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Preview: UFC 311 ‘Makhachev vs. Tsarukyan 2’

de Ridder vs. Holland


Middleweights

Reinier de Ridder (18-2, 1-0 UFC) vs. Kevin Holland (26-12, 13-9 UFC)

ODDS: De Ridder (-112), Holland (-108)

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Holland’s career doesn’t have much of an obvious direction at the moment, but he remains a welcome addition to any card, including this one. Holland was an unlikely breakout star for the UFC in 2020, as his approach to both his fights and his career were a perfect match for the early days of the coronavirus pandemic. Holland’s tendency to talk trash made for entertaining commentary in an otherwise empty arena, and his willingness to step in on late notice meant that he was constantly in front of viewers, racking up four wins in about four months at the very end of the year. While Holland reached new heights in 2020, 2021 is when things came crashing down a bit. Slotted into two main event bouts, Holland found himself without much of an answer for the wrestling of Derek Brunson and Marvin Vettori. It’s understandable that Holland would wind up cutting down to welterweight in the wake of those results, but rather than shore up the weaknesses in his game, “Trailblazer” seemed to regress from a pure skill standpoint. Now gigantic relative to most of his opposition, Holland was mostly content to slug things out rather than fight with his usual level of craft, which resulted in some entertaining fights but also meant he treaded water in the greater picture of the division. Holland eventually returned to 185 pounds in June, and it’s hard to tell where things go from here. An injury stoppage loss to Roman Dolidze in October showed that Holland still struggles with stronger wrestlers, and it’s difficult to know if he has rebuilt the game that was effective during his last run at a middleweight. At any rate, while Holland has plenty of questions to answer, the same is true of de Ridder, who looks to build on a successful UFC debut in November.

De Ridder was highly successful outside the UFC, including runs as a light heavyweight and heavyweight titleholder in ONE Championship, but it has been with an approach that looks better in practice than on paper. De Ridder’s striking is spotty, but he gets by as an absolute whiz of a submission artist compared to his peers. When things have gone south for “The Dutch Knight,” they have tended to spiral out of control. Faced with the horsepower of Anatoly Malykhin, de Ridder quickly ran out of ideas when he proved unable to get his opponent to the mat and got punished for it. However, de Ridder has looked to compensate for that gap in strength by cutting down to middleweight for his UFC career, which has been a mixed bag. He’s now one of the largest middleweights on the UFC roster, but his gas tank was a clear liability despite a late submission win over Gerald Meerschaert in his Octagon debut. De Ridder could easily wind up getting an easier win in this outing, as Holland does tend to get outwrestled and generally makes some poor decisions inside the cage. Still, Holland is an underrated grappler and likely just needs to survive a round before de Ridder starts to flag, at which point he will likely have few answers for the American’s power. The pick is Holland via second-round knockout.

Jump To »
Makhachev vs. Tsarukyan
Dvalishvili vs. Nurmagomedov
Hill vs. Prochazka
Moicano vs. Dariush
de Ridder vs. Holland
The Prelims

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