Henry Cejudo had high praise for former UFC foe Merab Dvalishvili.
Cejudo (16-5 MMA, 10-5 UFC) lost to Dvalishvili by unanimous decision at UFC 298. Dvalishvili went on to dethrone Sean O’Malley to become bantamweight champion at UFC 306, and notched his first title defense by handing Umar Nurmagomedov his first loss at UFC 311.
Olympic gold medalist wrestler and former UFC dual-champion Cejudo was put in unfamiliar territory by Dvalishvili (19-4 MMA, 12-2 UFC) when he was taken down five times in their fight.
“I knew Merab was really, really good with his chain fighting,” Cejudo said on the JAXXON PODCAST. “So, it’s not even wrestling, it’s how you chain it. That’s what separates them. Chaining is really putting the punches together and boom, the level change comes. Rather than just you maybe throwing a right hand and all of a sudden the level change comes.
“He’s able to mix it very good with his fakes and feints into takedowns. He’s a f*cking machine. It’s his cardio, it’s his conditioning. It’s the same reason why he can’t knock people out because he just knows that certain threshold where he could just keep it there and take it there. He can’t necessarily finish you, but he’ll f*cking drown you.”
Dvalishvili will run things back with O’Malley (18-2 MMA, 10-2 UFC) in the UFC 316 main event on June 7 from Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. Cejudo sticks by his statement that Dvalishvili is the greatest bantamweight of all time.
“I got to give credit to Merab and this is why I would say he’s the greatest bantamweight of all time,” Cejudo said. “Maybe he doesn’t have the title defenses, but look at who he’s beat. Yeah (he’s better than Dillashaw). Look at the list of who he’s beat and how he’s beat them. There’s a big difference.”

