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Movsar Evloev swipes majority verdict over Lerone Murphy in UFC London main event


By hook or by crook, Movsar Evloev is now the last man standing.

Posting a clean 20 wins opposite zero defeats, with 10 of those coming inside the Octagon—all 10 by decision—Evloev (20-0, 10-0 UFC) kept his unblemished record intact by spoiling Lerone Murphy’s (17-1-1, 9-1-1 UFC). The two engaged in a competitive bout where judges and scoring media members largely diverged in their assessments. The Russian likely cemented his place for a crack at Alexander Volkanovski’s throne in their Ultimate Fighting Championship’s de facto featherweight title eliminator.

The UFC Fight Night 270 fight card, one where the betting line for the headliner to go to decision closed at -250 on some books, ended up needing its entirety to play out. As if he wished to prove a point—or perhaps out of fear of the UFC’s recent stance of cutting successful smothering grapplers—Evloev came out in the first round without completing a single takedown. It has been a long time since that happened, and may have ended up working to his advantage. Murphy welcomed this all-striking approach, as the more fluid of the two he appeared to excel early. The Brit comfortably mixed his strikes together to keep Evloev guessing, frequently beating his man to the punch.

After two closer-than-expected rounds, the Russian finally managed to complete a takedown, but he could not keep “The Miracle” down for long after his extended effort. Both top 145ers began committing to their strikes as the third round raged on, with Evloev slashing open Murphy’s left eyebrow with an overhand right. Just when Evloev began gaining momentum, the second groin kick he landed resulted in a point deduction from referee Marc Goddard. Although Murphy struck back with a vengeance, it was Evloev who was empowered to seek the finish and push himself to the limit.

Evloev ended up winning four of five rounds on the judges’ official scorecards—to the surprise of many including the entirety of Sherdog’s virtual scoring team and all other media members who issued their 10’s and 9’s—to lay claim to a contentious decision. The 47-47 draw card from judge Clemens Werner was overruled by Ben Cartlidge and Derek Cleary’s matched offerings of 48-46, awarding the majority call to the Ingushetia, Russia, native. Evloev declared that it was his time to fight for a title, and that nothing more needed to be said. Gracious in defeat, Murphy agreed with him.

Iron-chinned featherweights Luke Riley (13-0, 2-0 UFC) and Michael Aswell (11-4, 1-2 UFC) entered into the UFC London co-main attraction without having suffered a knockout loss, and they ended their night the same. It was not for a lack of trying, however, as the youngsters duked it out for three tense rounds. The undefeated Liverpool native seemed a step ahead during their boxing-heavy tilt, outslugging Aswell each round with superior impact to secure his second win inside the Octagon.

The exchanges between the two resulted in repeated violent collisions like fireworks in the night sky, both fighters connecting flush on the other and not backing down. Just when one would land cleanly, the other would lash back and even the score. Riley maintained a slightly higher work rate, proved the more accurate of the two and had a deeper gas tank to go hard for three rounds. The three judges handed down matching 30-27 scores for the 26-year-old from county of Merseyside in England.

Riley advanced his spotless record to 13 up with zero down, with his finish rate falling beneath 75% for the slick decision win.

The featured welterweight match between former training partners Michael Page (25-3, 4-1 UFC) and Sam Patterson (14-3-1, 4-2 UFC) was frequently summed up by the crowd in three letters: “B-O-O.” The strikers, fully aware of one another’s game, rarely clashed across their dreadful 15-minute engagement and left what little they did to be deciphered by the judges. Those three officials handed in 30-27, 29-28 and 29-28 scores all in favor of the ever-elusive Page, who never was any danger throughout the bout.

Having gone the distance in all five of his UFC outings to date, Page cruised to a comfortable victory where he absorbed little damage and connected with enough to maintain the upper hand across the board. “MVP” forced Patterson to fight off the back foot for the majority of their de facto sparring match, keeping Patterson from committing to anything of merit.

“Venom” prevailed for the third time in a row, amassing his first win streak this length since notching six consecutive triumphs from 2019 to 2021.

To say Iwo Baraniewski (8-0, 2-0 UFC) vs. Austen Lane (13-8, 1 NC; 1-5; 1 NC UFC) was a mismatch would not do the term justice. The undefeated light heavyweight, welcoming the ex-heavyweight down to his division, handled the ex-footballer with style points. While he did not break his own personal record of a 20-second knockout, “Rudy” obliterated the hapless Lane in a whopping 28 seconds.

Unafraid of anything that came his way from the 6-foot-6 striker, Baraniewski meandered into range and unleashed a bomb of a right hand that detonated on the side of Lane’s dome. The Polish slugger put Lane down for the count with a hellacious left hook that landed about as cleanly as one can, and referee Lukasz Bosacki raced towards the athletes to intervene. Bosacki peeled back to allow Baraniewski to pummel his doomed opponent with a few more punctuating right hands while the light flickered out of Lane’s eyes, briefly coming into contact with the fighters before ultimately calling it on account of rain less than 30 seconds in.

Baraniewski clubbed his way into greater heights by securing his eighth first-round finish in his eight pro victories.

Christian Leroy Duncan (14-2, 7-2 UFC) needed all 900 agonizing seconds to surpass an aging, sluggish Roman Dolidze (15-5, 9-5 UFC) in a non-memorable middleweight affair. The local athlete served as a hefty betting favorite north of -350 odds, and he hung on to win courtesy of three matching 29-28 scores on his side.

The Georgian came out with an unorthodox approach, as he attacked with extremely low single-leg entries to latch hold of Duncan’s ankle and trip him up. Dolidze controlled for several minutes without getting much offense going, until Duncan had enough of being on his back and exploded up to his feet. Dolidze authored awkward spinning strikes, and Duncan managed to stave off the subsequent half-hearted leglock attempts.

Dolidze’s body language betrayed him every time he absorbed a flush strike, whether a chopping kick that would draw a wry grin or him slumping to the mat to possibly sandbag the damage and go for a leg. As Dolidze flopped to the mat after taking a heavy shot, he finally managed to get hold of his opponent in the final round. “The Caucasian” finagled a back take as he lightly pummeled Duncan on the sides of his head, not inflicting nearly enough damage to elicit a score that could force a draw. While “CLD” has now won four straight, Dolidze has dropped two in a row to place himself on his second career losing streak.

The UFC London main card commenced with a clash of featherweights on the rise as Liverpool native Kurtis Campbell (8-1, 0-1 UFC) made his highly anticipated debut so special that the UFC approved him to wear pink shorts. That bit of celebrity crashed and burned hard when Danny Silva (11-2, 3-1 UFC), one of the lone Americans on the billing, destroyed him in the second stanza with a seemingly unending stream of ferocious fists.

Campbell started his time with the promotion by introducing fans to his wrestling chops, where he scooped up and set down the Californian a few times as he controlled for a couple minutes. That success proved short-lived, as Silva turned on the jets and started to reverse positions, placing the unbeaten fighter on his back. Silva took no prisoners as the second round began, not about to allow the judges to weigh in.

“Puma” ultimately needed only 31 seconds and a couple of knockdowns to wilt and drum out the Liverpudlian as the second round rolled on. Silva pounds his way back into the win column by recording his first stoppage on the UFC roster, deflating the partisan crowd as all-time great musician Peter Gabriel watched on in the front row.

Continue Reading » UFC London Prelims: Jones, Sola shine in outstanding preliminary scrap

This article first appeared at Recent News on Sherdog.com


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