Career Averages - Cameron Smotherman
Career Averages - Jake Hadley
Cameron Smotherman
Jake Hadley
Cameron Smotherman - Fight History
Play-by-Play
View on SherdogBETTING PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT | ODDS: Asakura (-275); Smotherman (+225)
Round 1
Next up at UFC Macau are a pair of bantamweights who could really use a win, as Asakura (21-6; 0-2 UFC) and Smotherman (12-6; 1-2 UFC) have both underperformed thus far, compared to expectations. For former
Rizin Fighting Federation
star Asakura, it is a return to bantamweight, where his best pre-UFC wins took place anyway. Both men are in orthodox stance when Marc Goddard sends them into battle, and while Smotherman does look a tad larger, Asakura does not look at all like a blown-up flyweight. The early exchanges are cautious, mostly single strikes, with none of the exotic flying attacks that comprise so much of his highlight reel, but his speed advantage is obvious. He splits the guard of Smotherman with a couple of punches that land and hurt, then drops him to a knee with a beautiful switch right hook that wraps around the guard.
Smotherman manages to get back to his feet, but as he staggers back towards the fence, Asakura lands two left hooks. The second one puts Smotherman out completely, face down on the canvas where he remains for a long time.
Absolutely sensational knockout from Kai Asakura.
The Official Result
Kai Asakura def. Cameron Smotherman R1 1:50 via KO (Punches)
AJ picks Asakura, believing he will be reinvigorated at bantamweight after struggling with the cut to flyweight. He notes Asakura's speed, kickboxing, and knockout power will be too much for Smotherman, who is a lower-tier opponent. AJ expects a KO win, possibly in highlight-reel fashion.
AJ picks Asakura (referred to as Caio Borralho in transcript, but context indicates Kai Asakura) because of his snappy kickboxing, dangerous knees, and body kicks. He notes Smotherman is a decent boxer but has no offensive grappling (zero takedowns in UFC) and had a terrible weight cut. AJ thinks Asakura's speed advantage will show and predicts a knockout, possibly via knee.
Angelo picks Kai Asakura because he is the better striker in a striking matchup. He notes that Cameron Smotherman has zero recorded takedown attempts in the UFC and is coming off a bad weight cut. He thinks Kai's speed and footwork will be the difference, but he is not betting due to the odds.
Angelo picks Kai Asakura, believing his striking is superior to Smotherman's and that Smotherman won't attempt takedowns, negating Asakura's weakness. He notes Asakura is winless in the UFC but should win if he doesn't have to defend takedowns.
Angelo picks Kai Asakura because he is the superior striker and Smotherman has no takedown attempts in the UFC. He notes that Asakura's takedown defense is nonexistent, but since Smotherman doesn't wrestle, Asakura should win on the feet. He refuses to bet on Asakura at -300 due to the takedown vulnerability, but he believes Asakura will win.
Big Brady picks Asakura by first-round KO, viewing this as a massive step down in competition after Asakura's title fight debut. He notes Smotherman has a poor chin, has been knocked out multiple times, and recently fell face-first on the scale. He believes Asakura is a much better striker and grappler, and that Smotherman can't grapple, so the fight stays on the feet where Asakura has power and quick hands.
Cody picks Asakura, citing his speed and striking advantage over Smotherman. He notes Smotherman's bad weight cuts, suspect durability (KO loss in 13 seconds), and poor wrestling. Cody believes Asakura can piece him up on the feet and potentially knock him out. He also mentions that Asakura's move up to 135 may help with weight cut and speed.
Connor picks Asakura, emphasizing that Smotherman cannot control the pace and has no takedown game. Asakura's speed and power will be overwhelming, and Smotherman's defensive flaws will leave him vulnerable. Connor notes that Asakura is essentially a high-level kickboxer and should be matched with other borderline elite talents, not a struggling bantamweight like Smotherman.
Levi picks Asakura, believing he has better boxing and can knock out Smotherman. He dismisses Smotherman's UFC credentials, noting his knockout loss to Harlampos Gregorio and weight-cutting issues. Levi thinks Asakura will finally showcase his hype.
Jacob picks Kai Asakura because he should have the speed advantage and be more dynamic. He notes that Cameron Smotherman tends to plant his feet and look for counters, which could lead to inactivity. He warns that Kai should not hang out in the pocket because Cameron has power.
Lucrative James picks Kai Asakura but is not confident, calling it a 'very strange fight' and disliking the line. He notes Asakura's poor UFC performances, including submission losses, and questions his move up to bantamweight where he loses the size advantage. He sees Asakura's path via knockout due to power and speed, but worries if he doesn't get the finish, Smotherman's boxing could win rounds. He mentions Smotherman's fainting incident and chin issues but still leans Asakura as a pure pick, though he would look at props or even bet Smotherman if the line moves.
The host picks Asakura, believing his power and speed will be too much for Smotherman. He notes Asakura is more dangerous in the knockout department and may have a speed advantage. He expects Asakura to land big shots and potentially put Smotherman away, despite Smotherman's technical edge.
