Several of the UFC’s biggest names have their next marching orders.
UFC CEO Dana White on Tuesday announced a quartet of big-time bouts for the second half of the year, including a trio of matchups for UFC 320 on Oct. 4 in Las Vegas: Magomed Ankalaev vs. Alex Pereira 2 for the UFC light heavyweight title, Merab Dvalishvili vs. Cory Sandhagen for the UFC bantamweight title, and Jiri Prochazka vs. Khalil Rountree Jr. in a battle of light heavyweight top contenders.
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White also announced the first official defense of Tom Aspinall’s undisputed UFC heavyweight championship, as the ferocious Brit collides against Ciryl Gane on Oct. 25 in Abu Dhabi at UFC 321.
Pereira gets his Ankalaev rematch
Between his star power and the somewhat controversial decision that ripped the light heavyweight belt out of his hands, there was little doubt Pereira would get a rematch. He’s now set to step into the Octagon seven months after his first meeting with Ankalaev.
While some had “Poaton” winning on their score cards, there’s no denying Pereira looked listless (by his standards) at UFC 313. He has since revealed he nearly pulled out of the fight with injuries, which UFC commentator Joe Rogan claimed were a broken hand and norovirus. There was also the fact that it was his fourth title defense in the span of a year.
Seven months will represent the longest layoff between fights in Pereira’s UFC career, though Ankalaev’s chances aren’t to be discounted. The Russian has a game that could prove to Pereira’s kryptonite, especially considering he won the belt despite going 0-for-12 in takedown attempts, which many thought was his only path to victory.
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That Prochazka vs. Rountree fight also sure looks like it will decide who gets the next crack at Ankalaev should he survive another go-round with Pereira. The future will be a little less clear if Pereira wins, as he’s already beaten both of them convincingly (twice, in the case of Prochazka).
Dvalishvili’s quest to clear out 135 continues
If Sandhagen can’t surprise Dvalishvili, the UFC might be fresh out of ideas on how to unseat the relentless Georgian.
In the span of six fights, Dvalishvili has beaten Jose Aldo, Petr Yan, Henry Cejudo, Sean O’Malley, Umar Nurmagomedov and the non-hair dye version of O’Malley. That’s an absurd list, and it’s not like these fights have been close despite all but the last one going to decision. Nearly every bout has seen Dvalishvili torturing a beleaguered opponent in the final rounds.
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Dvalishvili is also jumping back in only four months after the second O’Malley fight, so he’s showing he has as little trouble with fatigue between fights as he does during them.
Sandhagen, fourth on the UFC’s official bantamweight rankings, earned the title shot with a dominant showing over Deiveson Figueiredo. He has promised to be aggressive against Dvalishvili, unlike certain other fighters. Of course, that’s easier said than done.
Aspinall’s reign begins with a rare contender he hasn’t already beaten
Tom Aspinall’s reign as heavyweight champion began about as anticlimactically as possible, thanks entirely to Jon Jones’ approach to decision-making, and now he gets his first defense against one of the few guys at the top of the heavyweight rankings Aspinall hasn’t already steamrolled.
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Gane is undefeated in his career except for his title shots against Jones and Francis Ngannou. He gets his chance third against a fighter who has looked even better as a UFC heavyweight than those guys.
An Oct. 25 fight date means Aspinall will have gone around 15 months between fights, and that might be the only reason to bet against him. He has long been earmarked as a potential superstar for the UFC, and now he gets to finally act on that potential in Abu Dhabi.
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