Best bets for UFC 293: Adesanya vs. Strickland
Last week, UFC favorites charged to another impressive showing going 10-1 on the night. Chalk has been on a tear the last month pushing the yearly rate of favorites winning UFC fights to 64.7%.
The international tour continues with the UFC headed to Australia, home to two current champions. We’ll get to see one of them defend the title at steep odds, but we’ll look for better betting value further down the card.
Israel Adesanya -650 vs. Sean Strickland +480
Middleweight Championship (170 pounds) Main Event
Finocchiaro: In Strickland, we have one of the most fearless, aggressive, confident fighters in the organization. He’s a high-risk taker who’s often reckless and chooses to ignore the game plan for a throwdown, once fists, elbows and spinning heels connect.
Strickland has been in the octagon against the elite of the division and has shown considerable aptitude. However, he hasn’t been in the cage with the ruler of the division Adesanya.
Throw away Strickland’s horrendous fight IQ, and we have an athlete who has fared competitively against the top ten of this division, and who has the physical tools to compete against anyone, though he is a touch undersized for the division.
After dismantling Nassourdine Imavov two fights back, Strickland showed his durability in his last fight. He was handed a tough, determined, Russian upstart who won the first round before entering the second where Strickland’s aggression, guile, experience and volume attack dominated Abus Magomedov.
Strickland has been in with the likes of Jared Cannonier, Alex Pereira and Jack Hermansson, so while stepping up in every form against Adesanya, it can’t be said that Strickland is not ready for this opportunity or that he doesn’t have a path to victory.
When he’s flowing, Strickland displays refined boxing, great cardio and he’s able to compete anywhere a fight goes. He’s a cat that spends more time in the cage sparring/fighting/trash-talking than he does outside of it, to be honest.
That stated, Strickland’s largest area of improvement is to address his fight intelligence, his lack of focus, and his reckless nature as his instincts to ‘kill’ interfere with the set plan of attack he and Coach Eric Nicksick have set for this bout.
It’s only in his recklessness that I find fault with Strickland’s mixed martial arts trajectory and his status within this division.
In Adesanya, we have a modern age striking savant. While Adesanya is not as complete as others in the division, his unique combination of height, length, athleticism, striking accuracy and competitive nature are supplemented by one of the great minds in MMA, Eugene Bareman at City Kickboxing in Auckland, New Zealand. Together, Bareman and Issy deliver one of the most dominant middleweight tandems in UFC history.
Adesanya’s world-class kickboxing base has now been complimented by a purple belt in BJJ as Adesanya’s professional drive forces him to improve his MMA arsenal to solidify himself among his peers. He’s focused, driven and is able to embrace a fight plan which is where this bout gets interesting.
Leading up to this bout, look for Strickland to use every mental ploy to try to get Issy charged for this bout. It’s his best way to try to even the tables.
From distasteful, inappropriate dialogue, to threats, accusations or buffoonery, Strickland’s shield against intensity and pre-fight nerves is to make light of the situation. He’s as awkward in pre-fight confrontation as Adesanya is laser-focused, and he’ll badger the champ with gibberish.
Adesanya should be a solid favorite in this fight. That said, this line seems a touch too high based on Strickland’s physical fight arsenal. However, based on Strickland’s past mental breakdowns in the cage, when the lights go on, it’s difficult for me to trust him to adhere to any form of plan.
Has he learned from the Pereira bout when he attempted to walk a devastating power striker down and was immediately KO’d for his trouble?
Will the somewhat undersized Strickland attempt to wrestle in this fight? One thing is certain, Adesanya is upset, and he wants to destroy Strickland in this fight.
One question I have for Issy is this: Will he attempt to overwhelm the challenger and take him out immediately or will he employ the old Muhammad Ali response to opponent Ernie Terrell when Terrell refused to address Ali by his real name and batter his opponent mercilessly for five full rounds?
One way or another, it’s Adesanya based on skills, experience and size.
Total in this fight: 4.5 Rds. Under -120
Points: n/a
Kuhn: It’s not exactly the title defense we were hoping for Israel Adesanya, but with Sean Strickland welcoming the role of “heel” and fighting a home cage booking for the champ, perhaps fans will still get a satisfying show.
But what we won’t see is much value in the odds. Strickland has always been primarily a point striker. He’s certainly a tricky opponent for anyone on the feet, but much less of a threat of power. Meanwhile, Adesanya seems to thrive against aggressive strikers and puts a lot more heat on his counters. So this scenario feels tailor-made for Adesanya to play to his strengths and find the right moments to land the more damaging strikes.