TJ Dillashaw tops Cory Sandhagen by split decision in first fight since 2019
Cory #Cory
Any questions about TJ Dillashaw’s standing in the bantamweight division after a long layoff have been answered — emphatically.
Dillashaw, the former two-time UFC bantamweight champion, defeated Sandhagen via split decision (47-48, 48-47, 48-47) in a bloody, back-and-forth fight Saturday in the main event of UFC Fight Night in Las Vegas.
Sandhagen opened up a nasty cut between Dillashaw’s right eye and nose — an area that Dillashaw dealt with cuts during his training camp — but he still gutted it out over five rounds.
Dillashaw was coming off a two-year suspension from the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) due to a positive drug test for EPO. He had not fought since January 2019 when he lost a flyweight title fight to Henry Cejudo via TKO in 32 seconds.
Coming in, ESPN had Sandhagen ranked No. 3 in the world at bantamweight. Afterward, Dillashaw said he wanted a chance to get his title back next. He was stripped of the belt when he failed the drug test. Aljamain Sterling will defend that title later this year against Petr Yan in a rematch of a controversial bout at UFC 259 on March 6.
“Easy money for that belt right now,” Dillashaw said in his postfight interview. “Of course, title fight.”
Dillashaw and Sandhagen were once training partners with Elevation Fight Team in Colorado. But it didn’t seem like either gained any advantage from those past experiences.
Dillashaw didn’t look like he was experiencing any ring rust right from the start. He won the first round with combinations and was able to land shots from top position after a takedown.
However, Sandhagen popped Dillashaw’s knee, Dillashaw said afterward, in a leg-lock attempt near the end of the first. Dillashaw said he wasn’t able to throw as many hooks after that.
Sandhagen gained the momentum in the second round, landing a big combination that not only rocked Dillashaw, but opened up that cut near his eye. Referee Herb Dean momentarily paused the bout and brought in the doctor, but Dillashaw was allowed to continue despite the deep, bloody cut.
Early and often during the fight, Dillashaw was attacking Sandhagen’s legs, and those really started to accumulate as the bout got into the later rounds. Dillashaw said his coach, Duane Ludwig, was telling him to “chop down the tree” from the corner.
“The game plan was to take his legs out,” Dillashaw said. “He’s a tall dude.”
Dillashaw finished the third round strong after a takedown attempt and some hard shots in a clinch against the cage. Sandhagen came back with hard shots in the fourth, including a spinning back fist. Both men had moments in the fifth round, with Sandhagen landing hard punches and Dillashaw getting through with a couple of combos.
“I didn’t think he’d be able to take a shot the way he was taking a shot,” Sandhagen said. “A lot of those shots take people out.”
Sandhagen bested Dillashaw in significant strikes 128-110, per UFC Stats. Dillashaw had 41 leg strikes to Sandhagen’s eight.
Judge Sal D’Amato had Dillashaw winning the first, third and fifth rounds. Judge Junichiro Kamijo had Dillashaw winning the first, third and fourth rounds. The lone dissenter, Derek Cleary, had Sandhagen winning the second, fourth and fifth rounds.
Dillashaw (17-4) was on a four-fight winning streak before that Cejudo loss. He owns two consecutive bantamweight title defenses, tied with Dominick Cruz for the longest title defense streak in UFC bantamweight history. Dillashaw, 35, has a 13-4 UFC record and is regarded as perhaps the best 135-pound fighter in promotion history. Those 13 victories tie Cruz for the most in UFC/WEC bantamweight history.
Sandhagen (14-3) had won two straight coming in and has won seven of nine overall in the UFC. The Colorado native was coming off a 28-second flying knee knockout of former lightweight champion Frankie Edgar, one of the best KOs of 2021. Sandhagen, 29, is regarded as one of the best fighters in the world under 30 years old.