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#UFC Fight Night 110
theanticool · 1 month
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Igor Severino vs Manoel Juninho - Jungle Fight 110
Igor Severino (8-0) might be only 20 years old but he's been fighting professionally since he was 14 years old. While we can argue about the risks of starting your fighting career so young, it has worked out for Severino so far. Undefeated, Severino managed to win the Jungle Fight flyweight title before getting the call for the Contender Series. Now he's in the UFC.
Severino will face off with fellow undefeated Brazilian flyweight André Lima (7-0) on the prelims for UFC Fight Night: Ribas vs. Namajunas this Saturday (March 23).
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(Fury's Fight Picks Podcast)
Look back at the predictions Luca Fury, owner of Fury’s Fight Picks, made for the Lewis vs. Hunt fight.
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plorpersate-blog · 4 years
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writingsubmissions · 7 years
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Fights to Make: UFC Auckland
Mark Hunt (beat Derrick Lewis) vs. Francis Ngannou: Mark Hunt is the man. This seemed set up for a Derrick Lewis win, potentially one that could even earn Lewis a title shot, but Hunt proved to have enough veteran savvy to (mostly) avoid Lewis’s big blows and eventually wear the American down towards a stoppage. And not only did Hunt knock off UFC’s top rising heavyweight and potentially retire him, he also did so while still suing the company. Baller. Anyway, I expect Hunt to continue to be a gatekeeper to the heavyweight elite, and someone UFC wants to see get knocked out, so let’s put him against Francis Ngannou, the other big rising talent at heavyweight; Ngannou’s both rawer and even scarier than Lewis, so it’d have a bunch of the same interesting dynamics that were at play for this fight.
Derek Brunson (beat Daniel Kelly) vs. David Branch: It was depressing to see the miracle run of Dan Kelly come to a quick and violent end, but it’s also nice to see Derek Brunson stop what was becoming a bit of a slide, particularly since he should’ve beaten Anderson Silva in February. I’m not really sure this was the return of the more aggressive Brunson - it’s just that he happens to have enough knockout power to knock Kelly out - but a win’s a win, and Brunson can act as a sort of plug-and-play top ten middleweight who’s an interesting enough matchup for anyone. Let’s go with David Branch, who won his return fight to UFC over Krzysztof Jotko after a run as a two-weight WSOF champ; both guys are well-rounded, and as with most fights, the result could vary wildly based off Brunson’s aggressiveness.
Derrick Lewis (lost to Mark Hunt) vs. Ruslan Magomedov: Lewis apparently retired after the fight, which was both surprisingly and not at all; he had talked a few years ago about basically retiring once he had paid off his house, but between a new, bigger contract and the fact that he’d been willing all his fights, that talk had quieted down, though one gets the feeling Lewis would’ve continued towards the belt if he won here. Anyway, Lewis left the door just open enough I’m not writing off a comeback yet, though it’ll probably be a while until he fights again - and top Russian prospect Ruslan Magomedov is currently dealing with a drug suspension, so the timeline of Lewis returning (if he does) and Magomedov being free and clear to fight will probably match up.
Daniel Kelly (lost to Derek Brunson) vs. Nate Marquardt: Well, shit. Kelly always figured to lose to Brunson in quick and brutal fashion, as long as a relatively aggressive version of Brunson showed up, but it was still sad to see one of UFC’s best stories over the last few years just get absolutely annihilated. Still, Kelly can hang around as a fairly successful novelty until he decides to retire; let’s go full old guy circuit and put him against Marquardt, a fading vet who has just enough power himself to make things interesting.
Ben Nguyen (beat Tim Elliott) vs. Ulka Sasaki/Justin Scoggins (Jun. 17) winner: Just when it looked like Tim Elliott might be able to distance himself from the pack, the flyweight randomizer pulled him right back into the glut of guys from ranking, say, 5 to 25, as Nguyen stunningly hopped on a choke and tapped him out in 49 seconds. Nguyen’s in that mix of guys who can basically win or lose to just about anyone, and have a fun fight while doing so - if you said this win earned him a shot at, say, a Jussier Formiga or Wilson Reis type, fine, but instead I’ll go the action route and put him against the winner of a fun prospect bout in Singapore.
Alexander Volkanovski (beat Mizuto Hirota) vs. Artem Lobov: Volkanovski’s one of the better Australian prospects, but I wasn’t really sold on him until now, as he faced a tough veteran test in Hirota and just dominated, showing off his strong wrestling and some thudding power, as he probably would’ve put most opponents away. Just keep moving him up the ladder - as I said after it happened, Artem Lobov’s performance against Cub Swanson showed he’s improved to where he could at least be a gatekeeper for actual prospects, and Volkanovski has proven himself as an actual prospect, so there you go.
John Moraga (beat Ashkan Mokhtarian) vs. Deiveson Figueiredo: Well, that was exactly what Moraga needed - while a lot of it was newcomer Mokhtarian looking awful, it was good to see Moraga have an impressive performance to break a rough stretch for the solid vet. With sticking on the roster out of the way, Moraga can go back to his top-ten or so gatekeeper role, so let’s put him against Figueiredo, who had an impressive debut last week against Marco Beltran to open up UFC 212.
Tim Elliott (lost to Ben Nguyen) vs. Jussier Formiga: Huh. Flyweight is weird, man - past Demetrious Johnson, Joseph Benavidez, and Henry Cejudo, there are basically twenty guys who can all beat each other, as Nguyen’s flash win over Elliott showed. I still regard Elliott as one of the better of the bunch, so I’ll give him another tough vet coming off a loss in Formiga, even if I do worry I’m falling into the trap that got Elliott cut the first time around, feeding him a bunch of tough matchups that he might lose.
Ion Cutelaba (beat Henrique da Silva) vs. Gadzhimurad Antigulov: Well, that was pretty cool. Cutelaba just pretty much destroyed da Silva from even before the opening horn, as he got in the Brazilian’s face during fighter introductions, then came out and just annihilated da Silva in 22 seconds. I’m not sure Cutelaba ever becomes anything more than a fun brawler, but the Moldovan is young enough to improve - at any rate, I doubt he has the well-rounded game to hang with Gadzhimurad Antigulov, but it’d be a fun fight, pitting Cutelaba’s straight-ahead brawling with Antigulov’s straight-ahead ground and pound style.
Dan Hooker (beat Ross Pearson) vs. Desmond Green: I still have no idea what to make of Dan Hooker, though he got of a hell of a highlight-reel win here with a brutal knee straight up the middle to knock out Pearson. He’s still lanky, even up a class at lightweight, and just kind of a collection of stuff that isn’t too impressive, but sometimes can prove to be ridiculously dynamic in spots, like he was here. Desmond Green, who was a bit of a surprising young veteran signing by UFC, impressed in his UFC debut in April, so let’s do that as a fight between mid-tier prospects that may yet continue to overachieve.
Vinc Pichel (beat Damien Brown) vs. Scott Holtzman: Good for Vinc Pichel. It looked like a three-year layoff was going to leave him too rusty to beat Damien Brown, but as soon as Brown started to take over, Pichel just caught him charging in with an uppercut that absolutely flattened him. I like the idea of a fight with Holtzman next - he’s a high-level athlete still trying to figure things out, and there are still questions about if the game as a whole has passed Pichel by, so I think it’s a strong test for both fighters.
Zak Ottow (beat Kiichi Kunimoto) vs. Siyar Bahadurzada: Zak Ottow is fine, but one of the blander guys on the roster, and the Milwaukee native is now 3-for-3 as far as fairly unmemorable split decisions in the UFC thus far, with Ottow getting the nod this time around. You can kind of do whatever with him - he’s solid as either a bounce-back win for a better fighter on tough times, a solid test for a rising prospect, or just a guy you can plug in in a forgettable fight. Let’s kind of go the last route with a bit of upside and put him against Afghan striker Siyar Bahadurzada, who hasn’t had the most memorable run but sometimes provides some fun bursts of violence.
Ross Pearson (lost to Dan Hooker) vs. Mitch Clarke: The downside of Dan Hooker’s impressive up-the-middle knee knockout is that it came over Pearson, who’s rapidly hitting diminishing returns after four straight losses. I obviously wouldn’t be shocked if he was cut, but I also wouldn’t be surprised if they kept him around for one more shot, given that Pearson’s been a fairly reliable action gatekeeper for almost a decade now. Let’s put him against Canadian submission artist Mitch Clarke, who’s still apparently on the UFC roster after one-sided losses to Michael Chiesa and Joe Duffy; it’d make for a fun striker-versus-grappler matchup.
Luke Jumeau (beat Dominique Steele) vs. Jingliang Li/Frank Camacho (Jun. 17) winner: This was a nice win for Jumeau, a debuting New Zealand prospect - I don’t exactly see him as a future contender, but this showed his athleticism and power has translated well enough that he can at least hang around and impressively beat some of the dregs of the roster. I’d just go pure action fights from here on out rather than booking Jumeau as a possible future contender, so I have an eye towards putting him against China’s Li, a fun banger who faces late replacement Frank Camacho in Singapore next week.
Mizuto Hirota (lost to Alexander Volkanovski) vs. Charles Rosa: Hirota had a fine performance here, but was just physically outgunned by Volkanovski, who was able to implement his wrestling and power striking more or less at will. Hirota’s sort of like Zak Ottow above in that he’s pretty much a tough, but beatable test for anyone - let’s put him against Boston’s Charles Rosa, who’s more athletic and more aggressive, but also wilder and someone that Hirota might be able to beat as a technician.
Damien Brown (lost to Vinc Pichel) vs. Davi Ramos: For a first-round knockout loss, Brown still kind of continues to overachieve in my eyes - I figured he’d be another Australian grappler who has no success at the UFC level, but his striking has come along to where he’s kind of a fun, scrappy vet. I like the idea of him against BJJ ace Ramos, who debuted at welterweight as a late replacement in March - a grappler who’s learned how to strike against one who seemingly has yet to.
J.J. Aldrich (beat Chan Mi Jeon) vs. Kailin Curran/Aleksandra Albu (Jul. 29) winner: This was a good win for Aldrich, as she had enough technical striking to keep raw newcomer Jeon at bay, but didn’t really change a ton in terms of long-term outlook in my eyes - Aldrich is still sort of a minus athlete, and anyone stronger who can grapple with her should have a ton of success. So even fights are hard to find on a deep roster like strawweight, but either Curran or Albu, lower-level fighters who square off at UFC 214, should do.
Ashkan Mokhtarian (lost to John Moraga) vs. Ryan Benoit: Well, Mokhtarian did not look good here - admittedly, some of that is probably facing Moraga, but the Australian just looked every bit the sort of athletic, trashy grappler that his pre-UFC film suggested. Ryan Benoit’s one of the few guys who can be a gatekeeper at flyweight, so let’s just use Mokhtarian to get him a win - and hell, the Australian might be athletic enough to even have some success.
Henrique da Silva (lost to Ion Cutelaba) vs. Igor Pokrajac: It’s been a wild ride for “Frankenstein” da Silva during his one-year UFC tenure - not much was expected of him until he got two trashy wins, and just when it looked like he might be a prospect, he started collecting one-sided losses, including a 22-second knockout here. Light heavyweight is thin enough I could see da Silva getting one more shot, and let’s do it against Pokrajac, a Croatian vet who was pretty much only re-signed for a card in Zagreb last year.
