TORONTO – Max Holloway holds essentially every key featherweight record in UFC history. Still, though, he doesn’t believe he’s the greatest fighter to ever compete in the division.

Holloway (20-3 MMA, 16-3 UFC) added another stellar victory to his resume on Saturday night when he defeated Brian Ortega (14-1 MMA, 6-1 UFC) in a one-sided manner to defend his featherweight belt for the second time. “Blessed” has run through the majority of the division’s best during his 13-fight winning streak, and that includes two wins over longtime ex-champ Jose Aldo.

Before Holloway came along, Aldo (27-4 MMA, 9-3 UFC) had established a legacy that stood on its own at 145 pounds. UFC commentator Joe Rogan said post-fight that Holloway has surpassed “Scarface,” and that’s certainly a valid opinion. One person who doesn’t share it, though, is Holloway himself.

“I still believe the greatest featherweight of all time is Jose Aldo,” Holloway told reporters, including MMAjunkie, post-fight at UFC 231. “When I’m 30 or 31 or his age then you ask me if I’m the greatest featherweight of all-time if I’m still here.”

UFC 231 took place at Scotiabank Arena. Holloway defeated Ortega by fourth-round TKO (due to a doctor’s stoppage) in the pay-per-view headliner, which followed prelims on FS1 and UFC Fight Pass.

Holloway currently owns divisional records for the longest winning streak, most wins, most stoppages and more. The only key record Aldo holds over him is title defenses, as the Brazilian put together a streak of six straight. Holloway believes he will eventually surpass Aldo but still needs more time.

“I’ve got to just keep winning, keep doing my job and keep winning fights and let you guys keep talking about it,” Holloway said. “Personally, for me, I think Jose still is. I’m chasing him. He set the bar, and I’m still chasing that bar, and I’ve got to break it. People are saying this is a new era. I guess I’m setting the bar for the new era. When ‘The Blessed Era’ is here, ‘The Blessed Era’ is going to be in full effect.”

Being the best featherweight ever would be a major accomplishment for Holloway, he said, but ultimately his aspirations are even greater than that. He wants to go down and the best fighter overall, and whether that means staying at 145 pounds or concede to UFC President Dana White’s desire to have him move up to lightweight, he said he will be prepared to do whatever it takes.

“At the end of the day I just want to be the pound-for-pound No. 1,” Holloway said. “I’m the champion, and I keep defending my belt, I’ll be No. 1. If it’s up a weight class, it’s up. If it’s defending my throne. If I get to fight one of my good friends, ‘The Daddest Man on the Plant’ (Daniel Cormier) for that title, bring it on Kung Fu Panda. I’ve got you, ‘DC.’ I can see him very soon.”

For complete coverage of UFC 231, check out the UFC Events section of the site.