NFL Musings and Abusings

Each week I’ll drop thoughts on the NFL season delivered from a decades long NFL fan and investor. My positions are meant to stimulate thought and communication not angst or negativity and with that said, I will be frank and blunt about my positions…see some below.

How about acute AFC EAST interest for the first time in many years west of Saratoga Springs, NY?

Chiefs are laydown favorites to win ten games, their division and beyond. What could go wrong?

I guarantee one thing right now and I do it every year with 100% accuracy, here it is:

No one knows a dad gummed thing about what’s going to transpire in the NFL in week one.

I work tirelessly to gain as much intel on players, teams, and organizations prior to week one each year to provide myself with any edge with regard to point spreads, betting and gambling and I realize that I know nothing, it’s the one absolute.

The good news is that others that conduct well less research than I do know nothing also.

Understanding how to invest off of the actions of those with said ‘lack of knowledge’ is a major contributor to my NFL success each week one.

The Niners are a dead under team this year and we bet them as such.

While the Cowboys have talent, they also have tough scheduling, players in contract disputes and a lame ducker in Mike McCarthy?

I don’t think the Bills are as strong as many believe, and I don’t know if Chicago will be able to execute into the hype of their fans this year either.

Why can’t the Seahawks as well as the Rams improve this year?

Even the lowly Cardinals may be able to overcome the ineptitude of their ownership bumbling and compete this year…by that I mean they carry extremely low expectation from the marketplace.

I’m not buying the Falcon hype outside of the fact that this group coming in will show significant improvement from a coaching standpoint than the group the left, it may take a couple of years to show which is how they drafted… if you were paying attention. They also compete in a pretty damn weak division.

The AFC North is going to be a murderers row this year. Those are four complete, competitive playoff erected football teams.

Will we find any rookie QB’s that can come out of the gate like CJ Stroud did last year? I’d caution Chicago that they may have to yield to Denver?

This edition of Musing and Abusing was unusually negative because this time of year I’m only looking to invest in teams to NOT achieve. I wait until immediately prior to the first game before I make positions on which teams I handicap to overachieve, win divisions, eclipse number of games etc.

Musings and Abusing’s next week will list teams I am considering to overachieve and perform well… I wait so that trades, injuries etc. cannot negatively affect my position.

Keep your head on a swivel!

GambLou.com

It’s Business!

UFC LV96 Cannonier vs. Borralho: Undeterred Nerd?

The APEX in Las Vegas with its smaller octagon hosts this week’s UFC LV96. On this week’s card are two TUF final bouts which bring the total fights on the card to eleven.

Last week underdogs finally raised their heads and realized a 5-6-1 result which knocks favorites winning percentage this year to 66.7% which is still extremely high.

Let’s hope what we saw last week will not be such a rarity as we move into the last half of the 2024 UFC fighting calendar.

Digital results stand 21-16 +10.28u on the heels of King O’Neill’s (+145) victory.

Ciao Borralho -205 vs. Jared Cannonier +175 Middleweight (185lbs.) main event

In fifth ranked middleweight Jarod Cannonier we have an athlete focused on a run at a title. Cannonier, who has competed at Heavyweight, light heavyweight and now middleweight is now forty years of age and though he usually competes like a man many years younger, in his last effort in June he did not.

Cannonier has a granite jaw and an unbreakable will. He’s felt the power of sluggers well larger than his current division and has managed to best every middleweight he’s faced save for his bout against then champion Israel Adesanya and his last outing, the aforementioned clunker against France’s Nassourdine Imavov.

At middleweight Cannonier is unusually fast and adroit while retaining the power he possessed when he fought at the higher divisions. Cannonier’s grappling is complete yet untested.

What I concern myself with is his IMMEDIATE desire to earn another title opportunity as opposed to waiting a few months to recharge. He may feel like his last fight was out of the ordinary or he could be rushing back in a touch of haste because he understands the odds of forty-year-old men competing in this game against skilled men close to a decade younger.

