Preview: UFC 188 ‘Velasquez vs. Werdum’
Melendez vs. Alvarez
Can
Gilbert Melendez rebound from the first submission loss of his
career? | Photo: D. Mandel/Sherdog.com
LIGHTWEIGHTS
Gilbert Melendez (22-4, 1-2 UFC) vs. Eddie Alvarez (25-4, 0-1 UFC)THE MATCHUP: For many years, Melendez and Alvarez were the two best lightweights outside the UFC, and former Bellator MMA boss Bjorn Rebney even tried to set up a super fight between the two men when Melendez held the Strikeforce title. The matchup has finally come to fruition, and it should be a barnburner. Alvarez dropped his promotional debut to Donald Cerrone in a fantastic scrap, while Melendez likewise lost his last outing -- a title fight against dynamo Anthony Pettis. The winner is still very much in the running for another shot in the stacked lightweight division.
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Alvarez is primarily a boxer -- and a talented one. He circles constantly, flicking a crisp jab or a darting right hand as he moves at range, and then picks his spots to commit to vicious head-body combinations. The right uppercut and left hook are his money punches, and he packs real power in his hands. He is generally sound defensively, but his willingness to operate in the pocket means that he is frequently there to be hit, and multiple opponents have succeeded in dropping him to the canvas. Originally a wrestler, Alvarez still excels at stuffing takedowns, and his constant movement makes it quite difficult to get a clean angle at his hips. He can hit the occasional single or double of his own, and he excels at setting up his shots with strikes and landing strikes off failed shots. Clinch fighting is not his specialty, but he is a solid dirty boxer. On the mat, he is fairly workmanlike, with good control and hard shots from top position, but he has a bad habit of giving up his back as he gets back to his feet.
THE PICK: This should be a proper donnybrook. Both fighters will likely be willing to engage on the feet and have the takedown defense to keep it there; both like to throw hands; and both are perfectly happy to exchange in the pocket. In that scenario, I favor Melendez, though not by much: He is a little cleaner defensively, more durable and has more ancillary tools. The pick is Melendez by tight decision.
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