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PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Emmers (-258), Buzukja (+210)
Round 1
There’s not much like a live sporting event at Madison Square
Garden. The UFC makes its annual pilgrimage to the world-famous
arena with a show that took several huge hits but came back with a
vengeance. The main card alone promises plenty of action, but
before then, eight prelims play out on the various ESPN and
streaming networks out there. The fights commence with a match
scheduled at featherweight only to get a slight tweak on weigh-in
day. Coming in one pound heavy, Emmers (19-7, 2-3 UFC) will hope
that surrendering a percentage of purse is the only thing he loses
today against New York’s own Buzukja (11-3, 0-1 UFC). Buzukja
offers his hand outstretched, and the heavy fighter choose not to
accept it under the nonsense-free gaze of referee Keith Peterson.
It’s on with the show. Buzukja sticks out a few jabs early, and
Emmers is on him with multiple low kicks. Emmers charges forward,
getting in a right hand and slipping back from the counter. A
second blitz from Emmers gets through the defense of his opponent,
and Buzukja defends himself but gets cracked with a right hand in
the midst of a flurry. “Pretty Boy” again dips back to evade the
strikes coming back, and
he lines up a straight right hand down the pipe that smashes square
into Buzukja’s chin. The New Yorker collapses in a heap, and Emmers
pounces immediately. Emmers batters Buzukja with a number of mighty
hammerfists, and as Buzukja turns to his side, Peterson steps in to
call a halt to the action. The victor immediately
calls for “50Gs,” but due to his weight miss, a post-fight bonus is
all but off the table. Nevertheless, Emmers earns his first finish
in the Octagon while becoming the first fighter to ever stop “The
Great” as a pro.
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The Official Result
Jamall Emmers def. Dennis Buzukja R1 0:49 via TKO (Punches)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Van (-218), Borjas (+180)
Round 1
A pair of once-beaten whirling dervish flyweights will take center
stage next in a fight that might not last terribly long. Both Van
(8-1, 1-0 UFC) and Borjas (9-1, 0-0 UFC) celebrate one decision
apiece, so referee Mike Beltran is ready to intervene at a moment’s
notice given their respective paces. They do not bother touching
gloves before going about their business. Van prods out early with
a low kick as Borjas misses on range-finding jabs, but Borjas
manages to find the target once or twice. Van jabs to the
midsection, and Borjas turns his hips into a leg kick. When Van
does not acknowledge it, Borjas kicks the same spot. This prompts
Van to his own low kick, in which Borjas retaliates immediately
with a front kick to the midsection. Borjas circles back, pops out
a leg kick, and gets chin-checked with a sharp jab. Borjas replies
with a solid strike, and both men are largely aiming single strikes
at one another. They go tit-for-tat with jabs and leg kicks, with
neither showing a large advantage, although Van puts a little more
into his strikes that mostly go wide. Borjas pokes the midsection
with the ball of his foot, and Van chambers and fires two stern
calf kicks in a hurry. Borjas continues feeding Van a steady diet
of frustrating jabs, although those and his kicks are largely all
that connect until he jumps forward with a switch kick and tags Van
with a right hand. Borjas spins with a wheel kick that grazes off
the guard, and he rushes at his opponent and hurts Van with a right
hand and sets the youngster on his seat. Van shakes out the cobwebs
as Borjas crashes forward and drills him in the chest with a jump
knee. Van ricochets off the fencing and looks for counters, but
Borjas is able to evade the brunt of them and strike back. A number
of jabs and hefty leg kicks find their home for “El Gallo Negro,”
and he runs forward in pursuit of a left hook that Van narrowly
evades. When Van resets, Borjas slams his shin on the calf of his
foe. Borjas sticks and moves with his jab, and he sneaks a front
kick in and is driven back with a left hook from the fighter born
in Myanmar. Borjas races forward, the bridge of Van’s nose
trickling blood, and he ties Van up in a clinch against the fence
until the bell.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Borjas
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Borjas
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Borjas
Round 2
The second round opens with the two testing one another, but the
pace picks up in a hurry when Van starts to crowd his opponent.
Borjas leans back and belts Van with a left hook, and Van bounces
away and recovers. Borjas keeps on his bike as Van pursues him,
picking away with jabs and leg kicks as Van closes in. Borjas
changes levels, only to go up high with a big one-two, and Van
sways and looks to loop two punches together in response. Van walks
face-first into a jump knee and does not bat an eye, and Borjas
whips a kick to the body to follow. Van embodies his “The Fearless”
nickname by striding forward, unfazed, and he connects with a big
right hand on the jaw. Van finds his range with a short combination
that ends with a head kick, and he rips the body when Borjas looks
to escape. Van marks up the Peruvian with a number of head and body
shots, and he backs off to measure a spinning wheel kick that
careens off the shoulder. Van digs two heavy shots to the body and
goes up top, and he continues working the midsection with a litany
of strikes. As Borjas drops his hand, Van boots him upside the
face. Borjas steels himself and nails Van in the face with a right
hand, and Van completely shrugs it off and continues his
high-pressure approach. Borjas keeps away, not letting Van crowd or
corner him, but Van is still able to find the liver with a left
hand. Van sneaks in a number of jabs and lets Borjas overswing in a
counter, and he eats a left hand and keeps right on plodding
forward. Van continues to mix his strikes up to the head and body,
and the round ends.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Van
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Van
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Van
Round 3
The two flyweights reach the final frame, and Van is ready to pick
up right where he left off and sticks out a number of jabs in rapid
succession. Van targets the lead leg when not jabbing, and Borjas
responds with a right to the breadbasket and a clapping calf kick.
