Kuwait Times

Tyron Woodley chooses smarts over slugfest, keeps UFC belt

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Tyron Woodley understood the booing that thoroughly drowned out his words when he spoke to the fans following his tactical victory over Stephen Thompson at UFC 209.

“I know this is a sport where you guys love to see knockouts,” Woodley said. “You guys love to see the gore. You love to see the blood, guys getting beat up, and then they find a way to come back. I love watching it as well.

“But guess what? I love being the world champion, and sometimes it’s not the sexiest fight on Earth.” The 34-yearold UFC welterweig­ht champ simply felt he couldn’t risk his belt or his livelihood in another emotional brawl with Thompson, the unpredicta­ble karate fighter who nearly finished him four months ago in their wild first bout in New York. Thompson exercised the same caution in their Vegas rematch, and Woodley eked out a cerebral, largely action-free victory that left both fighters thinking they had won.

It also left many fans wishing they hadn’t paid to watch a chess match in a cage. “I would say a stalemate is probably the proper term,” Woodley said. Woodley (17-3-1) and Thompson (13-2- 1) had the same solution to a common dilemma for high-profile mixed martial artists and boxers in big bouts: They can either fight intelligen­tly, or they can entertain the fans who come to see blood. Georges St. Pierre and Floyd Mayweather Jr. became stars without becoming brawlers, but most fighters don’t have the athleticis­m or the personalit­y to reach big paydays and worldwide recognitio­n without going a bit wild. By the time the T-Mobile Arena crowd chanted “Fight! Fight! Fight!” out of desperatio­n in the fifth round, Woodley and Thompson had made their preference­s clear - for this difficult matchup, at least.

The first two rounds had zero significan­t action as two talented counterpun­chers circled and waited to capitalize when the other threw a lazy, obvious strike. It never happened.

“I didn’t realize he was going to be as hesitant in this one,” Thompson said. “He was backing up a lot. I knew he was waiting for me to come in. You want to go out there and get a spectacula­r knockout, but when you get in there, it’s a different feel. I think only fighters can understand that.” Indeed, Woodley didn’t make UFC 209 boring by himself: Thompson fought the same tactical fight, showing little of his usual creativity in attack. They landed only a combined 136 total strikes over five rounds.

By contrast, co-main event fighters David Teymur and Lando Vannata landed 174 strikes in their three-round slugfest, earning $50,000 Fight of the Night bonuses.

The final 35 seconds of the fifth round contained essentiall­y all of the main event’s thrills: Woodley dropped Thompson with a straight right hand and pummeled him on the ground.—AP

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