Bantamweights
#8 BW | Rob Font (20-7, 10-6 UFC) vs. #2 FLW | Deiveson Figueiredo (21-3-1, 10-3-1 UFC)ODDS: Font (-135), Figueiredo (+114)
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This is also a big spot for Font. Even if Figueiredo’s future level of success at bantamweight is a question mark, he would be a big-name win in a career marked by Font’s inability to break into the 135-pound elite. Font’s UFC career got off to a slow start thanks to injuries and inactivity, and his early wins and losses showed a clear delineation in performance. Font was a diverse offensive terror against opponents he could march down and put away, but some steps up in competition saw him cede ground and become much less effective moving backwards. A 2019 win over Ricky Simon saw Font overcome those issues, as he held his ground and took apart a pathologically aggressive opponent over three rounds, and by 2021, he had established himself enough to earn some main event spot on UFC Fight Night cards. However, losses to Jose Aldo and Marlon Vera were a bit deflating, even though Font put in some strong performances. Font was able to rack up offense in both fights—he threw an absurd 520 strikes against Vera—that should have won him rounds, but Aldo and Vera were able to each find single shots that rocked him hard, negating his work and scoring clear decision victories. A cathartic win over Adrian Yanez in April, which saw Font score a knockout in a sprint, was a nice reminder that he is still a Top 10 bantamweight despite a clear ceiling—a ceiling that was then further affirmed by Cory Sandhagen in a wrestling-heavy affair in August. Even if Font’s momentum has been spotty, he is a perennially tough out who could give Figueiredo a lot of issues. Font’s game centers on establishing his jab, and he is both rangier and more effective at doing so than any of Figueiredo’s flyweight opponents. Add in that Font can keep throwing out volume and the fact that he has never actually been knocked out, and it is easy to see him establishing an early lead that he never gives up as Figueiredo attempts to pick his spots. Still, the former flyweight champ seems deserving of the benefit of the doubt here, particularly given Font’s previous struggles with patient power punchers in the past. There is a decent shot this winds up as another fight that Font wins statistically, only to come out on the losing end of all the fight-changing moments of offense. In what might be the most intriguing bout on the card, the pick is Figueiredo via decision.
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