sabah Homasi via first-round TKO (4:21)
  • Dominick Reyes def. Jeremy Kimball via first-round submission (rear-naked choke, 3:39)
  • Justin Willis def. Allen Crowder via first-round KO (2:33)

Alistair Overeem vs. Francis Ngannou

DETROIT, MI - DECEMBER 02: (L-R) Francis Ngannou of Cameroon punches Alistair Overeem of The Netherlands in their heavyweight bout during the UFC 218 event inside Little Caesars Arena on December 02, 2017 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Josh Hedges/Zuffa
Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

Francis Ngannou will be in every heavyweight's nightmares. 

Overeem was supposed to be the one to test whether the 31-year-old's meteoric rise was legitimate. The Cameroon native was 5-0, but his most impressive win was over an aging Andrei Arlovski.

Ngannou passed with flying colors. 

It only took one powerful left hook to put Overeem out. After a bit of clinch fighting against the cage, the powerful heavyweight ended the night as soon as referee Dan Miragliotta broke up the wall-and-stall action. 

The fight likely puts Ngannou in the driver's seat for the next shot at champion Stipe Miocic. It's a challenge the devastating striker believes he's ready for:

Miocic is one of just five heavyweight champions in UFC history to successfully defend the belt two times in a row. It looks like defending it a third time just got much more difficult for the current champion. 

Henry Cejudo vs. Sergio Pettis

7DETROIT, MI - DECEMBER 02: Henry Cejudo (L) battles Sergio Pettis (R) during UFC 218 at Little Ceasars Arena on December 2, 2018 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)
Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

It's beginning to look like Henry Cejudo is a flyweight contender again. The former Olympic gold medalist put on a comprehensive performance against Sergio Pettis en route to a unanimous-decision victory. 

Cejudo wrestled Pettis to the mat early and often as he dominated the position. Pettis had little to offer on the feet but even less to offer on the ground. 

After a rousing start to the card, this one was a ho-hum one-sided affair. Cejudo never came close to finishing Pettis, but he was clearly in control of the fight. 

As Shaheen Al-Shatti of MMA Fighting noted, it wasn't the kind of win that will get Cejudo the next title shot against Demetrious Johnson, but the rematch might not be far off:

Defeating a fighter of Pettis' caliber and making it look easy is a pretty quick way to ensure he's second in line for that title shot—especially with Mighty Mouse all but cleaning out the division already. 

Justin Gaethje vs. Eddie Alvarez

DETROIT, MI - DECEMBER 02: (R-L) Eddie Alvarez punches Justin Gaethje in their lightweight bout during the UFC 218 event inside Little Caesars Arena on December 02, 2017 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images)
Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

The lightweight showdown between Justin Gaethje and Eddie Alvarez looked to be the odds-on favorite for Fight of the Night on paper. It didn't disappoint. 

The brawling Gaethje and former champion Alvarez put on a striking battle in all three rounds. Alvarez—who is equally adept at plying a wall-and-stall grinding style as he is at brawling—obliged in a slugfest with the very hittable Gaethje, but he also absorbed tons of leg kicks. 

While Gaethje was able to land leg kicks at will and scored some ripping uppercuts throughout the fight, Alvarez was just a bit more technical, which turned out to be the difference. After throwing everything he had at his ultra durable opponent, a hellacious knee to the face in the clinch finally buckled Gaethje to the mat, and a few follow-up strikes brought about the end of the fight. 

After the bout, Alvarez acknowledged the leg kicks were something he had to fight through. 

The loss is the first in Gaethje's career, but this was a matchup fans wouldn't mind seeing again at some point. For Alvarez, this is the perfect result to get him back in the lightweight picture after a loss to Conor McGregor and a no-contest against Dustin Poirier due to illegal knees from Alvarez. 

Regardless of where both men end up, this fight was everything it was cracked up to be.  

Michelle Waterson vs. Tecia Torres

7DETROIT, MI - DECEMBER 02: Tecia Torres (top) battles Michelle Waterson during UFC 218 at Little Ceasars Arena on December 2, 2018 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)
Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

In a battle of highly ranked women's strawweights, Tecia Torres made a statement against Michelle Waterson in taking a unanimous-decision victory to kick off the main card. 

From the jump, it was clear Torres was the more athletically gifted fighter. Her speed and power advantage was clear as the two exchanged strikes on their feet. The UFC passed along some of the early highlights from the Tiny Tornado:

Waterson was able to score an early takedown that defined the second round. She was able to maintain top control for the majority of the round but landed very little of substance in stealing the round from the eventual winner. 

Torres was too much for The Karate Hottie in the third and final frame once again. Torres continued to get the better of the feet and turned a Waterson takedown attempt into an advantageous position, taking Waterson's back. 

Although she couldn't get the finish, Torres established her place in the women's strawweight hierarchy. It might not be long before she has a title shot to prepare for.    

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