OTTAWA, Canada – Donald Cerrone picked up a Zuffa record 17th fight-night bonus at UFC Fight Night 89 when he stopped Patrick Cote with strikes in the third round of their welterweight bout.

Despite all that extra cash, however, Cerrone (30-7 MMA, 17-4 UFC) said he’s still not happy with the way in which he’s been compensated by the UFC. And after beating Cote (23-10 MMA, 10-10 UFC), he said he wants to revisit the issue with company President Dana White.

“(The bonuses) all sound nice – according to my pay I don’t mean (expletive) to the UFC,” Cerrone told MMAjunkie at UFC Fight Night 89’s post-fight news conference. “But we’ll see. (I’m) going to talk to Dana after this and figure that out.”

On top of the record-setting bonus, Cerrone also made an impact on other sections of the history books for his dominant win on Saturday at The Arena at TD Place in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. “Cowboy” became the first to finish Cote with strikes, climbed further up the promotion’s all-time stoppage list and moved up to fourth in on the UFC’s all-time wins list.

The fight marked the second time Cerrone, 33, has competed at 170 pounds after he decided to move up a division following a quick TKO loss to Rafael dos Anjos in a lightweight title bout at UFC on FOX 17 in December.

Cerrone has shined in both of those performances. He submitted Alex Oliveira in the first round at UFC Fight Night 83 in February and battered Cote with strikes and submission attempts before finally finishing the job in the final frame.

The Jackson-Wink MMA fighter isn’t committed to remaining in his current weight class, though. Cerrone just wants to get back in the octagon quick, and if that means cutting back down to lightweight, he said that’s just fine.

“I don’t know. 155 or 170, either way,” Cerrone said. “Whatever the fastest trip to the next fight is, whether it’s 155 or 170, that’s the route I’m going. I felt good. I probably was literally 176, 177 walking into this fight tonight.”

Who would Cerrone like to fight in his next bout, though? He told MMAjunkie prior to UFC Fight Night 89 he has a score to settle with Nate Diaz (19-10 MMA, 14-8 UFC) and Khabib Nurmagomedov (23-0 MMA, 7-0 UFC).

“Diaz or Khabib at 155 or 170,” Cerrone said. “It don’t matter.”

For complete coverage of UFC Fight Night 89, check out the UFC Events section of the site.