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<a href='../fighter/Sean-O-Malley'>Sean O’Malley</a> does a backflip as he celebrates his knockout victory over <a href='../fighter/Alfred-Khashakyan'>Alfred Khashakyan</a> in their bantamweight bout during Dana White’s Tuesday Night Contender Series at the TUF Gym on July 18, 2017 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Brandon Magnus/DWTNCS)“ align=“center“/>Sean O’Malley had everything you want to see in a fighter when he stole the show on Week Two of Dana White’s Tuesday Night Contender Series in July. From charisma and flash to a highlight reel finish, the Montana native hit all his marks with style as he knocked out Alfred Khashakyan.<p>On Friday, O’Malley is back in Las Vegas to make his UFC debut against <a href=Terrion Ware. But will he still be “Sugar” Sean as the crowd and platform gets even bigger?

“I think the bigger the show and the more people, the better it is for me,” he said. “I thrive on that and I love that. I would rather fight in a bigger show with more people with Dana in front of me. That’s where I want to fight and that’s how I’ve been my whole life. That’s what I want. So I think it’s just gonna benefit me more.”

It’s the answer you expect from the 23-year-old, who took over the MMA world for a minute after his win over Khashakyan, and while the Summer of Sugar may have given way to a more sedate fall season, there is no dip in the confidence level of O’Malley heading into the latest “biggest fight” of his career. In fact, it’s business as usual for a fighter who hasn’t seen life change too much for him since earning his first UFC contract.

“My girl and I bought a house, so that’s a big change, but other than that, I’m still training, and life’s pretty much been the same,” he said. And while Ware and the rest of the up and comers on the bantamweight roster will love to get a crack at the kid who got so much attention over the last few months, O’Malley doesn’t feel like there will be too many potential opponents lining up after they see this week’s bout.

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“I don’t know if there’s a target on my back,” he said. “I haven’t really felt that or seen it on social media or anything. I think after this fight, I don’t know if there will be a target on my back because I don’t think people are gonna really want to fight me. They’re gonna see how fast I am, how good my eyes are, and my skill level.”

His eyes?

“It’s important, especially for my style,” O’Malley explains. “If I can keep it standing, that’s where I want to keep it, and once I fight a wrestler, they’re gonna be shooting in on me and they’re going to be opening themselves up for getting knocked out. Even strikers too. I feel like I see everyone’s stuff coming, and I feel like I’m gonna be super hard to hit for a lot of these guys. My eyes are just too fast. I see what they’re doing and see where I need to be.”

That kind of vision has nothing to do with the speed and reflexes of youth. That’s a gift you either have or you don’t. O’Malley started realizing he had it when he began training with his MMA Lab teammates in Arizona.

“I came to The Lab and I was doing pretty good against some of the UFC guys in there as an amateur, and I think it was just natural,” he said. “I was seeing a lot of things in there. I still get hit – obviously everyone gets hit – but if I do get hit, it’s barely. And once I turned pro and started realizing that, it felt like I was a step ahead of people and it boosted my confidence and it’s helped my game evolve a lot.”

Now 8-0 as a pro, O’Malley is still young in life and his career, but he’s had no reason to think that things won’t keep going the way they have when he faces Ware.

“I feel like it’s a chess match and I’m a step ahead in the striking department and every time I fight, I think it’s gonna be a good night for me. I feel like I’m gonna go in there, pick this dude apart and end up knocking him out. That’s how I felt every fight, that’s pretty much what happens every fight, and I think no different about this fight.”

Eight wins, six finishes, five knockouts. Yeah, things are right on schedule for the man in charge of “The Sugar Show.” Just like he planned it.

“At a young age I felt like I was gonna do something big,” O’Malley said. “I didn’t know what it was gonna be. I remember being in seventh grade and thinking I was gonna be in the NFL, but at a young age I always thought I was gonna be something great, and I kind of went with that. I feel like I was born to be something special and everything’s happened perfectly.”

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