“I think we’re both pretty explosive fighters and we both show up to fight,” Kennedy said. “We both like to throw some big bombs, so it’s a good matchup. I don’t think anybody can really plan to see what I’m coming in to do this time. I’m working with the best boxing coaches and training with Mark DeLaGrotte, one of the best MMA striking coaches in the world, so I think that people are going to see a new Tim that they’ve never seen before.”
Just one fight removed from a gruesome arm injury suffered in a technical knockout loss to Siyar Bahadurzada, Santos (16-13) dropped a split decision to Joey Villasenor at a Strikeforce show two months ago.
“I was just a little bit out of rhythm and was coming off an injury so my training was not 100 percent,” Santos said. “This is not an excuse. It’s just something natural that all athletes go through when they stop fighting for a long period of time.”
The 31-year-old Chute Boxe Academy stalwart has lost four of his last five fights. Santos has delivered 14 of his 16 career wins by knockout, TKO or submission.