Conor McGregor hits Donald Cerrone with several shoulder strikes before landing a head kick in the opening seconds. For more UFC, sign up here for ESPN+ http://plus.espn.com/ufc. (0:37)

His first middleweight title defence at last on the books, Israel Adesanya may just take a little inspiration from Conor McGregor into his UFC 248 showdown with Cuban Yoel Romero.

McGregor is once again the talk of the mixed martial arts world after his devastating Round 1 TKO of Donald "Cowboy" Cerrone over the weekend, the Irishman announcing his UFC return after an 18-month layoff in typically eye-catching fashion.

Saturday's UFC Fight Night main event features the surging Curtis Blaydes taking on veteran Junior dos Santos in a heavyweight clash. Blaydes has won six of his past seven fights; Dos Santos, a former UFC heavyweight champion, has won three of his past four. UFC Fight Night: Blaydes vs. Dos Santos

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Watching on back at home in Auckland, New Zealand, Adesanya had the same reaction as fight fans the world over as he watched a man with whom he shares the same Paradigm Sports Management team.

"It was great, I loved it. I appreciated the way he played the game," Adesanya told ESPN. "I loved the shoulder strikes, that was gangster. I liked the head kick, that was sick, it was real slick. I'm a big fan.

"And obviously his management team is my management team, so it's good. It's a good win for us because when he wins, I win; when I win, he wins. It's good for us because we get to claim a lot of the chips on the table."

Adesanya will return to the Octagon for his first title defence as the full UFC middleweight champion - he defeated Robert Whittaker as interim champion at UFC 243 last year - on Mar. 7 as first reported by ESPN's Brett Okamoto.

It will be a change in build-up from his first six UFC fights however with Adesanya having to wait six months between fights, his showdown with Romero representing the longest stint outside the Octagon since he began a seven-fight streak to the middleweight title.

"I would have liked to have fought sooner, I guess, but that's just not how things played out," Adesanya said.

Israel Adesanya became the UFC's middleweight world champion following a victory over Robert Whittaker in Melbourne, October 6, 2019 Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

"I'm in a different league now, I'm the champion ... but it is what it is, I'm here now and I have a fight ready. So I'm just going to line them up like I did in my run at the beginning of my UFC career."

Still, Adesanya was adamant Romero was the ideal opponent to start a year in which he wants three title defences; after Las Vegas, both London and either Vancouver or Toronto in Canada appeal as destinations where the Nigerian New Zealander wants to keep building his "global" brand.

"[I'll] take out one of the tough guys in my division, the guy no-one wants to fight, so I'll just take him out first and then work through the rest."

AP Photo/John Locher

While preparations for Romero will never be far from mind, Adesanya is also busy helping his City Kickboxing teammates prepare for UFC Fight Night Auckland.

The Feb. 23 card is being headlined by local lightweight star Dan Hooker but also represents a coronation of sorts for the Auckland gym after its stunning rise under Eugene Bareman.

"It's a beautiful atmosphere in the gym. Everyone working hard, working smart, towards the same goal," Adesanya said of City Kickboxing. "I must say that I'm looking forward to being front and centre watching Brad Riddell, Kai Kara-France [at UFC Auckland] and a few of the other guys fight the night before as well. It's beautiful."