Borjas sits down on counters, connecting cleanly with a few, but
Van no-sells them and fires right back fearlessly. When Borjas
swings hard, Van level changes and lifts Borjas up so he can slam
him down. Borjas scrambles, allowing Van to drop back and pursue a
leglock. Borjas is able to break the submission setup up so he can
stand up, and they both so do. Van continues to press the pace, and
he connects with numerous shots before attempting a single-leg
takedown. The 22-year-old bails on it so he can open up with
strikes to the head, which then allow him to work the body. The
offense of Van continues to keep his foe guessing, and Borjas tries
to retaliate and counter with step-in knees or other single
powerful blows, but Van largely sees them coming and blocks or
dodges them. Van jabs up high, punches the body and then kicks low
to light up all targets like the dummy on “Three Ninjas.” Van shows
no sign of slowing, flowing with offense and chaining strikes
together. Borjas tags him with a jump knee, and Van takes a right
hand on the chin that shakes him up. A rattled Van maintains the
composure to get hold of a body lock and throw Borjas down to the
mat, and he quickly steps over to half guard. From there, Van
sneaks into side control and looks to maintain a crucifix that
turns into a scarf hold with an armlock. Borjas brilliantly sweeps
“The Fearless” and dumps him on his back, where he uses the
position to take the back. As Van continues to move wildly, he gets
back on top. Van rides out the round on top with a few ground
strikes, concluding a thrilling 15-minute affair.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Van (29-28 Van)
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Van (29-28 Van)
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Van (29-28 Van)
The Official Result
Joshua Van def. Kevin Borjas via Unanimous Decision (29-28, 29-28,
29-28)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Castaneda (-142), Kang (+120)
Round 1
Even if South Korea’s “Mr. Perfect” Kang (19-9, 1 NC; 8-3, 1 NC
UFC) has not been perfect as a member of the UFC roster, his
pattern of three wins followed by a defeat has held perfectly for
the last decade. Should this continue, it would mean a victory over
Castaneda (20-6, 3-2 UFC) tonight. Due to this pairing coming
together on late notice, it will be contested at a catchweight of
138 pounds, and neither mad had a problem with the scales ahead of
time. Prior to the action, a touch of gloves is shared, and referee
Dan Miragliotta is on standby. Kang stays light on his feet early
to hops back to avoid a low kick, and he jabs with the ball of his
foot to Castaneda’s chest. Castaneda responds with a quick leg
kick, and Kang crowds him and looks to corner him. The South Korean
fighter sits down on a body kick, and he springs away from a
counter. Castaneda gives him a body kick back, but he does get
countered before he can get away. Castaneda starts to chew up the
lead wheel with a plethora of calf kicks, and he whips a kick to
the side that makes Kang grimace. Castaneda spins with a back kick
to the body as well, with very few strikes aimed up high early.
Castaneda jabs the head and body, and he gets driven back with a
straight right hand. Castaneda goes body and leg with a punch and a
kick, and Kang ignores the strikes and continues to walk him down.
Castaneda just misses with a right hand as Kang closes in, and he
keeps chipping at the inside and outside of Kang’s left leg.
Castaneda jabs the body and slides to the side, and he brings his
shin high to bang into Kang’s raised guard. Kang checks a kick as
he plods forward, and he belts Castaneda in the midsection with his
own foot. Castaneda doubles up on leg kicks and spins with a heel
to the ribs, and he surprises Kang with a left hand. Castaneda does
not slow down kicking the front leg, and he wades through a few
strikes to sit down on a right hand. Kang counters with a clean
straight right, and he finds his target with a second shortly
thereafter much to the dismay of “Sexi Mexi.” Castaneda comes up
short with a body kick, and he darts forward suddenly with two
swiping punches that brush sweat from Kang’s brow. Kang intercepts
Castaneda with a jab, and he bull-rushes forward and goes wide.
Castaneda stays elusive and lands a number of additional kicks
until the round ends.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda
Round 2
The second round begins in a hurry, as Kang is ready to hit harder
than before. When Castaneda attempts a low kick, Kang sends
Castaneda to his seat with a right hand. Castaneda climbs back up
and is not concerned, as he keeps right on kicking. Kang whiffs
with an elbow from up close, and he lands his own leg kick for good
measure. Castaneda tags him with a right hand over the top, and
Kang sees the success of that kick and goes to the same spot.
Castaneda jabs and moves, and he clips Kang with a short right
hand. Kang shakes it out and absorbs a leg kick, and Castaneda
times his right hand again. Kang looks for his own counter during a
leg kick, and this allows Castaneda to duck it and sneak around to
take his back. Castaneda looks to take Kang down, and he succeeds
in scooping up the Korean from behind and dropping him down on his
arms. Kang turns around, his back to the fence and his backside on
the floor, but Castaneda controls him from any further activity.
Kang explodes to get back to his feet, and he targets the body and
gets blasted with one to the solar plexus. Kang protests that the
kick went low, and Miragliotta calls time and checks on the replay.
Miragliotta rules the strike was clean, and they get back to it.
Castaneda sprints into action, working Kang’s leg to draw a
counter, duck it and take Kang’s back again while upright. Kang
defends from the takedown attempt this time around, so Castaneda
meets him with a thudding kick to the ribs and numerous punches up
high. Castaneda connects with a punch and kick to the body, and he
lands a kick on the inside and outside of Kang’s lead leg to
follow. Kang prods out his jab, and he smacks Castaneda with an
ineffective left. Kang puts a little more mustard behind a left
hand, but Castaneda does not flinch. Castaneda fires a left hand
over the top, and Kang gets tagged with a series of punches from
“Sexi Mexi.” The sparring match of a round ends as Kang shells up
against the fence.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda
Round 3
Castaneda hops out of his corner offering a glove touch, and Kang
accepts it and kicks him square in the groin. Castaneda groans but
waves Miragliotta off, as he is energized and wants to walk it off.
As Kang kicks his body again, Castaneda rifles a right hand down
the middle on the chest and knocks Kang down. Kang climbs back up,
and Castaneda is on him, stringing together combinations of punches
and leg kicks. The latter starts to draw reactions out of his
opponent, as Kang is wearing it from the assault to his left leg.
Kang toughs it out and gets back to his own forward momentum, and
he comes in close enough to block a body kick. Castaneda mixes
things up with kicks to the body and legs, and he punches the head
and body. A few head shots from “Sexi Mexi” make Kang nod at him
and try to entice a brawl, but Castaneda instead backs off as a
strike from Kang appears to have opened a cut on the top of his
right eye. Castaneda scores a clubbing right hand, and Kang lures
him into the slugfest he wanted, as the two trade punches. Kang
backs off, taking the worse of the exchanges, and Castaneda follows
after him and pursues a single. Castaneda drags Kang to the mat,
and Kang explodes back up and is met with a solid left hand and a
liver kick. Kang fires back, getting a bit of space from the
crowding Castaneda, and he gets Castaneda’s attention with a kick
to the ribs. Castaneda sprints forward, looking for a high crotch
to lift and dump Kang, and Kang keeps his balance when lowered to
the floor. Kang keeps moving and lets Castaneda slide off the side
and back, and he threatens suddenly with a guillotine choke.
