Alexander
Volkanovski
remains at the peak of his powers.

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The City Kickboxing standout showcased his physicality in the
UFC
290
main event, defeating Yair
Rodriguez
via technical knockout on Saturday night at the
T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Volkanovski ended the bout with a
salvo of ground-and-pound at the 4:19 mark of Round 3 to rebound
from a narrow loss to Islam
Makhachev
at UFC 284 this past February.

“You’ve got to expect the unexpected. Everybody that knows this
game knows how dangerous he was … This week I flipped the switch,”
Volkanovski said. “I’m the champ. I’m the king of this division. No
one is ever stopping me.”



While Rodriguez (15-4, 10-3 1 NC UFC) did his best to threaten with
his flashy toolbox of kicks, Volkanovski (26-2, 13-1 UFC) gradually
broke down is Mexican foe. The Aussie grounded Rodriguez repeatedly
in the opening 10 minutes, methodically hammering away with
ground-and-pound from above. Rodriguez showed a sense of urgency
early in the third frame, blending punching combinations with kicks
— a few of which drew nods of acknowledgment from his opponent.
However, those kicks would also lead to his demise. Volkanovski set
the stage for the finishing sequence when countered a Rodriguez
kick with a powerful right hook. A reeling Rodriguez backed up to
the fence, eating a knee and uppercut in close quarters before
being dumped on the canvas. From there, Volkanovski smashed his
adversary with alternating left and right hands until referee
Herb
Dean
had no choice but to pull him off of Rodriguez.

“I knew that when I started circling away he would switch stance,
and I knew that right hook would be pretty good,” Volkanovski.

Pantoja Captures Flyweight Crown in Instant Classic

Alexandre
Pantoja
just might have Brandon
Moreno
’s number.

In a flyweight championship epic that will go down in history,
Pantoja claimed the 125-pound strap with a split-decision triumph
over Moreno in the UFC 290 co-main event. Derek Cleary and
Junichiro Kamijo scored the bout 48-47 — both for Pantoja — while
Ben Cartlidge saw it 49-46 in favor of Moreno. Pantoja is now an
unofficial 3-0 against Moreno, with a decision triumph at UFC Fight
Night 129 and an exhibition submission victory on “The Ultimate
Fighter 24” also on his ledger.

Pantoja threatened to make it a quick night. He floored Moreno with
a short left hook to the chin early in Round 1 before following his
foe to the floor and cutting him with elbows from top position.
Moreno showed a champion’s resolve by making it to the end of the
round, and what ensued thereafter might rank as the best fight in
the history of the division.

Moreno regained his bearings and peppered Pantoja the rest of the
way with snappy jabs and right hands. He also busted his opponent
open with a standing elbow in Round 3. While Moreno held the edge
in volume during exchanges, Pantoja continued to fire back under
duress, though his power wasn’t the same as it was in the opening
stanza. What really made the difference for the Brazilian was his
ability to control the majority of the grappling exchanges. Though
he never threatened Moreno with a submission, Pantoja landed six
takedowns and ended the final frame by making his Mexican adversary
carry him like a backpack, an image that might have sealed his
victory.

Pantoja has won his last four in UFC competition.

Du Plessis Stops Whittaker, Claims No. 1 Contender Spot

It would be wise to stop underestimating Dricus Du
Plessis
.

With reigning middleweight champion Israel
Adesanya
sitting cageside, Du Plessis claimed the No. 1
contender’s spot in emphatic fashion with a second-round technical
knockout of Robert
Whittaker
. The South Africa native ended the bout with a swarm
of punches at the 2:23 mark of Round 2. Du Plessis (20-2, 6-0) has
won his last eight professional outings.



Whittaker (24-7, 15-5 UFC) appeared to be in control early, as he
countered effectively behind his jab while avoiding the majority of
his opponent’s offerings. Du Plessis seized momentum late in Round
1, when he executed a headlock takedown and opened a significant
cut near Whittaker’s right eye with an elbow from top position.

Du Plessis built upon that in the second stanza, as he stumbled
Whittaker with a clean straight right to the face. With the former
champ reeling, Du Plessis swarmed with punches to the head and body
against the fence, which forced a defenseless Whittaker to drop to
a knee. “Still Knocks” continued the salvo until Marc Goddard
intervened on Whittaker’s behalf.

At the conclusion of the bout, Adesanya entered the cage to face
off against Du Plessis, and the two middleweights exchanged words
in the Octagon. It’s widely expected that Adesanya will defend his
title agianst Du Plessis at UFC 293 in Sydney.

Hooker Edges Turner in Brawl

Dan
Hooker
shook off a slow start to capture a split decision
triumph against Jalin
Turner
in a back-and-forth lightweight slugfest. Derek Cleary
and Ron McCarthy scored the fight 29-28 for Hooker (23-12, 13-8
UFC), while Adalaide Byrd submitted a 29-28 tally for Turner (13-7,
6-4 UFC), who missed weight by two pounds one day prior.

What started as a technical affair gradually shifted into a brawl.
Turner controlled the range in Round 1 with stance switches,
straight punches to the head and kicks to the body. “The Tarantula”
continued that momentum early in the second frame, when he busted
Hooker open with a clean head kick. “The Hangman” turned the tide
late in the round, however, as he hurt Turner and backed him into
the fence with a flurry of punches. Hooker locked in a rear-naked
choke to cap off a wild round, but Turner was saved by the
horn.

Turner appeared to be almost out of gas by the start of the final
frame, and Hooker took advantage. Turner landed a takedown early
out of desperation, but Hooker poured it on after scrambling back
to his feet. He pressured with more punching combinations and sent
Turner tumbling to the canvas with the onslaught. The City
Kickboxing product then followed his foe into guard, where he spent
most of the rest of the frame racking up control time and landing
ground-and-pound. The fighters returned to their feet in the waning
moments, but Turner didn’t have enough time to turn things
around.

Nickal Earns Fifth First-Round Finish

Bo
Nickal
proved he is ready for a step up in competition, as he
secured his fifth career first-round stoppage against short-notice
opponent Valentine
Woodburn
in a featured middleweight tilt. The former three-time
NCAA national champion wrestler needed just 38 seconds to remove
Woodburn from the ranks of the unbeaten.

Nickal (5-0, 2-0 UFC) didn’t need to use his vaunted wrestling this
time around. He clipped Woodburn (7-1, 0-1 UFC) with right hook
during an initial exchange before putting his foe on wobbly legs
with a follow-up left hook. Moments later, he dropped Woodburn with
a left uppercut and dove in to seal his victory with a missile of a
right hand. That prompted referee Chris Tognoni to intervene and
save Woodburn from further punishment.

Continue Reading »
UFC 290 Prelims: Robbie Lawler Starches Niko Price in Swan Song

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