Chan Mi Jeon (lost to J.J. Aldrich) vs. Pearl Gonzalez: Chan Mi Jeon is a talent, but she’s also the youngest fighter on the roster and possibly the rawest; she fought more measured here against Aldrich than she did in any of her previous fights, but she still has a long ways to go before she can really implement a ton of effective offense. Pearl Gonzalez isn’t particularly good, and got dominated by Cynthia Calvillo in her lone UFC fight - if you had to choose someone on this roster that Jeon could beat at the moment, she’s as good a choice as any.
Kiichi Kunimoto (lost to Zak Ottow) vs. Dominique Steele (lost to Luke Jumeau): Now that he’s not on a weird winning streak, Kunimoto is fairly uninspiring, but I wouldn’t be surprised if he got another UFC fight; they’re coming to his native Japan in September, this was a narrow loss, and he is a solid vet to have around. I doubt Dominique Steele gets another bout, since he really can’t win at a UFC level, but they do have him going around and losing to people in their home town or nation, so there you go.
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kcowgill · 5 years
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2/18/2019 4.70 miles/7.56 kilometers Not among my best runs YTD: 153.62 miles 49 days in a row
Meh. That’s about all I have to say. I went to bed last night with about 2″ snow piled up on my deck railings, and woke up with about 4″ piled up on my deck railings. So I figured the sidewalks would be pretty crap, so I wore my ice spikes.
Narrator: Most sidewalks were, in fact, not pretty crap.
They’re pretty stiff so my ankles took a beating, especially after the 6.2 miles/10k yesterday. And since the sidewalks weren’t all that bad, probably a little overkill. BUT they kept my feet warm and dry, so there’s that?
Taekwondo a little later. My family and I were the only students in the class.
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[Insert standard disclaimer about HR recording during TKD being worthless]
Master Chris had us do a lot of static kick holds, and then a fun drill where we’d straddle a large target* and beat on it for 30 seconds, then roll clockwise to the next one and continue. My first target had a bit of a hole in it and I literally beat the stuffing out of it. Bits of foam were flying out, and Master Chris swapped my target out for another one with 10 seconds left to go.
Then he had us do another drill where we attempt to keep an empty plastic grocery bag floating by kicking at it. I did great when it was only front kicks, but lost it pretty bad when it got to roundhouses, side kicks, and turning kicks. The penalty for letting your bag hit the ground were either squats or pushups - my triceps were trashed from beating on the target, so I opted for squats.
Beat saber after the kids went to bed.
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All expert all the time. Granted I mostly stuck to 90% speed on all the new songs (because why not do the harder difficulty?), but I think I tried the familiar ones on 110% speed and did decently.
* Reminded me of the “ground ‘n’ pound” portion of a UFC fight where one guy’s whaling on the other after knocking him to the floor.
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planepocket51 · 2 years
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파이트 나이트 예측: 호세 알도 대 로버트 휘태커 글꼴: 파이트 카드, 확률, 방송 시간, 라이브 링크
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이미 2개의 세계 타이틀을 획득한 Jose Aldo의 페더급에서 밴텀급으로의 이동은 그의 결정 당시에 헤아릴 수 없는 것처럼 보였습니다. 그는 토요일 UFC Fight Night의 메인 이벤트에서 Rob Font와 대결하여 3연패를 기록하려고 합니다. Aldo가 처음 싸웠을 때, 그는 실제로 밴텀급으로 두 경기에서 모두 패했습니다.말론 모라에스에게 첫 시합을 포기한 후, 그는 다음 시합에서 빈 벨트에 기회가 주어졌습니다. Aldo는 해당 타이틀전의 5번째 라운드가 끝날 때 Petr Yan에 의해 중단되었지만 Yan이 인수하기 전에 경쟁력이 있어 많은 사람들을 놀라게 했습니다. 이러한 손실에도 불구하고 Aldo는 Marlon Vera와 Pedro Muhoz를 꺾고 마지막 두 경기에서 승리했습니다. Vera와 Munhoz는 135파운드의 강력한 경쟁자이지만 Font는 Aldo에게 훨씬 더 큰 도전을 제시할 것입니다. Font는 2014년부터 UFC 명단에 포함되었으며 현재 4경기에서 무패를 기록하고 있어 잠재적인 타이틀 도전에 도전할 수 있습니다. Font는 이제 옥타곤 커리어에서 세르히오 페티스, 리키 사이먼, 말론 모라에스, 전 UFC 챔피언 코디 가브란트를 5승 3패로 제치고 우승을 차지했습니다. Aldo를 이기면서 Font는 전 UFC 챔피언을 상대로 연속 승리를 거두고 타이틀 사진에서 확고하게 자리를 잡았습니다. 그럼에도 불구하고, Font는 밴텀급 챔피언 Aljamain Sterling이 부상을 당하고 잠정 챔피언 Petr Yan이 Sterling과 재대결을 준비하는 복잡한 타이틀 사진을 알고 있습니다. 이는 그가 꽤 오랜 시간 동안 자신의 기회를 기다릴 수 있음을 의미합니다. Font는 CBS Sports에 Sterling이 아직 Petr와 대결하지 않았다고 말했습니다. Petr는 여전히 결석하면 싸울 수 있습니다. TJ와 나는 Aljamain이 건강하고 활동적이라면 거기에 남아 있습니다. 내가 잘하거나 이기더라도 계속 기다리는 게 이상하다. 다음은 Caesar Sportsbook의 UFC Fight Night에 대한 확률입니다. UFC 파이트 나이트 카드, odds Rob Font -140 Jose Aldo +120 Bantamweight Rafael Fiziev -130 Brad Riddell +110 Lightweight Leonardo Santos -190 Clay Guida +160 Lightweight Jimmy Crute -165 Jamahal Hill +140 Light heavyweight Brendan Allen -360 Chris Curtis +280 Middleweight Bryan Barberena -120 Darian Weeks +100 Welterweight UFC Fight Night viewing information Date: Dec. 4 Start time: 10 p.M. ETLocation: UFC Apex , 라스베가스, NevadaStream: ESPN+ 예측 Rob Font vs. Jose Aldo: Font는 강력한 스트라이커이므로 분명히 이는 Font가 지상에서 Aldo를 만날 것임을 의미합니다. 알도가 원하는 것처럼. Aldo는 적시에 Font의 침략을 공격하고 처벌해야 할 때를 아는 역습의 대가입니다. 그들은 둘 다 강력한 지상 게임을 가지고 있지만, 이 싸움에서 전혀 문제가 되지 않는 것처럼 보입니다. 어떤 일이 먼저 발생하느냐에 따라 Font가 압력을 가하거나 Aldo가 반격할 것입니다. 5 라운드 싸움은 Aldo가 처리하기에는 너무 많은 것을 증명할 수 있습니다. 선택: TKO4를 통한 Rob 글꼴 먹튀검증
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wagerhome-blog · 3 years
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UFC 262 Betting Preview
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The Ultimate Fighting Championship is in Houston this weekend for another packed fight card, headlined by Charles Oliveira, taking on former Bellator champion Michael Chandler for the vacant Lightweight title. Here is a brief UFC 262 betting preview for all you fight fans out there.
UFC 262 Main Event Odds
Win Outright Oliveira (-130) Chandler (+110) Win by KO/TKO Oliveira (+460) Chandler (+230) Win by Points Oliveira (+600) Chandler (+500) Win by Submission Oliveira (+220) Chandler (+1100) The last time we saw Oliveira, he was dominating former No. 1 lightweight contender Tony Ferguson, winning his eighth fight in a row. He’s a terrific grappler and has a UFC-record 14 submissions, and this fight is his chance to break through and solidify himself as a star. Chandler has already won a lightweight title in the past at Bellator. He has solid wins over Eddie Alvarez, Benson Henderson, Patrick Pitbull, and Dan Hooker and now looks to take the same championship belt at UFC. He’s a great wrestler and striker and will pose a real challenge to Oliveira. If you want to bet on Chandler, it’s worth noting that Chandler’s last three wins have been by KO or TKO.
Other Main Card Odds
Lightweight Tony Ferguson (+140) Beneil Dariush (-165) Women’s Flyweight Katlyn Chookagian (-135) Viviane Araujo (+115) Featherweight Shane Burgos (-130) Edson Barboza (+110) Bantamweight Matt Schnell (-160) Rogerio Bontorin (+135) Tony Ferguson was one of the hottest fighters anywhere in MMA prior to the pandemic. He was on a 12-fight win streak and was set to fight for a belt in April. That got canceled, he took a short-notice fight and lost, and was beat up badly in December by Charles Oliveira. And now he’s the underdog against Beneil Dariush, which wouldn’t have been the case a year ago. Katlyn Chookagian brings a fierce strike to her fight with Viniane Araujo, whose only loss in the UFC was to former title contender Jessica Eye. This shapes up to be one of the best fights of the entire night. Both Shane Burgos and Edson Barboza are dynamic strikers who do not engage in grappling, which will make for an exciting fight. In fact, the two fighters have combined for 11 performance of the night bonuses, so you do not want to miss seeing them. Matt Schnell was supposed to fight Alex Perez in UFC 262, but Perez had to withdraw, and he was replaced by Rogerio Bontorin. Schnell is the more experienced fighter at this level, and while Bontorin does have a style that can give Schnell some trouble, he is the deserved favorite in this one.
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realfightjunkie · 3 years
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Nasrat Haqparast {-360} DEFEATS Rafa Garcia {+300} via 3 round DECISION on UFC Fight Night 187. Will Go 3 rounds {+110} & Haqparast wins by decision {+160} hits!
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allenmendezsr · 4 years
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The Boxing Blue Print.
New Post has been published on https://autotraffixpro.app/allenmendezsr/the-boxing-blue-print/
The Boxing Blue Print.
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    “Discover The Secret To Never-Ending Cardio, Warp Speed, and Lights-Out KO Power While Slashing Your Workout Time In Half With The Cutting-Edge Boxing Blue Print Training System”
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Correcting muscle imbalances by stretching the tight ones is crucial to staying injury free while boosting your fighting performance.
Learn how to get a lot more out of your workout by performing a dynamic warm up. Learn what muscles to stretch and how to stretch. Improved flexibility will improve boxing technique. Learn you must perform a dynamic warm up to get the most out of your workout and why it’s a costly mistake if you don’t.
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Learn the biggest myths of strength training & why you must get strong. Why strength makes or breaks a fighter. How maximal strength lays the foundation for other vital strength and special strength qualities that give the fighter a tremendous advantage in the ring to win.
Why max strength must be developed to raise the ceiling for future skill development in fighters. Weak fighters do NOT get better in skill. This is a fact.
Weak fighters lose, get strong to get better. Learn how & a lot more in this chapter.
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The incredibly explosive & powerful fighters are the most dangerous. You CAN develop explosive speed and power for the ring.
There are different types of power to develop. Which one depends on your needs. In this chapter you will learn the different types of power to develop, how, and why to develop them over another. This all depends on your needs of course and I will teach you how to perform your own needs analysis.
Learn the best power exercises that transfer to the ring leaving your opponent unconscious on the mat. How to effectively train for explosive power by knowing which type of power you need. How to develop special strengths that lie differently on the force/velocity curve.
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In this chapter you will learn how to develop endless endurance and how to develop the different energy systems that are called upon when fighting in the ring or cage.
There is FAR more than just road work to gain the stamina to fight all night.
You will learn how to use different unorthodox training tools and circuits that will simply bring the best out of you while developing fight all night endurance.
You are really going to look forward to performing these workouts.
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The core is often underdeveloped in fighters and this IS the pillar of the body. It is vital to your fighting performance and longevity to learn how to develop a strong & powerful core.
