Joshua Van vows to show 'no respect at all' for UFC champ Alexandre Pantoja in expected title fight
The new No. 1-ranked UFC flyweight contender has emerged seemingly overnight as one of MMA's biggest breakout stars of 2025. Van's current five-fight win streak began this past September, however none of the five were more resounding than his latest — the 23-year-old went to war with one-time title challenger Brandon Royval at UFC 317, won a unanimous decision, seized the baton as the Fight of the Year frontrunner and positioned himself as the next challenger to UFC champion Alexandre Pantoja.
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Despite the vast difference in experience between himself and Uncrowned's No. 4 pound-for-pound fighter in the world Pantoja, Van is exceedingly confident in his abilities ahead of the massive opportunity.
"There's no one like me," Van said on Monday's edition of "The Ariel Helwani Show." "The fighting style that I bring, the no respect — I don't give respect to nobody in that cage. I respect [Pantoja] as a man, I respect what he's done in our division. But when we fight, there's no respect at all.
"You know how a lot of people say that, 'He's good at this, he's the next level,' this and that? Look at Royval. When they said, 'Oh, his pressure's going to be too much' — I didn't give him no respect when he was pressuring me. I don't give no respect. I stay calm, I'll do my thing. It's going to be the same thing [against Pantoja]. I'm not going to let him do his thing. And I feel like a lot of people, because they know that his grappling is so much, that they're so scared of him taking them down, that they end up getting taken down."
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UFC 317 set the stage perfectly for the top of the flyweight division with an unofficial tournament of sorts. Van's clash against Royval directly preceded Pantoja's latest title defense over Kai Kara-France. Like Van, the champion also performed brilliantly, finishing Kara-France with a third-round rear-naked choke to notch his fourth consecutive defense of the 125-pound belt.
It was all a new experience for the surging Van, who stuck around inside Las Vegas' T-Mobile Arena after his own big moment against Royval.
"It was a good fight, but my head wasn't all there," Van said of his experience sitting cageside for Pantoja's win. "I was so excited to be there. You gotta remember, I never go to UFC events. I think that was probably my second time. ... For me to sit at the front row, my head wasn't there.
"When I walked in the cage, I didn't even know what to do. Joe Rogan asked me a question and I thought we were done. Shout out to the champ, man — he was like, 'Hey, we gotta do the faceoff.' I forgot about the faceoff! I thought after [Rogan] interviews me, we were done."
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Considering his youth, Van has already put together a wildly impressive career. Of his current five-fight stretch of victories, all occurred on numbered UFC pay-per-view events. Now if he can pull off the upset against Pantoja, Van will become one of the youngest champions in promotional history, falling just shy of topping Jon Jones' record set at age 23 against Mauricio "Shogun" Rua in 2011.
Though he's yet to fight a full five rounds in MMA, Van nonetheless has championship experience, having previously won the Fury FC flyweight title in 2023. That fight punched Van's ticket to the UFC, and nine fights later, he feels well-prepared to overthrow one of the best pound-for-pound fighters on Earth.
"I'm about to take that belt. [UFC 317] showed that I'm confident, I'm ready to take him on," Van said.
"I don't really care about the faceoff. People want to look hard when they face off. I'm like, 'Man, come on. We're going to fight in the cage.'
"He's a great champion, but he's never fought Joshua Van."

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