UFC 268 Usman vs. Covington 2: Live results and analysis

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NEW YORK – Kamaru Usman and Colby Covington went back and forth Thursday during a heated news conference, fueled by a crowd starved for conflict. Usman shoved Covington during the staredown, sending the fans to another level of raucousness.

There has not been a major MMA show in New York City in two years, but on Saturday, the big show returns to the Big Apple.

Usman defends his UFC welterweight title against Covington in the main event of UFC 268 at Madison Square Garden. The two fought at UFC 245 in December 2019 with Usman winning via fifth-round TKO in what is considered one of the best title fights in UFC history.

ESPN ranks Usman as No.1 on its pound-for-pound list. At welterweight, Usman is No. 1 and Covington is No. 3. On Saturday, Usman will look to further his legacy as one of the best 170-pound fighters ever against Covington, who is trying to prove that Usman’s TKO win two years ago was just a one-time occurrence.

Two title rematches headline a deep UFC 268 card. Kamaru Usman puts his welterweight title on the line against Colby Covington for the second time, while two-time strawweight champ defends against Zhang Weili, whom she beat in April. Also, in a key lightweight bout, Justin Gaethje faces Michael Chandler.

Buy UFC 268 on ESPN+ PPV

UFC 268: Usman vs. Covington 2
• Saturday, Madison Square Garden, NY
• Main card: 10 p.m. ET on ESPN+ PPV
• Prelims: 8 p.m. ET on ESPNEWS/ESPN+
• Early prelims: 6 p.m. ET on ESPN+

Subscribe to ESPN+ to get exclusive live UFC events, weigh-ins and more; Dana White’s Contender Series; and more exclusive MMA content.

Usman (19-1) has 14 straight wins in the UFC — the second longest such UFC streak behind only Anderson Silva (16), who is considered one of the best of all time. The Nigeria native, who lives in Florida and trains in Colorado, is coming off a second-round knockout win over Jorge Masvidal at UFC 261 in April. Usman, 34, has four title defenses and is chasing the welterweight record of nine set by Georges St-Pierre.

Covington (16-2) has won eight of his last nine fights, with the only loss during that span coming to Usman. The California native fighting out of Florida has not fought since a fifth-round TKO win over Tyron Woodley in September 2020. Covington, 34, is the former UFC interim welterweight champion.

In the co-main event, UFC women’s strawweight champion Rose Namajunas defends her title against former champ Zhang Weili. Namajunas (10-4), a 29-year-old fighting out of Colorado, stopped Zhang in the first round with a head kick at UFC 261. Zhang (21-2), the first-ever UFC champion born in China, had her 21-fight winning streak snapped by Namajunas seven months ago.

Also on the card, former interim UFC lightweight champion Justin Gaethje faces former Bellator lightweight champion Michael Chandler in what could be a title eliminator. Plus, former lightweight champ Frankie Edgar meets Marlon “Chito” Vera in a bantamweight bout, and Al Iaquinta faces Bobby Green in a battle of fan-favorite lightweights.

Follow along as Brett Okamoto, Marc Raimondi and Jeff Wagenheim recap all the action or watch the fights on ESPN+ PPV.

Fight in progress: Middleweight: Edmen Shahbazyan (11-2, 4-2 UFC, +100) vs. Nassourdine Imavov (10-3, 2-1 UFC, -120)

Results:

Welterweight: Ian Garry (8-0, 1-0 UFC) def. Jordan Williams (9-6, 0-3 UFC) by first-round KO (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

The undefeated Garry’s UFC debut was not going so well. The 23-year-old Irishman’s face was reddened from absorbing several punches as the final seconds of the first round ticked off the clock. Then Williams, who is 31 and from Englewood, Colorado, tried to punctuate the round with one final left hand. He missed.

Garry returned fire and did not miss. He stepped back to avoid the punch and unleashed a counter right hand that connected on the button and dropped Williams in his tracks. Referee Mike Beltran jumped right in to declare it a knockout at 4:59.

Afterward, Garry spoke about being a future champ with all the boldness of another Irish fighter. The former Cage Warriors champion even quoted Conor McGregor’s most famous line: “We’re not here to take part; we’re here to take over.”

From the hardest first round of his entire career, to put in an incredible ko with seconds remaining #UFC268 @ufc

— Juan Espino El Guapo (@juan_espino_ofi) November 6, 2021

Then Garry offered an addendum: “This is the takeover, Part 2.”

Heavyweight: Chris Barnett (22-7, 1-1 UFC) def. Gian Villante (17-14, 7-11 UFC) by second-round TKO (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Chris Barnett earned the first knockout of the night at UFC 268, utilizing a wheel kick to defeat Gian Villante. It was the first time in UFC history a heavyweight won a fight via wheel kick. Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

Barnett probably won’t win a fitness competition any time soon, but “Beast Boy” can put together a highlight-reel finish in the cage — that’s for sure.

Barnett dropped Villante with a wicked spinning hook kick to the head and followed on the ground for a TKO victory at 2:23 of the second round. After the finish, Barnett did a front flip and landed butt first on the canvas as a celebration. Barnett is the first UFC heavyweight fighter to win via a spinning kick, per ESPN Stats & Info.

