Preview: UFC Fight Night 189 ‘Rozenstruik vs. Sakai’
Tybura vs. Harris
Heavyweights
#11 HW | Marcin Tybura (21-6, 8-5 UFC) vs. #8 HW | Walt Harris (13-9, 6-8 UFC)ODDS: Tybura (-170), Harris (+150)
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In stark contrast to Harris, Poland’s Tybura is riding a surprising wave of positive momentum. After dropping a rough UFC debut to Timothy Johnson back in 2016, Tybura retooled some things and eventually found a solid mix of striking and wrestling. In turn, that led to a winning streak that earned him a main event spot against Werdum in late 2017. Tybura did not get much done in that fight, and that led to a rough stretch of four losses in five appearances that put the Pole firmly on the roster bubble; knockout losses to Shamil Abdurakhimov and Augusto Sakai, in particular, were worrying signs about his future with the promotion. However, Tybura turned things around to a shocking degree in 2020, winning all four of his bouts in the calendar year. He simply outclassed Spivak and Maxim Grishin with his wrestling, and wins over Ben Rothwell and Greg Hardy saw him outlast his opponents before switching gears in one-sided fashion. That survival ability alone represented a huge turnaround from some of the losses Tybura had suffered just a year prior. Tybura does not have the athletic ceiling to get over the hump to true contender status and durability still has to be a bit of a concern, but the last year has given him some new life as a relevant heavyweight that should carry him for a good while longer.
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As Harris becomes more and more reliant on quick finishes, this bout has a relatively simple dynamic. Either Harris is able to put Tybura away in the first few minutes of the fight, or “Tybur” continues his recent streak of outlasting his opponents and takes over the bout in the later rounds. Even though Tybura has fought smarter lately, he does figure to get hit hard a bunch in the opening moments. Harris has always found early success against less athletic opponents, and Tybura has had his share of slow starts, even during this winning streak. In that regard, it becomes a matter of whether or not Harris is dangerous enough to finish the job. There is certainly some worry on that end of things. While it is difficult to ever truly write off any heavyweight due to age, Harris is nearing 38 years old with an approach that has always been dependent on his athleticism. The bet for now is that Harris still has enough in the tank to take care of Tybura early. However, if this goes past the first round, Tybura figures to take over huge and likely score a finish. The pick is Harris via first-round knockout.
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