Castaneda escapes and retreats, and Kang gives chase and loads up
on all the offense he can muster until the horn sounds.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda (30-27 Castaneda)
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda (30-27 Castaneda)
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Castaneda (30-27
Castaneda)
The Official Result
John Castaneda def. Kyung Ho Kang via Unanimous Decision (30-27,
30-27, 30-27)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Gordon (-198), Madsen (+164)
Round 1
Lightweights dance as the prelims roll on, as Gordon (19-6, 1 NC;
7-5, 1 NC UFC) looks for his first win this year. Having tasted
defeat in MMA for the first time last year, Madsen (12-1, 4-1 UFC)
will be aiming to get his hand raised for the first time in 2023 as
well. Something’s got to give, and referee Marc Goddard will be
keeping things above board. With plenty of respect between the two
fighters, they gladly touch their gloves together to make things
official. Madsen is the one to advance first, and he walks through
a half-hearted leg kick to clinch up in the middle of the cage.
Gordon pushes off to escape, and Madsen ducks a looping right hand.
Gordon rips a right hand to the body, and when they close in,
Madsen knees him in the body and head. They smash fists on the
other’s faces, and Madsen targets the body with knees and punches
as Gordon rests on the fencing. Gordon gathers himself and pushes
off the cage wall so he can gain some space, and he looks to get
his boxing going only to have to duck a huge right hand. Madsen
bullies “Flash” back to the wall, where he spams knees up the
middle and dirty boxes with strikes to the midsection. Ever so
often, Madsen sneaks in an uppercut, and this flusters the New
Yorker and makes him need to escape. Madsen is on him like a cheap
suit, connecting with a clean right hand, and forcing Gordon to
take a funny step as he gets driven back to the cage. Madsen knees
Gordon a few times as he wears on Gordon, until Gordon again gets
out. Gordon looks for some pocket boxing success before Madsen
closes in, and Madsen manages to get up tight and get in more
knees. Madsen cracks Gordon with two left hands, and he meanders
forward with two more heavy blows before gripping Gordon in the
clinch. Gordon shucks him off and elbows Madsen on the temple, and
he pops Madsen with an uppercut.
Gordon takes advantage of this moment and pounds Madsen in the face
with an elbow, and he whips a right hand over the top that crashes
square into Madsen’s ear. The Danish fighter crumbles, and “Flash”
leaps in a flash to finish the job. Gordon delivers a
pounding on the defeated Madsen until Goddard pulls him off, and
New York is on the board tonight! On his post-fight interview,
Gordon claims that his grandfather fought four times in the
building—Madison Square Garden—and that he used to shoot heroin in
Penn Station beneath the same building before knocking someone out
under its lights. Gordon declares that you can do anything you put
your mind to, and he celebrates his big knockout with his team.
The Official Result
Jared Gordon def. Mark O. Madsen R1 4:42 via TKO (Elbow and
Punches)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Sadykhov (-135), Borshchev (+114)
Round 1
Two strikers from Asia that relocated to America to train with
prominent MMA gyms will do battle in this next lightweight affair.
Winner of nine straight since dropping his pro debut,
Azerbaijan-born Longo/Weidman MMA product Sadykhov (9-1, 2-0 UFC)
will step into the Octagon to throw hands with Russia’s Borshchev
(7-3, 2-2 UFC) out of the Team Alpha Male Stable. Bragging rights
for the camps and a step up the pecking order will be in store for
the winner, and before that happens, the lightweights clap hands.
Referee Keith Peterson dons his proverbial hard hat and boots
nonsense to the curb as these two flamethrowers with 89% and 86%
stoppage rates, respectively, are about to go at it. Sadykhov
strikes first with a low kick, and Borshchev responds with a side
kick to the lead leg as well. The two trade kicks to the same
targets, and Sadykhov gets off a jab to the body and has a head
kick glance off the guard. “Slava” steps back and goes low with a
kick, before going high with his shin. Sadykhov guards them both
and knees the body, and he considers a level change but lets it go.
A powerful kick from the Team Alpha Male forces Sadykhov to spin
all the way around to recover, and when he resets, he lines up a
right hand down Broadway. Sadykhov takes a few more thudding leg
kicks, and Borshchev strings together punches up high and trips
Sadykhov up with a kick on the way out. Sadykhov gathers himself
and keeps his guard high to block the oncoming fire, and he checks
a kick and backs Borshchev off before shooting in on the hips.
Borshchev shuts it down and blasts Sadykhov to the body with a
right hand, and Sadykhov retaliates with counters. Borshchev
hammers the leg with a kick and strings four punches together to
immediately follow it, and then retreats to sneak an inside leg
kick in after. Sadykhov comes up short with a one-two, and he pops
Borshchev with a leg and eats a right hand. Sadykhov continues
barreling forward, letting loose with fists and a body kick.
Borshchev reels and kicks the leg to spin Sadykhov around again,
and he jackhammers the front leg to make Sadykhov stumble. A
powerful left hand from Sadykhov rattles “Slava,” forcing the
Russian-born fighter to backpedal. Sadykhov marches him down, but
Borshchev has recovered in time and is ready to throw hands.
Borshchev lambastes Sadykhov with another vicious kick, and
Sadykhov tries to spin through it with a back fist. Borshchev
blocks and connects with a right hand, and the horn sounds.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Borshchev
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Borshchev
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Borshchev
Round 2
The fighters clap hands again to lead off the round, and Sadykhov
advances to load up on four punches, then goes after a high kick at
the conclusion of a combination. Borshchev counters and drills
Sadykhov’s lead wheel with a kick, and Sadykhov raises it gingerly
and hops around before changing stances. Borshchev strides forward,
brimming with confidence, and he puts seven or eight punches on his
opponent before spinning Sadykhov all the way around with a
devastating leg kick. Sadykhov absorbs two punches flush on the
chin and is ready to lash out, only for Borshchev to duck and spin
with a back fist that smacks him upside the noggin. Sadykhov shakes
it off and walks through a calf kick to pat out jabs, and he ducks
under a looping left hand. Sadykhov fakes with a kick and rifles
two punches up top, and Borshchev retaliates immediately with a
body kick. Sadykhov unloads with a left hand, and Borshchev is
rocked badly. Sadykhov releases a high kick that knocks Borshchev
to his seat, and he leaps on top to strike. Borshchev gathers his
thoughts while on his back, but Sadykhov is not about to let him
off the hook as he slashes down with an elbow that splits
Borshchev’s head wide open. Borshchev looks to scramble, and he
manages to get back to his feet out of sheer force of will.