“My f—ing heel is killing me,” Barnett said after the fight. “My man has the head of a cinderblock. My foot is on fire right now.”

During that interview, Barnett praised Villante, a New York native in his final UFC fight. Before the finish, Barnett and Villante were trading hard kicks to the body and legs for the better part of two rounds. Barnett said he figured he had to switch it up with something flashy since Villante was matching him kick for kick.

Barnett, 35, picked up his first UFC victory on Saturday. The Florida native, who was born in Spain, made his UFC debut in May after 12 years as a pro fighter in multiple disciplines all over the world. Villante, a 36-year-old Long Islander, has dropped four straight, the last three after moving up to heavyweight from light heavyweight. — Raimondi

Ok he’s awesome. I wanna hang out with him #UFC268

— Niko Price (@Nikohybridprice) November 6, 2021

Light heavyweight: Dustin Jacoby (16-5-1, 4-2-1 UFC) def. John Allan (13-7 1 NC, 0-2 1NC UFC) by unanimous decision (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Dustin Jacoby, left, took a fight against John Allan on late notice and won — extending his UFC record to 4-0-1. Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

Jacoby, of Colorado, cruised to an easy win on the scorecards, following a slow 15-minute affair. The 33-year-old took the fight on short notice, but had no problem picking at Allan from range with jabs and front kicks. Jacoby rarely threw anything behind the distance strikes though, and never appeared to have Allan hurt.

Despite the fact he was at a clear disadvantage, Allan, of Curitiba, Brazil, didn’t appear to have a backup plan or just wasn’t capable of executing one. He continued to fight Jacoby at range and had very few moments of success offensively.

Jacoby remains unbeaten in the UFC. He is 4-0-1 since signing with the promotion last year. — Okamoto

Men’s featherweight: Melsik Baghdasaryan (7-1, 2-0 UFC) def. Bruno Souza (10-2, 0-1 UFC ) by unanimous decision (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Melsik Baghdasaryan, left, won his seventh straight fight and pushed his UFC record to 2-0 against Bruno Souza. Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

On the night before the New York City Marathon, these two fighters put in the miles, circling each other inside the cage for the better part of 15 minutes. Baghdasaryan was in pursuit, but unable to land a whole lot, but his leg kicks and occasional flurries were enough to earn him the 29-28 nod on all three scorecards.

For Baghdasaryan, who is 29 and from Glendale, California, it was his seventh win in a row, including his last two in the UFC. He just never was able to cut off the cage on his elusive opponent.

Souza, a 25-year-old Brazilian who fights out of Los Angeles, saw a 10-fight winning streak come to an end in a fight in which he avoided significant damage, but did not mount much offense. — Wagenheim

Men’s flyweight: Ode’ Osbourne (10-4, 2-2 UFC) def. C.J. Vergara (9-3-1, 0-1 UFC) by unanimous decision (Watch this fight on ESPN+)

Ode’ Osbourne,right, opened the action at UFC 268 with a unanimous decision victory over C.J. Vergara. Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

No, Osbourne didn’t exactly end the fight in spectacular fashion. Vergara was on top, landing ground and pound until the bell.

But Osbourne did enough early to earn a unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28) in the UFC 268 opener. Simply, Osbourne landed the harder blows in the first and second rounds. In the first, he blasted Vergara with some solid combinations and that continued in the second with Osbourne landing a sneaky left hand. In the third, Osbourne started hot with combinations, but seemed to tire and Vergara stole momentum with a takedown and top position.

Osbourne, 29, is now 2-2 in the UFC. The Jamaica native, who fights out of Milwaukee, is a Dana White’s Contender Series alum. Vergara, a 30-year-old Texan, was making his UFC debut. He missed weight by 1.4 pounds Friday. — Raimondi

Still to come:

Welterweight championship: Kamaru Usman (c) (19-1, 14-0 UFC, -310) vs. Colby Covington (16-2, 11-2 UFC, +250)
Strawweight championship: Rose Namajunas (c) (11-4, 8-3 UFC, -105) vs. Zhang Weili (21-2, 5-1 UFC, -115)
Men’s bantamweight: Frankie Edgar (23-9-1, 18-9-1 UFC, +135) vs. Marlon Vera (17-7-1, 11-6 UFC, -160)
Men’s featherweight: Shane Burgos (13-3, 6-3 UFC, -195) vs. Billy Quarantillo (16-3, 4-1 UFC, +165)
Lightweight: Justin Gaethje (22-3, 5-3 UFC, -210) vs. Michael Chandler (22-6, 1-1 UFC, +175)
Middleweight: Alex Pereira (3-1, 0-0 UFC, -260) vs. Andreas Michailidis (13-4, 1-1 UFC, +210)
Lightweight: Al Iaquinta (14-6-1, 9-5 UFC, +155) vs. Bobby Green (27-12-1, 8-7-1 UFC, -180)
Middleweight: Phil Hawes (11-2, 3-0 UFC, -330) vs. Chris Curtis (26-8, 0-0 UFC, +260)

(c) = defending champion