Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lawler weary of fight-of-night thrillers

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entertaini­ng bout of the year.

After knocking out Jake Ellenberge­r, Lawler won a unanimous decision in a fight-of-the-night performanc­e over Matt Brown to set up a rematch with Hendricks for the title.

Lawler became champion with a split decision win in December 2014. He has successful­ly defended the title twice, though it hasn’t been easy.

He knocked out Rory MacDonald in his first title defense, but it came in the fifth round of a back-andforth bout that was named the top fight of 2015.

A split decision win over Carlos Condit in January was just as grueling.

While Lawler hopes to have a shorter night Saturday, he knows Woodley, a two-time NCAA All-America wrestler at Missouri, presents a unique challenge.

“Obviously he brings a lot to the table: (particular­ly) speed and his wrestling ability,” Lawler said. “So I have to listen to my coaches. They’ve done a good job of putting me in situations that I need to be in to be prepared for this fight, so we’ve been working and trying to get better every day.”

His coaches should have pretty strong insight on Woodley. While Lawler has downplayed the significan­ce of the few training sessions they have had together, they are technicall­y teammates at American Top Team.

Woodley decided to take his training camp on the road, preparing for the title fight at several gyms and allowing Lawler to remain at home in Florida.

“Robbie was the first guy that brought home UFC gold from the American Top Team,” Woodley said. “It just feels like the right thing to do to give him the home-court advantage, to train 100 percent there and make things as profession­al as possible.”

Woodley, 34, had one previous shot at a belt. He suffered his first career loss when he was knocked out by Nate Marquardt in a Strikeforc­e bout in 2012.

He thinks he will deliver a much better performanc­e this time.

“The difference between me then and me now is that I’m putting everything together,” Woodley said. “You guys have seen the submission games, you’ve seen the wrestling game, you’ve seen the striking game. Over time, I just matured as a fighter, and it’s my time to seize it. I’m putting everything together, and I’m ready to take off.”

He might have to overcome a bit of rust. Woodley became the top contender with a split decision win over Kelvin Gastelum in January 2015 but has not fought since. He was supposed to fight Hendricks in October, but Hendricks pulled out the day before the fight because of complicati­ons during the weight-cutting process.

Also on the card, Rose Namajunas has a chance to earn her first title shot when she fights fellow strawweigh­t contender Karolina Kowalkiewi­cz.

A main-card flyweight bout between Ian McCall and Justin Scoggins was called off after Scoggins ran into difficulty cutting weight Thursday night and was forced to withdraw. The pay-per-view portion of the card now will be led by a flyweight bout between Ryan Benoit and Fredy Serrano at 7 p.m.

The preliminar­y card airs on Fox Sports 2 at 5 p.m. Contact reporter Adam Hill at ahill@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-224-5509. Follow @adamhilllv­rj on Twitter.

 ?? CHASE STEVENS/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FOLLOW @CSSTEVENSP­HOTO ?? Robbie Lawler, left, trades jabs with Rory MacDonald during their welterweig­ht title bout at UFC 189 at the MGM Grand Garden on July 11, 2015. Lawler won by technical knockout in the fifth round, and the fight was voted as the best of the year.
CHASE STEVENS/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FOLLOW @CSSTEVENSP­HOTO Robbie Lawler, left, trades jabs with Rory MacDonald during their welterweig­ht title bout at UFC 189 at the MGM Grand Garden on July 11, 2015. Lawler won by technical knockout in the fifth round, and the fight was voted as the best of the year.

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