UFC LV 116 Sterling vs. Zalal: Funk #49!

Back to the quaint confines of the UFC Meta APEX we go for this week’s UFC LV116, an event scheduled for thirteen bouts with athletes ranging in size from115lb. Strawweight ladies to the heavyweights where the weight limit is 266lbs.

This card is populated with relatively unrecognizable talent but there are a handful of matchups on the card that will be more than compelling.

There are four larger weight class clashes taking place at 170lbs. and greater as well there are seven fights with wide ranges between the combatants ages (fighters five years or more younger than their adversary win at a 64% clip, and that rate grows higher as the age gap widens!

The international cast of athletes arrive mostly from varying locations in the states however there are five fighters that must travel (Brazil and Equator) into the US to take on domestic athletes who do not have to endure global travel and the weight complexities that go with it.

Last week’s release of Canadian Mandel Nallo went down in flames as Jai Herbert finished the Canadian in short time.

We head into this card holding a 7-8-1 -2.35u tally.

Let’s Fight

Yousuff Zalal -155 vs. Aljamain Sterling +130 Featherweight (145lbs) main event

Seventh ranked featherweight Zalal arrives to this fight riding the momentum of winning five straight UFC battles.

Zalal has dynamic athleticism, he is nimble on his feet, fast, fluid, and frenetic when he needs to be while his cage generalship and strike defense are world class as evidenced by his 67% strike defense.

Zalal is decorated with a black belt in BJJ, but opponents must not regard him as singularly equipped for Zalal’s mixed martial arts weaponry is complete, well developed and is practiced with a great deal of ill intent.

Zalal’s stepping WAY up in class for this fight for his opponent is a former champion at 135lbs. and has looked forceful in his last two bouts.

For Aljo Sterling, this fight is but another test the UFC is putting him through because fighter traits like world class wrestling, dogged determination coupled with unending cardio are not the traits the organization wants to see its fighters take.

After all this is the age of Paramount, 100K fight bonus’s and anti-wrestling/grappling sentiment.

We understand that the UFC yearns for toe-to-toe, sledgehammer competitions where someone ends up quivering on the canvas. Unfortunately, world class wrestlers like Aljo do not provide the fans with that form of entertainment.

Despite Aljo’s propensity to be overlooked, his striking has developed and as always, his unrelenting forward pressure, his cardio, and his grip lock embraces are sophisticated and subtle enough to dominate anyone on the division.

Interestingly Zalal, twenty-nine will be the larger man in the cage Saturday and that is sure to force Aljo into even more forward pressing pressure wrestling for Sterling will not stand for any length of time on the outside with Zalal without blitzing him like a linebacker in the super bowl.

Aljo is now thirty-six but a man who has faced the absolute elite of two weight classes. He will force Zalal into defending his advances every second of the fight which will force Zalal to expend energy while simultaneously not being able to find the space/time to strike.

Aljo, like many practiced mixed martial arts insiders, understand that world class wrestling is kryptonite to world class BJJ, so look for Aljo to immediately engage while Zalal will strive to find room to breathe, let alone earn this space to strike.

These two have trained together prior. They know one another well, which adds dynamic to this confrontation.

This fight will be tightly contested and while I hesitate to side with an athlete seven years the elder fighter, I must recognize who Sterling is, his experience and the fact that he has competed in many main events before while Zalal is in his first.
Sterling came -200 at open and now I can invest in him plus money?

Sterling +130 

Total in this bout: 4.5 Over -185

Strong lean over, strong lean to Sterling decision also.

Alexander Hernandez -125 vs. Rafa Garcia +105 Lightweight (155lbs)

Firefight!

Garcia is one tough, durable Mexican mixed martial artist who has an iron chin, unending cardio, and a blue belt in BJJ.

Garcia’s striking is based on volume, and he does possess accumulated power in his hands. The thing with Rafa is that when he fights standing, he is more than willing to take one in order to give one and in this matchup that may be dangerous.

Garcia’s plan in any fight is to tax the opponent with forward striking pressure then initiate his apt clinching, takedown strategy. Once in the clasp and/or on the mat Garcia works to suck the life out of opponents with his constant pressure wrestling/grappling.

