
Felipe Lima made the most of a late-notice call to be in the UFC in June, relinquishing the Oktagon bantamweight title to walk through Muhammad Naimov in a featherweight clash at UFC Saudi Arabia and pocket an extra $50,000 in bonus.
With an actual camp now, âJungle Boyâ had proper time to prepare for his octagon appearance and fully realize the dream of being in the UFC going into his clash with Miles Johns at Saturday nightâs UFC Tampa.
Born in Coari and living in Manaus since his teenage years, the Brazilian prospect devoted his life to jiu-jitsu before shifting his focus to MMA in 2015. The young talent was choked out in his first trip to a cage, but hasnât tasted defeat ever since.
With a record of 7-1, and a champion in his home state, Lima decided it was time to chase belts overseas. He applied for a visa to enter the United States. However, as expected, it was denied. And when a friend commented about a fellow fighter had taken a different approach and moved to Sweden, Lima decided to take the shot.
âI didnât like it here at first,â Lima said of life in Sweden. âI stayed for two weeks and cried all the time because I couldnât speak the language, it was dark, and I had no friends. I went back to Brazil and three weeks later I said, âI canât stay in Brazil anymore,â and went back to Sweden to build my life here.â
Life in Helsingborg was somewhat depressing, especially for a Manaus man leaving the Amazon rainforest heat to the cold Scandinavian winter.
âWhat shocked me the most was the weather, but also the darkness,â Lima said. âSummer here is beautiful, but itâs different when you donât speak the language. You canât communicate to other people, and that was the toughest part of that season.â
Lima beat Gustavo Oliveira in his first fight in Europe and then topped Farbod Iran Nezhad at Brave CFâs show in Stockholm, and thatâs when his career took a turn. Lima met Allstars Training Centerâs coaches that week, plus UFC star Alexander Gustafsson, and was invited to be part of the team.
âI had sparks in the eyes looking at them because Iâm a big fan of [Allstars jiu-jitsu coach Alan Nascimento] âFinfouâ, and heâs like a brother to me now,â Lima said. âThe relationship Iâve built with these guys now, âFinfouâ and Gustafsson⌠Theyâre legends to me, and to be able to share the mats with them was an incredible experience that has helped me so much not only in my career, but as a person as well.â
Lima said âconfidence comes form hard work,â staying in the gym 12 hours a day for years to become the athlete he is today, and it will show when he enters the cage Saturday to battle Johns.
Kansasâ âChapoâ Johns enters the cage confident after going unbeaten his past four under the UFC banner, capped off by wins over Cody Gibson and Douglas Silva de Andrade, but Lima sees him âstiff like a bodybuilder.â
âHeâs very strong, his fighting style is more like low tempo. Thatâs the different between us,â Lima said. âI start the fight at high pace, and he only trusts that right overhand. My game will be to move around, hit and get out, and be prepared for everything. He likes to go for takedowns when heâs under pressure, so letâs see how he reacts to my speed and strikes.â
âIâm happy the UFC has given me this opportunity,â he continued. âEven though itâs not a long camp, four weeks out, Iâm ready. This guy has eight UFC fights, heâs 6-2 in the UFC, so itâs a good name to beat.â
MMA Fighting – All Posts