You will in this chapter. Learn why you MUST train the core in rotation, anti rotation, and why sit ups are the worst core exercise you can do.
You will develop a very function & bullet proof core after applying the exercises in this chapter.
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Boxing skill training creates career shortening muscle imbalances. In this chapter you will learn how to correct these imbalances while developing a more balanced. efficient, and powerful body.
You know the saying, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
It’s all in this chapter.
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Recovery is so overlooked in boxing and that mistake robs the fighter of would be stellar performances in the ring. The fighter can also make it to fight night feeling beat up and worn out, not fresh and ready to go.
In this chapter learn how to effectively apply recovery methods and how they leave you feeling better than ever while training harder than ever with NO set backs as in injuries.
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Cutting weight has gotten so out of hand and dangerous now a days. Whether cutting too much or just doing it the wrong way in harming the body.
There IS a very effective science and proven method of cutting weight that takes the frustration and even harmful ways of doing it, out of it.
In this chapter Alwyn Cosgrove shows you how to easily and effectively cut weight.
Take Their Word For It.
“Rob Pilger’s boxing blue print is a must for anyone that is wanting to rapidly improve their boxing performance.
Rob has done an excellent job laying down real world strength, power and conditioning programs that enable you to increase stamina while becoming stronger and more explosive.
Having gone from a youth program to amateur, then to pro level, Rob leaves nothing out of this fine e-book, he walks the talk and gives you the ammo you need to succeed in the ring “
The Godfather Of Strength & Power, Louie Simmons, founder of Westside Barbell, The STRONGEST gym in the world.
“I’m constantly amazed at how many “fitness frauds” there are selling BS workout programs that have never been tested on real people or athletes. And the older I get the shorter my patience with these bums
That is why I give a 110% endorsement to Rob Pilger and his amazing Boxing Blueprint Manual. From the moment I cracked the book opened I could tell that this manual is a MUST READ for anyone wanting to gain real strength, fat loss and performance success!
This book is back-to-the-basics, science based strength training for athletes at it’s finest! “
Elliott Hulse CSCS
“Rob’s knowledge of boxing and conditioning are second to none. On top of all that, if it wasn’t for Rob I would still be suffering from a very sore lower back. My back was killing me as I walked into his gym one day for a workout. I left feeling better than I had in months due to a few exercises and advice from Rob. For a professional fighter this is invaluable and I highly recommend this manual if you are serious about your fighting career!”
The Immortal Matt Brown ,UFC Fighter
“Rob Pilger’s book The Boxing Blueprint is just what I’ve been looking for in real strength and conditioning expertise from someone who is entrenched into the boxing world. These exercises and conditioning drills are specific designed for boxers again Rob great work, I will be implementing these training workouts in my sons program.” Joe Suarez-Suarez Boxing Boxing Coach, Father & Trainer of Carlos Suarez
Augusta Classic National Champion
Four time Ringside World Champion
National Jr Golden Gloves Champion-Title National Champion
Under 19 National Champion-Silver gloves Champion
Three time Arnold National Classic Winner
“Rob has been an under ground in the trenches fight coach for years. He has delivered a masterpiece with this manual! The power chapter is sick! It’s packed full of real world no fluff bullshit training methods that will have you hitting harder, faster, and longer, outlasting your toughest competition!”
Renegade Mind Set Coach for Fighters Stephen Ladd CHEK II
BOOM! Right hook of knowledge!
“Rob Pilger’s Boxing Blueprint is a must have for combat athletes. Rob provides a complete program and explanation to improve strength, power, and endurance. He sets this manual apart by adding rock solid science and making it practical for any lifter. I already have this manual printed out and will be referencing it regularly at our gym!
Thanks Rob! Joe Hashey CSCS
“Man, I wish I’d had this book 25 years ago! I was fortunate in that my first boxing coach (Willie Toweel) knew I needed strength training, unfortunately he had no idea what kind. I can still remember his words as he sent me off to the gym, ‘just don’t let them make you big and slow’. That was the fear of most boxing coaches back then and it still is today when it comes to resistance training. Fortunately Rob’s book should finally change all of that! Here’s a book that breaks down exactly how to build explosive power in a safe and scientific manner based on all of Rob’s incredible experience and knowledge.”
Author of 5-Minute Flexibility, 25 years in the combat arts Giles Wiley CSCS
“It’s about time that someone cuts through the bull shit in the Boxing world. Where was this book when I was a kid? That’s all I could think of when I had the opportunity to read The Boxing Blueprint. I consider Rob Pilger a colleague and a friend in Boxing. If you are ever in question, learn from people who lead by example – Real Fighters and Those who actually train real fighters. Rob is the best of both worlds. There is no room for “The Land Of Make Believe” in Boxing. Rob Pilger’s book is practical. Not theory. The Boxing Blueprint maps out every training aspect for a Novice Boxer to a Seasoned Professional. The knowledge that is shared is superior and is laid out in an understandable way. It will answer all the training questions you may have and will save you from the mistakes most fighters make. It may very well save your Boxing Career.”
The YESS TRAINING BARBELL CLUB (LLC) Joe Rossi
“This book does what it says on the cover! Rob has covered every aspect of a fighters training with this book if you take your training seriously then this training bible is a must. I have used it when planning sessions with fighters from amateur to professional and the feedback and results are tops.”
Brian Fernie MMA CSCC
Introducing The Boxing Blue Print Strength/Conditioning System
You Also Get 3 More Bonuses Worth $115 For Free
Bonus #1: Joe Rossi’s Advanced Explosive Power Exercise Series ($50 Value)
Real world strength/conditioning coach Joe Rossi gives you bone jarring explosive exercises and programs to instantly add in your training.
Bonus #2: Joe Hashey’s Advanced Battling Rope Workout Series ( $50 Value )
Joe has come up with some sick battling rope progressions to instantly add in your training. Think you are in shape? I challenge you now to try these battling rope progressions and workouts!
Bonus #3: Free One Month Membership to Boxingperformance.com ( $15.00 Value )
This is the premier site for combining old school boxing skill with 21st century sports science. There is a forum to ask questions and talk training along with hundreds of training videos, articles, and interviews with some of the best coaches in the world.
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Yes Coach Rob… with this package, I understand that I not only receive The Boxing Blue Print E-Manual, but I also receive the 3 FREE Bonuses worth over $115 during this limited time bonus special… and I receive the entire package for a total one-time fee of only $49 $37 now Christmas sale!
I know that if I’m not happy with my results from The Boxing Blue Print I have an 60 day unconditional money-back guarantee.
Do This Now
Click the Buy Now button below. Once you’ve completed the payment process via our secure servers, you’ll be given immediate access to The Boxing Blue Print ebook  Plus the $225 in Free bonuses
for just $49 $37 now Christmas sale!
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You read that correctly only – $49 $37 now Christmas sale!
IF you act immediately, you get everything in digital format for this low introductory training investment of $49 $37 now Christmas sale!
If you are looking for the FINAL Competitive Edge to being a devastatingly effective fighter then your search is over.
These training methods are proven and you get immediate access to them for a special (protected) low price. Give it a try for 60 days and see the results for yourself.
Now it’s time to get started. Click the Add to Cart button.
Coach Rob
Q: Rob, is this training system for a complete beginner?
If you’re a beginner, this training system will rapidly improve your strength, power, and conditioning as you have a young training age and don’t not bad lifting patterns and imbalances to correct like the advanced fighters do. This system is for the amateur JO fighters, novice, open, and open fighter. For 4-8 round pro fighter, 10-12 round main event fighter, and the veteran pro. You simply plug the appropriate training guidelines I have in this manual to your current experience level.
Q: Rob, but if it doesn’t work for me?
Then it’s FREE. If you don’t get stronger, faster, more explosive, and improve your conditioning then I will quickly refund your $ NO questions asked. That’s how confident I am with my training system. So you have ZERO risk. The heat is on me to produce and I will in this book. 🙂
Q: Rob, do i need expensive equipment to use your training system?
You don’t need any shiny machine equipment. That shit is garbage! Just the bare bone essentials will get you in amazing shape.
• Room to perform body-weight exercises. • Barbells, Dumbells, kettle bells • Power rack ( this is like a total gym, squat, dead lifts, chin up, pull ups, close presses, all in one piece of equipment) • Swiss ball
And while medicine balls and cables aren’t absolutely necessary, you will get optimal results if you have access to these as well.
Q: Is my credit card information safe?
That is a great question! I understand that many people are still just now making their first purchases online and are a little nervous about using their credit cards on the Internet. These days, online payment processors have advanced to the point that they are actually MORE secure than many other forms of payment.
In many ways, ordering online is actually a safer method of payment than giving out the info on the phone or on a mail-in stub, where an actual human is going to have access to your info. With a secure online form, a human will not have access to your info, only the merchant bank.
Our merchant account uses SSL (secure socket layer) technology to protect your information from being viewed by any third parties. Even as the website owner myself, I don’t have access to any credit card information that you input for the order. Only the bank processes the information.
We use Clickbank to process our orders. Clickbank is the most popular and frequently used credit card processing company in the world for online downloadable products. Clickbank has an outstanding reputation and security has never been a problem. You’ll notice that when you get to the page where you are inputting your card numbers, the beginning of the web URL will change from http to https. That indicates that you are on a secure page and the info cannot be found by a 3rd party. Keep that in mind on any websites where you are using your credit card. Always look for the https at the beginning of the web address on the actual page where the card info is requested.
Q: How long does it take for The Boxing Blue Print System to arrive?
No more than about 1-3 minutes. As soon as you complete your purchase, you’ll be given instant access to E-Manual and bonuses. No need to wait impatiently until it arrives in the mail, or pay additional fees for shipping.
Q: Does it matter what country I live in and is the sale in US dollars?
You can order online no matter what country you’re located in. Our secure credit card processor will automatically convert the US dollars to your country’s currency.