Garcia’s completes 3.13 takedowns per fifteen minutes of fight time while being able to defend 76% of opponent takedowns. This means he often fights from top position.

Garcia’s opponent, Alex Hernandez takes this fight on the momentum of four straight wins, his latest a finish of Brazilian Diego Ferreira. Hernandez’s striking is his bread and butter.

Hernandez power is unusual but like Garcia, he is more than willing to receive one in order to unleash one. Hernandez negative .50 strike differential (per minute) is poor, but he overcomes getting flushed so often because of the tremendous power he packs in his shots.

This fight introduces fighters who are both entering with confidence and who are fighting for position for the victor of this fight see’s themselves in the top twenty of this stacked lightweight division.

Garcia will want to grapple and smear the floor with Hernandez while Hernandez will strive to keep this fight standing where he can attempt to maim the Mexican mauler.

Both men are confident in their application of their expertise, and both men stand to make substantial jumps in earning power with a victory Saturday night.

This fight will be highly competitive and it’s my take that it is likely to go to decision.

Total in this Fight: 2.5Rds Over -220

Friday morning the ‘Bout Business Podcast, currently on a tear drops across all podcast platforms as well at GamgLou.com

Thank you for reading and enjoy the bouts!

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UFC 327 Prochazka vs. Ulberg: Czech…mate!

Miami, FL. Hosts this week’s UFC 327, an event featuring twelve scheduled bouts consisting of well recognized and mostly ranked UFC fighters. There are seven bouts to be held at weight levels of 170lbs. and above so the matchmakers are striving to present violence in Miami as the heavier athletes realize a higher finish rates.

Four of the main card fights highlight larger athletes as well there are five fights scheduled to be waged where one athlete is at least five years younger than their adversary.

Fighters with a youth advantage of six years or greater win their fights at roughly a 63% clip…that rate increases as the age gap widens.

Miami will utilize the large octagon, and it is safe to say the athletes that train in Florida as well the Latino fighters shipping in to compete will hold crowd advantage during their bouts.

One last point is that this fight card features highly competitive bouts as most of these battles are lined at -200 or less to the favorite, I smell some underdogs!

Last week Virna Jandiroba’s size, her experience and her elite grappling together earned her a decision victory over tiny terrorizer Tabitha Ricci which adds another unit of profit to this digital column. We stand 7-7 -.60u on the year.

Let’s Fight!

Jiri Prochazka -125 vs. Carlos Ulberg +100 Light Heavyweight (205lbs.) Title

Ulberg ships in from Australia’s City Kickboxing club to take this title opportunity.

9-1 in the UFC Ulberg lost his debut then rattled off nine straight wins. Ulberg’s level of competition faced is actually lacking until recently as he has earned victories in his last three fights against top ten competition in the division albeit competition that is not relevant in the division any longer.

Ulberg, a male model in his spare time is a kickboxing specialist who arrives to competition with athleticism, the ability to move fluently on his feet and certain power in his hands. What Ulberg has not seen yet in UFC competition and what he will not see in this fight is an adversary with world class wrestling/grappling prowess for his adversary in this fight will confound Ulberg with his unorthodoxy not his grappling acumen.

Ulberg’s been fortunate to have competed against an ascending level of varying striking talent thus far in his UFC career. In this fight, his level of competition rises to the pinnacle of the division for Jiri Prochazka is a legitimate top two talent in the division who in the last decade has lost only to Alex Pereira, twice.

Ulberg, currently ranked third in the division has a golden opportunity to earn himself a championship belt but I must ask if he is biting off more than he can chew this early in his ascending career?

In Jiri Prochazka we have a Czech warrior who is as unconventional in his training, his fight arsenal, and his approach to war as there is in the organization.

Prochazka is a black belt in Kyokushin which is a Japanese derivative of Karate so his awkward stance, unconventional approach to movement and his tactics in the cage are only matched by his unorthodox approach to life and fighting for this man is truly an original.

When the bell for this fight clangs, we will witness a couple of 6’4” behemoths who will each look to back the other man up with a steady application of stand up striking.

