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msudogs
Moderator
Registered: Nov 2005
Posts: 65535
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Derrick Lewis -1450 vs. Rodrigo Nascimento +125
Heavyweight (265 pounds) main event
Brazilian mixed martial artist Nascimento is the fifteenth-ranked athlete in the division. The 31-year-old is a blue belt in BJJ and a well-rounded grappler/striker who steps up in level of competition for this, his first five-round main event.
Derrick Lewis is now 39 and ranked twelfth in the division. Lewis is not a mixed martial artist. Rather, he is a behemoth who stalks opponents down and clubs them into unconsciousness with his singularly dimensioned one-strike KO power.
Lewis is short on footwork, take down defense and stamina though early in fights he displays athleticism and explosion though the limit for his explosiveness is around four minutes, then Lewis is a telegraphing headhunter.
At this stage of his career, when Lewis fights, he’s calculating how best to expend his precious energy. His one way to earn victory is to touch the opponent on the teeth. With one detonation, Lewis can put adversaries to sleep with one telegraphed connection. That is Lewis’ plan of attack in any fight.
Nascimento’s last three bouts have all gone to decision so he can effectively compete for fifteen minutes, and it must be his approach to take Lewis past the first five minutes to burden the ‘Black Beast,’ force him to tire and therefore make any takedown attempt that much easier to execute.
The issue for Nascimento may be his chin. Is his sole loss earlier in his career to journeyman Chris Daukaus, who is no longer in the organization, Nascimento was knocked out, and Daukaus has fractions of the speed and power that Lewis holds.
Should Nascimento, who opened a pick ’em against Lewis, be ‘chinny’ as that fight against Daukaus indicated, then it is fair to say that he is in real danger against a profuse pounder like Lewis.
The total in this fight is lines 1.5 Under -145, which is concerning if one is trying to make a case for the Brazilian traveling to the ‘show me state’ to compete against a pure knockout threat like Lewis.
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05-11-24 03:22 PM |
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msudogs
Moderator
Registered: Nov 2005
Posts: 65535
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Joaquin Buckley -170 vs. Nursulton Ruziboev +150
Welterweight (170 pounds) co-main event
We last saw eleventh-ranked Buckley 18-6 overwhelm top-fifteen-ranked Vicente Luque with his power striking in New York on March 30th. That display put Buckley in the rankings and put the division on notice that this man is a natural-born finisher.
Buckley rarely employs a wrestling base developed in high school, as his vicious fighting style was groomed in the streets of East St. Louis.
Besides fighting in his home city, Buckley totes momentum into this fight and he is exuding great confidence. Confidence is one weapon UFC fighters often boomerang into dynamic success.
Ruziboev, 34-8-2, enters this fight with vast experience, though there are legitimate questions surrounding the authenticity of his record as well the caliber of athletes he’s faced.
Fighting out of the Renzo Gracie camp in Philly, which is known for its cultivation and refining of wrestling/grappling based talent, Ruziboev enters this fight off an impressive KO finish of the modestly talented Sedriques Dumas, which he accomplished March 30th on the same card as his opponent Buckley.
Ruziboev will hold seven inches of height supremacy and four inches of leg reach, in addition to his vast advantage in grappling.
To date, we have not witnessed Ruziboev tussle against pedigreed UFC talent, nor have we watched him have to endure any form of real trouble. That changes in this fight.
Once this scrap starts, Ruziboev will look to distance himself strategically from the aggressive keg of TNT that is Buckley. Buckley will be impatient in his attempt to gain inside access and detonate hooks, crosses, elbows, and kicks on the tall man from Uzbekistan.
Ruziboev has everything to gain in this most intriguing battle. He must weather the furious first five minutes of this fight. He must find a way to clasp hold of and press the explosive Buckley against the fence, then onto the floor.
After Buckley’s explosiveness is usurped by battle (that is the hope anyway), the fight could well turn to the towering, but well-structured grappler Ruziboev, who uses a grinding methodology as opposed to immediate and sudden impact.
‘Styles make fights’ as Angelo Dundee used to chime, and I regard this fight as exhibit ‘A’ for that quote.
Buckley opened -150 for this fight and his price has risen steadily early in the week. The total in this fight is 1.5 over -130, which indicates potential success for the Uzbeki grappler, as I do see this fight eclipsing that total.
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05-11-24 03:23 PM |
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