Cannonier coming off a TKO against Imavov just seven weeks ago compounds my skepticism.

This is a foundational fight for Cannonier and his future in the top five of this most competitive division.

In twelfth ranked Brazilian Borralho, we have the poster boy for his team which called the ‘fighting nerds.’

Borralho wears glasses and looks to be more valedictorian than middleweight challenger until he steps into an octagon.

He and team wear crooked glasses that tote white tape on the hinge to help them ‘look the part’ but sgangly, it to say that though these young athletes may look goofy, awkward, gangly and odd, please understand that each one is technically versed in their own world class dialect of BJJ and the martial arts.

In the cage Borralho is an elite talent. He is lightning fast; he has solid wrestling/grappling acumen to compliment his highly intricate athleticism and BJJ aptitude.

Cannonier is the man in this fight with the advantage in size (unusual) and experience. He’s been in against killers from three different UFC divisions. Primarily a boxing/kickboxing threat, Cannonier has also developed a grappling game though we’ve seen little of it in his past fights.

That may well change Saturday for it’s my belief that Borralho will force Cannonier into engagements that will test Cannonier’s grappling, take down defense and submission guard.

Key factors for me in this fight are Cannonier’s age, the attrition his body has taken from an extensive career in martial arts spanning three different weight classes and his desperation to get one more shot at the middleweight title.

Now coming into such a critical fight off of a near knock-out loss just two months ago has me wondering what the rush was for Cannonier to get back into the cage so fast and against this type of elite opponent.

We understand that fighters at least 9 years younger than their opponents have a near 70% rate of winning in the UFC. That coupled with the mixed martial arts weaponry of Ciao may make it a long night for Cannonier in the APEX Saturday if Cannonier is unable to back Borralho up and keep this fight upright.

In Saturday’s main event we’ll witness two world class 185-pound athletes contend for Cannoniers fifth ranked position in the division.

Total in this fight: 3.5 rds. Over -175

Michael Morales -600 vs. Neil Magny +470 Welterweight (170lbs.)

Last week I broke down a fight where novice Brazilian razor blade Carlos Prates fought wily veteran Li Jingliang of China. The gist of the write-up was centered around the dynamic speed, ferocity, precision striking/kicking and evasive defensive abilities of the YOUNGER Prates and how those abilities matched up against a methodical, grizzled, wily, durable, tough but aged veteran of the sport of MMA who had never been stopped prior.

Prates annihilated Jingliang. He was the first one to finish the proud Chinese warrior in the late second round of their fight.

It is unfortunate that thirty-seven-year-old Neil Magny, a long, tall, grizzled veteran of more than thirty UFC competitions would draw a more favorable matchup than having to face one of the most violent mixed martial artists in the organization in twenty-five-year-old Morales.

Magny arrives to this tussle off a nice upset win over Canada’s MIke Mallot this past January in a fight he was also totally disrespected in as he closed close to a +300 underdog so at least Magny is used to the treatment.

Magny’s a superior grappler whose long, tall frame sets him up with excellent submission abilities as well that height/reach advantage and his fluidity of movement on the feet is helpful when fights remain standing.

The issue, however, is that Magny is not fast or overly durable and while he is crafty, beguiling and has an exceedingly high IQ in the octagon he is also in the twilight of a lengthy career.

The incoming breed of young hungry and well balanced mixed martial artists are salivating to be matched up with these wise but aged UFC ambassadors in order to club them into unconsciousness then walk away with their position within the division.

I’ve said before, the fight game is one tough pursuit.

Morales, now twenty-five, is young, fast, powerful, explosive and a threat to finish any fight wherever said fight may go. His level of competition faced, and lack of experience needs cultivation and this fight with Magny is his first true test.

Magny will have to discover a way to use his experience and fighting acumen to perplex Morales, confound him with evasive movement/angles and keep him at the end of his strikes and kicks.

Magny cannot allow himself to be caught competing in any flat-footed striking encounters. He can’t allow Morales any ‘in pocket’ opportunities for a wide stanched power shot heaving because Morales is a fighter that can end any athlete’s night with one power blast.

