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Pettis vs. Melendez
Anthony Pettis has not fought in more than a year. | Photo: Jeff
Sherwood/Sherdog.com
UFC LIGHTWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP
Anthony Pettis (17-2, 4-1 UFC) vs. Gilbert Melendez (22-3, 1-1 UFC)THE MATCHUP: Long-lost lightweight champion Pettis returns to action to face challenger Melendez. Pettis, the former World Extreme Cagefighting champion, has rattled off four straight wins since dropping a grinding decision to Clay Guida in his UFC debut, with the most recent victory a dominating submission over Benson Henderson to capture the belt. Melendez was the longtime Strikeforce lightweight champion, and his only loss in the last six years was a razor-thin decision to the aforementioned Henderson. This is one of the best fights that can be made in a stacked division, and we should be really, really excited for it.
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The challenger, on the other hand, uses a far more meat-and-potatoes game based on clean, efficient angles and movement on the feet. Melendez is a talented, powerful boxer who really turns over his hip into his shots, keeps his feet under him when he throws and strings together lovely combinations both moving forward and on the counter. He mixes it up to the body and the head and throws the occasional kick to catch opponents as they slip to the side or attempt to roll under his hooks and overhands. As good as he is at range, Melendez is also a strong infighter who excels at delivering punches, knees and elbows in transition and in extended clinch grappling situations. His wrestling is proficient if not outstanding; while he lacks an explosive shot, he chain wrestles beautifully on the inside and scrambles well. From top position, he can drop absolute bombs and keeps a heavy base while doing so.
BETTING ODDS: Pettis (-220), Melendez (+180)
THE PICK: The betting odds accurately capture the two glaring problems that make this a difficult matchup for Melendez. First, Pettis tends to operate at long range, where the challenger has few consistently effective weapons. Second, Melendez, like Pettis, generally prefers to operate in the center of the cage and does not consistently pressure his opponents. A fight that takes place in the middle makes it much easier for Pettis to keep his distance and uncork his kicking game without having to worry too much about getting pushed up against the fence and grinded down for minutes at a time. While Melendez excels at both catching and countering kicks, I think Pettis’ speed and range advantages will be the difference in a competitive, back-and-forth fight. Pettis by decision is the pick.
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