Tyron Woodley inspired to face fearless Darren Till at UFC 228
Welterweight champion Tyron Woodley believes he drew a much tougher opponent when Darren Till accepted a title bout for UFC 228 on Sept. 8 in Dallas instead of interim champ Colby Covington.
That’s just fine with Woodley.
“Sometimes it takes that young fighter that reminds you of yourself to light that fire again,” he said backstage at UFC 227 in Los Angeles on Saturday night.
“He does remind me a lot of myself because he really believes he can beat me. Some guys talk and say what they think you want to hear. He believes it. He believes he’s the best welterweight in the world. The guys I’ve done best against are the guys I respected most and the ones that style-wise were the most problematic.”
Till emerged confident from their first official staredown at a news conference unveiling the UFC’s remaining 2018 schedule on Friday in Los Angeles, telling a group of reporters he sensed doubt in Woodley’s eyes.
Woodley scoffed at the observation.
“He didn’t see a lick of (expletive) doubt in my eyes and he knows that,” the champion said of a challenger whose three-inch height advantage was difficult to overlook. “I didn’t see any in his eyes either and that’s OK. There shouldn’t be any doubt. He should believe that he can beat me. He should believe he’s the best in the world, otherwise he shouldn’t be doing this.”
Woodley wouldn’t say the same about Covington, who turned down the fight due to a nasal procedure.
“He’s basically shown us he’s a (expletive), and he never really wanted to fight in the first place,” Woodley said of Covington, who was stripped of his interim belt. “He talked himself into a position to get the shot and he needed a Claritin all of a sudden.”
No world tour for McGregor
UFC president Dana White believes Conor McGregor’s return to action at UFC 229 on Oct. 6 at T-Mobile Arena will be one of the biggest fights in UFC history.
It won’t have the benefit of a global promotional tour to draw even more attention, however, after the fight didn’t officially come together until two months before the scheduled date.
“We don’t have time for a world tour,” White said. “These guys are going to fight the first week of October. Both guys are going to go into camp. We’ll do something fun, we’ll do some different stuff. We’re literally having a big meeting on Monday to get this stuff in order and get it going.”
White insisted there’s no added concern about bitter rivals McGregor and Nurmagomedov being around each other even though Nurmagomedov was the target of McGregor’s attack on a bus for which he was arrested and prosecuted.
“We’re pretty confident that we can control what happens,” White said. “What happened in New York, obviously if you look at what happened, everyone was loading onto the buses, everything was done, and our staff still handled it pretty damn well for what was going down.
“We’re very aware. Nothing is going to happen. We’ll be good.”
Hardy set for ‘Contender Series’ bout
Former NFL defensive lineman Greg Hardy will return to Dana White’s Tuesday Night Contender Series in Las Vegas.
Hardy made his pro debut on the show in June, knocking out Austen Lane in just 57 seconds.
White offered him a developmental deal in which Hardy will work with UFC officials to guide a career path into the organization.
That includes a rare second appearance on the Fight Pass show. He will take on undefeated prospect Tebaris Gordon on the card, which streams live at 5 p.m. from “The Ultimate Fighter” gym.
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Contact Adam Hill at ahill@reviewjournal.com or 702-277-8028. Follow @AdamHillLVRJ on Twitter.