In my estimation, what the UFC is doing to this fight ambassador is similar to what they did to Li Jingliang last week in putting him in with a foe he is unlikely to be able to compete effectively against.

UFC fans understand that in this realm of mixed martial arts, the fittest survive and there is little way to sidestep tomorrow’s future stars like this gifted newcomer Morales.

Total in this fight: 2.5Rds. Over -175

Jacqueline Cavalcanti -185 vs. Josiane Nunes +160 Women’s Bantamweight (135lbs)

Portugal’s Cavalcanti arrives in Perth ready for her sophomore UFC fight but in this matchup her foe is considerably more talented than the fighter she faced in her debut.

Cavalcanti, primarily a striker looks the part for sure, she’s 5’8” which will provide her a six-inch height advantage in this bout. She also holds a four-year youth advantage to go with her four-inch reach advantage.

Cavalcanti will want to keep this fight at distance and standing for her most advantageous outcome.

In Nunes we have a short 5’2” hand grenade. The Brazilian is also a power striker with an emphasis on power.

Despite the fact that she is tremendously undersized physically, opponents find out immediately that when fighting Nunes, “it’s not the size of the dog in the fight, it’s the size of the fight in the dog.”

In this fight Nunes has an edge in fight experience and has been in with the more able set of opponents as well she beat the only UFC level fighter that Cavalcanti beat previously Zarah Fairn.

The betting market has taken Cavalcanti from -110 at open to the current -185 and that must be based on her size and some ‘Nunes fade’ as there is nothing other than those aspects to this fight that make me feel Cavalcanti has the advantage in this fight.

Nunes +160

Nunes decision should also come at a large plus price once released.

Don’t be afraid to add a touch of investment there especially with the total 2.5Rds. Over -260!

Friday mid-day the ‘Bout Business Podcast is available at GambLou.com. Catch all of my official releases there.

Thank you for reading and enjoy the hostilities.

GambLou.com

It’s Business!

UFC 305 Du Plessis vs. Adesanya: Perth of a nation!

Perth, Australia is the location for this week’s UFC 305.

Competing fighters will benefit from a hysterical Aussie crowd witnessing twelve scheduled bouts in a large 30-foot cage where preliminary action begins at 3:30pm PT.

The card features nine Australians seven of which face opponents from around the globe. As is always the case when the UFC travels to locations throughout the world, it’s important to understand who the local athletes are and which fighters if any are likely to benefit from potential favorable matchmaking, lack of travel as well potential ‘home cooking’ decision results.

Last week Sergei Spivak earned digital readers another unit of profit as he submitted Polish heavyweight fighter Marcin Tybura in the first round. Spivak is a heavyweight that can whup anyone on the roster save the top five ranked heavyweights in the division.

UFC favorites 2024: 220-97-8 (67.6%)

2024 Digital results: 20-16 +8.73 (+123)

Dricus Du Plessis +110 vs. Israel Adesanya -130 Middleweight (185lbs.) title

DDP is a massive sized profusely powerful South African kickboxing talent, he is 7-0 in the UFC but has only defeated two elite middleweight opponents, one could argue that the title he won came via a faulty split decision.

Du Plessis is a forward pressing, heavy handed striker who can numb legs with his kicks and shut down foe’s consciousness with this power striking. Du Plessis is neither swift afoot nor nimble evading strikes, but in his own way he is awkwardly agile, tough, durable and since his nose operation seems to be able to fight without any cardiovascular issues.

In former champion and second ranked middleweight Adesanya, Du Plessis draws an opponent not only four inches taller than he but one with considerable speed/quickness advantages. Despite the fact that Adesanya is now thirty-five the Nigerian is light years ahead of Du Plessis when it comes to innate quickness, precision striking, strike defense and athleticism.

With Adesanya the question is not whether he is capable of defeating Du Plessis, the question is whether Adesanya is property focused, trained, and motivated to take aggressive action when this fight calls for him to inflict damage.

