Robert Whittaker didn’t just move up a weight class. He moved up and put the whole division on notice.
“The Reaper” closed out the UFC 329 prelims Saturday night with a third-round TKO of Nikita Krylov at 1:01, and he did it the way only Whittaker can; with speed, discipline, and straight punches that never stopped finding the target.
Let’s be real about what this was. Krylov is a 13-year Octagon veteran, a natural 205er with 29 career finishes and knockout power everywhere. On paper, size was supposed to be the problem. Instead, Whittaker turned the fight into a track meet. He stuck the jab, he came back over the top with the right hand, and he stayed locked in on the head with a focus that never wavered. Early in the third, he hurt Krylov, backed him up, and when one more clean right landed flush, the veteran waved it off, jaw jacked up, night over!
For a man who spent 19 fights at middleweight, that’s about as loud an introduction to a new home as you can make.
And for us? It’s bigger than the weight class.
Whittaker was born at Middlemore Hospital in Auckland, and his mother’s side carries Māori and Samoan blood. He’s said it himself: “It’s half of who I am, is Maori, and my mum’s roots go back to Samoa.” The tribal work on his arm honors that side of his story. So when the first Australian UFC champion walks into a brand-new division at 35 years old, coming off two straight losses, and snaps the skid with a finish.
Size will always be the question mark at 205. But quality? Quality was never in doubt.
Whittaker just proved it in a division that’s supposed to be too big for him. Give him a real camp to settle in, and this could get scary.
The Reaper’s not done. He’s just getting started.






