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MMA System: I Will Be Pound For Pound Goat-Chapter 445 A Clash of Titans
The event rolled on, energy in the arena building with each passing fight.
But now, it was time for the main event, the fight that had the world watching.
Ireland vs. the United States.
Middleweight division.
The reason this fight was chosen as the main event was obvious. The stakes, the hype, the fighters involved, it was a perfect storm of anticipation.
For the United States, standing across the cage was none other than Shane Brickland, the current UFA Middleweight Champion.
And for Ireland? Damon Cross. The undefeated phenom, the man many already saw as the uncrowned king of the division.
It wasn't for a belt. But in the eyes of fans? It might as well have been.
"If Damon wins tonight," one commentator began, voice brimming with excitement, "doesn't that unofficially make him the best middleweight in the world?"
"That's exactly why this fight is massive," another chimed in. "Shane Brickland is walking into this cage as the reigning UFA champion. If Damon Cross takes him out? He's just proven to everyone that he should've been fighting for that belt already."
The Irish fans in the crowd were electric, chanting Damon's name, while American supporters rallied behind their champion.
This was more than just a tournament fight.
This was war.
Backstage – The American Locker Room
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Shane Brickland leaned back against the wall, one foot propped up on a bench, hands casually wrapped as his team prepped him for the fight. He wasn't tense.
He wasn't pacing or shadowboxing like some fighters did before walking out. No, Shane was talking. Loudly.
"This whole thing's a joke, man," he said, shaking his head as his coach adjusted his wraps.
"These motherfuckers hypin' up Damon Cross like he's some goddamn second coming. Like, bro, you know what I've done? You know who I've fought? I got fuckin' scars from wars in the cage, and this dude's biggest claim to fame is knockin' out some prospect on a reality show?"
One of his teammates chuckled, but Shane wasn't joking. He looked around the room, eyes bouncing from his coach to his training partners.
"Like, for real, tell me this, am I crazy? Am I the only one seein' this shit? Motherfucker fights some guys, wins a few fights, and suddenly he's 'The Guy'? Like, no disrespect, okay, but I am the fuckin' middleweight champion. Like, I got the belt. You earn the right to fight me. They didn't even make him go through the fuckin' process!"
His coach, a grizzled old-school MMA guy, smirked. "Well, that's what happens when you hype a guy up. The media loves him, the fans—"
"Yeah, yeah, fans love him, fans love a fuckin' lotta things," Shane interrupted, throwing his hands up. "Listen, you guys, I'm gonna beat the hell out of him".
On the Irish side, the energy was completely different.
There was no loud banter, no jokes being tossed around like in the American locker room.
The tension was thick, suffocating almost, and it wasn't the kind of nervous excitement that made the moment enjoyable. It was heavier, expectation, pressure, the weight of a nation riding on one man's shoulders.
No one was laughing.
No one was hyping him up.
Damon sat calmly, hands wrapped, bouncing his legs slightly as he stayed loose.
His breathing was steady, measured. His team moved around him, checking final details, whispering among themselves, but he wasn't really paying attention to any of it.
He didn't need them to remind him what was at stake.
They had already lost in flyweight. They had already forfeited lightweight.
If he lost this fight, Ireland's run in the tournament would be over before it even properly started.
Tommy Hughes stood by the door, arms crossed, the old coach's gaze fixed on Damon.
He hadn't said a word in the past five minutes, but his presence was impossible to ignore. The weight of his expectations was heavy enough.
A knock at the door. One of the officials stepped in, headset on, clipboard in hand.
"It's time."
Damon stood up.
Unlike the others, he didn't seem tense. He didn't look like a man about to walk into a fight with a champion. He was calm, unbothered.
He rolled his neck, shaking out his limbs as he followed the team out of the locker room.
They moved through the winding halls of the arena, past event staff, past cameras waiting to capture the moment.
The sounds of the crowd grew louder with every step. The chants, the roars, it was all building up, a storm waiting to explode once the fight began.
When they reached the tunnel, Damon exhaled slowly.
He could hear the American fans chanting Shane's name from the other side of the arena.
He could hear the Irish fans trying to drown them out.
It didn't matter.
None of it did.
The official nodded toward them. The music was about to hit.
Damon rolled his shoulders, eyes locked forward.
No fear.
No nerves.
Just the fight ahead.
The music hit.
The entire crowd went ballistic.
From the sheer volume of the roar, Damon could tell, this wasn't just Irish fans. Even some of the American crowd were chanting his name.
That's the beauty of the sport, he thought. It wasn't just about nationality. It was about the fighter.
The people didn't cheer for flags. They cheered for warriors.
Damon walked through the tunnel, feeling the vibrations of thousands of voices shaking the arena.
The closer he got to the entrance, the more the noise built up, reaching a deafening crescendo.
Then—
Darkness.
Everything went black. The massive screens dimmed. The overhead lights shut off.
Damon closed his eyes for a brief second, took a deep breath, then exhaled.
He started bouncing in place, the way Rock Lazer did before walking into a pro wrestling ring.
His shoulders rolled, his hands loosened, his body staying light, ready.
The moment the lights came back on, it was blinding.
The Irish national anthem still played, but it didn't match the chaos in the crowd. Not one person cared.
The entire arena was alive, buzzing, shaking with pure adrenaline.
Damon stepped forward.
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His walk was steady, smooth, unshaken.
He wasn't here to put on a show. He wasn't here to hype up the crowd or do some forced theatrics.
He was here to fight.
To take the head of a "champion".