When fighting for a UFC title motivation is rarely questioned and, in this case, with the rivalry between them and each claiming to be ‘the’ authentic African athlete motivation is not questioned. What may be called into question rather than motivation is emotion.

Emotion is rarely a fighter’s friend, it at all times must be checked and eradicated. That said, in this fight I sense an abundance of emotion emanating from Adesanya.

Adesanya’s physical fight plan is simple, use his speed, quickness, combination striking and deft defense to befuddle DDP and force him into becoming predictable by charging inside to engage.

For DDP he needs to be patient. Understanding that this is a twenty-five-minute fight, and it may take him all twenty-five to badger/frustrate Adesanya, force him into a corner then unleash power hooks and crosses to the body and head.

DDP will look to shut the lights out on Issy with bludgeoning strikes and kicks while Adesanya will look to shred DDP with accumulated volume and eventually take him out by utilizing space, time, angles, and combination striking…that is provided he is level, balanced and focused mentally.

This title defense is the FIRST real test for DDP as he was awarded a close decision against Strickland and now, he must face Issy in Australia with all his fellow ‘sandgroppers’ cheering him on.

DDP has been chiding Issy constantly leading up to fight week and I wonder if his quips about Issy being in his own head may be getting to the former champion.

DDP must remain logical and clinical in this fight, He must follow his plan and hope that over time he can suck some of the speed and zip from Adesanya in order to try to catch him with any form of devastating strike, kick, or elbow.

Adesanya for his part must remain stone faced and without emotion, if he can maintain his emotional control, he stands a great chance of finishing DDP. If Adesanya gets emotional and wanders from his team’s plan then he’ll have to find a way to live with the outcome of this fight, one he should technically win.

Total in this fight: 4.5Rds. Under -145

Steve Erceg -205 `vs. Kai Kara-France +180 Flyweight (125lbs.) co main event

Fourth ranked Erceg leaped up the flyweight rankings after his impressive title opportunity against current champion Alexandre Pantoja.

Erceg is a balanced mixed martial artist, he can grapple a good game as well he has size, length and effective striking ability. Add to that the fact that he provided the current flyweight champion a bona fide scare in their recent title fight, and we can add confidence to his already complete MMA weaponry.

In Erceg we have a fighter that in my judgement may not be defeated for some time in this division should he defeat the elite Kara-France.

Kara-France is an authentic and difficult test for Erceg as Kara-France is deeply experienced, has competed against the elite of the division and has earned finishes via the KO and submission.

Kara France is 3-2 in his last five fights losing his last two straight to former champion Brandon Moreno then a razor close, controversial loss to Amir Abazzi in a fight that most believed Kara-France won.

Kara-France is the older fighter, he has an experience edge over Erceg as well he may be the quicker of the two, but he’ll need to be able to deal with Erceg’s power grappling.

Erceg opened eyes with his battle against Pantoja so he will not sneak up on anyone in this division now but the question we need answered is this: Is Erceg ‘the’ legitimate threat to the flyweight title?

With a dominant performance Saturday night against a mainstay in the division in Kara-France that question must be a resounding yes.

Total in this fight: 2.5Rds Over -250

Luana Santos -165 vs. Casey O’Neill +145 women’s flyweight (125lbs.)

Brazilian Santos is twenty-four, she’s 3-0 in the UFC but has competed only against a nominal set of UFC mixed martial artists. A judo and BJJ practitioner Santos is aggressive and willing but has yet to share the cage with any legitimate bona fide adversary. That said, she has looked efficient in disposing of who has been put in front of her.

Scotland’s O’Neill who currently trains in Las Vegas at Xtreme Couture enters loser of her last two. Her loss to Jenn Maia was a tight fight and can be understood as she was coming off of an injury into that bout. Her last outing was worrisome as O’Neill looked passive and lethargic in a submission loss to Ariane Lipski, a fight that O’Neill should have won in my judgement.

