Featherweights
#9 | Dan Ige (14-3, 6-2 UFC) vs. NR | Gavin Tucker (13-1, 4-1 UFC)ODDS: Ige (-150), Tucker (+130)
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Tucker wound up finding the success that many expected, but it has been a strange path for the “Guv’nor” to get there over the course of his UFC career. Tucker was signed ahead of the promotion’s event in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 2017, mostly as a way to get some local talent on the card. Tucker showed some potential as a flowy striker, but even the UFC broadcast noted the particularly weak level of competition on his resume. After winning that debut against Sam Sicilia, Tucker was matched against Rick Glenn in a fight that derailed everything for the Canadian prospect. Tucker was quickly thrown off by Glenn’s size, durability and ability to bring pressure, and due to some refereeing incompetency, the end result was his suffering a prolonged beating that threatened to end his career. It figured to make Tucker more gun-shy or less durable going forward, but once he made his return after two years of recovery, he somehow showed up in the best form of his career. Tucker has been much improved as a striker, but the real shock has been his development of a strong wrestling game seemingly from scratch. Never a part of his style prior the injury, Tucker has managed to mix things up and grind out victories on his way to a three-fight winning streak. Tucker is quietly on the older side for a prospect—he turns 35 in June—so it is nice to see him get a shot at a breakthrough win, especially given that this comeback was far from a sure thing.
This should be an intriguing back-and-forth fight. Even if one man winds up with a clear advantage, particularly in the wrestling and grappling departments, neither figures to be truly put out of the fight. Ige’s speed advantage should allow his crashing style to work. While Tucker might be harder hitter in terms of single shots, Ige looks fast enough to play with distance on the feet and, more importantly, have success finding takedowns. Tucker’s wrestling has been one of the most pleasant surprises in recent memory as far as a prospect developing some new skills, but this figures to be the ceiling, at least for the time being. If Tucker pulls this out, it will be an even more amazing story in terms of resilience and talent. Even Ige’s best wins are not complete shutouts, so Tucker should make this a fun scrap all the way through. Even so, the pick is Ige via clear decision.
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