Beating the Odds: UFC 214
Perhaps now the rest of the Ultimate Fighting Championship light heavyweight division will view Volkan Oezdemir in a more serious light.
Oezdemir authored his third consecutive upset -- he was listed as a +162 underdog, per BetDSI.com -- at UFC 214 on Saturday, when he wiped out Jimi Manuwa in less than a minute at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California. Manuwa (-200) bit the dust 42 seconds into the first round, joining Ovince St. Preux and Misha Cirkunov on the surging Swiss star’s scrap heap.
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“It was a matchup of two really strong strikers with knockout power,” Oezdemir said. “We both go for the kill. Of course, it’s going to be explosive and really fast. I know I’ve got power. I think I showed in my last two fights that with a full camp I’m unstoppable.”
Operating out of the Combat Club gym fronted by Henri Hooft,
Oezdemir finds himself on a five-fight winning streak and sees
himself as the No. 1 contender for light heavyweight champion
Jon
Jones.
“I think I proved that,” he said. “[Manuwa] was supposed to be fighting for the belt next, so my goal is to go for the belt right away. I want to be the fastest-rising guy for the belt.”
Manuwa was not the only favorite to fall, as Renan Barao (-142), Renato Carneiro (-175) and Andre Fili (-346) all failed to meet expectations.
A former bantamweight champion who has seen his better days, Barao was victimized in a unanimous decision loss to Serra-Longo Fight Team upstart Aljamain Sterling. Two of the three cageside judges awarded a 10-8 round to Sterling (+111), who swept the scorecards with 29-28, 29-27 and 30-26 marks.
“I think once your pegged as one of the greats in this sport and you run into a guy who really doesn’t have much of a resume with standup and all this stuff, it might look like you got a cakewalk fight,” said Sterling, a onetime Cage Fury Fighting Championships titleholder who has rattled off back-to-back victories since his split decision defeat to Raphael Assuncao in January. “I think he realized tonight [that] I’m no cakewalk for anybody.”
Meanwhile, Carneiro crashed and burned in his first professional setback, as he submitted to a third-round guillotine choke from former Resurrection Fighting Alliance champion Brian Ortega. The Brazilian conceded defeat 2:59 into Round 3, an ill-conceived takedown attempt having led to his demise. Ortega (+135) has finished each of his last four opponents -- Carneiro, Clay Guida, Diego Brandao and Thiago Tavares -- in the third round.
Finally, promotional newcomer Calvin Kattar leapfrogged Fili in the featherweight pecking order and pocketed a unanimous decision in a three-round undercard battle at 145 pounds. All three cageside judges scored it 30-27 for Kattar (+296), a Team Sityodtong export who has recorded nine straight wins.
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