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So considering that Henry Cejudo had been stopped in less than three minutes in his first bout with Demetrious Johnson, not many gave him a shot at dethroning the UFC’s only flyweight champion on August 4th of last year.

Cejudo believed, and he knew just what it would take to beat “Mighty Mouse.”

“The key to beating Demetrious Johnson was composure,” he said. “I studied this man so much that I knew composure would be key because I knew everything he would do.”
 

What Cejudo didn’t know that he was going to sprain his ankle less than a minute into the UFC 227 co-main event. Now he needed that composure more than ever. And he found it, staying cool, sticking to the game plan, and with the fight up for grabs heading into the fifth and final round, he went for the belt.

“I knew that going into round five it was up for grabs and I knew I had to push the pace and that’s exactly what I did,” said Cejudo, who won the round and the fight via split decision. “The Messenger” was the UFC flyweight champion of the world. 

“It showed who Henry Cejudo is,” he said. “I fight through adversity. The first 20-30 seconds of the match, I sprained my ankle and I was able to defeat the greatest fighter of all-time with a sprained ankle, so that just lets you know the type of heart I have and the type of person that I am.”

Cejudo didn’t need to prove that he had heart. He showed that a long time ago, as he made it through harrowing times growing up in Phoenix to shock the world in 2008 by winning an Olympic gold medal in freestyle wrestling at the age of 21. Then he beat Johnson. On Saturday night, he’ll look to turn back the challenge of UFC bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw in Brooklyn. 

“It (beating Johnson) ain’t the first time I shocked the world,” he said. “I shocked the world in 2008 at the Olympics and I shocked the world at UFC 227 and I’m looking to shock the world again.”

Hate to disappoint the 31-year-old, but if he beats Dillashaw on Saturday to successfully defend his title, it won’t be a shocker. Not after he ended the long reign of Johnson to cement his place as one of the best fighters in the game. Guys like that don’t pull off upsets. When they win, it’s almost expected. And Cejudo expects it, just like he did against DJ.

“The reason I was able to defeat Demetrious Johnson was because it was in my head,” he said. “I’m a competitor and I believe I’m one of the greatest competitors to ever walk this Earth. And the fact that people would even doubt me is ridiculous, even after beating a guy like Demetrious Johnson.” 

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If there was an ounce of doubt in Cejudo’s own head, that was erased moments after the verdict was read in STAPLES Center, as the new champion made an immediate call for his fellow titleholder ten pounds north.

“After the fight, I decided to call out the champ up a weight, TJ Dillashaw,” he said. “I believe they’ve always overlooked me. They’ve always talked about TJ and DJ fighting in the SuperFight and I said, ‘TJ, you’ve got a date with Henry Cejudo now.’

“That’s who Henry Cejudo is. Bring him on.”

You can usually detect when a fighter is talking for the cameras and not necessarily telling the truth. There is none of that coming from the mouth of Cejudo. He believes every word when he declares that this fight belongs to him and him alone. 

“I love this matchup because TJ has never fought a wrestler, a smart person like me,” he said. “I will adjust to this man, I’m a chameleon. According to what he’s giving me, I will adapt.

“I’m a different person,” Cejudo continues. “I have a different mindset, I’m a different athlete, I’m a different competitor.”

He’s also a champion, one who will do what it takes to keep that belt around his waist.

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