Late-notice injuries are a part of the game when your average training camp essentially combines a never-ending cycle of blunt-force trauma with the kind of cardio conditioning that requires a vomit bucket on hand at all times. Look up and down the card of this Saturday’s UFC 108 event and you’d think Dana White has made a hobby of ticking off Voodoo Gods, as the combination of last-minute injuries and Quinton Jackson’s unholy decision to try and replace Mr. T all but sabotaged the show.
Junior dos Santos vs. Gilbert Yvel
The Breakdown: A case study in incredible talent coming at a heavy price, Yvel is a gifted kickboxer whose behavior also happens to border on being sociopathic. On the opposite end of the mental health spectrum is dos Santos, who has developed into one of the sport’s premier heavyweight prospects while maintaining a firm grip on his sanity.
Once upon a time, this fight would have been compelling, but Yvel is a shell of his old self and has lost the technical sheen on his game that once made him so dangerous. Now content to keep his hands low and wing lazy strikes, Yvel’s defense is full of holes that an intelligent striker like dos Santos will easily ferret out.
Just watch dos Santos’ fight with Mirko Filipovic at UFC 103 and you’ll see a fighter who understands the importance of strategy and how to execute one correctly. That sort of fight IQ has been missing from Yvel’s game from day one, and he’ll learn yet again what happens when talent alone can’t win you a fight.
File Photo
Dos Santos
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The Bottom Line: Holding out hope for Yvel is like doing the same for Mike Tyson: Your time is better spent on other endeavors. Instead of admiring Yvel’s brilliant brand of muay Thai, we’ll be stuck watching him absorb a beating from a younger version of himself. Three synapse-scrambling rounds for Yvel come to a merciful end with dos Santos notching a unanimous decision.