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plusbetnet · 4 years
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🔔 Oskar Piechota vs. Marc-Andre Barriault - 6/20/20 UFC Fight Night 173 Pick, Odds, and Prediction Marc-Andre Barriault vs. Oskar Piechota Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 8:00 PM (UFC APEX) The Line: Oskar Piechota -140 / Marc-Andre Barriault +110 -- Over/Under: TV: ESPN+ Marc-Andre Barriault and Oskar Piechota fight Saturday during UFC Fight Night 173 at the UFC APEX. Marc-Andre Barriault enters this fight with a 11-4 record and has won 73 percent of his fights by knockout. Barriault has lost his last three fights and is coming off a December loss to Jun Yong Park. Barriault is averaging 3... 🌍 https://tinyurl.com/ybqhyx54 🏷️ #mma #mmapicks #mmaprediction #mmapreviews #mmatips #odds #picks #prediction
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writingsubmissions · 7 years
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UFC Fight Night 110 Preview
WHAT'S HAPPENING: *UFC 212 was one of the best cards of the year thus far, even if the Rio faithful probably wouldn't agree, as native son Jose Aldo finally turned mortal, and Max Holloway knocked him out to become undisputed featherweight champion. It was a strange sight to behold, given how good Aldo looked in his last fight against Frankie Edgar, and how good he looked in the first round here, uncorking a bunch of shots and generally making Holloway look like another streaking contender who would fall at his hands. But Holloway just hung in there and waited for his opening, and as the quick pace surprisingly began to tire Aldo, Holloway just started to take over, landing combinations and generally out-quicking Aldo before landing a quick combination of jabs that would mark the beginning of the end. Aldo just kept surviving to the end, as it seemingly took about a minute and a half for Holloway to finally put Aldo away, but at a certain point Holloway was landing so many shots that John McCarthy had no choice to stop the fight. So Max Holloway is primed to reign over featherweight for the next few years - though you never know with this sport - as he's somehow still only 25 years old and keeps looking better than ever. Frankie Edgar is the obvious next title challenger, and one wonders if Holloway will finally get the UFC card in his native Hawaii that he's been wanting for years, though the stadium situation there always makes the possibility somewhat iffy. As for Aldo, it's an open question as far as what's next - maybe it's finally time for him to move up to lightweight, so he can finally try and get revenge against Conor McGregor. *UFC 212 had a bunch of finishes, but the most unexpected might have come in the co-main, where Claudia Gadelha polished off Karolina Kowalkiewicz in a shade over three minutes via rear-naked choke. Gadelha winning wasn't a surprise to a lot of people (though I picked Kowalkiewicz), but she's mostly been a decision machine in the UFC, and if nothing else, Kowalkiewicz has proven both strong and durable despite looking so unassuming. But after a brief feeling out process, Gadelha scored big on her first takedown attempt of the fight, got Kowalkiewicz to the ground, and worked for the choke in fairly short order. A masterful, career-best performance, though I'm not really sure it closes the gap between her and champion/career rival Joanna Jedrzejczyk, since Jedrzejczyk's also coming off her own career-best performance against Jessica Andrade. But c'est la vie. *Well, Vitor Belfort's fight against Nate Marquardt turned out to be kind of pointless. Initially, this was supposed to be Belfort's retirement fight, but as we got closer to the bout, Belfort started talking like it was only going to be his last UFC fight. And then it came out that this wasn't even the last fight on Belfort's UFC contract, so as always, it's unclear exactly what Belfort was thinking. So anyway, Belfort's fight with Marquardt just sort of...happened - basically, Belfort might be a more technical striker than ever, but it's come at the cost of his finishing ability, so now he's just a dude who doesn't knock people out - and while most people had Marquardt winning a fairly nothing-happening fight, it was Belfort who, somehow, got his first decision win in the UFC after all these years. And then Belfort announced his intention to fight out his contract, which apparently contains five more fights. I have no idea where the hell you go from here. *The card also saw some big goings-on at bantamweight, even if the biggest thing was a veteran holding onto his spot. The worst case pretty much happened with the debut of former WSOF champ Marlon Moraes, one of the best bantamweights outside of the UFC and a guy who was expected to move up the ladder quickly. He faced Raphael Assuncao, who's been a top contender in the division for years, and rather than this being the usual violent Marlon Moraes fight, this instead became a Raphael Assuncao fight, with Assuncao basically neutralizing his fellow Brazilian's offense with his defense and counters. So the fight was a boring slog, but the strong consensus was that Moraes still did enough to win, so hey, all's well that ends well when it comes to creating a new contender, right? Wrong, as the judges rather stunningly gave the fight to Assuncao. So...great. But on the plus side, at least two other talents broke through on the card. UFC's matchmaking with Californian grappler Matthew Lopez has been oddly aggressive, pitting him against a bunch of tough vets, but Lopez has stunningly risen to the challenge and looked awesome here, knocking out Johnny Eduardo in under three minutes. Eduardo's primarily a Muay Thai artist, so it's no surprise that Lopez had the advantage grappling, but Lopez's hands are coming along nicely - he held his own here, and rather than going for submissions, Lopez unleashed some brutal ground and pound to finish the fight. And the most stunning result of the card was Brian Kelleher tapping out divisional stalwart Iuri Alcantara in his UFC debut. This was an odd bit of matchmaking, since it looked like UFC was just feeding Kelleher to a Brazilian vet, but the fight was seemingly just getting started when Alcantara left his neck open for a guillotine, and then suddenly tapped out in under two minutes. Kelleher then made the most of his mic time after the fight, antagonizing the Brazilian crowd to the point he needed extra security, and demanding a bit fight on his native Long Island this July - and while it's not a huge opponent, Kelleher did in fact get one of the last spots on that card, as he's slated to face Marlon Vera on about a two month turnaround. *There was some other interesting stuff up and down the card, including a bunch of finishes. Top Brazilian prospect Paulo Borrachinha looked surprisingly good against Oluwale Bamgbose; Borrachinha's a bit of a high-risk, high-reward prospect, as he's got a bodybuilder physique and has a career entirely consisting of quick knockouts, but this fight suggested he may actually have some fight IQ to work with. Bamgbose just came out throwing all sorts of ridiculous offense, and rather than spark his usual brawl, Borrachinha just sat back and let Bamgbose tire himself out, scoring a stoppage in the second round. On the other side of things, it looks like Erick Silva is now pretty much done as any sort of high-level fighter. Like Vitor Belfort above, but only more pronounced, Silva has become a more technical fighter, but it's too little, too late; now rather than a violent one-round danger, Silva's now less explosive on offense, but still as porous on defense, and Yancy Medeiros was able to eventually nail Silva for a second-round stoppage, even if the referee did definitely step in a bit too early. Middleweight prospect Antonio Carlos Junior looked good, getting a second-round sub after some fun grappling against Eric Spicely; this was pretty much a gimme of a matchup, since Spicely essentially does an inferior version of what Carlos is great at, but given "Cara de Sapato"'s tendency to lose winnable fights, nothing should be taken for granted. Luan Chagas showed some of the best form of his career against Jim Wallhead; like Paulo Borrachinha, Chagas is a young guy who has mostly just tried to throw heat for much of his career, but started to pace himself here en route to still getting the knockout. Deiveson Figueiredo looked good in his UFC debut, taking out Marco Beltran with a stoppage as the horn sounded at the end of the second round - it's hard not to feel bad for Beltran, though, as he lost a crucial fight just two days after the death of his mother. And in one of the more blah fights on the card - though it may have been the best of the three decisions - Viviane Pereira won a battle of strawweight prospects against Jamie Moyle rather handily. Pereira was just much better on the feet, and after getting shut down early, Moyle didn't really even try to impose her grappling game, so she just sort of coasted to a loss. *So, Demetrious Johnson has pretty much had it with UFC's bullshit, apparently. Between a statement to MMA Fighting and an appearance on Ariel Helwani's weekly interview show, there's a lot to unpack, mostly about Johnson's discussions with UFC about his next fight. So, apparently Johnson was offered - or, I guess in UFC's eyes, given - Ray Borg as a next opponent. Johnson offered some other options, as he preferred Sergio Pettis as a next contender, feeling Pettis (probably rightly) was a bit more marketable, or the Cody Garbrandt fight that the bantamweight champ had teased in some interviews. Johnson was still forced to take the Borg fight, essentially - UFC also refused his request for any future pay-per-view points, and also told Johnson that a fight with Garbrandt, basically, wasn't a marketable or money fight. Now, I understand that for UFC, the T.J. Dillashaw fight was the obvious fight, from both a sporting and a promotional standpoint, for Garbrandt to have next, but going so far as to say that Garbrandt isn't a money fight for Johnson was pretty unnecessary, particularly with how things played out. Admittedly, I'm not sure if any Johnson fight is all that marketable, but the Garbrandt one (or whoever is bantamweight champ, honestly) probably tops that list, so I have no idea why you'd tell Johnson that. So, UFC eventually strong-arms Johnson into taking the Borg fight, and shortly thereafter, Garbrandt hurts his back, his fight with Dillashaw is cancelled, and things go to hell. So, Dana White suddenly reverses course and wants Johnson to fight Dillashaw instead of Borg, even though, again, UFC basically forced Johnson to take the Borg fight, and apparently contracts were already signed. Johnson, rightfully, points out that UFC has already told him a fight with Garbrandt wouldn't draw, and then asks, in that case, why he should bother fighting a bantamweight who isn't even the champion. Plus, Johnson has concerns that Dillashaw can even make weight for a title fight, and says that he'll think about taking the bout if they guarantee that Johnson will get both his purse and Dillashaw's if Dillashaw can't make weight. Dana White apparently blows up at all of this. He goes on to say that Johnson is taking away Dillashaw's opportunity - which, as Johnson brings up, it's unclear why Johnson would care about T.J. Dillashaw's career - and actually threatened to shut down the entire flyweight division if Johnson refused to fight Dillashaw. So Johnson called the bluff, telling UFC to go ahead and shut it down, and...nothing happened, save White telling some media that a Johnson/Dillashaw fight was on, an obvious attempt to make Johnson look bad. In Johnson's telling of the story, the only UFC employee who comes off looking even decent is new matchmaker Mick Maynard, who comes off as a relatively rational guy forced in a tough spot by his bosses, White and fellow matchmaker Sean Shelby. Now, there are some assumptions of Johnson's that I disagree with, namely when it comes to his promotion. Johnson's griped for a while that UFC doesn't promote him as strongly as they should, which I do agree to to an extent, but I think Johnson makes the incorrect assumption that UFC promoting him will automatically make his fights a big deal. I think his last fight against Wilson Reis was fairly emblematic of this - consensus was that UFC did a pretty great job pushing Johnson as one of the greatest all time as he attempted to tie Anderson Silva's record for title defenses, but the result was a horrible rating that was one of the lowest in UFC's history on the network. But treating Johnson like this is fairly indefensible, given that he's mostly been a good company man. So it's unclear where this all stands, or what it means for UFC 215, which was assumed to be built around Johnson fighting in his hometown of Seattle. And, of course, since this is an industry of alpha males, Johnson has apparently already rebuffed the idea of MMA fighters needing a union, so none of these problems will probably ever change. *Not a ton else in terms of news, with the only other decent-sized story being War Machine finally getting put in jail for a whole bunch of assault and battery charges related to his ex-girlfriend, porn star Christy Mack. Machine (yes, it's dumb) has gotten a life sentence with a possibility of parole after 36 years, so we won't be seeing him again until he's into his seventies. Good riddance to bad rubbish. ------ BOOKINGS: *Not a ton of new bookings, with the biggest news related to such being that "The Korean Zombie" Chan Sung Jung's comeback is going to be a short-lived one for