Current:Home > FinanceSafeX Pro Exchange|Francis Ngannou, ex-UFC champ, hopes to restore his passion for fighting as he mourns -TradeGrid
SafeX Pro Exchange|Francis Ngannou, ex-UFC champ, hopes to restore his passion for fighting as he mourns
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-10 22:58:24
Why would a fighter grieving the death of his son head back into the MMA cage?SafeX Pro Exchange
It’s a question this week that hung over Francis Ngannou, the former UFC heavyweight champion.
Three months after announcing his 15-month-old young son had died of an undiagnosed brain malformation, Ngannou made another announcement.
On Oct. 19, he will fight Renan Ferreira, the current heavyweight champion on the Professional Fighters League (PFL), in a return to mixed martial arts as part of a PFL pay-per-view card. The site of the fight has yet to be announced, and Ngannou's full motivation to fight the 6-foot-8 Brazilian was open to speculation.
There is the matter of contractual obligation. Ngannou, who's from Cameroon, has a multi-fight deal with the PFL.
But during a video interview with USA TODAY Sports, Ngannou said something else is drawing him back to the cage for his first fight since the death of his son, Kobe.
“I didn't choose fighting as a profession,’’ Ngannou, 37, told USA TODAY Spots. “Fighting for me was a passion.
“I love fighting since I was kid, since I could even before walking. I love fighting and then, yeah, and at some point you need to have that feeling to get there to share life again.’’
It is a feeling that apparently escaped Ngannou April 27, the day his son died in Cameroon.
“This fight might be the thing that would really give me that feeling to be alive,’’ he said. “Be that in that environment that is in mind. Not that I will forget what happened. I'll (never) forget the loss of my kid, of my boy, but maybe you can still have that feeling. Connect with that place that's yours that you belong to.’’
Redefining devastation
The last time the sports world saw Ngannou, he was regaining consciousness inside a boxing ring.
Anthony Joshua, the former heavyweight champion, had knocked him down three times − and knocked him out cold in the second round of their fight March 8. It was a stunning development.
That prior October, in his pro boxing debut, Ngannou knocked down Tyson Fury, then the lineal world heavyweight champion. The bout ended in a split-decision loss, but that seemed almost inconsequential as Ngannou headed into his second pro boxing bout against Joshua with high expectations before the second-round knockout loss.
Devastating was a word used to describe the setback before real devastation struck.
The month after the fight, Ngannou has said, his son had trouble breathing. On two occasions, Ngannou told Joe Rogan on Rogan's podcast, doctors failed to diagnosis Kobe's brain malformation that resulted in his death.
Ngannou said he began to wonder if the world was ending as he was engulfed by powerlessness.
"You get to the point that you think you are strong,'' Ngannou told USA TODAY Sports. "That you think you have overcome a lot of things. And then all of a sudden you realize that you know are not that strong. You are just like everybody, or even less.''
Because the physical strength of the Cameroonian fighter with bulging biceps and 12 knockouts in 17 MMA victories, it proved to be of no help during medical crisis.
"You couldn't fight for your son,'' Ngannou said.
How will it all play out
During the video interview with USA TODAY Sports, Ngannou held up a photo of his son.
“I was waiting for him to be strong on his feet so we can go play soccer and stuff and planning, building a basketball court for him,’’ Ngannou said. “Or the stuff that I was doing thinking already of his education, where he should go to school, where should he have the proper education.’’
Now, there’s still the sense of fragility. Why plan in a world when life can end in an instant.
But as he’s begun to prepare for his next fight, against the massive Brazilian, Ngannou also seems ready to welcome the unknown.
“I don't know how this is going to play out,’’ he said. “I don't know how the new version of me can look. But I can’t know by just sitting here.’’
veryGood! (86563)
Related
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Oleksandr Usyk beats Tyson Fury by split decision: Round-by-round analysis, highlights
- Duke graduates who walked out on Jerry Seinfeld's commencement speech failed Life 101
- Meet the fashion designer who dresses Tyson Fury, Jake Paul and more of the world's biggest boxers
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- 'Dumb and Dumber': Jeff Daniels feared flushing away his career with infamous toilet scene
- Man City wins record fourth-straight Premier League title after 3-1 win against West Ham
- Georgia freshman wide receiver arrested for reckless driving
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Sentencing trial set to begin for Florida man who executed 5 women at a bank in 2019
Ranking
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Stock market today: Asian stocks advance after Wall Street closes out another winning week
- Surprise! Taylor Swift gifts fans a '1989' mashup at Saturday's Stockholm Eras Tour show
- 'Stax' doc looks at extraordinary music studio that fell to financial and racial struggles
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- John Krasinski pays tribute to his mom in 'IF' with a 'perfect' Tina Turner dance number
- Ohio voters approved reproductive rights. Will the state’s near-ban on abortion stand?
- Travis Kelce Shares Favorite Parts of Italy Trip With Taylor Swift
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Man suspected of shooting 6-month-old son in hostage standoff near Phoenix apparently killed himself
Jerry Seinfeld's comedy show interrupted by pro-Palestinian protesters after Duke walkouts
The Dow hit a new record. What it tells us about the economy, what it means for 401(k)s.
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Man wins nearly $2 million placing $5 side bet at Las Vegas casino
How long will cicadas be around this year? Here's when to expect Brood XIX, XIII to die off
Ohio Solar Mounts a Comeback in the Face of a Campaign Whose Alleged Villains Include China and Bill Gates