So, Santos arrives looking to take O’Neill’s 15th ranking in the division away from her while O’Neill is poised to regain control of her ranking with a stellar showing off of that last loss.

O’Neill’s a well-equipped, versatile fighter. She possesses expertise in Muay Thai striking, she’s earned a brown belt in BJJ and her father brought her up in kickboxing.

O’Neill’s two years the older fighter who holds a good deal of experience over Santos and experience against a higher level of competition at that. She’ll be the slightly larger athlete in the cage Saturday so with her diverse mixed martial arts weaponry, and her desperation to reaffirm her standing in the division it’s my belief that she comes out and competes in dominant fashion.

O’Neill opened -150 for this fight and now she’s a decent sized underdog. I prefer to believe that the opening number is a more appropriate depiction of this fight’s outcome than current pricing.

O’Neill +145

I released O’Neill +155 on Monday’s ‘Sneak-Teep’ Podcast, so we are seeing a little buy back on her. I’d say jump her now before more advantage in her price evaporated.

Total in this fight: 2.5Rds Over -240

GambLou.com

It’s Business!

UFC LV95 Spivak vs. Tybura: Polar snare?

The UFC is back in its APEX center this week for UFC LV95, an eleven-fight card populated with an international array of lesser-known UFC combatants.

Three of the bouts feature 170lbs. (or larger) men fighting in the smaller 25’ diameter APEX octagon while the remaining bouts are competitively matched smaller athletes where there could be a slight advantage to the wrestling/grappling combatant.

Favorites marched to a 12-1 result last week and stand 212-95-8 in 2024 which renders investing in underdogs a risky proposition.

Digital results in 2024 stand 19-16 +7.73u, I am navigating my way through the heavy first half year chalk parade profitably.

Sergei Spivak -145 vs. Marcin Tybura +120 Heavyweight (265lbs.) Main Event

This is a rematch of a 202 fight where Polish veteran Tybura, then an experienced 34-year-old UFC veteran, introduced a twenty-five-year-old Moldovan neophyte Spivak to the heavyweight division by winning a close decision over the ‘Polar Bear’ who was competing in his third UFC fight.

In that first fight, the betting line on Tybura closed -125. It took Tybura all of his cardio, guile, and experience to win that fight over the younger, more energetic but less experienced Spivak.

Since then, each has won the fights they should have while dropping marquee opportunities to athletes well more gifted than they when it comes to heavyweight MMA weaponry and tactics.

Flash forward four years and Tybura, who is now even more experienced at thirty-seven stands ready to defend his eighth rank in the division against old foe Spivak who happens to be ranked 9th.

In a small cage, large lumbering men with ill intent will offer excitement in the initial stages of this fight but after six minutes or so this one could turn into a ‘slow dance at the high school prom’.

These two mammoth heavyweights are neither dynamic physically or to be honest athletically. What we’ll witness after the first six to seven minutes will be groping, mauling, and maneuvering within the small cage once the crispness of each fighter’s strikes has dulled.

When this fight is completed, it’s my position that Sergei Spivak will earn a decision victory in a battle that will mean much to both the victor and the defeated but little else to anyone but we investors.

I sense revenge.

Spivak -145

Total in this fight: 3.5Rds Under -130

Lean over.

Jose Mariscal -210 vs. Damon Jackson +180 Featherweight (145lbs.)

This new co main event will be a tremendous clash of styles as a short sawed-off Mariscal looks to incapacitate the crafty, beguiling submission artist Jackson.

Jackson is the grizzled veteran who will stand four inches taller than Mariscal, he’ll hold a two-inch arm reach advantage to go with his four-inch leg reach edge which in past fights has allowed him to use those thin appendages to clasp onto necks, head, arms, and legs.

Jackson earned victory in his last fight against Alex Hernadez and showed vastly improved striking but dropped his two previous bouts to Dan Ige and Billy Quarantillo, respectively. He works behind a decent jab, gut wrenching teep kicks and forward pressure when the war goes his way.

