A condensed version of this appears on abs-cbnnew.com (in the opinion/insights section)
Bibiano
Fernandes: Fear is not in his language
by rick olivares
One Fighting Champion’s Chief
Executive Officer Victor Cui has a story about Bibiano Fernandes (11-3). During
the Brazilian’s more youthful years (he’s now 32 years old), he would watch practitioners
of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu in a studio near where he lived. Fernandes would be
there everyday watching and watching and saying nothing. Until one day, the gym
rats called him over. “Want to try it? C’mon.” Without any prior experience,
Fernandes had everyone tapping out.
“If ever there’s a natural athlete,
that’s Bibi,” said Cui like a proud father. “The weight of all the belts he’s
won is heavier than his actual weight (134 pounds).
Fernandes is making his One FC debut
when he takes on Brazilian-born Australian Gustavo Falciroli in a dream card
for Asia’s top MMA event on August 31 at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.
An hour and 30 minutes before the
press conference, before the media horde piled into the Magellan Room of the
Discovery Suites, Fernandes – true to form – sat in the back, observing
everyone that came in. “It’s a habit. Studying. Studying everything. You learn
a lot by observing,” he said to me and I felt like a certain grasshopper.
I ask him about his youth in Brazil.
“It was tough, man. But either you let the world consume you or you find a way
to bend it to your goal. But I am determined. I wanted to make something of
myself.”
The unorthodox 5’7” Fernandes did make
something of himself by becoming the first ever Dream Featherweight and
Bantamweight champion. And prior to signing up with One FC, he was touted to be
on the card of this week’s UFC 149 in Calgary, Canada.
When I touch on the topic of
Brazilians being top mixed martial artists, Fernandes can’t help but beam with
pride. I ask if it’s the water. He seemed puzzled for a moment then got it and
laughed. “No. Not at all. Brazil is beautiful but it is a tough place. We have
to work hard for what we have. What there is in Brazil is something everyone
worked hard for. It’s a hard place that builds hard and talented people. It’s
like the Philippines. You have a lot of world class boxers from the
Philippines…”
Point made.
I follow that up whether he feels a
tinge of fear when he enters the cage for a fight. “No. No fear. If you do then
you don’t belong there. I lost my first two fights and I never stopped
believing that I could be a champion. I lost again and I get up. That’s life.
When you have nothing then you have nothing to lose. When there is fear there
is doubt. You know you’re in a fight and you know you’re going to get hit. So
no fear. Not in my language. I am happy where I am but I know there is plenty
to accomplish.”
An hour later, someone from the media
asked if he had any pre-fight words for Falciroli. “No. I say nothing,” he
replied. “I don’t talk.” I ask him about that and he expounded, “Talk is cheap.
I will just go out and do what I want to say.”
Watch out for more One FC and URCC stuff over the next few days.
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