the moment. Jung pulled out of his fight at UFC 214 against Ricardo Lamas after completely tearing up his knee, blowing out both his ACL and MCL. It's similar to one of the many injuries that kept Dominick Cruz out of action, so it'll probably be until late 2018 - at the earliest - that we see Jung back in action. Damn. I hate to say there's a silver lining, but at least we still get a fairly fun fight, as rising prospect Jason Knight steps in to take on Lamas in the biggest fight of his career. Knight has looked excellent in his four UFC wins to date, all exciting affairs, so the chance is well-earned. *Mexico City got a few interesting fights, most notably Rashad Evans trying again at middleweight, this time against "Smilin'" Sam Alvey. Evans lost a narrow decision to Dan Kelly in his middleweight debut, and is just struggling to get any sort of momentum going, so pitting him against Alvey's weird, low-volume, counter-attacking style is...bizarrely perfect? Mexico City also adds lightweights Alvaro Herrera and Jordan Rinaldi, an obvious attempt to get lower-tier Mexican fighter Herrera a win, and, bizarrely, a middleweight bout between Sweden's Jack Hermansson and England's Brad Scott. UFC has a show in Scotland this July and a card in the Netherlands this September, so those would be more obvious fits for a fight between two Europeans...but I guess the Mexican fans demanded it? *A fight between Hector Lombard and Anthony Smith is scheduled for...sometime. It appears to be set for August 19th, which is assumed to be the UFC 215 card from Seattle that may include Demetrious Johnson, but nothing's been announced. But even though we have no UFC 215 yet, UFC 216 is starting to get some fights. Henry Cejudo and Wilson Reis square off at flyweight, as UFC looks to take advantage of the large Mexican and Brazilian populations in Edmonton, apparently. Canadian bantamweight Sarah Moras returns from over two years off to take on Ashlee Evans-Smith, and Canadian wrestler Arjan Bhullar, the first-ever UFC fighter of Indian descent, makes his debut at heavyweight against Luis Henrique. Alan Jouban is out of his UFC 213 fight with Brian Camozzi due to injury, scrapping a weird pairing that seemingly existed only to get Jouban a win. As mentioned above, Brian Kelleher gets a quick turnaround from an impressive UFC debut, getting a fight on his native Long Island against Marlon Vera next month. And highly touted Chinese featherweight Guan Wang is apparently off the Singapore card, with no reason as to why. When the Singapore card was announced a few months back, Dana White teased the signing of a potential Chinese star, who turned out to be Wang, and word got out shortly thereafter that he was slated to face Alex Caceres on this show. But the fight never got officially announced as best I can tell, as just two weeks before the card, UFC announced that Caceres was on the card, but facing newcomer Rolando Dy instead of Wang. Huh. ----- ROSTER CUTS: 1) Chris Camozzi (24-13 overall, 9-10 UFC, last fought 5/28/17, L vs. Trevor Smith): Camozzi announced that his contract with the UFC is up, ending his third stint with the promotion and second one that saw some crazy up-and-down runs. Camozzi looked like he'd be sort of a footnote - he was on TUF 11, but got injured and never had a fight in the house, and his first UFC stint mostly saw him get fed to hometown fighter Kyle Noke on a card in Australia and then immediately cut. But Camozzi was signed back up within a year and after a loss to Francis Carmont, suddenly went on a four-fight win streak. None of them were particularly dominating - Camozzi would just sort of win a mediocre kickboxing contest via a narrow decision over and over, as I believe it was well into double-digit UFC fights before he even attempted a takedown, but four wins are four wins, and it eventually earned Camozzi a late-notice slot against Jacare Souza, who memorably choked Camozzi unconscious in about three and a half minutes. From there, Camozzi's luck pretty much ran out - he was still taking fights to narrow decisions, but this time he was on the losing end; and after a while, four straight losses were four straight losses, and Camozzi got cut once again. That figured to be that, but once again, Camozzi found himself back in UFC within a year, and this time in fairly amusing fashion, as he was crazy enough to step up and face Souza again on about a week's notice when a replacement was needed. And this time, Camozzi got tapped even faster, losing in just two and a half minutes. From there, things pretty much picked up where they left off, with Camozzi winning kickboxing contests, but 2016 saw him show some of the better form of his career, at least at first - he ran through a decrepit Joe Riggs, then actually mixed in some wrestling and looked excellent in a one-sided beatdown of Vitor Miranda. But like before, all those wins just earned Camozzi some ass-kickings, as his last three fights showed that for all his offensive improvements, Camozzi's defensive wrestling was still quite lacking. Thales Leites and Dan Kelly pretty much threw Camozzi around at will, and his last fight against Trevor Smith was an awful affair where Smith pretty much just held Camozzi down for three rounds. Camozzi's still 30, so I can't wait to see who he returns to take on in, say, February, given the way history has gone. ----- UPCOMING UFC SHOWS: 6/17 - UFC Fight Night 111 - Singapore, Singapore - Bethe Correia vs. Holly Holm, Andrei Arlovski vs. Marcin Tybura, Colby Covington vs. Dong Hyun Kim, Rafael dos Anjos vs. Tarec Saffiedine 6/25 - UFC Fight Night 112 - Oklahoma City, OK - Michael Chiesa vs. Kevin Lee, Tim Boetsch vs. Johny Hendricks, B.J. Penn vs. Dennis Siver 7/7 - TUF 25 Finale - Las Vegas, NV - Justin Gaethje vs. Michael Johnson 7/8 - UFC 213 - Las Vegas, NV - Amanda Nunes ( c ) vs. Valentina Shevchenko, Yoel Romero vs. Robert Whittaker, Donald Cerrone vs. Robbie Lawler 7/16 - UFC Fight Night 113 - Glasgow, Scotland - Gunnar Nelson vs. Santiago Ponzinibbio, Joanne Calderwood vs. Cynthia Calvillo 7/22 - UFC on Fox 25 - Uniondale, NY - Kelvin Gastelum vs. Chris Weidman, Dennis Bermudez vs. Darren Elkins, Thomas Almeida vs. Jimmie Rivera 7/29 - UFC 214 - Anaheim, CA - Daniel Cormier ( c ) vs. Jon Jones, Jimi Manuwa vs. Volkan Oezdemir, Jason Knight vs. Ricardo Lamas 8/5 - UFC Fight Night 114 - Mexico City, Mexico - Brandon Moreno vs. Sergio Pettis, Sam Alvey vs. Rashad Evans 9/2 - UFC Fight Night 115 - Rotterdam, Netherlands - Stefan Struve vs. Alexander Volkov 9/9 - UFC 216 - Edmonton, AB - Henry Cejudo vs. Wilson Reis, Rick Glenn vs. Gavin Tucker ----- UFC Fight Night 110 - June 10, 2017 - Vector Arena - Auckland, New Zealand So this is a pretty solid card, at least as far as UFC's jaunts to Oceania tend to go. UFC's card from Melbourne in November was a one-fight show, with Robert Whittaker against Derek Brunson and then absolutely nothing, and this marks a much better card on paper than UFC's first effort from New Zealand. That card, in June of 2014, was focused around James Te Huna of all people, as the veteran light heavyweight attempted to cut to middleweight and failed fairly miserably, getting tapped out in about four and a half minutes by Nate Marquardt. But even that card, which is among the lowest in terms of starpower in UFC history, was fairly emblematic of UFC's cards in Australia and New Zealand - no names, but usually some pretty fun fights, as regional fighters are just good enough on offense and bad enough on defense to make for some excitement. Plus add in some of the better crowds of the world, and pretty much every Oceania card is at least worth watching. And this should be no exception, at least as far as the main card, as we get an important heavyweight bout, the continuation of an unlikely underdog story, plus fights that either promise good action or showcase solid prospects. Just, uh, maybe ignore those prelims. MAIN CARD (Fox Sports 1 - 10:00 PM ET): Heavyweight: (#6) Derrick Lewis vs. (#7) Mark Hunt Middleweight: (#8) Derek Brunson vs. (#15) Daniel Kelly Lightweight: Daniel Hooker vs. Ross Pearson Light Heavyweight: Ion Cutelaba vs. Henrique da Silva Flyweight: (#8) Tim Elliott vs. (#12) Ben Nguyen Featherweight: Mizuto Hirota vs. Alexander Volkanovski PRELIMINARY CARD (Fox Sports 1 - 8:00 PM ET): Lightweight: Damien Brown vs. Vinc Pichel Welterweight: Luke Jumeau vs. Dominique Steele Flyweight: (#11) John Moraga vs. Ashkan Mokhtarian Welterweight: Kiichi Kunimoto vs. Zak Ottow PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC Fight Pass - 7:00 PM ET): Women's Strawweight: J.J. Aldrich vs. Chan Mi Jeon Lightweight: Thibault Gouti vs. Dong Hyun Kim THE RUNDOWN: Derrick Lewis (18-4 [1] overall, 9-2 UFC, 0-1 Bellator) vs. Mark Hunt (12-11-1 [1] overall, 7-5-1 [1] UFC, 5-3 PRIDE): Derrick Lewis wound up being a bit of a breakout star in 2016, only a year or two later than expected. The gigantic Texan burst onto the UFC scene in 2014, obliterating Jack May and Guto Inocente within minutes and showing off some of the most brutal power in the entire heavyweight division. But a move up the ladder against Matt Mitrione resulted in a 41-second loss, and after a rebound win over Ruan Potts, Shawn Jordan also stopped Lewis rather easily, causing many to just sort of write Lewis off as a flawed knockout artist with too limited of a game to accomplish much. And, well, Lewis is still a flawed knockout artist, but he's gotten much better at making that game work, enough so that Lewis suddenly has a six-fight winning streak. Combine that with a pretty great social media presence - Lewis pretty much acts like the human embodiment of black Twitter, and at some point will surely cross a line he shouldn't, but in the meantime, it's quite entertaining - and Lewis has become a cult favorite who UFC is increasingly relying on to headline some of these small- to medium-sized shows. In fact, this seems like kind of an attempt at a changing of the guard, as the reigning king of the cult favorite knockout artists is the man in the other corner, Auckland's own Mark Hunt. Hunt's had a pretty crazy career path to get here, not even counting his fairly horrible upbringing - a kickboxing star with K-1, PRIDE brought Hunt into MMA for seemingly more freakshow reasons than anything, and after some early success, fighters figured out that if you could take Hunt down, you could submit him fairly easily. PRIDE was eventually absorbed by UFC, and Hunt was one of the few who refused to have his contract bought out, insisting UFC honor the last two fights on his deal. This dragged on, as Hunt fought elsewhere in Japan, and by the time UFC gave in and brought Hunt in, the "Super Samoan" was riding a five-fight win streak. And Sean McCorkle, of all people, made it six, following the blueprint and tapping out Hunt in about a minute. With one fight left on his deal, UFC decided to match Hunt up with fellow brawler Chris Tuchscherer, and Hunt scored the upset by getting a second-round knockout. And then, well, Hunt suddenly went on a winning streak. Some of it was Hunt being matched up with people who wanted to stand and trade, but as UFC put him against some guys with grappling skill, Hunt finally showed some takedown defense, at which point opponents were sitting ducks for Hunt's destructive power. The unlikely run finally ended against Junior dos Santos in a number-one contender's fight, but for the last few years, Hunt has mostly hung around as a top contender, even earning a spot in an interim title fight against Fabricio Werdum. But a one-sided loss to Stipe Miocic in 2015 has started to mark a decline for Hunt, who's 43 - there were quick wins over Bigfoot Silva and Frank Mir, but Brock Lesnar out-wrestled Hunt fairly easily (and then failed a drug test, leading to a Hunt lawsuit against UFC that is still ongoing, a weird detail hanging over this fight), and March's fight against Alistair Overeem made Hunt look fairly slow before Overeem cracked Hunt's legendarily tough chin. So in a deeper division, Hunt's probably the kind of guy who would be aging his way down the ladder, but those fighters don't really exist at heavyweight outside of, well, Lewis and Francis Ngannou. Before I attempt to pick a winner in this fight, first I must mention the caveat that this is pretty much a pick 'em - not only is it between two hard-hitting heavyweights, which is almost always a coin flip, this is also one of those deals where Hunt would be, by far, Lewis's best win, while all of Hunt's losses in the UFC (save the McCorkle fight) are to top-five heavyweights in the world. But I think I'll take Hunt. Lewis's last few fights, pretty much since UFC decided to run with one, have all been weird deals, with Lewis getting in a lot of trouble early. Roy Nelson and Shamil Abdurakhimov were able to control Lewis with wrestling and clinch-work, while Travis Browne was able to damage Lewis quite a bit with some outside kicks to the body. But, of course, these all eventually swung back Lewis's way - Nelson just couldn't really do much of anything offensively, giving away a decision to Lewis, and while Abdurakhimov and Browne continued to win the fights until they got knocked out, well, Lewis only needs a little bit of an opening to get the knockout thanks to his immense power. But I don't really see Hunt doing any of that - sure, he may use the distance a bit like Browne did, but Hunt is mostly there to bang it out, and counter-intuitively, that may be the best way for someone like him to handle Lewis. Someone like Abdurakhimov just respected Lewis's power too much to do much in the way of effective offense, which, admittedly, may have