Bantamweights
Cody Garbrandt (11-3) vs. Raphael Assuncao (27-7)ODDS: Garbrandt (-145), Assuncao (+125)
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While Garbrandt has been a promotional favorite during his time with the UFC, it has been the exact opposite story for Assuncao. After losing his Octagon debut as a featherweight, the Brazilian cut to 135 pounds and just kept winning, even as the UFC seemed disinterested in pushing him up the ladder. It was easy to see why. Assuncao is a colorless personality, and his patient and counter-heavy style does not do much to appeal to the masses. However, in 2014, it looked like Assuncao had finally done enough to get some notice, only for his body to betray him. Assuncao was reportedly the first choice to challenge Renan Barao for the bantamweight strap at UFC 173, but he was unable to fight due to a rib injury. As a result, Dillashaw, who Assuncao had defeated a few months prior, stepped in and unseated Barao instead. Assuncao returned a few months later to earn a one-sided win over Bryan Caraway, but he quickly found himself snakebitten once again, as an ankle injury kept him from headlining a card against Faber and cost him about 18 months of his career. Assuncao finally returned at UFC 200, where he looked rusty in losing a rematch to Dillashaw that essentially closed his championship window. Even subsequent wins over Aljamain Sterling and Marlon Moraes did not get Assuncao much of anywhere. His 2019 campaign was a rough one, as Moraes quickly took care of him in their rematch and he struggled with the pace and length of Cory Sandhagen. Still, he carries the rightful reputation as one of the toughest outs in the division, and even if he took a completely different path to get her, Assuncao is in a similar spot as Garbrandt. Both men badly need to win to stay relevant.
This is obviously a referendum on where Garbrandt is at as a contender, but it is also sneakily crucial for Assuncao; the Brazilian needs to prove he can still make his game work against younger, faster athletes. This should still start out as Assuncao’s fight. Garbrandt just does not have much in the way of technical depth, and the Brazilian should be able to play with distance and get the better of any exchanges if he forces the former champion to lead. That could just be the entire fight, but based on history, there is going to be a point where someone gets hurt. If that happens to be Garbrandt, he could once again abandon all defense and focus on returning fire. The pick is Assuncao, and given Garbrandt’s tendency to go off the rails quickly, the method is by first-round knockout.
Continue Reading » Sterling vs. Sandhagen
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