UFC 178 ‘Johnson vs. Cariaso’ Preview
Cerrone vs. Alvarez
Eddie Alvarez arrives in the UFC to much fanfare. | Photo: D.
Mandel/Sherdog.com
LIGHTWEIGHTS
Donald Cerrone (24-6, 11-3 UFC) vs. Eddie Alvarez (25-3, 0-0 UFC)THE MATCHUP: After finishing his last four opponents, quintessential action fighter Cerrone looks to run his winning streak to five against former Bellator lightweight champion Alvarez, who took the title from Michael Chandler in November and is riding a three-fight winning streak of his own. There is next to no chance that this fight turns into anything other than a delectable feast of entertaining violence, and it has the added bonus of being a potential title eliminator featuring two exceptional offensive fighters.
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Like Cerrone, Alvarez is an offensive powerhouse with defensive liabilities. One of MMA’s best boxers, Alvarez’s staples are a sharp jab, a “soft” right in which the puncher steps forward with the left rather than the right as he throws and a punishing series of power shots with his left, including a vicious hook and uppercut. He counters beautifully in the pocket with two- to four-punch combinations and generally employs good head movement and angles. When he does get hit, however, Alvarez tends to eat big shots due to his poor posture and habit of leaving his head bent forward over his lead leg. A decorated high school wrestler, Alvarez shoots beautiful reactive takedowns and has a particularly nice single, while his defensive wrestling is generally good enough to keep him standing. The Philadelphian is not a special grappler, but he does have a nose for opportunistic positional advancements and submissions, especially the rear-naked choke.
BETTING ODDS: Alvarez (-110), Cerrone (-110)
THE PICK: This is an even-money fight, and the fact that both are so offensively talented and defensively questionable makes it even harder to predict. If Alvarez comes out blazing and immediately pushes the hittable Cerrone toward the fence, he can take the first round and set himself up for the rest of the fight. From a purely technical perspective, however, the fight favors Cerrone in both the striking and the grappling. He has the edge in height to exploit Alvarez’s limited outside game with a consistent diet of kicks, and in the pocket, Cerrone’s counter knees are the perfect tool to use against a fighter whose tendency to bob and weave accentuates his height disadvantage. In scrambles and transitions, Alvarez’s propensity to give up his back is bad news when faced with an opponent so adept at grabbing the position. Cerrone by decision is the pick in a fun, back-and-forth contest that features a bit of everything.
Next Fight » Conor McGregor vs. Dustin Poirier
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