Sadykhov cracks his foe with a few punches, and a big one-two
knocks Borshchev back. Sadykhov times his strikes to attempt a
takedown, and he puts “Slava” on his back. Borshchev defends and
even trips Sadykhov, but Sadykhov steps over to claim full mount,
all while blood pours in Borshchev’s eyes. Sadykhov gets dragged to
half guard and considers an arm-triangle choke, and he drops down a
few elbows. Borshchev turns to his stomach and powers his way back
up, and he lands once but gets knocked back. Sadykhov hurts him
again, and he tanks an elbow on the chin right at the bell to make
him raise his arms in the air in celebration.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-8 Sadykhov
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-8 Sadykhov
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-8 Sadykhov
Round 3
After a little examination, Borshchev is cleared to continue, and
he is grinning as he is ready to start off the last round. Sadykhov
races towards him throwing punches, and he slips a strike and marks
the body. Borshchev kicks the leg to spin Sadykhov around, and
Sadykhov tackles him down courtesy of a single. Borshchev bucks and
twists to try to kick Sadykhov off of him, and Sadykhov frustrates
him with a few strikes but cannot keep him there. Borshchev turns
over and pops back to his feet, where he is ready to throw hands.
Borshchev works the body, and Sadykhov responds with a knee that
splits the guard. They trade right hands at the same time, and
Borshchev slams his fist into Sadykhov’s midsection and measures a
high kick that is barely blocked. Borshchev continues investing in
body work, and he lines up a few punches that ring Sadykhov’s bell.
Sadykhov tries to recover and takes a left to the body and a right
to the head. Borshchev leans back to dodge a strike and snipes
Sadykhov with a right hand, and he strings four and then two
punches together in rapid succession before kicking out Sadykhov’s
leg. Borshchev rips the body and goes up top, and he completely
ignores a head kick. Borshchev kicks him back with a heavier blow,
leading Sadykhov to crash the pocket and take him to the mat.
Borshchev uses his legs and an active butterfly guard to keep
Sadykhov from advancing, and Sadykhov jumps over to take a dominant
position but only holds it for a second before Borshchev is flipped
over and turned to his knees. Borshchev climbs back up and works
the body, and a knee bounces off his head that makes Sadykhov
tumble to the mat. Borshchev kicks the leg and trades punches, and
he evades a head kick and counters with a left hook. Borshchev
connects with a partial Superman punch, and he boxes Sadykhov up
with punches in bunches. Sadykhov is relegated to single strikes,
and he rushes forward to take Borshchev down. Borshchev stands with
a second to go, and he blocks a high knee to conclude the fight.
Depending on how judges scored the second round, this
blood-and-guts thriller could end up as a draw.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Borshchev (28-28)
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Borshchev (28-28)
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Borshchev (28-28)
The Official Result
Viacheslav Borshchev vs. Nazim Sadykhov is Scored a Majority Draw
(29-28, 28-28, 28-28)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT |
ODDS: Rebecki (-700), Roberts (+500)
Round 1
Originally expecting he would come to blows with Tajikistan’s
Nurullo Aliev, on ultra-late notice, Rebecki (18-1, 2-0 UFC) will
instead welcome Roberts (12-3, 1 NC; 4-3, 1 NC UFC) back to the
Octagon. The eight-fight vet left the organization in 2021 after
getting posterized by Ignacio Bahamondes, and two wins on the
regional circuit plus an appearance on the 31st season of “The
Ultimate Fighter” led to “The Predator”—no not that one—getting a
return ticket to the UFC. Unfortunately for Roberts, his second
chance at a first impression will start off rough, as he could not
reach the lightweight limit, coming in two pounds heavy and losing
a hefty chunk of his purse. The two will proceed with referee Mike
Beltran as their third, and the combatants happily exchange a fist
bump. Roberts measures a right hand, and he just misses Rebecki.
Rebecki rips a few kicks down low, and he comes up short with big
swinging fists. Roberts backs off, looking for a knee to counter,
and Rebecki follows him and secures a double-leg takedown to put
Roberts on the mat. Rebecki slashes down with an elbow on the
forehead, and he maintains position while landing some sporadic
ground-and-pound. Rebecki grinds down with his elbow, frustrating
the taller fighter, until Roberts kicks his feet in pursuit of a
sweep. This backfires for him, as Rebecki takes side control in a
hurry. Roberts is able to power his way back up through sheer
muscle, and Rebecki drags him down to his face from behind. As
Roberts recovers, Rebecki slithers around to take the back and get
both hooks in. Rebecki smacks Roberts on the sides of his head,
softening his man up until Roberts times an explosion to turn
around and stand up.
Before he gets all the way up, Rebecki snares him in an armbar, and
“The Predator” has just become the prey. Roberts tries to roll
through to defend against the submission, but this places him in
even greater danger. Rebecki continues to torque the arm with all
his might, and Roberts screams out before his arm breaks and his
tendons snap. Beltran is immediately on the action to
make sure nothing goes awry, but Rebecki releases the grip as soon
as he hears the verbal submission. The Polish fighter is in all
smiles when he stands back up, and he calls for the UFC to hold an
event in Poland soon.
The Official Result
Mateusz Rebecki def. Roosevelt Roberts R1 3:08 via Submission
(Armbar)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Godinez (-170), Ricci (+142)
Round 1
A place in the strawweight top 10 likely looms for the victor
between surging grappler Ricci (9-1, 4-1 UFC) and battle-tested
Godinez (11-3, 6-3 UFC), with a slight logjam up top of the
division but plenty of room to move around. The former celebrates a
win streak of four, while the latter has had her hand raised three
times in a row, and referee Dan Miragliotta will be the first to
know which one will be broken tonight. Eager to get after it, the
115ers skip past a fist bump and Ricci is jittery with strikes
right off the bat. Godinez ignores the fluttery movement and
reaches out with a pair of one-twos, and both come up short. Ricci
misses on a kick and dodges a right hand that zooms past her face.
