In hindsight, Andrei Arlovski’s 15-second destruction of Paul Buentello at UFC 55 on Oct. 7, 2005, is noteworthy not only for its shocking brevity and the perfection of the fight-ending strike itself—though we’ll get to that.
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The fight itself leaves little to talk about. Buentello, a perennial fringe contender whose résumé is historically underrated, was simply no match for the Belarusian. After a couple of tentative exchanges, Arlovski caught Buentello with a short right to the jaw that was so fast and clean that UFC color commentator Joe Rogan at first mistook the action for a takedown when Buentello collapsed in a heap and Arlovski landed on top of him, then yelled, “What happened? What happened!”
Only when referee “Big” John McCarthy rushed in—McCarthy’s spot-on stoppage was the true performance of the night—and Arlovski sprang up to celebrate did the UFC booth understand that they needed to look at the replay. Despite the boos and chanting from the crowd, that replay revealed just how devastating the punch had been, and how justified the stoppage, which was further vindicated when Buentello stood up to try and protest, only to go stumbling around the Octagon.
Arlovski would face Sylvia twice more—and would have his long-delayed meeting with Mir a decade later—but for the moment he was the UFC’s undisputed heavyweight champion, having defended his newly upgraded title in the most definitive way imaginable.
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