Tom Aspinall. UFC 321. This is your moment.
Even when Jon Jones was parading around as the βundisputedβ champion, his inactivity and insistence on defending the title against an aged and even more inactive Stipe Miocic left the door open for Aspinall to be considered the true heavyweight king after he defeated Sergei Pavlovich for an interim belt at UFC 295 (a bout that was put together due to Jones-Miocic being postponed). Our rankings panel at MMA Fighting was quick to embrace Aspinall as the true No. 1 in his division, but it wasnβt until Jones retired this past June that the UFC officially followed suit.
Now, Aspinall finally bears the undisputed mantle and he has to prove once again he deserves it when he takes on Ciryl Gane in Saturdayβs main event. Gane, also a former interim champion, has twice had the chance to claim sole ownership of the UFC heavyweight title and twice he has fallen short. He has nothing to lose and would delight at least one fight fan to no end if he upsets Aspinall.
In the UFC 321 co-main event, Virna Jandiroba and Mackenzie Dern battle in a rematch to become the next strawweight champion. Pound-for-pound great Zhang Weili left the division to take on flyweight champion Valentina Shevchenko at UFC 322, giving two top contenders the opportunity to join the hallowed list of UFC titleholders. Will it be the streaking Jandiroba or the perpetually promising Dern that ends their long-awaited hunt for gold?
Also on the main card, Umar Nurmagomedov and Mario Bautista clash in a potential No. 1 bantamweight contender bout, Alexander Volkov and Jailton Almeida do the same at heavyweight, and light heavyweight veteran Aleksandar Rakic looks to break a slump when he faces the undefeated Azamat Murzakanov.
Where: Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi
When: Saturday, Oct. 25. The eight-fight early preliminary card begins at 10 a.m. ET on ESPN+, Disney+, and FX. The five-fight main card begins at 2 p.m. ET exclusively on ESPN+ pay-per-view.
(Numbers in parentheses indicate standing in the MMA Fighting Global Rankings and Pound-for-Pound Rankings)
Tom Aspinall vs. Ciryl Gane
To coin a clichΓ©, this is Tom Aspinallβs fight to lose.
Aspinall and Ciryl Gane have been in each otherβs orbit for some time, well before Aspinall claimed any form of UFC title. And you know what I thought of the matchup back then? Aspinall is going to tackle Gane and submit him or beat him with ground-and-pound. That prediction has not changed.
Credit to Gane, who has clearly worked to level up his grappling as evidenced in his controversial split decision win over Alexander Volkov. Itβs still an imperfect set of tools, but heβs at least trying to avoid getting bulldozed again like when he fought Jon Jones. That said, I canβt imagine heβs reached the point where his wrestling defense is enough to stop Aspinall.
Even taking into account Ganeβs superb athleticism and agility, Aspinall can match him in that department, at least enough to cut off the cage and find angles to latch on to Gane and put him on the mat. From there, it will be just like the Jones fight. Maybe worse.
Puncherβs chance and all that, and Gane has a knack for making life difficult for his opponents (again, anyone not named Jon Jones), but even if it takes a couple of rounds or three for Aspinall to catch him, heβs going to catch him. Then itβs over.
Virna Jandiroba vs. Mackenzie Dern
Rematches can often be drastically different from the first encounter and given that Virna Jandiroba and Mackenzie Dernβs first fight was almost five years ago, thereβs reason to believe thatβs likely the case with Saturdayβs co-main event. Iβm not convinced.
Back at UFC 256, Jandiroba and Dern competed primarily on the feet as their extensive grappling pedigrees canceled each other out. I expect the same here, because even though Jandiroba is far superior at getting takedowns, Dern has no issue fighting off of her back and Iβll be amazed if Jandiroba can out-muscle her on the mat. Quite clearly, Dern is in the best shape of her life, and she already had a considerable athleticism advantage over Jandiroba the first time.
So there will be plenty of striking in this one, as well as some grueling sequences with the fighters pressed against the fence and jockeying for position. Takedowns will come and I look forward to some exquisite scrambles, but neither fighter should be able to submit the other. I mean, can you imagine?
So give me Dern in a competitive standup contest, with her speed and power allowing her to win the majority of the exchanges andβ¦
Mackenzie Dern is about to become a UFC champion???