Ricci tosses out a low kick, and Godinez fires off another one-two
that is a whisker closer. Ricci reaches her foe with a right hand,
and they crash together with single strikes at the same time.
Godinez paws out a jab, and she meets Ricci with a stern right hand
on the nose. Ricci blinks it out and flicks out low kicks. When
Godinez overswings on a right hand, Ricci rushes at her and grabs
hold of a body lock to take the fight down. Godinez balances from
one side of the cage to the other, and she keeps on her feet and
breaks away. Ricci whiffs on a pair of punches and gets driven back
with a right hand, and she resets and kicks low. Godinez crowds her
foe with a right hook, and she keeps her jab going. A right hand
from the Brazilian bounces off the guard, and Godinez catches her
and beans her with a right hand. Ricci topples to her seat, and
springs back up to tie Godinez up. Ricci presses her opponent
against the fence, where she looks to shake out any cobwebs, only
to get popped with a knee to force a break. Ricci scores with a
right hand, and Godinez greets her with one of her own. Ricci
avoids a jumping right hand and ducks beneath a swinging hook, but
she does not manage to get off anything from her own side. Ricci is
stonewalled when changing levels, and Godinez shoves her back and
knees Ricci in the chest. They both get off single swiping punches,
and it is Godinez’ punch that follows and dings Ricci again. Ricci
wears it well and absorbs a few more punches, and Godinez stalks
her down calmly and catches her with a jab. Ricci surprises Godinez
with a straight left that buckles Godinez’ knees, and Godinez
wobbles but fires back with a right hand before the bell
sounds.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Godinez
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Godinez
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Godinez
Round 2
The strawweights meet in the middle to engage, and Ricci fires off
strikes first as she lunges with jabs and punches. Godinez parries
or dodges and scores with a counter. Godinez wings a left hook and
a right hand, and she follows suit with a left hook that catches
Ricci flat-footed. Ricci tosses out a leg kick, and misses with a
one-two, as Godinez aims a left to her midsection. Godinez hooks a
left around the raised guard, and Ricci is shoved back by a left
hand down the middle. Ricci throws frantically, while Godinez is
far more composed and tagging her cleanly. Ricci secures a right
hand on the temple, and Godinez brushes past it to strike back only
to be met with a low kick. A number of Ricci punches hit nothing
but air, and Godinez tags her with a left hook. Godinez lunges
forward, stinging Ricci with another left hook, and a third really
gets Ricci’s attention. Godinez continues to find her home with her
big left, and when Ricci hits her back, the impact is nowhere near
as significant. Ricci strings three punches together and shoots in,
only to be met with a stuff and a solid right hand. Ricci marks up
her foe’s nose with a few punches, a head kick, and a sneaky
spinning back fist when resetting. Godinez stops the takedown
effort from succeeding, and she turns Ricci’s head with a straight
right hand. Ricci’s striking accuracy rate is likely low, while
Godinez continues to connect cleanly without fear. Ricci takes a
left hand flush, and Godinez sits down on a pair of punches to
follow. As Godinez rushes in, Ricci snipes her with a left hand and
their heads clack together, and Godinez falls to her back. As Ricci
leaps on top of her fallen foe to land strikes, the horn
blares.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Godinez
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Godinez
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Godinez
Round 3
The last round kicks off with an aggressive Ricci, who puts a
plenty of punches together but is met by the oncoming Godinez.
Godinez throws harder, and they bang heads together again during an
exchange. Ricci commits to a leg kick, and she aims a right hand
over the top and shoots in for a takedown. Godinez leans her back
to the wall to stop it from succeeding, and when Ricci’s attempt
fails, the Brazilian elects to swipe several elbows over the top.
Godinez pushes her off, her nose leaking a bit, and the two start
trading hands from up close. Ricci shoots for a single, and Godinez
drops to a knee to defend it and thwarts it completely. “Loopy”
keeps her guard high to defend from the jabs and straight punches,
and she knocks Ricci back with a clean one-two. Godinez swipes out
with a left hook, and she presses forward and walks square into a
right hand. Godinez counters and blocks a head kick, and she hops
back when Ricci kicks at her leg. Ricci lands at the end of a right
hand, and she takes a punch flush on the mouth that knocks her head
back. The two engage in brief flurries where both land with one or
two shots, and Godinez follows with a solid left hand as Ricci
sharply exhales. Godinez counters a short barrage with a right
hand, and she lands a heavy kick to the ribs. Ricci throws wild,
and a strike catches Godinez and wobbles her briefly. Godinez
gathers her thoughts and changes levels in pursuit of a single, and
she abandons it when pushing “Baby Shark” to the wall. Godinez lets
Ricci’s hands bounce off her gloves and delivers retribution on the
chin, and the two trade leather right to the bell.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Godinez (30-27 Godinez)
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Godinez (30-27 Godinez)
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Godinez (30-27 Godinez)
The Official Result
Lupita Godinez def. Tabatha Ricci via Split Decision (27-30, 29-28,
29-28)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Erceg (-166), Costa (+140)
Round 1
Crashing into the UFC in June with a huge upset win over a ranked
David Dvorak, Australia’s Erceg (10-1, 1-0 UFC) hopes his sophomore
effort is just as solid as his UFC debut. Looking to halt his
momentum will be Costa (13-3, 1-1 UFC), a former Lux Fight League
champ who holds eight first-round finishes on his resume. They will
be joined in the cage by referee Marc Goddard, and the preliminary
headliner commences as the two flyweights touch gloves. Erceg takes
to the center of the cage, and he slowly works his way forward
without throwing much of note. When Costa aims a kick low, Erceg
counters with a piston-like right hand. Erceg tosses out a leg
kick, and a second kick makes Costa spring into action with a hard
right hand. Costa flicks out a jab, and Erceg pushes out one back
and kicks the inside and outside of his leg. When Costa kicks back,
Erceg has a check ready. Costa’s big right hand bounces off the
guard, and he swings two hooks as Erceg bears down on him. Erceg
gets backed off, but still connects with a power jab. Costa flails
long and connects with part of an overhand right, but Erceg is able
to move with it to take some of the sting out of it. Erceg prods
out his jab and snaps the head back with a right hand, and Costa
kicks him in response. Costa rings Erceg’s bell with an overhand
right, and he tries to chain another and is met with a knee up the
middle and a right hook. Erceg splits the guard with a one-two, and
he puts three together and sways to the side to make Costa hurl
punches at nothing but air. Erceg goes between the gloves with an
uppercut, and he lines up a huge right hand and busts Costa in the
face. Costa attempts to take him down as he is rattled, and Erceg
spins him around and climbs straight into full mount. Costa turns
to his side, and Erceg snatches up a rear-naked choke. Costa is in
huge trouble but manages to gut out the submission, as he turns his
body and keeps moving. Erceg tries to trap him with another choke
attempt, but Costa explodes to get back to his feet, and he pushes
the Aussie to the wire. The round ends with both men attempting
inaccurate front kicks.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Erceg
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Erceg
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Erceg
Round 2
To start off the second stanza, the Australian fighter again claims
the middle of the Octagon and moves forward, to force Costa to
immediately backpedal. Erceg launches a head kick that pounds into
the guard, and he shoves Costa and bounces him off the fence. Costa
goes for a home run right hand, and Erceg evades it by a matter of
millimeters. Costa is a man on a mission, looking for giant
strikes, and he connects with numerous huge strikes as Erceg takes
them or tries to keep moving. Costa drives a knee up the middle,
and Erceg recovers and returns to put pressure on his opponent.
