MMA System: I Will Be Pound For Pound Goat-Chapter 527: The Final Frame

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When the bell rang, signaling the third and final round, all eyes shifted to Desayen.

He stood from the stool slowly, shoulders slumped slightly, breathing through his mouth. His chest heaved with effort, the kind that told everyone he was gassed. Not just tired, spent. Like he had gone through two wars in the first ten minutes.

Across from him, Damon Cross stood up as if the fight had just begun.

Bouncing lightly on his feet, loose shoulders, clear eyes.

It was like he hadn't fought yet. The contrast was stark. It made people wonder, how the hell is this man still fresh?

It wasn't just training. It wasn't just genetics. It was focus. Preparation. Systemic intelligence. And it was terrifying.

Jon Goodman spoke up on commentary. "Look at Damon. That's round three and he looks like he could do three more."

Rich Alvarez nodded. "That's recovery, but also mentality. When you know how to conserve, when to push, when to breathe, that's elite level."

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Marvin Duke added, "And let's not forget, Desayen has had to fight off submissions and strikes for a full round. That ground control from Damon wasn't just dominance, it was attrition."

Back in the cage, Damon smiled as he stepped forward.

He saw Desayen's shoulders roll, the heavy breath, the slight drag in his footwork. All the signs were there. Fighters at this point were exposed. Power dipped, footwork slowed, and most importantly, mistakes started to creep in.

Damon didn't rush.

He started with feints. A few light touches. Low kicks that made Desayen flinch more than they should have. A jab that didn't even land, but forced a full head movement from Desayen, who was just trying to react to everything now.

The crowd watched in quiet anticipation.

Desayen fired a sharp front kick, but it was slower. Damon read it, stepped inside, and countered with a short hook. It grazed, but the message was clear.

I'm still sharp. You're not.

Damon's footwork continued, gliding just outside range, then dipping in with a clean body jab. Another. A third, then he reset.

He wasn't just winning.

He was dissecting.

And Desayen, for all his toughness and experience, was starting to show it.

The fans watching live… the ones at home… they could feel it.

This was the endgame.

And Damon Cross was in full control.

Desayen backed up slowly, sweat trailing down the side of his face. His arms hung low for a moment before he rolled his shoulders and straightened up, taking a deep breath.

His eyes never left Damon.

And Damon, cool as ever, stood waiting. Center of the cage. Calm. Relaxed. In control.

Desayen's chest rose and fell heavily, but there was a spark behind his exhaustion. That look. That refusal to fold. Even with the fight slipping, he had something left, pride.

Then he said it.

"Let's bang."

It wasn't loud. No one in the crowd could hear it. But Damon heard it.

And he knew exactly what it meant.

He didn't answer with words.

He didn't need to.

He simply nodded once.

And stepped forward.

Jon Goodman lit up on commentary. "Ohhh, hold up, hold up, what did Desayen just say to him?"

Rich Alvarez leaned in. "I think we all know what that means, Jon. He just called for a war. He's not going out quiet."

Marvin Duke added, "And look at Damon, he's walking forward! He's agreeing to it! We got a throwdown coming!"

In the arena, the tension flipped like a switch.

The crowd couldn't hear the fighters, but they could read the body language. They could feel the tempo shift.

Both men walked to the center of the cage, squaring up, no more circling, no more footwork games.

Damon's hands rose just slightly. Desayen adjusted his stance, shoulders tight.

This wasn't about control anymore.

This was about respect.

About legacy.

And the crowd?

They felt it in their bones.

They roared.

Desayen lunged in first, his guard tight, trying to force Damon into an exchange. He threw a jab, then slipped to the right, cocking his right hand for a power shot. Damon rolled under it with ease, calm in the chaos, his eyes locked in.

Desayen swung again, trying to cut through Damon's space, an uppercut aimed high. Damon weaved low, pivoted, then came up just outside range.

Desayen kept swinging.

But Damon wasn't there.

Each punch was empty.

He slipped, ducked, leaned, barely using effort. Just smooth motion and timing. Like water flowing through cracks.

Rich Alvarez said it clearly: "Desayen's giving everything he's got, and nothing's landing."

Jon Goodman added, "He's trying to fight fire with fire, but Damon's just too slick. It's like trying to hit a shadow in the dark."

Marvin Duke leaned in, "And this is a retirement fight. Desayen wants that one last brawl, but Cross? Cross is surgical."

Desayen swung again, a wild left hook—

And Damon popped him.

A clean 1–2.

Right down the middle.

The jab stunned him, the straight caught him square.

Desayen's head snapped back.

His knees buckled.

He collapsed to the canvas, flat on his back. The crowd gasped as Damon stood over him, fists ready, eyes locked on the ref.

But the referee dove in instantly.

It was over.

No ground and pound needed.

Desayen wasn't out cold, but he wasn't getting up either.

Jon Goodman shouted, "That's it! It's over! Damon Cross ends it with precision! Lights out!"

Marvin Duke followed up, "And that's the difference, Desayen came to bang, and Damon came to win."

Rich Alvarez nodded. "And he just did both."

This match wasn't just a retirement fight.

It was a passing of the torch, whether Desayen wanted to admit it or not.

A reminder that the sport doesn't slow down for anyone. It evolves. It sharpens. And if you're not ready to keep up, it leaves you behind.

Damon wasn't just keeping up. He was leading the charge.

The striking, the movement, the composure, it all spoke of someone who had entered a new tier. A generation defined by well-roundedness, IQ, and relentless pressure. And Damon was becoming the face of it.

He didn't just win.

He dissected a veteran with poise and respect. Didn't humiliate him. Didn't mock him. But left no doubt.

He belonged at the top.

And tonight, with that performance, he didn't just cement his place in the rankings.

He made it clear:

The middleweight division had a new king in waiting.

And his name was Damon Cross.