In Chepe Mariscal we have a human chain saw.

Chepe is short, squat, forward pressing and as tempered as an anvil. He forges forward with one intent, to attack the opponent with power strikes/kicks that deliver numbing results.

Chepe ‘makes’ fights but in this battle, I believe we’ll see him approach Jackson with initial caution as he must not force his way into a lack of submission awareness while working to engage.

Jackson’s going to have to employ a stiff jab to both neutralize Chape’s inward press as well maintain distance for his elbows and knees to catch the maniacal Mariscal on entry.

Entry is the key to this fight for ultimately ‘Chepe’ wants to be inside lobbing power bombs at Jackson and Jackson may well want Chepe working into him for the submission come far easier with a forceful foe.

Jackson’s length, experience and level of competition faced provide him a great opportunity to turn back Mariscal in this fight but he’ll need to overcome a couple rounds of pure ferocity if he is to do it unless he can find the aggressive strikers neck while the fight is early and the skin dry.

Mariscal’s momentum from three straight wins over bona fide UFC competition combined with his compact frame, extreme aggression, forward pressure, granite chin and profuse power force me to believe that a Chepe, a man that has never been submitted could make this four in a row in the UFC.

Total in this fight: 2.5 Rds. Over -125

Danny Barlow -340 vs. Nicolay Verretennikov +285 Welterweight (170lbs.)

Barlow is young, fast, powerful and on the ascent despite the fact that he’s yet to be really tested in the UFC.

Short notice replacement fighter Verretennikov arrives with few credentials except for the fact that he’s won a couple of fights and was available to replace Uros Medic on very short notice.

Verretennikov is a durable, tough methodical finisher who will look to make a name for himself at this late stage of a fighting career.

In this fight we have the big name that needs to look dominant, but will the short notice replacement be game for the upset, a solid showing, or a beating?

Total in this fight: 1.5 Rds. Over -210.

This total is based on what Barlow is expected to do. It’s my take that Verretennikov is much more durable than one and a half rounds.

My final releases for this week’s UFC LV95 will be available Friday mid-day PT at GambLou.com

Thank you for reading and enjoy the fights this week.

GambLou.com

It’s Business!

 

UFC FN Abu Dhabi Sandhagen vs. Nurmagomedov: Hand Jai

This week the UFC road trips from Manchester, England to Abu Dhabi in the Arab Emirates to present UFC FN Abu Dhabi: Sandhagen vs. Nurmagomedov.

This card has thirteen fights slated with preliminary action starting at 9am PT in the states with the main card dropping at noon PT.

As with last week, it is foundational to understand which athletes are of Muslim belief and are from that geographical region and yes, they’ll be using the larger 30’ octagon this week.

Last week we split wagers, but the Belal Muhammad +215 wager pushes this year’s profitability to: 18-16 +6.72u.

Let’s address Abu Dhabi.

Cory Sandhagen +250 against Umar Nurmagomedov -290 Bantamweight (135lbs.) main event

Second ranked Cory Sandhagen is a world class mixed martial artist.

He’s a fleet footed, agile moving striker who uses his physical stature and brilliant angling to tatter opponents with his striking while befuddling them with his evasive strike defense. Sandhagen is an apt wrestler and as a brown belt in BJJ he can more than hold his own rolling on the rug.

Sandhagen has been in against the elite of the division, he’s thirty-two years old so just in his prime, as well he’s three inches taller than his opponent and holds leg and arm reach advantages.

Sandhagen has a positive significant strike ratio and averages better than 1.3 take downs per fifteen minutes. He can dominate fights wherever they transition. Sandhagen is legitimate top three in this division based on everything he has displayed to date.

Nurmagomedov is the tenth ranked bantamweight, yet he comes into this fight an almost -300 favorite.

Despite the experience and physical advantages, he is giving away to Sandhagen, Nurmagomedov has an obtuse strike differential on the feet and impressive grappling/takedown acumen working for him coming into this bout. Umar is the marquee man for this production so understand the crowd is his and they’ll be pulling for their compatriots all night long.

