Lightweights
#10 LW | Renato “Money” Moicano (20-5-1, 12-5 UFC) vs. #9 LW | Beneil Dariush (22-6-1, 16-6-1 UFC)ODDS: Moicano (-175), Dariush (+145)
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Dariush also came to the UFC in 2014 as a prospect with all the talent in the world, and he both lived up to that hype and greatly disappointed during his first half a decade on the roster. In a lot of his fights, Dariush looked like one of the sharpest competitors in the UFC, marrying knockout power and elite grappling skills with a pressure-heavy game that mixed both aggression and technique. Whenever Dariush lost, it typically exposed a fatal flaw of his simply not having the durability to get away with that style against better athletes. His 2017 defeat to Edson Barboza was a particularly stark example of Dariush cruising to an impressive victory up until the point that the former Ring of Combat champion suddenly knocked him unconscious. Once Dariush got run over by then-newcomer Alexander Hernandez in 2018, his championship window seemed to be closed—a thought that persisted even as he rebounded and kept racking up victories. However, around the time of his 2020 win over Drakkar Klose, something in Dariush’s mental makeup changed. He would get stunned, but rather than it resulting in a sudden knockout, it instead seemed to prompt Dariush to embrace a more violent style, selling out on offense and eventually finding a finish. Dariush was the lightweight division’s dark horse contender by the end of 2022, only for that all to come crashing down in 2023, as he got finished within a round by both Charles Oliveira and Arman Tsarukyan, though he did find some success in the former fight. That probably means he will settle in as a gatekeeper to the elite going forward, which is his role against a suddenly surging Moicano in a fight that’s hard to call. For most of his career, Moicano has typically only pivoted to wrestling once his striking success stalls out, but his last few fights have seen him cut out the risks of that approach and go right for the takedown, which has helped establish some advantages right from the jump. Even so, it’s unclear how well that initial plan will go against a standout wrestler and grappler like Dariush. It doesn’t seem likely to work, but then again, this doesn’t get much easier to call as a pure striking match. Moicano typically does the better job of setting a range—up until the point that he gets cracked—but it’s unclear how well he’ll be able to turn back a pressure game that’s both as dedicated and thoughtful as Dariush’s can be. At the same time, the Brazilian could wind up fine in a war of attrition, as while both men are historically chinny, Dariush is the only one who has gotten outright knocked out in recent years. At the end of the day, Moicano seems like the more reliant of the two on a ground game that might not be there for either man, and Dariush figures to hit the harder shots. The pick is Dariush via decision.
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Makhachev vs. Tsarukyan
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Moicano vs. Dariush
de Ridder vs. Holland
The Prelims
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