“The Predator” is back. For the first time in 33 months, Francis Ngannou will make the walk to an octagon.
The former undisputed UFC heavyweight champion will return on Oct. 19 to face PFL heavyweight champion Renan Ferreira for the PFL Super Fight belt in Ngannou’s debut with the promotion.
Since defending his UFC heavyweight title against Ciryl Gane in January 2022, Ngannou has endured more than two years of negotiations, triumphs and heartbreak.
After spending 2022 recovering from surgery and waiting out the end of his contract to become the most sought-after free agent in MMA history, he spent the first half of 2023 negotiating a deal with the PFL that would allow him to compete as a boxer.
And then — after a world-class performance against lineal heavyweight champ Tyson Fury and a loss against Anthony Joshua — Ngannou suffered tragedy when his 15-month-old son died in April.
On Monday, Ngannou told The Athletic the loss left him with “a lot of insecurity, a lot of uncertainty,” and compared it to someone popping his life with a needle.
With Wednesday’s announcement, the 37-year-old said he has eagerly returned to the normalcy of his professional career.
And even after establishing himself as one of the most feared strikers in MMA history, he talked like a fighter hungry to prove himself.
“I have to prove that I can win this fight,” he said.
“The purpose (of this sport) is competing, giving your best every day. So yes I think I have something to prove, that I can still give my best.”
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As for what kind of fighter fans can expect nearly three years after his last MMA bout, Ngannou was bluntly simple: Much of what they’ve already seen.
“Just the same thing,” he said, later adding, “I think I show up doing everything to win the fight, knowing that I didn’t leave any stone unturned and that’s what I’m expecting to bring.”
If he’s right, he could change the landscape of the industry. The PFL has long been seen as a second-tier, if not third-tier, promotion to the UFC. Ngannou debuting with the same one-punch power that turned UFC’s heavyweight division upside down would give the PFL its most important moment.
Ferreira will be a formidable first opponent. The 6-foot-8, 34-year-old Brazillian is 13-3 and coming off a 21-second TKO of Ryan Bader in February for the “PFL vs. Bellator Champion” Super Belt. Before that, Ferreira defeated Denis Goltsov to win the 2023 PFL Heavyweight Tournament.
In an MMA era when “superfights” and long-hyped returns cause opponents to turn down years of other opportunities, such as Michael Chandler waiting for Conor McGregor in the UFC, this bout marks something different.
Ferreira took a calculated risk in sitting out the 2024 PFL season while he waited for Ngannou’s return after earning the shot by defeating Bader. He told MMA Fighting in March, “I’m very happy for this opportunity, and I hope it happens soon.”
Ngannou doesn’t talk lowly of Ferreira’s patience, comparing it to his own situation with becoming a free agent.
“When you have that opportunity, you just jump on it,” Ngannou told The Athletic. “Just as I went after my own opportunity in leaving the UFC when I chose that was necessary, I did what I had to do for my own opportunity.”
In the 15 months since signing with the PFL, Ngannou’s tactic of waiting out his contract hasn’t been duplicated by many others. But he doesn’t lose hope in changing the industry and believes his risk in 2022 built MMA-wide awareness of how fighter contracts work.
He even said some fighters have approached him for guidance on how to negotiate their future deals.
“Rome wasn’t built in one day. Change isn’t going to come around from one day or one year, maybe not five years,” he said. “But you can be certain that a lot of people today make moves and decisions using that as an example.”
He also doesn’t lose any sleep over the years that he did lose.
“I wasn’t missing anything. … My decision was for what I wanted and I what I think I should have done for me, so I don’t have regret.”
“At the end of the day, look at me. I think things played out for me just perfectly.”
Required reading
(Top photo courtesy of PFL)