Valter
Walker
dug into his bag of tricks and took a small but not
insignificant step forward in the Ultimate Fighting Championship
heavyweight division.

The ex-Titan Fighting Championship titleholder disposed of Junior Tafa
with a heel hook in the first round of their featured
UFC 305
prelim on Saturday at RAC Arena in Perth, Australia.

Tafa (5-3, 1-3 UFC) yelled in pain as his adversary isolated his
leg and cranked, resulting in the verbal
submission
.

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Walker (12-1, 1-1 UFC) withstood power punches from the Soma Fight
Club product, secured two takedowns, established a dominant
position and eventually targeted a lower extremity. Tafa went nose
to nose with the Brazilian in the aftermath and delivered a slap to
the side of his head before he was physically escorted to the other
side of the cage.

Meanwhile, Ricardo
Ramos
rode an opportunistic takedown and a near-finish to a
contentious split decision over former Hex Fight Series champion
Joshua
Culibao
in a three-round featherweight encounter. All three
cageside judges scored it 29-28: Mark Christie and Mick Meany for
Ramos, Ben Cartlidge for Culibao.

Ramos (17-6, 8-5 UFC) retreated to the fence after eating a
crushing low kick in the first round but managed to power into top
position after his counterpart slipped on a kick. From there, he
progressed to the back and threatened with a rear-naked choke.
Ramos adjusted his grip and tightened his squeeze several times but
could not elicit the tapout. Culibao (11-4-1, 3-4-1 UFC) looked
rejuvenated in the middle stanza, where he continued his assault on
the lower lead leg with kicks—he knocked down the Brazilian at one
point and forced him into a defensive shell in the butt scoot
position—and crisp combination punching. Round 3 followed a similar
narrative, but Ramos opened a cut near the Aussie’s right eye with
a sneaky left hook and secured a takedown with roughly 75 seconds
left on the clock. He maintained a dominant position for the
remainder of the fight and exited the cage with his hand
raised.

Culibao heads back to the drawing board after suffering his third
consecutive defeat.

Further down the undercard, Fight Ready’s Casey
O’Neill
rebounded from a Dec. 16 submission defeat to Ariane
Lipski
with a clear-cut unanimous decision over Luana
Santos
in a three-round women’s flyweight scrap. O’Neill (10-2,
5-2 UFC) carried all three scorecards: 30-27, 30-27 and 30-26.

A short-notice substitution for Tereze Bleda, Luana (8-2, 3-1 UFC)
never established a rhythm and proved to be out of her depth
against a ranked opponent. O’Neill pursued her with pressure,
popped her lead leg with kicks and uncorked two-, three- and
four-punch combinations with regularity. She countered a
head-and-arm throw from Santos in the third round, wheeled behind
the Brazilian and secured position with a body triangle.
Ground-and-pound followed, and O’Neill even made a pass at a
rear-naked choke to salt away the decision.

The setback snapped a five-fight winning streak for Santos.

Elsewhere, onetime Eternal MMA titleholder Jack
Jenkins
put away Herbert
Burns
with an accumulation of punishment in the third round of
their featherweight clash. A late replacement for Gavin
Tucker
, Burns (11-6, 2-4 UFC) bowed out 38 seconds into Round
3.



Jenkins (13-3, 3-1 UFC) hammered the Kill Cliff Fight Club export
with attritive body-head combinations and devasting leg kicks,
slowly but surely driving the nails into the Brazilian’s coffin.
Burns managed to answer with takedowns in the first and second
rounds—he briefly threatened with an arm-triangle at one point—but
had no way to close the massive gap that existed between the two
men in the standup department.
Jenkins floored him with an overhand right early in Round 3,
swarmed with punches and returned to a standing position. Referee
Marc Goddard motioned for Burns to do the same. He refused,
necessitating the stoppage
.

The 31-year-old Jenkins has won 10 of his past 11 bouts.

Finally, former Ultimate Warrior Challenge champion Jesus
Santos Aguilar
choked the previously unbeaten Stewart
Nicoll
unconscious with a guillotine in the first round of
their flyweight pairing. Aguilar (11-2, 3-1 UFC), who missed weight
for the match by a pound and a half, brought it to a close 2:39
into Round 1.

Nicoll (8-1, 0-1 UFC) paid for overzealousness in his
organizational debut. He had Aguilar in genuine peril for much of
the round, as he used a kimura to sweep to the back before
battering him with punches, elbows, forearm strikes and
hammerfists. However, Nicoll failed to control his position in his
bid to finish. Aguilar set off a scramble, broke free and caught
the Broz Martial Arts rep in the guillotine.
Nicoll did all he could to extricate himself during an extended
struggle, only to black out in his opponent’s
clutches
.

Aguilar has rattled off three straight victories.

In other action, Team Compton Training Centre rep Tom Nolan
(8-1, 2-1 UFC) outstruck ex-King of the Cage titleholder Alex Reyes
(13-5, 0-3 UFC) to a unanimous decision in a three-round
lightweight affair, earning 30-27, 30-27 and 29-28 scores from the
judiciary; and Black Tiger Fight Club product Kenan Song
(22-8, 6-4 UFC) brutalized onetime World Series of Fighting
champion Ricky Glenn
(22-9-2, 4-6-1 UFC) with high-impact standup on his way to a
unanimous decision in their three-round welterweight tilt, sweeping
the scorecards with 30-27, 30-26 and 29-28 marks from the cageside
judges.

IMAK ADMIN

By IMAK ADMIN

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