Bantamweights
#4 BW | Petr Yan (16-5, 8-4 UFC) vs. #7 BW | Yadong Song (21-7-1, 10-2-1 UFC)ODDS: Yan (-115), Song (-105)
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Song has the type of elite physical ability that seems guaranteed to make him a title contender at some point. It is just a matter of when things finally fully click for the Chinese prospect. Song was a bit lost in the shuffle ahead of his UFC debut, as he was part of a glut of Chinese talent signed ahead of a Shanghai card in 2017, but a brutal knockout of Bharat Kandare announced the then-19-year-old as someone to watch. Song was then featured on a few of the UFC’s Asian cards for the next year and change, where he further established himself as a power puncher. However, his stateside debut against Alejandro Perez served as his true breakout. Faced with an effective veteran with a knack for neutralizing his opponents, Song quickly scored one of the most brutal knockouts of 2019. With his subsequent steps up in competition, Song’s strengths and weaknesses have clearly been on display. He can go toe-to-toe with anyone in a straightforward striking match—his 2020 decision victory over Marlon Vera has aged particularly well—but he is quite prone to getting outmaneuvered, even while consistently remaining dangerous. Cody Stamann was able to outwrestle Song enough to earn a draw on the scorecards, while Sandhagen and Kyler Phillips each found success by staying fast and out-quicking Song’s relatively planted and powerful style. That does seem to require an elite level of athleticism to pull off against Song, at least to a winning degree. Ricky Simon and Chris Gutierrez had some of those ideas, and while they were each able to frustrate Song at times, they still suffered enough attritional damage in the process that Simon got knocked out and Gutierrez imploded by the fifth round. Song’s approach is straightforward enough that he figures to take his lumps against the bantamweight elite, but his success does feel inevitable. He is improving around the edges every few fights and has the elite athleticism to have an extended prime while he figures things out. This does make for an interesting pairing since Yan’s own approach figures to have him in close range against such a dangerous power puncher, but the bet is that the Russian’s diversity of offense allows him to stay ahead in a tough fight; and if all else fails, the former champion has his wrestling in his back pocket. The pick is Yan via decision.
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