been the way to go for him, since Abdurakhimov doesn't really have one-hitter quitter power. But Hunt does, and Lewis is both there to be hit and, judging from those Mitrione and Jordan fights, doesn't really like to be hit, so I could see Hunt just wading in to try and score a big blow, and once he does, finish the fight in rather short fashion. Admittedly, this could just as easily go the either way - if Hunt's chin has in fact slipped even a bit, Lewis could just as easily knock him out, even when Hunt has an advantage - but give me Mark Hunt by first-round knockout. Plus, admittedly, Hunt knocking off UFC's top rising heavyweight at the same time he's suing the promotion would be pretty amusing. Derek Brunson (16-5 overall, 7-3 UFC, 3-1 Strikeforce) vs. Daniel Kelly (13-1 overall, 6-1 UFC): The continued success of Dan Kelly has been one of the better stories in the UFC over the last few years. Kelly seemed destined to be a footnote - a four-time Olympian for Australia in judo, he didn't even really pick up MMA in earnest until he was 35, and didn't really show much on a one-off Canada versus Australia edition of TUF, getting tapped out by Sheldon Westcott. UFC didn't even pick up Kelly immediately off the show; he went back to Australia for one more win, before UFC, figuring they would run Australia more as they continued to expand globally, decided to sign him for a card in Sydney. After some wins over guys with missable UFC careers like Luke Zachrich and Patrick Walsh, Kelly got knocked out rather quickly by Sam Alvey, seemingly resigning Kelly to be a regional fan favorite and interesting curio rather than anything else. But Kelly rebounded with a win over Steve Montgomery, and then it was off to the races, as that started a run of four straight underdog victories by Kelly - in fact, he's been an underdog in every UFC fight to date, including this one. The peak thus far was Kelly's last fight, a stunning win at UFC 209 over former light heavyweight champ Rashad Evans, in Evans's middleweight debut; while Evans did the best job of anyone during this run in dealing with Kelly's relentless pressure, Kelly was relentless enough to make it pretty much an even fight, and wound up getting the decision. So, amazingly, Kelly is getting a completely-earned shot at the top ten months before his fortieth birthday, and it comes against Derek Brunson, who could really use a win. Brunson was kind of a wrestling-heavy blanket during his days in Strikeforce, but once he came into UFC, the North Carolina native suddenly discovered his striking game and streaked towards becoming a top contender. Brunson did lose early on to Yoel Romero before anyone realized quite what an eater of worlds Romero would become, but outside of that fight, Brunson just pretty much blew through the competition, including a string of four first-round knockouts over Ed Herman, Sam Alvey, Roan Carneiro, and Uriah Hall. That earned him a main-event slot against Robert Whittaker, which, well, became quite an infamous performance. Brunson decided to go for an impressive knockout to cement himself as a top contender, but did so in about the dumbest way possible, spending the entire fight basically just charging at Whittaker while winging power shots as hard as he could. It actually worked for a few minutes because, well, what the hell, dude, but then Brunson ran at full speed into Whittaker's fist like he was Bald Bull, and that ended the fight rather quickly. From there, Brunson had another super-weird fight against Anderson Silva, since, well, all late-career Anderson Silva fights are pretty weird. The balance of the fight saw Anderson Silva doing Anderson Silva bullshit, but leaving out the part where he actually hits the other guy really hard - it wasn't like Brunson ever really pressed the action, but he was definitely doing more in terms of offense than Silva. Still, Silva got the decision, so now Brunson is looking to turn things around from a two-fight losing streak. And I think he has a good shot here, even if there is the chance Kelly can throw him off. I don't know if I've done justice just how strange Kelly's success is - his knees are completely shot and completely wrapped up (one knee is apparently barely functioning, but Kelly is so old that his career can't afford a surgery layoff, so he just guts through it), and his game is basically based completely off of ridiculous toughness and dad strength, as Kelly just kind of lurches forward through the abuse to get his hands on his opponent and muscle them around. But the Sam Alvey loss did show the secret to beating Kelly, and this is going to sound fairly dumb - you need to knock him the hell out, or at least on his ass. Alvey is the only guy that Kelly's faced who I'd say has knockout power, and while guys like Chris Camozzi and Evans couldn't put Kelly away, when the Aussie waded in, Alvey just used his main skill - power - and obliterated Kelly in under a minute. And, well, Brunson has power. Now, Brunson's last few fights have been weird enough that there's the chance that, for whatever reason, this is the fight where Brunson decides to abandon his aggression and let Kelly hang around to potentially steal a decision, but the knockout's there if Brunson wants it. It does pain me, since Dan Kelly really is one of my favorite stories, but this seems like a fairly easy pick - Brunson by knockout, and I'll say in the first round, though I suppose I do pick against Dan Kelly at my own risk. Daniel Hooker (13-7 overall, 3-3 UFC) vs. Ross Pearson (19-13 [1] overall, 11-10 [1] UFC): One of the highlights of UFC's first show in Auckland was the debut on Dan Hooker, who's turned out to be fairly solid for a guy probably signed only because UFC was going to be in his hometown. Hooker ended his fight with Ian Entwistle in fairly unique fashion - Entwistle, a stocky leglock specialist, tied up the leg of the lanky Hooker as he went to work, and Hooker basically realized he was tall enough to just sit up and elbow Entwistle in the head until he got the eventual finish. From there, the Kiwi's been a solid B-grade prospect - he's not athletic enough to really move much up the ladder, but he's fairly crafty and dangerous. After a loss to Jason Knight, Hooker basically decided to stop putting his body through the cut to featherweight, so he makes his debut at lightweight here against Ross Pearson, who's badly in need of a win. Pearson didn't quite turn into the UK star that UFC might have expected once he won season nine of TUF, but the Sunderland native has stuck around on the roster as a pretty fun mid-card action fighter. But we're starting to hit a period of diminishing returns, as Pearson has lost three straight to Will Brooks, Jorge Masvidal, and Stevie Ray; admittedly all of those save the Masvidal fight were fairly close losses, but losses are losses, and UFC rarely keeps a guy coming off four straight. Pearson's a solid enough fighter, but the story of his fights are fairly simple - he's pretty much just a somewhat quick straight-ahead boxer, but if his opponents can successfully pressure him and try to make him fight moving backwards, Pearson isn't nearly as successful - plus if his opponent can actually wrestle and take Pearson down, things also start to unravel fairly quickly. And honestly, I could really go either way on if any of that applies to Hooker - again, he's long and lanky, even moving up a weight class, but Pearson does figure to be the quicker fighter, and Hooker isn't exactly a guy who's been able to control where fights take place. Still, I'm assuming Hooker does have enough of a fight IQ to at least try and implement a grappling-based gameplan, since that's probably where he's strongest; and even if it isn't completely successful, just moving forward and trying to make things happen might be enough to scare Pearson off and prevent him from looking good either. So I expect, like a lot of Pearson fights, a fairly fun, if unmemorable fight that goes to a narrow decision, and by pretty much the slimmest of margins, I'm taking Hooker to get the decision win in his hometown. Ion Cutelaba (12-3 [1] overall, 1-2 UFC) vs. Henrique da Silva (12-2 overall, 2-2 UFC): Even though neither of these guys is from anywhere near Australia or New Zealand, this is the best type of fight you can hope for on a lot of these smaller Oceania cards - two guys who are near the cut line, but are pretty much guaranteed to have a fun fight. Brazil's Henrique da Silva goes by the nickname "Frankenstein", and it's fairly appropriate; he's big for the division, and his gameplan is pretty much all size, aggression, and a complete lack of defense, as da Silva just sort of plods forward through whatever shots his opponent throws and tries to just punch them or pull them to the ground. Add in the fact that da Silva seemingly knows just enough grappling to get both him and his opponent in danger, and it's a weird, sometimes effective game. But over the course of just about a year, da Silva has already had a UFC run of highs and lows - not much was expected of him at first, but wins over Jonathan Wilson and Joachim Christensen had people thinking of da Silva as a possible prospect, only for the Brazilian to get tapped out by Paul Craig and then pretty much dominated by top prospect Jordan Johnson. So da Silva looks to turn things around against Ion Cutelaba, who's struggled to gain a foothold in the UFC thus far. Cutelaba's been on the MMA radar for a few years, since he was a 19-year old knocking out guys in his native Moldova, but as he's gotten to the UFC level, the finishes have dried up. The approach still hasn't changed, as Cutelaba is still looking for the knockout at pretty much all times, but he's been 1-2 in the UFC and struggled to break out of the pack, even if all of his fights have been pretty fun brawls. This fight is going to pretty much be a fun trash fire that could go either way, but I like Cutelaba fairly considerably here - while there's the chance that da Silva is big enough that he can just march down Cutelaba, I think the Moldovan can also pretty much tee off on da Silva as he tries to do so. Add in the fact that da Silva appears to have the much worse gas tank, and I see a fun brawl where both guys have their moments until Cutelaba puts da Silva away with a knockout sometime in the third. Tim Elliott (14-7-1 overall, 3-5 UFC) vs. Ben Nguyen (16-6 overall, 3-1 UFC): So this was originally supposed to be Joseph Benavidez getting thrown yet another mid-tier flyweight in Ben Nguyen, as UFC continues to shy away from giving Benavidez a deserved third title shot - and while I'm not happy the injury that took Benavidez out of this fight looks to be rather serious, it did give us a more interesting fight between Nguyen and Tim Elliott. Elliott's had a bit of a strange career path - during his first UFC stint, UFC just kept matching him up against some of the toughest guys in the division, and while Elliott typically acquitted himself well, he racked up enough losses that UFC decided to cut him, even though he was ranked in their own top ten at the time. So Elliott went ahead and won a few fights outside of the UFC, and eventually got another shot via last winter's season of TUF, an all-flyweight show where the winner got a shot at Demetrious Johnson. Elliott won the season and gave Johnson his toughest test in a while - which, admittedly, means Elliott won the first round and then proceeded to get blown out for twenty minutes - and after a win over Louis Smolka, Elliott looks to get some momentum going for the first time in his UFC career with a win over Ben Nguyen. Nguyen's an interesting story of his own - he was a non-prospect in his native South Dakota, but eventually found his way to Southeast Asia and Australia, and improved enough once he put down roots in Brisbane, UFC signed him up. And Nguyen has had a fairly solid amount of success - admittedly, UFC hasn't put him against the best competition, but Nguyen has looked good in all of his fights, including his lone UFC loss to Smolka. So this should be a really fun style matchup - both guys are decent enough on the feet, but they're both at their best when scrambling for submissions, and both had pretty great fights against Smolka, a guy in a similar mold. I'm taking Elliott here, though not without reservations - he's the bigger guy, and in fact pretty massive for the flyweight division, and probably the better grappler, but Nguyen does have his avenues to victory. First, any scramble-heavy fight can be sort of a 50-50 proposition, given that enough chaos is happening that either guy can clamp on some sort of submission. And second, Elliott being big for the division means he can sometimes gas, and I can easily see a scenario where an action-packed first two rounds gives way to a third where Elliott is too tired to do much, particularly with his herky-jerky striking style, and Nguyen is able to use his underrated striking game to great effect. But at the end of the day, I see most of this taking place on the ground, and Elliott probably has the advantage there, so my pick is Elliott by decision. Mizuto Hirota (18-7-2 overall, 1-2-1 UFC, 0-1 Strikeforce) vs. Alexander Volkanovski (14-1 overall, 1-0 UFC): This is the right step up in competition for Alexander Volkanovski, who's an interesting Australian prospect. Volkanovski had a bit of hype coming in as one of the better prospects in Australia, and in his UFC debut, he mostly came through, fighting Japanese lightweight Yusuke Kasuya and showing off some brutal ground and pound for the finish, plus some charisma to boot. I'm kind of interested to see how Volkanovski looks