Raoni Barcelos Considers It a ‘Blessing’ Victor Henry Accepted UFC Fight Night 199 Matchup
Considered one of the top prospects in the bantamweight division, Raoni Barcelos had a five-bout UFC winning streak snapped at the hands of Timur Valiev at UFC Fight Night 190 this past June.
Barcelos lacked the volume of his opponent, but he authored the fight’s most decisive moment when he floored Valiev twice in the second frame. Ultimately, he was unable to secure the finish and Valiev escaped with a majority decision triumph.
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Originally slated to face Trevin Jones, Barcelos will instead meet Victory Henry on short notice in a bantamweight contest at UFC Fight Night 199 at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas on Saturday. The opponent change didn’t faze the former Resurrection Fighting Alliance champion, who has faced multiple cancellations during his promotional tenure.
"Actually, I saw that as a blessing that Victor
Henry accepted on one week’s notice. I was already considering
not fighting,” Barcelos said. “I'm used to having opponents
switched in all my fights. Before Trevin
Jones I was training for another opponent.”
The former Brazilian wrestling and BJJ national champion isn’t attempting to hide his game plan for Henry, a 26-fight veteran with experience in organizations such as Rizin, Deep and Pancrase.
"I had little time to study him,” Barcelos said. “But I know he is very experienced, having skills in all areas, so I’m planning to impose my game and not let him destroy my dream of being a UFC bantamweight champion.”
Barcelos also commented on the exploits of rising bantamweight star Sean O’Malley, who is coming off a first-round TKO of Raulian Paiva at UFC 269. Former training partner Alexandre Pantoja commented that O’Malley “wouldn’t last one round” with Barcelos in a recent interview.
"Pantoja was a great training partner and friend,” Barcelos said. “I think O´Malley proved in the fight against Raulian that he is such an intelligent fighter with great striking and amazing distance control. I would love to fight him, but I'm not in the rankings yet. If the UFC puts him against a good grappler, like Merab Dvalishvili, he will have a real test.
“I believe a lot in the philosophy of my school, Ruas Vale Tudo. If my opponent punches and kicks, I grapple. If he is good at grappling, I take him to striking. That's how I fight and that's how I intend to reach the top of the division.”
If he is victorious on Saturday, Barcelos would like to revisit a booking against Raphael Assuncao. The two were scheduled to meet in February before Assuncao withdrew from the bout.
"We were close to fighting and he had to withdraw. He is still in the rankings. If we both win, I think that would be a great fight to have next.”
As far as the future, Barcelos likes former training partner Jose Aldo’s chances of ending 2022 with bantamweight gold. He sees a championship coming his way a little bit beyond that.
“It´s amazing to see what Aldo has been doing for such a long time. He is still evolving and I think he would be a favorite against [T.J. Dillashaw] or [Dominick Cruz]. For everything he did in MMA, Aldo deserves to finish his career with that title,” Barcelos said.
“My time will come. My goal is to fight three times in 2022 and by 2023 be at the top of the bantamweight division fighting for the title shot. Sooner or later I´ll reach my goal of being UFC bantamweight champion.”
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