Francis Ngannouβs journey to the upper echelons of the UFC is nothing short of remarkable.
Working in a sand quarry as a schoolboy, he realised he would have to leave Cameroon if he wanted a better life and the chance to chase his dreams and follow in the footsteps of his idol Mike Tyson. That would mean leaving his family and making his way up the African continent and into Europe, illegally hopping across borders before finally reaching France, sleeping on the Parisian streets.
Just arrived at the Apex for the press conference. See you all soon
#ufc260 pic.twitter.com/H3KuAm5nUq β Francis Ngannou (@francis_ngannou) March 25, 2021
This weekend, at UFC 260 in Las Vegas, the 34-year-old is bidding to become the UFCβs first African-born heavyweight champion.
The fight against Stipe Miocic is a rematch three years in the making.
At UFC 220, in his first title fight, Ngannou came up short, losing via unanimous decision.
Against a fighter many consider to be the greatest heavyweight in UFC history it ended up being a tough night in Boston.
The πππππππ πππππππ πππππππ is finally here!#UFC260:
@StipeMiocic vs @Francis_Ngannou pic.twitter.com/rsXozF5N4u β UFC (@ufc) March 22, 2021
Ngannou insists lessons have been learned.
:30 seconds this time
#bodyshotchallenge pic.twitter.com/6bqGm4UWjS β Francis Ngannou (@francis_ngannou) February 24, 2021
βI didnβt fight my fight,β Ngannou says when reflecting on his first encounter with Miocic. βWhen I look at that fight, I do not recognise myself. The way that I fought, thatβs not me. That fight helped me to understand and experience a lot of things, things I will get right in this one,β he told BBC Africa Sports.