Middleweights
#14 P4P | Sean Strickland (28-6, 15-6 UFC) vs. #7 MW | Paulo Costa (14-3, 6-3 UFC)Advertisement
With one of the UFC’s unlikeliest title reigns now in the rearview mirror, Strickland looks to get back in the saddle and reclaim the middleweight belt. Strickland was a moderately successful and fairly unremarkable welterweight up until a career-threatening motorcycle accident in 2018, after which he came back as an entirely different fighter. Upon his return in 2020, Strickland was a full-time middleweight and firmly fighting behind a pressure boxing game and upright stance that relied on his cardio to drown his opponents on offense and his vision to keep him safe on defense. It was a novel switch-up relative to the rest of the division that figured to hit a ceiling at some point, but Strickland managed to keep racking up wins and found himself as a top contender by the middle of 2022, at which point his commitment to his approach got him quickly and brutally knocked out by Alex Pereira. After a narrow loss against Jared Cannonier to cap off the year, it appeared that Strickland’s window for championship relevance might have closed, but 2023 wound up as the most successful year of his career, in part simply due to his willingness to keep showing up. Strickland’s first two fights of the year saw him headline UFC Apex cards on late notice, first against Nassourdine Imavov on the first show of 2023 and then on top of a completely thrown-together event against Abusupiyan Magomedov. The Magomedov fight was a bit of a farce as a headliner given Magomedov’s lack of profile, but it somehow set Strickland up for a championship shot. Top contender Dricus Du Plessis was injured and unable to make the date earmarked for Israel Adesanya’s next title defense, so Strickland stepped in as the best challenger available. It figured to be a walkover for Adesanya, but it instead turned into a shockingly easy all-timer of an upset for Strickland, who nearly finished “The Last Stylebender” early and kept his foot on the gas pedal for the better part of five rounds. Strickland’s first title defense came against Du Plessis in January, and while “Tarzan” gave up the title, it was in a performance that suggests he will hang around the top of the division for the time being, as the two fought a relatively even fight for 25 minutes. The comeback trail starts here for Strickland, and first up is a former title contender in Costa.
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Makhachev vs. Poirier
Strickland vs. Costa
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