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Henry Cejudo retains title, retires at UFC 249

JACKSONVILLE, Florida—Bantamweight champion Henry Cejudo solidified his legacy with a second-round knockout of longtime champ Dominick Cruz with just 2 seconds remaining in their co-main event bout in front of an empty crowd at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena.

That was more than enough for Cejudo to feel content, who announced his retirement after the victory.

“I’m ruthless,” the two-division champion and Olympic gold medalist said. “I may be cringy and corny, but boy can I fight. I’m the greatest combat sports athlete of all time.

“I’m happy with my career. I’ve done enough in the sport. Triple-C is out.”

Moments after his head was cut open by an accidental headbutt, Cejudo took advantage of the restart with a crushing knee to drop Cruz and followed up with left hands as he tried to get to his feet. Cruz disputed the stoppage to no avail.

In the main event, Justin Gaethje stopped Tony Ferguson at 3:39 of the fifth round to end Ferguson’s 12-fight winning streak and capture the interim lightweight title.

Gaethje punished Ferguson, mostly with left hands and leg kicks, until the referee decided he had seen enough of the punishment.

“This is hard work,” Gaethje said. “I’ve worked since I was four years old, never looking past any day and just trying to be better than yesterday. That’s all this is.”

Heavyweight Francis Ngannou, a Las Vegas resident, needed just 20 seconds to hand Jairzinho Rozenstruik the first loss of his professional career.

Ngannou dropped Rozenstruik with a devastating left hook and followed up with punches as Rozenstruik sat against the cage.

It was his fourth straight first-round knockout, with the longest fight going just 1:11.

Contact Adam Hill at ahill@reviewjournal.com. Follow @AdamHillLVRJ on Twitter.

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