UFC Hall of Famer Daniel Cormier Crowns Alexander Volkanovski as Featherweight GOAT
The debate is the lifeblood of combat sports. In every weight class, across every era, fans and pundits passionately argue over who stands alone at the summit of history. In the UFC’s featherweight division, that conversation has long orbited two legendary names: the iconic pioneer, José Aldo, and the relentless force of nature, Max Holloway. But after a dominant title fight victory at UFC 325, a new, definitive voice has entered the fray. UFC Hall of Famer and commentator Daniel Cormier has seen enough. He has declared, unequivocally, that Alexander Volkanovski is the greatest featherweight of all time.
A Legacy Forged in the Fire of Greatness
Volkanovski’s path to the pinnacle was never about flash; it was about systematic, undeniable dominance. His recent rematch win over Diego Lopes wasn’t just a defense—it was a historic benchmark. With that victory, “The Great” tied José Aldo’s long-standing record for the most title fight wins in UFC featherweight history. But for Cormier, the significance isn’t just in matching the number, but in the quality of the names attached to it.
“I’m telling you, he (Volkanovski) is the greatest featherweight of all time,” Cormier stated on his YouTube channel. “I know we love José Aldo. I know we love Max Holloway, but he just won his eighth UFC featherweight title fight. Four of those victories are against Holloway and Aldo, the two other guys considered the greatest featherweights of all time.”
This is the core of Cormier’s, and a growing number of analysts’, argument. Volkanovski hasn’t just built a resume; he has directly supplanted his rivals. Consider the evidence:
- Three decisive wins over Max Holloway, a fighter many consider a top-three featherweight ever, effectively closing that chapter.
- A one-sided, five-round unanimous decision victory over José Aldo in Aldo’s home country of Brazil in 2019, a passing-of-the-torch moment that now resonates even louder.
- A championship reign that began in December 2019 and saw him clear out the division’s top contenders with a staggering blend of fight IQ, pressure, and power.
His only stumble at 145 pounds came against the dynamic Ilia Topuria, a single blemish in a decade of UFC featherweight excellence. This body of work, built directly upon the backs of the other GOAT candidates, forms an irrefutable case.
The Cormier Doctrine: Why Volkanovski Surpasses Aldo
Daniel Cormier’s perspective carries unique weight. As a former two-division champion himself, he understands the nuances of legacy-building—the pressure of title fights, the challenge of evolving, and the importance of era-defining wins. For him, Volkanovski’s active competition against and victory over Aldo is the ultimate tiebreaker.
“Strengthening that assertion is Volkanovski holding a one-sided decision win over ‘Junior,'” Cormier noted, referencing the 2019 fight. In the GOAT debate, direct comparison is the gold standard. While Aldo’s reign of nearly a decade was awe-inspiring and transformative for the sport, he never faced a prime version of a featherweight GOAT candidate. Volkanovski did. He faced both Aldo and Holloway in their primes and emerged victorious, repeatedly.
Cormier also highlights Volkanovski’s unparalleled consistency and drive. “He’s the best in the world, man. He’s as good as they come. The guy is tremendous, and I really don’t see him slowing down anytime soon. He’s too committed,” he continued. This mental fortitude, showcased in his immediate rematch dominance after losing his title, separates the great from the greatest.
The Holloway Hurdle and the Topuria Question
No GOAT discussion is complete without addressing Max Holloway. “Blessed” possesses an incredible resume and remains a fan favorite for his thrilling style. However, the head-to-head record is stark and definitive. Volkanovski solved the Holloway puzzle not once, but twice in title fights, and then a third time in a non-title bout. In the sport’s purest metric, Volkanovski holds the clear advantage.
The new variable in the equation is Ilia Topuria. The Georgian-Spaniard’s knockout win over Volkanovski at UFC 298 momentarily paused the GOAT conversation. Yet, Volkanovski’s immediate return to form at UFC 325 reinforces Cormier’s point about his resilience. It also sets the stage for the most important fight in the division’s future: Volkanovski vs. Topuria II.
A potential rematch carries immense stakes for Volkanovski’s legacy. Reclaiming the title from Topuria would not only add another legendary chapter but would demonstrate a capacity for revenge and reinvention that further cements his status. It would be the final piece of a story that includes dominance over the past (Aldo), the present of his era (Holloway), and the future (Topuria).
The Verdict: A New King of the Featherweights
The metrics, the expert testimony, and the cold, hard results all point in one direction. José Aldo will forever be the Featherweight King, the man who built the kingdom. His contributions are sacred. But kingdoms see new rulers.
Alexander Volkanovski, through a combination of elite skill, tactical brilliance, and historic head-to-head victories, has claimed the throne. He didn’t just win a championship; he conquered the very legends against whom he is measured. He tied Aldo’s record by beating Aldo himself. He neutralized Holloway’s threat not with luck, but with a masterclass in adjustment and execution.
Daniel Cormier’s declaration is less a hot take and more a formal coronation based on the evidence. In the relentless, data-driven world of modern MMA, legacy is defined by who you beat and when you beat them. By that definitive standard, Alexander “The Great” Volkanovski has earned his moniker. The greatest featherweight of all time no longer hails from Brazil or Hawaii. He is a proud Australian of Macedonian descent, and his reign over the history books, much like his fights, appears to be unanimous.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
