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Sean O’Malley Faces a Crossroads at UFC 324
Craig Kidwell-Imagn Images

Sean O’Malley knows what’s at stake and he’s not pretending otherwise. The former UFC bantamweight champion enters UFC 324 on Jan. 24 at T-Mobile Arena with urgency bordering on finality. Tasked with snapping a two-fight skid, O’Malley will face the dangerous Song Yadong in a fight that could determine not just his title trajectory but how long “Suga” sticks around at all.

At 31, O’Malley remains one of the division’s most recognizable stars, but he’s also increasingly candid about the realities of a career in combat sports. “It’s almost so pointless to predict what I want to do in the next five years, two years, three years,” O’Malley said on his YouTube channel. “If I go out there and lose and lose, I’m done with this s---.”

The bluntness reflects where O’Malley is mentally. Two straight losses to relentless former champion Merab Dvalishvili stalled his momentum and pushed him to the edge of relevance in a loaded division.

Yet opportunity has quietly reopened.

With Petr Yan reclaiming the title from Dvalishvili at UFC 323 in December, O’Malley suddenly finds himself in position for a rematch that’s been brewing for years.

O’Malley holds a controversial split-decision win over Yan from UFC 280 in October 2022 a result that sparked debate and demands for a do-over. Now, with Yan back on top, the path to a storybook ending is visible again. But first comes Song Yadong.

No Looking Past Song Even With Yan on the Mind

O’Malley insists he’s not overlooking the Chinese powerhouse, who enters the bout at 22-8-1 (11-3-1 UFC) and carries knockout power in both hands.

“I’m not taking Song Song’s f------ dangerous,” O’Malley said. “He’s dangerous. He’s got power in both hands, he’s fast. I’m preparing for him.”

At the same time, O’Malley admits he’s already envisioning what comes next.

“Honestly I’m getting ready for Petr still, too,” he said. “Petr knows. That’s what’s next. I’m going to go out there, take care of Song, and that’s what’s next. It just makes sense.”

A ‘Suga’ Swan Song?

If O’Malley gets past Song and then settles unfinished business with Yan, he sees a clean exit one that blends fighting success with life beyond the Octagon.

“2026 is about to be lit,” O’Malley said. “I’m going to go out there, take care of Song, take care of Petr, (my new business) DoingWell is going to blow up. I’m going to retire. This might be the last ‘Suga’ year ever.”

It’s a striking admission from a fighter once seen as the division’s long-term future. But O’Malley has never followed a conventional script and he’s clearly comfortable betting on himself one last time.

At UFC 324, the stakes are simple: win and chase a fairytale finish, or lose and start writing the next chapter of life without fighting. Either way, Sean O’Malley is done drifting. This is his moment to decide how the “Suga” era ends.

This article first appeared on Dice City Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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