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Josiah Harrell isn’t treating his UFC debut like a comeback story despite the road back having been through a hospital ward and a nine-hour brain surgery. On February 21 in Houston, he finally walks into the Octagon after losing his first UFC shot in 2023 to a rare brain condition that could’ve ended his career before it started. The timing alone makes this heavy. He’s stepping in on short notice, replacing Seok Hyun Ko, to face one of the welterweight division’s hottest prospects in Jacobe Smith. It’s a test straight away, and Harrell seems to know exactly what kind of night he’s signing up for.

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“Feels like this is where I’m supposed to be,” Harrel said during an interview with the UFC. “So it’s just coming all back together since my brain surgery and everything. So it’s just, I’m just happy to be here. Yeah, I don’t know if, I mean, it’s pretty obvious. I’m not normal and not in the best ways. I’m on the mental scale. I’m on the spectrum somewhere. So it’s just, I had to do something to get back.

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“Like if I did not do anything, I was going to do more mental damage to myself than I would physical. So, like, just balancing those two things out, I had to get back in there. It was almost immediately. I think it was… so I got back into Columbus a week after. But even like a day after my surgery, I was hiking. I was like I needed to move. I got way too much trauma up here to be sitting still in my own thoughts for a certain amount of time.”

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The undefeated 27-year-old admitted the fight back was as mental as physical, and that the biggest risk for him was quitting on himself when things got hard. Team Alpha Male’s Vince Murdock, who also returned to fighting after surgery for the same condition, played a big role in that belief.

The details of Josiah Harrell’s recovery explain why this debut carries extra weight. Diagnosed with Moyamoya in 2023, he underwent surgery to reroute blood flow and prevent clotting and stroke. He even returned to training after suffering two seizures, against advice to slow down. However, as he explained, for him motion was the medicine.

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Since the surgery, Harrell went 4–0 on the regional scene, including a win in LFA, to earn his way back. That matters when you line him up with his upcoming opponent, Jacobe Smith. He’s an Oklahoma wrestling product, taken under Daniel Cormier’s wing, with a knockout of Preston Parsons and a submission of Niko Price in the UFC already on his record. But Harrell isn’t here to protect his 11–0 record. He’s here because the alternative, for him, was worse. And in the same interview, he shared an inspirational message for others who might be going through their own tests in life.

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Josiah Harrell shares a message for people “chasing a dream” ahead of his UFC debut

Josiah Harrell’s message didn’t come off as just stereotypical and generic advice. It sounded lived-in. Harrell told people chasing something big to make sure they’re not the ones who take themselves out of the race.

“When you’re chasing a dream, I hope that you’re not the one that takes yourself away from that dream,” he said. “I would not use this as relationship advice if you have a bad partner to leave. But other than that, it’s just, don’t take yourself out of it. There’s a lot of things that can happen and there’s a lot of things, that will try to push you away from something you want to do and there’s gonna be a lot of excuses in your head.”

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From there, Harrell widened the lens. He said the point is staying on your path and doing what you actually love, even when it’s uncomfortable. Whether his hand gets raised in Houston or not, he views the act of showing up as the win. The welterweight fighter also spoke on bringing glory to God, pursuing the passion that makes him feel alive, and showing people that setbacks are not the end of the road. In his mind, the result is secondary. The opportunity to step back into the arena at all is the prize.

That perspective tracks with his story. Most fighters guard an undefeated record like a vault. Harrell is stepping into a short-notice UFC debut against a 2–0 prospect who’s already finished two veterans. That’s not careful matchmaking. That’s a guy who’s already lost more than a number on a record and decided the risk is worth it.

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