Costa winds up with a hefty leg kick, and a subsequent overhand
right stings Erceg again. Costa swings with a mighty right hook
once more, and he shoots in low for a single to catch Erceg
unaware. Erceg defends himself by getting pushed back to the wall,
and Costa drags him down and shifts himself to half guard in a
hurry. Costa tries to smash his foe with ground-and-pound, but he
throws himself off-balance and allows Erceg to sneak out the back
door and climb back to his feet, where he pushes Costa into the
wall from behind. Erceg lowers himself down to grip hold of a
single, and Costa gets away with a fence grab to stay upright.
Erceg knees the body a few times while tightly pressed on his
adversary, and Costa jumps guard for an armbar out of nowhere.
Erceg defends himself smoothly and lets them both stand, but he
continues to press his weight on his aggressive opponent. Costa
pushes off, and he lets his hands go to knock Erceg back. As Erceg
is wobbled, Costa tackles him to the canvas. The Brazilian turns
over to pursue an armlock, and Erceg flips him over and grinds him
with elbows on the face until the round ends.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Costa
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Costa
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Costa
Round 3
The flyweights have reached Round 3, and Erceg is quick to resume
the trend where he started the first two rounds pushing the pace
early. Erceg backs Costa off, threatening knees and level changes,
and Costa blocks a jump knee that is aimed at his dome. Erceg
pushes him up to the fencing, and he fights off a trip to keep on
his feet. Erceg looks to drag his man down, but Costa awkwardly
keeps his balance and may have grabbed the cage again. Erceg
transitions to a single, and Costa belts him with an elbow to back
him off. Costa comes up short with a sweeping low kick, and Erceg
jabs him multiple times in the face before timing a clean level
change. Costa is on the mat for barely a second before jumping back
up, and Erceg squeezes him up against the fencing to control him
further. Costa gets off a solid right hand to back off the Aussie,
and Erceg gathers his thoughts and pushes him back to the wall.
Erceg looks to tie the legs up and trip Costa down, and Costa hits
his knees and powers back up without batting an eye. Costa attempts
his own far-side trip that does not succeed, and Erceg elbows him
and eats two knees in the belly for his effort. Costa turns him
around and sells out for a single, and he dumps Erceg down but
cannot control him. Erceg is upright before Costa knows it, and he
is pushing the Brazilian against the wall to run out the clock.
Costa frames off with knees to the body, and Erceg responds in
kind. Erceg cannot get his foe down, and he settles for clinch
control until the final horn wraps the fight.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Erceg (29-28 Erceg)
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Erceg (29-28 Erceg)
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Erceg (29-28 Erceg)
The Official Result
Steve Erceg def. Alessandro Costa via Unanimous Decision (29-28,
29-28, 29-28)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Sabatini (-120), Lopes (+100)
Round 1
The main card is upon us, and it should provide a grappler’s
delight as the two featherweights about to invade the Octagon
combine for 23 submission victories without a single defeat via
tapout. Aiming to prove he is not just a grappler, action-packed
Brazilian contender Lopes (22-6, 1-1 UFC) will bring his 89% finish
rate and try to threaten every step of the fight. With not a great
deal of New Yorkers on the card, the UFC dipped into the Tri-State
Area to pull Pennsylvanian Sabatini (18-4, 4-1 UFC) up onto the
billing, and he too would like to showcase his jiu-jitsu chops when
it counts. Referee Keith Peterson will draw the assignment for the
pay-per-view opener, and the fighters quickly touch ‘em up. No
nonsense will be permitted for the next 15 minutes or less. Both
men bounce up and down while quite distant from one another, and
Lopes tries to reach with a kick. Sabatini surges forward with a
three-punch salvo that gets Lopes’ attention, and Lopes has to
shake it off early. Sabatini jumps with a switch kick to the body,
and Lopes looks to catch it but lets it go all while chants for
“USA” rain down in support of Sabatini. The Pennsylvanian comes up
short with another jump kick, and the two come together for a
possible takedown effort of some sort. Lopes stands his man up with
an uppercut as they try to get upright, and Sabatini is stunned
when he tries to take a step back. The Brazilian immediately
follows suit with a vicious right hand on the temple, and Sabatini
might be out on his feet as he turns to another direction and his
eyes go wide. Lopes will not let this fish get away, and he charges
after Sabatini with powerful fists until pushing Sabatini down to
his side. Lopes traps the Pennsylvania native’s arm behind his back
and begins battering Sabatini with his free hand. Sabatini, unable
to block his face and clinging to consciousness, gets knocked out,
back in, and out again as Lopes punishes him with right hands.
Peterson recognizes that Sabatini cannot defend himself at all, and
he calls a stop to the beating. What a performance for Lopes, who
likely catapults himself into featherweight contendership by
wrecking a tough out in about a minute and a half.