Ulberg, a man whose wrestling/grappling prowess I suspect is lacking will not have to address that specialty in this fight for Jiri is as singularly dimensioned a striker as is Carlos. What Carlos must be aware of is that he is sometimes stale and inactive in fights. He cannot afford to be ‘watching’ in this one!

This fight sets up to be a stand-up battle waged between a calm, levelheaded, matriculated, structured striker in Ulberg against a free flowing, no holds barred improvisational striker in Prochazka.

Both men possess aggression, strength, power, and experience but in this matchup it’s my judgement that Prochazka’s history of world class athletes faced separates him from Ulberg who has faced complimentary talent only.

The substantial step up in class of opponent is the differentiating matter in this handicap and because of this ascent in competition I must lean to Prochazka here for he has proven himself in the division over time.

Monitoring

Total in this fight: 2.5Rds Under -120

Chris Padilla -180 vs. MarQuel Mederos +160 Lightweight (155lbs.)

Padilla jumped on the UFC scene with an impressive victory over favorite James Liontop in his UFC debut.

Padilla then defeated his next two journeyman adversaries before being tested in his last fight by Ismail Bonfim a fighter who has the ‘name’ but not much ‘fighting game’ for it’s Bonfim’s brother that holds the authentic fighting talent in that family.

Padilla enters this fight with great momentum and a good bit of ‘recency’ attached to his price as I handicap this fight. Padilla’s got good feet, he has power in his strikes and he’s a diversely equipped fighter however he takes on an adversary in this fight that is a substantial level of class above what he has competed against to date.

Mederos trains out of the MMALab in Phoenix, AZ.

He’s a gifted, slick striker with deft footwork, power in all limbs and a wrestling/grappling acumen that provides Mederos the appropriate fighting tools to apply in any adversarial situation a fight may present him with.

These two are closely matched but it is the nuanced striking of Mederos his simplicity that forces me to side with him.

Physically Mederos will sport a slight height advantage while Padilla will have arm reach, but this fight will NOT be decided by the physical attributes of each fighter but their will.

This battle boils down to grit, guts, and grime for these two will batter each other with the understanding that a win here may project the victor into the top fifteen of the division, a division steeped with talent.

Padilla, who rides in with some public awareness, opened -150 for this fight. There is bias in his price based on that recency as he now stands -180.

This fight should be priced much tighter for the power, strike defense and grappling of Mederos, who has been relatively absent from the cage for a few months must account for some premium while Padilla’s recent win over Bonfim may be seen as more of an accomplishment by the public than it truly is.

Saturday night Mederos will have the opportunity to move on up the lightweight ladder. He must defeat a confident power puncher in Padilla, and I believe over three long rounds he’ll earn a tough decision victory.

Mederos +160

Mederos points handicap will be released later this week and that wager may make great fiscal sense depending on price….

Total in this fight: 2.5Rds Over -220

Lean Over

 

Curtis Blaydes -125 vs. Josh Hokit +105 Heavyweight (265lbs.)

Simple power punching athlete Josh Hokit has obliterated two straight UFC opponents and now the UFC gives him the opportunity to try to touch glass jawed Curtis Blaydes.

Should he be successful, a win would propel Hokit a fighter the UFC loves and wants to see succeed, into the top of an oh so thin division while it would basically end Blaydes run as a legitimate top five fighter in the division.

The UFC has never liked Blaydes nor his dominant form of wrestling, so they bombard him with young, fast, powerful strikers to try to eliminate him. The issue is that Blaydes is stubborn and one damn accomplished wrestling based mixed martial artist. The cat just won’t go away!

Blaydes level of competition faced and the fact his wrestling is the standard bearer in the division coupled with his angst that he is constantly having to fend off these young up and comers (see Jailton Almeida) is providing him great focus and intensity for this fight.

Blaydes -125 is an absolutely bargain price as he opened -160 which I view as more than attractive and affordable. It’s my position that he will smear Hokit all over the canvass Saturday in a one-sided wrestling display.

Let’s parlay

Blaydes -125 to Tatsuru Taira -180*

 

*Taira faces Flyweight Champion Josh Van May 9th in New Jersey.

Friday the ‘Bout Business Podcast drops across all major podcast platforms as well on GambLou.com.

Thank You for reading and enjoy the hostilities!

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