AT. THE. HORN. @CarlosCondit
dropped Court McGee at the end of the first round at
#UFCFightIsland4 pic.twitter.com/XR0UG1w11q— ESPN MMA (@espnmma)
October 4, 2020
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Even at 36, “The Natural Born Killer” retains some of his
trademark killer instinct.
In the featured preliminary matchup of UFC on ESPN 16 on Saturday in
Abu Dhabi, Carlos
Condit overcame a slow start to take a hard-fought unanimous
decision over Court McGee.
A competitive first round seemed to be going the way of McGee, when
a picture-perfect right hook from Condit dropped him at the bell,
instantly bloodying his nose in the bargain. McGee managed to get
up and return to his corner, but the momentum had turned: Condit
won the final two rounds in straightforward fashion, as he seemed
to be a step ahead of “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 11 winner with
his kicks and punches.
After three rounds, former interim welterweight champ Condit
(31-13) picked up the unanimous decision via matching 30-27
scorecards, marking his first win in over five years and putting an
end to a five-fight losing streak since he defeated Thiago Alves
at UFC Fight Night 67 in May 2015. McGee (19-10) has now lost three
straight and five of his last six.
Jourdain, Culibao Duel to Split Draw
In a strange fight marred by fouls both real and imagined,
featherweight up-and-comers Charles
Jourdain and Joshua
Culibao fought to a draw. While all three rounds were
competitive, the first was the most clear-cut, as Culibao dropped
Jourdain with a big right hand that smashed his nose, which
immediately began to bleed heavily. The remaining two rounds were
back-and-forth affairs, characterized by Jourdain’s heavy low kicks
and Culibao’s combination punching and takedown attempts. Fouls—or
foul-like moments, at least—abounded, as there was a borderline low
blow, as well as an odd sequence in the second round in which
referee Jason Herzog stopped the action after an apparent eye poke,
only to have Culibao admit that he had done it to himself. The
fight was apparently as hard to score as it was to officiate, as
the cageside judges turned in wide-ranging 30-27, 28-29 and 28-28
scorecards, resulting in a rare split draw. The result sends
Jourdain to 10-3-1 (1-2-1 UFC), while Culibao is now 8-1-1 after
debuting in the UFC this year as a 7-0 prospect.
Imavov Outlasts Williams
Nassourdine
Imavov overcame a wild first round and an early clash of heads
to pull ahead of a tiring Jordan
Williams. The inadvertent head butt between the debuting
middleweights opened a cut on Williams’ forehead, but appeared to
daze Imavov, who spent much of the rest of the round on the
defensive. By the second round, however, Williams—who debuted on a
short turnaround after winning on Dana White’s Contender Series last month—was
clearly the more tired man, and the final 10 minutes were largely
one-sided. After three rounds, Imavov walked away with the
unanimous decision (29-27, 29-27, 29-28), extending his winning
streak to six straight and his overall record to 9-2. Williams, who
appeared on DWCS three times before earning his UFC contract, is
now 9-4 with one no-contest.
“Loma Lookboonmee” Cruises over Frey
Konklak
Suphisara used textbook muay Thai to outclass and outpace
Jinh Yu
Frey in a strawweight matchup of former atomweights. The first
two rounds were all “Loma Lookboonmee,” as she touched Frey up at
range and punished her with knees and elbows anytime they clinched.
Former Invicta FC champ Frey finally struck for a
takedown in the third round, then passed briefly to side control,
but Suphisara was able to escape before Frey could mount any
serious offense there. Suphisara prevailed by unanimous decision
(30-27, 30-27, 29-28), moving to 5-2 in her career and getting back
on track after her loss to Angela Hill
in February. Frey (9-6) has now lost her first two in the
Octagon.
Kenney Brutalizes Alateng
Casey
Kenney laid one of the most lopsided three-round beatings of
2020 on Heili
Alateng in their bantamweight prelim. Kenney used superior
footwork, sharp punching but above all, a steady stream of brutal
left kicks to stymie Alateng, who was bleeding from his right ear
and showing significant damage to his ribs within the first three
minutes. “The Mongolian Knight” was game throughout, but simply
unable to get his own offense untracked; in particular, Kenney’s
takedown defense was never even tested. After the 15-minute
drubbing, the judges turned in scores of 30-25, 30-26 and 30-27 in
favor of Kenney, who moves to 15-2 (4-1 UFC). The loss is the first
in the Octagon for Alateng (14-8-1) after starting his UFC tenure
with two straight wins.
Vendramini Blitzes Ayari
In the opening bout of the evening between two men coming off of
two-year layoffs, Luigi
Vendramini needed just 1:12 to announce his return in emphatic
fashion. “The Italian Stallion” rocked Jessin
Ayari with a left hook in an early exchange, then gave chase,
throwing a volley of punches as Ayari staggered. Most seemed to
glance or miss, but there was no question about the right high kick
that Vendramini landed against the fence, dropping the German and
spurring referee Kevin
Herzog into action. The win is the first in the Octagon for
Vendramini (9-1) who lost to Elizeu
Zaleski dos Santos in his UFC debut in September 2018; Ayari
(16-6) has now dropped three straight in the promotion after
winning his own debut.