here, though, as he's moving down to featherweight (and honestly, is short and stocky enough he could even cut down to bantamweight) and has a tough test in another Japanese vet, Mizuto Hirota. Hirota will probably be best known for having his arm broken via hammerlock by Shinya Aoki during a big fight in Japan, but he's carved out a solid enough career for himself - he's been a top fighter in Japan when he's spent time there, and while his first Strikeforce and UFC run was fairly unmemorable, the second time around has already gone better, with Hirota getting a draw against Teruto Ishihara before beating Cole Miller. This is an interesting test of technicality versus physicality - Hirota has fairly solid fundamentals everywhere, as he's able to box at a solid level, but as the Miller fight showed, can take over a fight with wrestling if he needs to. But Volkanovski, again, is a stocky, powerful guy who throws heat on the feet and, as Kasuya found out, seems fairly hard to keep down in grappling exchanges. Still, I favor Hirota here - for as good as Volkanovski looked in his UFC debut, his pre-UFC fights didn't really impress me (though I seem to be in the minority), and I just have a lot of questions about how well his game works. I think there's even odds Hirota can control him on the ground, and even if he can't, Volkanovski just kind of wings things, and I could see Hirota just sort of avoiding the Aussie's big shots and mostly neutralizing him. Part of my hopes I'm wrong - Hirota's not particularly exciting and Australia deserves some interesting talents - but my pick is Hirota by fairly blah decision. Damien Brown (17-9 overall, 2-1 UFC) vs. Vinc Pichel (9-1 overall, 2-1 UFC): A strange little fight here where it's hard to know exactly what's going to happen, since Vinc Pichel is returning from a three-year layoff. A TUF 15 alum, Pichel made his UFC debut back in 2012, which is probably his most memorable UFC fight, though not for reasons Pichel would want - he was matched against fellow newcomer Rustam Khabilov, and Khabilov went full pro wrestling, knocking out Pichel by suplexing him directly onto his head. But the Los Angeles native eventually rebounded from that embarrassment, winning two straight and looking like a solid mid-tier lightweight before basically suffering all of the injuries; for reference, Pichel's last fight was a win over Anthony Njokuani all the way back at UFC 173, the card in May of 2014 that saw T.J. Dillashaw upset Renan Barao to win the bantamweight title. So Pichel finally returns to face Brisbane's Damien Brown, who has pretty much already exceeded expectations by notching two UFC wins. Brown had already gotten his shot outside of Australia when he went over the Cage Warriors in Europe and had no success, so when UFC signed him as a late injury replacement a little over a year ago, he figured to be like a lot of Australian signees - a guy who has just enough wrestling to have a ton of success at home, but really get nothing done once he gets to a UFC level. And, well, that's still sort of true in general for Brown over the long term, but after an unimpressive UFC debut, he was able to knock out (the admittedly frail) Cesar Arzamendia and then pretty much rely on his boxing to steal a narrow decision from Jon Tuck. I don't see Brown really getting much further, but with the right matchmaking, he's the kind of guy who can hang around a while beating the bottom rungs of the UFC roster. Again, I don't know what Pichel is going to look like after such a long layoff, but if he shows up resembling anything like his 2014 form, he should be able to beat Brown - his wrestling looked good in those two wins way back when, and given that Brown's grappling hasn't looked up to snuff in his UFC fights, that alone should be enough for Pichel to win some rounds as he gets back into a groove. So my pick is Pichel by a fairly clear decision, though obviously, given the layoff, that comes with a ton of apprehension. Luke Jumeau (11-3 overall) vs. Dominique Steele (14-8 overall, 1-3 UFC, 0-1 Bellator, 1-0 Strikeforce): Well, UFC has carved out a role for Dominique Steele, and it's the guy that they sent out there for the hometown fighter to try and beat. Two of Steele's UFC fights have seen him face (the lightweight) Dong Hyun Kim in Korea and Court McGee in McGee's native Utah, and after a fight against Australia's Kyle Noke in Melbourne fell through, Steele faces New Zealand's Luke Jumeau here in Auckland. Steele's a fine enough fighter, though his game's sort of weird - he's big for the division and aggressive, and just sort of bulls forward to try and clinch his opponents into the cage, though once he gets there he doesn't really do much with it. That sounds like it'd be boring, but Steele is hittable enough coming in and leaves enough openings when it comes to his control that his opponents are still able to get some offense off, resulting in some weird decisions weighing control against offense, assuming nobody gets finished first. As for Jumeau, I'm beginning to wonder if it's me, in that I seemingly never really like any newcomer coming out of Australia or New Zealand once I watch some tape of them. I was looking forward to watching Jumeau's fights, because he had some hype, and his last two losses have been to Jingliang Li and Jake Matthews, who are both on the UFC roster, but...eh. There is stuff to like - Jumeau has some athleticism, and if nothing else, seems to have some dangerous power, but I watched his last fight, against UFC washout Vik Grujic, and Grujic was more or less using his grappling to dominate the fight before he gassed and was a sitting duck for a Jumeau knockout. It's not impossible Jumeau gets a win here - again, he has knockout power, and some of the more hyped Australia/New Zealand prospects like Alexander Volkanovski have impressed in their UFC debuts - but I just see Steele's size, physicality and aggression working here. Hopefully Jumeau is able to do enough to make it fun, but my pick is Dominique Steele via decision. John Moraga (16-6 overall, 5-5 UFC) vs. Ashkan Mokhtarian (13-1 overall): So, this is pretty much the last chance for flyweight stalwart John Moraga, who's suddenly finding himself aging out of the division. Moraga was one of Demetrious Johnson's first title challengers as the flyweight division shook itself out, and then just sort of kept hanging around somewhere between the top five and top ten of the division, losing to the elite but also winning a lot more than he lost. But after losing a decision in 2015 to Joseph Benavidez, Moraga took about a year off due to injuries and then completely lost his groove, dropping decisions to Matheus Nicolau and Sergio Pettis. Moraga doesn't really look shot, but he's always been dependent on dangerous bursts of offense, and between his athleticism slipping into his thirties and younger fighters coming in with more evolved games, Moraga just hasn't really been able to do John Moraga things. Luckily for him, and I hate to sound like a broken record, Ashkan Mokhtarian is yet another Australian newcomer who doesn't really impress me. There's nothing I can find of Mokhtarian, at least of any value, since 2015, so maybe he's improved a bit, but while he seems to be a decently athletic grappler, he also doesn't really seem all that great or defensively sound. Though, to be fair, based off his record, if you're going to sign any Australian flyweight, Mokhtarian seems fairly obviously to be the guy. Maybe Moraga has lost enough steps that just being a bit faster and a bit more athletic is all Mokhtarian needs to win, and again, I'm looking at old film, but I'll lean towards the known quantity and say Moraga takes a decision, even if the trendline isn't particularly great. Kiichi Kunimoto (18-6-2 [1] overall, 3-1 UFC) vs. Zak Ottow (14-4 overall, 1-1 UFC): Well, Kiichi Kunimoto is a lot less interesting now that he's lost a fight. Kunimoto's a decent enough Japanese vet who UFC signed up in 2014, when the company figured they'd be running a lot more shows in Asia, and then just kind of kept winning fights via weird fashion. His debut sort of set the tone, as he went for a takedown against Luiz Dutra, who just decided to repeatedly elbow Kunimoto in the back of the head until he was unconscious, giving Kunimoto the DQ win. Then Kunimoto faced Daniel Sarafian, a typical middleweight who had an awful weight cut to 170 in a one-time experiment, and was too drained to do anything, and then Kunimoto got a robbert decision win over Rich Walsh. So, heading into 2015, Kunimoto was 3-0 in the UFC and suddenly a going concern at welterweight, even though he had shown pretty much nothing. So UFC then fed him to rising contender Neil Magny, Magny pretty much dominated their fight, and Kunimoto has spent the last two-plus years out of action with injuries. So now Kiichi Kunimoto is pretty much just a guy. Also just a guy is Zak Ottow, a Milwaukee native who got signed as an injury replacement last October. Ottow came into UFC advertised as a BJJ player, but he's mostly gotten by on his striking thus far in his two UFC fights - he won a close fight standing against Joshua Burkman for his debut, and then rightfully tried to keep things standing against top-shelf BJJ practitioner Sergio Moraes. This is...a fight that is definitely going to happen. Both guys can do a little bit of everything, but are more technicians than anything, and not particularly dynamic, so I just sort of expect this to be a close decision. Kunimoto's wrestling may be the best individual skill of either guy, but I like Ottow's size and athleticism to be enough here. I'll take Ottow by split decision, though frankly, the real upset will be if anything that interesting happens. J.J. Aldrich (4-2 overall, 0-1 UFC, 3-1 Invicta) vs. Chan Mi Jeon (5-0 overall): An interesting bout here, if only because they don't come much rawer than South Korean newcomer Chan Mi Jeon. Born in August of 1997, Jeon is the youngest fighter on the UFC roster (beating Japan's Naoki Inoue, who debuts in Singapore next weekend), and has pretty much no real experience. Jeon's last win was over Megumi Yabushita, a then-44 year old who seems to be a pro wrestler more than anything nowadays, and hadn't fought since 2013 or won a fight since 2010, and all her other bouts were against women making their MMA debuts. Watching some of Jeon's fights, you can see the potential, as she's definitely an athlete, but a lot of these bouts are ones where nobody really seems to know what the hell they're doing; one saw the two fighters simultaneously have each other in an inverted triangle, which is kind of emblematic of the all-offense, no-defense style of these women just doing whatever comes to mind. I'm still kind of confident that Jeon will be good one day, but I have no idea if she can improve quickly enough to actually get some wins and stay on the UFC roster. She faces Colorado's J.J. Aldrich, who's a fine enough prospect; at her best, Aldrich is a solid Muay Thai artist who can apply a lot of pressure and throw some solid shots in the clinch, but she's struggled against more powerful opponents who just try to wrestle her - Jamie Moyle and Tatiana Suarez both pretty much ran through her, and UFC was kind of cruel in making her debut against Juliana Lima, who pretty much does nothing but grind out decisions. This is already a pretty important bellweather fight for Jeon; unless UFC is just going to sign people for her to fight, Aldrich is probably one of the better bets as far as someone she can just overwhelm with her sheer physicality. But I'm not willing to pick her purely on potential, so I'll say Aldrich gets the decision victory, though I do hope that Jeon impresses in this fight. Thibault Gouti (11-3 overall, 0-3 UFC) vs. Dong Hyun Kim (14-8-3 overall, 1-2 UFC): If only Thibault Gouti was as good at surviving in fights as he is at surviving on the roster. The Frenchman was a fine enough signing when UFC needed a late replacement on a card in Europe last year, but he got stunned on the feet and then tapped out by Teemu Packalen in just 24 seconds, and while he had his moments against top Canadian prospect Olivier Aubin-Mercier, he was little more than a roadblock before Aubin-Mercier also tapped him out. So Gouti figured to be two and out in the UFC, but then he wound up as a bounce-back opponent for another Canadian fighter, as Chad Laprise knocked him out in about a minute and a half. So, you'd think after three fights and showing little, UFC would cut Gouti, but you'd be wrong; Laprise blew weight for their fight, and rumor was that Gouti would only agree to fight Laprise if he was guaranteed another fight - and I guess those rumors were right, because now Gouti is back against "Maestro" Dong Hyun Kim. This isn't the longtime welterweight contender "Stun Gun" - he fights next week - but rather the action lightweight, best known for his insane brawl at UFC 199 with Polo Reyes that was one of the best fights of the year. Kim's all-offense, no-defense, like a lot of Korean fighters, but the Reyes fight was a bit of an outlier in terms of punches thrown; Kim's a big lightweight, and keeps moving forward, but mostly just tries to get things into the clinch and ugly them up. Really, Gouti's shown me little, and while Kim might be hittable for a technical boxer like Gouti, Kim's also proven to be ridiculously tough, so I'm not really sure Gouti's going to be able to get anywhere. So Kim should be able to control the balance of this fight, and while Gouti might be able to survive, why pick against his streak of getting finished? I'll say Kim gets a stoppage sometime in the third round.