Sandhagen faced a more pedigreed, complete set of adversaries so he is surely prepared for this challenge and in fact asked for Umar.

For Nurmagomedov this is a substantial step up in class, but one he has been asking for, Sandhagen just happened to be one of very few ranked bantamweights willing to clash in the cage with Umar.

This will be a tightly contested fight between two skilled professionals fighting in the large cage in Abu Dhabi.

It’s my judgement that Nurmagomedov’s skills will make this fight appear to be similar in style, competition and outcome to the interim bantamweight title bout Sandhagen and Petr Yan competed in late in 2021. In that fight, Yan was able to use his deft boxing and forward pressure to keep the fight standing while pressing Sandhagen backwards.

Surely the Nurmagomedov camp has scrutinized film of this fight closely in order to glean any/every advantage to help him overcome the experience, movement, and size advantages that Sandhagen carries to the cage.

I’ll want the remainder of the week to watch this line mature.

Total in this fight: 3.5Rds Over -195

Shara Magomedov -250 vs. Michael Oleksiejczuk +210 Middleweight co main event

Michael O is a polish power puncher who is mean, aggressive, and willing to fight anyone, anywhere. It just so happens that Michael O’s striking/boxing is world class and those willing to compete on the feet with him give him every opportunity to earn victory often in impressive fashion.

However, Michal O has little wrestling/BJJ aptitude and therefore is often found drowning in fights where he is pitted against highly decorated grapplers or world class wrestlers.

In Shara Magomedov we have the epitome of a fighter to fade as he is deliberate on the feet, slow and telegraphing with his strikes yet a solid grappler/wrestler…

The way to make Shara shine is to feed him a singularly dimensioned striker from across the world, which is exactly what the UFC has done.

Once this fight starts Michael O will display a certain willingness to ‘get it on’ and he’ll light Magomedov up on the feet only so long as it takes the Dagestani grappler to decide to maul Michael O all over the mat.

Michael O knows exactly what’s coming and should he be able to keep this on the feet he has every chance to finish Magomedov but if this fight transitions to the mat, then Mikael O will drown.

Total in this fight: 1.5Rds Over -140

Mackenzie Dern -120 vs. Lupita Godinez +100 woman’s strawweight (115lbs.)

Godinez is a Mexican striker/wrestler who has deft boxing skill, a granite chin athletic movement and great cardio. Ranked tenth currently, Godinez has steadily risen up the division until her last bout a loss to Virna Jandiroba, an elite who is soon to be tussling for a title fight.

Godinez is exceedingly small in stature, but she is immense when it comes to toughness, belief and durability and she’ll enter this fight looking to get back into the win column by taking her opponent’s seventh ranked position away from her.

Seventh ranked MacKenzie Dern enters this fight a highly disrespected athlete based on my assessment of this line. At open she was -175 which seemed an accurate depiction of this fight.

Soon after opening however Godinez money poured in taking this line well closer to a pick-em.

Godinez has the mind, the heart, the durability, and the willingness to continue to rise up the ranks but she showed in her loss to Jandiroba that elite world class BJJ can cause her issue.

Dern enters this fight as the loser of three of her last four fights but returns to coach Jason Parillo under who Dern’s striking has evolved considerably.

Dern is the highest ranked most decorated BJJ artist of the division. Her championship pedigree from those BJJ tournaments, the level of UFC competition she has faced along with her improved striking together force me to regard Dern as the rightful favorite in this fight, a fight where she deserves to be priced more like she was at the opening bell as opposed to where she is priced currently.

Dern -120

Total in this fight: 2.5Rds Over -238

Dern via submission is also an avenue I would consider once those prices are available.

Friday the ‘Bout Business podcast drops at GambLou.com. Go there to access all of my final releases for this UFC FN Abu Dhabi event.

Thank you for reading and enjoy the hostilities!

GambLou.com

It’s Business!