Middleweights
Chris Weidman (16-7, 12-7 UFC) vs. Eryk Anders (16-8, 8-8 UFC)ODDS: Weidman (-115), Anders (-105)
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Anders announced himself as a prospect to watch back in 2017, when he debuted with a knockout win over steady veteran Rafael Natal. However, that just led to the UFC throwing “Ya Boi” into a level of competition that was over his head. As a former standout linebacker for the University of Alabama, the promotion was obviously hoping that Anders’ built-in fanbase would buoy him to a certain level of stardom. Instead, Anders put in game efforts but was unable to score wins in main events against Lyoto Machida and Thiago Santos, and having now been established as a headliner, he suffered a few more losses until the UFC matched him at a more appropriate level. The good news is that about half a decade later, Anders has finally come out the other side of his development as a solid if not particularly exciting fighter, turning what was once a fairly static game into one with some combination punching buoyed by his considerable physicality. A hard-fought loss to Marc-Andre Barriault in a surprisingly fun fight raised some hopes that Anders could be turning the corner into a full-on pace fighter, but after a fairly workmanlike win over Jamie Pickett in March, it seems like he will officially settle in as a sharper version of the physical monolith he has been for most of his career. Weidman could just win an ugly wrestling match, but Anders should be sound and capable enough to neutralize most of those efforts; and if he’s not the harder hitter, he should at least be able to absorb punishment better than the former middleweight champion at this point. The pick is Anders via decision.
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