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runzwithbullz · 7 years
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Full Heel Podcast is back at it on Saturday with UFC Fight Night 110. The Black Beast is on a 6 fight win streak and he takes on the Super Samoan who is coming off his devastating loss to Overreem. Will Hunt avenge his last Loss or will the Black Beast climb even that much closer to the HW Title. Hit That Subscribe button and Join the Club #WWE #UFC #UFCFightNight110 #FightNight #UFCAuckland #MarkHunt #BlackBeast #FullHeelPodcast #FullHeelFightClub #FightClub #Podcast   Heavyweight- Derrick Lewis vs. Mark Hunt Middleweight- Derek Brunson vs. Dan Kelly Lightweight- Dan Hooker vs. Ross Pearson Light Heavyweight - Ion Cutelaba vs. Henrique da Silva Flyweight- Tim Elliott vs. Ben Nguyen
https://www.youtube.com/user/ToroODPhi
http://rafaelchaidez88.podbean.com
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/full-heel-podcast/id1238500437?mt=2 
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randomquestionshq · 7 years
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More Random Questions - Send Me Numbers
Here is yet another set of random questions for people to ask you in order to get to know you better. Please reblog!
Part one is here!
1. Ice cream or frozen yogurt? 2. Worst movie you’ve ever seen? 3. Favorite flavor of Pop-Tarts? 4. Did you sleep with any stuffed animals as a child? 5. What musical artist have you seen the most live? 6. Have you ever had any pets besides a dog or a cat? 7. Have you ever gone to another country for spring break? 8. Have you ever drunk anything from a mason jar? 9. How often do you wash your hair? 10. Can you change a car tire? 11. Do you think you have a guardian angel? 12. What celebrity do you think would make the best president? 13. Curtains or blinds? 14. Have you ever been locked out of your home? 15. How many US states have you visited? 16. Are any of your grandparents still alive? 17. Have you ever had a surgery? 18. Do you smoke? 19. Have you even been caught in a love triangle? 20. Beyonce or Taylor Swift? 21. Do you wear a wristwatch? 22. Can you whistle? 23. Can you do any impressions? 24. Have you ever been on a cruise? 25. Which term do you use: soda, pop, bubbly, or Coke? 26. How long have you lived in your current home? 27. Name one celebrity you wish was still alive. 28. Can you recognize any constellations? 29. Have you ever donated blood? 30. Bottled water or tap? 31. Can you blow a bubble gum bubble? 32. What do you think is your best physical feature? 33. What do you think is your worst physical feature? 34. From 1-10, how healthy do you eat? 35. How white are your teeth? 36. Nutella or peanut butter? 37. Favorite physical feature on the opposite sex? 38. Have you ever bought anything from a flea market? 39. Have you ever bought anything from a farmer’s market? 40. Have you ever dressed in drag? 41. How many different accents can you talk in? 42. Have you ever been told you have an accent? 43. When was the last time you flew on an airplane? 44. Have you ever ridden on a train? 45. How strict are you about manners? 46. How often do you call people significantly older than you Mr., Ms., or Mrs.? 47. How often do you drop your cell phone? 48. Have you ever swallowed your gum? 49. What is the most expensive piece of fashion you own? 50. Do you like any energy drinks? 51. From 1-10, how much are you like your mother? 52. From 1-10, how much are you like your father? 53. Have you ever been considered the mother or father of your group of friends? 54. How often do you hold doors open for other people? 55. Have you ever been to a summer camp? 56. Have you ever been to a psychiatrist? 57. How do you get rid of hiccups? 58. Have you ever been to a music festival? 59. Have you ever ridden on a motorcycle? 60. Do you skateboard or longboard at all? 61. Have you ever bought a lottery ticket? 62. From 1-10, how lucky do you consider yourself? 63. Last dream you had that you remember? 64. Credit cards or cash? 65. Picnic tables or picnic blankets? 66. Have you ever volunteered at a soup kitchen or a homeless shelter? 67. Besides turkey, what is your favorite Thanksgiving food? 68. How often do you leave tips at a restaurant? 69. Have you ever been part of a jury? 70. How often do you read your horoscope? 71. What colors do you wear the most? 72. What is the longest you’ve ever kept a New Year’s resolution? 73. Have you ever played spin the bottle? 74. Favorite card game? 75. Handshakes, high fives, or fist bumps? 76. Do any of your family members currently serve in the military? 77. Have you ever been arrested? 78. Have you ever accidentally dialed 911? 79. Do you remember what you were doing when 9/11 happened? 80. First thing you do when you get up in the morning? 81. Do you watch Saturday Night Live? 82. At what age did you have your first kiss? 83. How early in the year do you start listening to Christmas/holiday music? 84. When hanging with your friends, what are you usually doing? 85. Do you have any posters on your bedroom walls? 86. Do you have any bumper stickers on your car? 87. Do you still have your wisdom teeth? 88, How many games do you have on your cell phone? 89. How long can you hold your breath? 90. Favorite winter activity? 91. Who would you want to star in a movie about your life? 92. Does your home have a fireplace? 93. Have you ever given money to a homeless person? 94. What cell phone service do you use? 95. What do you usually put on a hamburger? 96. Rice or quinoa? 97. Can you eat using chopsticks? 97. Can you surf? 99. Have you ever been to Las Vegas? 100. How often do you smile in pictures? 101. Have you ever texted while driving? 102. Name something about you most people don’t know. 103. How well do you work with others? 104. Do you know your IQ? 105. What was your high school GPA? 106. What was your ACT score? 107. What was your SAT score? 108. Do you like roller coasters? 109. Are tomatoes a fruit or a vegetable? 110. Have you ever embarrassed yourself in public? 111. How easily do you sunburn? 112. Do you like watching documentaries? 113. Favorite male singer? 114. Favorite female singer? 115. Favorite band? 116. Do you use Spotify? 117. Have you ever bought anything off iTunes? 118. Target or Wal-Mart? 119. In-store or online shopping? 120. Have you ever said “gay” to mean “stupid” or “dumb”? 121. Does your blog have a theme? 122. Do you have any side blogs? 123. Have you ever watched a UFC fight? 124. Professional wrestling: real or fake? 125. Favorite Christmas/holiday song? 126. How much of a jealous person are you? 127. How much of a patient person are you? 128. How well do you know your neighbors? 129. Have you ever been mugged? 130. How often do you make your bed? 131. What day of the week is laundry day for you? 132. Earbud headphones or earmuff headphones? 133. Have you ever fallen asleep during a class? 134. How often do you ride a bicycle? 135. Last celebrity you googled? 136. Do you like mustard? 137. Do you know how to play chess? 138. Have you ever auditioned for a reality competition show? 139. Have you ever ridden in a limousine? 140. Do you have any scars? If so, how did you get them? 141. How often do you attend your state’s fair? 142. Either & neither: Do you say i-thur and nye-thur or e-thur and knee-thur? 143. Do you like to draw? 144. Have you ever shot a gun? 145. How good are you at communicating through facial expressions? 146. Have you ever written a letter to Santa? 147. Do you think there is life on other planets? 148. Have you ever been a part of your school’s student government? 149. Do you listen to any religious music? 150. How often do your parents annoy or embarrass you?
Find more question sets here: http://randomquestionshq.tumblr.com
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redalertwagers · 4 years
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wagerhome-blog · 4 years
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Get In On The UFC 250 Betting Action
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Hopefully you were prescient enough to put money down on Gilbert Burns last weekend in his UFC fight with Tyron Woodley. Burns’ dominating win over the former champion was a sight to see, and at +150, it was an awfully nice payday. It’s also the kind of performance that could land Burns a title shot in the not too distant future. Other underdogs that came away victorious last weekend were Brandon Royval (+135) and Katlyn Chookagian (+115), with the majority of the card being dominated by the favorites.
More Fighting at APEX
The smaller octagon at UFC APEX had an impact on last week’s fights, and it will again be the site for this coming weekend’s UFC 250, featuring Amanda Nunes and Felicia Spencer in the main event. This fight was originally supposed to take place in Brazil in early May, but the COVID-19 pandemic forced us all to wait an extra month. Nunes is both the bantamweight and featherweight champion, and this will be her first defense of the featherweight title since she won it with a 51-second knocking of Cris Cyborg. On the flip side, when judging this fight, it’s worth noting that Spencer’s only loss came against Cyborg last summer. The co-main event of the night is another fight that we’ve been waiting several weeks for. Former champ Cody Garbrandt and 37-year-old Brazilian Raphael Assuncao were originally scheduled to go at it in March before the fight was postponed by the pandemic.
UFC 250 Full Fight Card
Preliminary Card Evan Dunham (+180) vs. Herbert Burns (-250) Alonzo Menifield (-240) vs. Devin Clark (+185) Alex Perez (-137) vs. Jussier Formiga (+110) Charles Byrd (-177) vs. Maki Pitolo (+138) Cody Stamann (-250) vs. Brian Kelleher (+180) Gerald Meerschaert (+100) vs. Ian Heinisch (-125) Alex Caceres (+120) vs. Chase Hooper (-150) Main Card Eddie Wineland (+310) vs. Sean O’Malley (-435) Neil Magny (-150) vs. Anthony Rocco Martin (+120) Aljamain Sterling (-118) vs. Cory Sandhagen (-106) Co-Main Event Cody Garbrandt (-143) vs. Raphael Assuncao (+115) Main Event Amanda Nunes (-590) vs. Felicia Spencer (+450) On the preliminary card, the Alex Perez-Jussier Formiga fight looks to be one of the best. Both flyweights are ranked in the top 10. The Aljamain Sterling-Cory Sandhagen fight on the main card pits two top-5 bantamweights. Both men are fighting well - Sandhagen has won seven straight while Sterling has won six of seven - and the winner will be set up nicely for a title shot.
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As for the co-main event, Garbrandt is seen as the better fighter, but he hasn’t fought in nearly 15 months and hasn’t won since 2016. That makes a play on the plus money of Assuncao extra appealing.
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realfightjunkie · 3 years
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Matthew Semelsberger {-130} DEFEATS Jason Witt {+110} via 1 round KNOCKOUT on UFC Fight Night 187. Won't Go 3 rounds {+125} & Semelsberger wins inside the distance {+195} hits!   
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