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Kyoji Horiguchi Focused on UFC Flyweight Title After Latest Victory

Kyoji Horiguchi was in prime form against Amir Albazi. | Getty/UFC


More than 10 years ago, Kyoji Horiguchi wasn’t ready to become UFC champion.

The Japanese standout squared off against pound-for-pound great Demetrious Johnson at UFC 186, falling to “Mighty Mouse” via armbar in the fifth round of their April 2015 championship bout. Horiguchi would win three more UFC bouts before parting ways with the Las Vegas-based promotion in 2016. He enjoyed plenty of success in Rizin and Bellator before returning to the UFC late last year. On Saturday, he earned his second consecutive victory in the Octagon, as he cruised past Amir Albazi in the UFC Fight Night 266 co-main event.

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“I’m better at everything,” Horiguchi said of the difference between now and then at Saturday’s post-fight press conference. “Fighting fear, scared, everything, I learn. That’s why I’m strong right now.”

At 35 years old, Horiguchi appears to still be at the peak of his powers. With that in mind, he has his sights set on adding UFC hardware to a trophy case that already includes Rizin and Bellator belts.

“I don’t care,” Horiguchi said. “I want a belt. If the champion is [Alexandre] Pantoja, yes Pantoja. If it’s other guy, yes other guy. That’s all.”

Joshua Van claimed the flyweight strap when Pantoja suffered an arm injury early in their UFC 323 encounter this past December. Pantoja has been a training partner of Horiguchi’s at American Top team, and the Japanese standout would be more than willing to give the Brazilian a shot at the title if it comes to that.

“Of course,” Horiguchi said. “He defended it many times. I think he’s a true champion. It was an accident. I think he’s a true champion.”

The Perfectionist

While Horiguchi was nearly flawless against Albazi on Satruday, he still saw plenty of room for improvement.

“Not my best performance – I want to finish him,” Horiguchi said. “Of course I want to get the belt soon. I will keep training, go back to Florida and I’m just focused on the belt.”

Horiguchi seemed to be nursing a hand injury as he fulfilled his media obligations, but he doesn’t expect it to be a significant hindrance.

“I’m not sure [when I’ll fight next] because maybe my hand is a little broke, but when I fix this, it doesn’t matter,” Horiguchi said. “Anywhere, anytime, I can fight.”

This article first appeared at Recent News on Sherdog.com


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