The Official Result
Diego Lopes def. Pat Sabatini R1 1:30 via KO (Punches)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: St. Denis (-230), Frevola (+190)
Round 1
Referee Mike Beltran cannot blink as he watches over this
lightweight banger. Three first-round knockouts in a row bolster
the recent resume of New York native Frevola (11-3-1, 5-3-1 UFC),
while French foe St. Denis (12-1, 1 NC; 4-1 UFC) has performed four
straight finishes on his own right. Before the flurries of fists
and feet that are sure to bless the cage commence, the
contenders-to-be tap their fists together. St. Denis introduces
himself with a head kick, and Frevola leans back to dodge it.
Frevola kicks low, and when he attempts to throw hands, St. Denis
catches him on the way in with another low kick that may have
grazed the cup. St. Denis aims a kick to the body, and Frevola does
the same. A kick from Frevola makes him stumble, and St. Denis
rushes towards him and jumps guard with a guillotine choke. Frevola
escapes the danger, stands back up, lifts the Frenchman in the air
and slams him down. St. Denis is able to power back up, and when he
pushes Frevola back to the fence, he absorbs a stern knee to his
guts. Frevola breaks off, circling away to reset, but the French
fighter gives chase. St. Denis chambers and launches his left shin
at the dome, and it clatters off Frevola’s forehead and puts him
all the way out. St. Denis, not sure if Frevola was still with it,
drops to his knees and clobbers an unconscious Frevola with a few
left hands, all while Beltran sprints towards them to stop the
fight. Frevola comes to shortly after, and there is absolutely no
ill will between the two, as they salute one another and thank the
other for their personal previous military services. What a
spectacular knockout!
The Official Result
Benoit St. Denis def. Matt Frevola R1 1:31 via KO (Head Kick)
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Dern (-198), Andrade (+164)
Round 1
A crossroads fight looms for these two strawweights wanting to make
either another run in the case of Andrade (24-12, 15-10 UFC) or
their first run in the case of Dern (13-3, 8-3 UFC) at the throne.
The former champ has struggled as of late, dropping three in a row
this year, while Dern has alternated wins and losses in her last
five. Two women enter, one woman leaves. Referee Keith Peterson
will keep tabs and eject nonsense from the featured fight of the
night, one that begins with a sporting glove touch. Dern pushes out
a jab early and a few front kicks to the belly, and Andrade ignores
anything that comes her way as she keeps a poker face and slowly
walks forward. Dern strafes to the side and pecks at Andrade with
low kicks, and they crash together and Dern looks to throw her to
the ground with a head lock. Andrade hits the mat and scrambles
immediately, where she gets up and prepares to strike. Dern kicks,
and Andrade catches it and backs her off with a right hand. Andrade
comes up short with a few punches, and a leg kick. Dern plants her
own leg kick on the thigh, and she swings for the fences and
engages in a brief brawl with the former champ. Dern ducks down and
sticks out a right hand, and Andrade parries it and catches a front
kick. Andrade lets fly a leg kick, and she gets backed off by a
series of punches from the jiu-jitsu player. Andrade lets Dern fall
to the ground while flurrying, and she eats a strike on the way
down before climbing back up. “Bate Estaca” connects with leg kicks
and drills her in the side of the head with two hooks, as Dern’s
striking liabilities are allowing her to eat shots. Dern is
wide-eyed and jabbing, and Andrade continues to work Dern’s lead
leg over with heavy kicks. Dern pierces out a one-two and shoots
low for a single, and Andrade backs off and defends the submission.
Andrade walks her down and blasts her in the face with a right
hand, and Dern falls to the mat and attempts a desperation takedown
as the horn sounds.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Andrade
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Andrade
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Andrade
Round 2
The second round kicks off with a one-two from Dern, and she
follows with another but gets tagged with a right hand on the way
out. Andrade chains the counter with a pair of leg kicks, and Dern
thinks about changing stances but elects to keep her left foot
forward so she can jab her way into a takedown entry. Andrade gets
out of the way and jabs her back, and she whiffs on an uppercut
when Dern ducks down. Andrade continues chipping away at calf
kicks, and Dern flies off-balance again when striking. Dern lashes
out with a four-punch salvo, and Andrade cooly dodges the worst of
them and comes back up top. Dern lands first, but Andrade lands
last. Dern lumbers forward and gets in a left hand over the top,
and she tries for a takedown but gets clubbed in the side of the
head with a left. Dern’s legs give way beneath her, and Andrade
lets her stand up so she can let Dern try to strike with her. Dern
does just that, and Andrade lays into her with a fierce barrage of
punches and low kicks to bust up Dern’s nose. Dern unloads with
everything she has, and Andrade counters her brilliantly with a
right hand that sets Dern down to the ground again. Andrade walks
off, expecting that Peterson will step in, but Dern is still barely
with it and is allowed to get up. As “Bate Estaca” lets her back
up, Dern gets her bearings slightly, only for her balance to betray
her as her knees wobble like a newborn deer as she backs to the
wall. Andrade calmly strides forward, knowing the finish is right
around the corner, and she unloads with a jab, a power left hook
and jackhammering right straight that puts Dern down once and for
all. Dern flops to her back like a fainting goat, almost looking
like she was betrayed by her team and the referee for allowing the
fight to continue, and Peterson has seen more than enough. The
losing streak for the former champion has ended violently, and
Andrade shows the division she is still a factor as she becomes the
first woman to finish the star grappler in MMA.
The Official Result
Jessica Andrade def. Mackenzie Dern R2 3:15 via TKO (Punches)
UFC Interim Heavyweight Title Fight:
Sergei
Pavlovich (259.8) vs. Tom
Aspinall (261.6)
BETTING
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Aspinall (-118), Pavlovich (-102)
Round 1
The interim heavyweight strap looms, while current champ Jon Jones
is on the mend from shoulder surgery. It is unclear if the winner
of this fight will face the victor between the rescheduled
Jones-Stipe Miocic tilt that may happen next year, as a lot of
factors remain. This silver medal will be vied for by a pair of
finishers that have each claimed six victories opposite a single
defeat in the UFC thus far, and in those 14 fights, only Aspinall
(13-3, 6-1 UFC) has reached Round 2. Once. The betting line that
Pavlovich (18-1, 6-1 UFC) and Aspinall reach the final bell is
currently around -1400, although that same prop for Jailton Almeida
and Derrick Lewis last week was an astounding -3500, and everyone
knows what happened. This is MMA, where anything can and often does
happen. The fighters share an embrace when brought together, and
referee Dan Miragliotta takes a deep breath. Pavlovich keeps his
left hand out early to measure, and Aspinall kicks the lead leg in
a hurry. Aspinall splits the guard with a front kick that just
grazes the midsection, and a kick is checked by Pavlovich. A flurry
from the Russian dislodges Aspinall’s mouthpiece, and he appears
surprised at the power that came his way as he resets it. Pavlovich
blocks a high kick and crowds his man with an overhand right that
connects and hurts Pavlovich. Aspinall reaches out with a left, and
follows with a momentous right hook that collides square into the
temple. Pavlovich’s eyes go wide as his balance gives out, and he
slowly collapses to his back like a flan in a cupboard. Confidence
through the roof, Aspinall pounces, and he completely hammers the
nail with three hammerfists before Miragliotta reaches him to shove
the new champion off of the fallen Russian. Aspinall has done it,
becoming the third Brit to claim a UFC belt, and joining Michael
Bisping and Leon Edwards. What a night of fights so far, and there
is one more championship to go.
