At 36 Years Old, UFC Fighter Frankie Edgar Starting To Feel The Urgency Of His Career

At 36 Years Old, UFC Fighter Frankie Edgar Starting To Feel The Urgency Of His Career

One of the biggest bouts on tonight's UFC card is Frankie Edgar vs. Brian Ortega. Doing media rounds, Edgar discusses facing the younger generation and says that "time is ticking" on his career. Check it out...

By EliteGuy101 - Mar 03, 2018 01:03 PM EST
Filed Under: UFC
Source: MMA Fighting
Edgar accepted the non-title fight against undefeated contender Brian Ortega at UFC 222 on short notice, despite the fact that a title shot against UFC featherweight champion Max Holloway already belonged to him. Many fighters would’ve shied away from the risk and waited out their chance at gold — and Edgar even received plenty of advice to do the same — but he wanted to compete on March 3 simply because that’s what old-school fighters do, consequences be damned.

“My fans don’t want to see me not fight. Even some of my friends were telling me to wait and sit … but I think the real fans just want to see guys fight,” Edgar said Thursday at UFC 222 media day. “They want to see good fights. Titles, all this interim stuff and everything, picking and choosing nowadays, it’s definitely left a little bit of a stain, I think, on the sport, so if I can just go out there and just put on a show for everybody, that’s [what I want to do].”

It’s the kind of mindset fight fans have come to expect from Edgar, who at 36 years old, finds himself becoming one of the old dogs on the lighter-weight circuit.

 “The Answer” remains as relevant as ever, a winner of seven of his last eight, even as his 37th birthday looms. Rarely do fighters of Edgar’s size find success well into their late-30s. What Edgar has done is simply remarkable; however, even he knows it can’t last forever, and that crunch of the clock is something Edgar has become acutely aware of as his time left in MMA wanes.

“I just want to be active, period,” Edgar said. “I haven’t fought in almost in a year. I didn’t want to sit out for a year. But yeah, I’m not going to get these days back. Time’s ticking. I’m 36 years old; don’t feel it, don’t look it, but it’s the facts and I’m not going to get those years back. So I don’t want to sit idle and let those years pass.


“I want to get some fights under my belt.”


That urgency has led Edgar to the familiar situation he finds himself in for UFC 222, staring down the barrel of a matchup against a hungry young contender, hearing all about how said contender grew up watching the exploits of “The Answer.”

 “[Ortega] is a great submission guy, but I think his gameness is the biggest thing,” Edgar said. “He’s been down. In his UFC career, he’s been down in a lot of his fights and he finds a way to win, even in third round. I think he has the most third-round finishes. That just goes to show you that he’s more game than probably, maybe anyone I’ve fought. That’s a dangerous guy. You can be up on the cards and think you’re smooth sailing, and he’ll find a way to win. So I’ve got to make sure I’m 100 percent focused.

“It’s only three rounds. You give up that first round, you’ve only got two to make it up, so you want to make sure you go out there and start hot. A five-round fight, you can maybe give up that first round, start slow and pour it on, especially someone like myself. But I’ve got to make sure I’m guns blazing out the gate.”


MMA is a sport that religiously feeds its old to its young, so Edgar knows UFC 222 won’t be the last time he’s thrust into a potential changing of the guard matchup. They’re going to become more commonplace the longer he stays in this game, whether it’s Ortega or the next hungry youngster at 145 pounds.

But even as he embarks on the 13th year of his MMA career that’s stronger than ever, Edgar is content to keep sending those challengers right back, and smiling all along the way.

“After the fact, it’s nice to say I told you so,” Edgar admitted, laughing. “In the lead-up, man — I believe in myself and I’ve been doubted early in my career, in the middle of the my career, in this part of my career — I feel like everybody doubts me, and you can’t pay attention to those people, so I kinda try to just worry about myself and I’m confident in everything I do. And when it’s all said and done, I’ll definitely be one to say I told you so.”

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