If Yoel Romero evens the score with Robert Whittaker in their UFC 225 rematch on Saturday, “The Reaper” may have to get used to seeing the Cuban.
“I’m not against fighting him for a third time, or a fourth time,” said Romero through a translator. “I’ve done it several times in wrestling. In wrestling, I’ve had to fight five or six times with the same athlete. So I might fight Robert, three, four, five times. As many times as needed. That’s why I’m here. To fight.”
He smiles when he says it, and he means that statement and that smile. It’s a beautiful thing to find your niche in life, and while wrestling put Romero on the map when he won a silver medal in the 2000 Sydney Games, mixed martial arts made him a star.
Just check out his social media accounts, look at the Reebok shirt celebrating him, and you’ll see that he has become an unlikely crossover star over the last couple years.
“I am astonished at how people have accepted me,” Romero said. “The acceptance I’ve had from the people here in Miami, people know me wherever I go and they identify with me. I like interacting with people, chatting with people. And that communication between me and the fans, that exchange of energy, that’s beautiful.”
It’s that energy that may be the secret of Romero’s appeal. In the Octagon or out, there is an aura around “The Soldier of God.” On fight night, it manifests itself in explosive bursts of power that can end a fight in a split second. Outside of it, there’s an impossible to describe charisma to him, making him someone you can’t turn away from.
In other words, things could get even bigger for him should he defeat Whittaker, even if he can’t take home the middleweight title after missing weight on Friday at 185.2 pounds.

It’s the talk of a sportsman, and the UFC 225 bout has no hint of bad blood or gamesmanship. It’s simply the two best middleweights in the world matching wits and fists. That wasn’t the case in Romero’s last fight in February, when he got into it verbally with former champ Luke Rockhold, who had some pointed barbs to throw at his opponent. It irked Romero.
“I was called on short notice, but I accepted the challenge,” he said. “Firstly, because Luke had made some statements against me and I don’t think it was ethical; there were no sport ethics in what he was saying. We hadn’t had a close relationship, but we shared some things. We hung out on several occasions, and you need some ethics. If you think something is wrong, and you weren’t asked, don’t talk. If he was asked, he should have been more ethical. If he wasn’t asked, he shouldn’t have spoken. He didn’t say nice things about me, so that fight was actually needed. We needed to fight.”
And they did, and as Rockhold found out, don’t get on Romero’s bad side.
“I’ve always said what you’ll do, do it the day of the fight. What you intend to do, do it the day of the fight. So my coach told him, ‘The freshness of the tongue is paid by the teeth.’ He predicted it.”
It was a devastating third-round knockout win for Romero, and while he didn’t get the interim title due to another instance of missing weight, he did get his rematch with Whittaker, and when it comes to the result of this fight, Romero is confident, but not cocky. So don’t expect a prediction for Saturday night’s bout.
Well, maybe two.
“We’ll do our best,” Romero said. “Blood will be shed. I can promise that.”