Preview: UFC Fight Night 128 ‘Barboza vs. Lee’
FS1 Prelims
Welterweights Ryan LaFlare vs. Alex Garcia
Odds: LaFlare (-150), Garcia (+130)
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Flyweights Magomed Bibulatov vs. Yuta Sasaki
Odds: Bibulatov (-370), Sasaki (+310)
Muscle for Chechen warlord and human rights abuser Ramzan Kadyrov,
Bibulatov is nevertheless being given a favorable matchup on the
rebound from his first pro loss. Despite getting pasted by John Moraga,
there is a reason Bibulatov entered the UFC as a highly regarded
prospect. The former WSOF champion is a powerful and kick-heavy
bruiser who also wings a crushing counter right hand. But Bibulatov
primarily does work on the ground, where he brings that thumping
style to bear as well. He is crafty and suffocating in top control,
always looking to pass while pummeling his opponent mercilessly. He
squares off with Sasaki, an impossibly tall and lanky flyweight
with his own penchant for ground fighting. The Japanese fighter is
a flashy striker who isn’t afraid of mixing it up but falters when
consistently pressured. While he struggles to make full use of his
length to keep foes on the outside, it gives him great leverage in
the clinch for the trips and throws he likes. Sasaki isn’t shy
about scrambling with anyone, even if it’s against world-class
grapplers like Leandro
Issa, Wilson Reis
and Jussier da
Silva. He lost to all three, but his three octagon wins are all
by rear-naked choke, and 11 of his 20 pro wins are by submission.
Sasaki will be throwing up his legs and looking to create
opportunities for himself, but he’ll get gradually beat up and
dominated on the way to a decision loss.
Welterweights Siyar Bahadurzada vs. Luan Chagas
Odds: Bahadurzada (-110), Chagas (-110)
Chagas is a bricked-up welterweight who isn’t afraid to get into a brawl. Unsurprisingly, cardio has been “Tarzan’s” biggest bugaboo in three UFC bouts. The Gile Ribeiro student got into an absolute slobberknocker with Erick Silva -- also renowned for terrible conditioning -- and found that he was the more exhausted of the two in the third round. Chagas is a BJJ black belt, but he was submitted in that third frame by Silva, and he got outgrappled by Sergio Moraes. But still only 24 years old, “Tarzan” demonstrated the profound improvements one would expect from an athletically gifted fighter his age in his last bout with Jim Wallhead. Chagas calmly and forcefully outboxed “Judo Jim” before dropping and submitting him. Nearly ten months removed from his first UFC win, expect those strides to continue for the heavy-handed southpaw. Bahadurzada has only fought twice in the past four years due to injury. But the native Afghan showed few ill effects from his inactivity in wins over Brandon Thatch and Rob Wilkinson. Bahadurzada is a capable wrestler whose bread and butter are his hook combinations. He can throw them moving forward or backward, and they pack pop. But the Jackson-Wink transplant can run into problems waiting to counter with a big shot that never comes, or when he loads up and gets too wide on haymaker hooks. Yet he has never been knocked out in a career that spans 16 years. Still, I like the nine-year age “advantage” Chagas holds over the 33-year-old Bahadurzada, his superiority if the fight hits the mat and the fact that he lands nearly a strike and half per minute more. Chagas by decision is the pick.
Light Heavyweights Corey Anderson vs. Patrick Cummins
Odds: Anderson (-125), Cummins (+105)
Two wrestlers with bad chins collide, what fun! Cummins has the superior pedigree as a two-time D-1 All-American and U.S. National Team member, but Anderson is no slouch as an MMA wrestler either. Cummins likes to work position-first grappling while landing decent but unspectacular ground and pound. “Durkin” will have moderate success with takedowns if he decides to force the issue, but I don’t think that is the phase that decides this fight. Anderson is the better striker, so I give him an edge. He moves well, has tighter technique, and throws at a higher rate. But the man formerly known as “Beastin 25/8” has a terrible habit of getting badly hurt or knocked out in fights he was otherwise winning. His disappointing losses to Mauricio Rua and Ovince St. Preux come to mind. Cummins’ chin is slightly better. He rarely goes out cold, but his nonexistent head movement leads him to getting countered often, and worse, he freaks out badly. He either shoots a desperate, telegraphed shot or staggers away, inviting the knockout blow. And he wears damage cosmetically as poorly as anyone. Despite largely dominating Rafael Cavalcante with his wrestling, Cummins still looked like he had been in a car crash afterward. This is high variance and should have periods of messiness when one or the other is hurt, but I’ll go with the fighter who lands more and gets hit less. Anderson ekes out a decision.
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