Heavyweights
Fabricio Werdum (23-9-1) vs. Alexander Gustafsson (18-6)Odds: Gustafsson (-340), Werdum (+280)
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It was unclear how Werdum would fare upon returning to the UFC in 2012; he had dethroned the unbeatable Fedor Emilianenko just two fights prior, but followed that up with a flat and terrible loss to Alistair Overeem. But Werdum slowly marched his way back up the heavyweight ranks without much issue, first taking an interim title against Mark Hunt before scoring another win over a seemingly unbeatable opponent, this time tapping out Cain Velasquez to win undisputed gold. But heavyweight glory never lasts long in the UFC, and the next time Werdum entered the cage, he found himself face down in Curitiba at the hands of Stipe Miocic. Even after another loss - this time a much more controversial decision - to Overeem, Werdum figured to hang around the top of the division until challenger status finally circled back his way. Things went well enough for a few fights, but everything started to go south somewhere around the third round of his 2018 fight against Alexander Volkov. Werdum controlled most of the fight with his elite grappling, but suddenly found his gas tank on empty, giving Volkov the opportunity to turn the fight around and score a surprising stoppage victory. And that'd be Werdum's last match for the next two years, owing to a failed drug test shortly thereafter. Upon his return in May, Werdum frankly was terrible - there have been spates of his career where he's looked unmotivated and stunk up the joint as a result, and this was that, only older. Werdum had about three minutes of cardio this time around, and while he gutted through to the end of a close decision against Alexey Oleynik, expectations have been firmly lowered. While Werdum's skilled enough that he probably can't help but earn a few more wins from here on out, who knows where he's at by this point of his career.
This is one of those fights where it comes down to which fighter is less deserving of any faith. Gustafsson's somehow still just 33 years-old and relatively spry, so by heavyweight standards he still has a few good years left in him -- and, frankly, at heavyweight they don't even have to be all that good. But the dynamics for this feel all wrong - Gustafsson's whole deal is size and athleticism, but heavyweight bouts often come down to a contest of durability, which has always been a bit of a question for Gustafsson. The Smith fight, a bout where everything was going well until his opponent suddenly shifted the momentum with one burst of offense, feels more like an omen than anything else. So while things may not look too sanguine down the road for Gustafsson at heavyweight, does any of that matter here against this version of Werdum? Werdum's still tough, but if he's as plodding and devoid of energy as he was just two months ago, Gustafsson might just be too quick to get himself in any sort of real danger - one gets the sense that Gustafsson can basically run laps for the first four minutes of this fight and then have his way with Werdum for the rest of the bout. And of course, there's also the factor of how Gustafsson is handling this move up to heavyweight; as Gian Villante showed, giving a fighter 60 extra pounds to work with can often go wrong. Werdum might just clang Gustafsson with one knockout blow, even late in the fight while he's exhausted, but Gustafsson's ability to set a fast pace should be able to take this for as long as he remains upright. The pick is for Gustafsson to eventually tire Werdum into a third-round stoppage, but this could be a mess.
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