The Official Result
Tom Aspinall def. Sergei Pavlovich R1 1:09 via TKO (Punches)
UFC Light Heavyweight Title Fight:
Jiri
Prochazka (204.2) vs. Alex
Pereira (204)
BETTING
PREVIEW | SCOUTING
REPORT | ODDS: Pereira (-130), Prochazka (+110)
Round 1
Prochazka (29-3-1, 3-0 UFC) wants his belt back, and badly. The
Czech finisher honorably relinquished his claim on the 205-pound
crown when suffering an injury in 2022, and plenty of shenanigans
ensued. Due to a Benny Hill-esque series of unfortunate events,
“BJP” will get to vie for the vacant strap, and he will do against
former middleweight kingpin Pereira (8-2, 5-1 UFC) of all people.
Someone may get knocked out in short order, and referee Marc
Goddard hopes that it will not be him. As soon as Prochazka enters
the cage, the two lock into an eye-to-eye staredown that carries
practically all the way through the introductions and instructions.
Barely blinking, the two share a double glove touch and bow at one
another when they meet in the middle. What follows will likely be
mayhem. Prochazka keeps his hands low out of the gate and prods out
a few leg kicks while working at awkward angles, and Pereira’s
hands are high and he is composed. Pereira jabs to the chest, and
he has the side of his foot careen off the same spot. Prochazka
ducks down for a level change and rips an uppercut up high that
pounds into Pereira’s chin, and Pereira shakes it off in surprise.
“Poatan” kicks Prochazka’s leg out with one heavy blow, and when
Prochazka jumps back to his feet, Pereira kicks it again. Prochazka
changes stances and flicks out a front kick after missing with an
uppercut, and a third calf kick from Pereira compromises the lead
leg of the former light heavyweight champ. Pereira kicks it again,
and Prochazka is in a bad way as he switches stances repeatedly to
shake his legs out. Prochazka leaps forward and reaches a right
hand over the top, and he comes up short with a high kick. Pereira
intercepts him with a crushing calf kick, and Prochazka drops down
low for a potential takedown. Pereira defends with a guillotine
choke, and Prochazka grits it out, lifts Pereira into the air and
powerslams him down, landing in half guard. Prochazka postures up
and starts dropping down a few punches, and Pereira is
hand-fighting and protecting himself from the worst of it.
Prochazka lowers himself chest-to-chest and considers isolating an
arm, but he elects to sit up and elbow the Brazilian in the
forehead. Prochazka drives down another elbow until Pereira fights
back to his feet, and he climbs back up with the wall behind him.
Pereira, on his feet, scores a solid right hand and just misses
with a calf kick. The horn sounds right after a Prochazka
uppercut.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Pereira
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Pereira
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Pereira
Round 2
Prochazka locates himself in the center of the cage to start the
round, and he gives ground so he can sink in a short left hook when
Pereira advances towards him. Prochazka parries the strikes that
come from the Brazilian, and he flicks out a jab and checks a calf
kick. Prochazka comes over the top with a right hook, and Pereira
jabs him in the midsection. Prochazka pushes his man back with a
jump kick to the body, and he whiffs on a pair of huge hooks when
he lands. Periera connects with a jab and kicks the body, and
Prochazka nods at him and accepts a leg kick. They collide with
hooks at the same time, and Prochazka backs his foe off with a
right hook and a knee to the body. Pereira tries to counter him,
and Prochazka catches him with several looping shots. Pereira fires
back, and he gets Prochazka’s attention but does not back him off.
The Czech fighter works the body with knees when up against the
fence, and Pereira breaks off and takes a breath. Pereira drives
home a heavy low kick, forcing a stance switch, and when Prochazka
goes back to orthodox, Pereira kicks it again. Prochazka crashes
the pocket, and he walks into a right hand. Prochazka knees him up
the middle when he initiates the clinch, and he gets shoved as
Pereira gets away. Pereira reaches out with a jab and takes a leg
kick, but he gives one back much harder. Prochazka swings a one-two
that rings Pereira’s bell, and Pereira sits down on a counter and
blasts Prochazka in the face with a right hand and a scooping left
hook that drops Prochazka down. Prochazka, on his knees, considers
a takedown, and “Poatan” rails into him with elbows to the side of
the head. Prochazka falls to his back, and Goddard waves the fight
off in what immediately looks premature. Prochazka rolls to his
knees when Pereira dismounts him, and he is extremely disappointed
and briefly protests the stoppage by claiming he is still with it.
The crowd is not thrilled by the conclusion of the match, but the
result is what it is. The victorious Pereira has now remarkably
claimed a championship belt in a second division, certainly setting
the record for the quickest of any UFC fighter to pick up belts in
two different weight classes. In his post-fight interview, Pereira
calls for Israel Adesanya to come back and meet him at 205 pounds
to challenge him for his belt. The company appears to have other
immediate plans, and Pereira will likely meet former champ Jamahal
Hill next. This dramatic turn of events caps off a wild night of
combat that saw finishes for all five bouts on the main card, and
six first-round finishes throughout the billing. One could scarcely
ask for more. There is little time to savor this event, however, as
the UFC trucks back to the Apex next week to end this short stretch
of Saturdays before Thanksgiving in the U.S. We will be here for
that next fight card, and we hope you are too.
The Official Result
Alex Pereira def. Jiri Prochazka R2 4:08 via KO (Punches and
Elbows)