UFC president Dana White promised he was bringing back sports for good — and it certainly felt that way as the UFC prepared to host its second event in five days.
After postponing all events from March 14 to May 9 because of the coronavirus pandemic, the UFC is looking to make up for lost time with a midweek UFC Fight Night. Wednesday’s headliner will feature former light heavyweight title contenders Anthony Smith (32-14) and Glover Teixeira (30-7). It will take place at VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, Florida, and air on ESPN+ beginning at 6 p.m. ET. There will be no fans in attendance.
All fights from UFC Fight Night: Smith vs. Teixeira will be available to watch on ESPN+.
• Anthony Smith vs. Glover Teixeira
• Ben Rothwell vs. Ovince Saint Preux
• Alexander Hernandez vs. Drew Dober
• Ricky Simon vs. Ray Borg
• Andrei Arlovski vs. Philipe Lins
• Michael Johnson vs. Thiago Moises
• Sijara Eubanks vs. Sarah Moras
• Gabriel Benitez vs. Omar Morales
• Hunter Azure vs. Brian Kelleher
• Chase Sherman vs. Isaac Villanueva
Watch the complete card on ESPN+
For Smith, 31, it’s an opportunity to build off a stoppage win over Alexander Gustafsson in his previous outing, and continue his push toward a second UFC title shot. The Nebraska native has promised he will earn his way to a rematch against Jon Jones, whom he lost to in 2019.
Teixeira, 40, has a similar motive, although his comes with a greater sense of urgency. The Brazilian’s title hopes appeared to be all but gone from 2016 to 2018, when he dropped three of five appearances, but he has since rattled off three consecutive wins. An upset of Smith would crack the door for Teixeira for one more shot at a title.
There are 10 bouts total on Wednesday’s card, featuring veterans such as heavyweights Andrei Arlovski and Ben Rothwell, as well as an intriguing prospect in Ricky Simon. And when the night is over, the UFC will immediately turn around and look forward to its next event in Jacksonville, which will take place Saturday.
Brett Okamoto, Marc Raimondi and Jeff Wagenheim will recap the action as it unfolds.
Fight in progress
Bantamweight: Sijara Eubanks (5-4, -350) vs. Sarah Moras (6-6, +275)
Results
Lightweight: Omar Morales (10-0) defeats Gabriel Benitez (21-9) by unanimous decision
Omar Morales unleashes a couple of strong punches onto Gabriel Benitez in the third round.
Morales walked away from this night as the event’s only unbeaten fighter. Minutes after Hunter Azure suffered his first career loss, Morales kept his record perfect with a unanimous — but slim — victory over Benitez.
It was basically a kickboxing match inside an MMA cage. Both men did their most damage with hard kicks to the midsection and legs, although perhaps Morales’ most harmful maneuver was checking Benitez’s kicks. By doing so, he opened up a grotesquely deep cut on Benitez’s shin — which did not deter the 31-year-old from fighting on.
Great performance by @OmarMoralesJR wow what a war #UFCJAX
— GILBERT BURNS DURINHO (@GilbertDurinho) May 14, 2020
“That’s exactly what I was expecting,” Morales (10-0) said through an interpreter. “He’s a Mexican fighter, a tough fighter.”
Benitez, a 31-year-old from Tijuana, was fighting at lightweight for the first time since 2013. He’s typically competed at featherweight. He started off as the more aggressive man, landing vicious kicks early. But Morales always had a counter, and as the fought wore on he turned the strike totals his way. He outlanded Benitez 63-50, including 31-22 in the decisive final round.
Two judges scored it his way 29-28, and the other gave Morales all three rounds.
Morales, 34, is a native of Venezuela who trains in South Florida. He won his UFC debut in December, earning a unanimous decision over Dong Hyun Ma.
— Wagenheim
Watch this fight on ESPN+.
Featherweight: Brian Kelleher (21-10) defeats Hunter Azure (8-1) by second-round KO
Brian Kelleher gets his momentum back after rocking Hunter Azure with a right hand in Round 2.
He doesn’t call himself “Boom” for nothing. Kelleher earned a spectacular knockout over Azure in a featherweight bout, dropping Azure with a nasty left hook to the chin at 3 minutes, 40 seconds of the second round.
The victory is good for the eighth knockout of Kelleher’s professional career. Immediately after, Kelleher, who actually fights at bantamweight but agreed to move up for this matchup, called out popular 135-pounder Sean O’Malley.
“I told Dana White, get ‘Suga’ Sean, stop protecting this guy,” Kelleher said. “That’s the guy I want.”
Boom @brianboom135 #supernecessary
— Jorge Masvidal UFC (@GamebredFighter) May 13, 2020
Kelleher, of New York, didn’t fare as well with Azure in the opening round as he did in the second. Azure got off to a great start, with the low leg kick and boxing combinations to the body. Kelleher was clearly getting the worse of the exchanges, and tried to take Azure down multiple times, but was unsuccessful.
Things changed in a hurry in the next frame, however, as Kelleher adjusted his range and started to find a home for the overhand right — and then, of course, the knockout left hook.
“I’m always a little bit of a slow starter,” Kelleher said. “I gotta work on that. But as soon as I find my range and confidence, it’s a whole different fight.”
— Okamoto
Watch this fight on ESPN+.
Heavyweight: Chase Sherman (14-6) defeats Isaac Villanueva (16-9) by second-round TKO
Chase Sherman unleashes a fury of punches on Ike Villanueva and caps it off with a huge knee late in the first round.
Two years ago, Sherman was cut from the UFC after three consecutive losses. He has been busy since then. Sherman won three straight on the regional scene — all by TKO — and took home a heavyweight bare-knuckle boxing title.
On Wednesday night, Sherman returned to the UFC and put on an excellent performance, stopping Villanueva at 49 seconds of the second round in the UFC Jacksonville opener.
That’s an amazing performance on 6 days notice!! @chasesherman
— michael (@bisping) May 13, 2020
After a dominant first round, Sherman poured it on in the opening seconds of the second. He landed a big combination, including a body shot. He landed hard leg kicks. And then he finished up against the cage with another punching combination and a thrusting elbow to Villanueva’s face.
Sherman, 30, has won four in a row overall after three straight losses in the UFC in 2017 and 2018. The Mississippi native has won 14 of his 15 career pro MMA fights by KO/TKO.
Villanueva, 36, was making his UFC debut. The Texas native had won four straight coming in.
“I’ve grown as a fighter and grown as a man and now it’s time to properly take the steps that I need,” Sherman said. “Last time, I was rushing into fights, seven fights — six of them were short notice … I took fights that I shouldn’t have took. I was trying to be a company man and take fights on short notice. But now I need to go out there and instead of chasing money, I need to chase the ultimate goal, which is be at the top of the division and hopefully one day be a champion.”
— Raimondi
Watch this fight on ESPN+.
Still to come
Light heavyweight: Anthony Smith (32-14, -180) vs. Glover Teixeira (30-7, +150)
Heavyweight: Ben Rothwell (37-12, +120) vs. Ovince Saint Preux (24-13, -150)
Lightweight: Alexander Hernandez (11-2, -110) vs. Drew Dober (22-9, -120)
Bantamweight: Ricky Simon (15-3, -170) vs. Ray Borg (13-4, +140)
Heavyweight: Andrei Arlovski (28-19, +145) vs. Philipe Lins (14-3, -175)
Lightweight: Michael Johnson (20-15, -110) vs. Thiago Moises (12-4, -120)
Credit: Source link