Being heavyweight champion is a peak experience for any fighter, largely because the title carries the nickname “the toughest man on the planet”. This glorifying title emerged in boxing in the late 1980s, during Mike Tyson’s reign as heavyweight champion. His aggressiveness, punching power, and intimidating behavior defeated his opponents through both intimidation and blows. No one since then has matched his fearsome aura in boxing, and the nickname “the toughest man” has essentially moved to MMA, a sport with a wider variety of combat than anything the Marquess of Queensberry ever imagined. Ask three-time boxing champion James Toney, who was easily knocked down by Randy Couture in 18 seconds and submitted during his 2010 UFC fight. When an MMA heavyweight is recognized as “the baddest man on the planet,” it’s often the result of the story of how he won the championship. Francis Ngannou captured the UFC belt in 2021 by knocking out Stipe Miocic, whose three title defenses set a heavyweight record that still stands. Miocic first won the title in 2016 by knocking out Fabricio Werdum, who had previously secured a place of honor in the annals of the sport by defeating two of the greatest of all time, Fedor Emelianenko and Cain Velasquez. Velasquez, whose multifaceted skill set and full-throttle engine made him unlike any previous heavyweight, became UFC champion in 2010 with an iconic destruction of the seemingly indestructible Brock Lesnar. Contrast those spectacular ascents to the mountain’s summit with the unobstructed rise of the current UFC heavyweight belt holder, Tom Aspinall. While Ngannou, Miocic, and many other greats established their supremacy with resounding victories, Aspinall did not dethrone a reigning champion to obtain the title. The UFC simply promoted him from interim champion to undisputed champion four months ago to fill a vacancy left by Jon Jones’ retirement. Aspinall will defend the belt for the first time on Saturday, facing title challenger for the third time Ciryl Gane at UFC 321 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (2 p.m. ET on ESPN PPV, prelims at 10 a.m. on ESPN+). But even before the new champion steps into the Octagon this weekend, here’s something essential to know about him: Aspinall has already established himself as the most dominant heavyweight in MMA history.
If that sounds premature or even absurd, consider that this is not a proclamation that Aspinall (15-3) is the best heavyweight in history. That honor is generally given to Emelianenko, who amassed an undefeated streak of 29 fights that spanned almost the entire first decade of the 2000s.
Aspinall is also not the most successful heavyweight in MMA. There is a strong argument for Miocic, who defended the UFC title more than anyone and holds the heavyweight record with six wins in title fights. Perhaps the most successful is Couture, the only fighter who reigned three times as UFC heavyweight champion.
- He has the shortest average fight time in UFC history (2 minutes and 2 seconds).
- He has spent the least amount of time in bottom position of any fighter in UFC history (1 second).
- His average of 4.09 takedowns per 15 minutes of fight time is the highest in UFC heavyweight history (the second highest in any weight class).
- His average of 8.07 significant strikes landed per minute is the highest in UFC heavyweight history (the third highest in any weight class).
- His significant strike differential (strikes landed minus strikes received) of over 5.18 per minute is the highest in UFC history.
If anyone from MMA’s past showed Aspinall-level supreme domination, it was Ronda Rousey. She won her first 12 fights, all by finish, all but one in the first round. The last three fights during that untouchable streak ended in 16, 14, and 34 seconds. But then everything fell apart for “Rowdy Ronda”, thanks to Holly Holm and Amanda Nunes.
In the heavyweight division, the story was very similar with Shane Carwin. He also built a 12-0 record with quick finishes: in his case, they all came in the first round. Carwin was on his way to adding a thirteenth demolition, until Lesnar withstood a beating in the first round and survived the bell. When the second round began, Carwin was in uncharted waters, and Lesnar choked him out. So far, the dominance of the greats.Some might say that Aspinall, like Jones, deserves an incomplete grade. But while he hasn’t yet made a single defense of the undisputed title, Aspinall put his interim belt on the line once while waiting (in vain) for Jones to return. He holds a victory over a former UFC heavyweight champion, Andrei Arlovski. And if he defeats Gane on Saturday (as a -425 favorite according to ESPN BET), Aspinall will have beaten all four UFC heavyweights ranked just behind him in ESPN’s divisional rankings. That’s a hefty dose of dominance for a career that seems to be just beginning.
At 32 years old, Aspinall has time to achieve much more and face any challenge that comes his way. No one has stopped his progress yet. Will he add another stellar chapter to a story that has been all his own this weekend, or will the narrative about Tom Aspinall change completely?