Vince Morales is back after more than a year away, and his next assignment comes in Perth against Colby Thicknesse at bantamweight. For Morales, it is a return to the cage after knee surgery and a long wait for a fight contract to finally come through.
Morales said the procedure after his last bout was a meniscus issue, a minimal operation that still kept him out far longer than he expected. He said the delay in getting booked was the longest layoff of his career, though he added that he feels great now and may have needed the time to reset.
The timing matters because Morales enters UFC Perth on a three-fight losing skid and knows another setback would deepen the pressure on his run in the promotion. His last outing came against Raul Rosas Jr., who controlled him for three rounds, and Morales said he wants this one to look nothing like that.
That is why he is talking about blood, bruises and a finish. Morales said he is hoping Thicknesse will stay in the fire with him, because he wants a fight that turns into a war of attrition rather than another lopsided wrestling match. He said he is itching to get in there, make it a real brawl and do enough to leave with his hand raised.
The Australia trip also has personal meaning. Morales said he had never been to Australia before, and he had hoped to share the card with his teammate and close friend Kody Steele after Steele got on the lineup. What started as a joke, he said, turned into a real chance to compete on the same show in a place he had never seen.
For Morales, the bout is about more than simply ending a layoff. He said his plan is to show why he belongs in the UFC and earn a new contract, a point that gives the matchup added weight for a fighter who has spent the last year waiting for his next shot. Thicknesse now gets that version of Morales: healthy, annoyed by the wait and determined to prove something.