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Aljamain Sterling Doubtful To Defend Bantamweight Championship In March vs. Henry Cejudo With Torn Bicep

A big blow to a huge Bantamweight championship has unfolded in the UFC.

Aljamain Sterling has revealed that he has a torn bicep and will likely not be able to defend his title against Henry Cejudo in March.

Here is the clip where Sterling explains his situation.

“I’m going to need this bicep to compete at 100 percent, and I don’t take Henry Cejudo lightly. … I’ve got to make sure I’m in shape, and it’s hard to get in shape when I have this thing compromised with me the entire time,” Sterling said on his Weekly Scraps video podcast. “Yes, I can run, yes I can do sprints – those are all cool, but I need to make sure I have the grappling endurance to go 25 minutes.”

Sterling later expanded on this history of his injury.

The apparent delay is another round of frustration for top bantamweight contender Sean O’Malley, who called for a title shot after beating ex-champ Petr Yan on the undercard of UFC 280 in which Sterling defeated ex-champ T.J. Dillashaw.

Cejudo entered the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency’s drug testing pool this past year in anticipation of a comeback. The Olympic gold medalist wrestler stepped away from the sport in 2020 after defending the bantamweight title; he sought bigger paydays to incentivize him against getting out of the fight business.

After a long period of limbo with the UFC, which wasn’t thrilled with his sudden departure, Cejudo jumped to the front of the line when O’Malley didn’t wow UFC President Dana White at UFC 280. O’Malley has gone unbeaten in his past five fights including his win over Yan.

Cejudo later responded to O’Malley’s tweet.

Sterling said after weighing his options, he elected to prioritize his health.

“If you guys want to be mad at me, it is what it is. I’ve had fans mad at me nonstop for 13 months. It’s water off a duck’s back. I can’t push myself to do something I can’t physically do. I’ve fought twice in a calendar year, and I’ve fought both of those fights compromised … and I got through those fights. … It’s the fight before the fight. We’re fighters, we all go in there compromised, but what I’m trying to not have happen is to go through an entire training camp, or almost an entire training camp, waste four to six weeks, maybe seven? Who wants to see that? Why am I going to risk a third time, where if I completely snap it, I have to have surgery.”

He said Cejudo had “physical advantages” because he hadn’t been actively fighting and was “doing who knows what” while out of the drug testing pool. He stopped short of accusing Cejudo of performance-enhancing drug use, but pointed out a loophole in USADA’s testing program upon a fighter’s retirement.

Sterling later responded to O’Malley on Twitter.

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