Umar Nurmagomedov vs. Mario Bautista
Full disclosure (and this is no secret to anyone whoβs kept up with my takes): Iβm an Umar Nurmagomedov backer all the way. I picked him to beat Merab Dvalishvili (wrong!) and Iβll pick him to beat Merab Dvalishvili again if they rematch (weβll see!).
So how can I pick against him here?
Truthfully, were it not for my dogged belief in Nurmagomedov, Iβd be nervous for him. Nitpick Mario Bautistaβs eight-fight win streak all you want, the man finds a way to win fights. That sounds simplistic, but when weβre talking about the often finicky judgesβ scorecards, thatβs an actual skill. An art, even.
Just as importantly, Bautista makes his opponents look bad. He has a gift for forcing his opponents to take the path of most resistance and while that can lead to some ugly decisions, theyβre decisions that frequently go in Bautistaβs favor. Dana White has challenged Nurmagomedov to put on a show if he wants another title shot and Iβm not even sure thatβs possible against Bautista.
Best case scenario, Nurmagomedov gets to display some of his high-level striking, but also focuses on taking Bautista down early and often. Bautista hasnβt dealt with a wrestler of Nurmagomedovβs prowessβ¦ ever? And I donβt see him stopping takedowns if thatβs the focus of Nurmagomedovβs game plan.
You know what? Iβm going out on a limb here and predicting Nurmagomedov wows the boss, scoring a submission late in Round 1.
Alexander Volkov vs. Jailton Almeida
What I just said about Nurmagomedov might go double for Jailton Almeida. This man will be heavyweight champion someday.
Almeidaβs dreary five-round win over Derrick Lewis and subsequent letdown loss to Curtis Blaydes did majorβbut not irreparable!βdamage to his contender case, but heβs bounced back nicely doing what he does best: taking people down and finishing them fast. His past two wins over Serghei Spivac and Alexandr Romanov both ended in the first round.
Alexander Volkov is several notches above that level of opposition. He did enough to beat Gane and arguably should be in Saturdayβs main event, but instead heβs playing gatekeeper to the top 5 against one of the most dangerous fighters in the division. Thatβs nothing new for the towering Volkov, who has spoiled many a contenders rise to the top.
Based on his majestic mane alone, itβs tempting to pick Volkov. You can see him replicating what Blaydes did to beat Almeida, stuffing the Brazilianβs signature takedown against the fence and battering him with elbows. But Volkov isnβt Blaydes when it comes to takedown defense and even Blaydes was put on his back and at first before finding the win in Round 2. If Volkov ends up in the same kind of trouble, heβs going to have trouble recovering.
I have concerns about Almeidaβs cardio as heβs rarely fought past the first round and the one time he did in the UFC, it was against Lewis in a bout where Almeida was in complete control for 25 minutes. Volkov has so much more experience, that could be the difference in the final frame.
With that in mind, Iβm still picking Almeida to snatch up those giraffe legs early, put Volkov on his back, and finish in Round 1.
Aleksandar Rakic vs. Azamat Murzakanov
Iβd love to see a back-and-forth battle here, but I have a feeling this is going to be one-way traffic one way or another.
If itβs Aleksandar Rakic who gets the win, it will be because heβs had a much stronger strength of schedule than Murzakanov. No, Rakic hasnβt won a fight since 2021, with much of his time lost to injury. But heβs also been in there with the best of the best, suffering consecutive losses to Magomed Ankalaev, Jiri Prochazka, and Jan Blachowicz (who he suffered a knee injury against). Those are three UFC light heavyweight champions, folks.
Who is Azamat Murzakanovβs best UFC opponent? Alonzo Menifield? Dustin Jacoby? Solid names, but they definitely donβt compare to who Rakic has had to deal with.
So this is either going to be the younger and yet more battle tested Rakic showing Murzakanov there are levels to this game and picking him apart before possibly finishing late, or Murzakanov just running through the slumping Rakic. Iβve bought in to the Murzakanov hype, so Iβm sticking to that.
Murzakanov by first-round knockout.
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Ikram Aliskerov def. Jun Yong Park
Mateusz Rebecki def. Ludovit Klein
Valter Walker def. Louie Sutherland
Nathaniel Wood def. Jose Miguel Delgado
Chris Barnett def. Hamdy Abdelwahab
Azat Maksum def. Mitch Raposo
Jaqueline Amorim def. Mizuki Inoue