Charles Oliveira Reconsiders Fighting in Canada after Feeling at Home in UFC 289

Charles Oliveira overcame his resistance to fighting in Canada by securing a knockout win in Vancouver, proving his decision to return to the country was the right one.

Charles Oliveira was treated like a superstar by the Vancouver crowd at UFC 289 before and after his first-round knockout win over Beneil Dariush earlier this month, proving that “do Bronx” was right to walk back from his decision to never fight in the country again. Oliveira visited Canada four times as a UFC fighter between 2010 and 2016, coming up short in all occasions with defeats to Jim Miller, Cub Swanson, Max Holloway, and Anthony Pettis. Finished by every single one of them, Oliveira had enough.

“I remember when I took over Oliveira [as a manager] he told me jokingly, but at the same time being very serious, ‘Let’s only make a deal, I don’t fight in Canada,’” Oliveira’s head coach and manager Diego Lima said on this week’s episode of Trocação Franca podcast. “We laughed and said, ‘Ok, you’ll never fight in Canada.’” Oliveira was booked to face Dariush on the UFC 288 card in Newark, but the Brazilian had to pull out due to an injury. The following pay-per-view was set to take place at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, and UFC wanted to re-schedule it for that date.

“Sean Shelby said he would keep Dariush [as his opponent], but it had to be in Canada,” Lima said. “I called Charles and said, ‘It’s going to be on the 10th, but in Canada.’ He said, ‘You know what, let’s go. I’m ready. It’s good, another obstacle for me to go through and leave behind.’” Oliveira did leave that in the past, scoring his first victory in Canadian soil to now hope to face Islam Makhachev a second time for the UFC lightweight gold. In the end, fighting in Canada will now bring a different memory for the São Paulo star.

“To have a standing ovation by [almost] 20,000 people in Vancouver, Canada, felt like I was fighting in my backyard,” Oliveira told Trocação Franca. “I’ll never forget that in my life. I cried walking out, I cried after the fight, so that will never leave my head. The event was over, it was late at night, and you go back to the hotel and there’s thousands of people screaming your name. I’ll never forget that. It felt like they would flip my car over with so many people over it. If you weren’t there to feel it, you won’t understand. I’ve only seen that in movies.”

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