New York Post

Underdog Brunson is a good buy at the 'maul'

- By LOU FINOCCHIAR­O

Saturday night’s UFC main event in Las Vegas features an intriguing matchup between the No. 7 middleweig­ht contender, Derek Brunson (+145 at BetMGM), and No. 10 Kevin Holland (-175).

Holland arrives with an impressive body of work and brimming with confidence. After making a mistake and getting submitted against Brendan Allen in 2019 Holland has gone on to win five straight bouts. Decorated with a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and a second-degree black belt in kung fu. Holland is a devastatin­g striker who has finished four of those last five opponents via KO or TKO, which is not to overlook his sound grappling ability.

Holland is a couple of inches taller than Brunson, he’s nine years younger and he’ll own a four-inch reach advantage in this fight. Surely it is Hollands’s plan to keep this confrontat­ion standing and use his arm and leg strikes to batter Brunson.

Brunson, 37, comes in as the undervalue­d combatant. He has faced a far superior level of competitio­n than has Holland but he’ll need to deal with Holland’s speed, skill and willingnes­s to take risks. Brunson’s himself decorated with a brown belt in Brazlian jiu-jitsu, which supplement­s his Division II NCAA wrestling pedigree.

Since setbacks to Jacare Souza and current champion Israel Adesanya in 2019, Brunson has won three straight bouts against Ian Heinisch, Elias Theodorou and Edmund Shabazyan. The Shabazyan win was an epic display a young, game fighter with momentum waltzing into an absolute whuppin’. Will Brunson yet again award another young hyped athlete his Ph.D in MMA?

I see Holland using speed, quickness, and legwork to keep Brunson on the outside. Fluid movement is mandatory in allowing Holland to blister the incoming Brunson with precision striking, and Holland has the ability to finish in one shot or from a barrage.

Brunson must persevere and pressure through the opening rounds when Holland’s flash and fluidity are keenest. He must work to eliminate the dancer’s space and maul Holland into the fence then onto the floor in an attempt to make this fight ugly, dirty and most importantl­y lengthy.

Brunson’s change of fight camps to Sanford MMA some three fights back has reinvigora­ted the fighter with a renewed focus, and for this reason, I believe he is a solid choice in an underdog position.

Gregor Gillespie (-250) vs. Brad Riddell (+200), lightweigh­ts

Gillespie’s last fight was a devastatin­g KO via head kick by Kevin Lee in November 2019. He’s taken the appropriat­e time off to not only recover and prepare for this opportunit­y, but I believe he has used that result as motivation to quit trying to put on a show and get back to his basics, which happen to be boring, old wrestling.

Gillespie is best when he pressures, crowds, mauls, and clasps his way into engagement with opponents to scrape them against the cage then transition to drubbing them from top position on the mat. He arrives prepared to wrestle and he should be a worthy favorite against an athlete who will have limited time and only one way to win this fight: KO or TKO.

Gillespie opened -150 and his price has risen based on his pedigree in a classic striker versus grappler matchup. Betting recommenda­tion: Gillespie parlayed with Grant Dawson on the undercard.

Lou Finocchiar­o handicaps MMA for Point Spread Weekly, VSiN’s digital magazine for sports bettors.

 ??  ?? RUFF & TUMBLE: Derek Brunson takes down Elias Theodorou in May 2019, part of the three-fight winning streak he carries into Saturday night’s UFC main event.
RUFF & TUMBLE: Derek Brunson takes down Elias Theodorou in May 2019, part of the three-fight winning streak he carries into Saturday night’s UFC main event.

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