EXCLUSIVE | Al Iaquinta eyeing quick finish of ‘Cowboy’ at UFC Ottawa

By Tom Taylor - April 5, 2019

When Al Iaquinta upset Kevin Lee at the final UFC on FOX event in December, he sent himself rocketing up the lightweight rankings, and set himself up for another big fight in the crowded division. He’ll get that next big fight in the main event of the UFC’s May 4th return to Ottawa, Canada, where he’ll battle fan favorite contender Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone.

Al Iaquinta

Cowboy last fought in January, when he slowed the rise of Alex Hernandez, putting the young contender down with a head-kick and salvo of followup punches in the second round. Iaquinta believes that his experience will help him avoid meeting a similar fate when he battles the lightweight gunslinger in the Canadian capital.

“Stylistically, I think that, like I said before, my youth and my experience is peaking both at the same time right now,” he said on the latest stacked episode of BJPENN.com Radio. “I’m coming into my prime as far as physicality and my experience. I’ve been in there also with a bunch of the top guys. I’ve been in there with the best.

“I think that Cowboy’s last fight, he fought a guy who was young, hungry, but he wasn’t too experienced, and I think that showed as the fight wore on,” Iaquinta continued. “That kid got into the second round and he melted. I think that I have that same hunger and that same drive right now on my way up, but I have the experience that he lacked. I think that’s going to be the difference in this fight, that I have both. I have that hunger, that drive, that youthfulness, and the experience is what’s going to do it for me.”

While both Cowboy and Al Iaquinta have been involved in their fair share of wars in the past, the latter says his priority in Ottawa will be quick and efficient execution.

“I think it’s going to be a pretty good fight no matter how it goes,” Iaquinta said. “I’m going in there, I want to make it easy. I want to make it quick. I want to make it painless on my end. I just want to go out there and finish him in the first round. I think I have all the capabilities to do it.

“I remember watching the beginning of the fight in his last one, and I was like, ‘Oh, he’s not looking too young…’ But his experience pulled him through that one and I think that I’m going to be able to put it on him pretty quick.

“I’m also ready and prepared that he is an experienced guy, so he does hang in there. There’s been times where he’s kind of cracked, and I think that for the most part he usually hangs tough and he’s in there, unless you really put him out. But he does crack at times, and I’m looking to get on him early, make him crack”

If Al Iaquinta isn’t able to put Cowboy away early as planed, he’s prepared to go five rounds with the dangerous veteran if need be.

“I’ll be content to beat on him for all five rounds,” he said. “I mean, if this fight was next week, I’d be ready to go. I’ve been training hard. I just have a great formula with my team, the guys that I train with. It’s like clockwork. It’s enjoyable to go to the gym, to be with Ray Longo, Matt Serra, Aljamain Sterling, Merab [Dvalishvili], Matt Frevola… We’ve got a bunch of upcoming guys that are in the regional circuit and around my weight that are just animals, so it’s a good time. It’s a good time in the gym and it’s a good time for this fight. Everything’s coming together. It’s going to be really good.”

In the past, Cowboy has occasionally gotten quite friendly with his opponents, even swapping hugs and high-fives during lulls in the action. While Al Iaquinta assures he respects his UFC Ottawa opponent, he wants to make it clear that he is not flying to Canada to make friends.

“You got to be careful with that guy, I don’t know,” Iaquinta explained. “He was trying to get real buddy-buddy with me at the on sale tour when we went to Toronto to sell the tickets. He was asking me a bunch of questions about real estate and stuff, and I was giving him one word answers. Like, ‘Alright bro. Let’s not get too friendly.’

“He likes that. Like he kind of like tries to fool you into thinking, ‘Oh, we’re going to have a nice fight.’ It ain’t going to be a nice fight. I’m f***ing going after him. It’s going to be all respect, but I’m not going to be hugging his grandma after and like, ‘Oh, good fight. That was great,’ you know?

“He wants the same shit I want, and I want it more, so I’m going out there to take it. It’s not going to be like f***ing a Yancy Medeiros fight. It’s going to be where I’m in his face the whole time. There’s no hugging in between knockdowns and shit like that.”

If things go according to plan for Al Iaquinta, and he out-duels Cowboy in Ottawa, he’ll emerge as one of the top contenders in the UFC lightweight division. With reigning champion Khabib Nurmagomedov suspended, and Dustin Poirier and Max Holloway soon battling for the interim lightweight title at UFC 236, The New Yorker recognizes that the path to another lightweight title shot is not particularly clear at present. That being said, he’s confident that an impressive performance in Ottawa will give him a massive push in the right direction. And that is the primary objective.

“You never know,” he said of a title shot. “It could be one [win] … It depends how I win. It depends what happens with everybody else [in the division]. The division’s crazy right now, so yeah, I don’t know. We’ll see what happens. I just know, no matter what, I got to go out there and I got to perform. That’s really what I’m going to do. That’s it.”

If Al Iaquinta defeats Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone in the UFC Ottawa main event, where do you think he’ll stand in the perilous UFC lightweight division?

This article first appeared on BJPENN.COM on 4/5/2019. 


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