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Makhachev chokes out Oliveira to claim UFC lightweight crown

Reuters
Islam Makhachev (2nd-L) celebrates with his team including Khabib Nurmagomedov after defeating Charles Oliveira for the UFC lightweight championship
Islam Makhachev (2nd-L) celebrates with his team including Khabib Nurmagomedov after defeating Charles Oliveira for the UFC lightweight championshipAFP
Islam Makhachev (30) pulled off a sensational submission win over Charles Oliveira (33) to win the lightweight title and Aljamain Sterling (33) beat TJ Dillashaw (36) by TKO to claim the bantamweight belt at UFC 280 at the Etihad Arena on Saturday.

Makhachev capped his ascent to the lightweight throne with a brilliant win by arm triangle choke against Brazilian Oliveira, the holder of the UFC record for submission wins with 16.

Oliveira was stripped of the lightweight belt in May when he missed the weight for his title clash with Justin Gaethje (33) and though he beat the American the title remained vacant, setting up the showdown with Russian Makhachev.

After spending much of the first round defending and trying to threaten with submissions off his back, Oliveira tried to keep the fight on the feet in the second round.

That tactic looked like it was paying off until he was decked by a punch from Makhachev, who wasted no time jumping on his opponent, locking in the choke and forcing the tap for Oliveira.

Makhachev dedicated the win to his late coach Abdulmanap Nurmagomedov, who died in 2020, saying: "Many years ago he told me just train hard and I will be champion", before handing the belt to Khabib Nurmagomedov (34) who took over from his father as the Russian's coach and is himself a former UFC lightweight champion.

His 11th submission win moves Makhachev on to a record of 23 wins and one loss as a pro.

In the co-main event Dillashaw, who had to give up the belt and serve a two-year suspension after testing positive for EPO in 2019, suffered a dislocated shoulder early in the first round but somehow made it through the first frame.

Reigning champion Sterling did not let up and Dillashaw's shoulder popped out again in the second round, allowing the Jamaican-American to take him down and dominate him until referee Mark Goddard called a halt

"I probably popped it out about 20 times in training camp... I told the ref in the back that my shoulder is probably going to pop out, we'll put it back so if it does don't stop (the fight)," American Dillashaw said in his post-fight interview.

In the main card's other big fight, American Sean O'Malley (27) won a close split decision over Russian Petr Yan (29) after a three-round brawl to put himself in pole position for a shot at the bantamweight title.

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