The host believes this is the most favorable matchup for Kai Asakura in the UFC, expecting him to utilize his flashy striking. Despite Smotherman's technical striking, Asakura's speed and power will be the difference, leading to a knockout.
Paul is tempted by Asakura but hesitant due to his age (32) and move up in weight. He notes Asakura's losses in rematches and his UFC loss to Pantoja. However, he acknowledges Smotherman's poor weight cut and durability issues, and that Asakura is the better striker. Paul leans Asakura but is not fully confident.
The Guru picks Asakura due to superior grappling and striking. He notes Asakura has good knees, combinations, and recovers quickly when hurt. Smotherman is a striker who hates grappling and has decent takedown defense but will be outmatched on the ground. Asakura should win comfortably.
The Guru picks Kai Asakura over Cameron Smotherman, citing Kai's speed and power advantage. He believes Kai's explosive striking will outclass Smotherman's volume-based boxing. He notes Smotherman's back-to-back losses and expects Kai to land the bigger shots.
The MMA Guru picks Kai Asakura to win by knockout. He notes that Asakura is a step up in competition for Smotherman, and Asakura's striking is more dynamic and powerful. He believes Asakura will keep the fight on the feet and land a knockout, as Smotherman is mostly a boxer and small for the weight class.
Zane picks Asakura, noting that Smotherman has zero takedown average and no wrestling game, while Asakura is a fast, powerful striker who can knock out anyone who stands with him. He acknowledges Asakura's grappling deficiencies but points out that Smotherman doesn't have the skills to exploit them. Zane also mentions that Smotherman has two first-round KO losses, which bodes well for Asakura's one-shot power.
Angelo picks Cameron Smotherman, calling him the far better striker who will control the fight on the feet. He criticizes Ricky Turcios for getting worse in each fight, describing his style as running forward with windmill punches. He notes Smotherman's unreliability but believes he is more than a 2-to-1 favorite.
Big Brady is not a fan of either fighter, but leans Smotherman due to his slick striking and hands. He criticizes Turcios for a poor performance against Aiemann Zahabi and his taunting. However, he notes Smotherman is chinny and has been knocked out before, so he's not confident. He predicts Smotherman by decision.
Cody leans toward Ricky Turcios as an underdog, citing his durability and cardio. He notes Turcios's wrestling and volume could overwhelm Smotherman, who has poor takedown defense. Cody believes Turcios can win a decision or even a submission, and likes the plus money value.
Connor picks Smotherman because he is at least fast and powerful, while Turcios is a mess with low athleticism. He notes that Smotherman has technical skills but freezes up, while Turcios is a cyclone of activity without direction. Connor believes Smotherman has more potential to do damage if he chooses to.
Daniel Vreeland picks Cameron Smotherman simply because he dislikes Ricky Turcios as a fighter. He notes that neither fighter belongs in the UFC, but he refuses to pick Turcios. Vreeland acknowledges that Smotherman has decent hands but a suspect chin and poor ground game, making this a low-confidence pick.
James picks Smotherman, calling him the much better boxer and noting Turcios's lack of activity and focus on side ventures. He expects Smotherman to outbox Turcios and possibly hurt him.
The host picks Smotherman by decision, citing his slick striking and footwork. He believes Smotherman can counter Turcios's pressure and avoid grappling, as Turcios is not as strong a wrestler as Ricky Simone. He notes Smotherman's takedown defense has improved and expects him to win on the scorecards.
Paul picks Cameron Smotherman but is hesitant due to his takedown defense issues. He notes Smotherman's superior boxing and volume, but worries about Turcios's wrestling and durability. Paul prefers the over 2.5 rounds prop and believes Smotherman can win a decision if he stuffs takedowns.
The MMA Guru picks Cameron Smotherman, noting that Ricky Turcios has looked scared to fight and has not won recently. He likes Smotherman's body work and ability to snowball into fights, while Turcios lacks early aggression. He predicts a decision win.
Zane agrees with Connor, using the same logic: Smotherman is a solid athlete while Turcios has very little natural athleticism. He notes that Turcios has stamina and toughness but is a mess technically. Zane thinks Smotherman could do damage if he chooses to, but the fight is low level.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ricky Simón | 0 | 34 of 74 | 45% | 50 of 94 | 3 of 10 | 30% | 0 | 0 | 9:13 |
| Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 29 of 99 | 29% | 33 of 104 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:02 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ricky Simón | 0 | 7 of 13 | 53% | 19 of 27 | 1 of 2 | 50% | 0 | 0 | 4:27 |
| Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 1 of 6 | 16% | 3 of 8 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 2 | Ricky Simón | 0 | 16 of 31 | 51% | 20 of 37 | 1 of 1 | 100% | 0 | 0 | 2:56 |
| Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 11 of 37 | 29% | 12 of 38 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 3 | Ricky Simón | 0 | 11 of 30 | 36% | 11 of 30 | 1 of 7 | 14% | 0 | 0 | 1:50 |
| Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 17 of 56 | 30% | 18 of 58 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:02 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ricky Simón | 34 of 74 | 45% | 22 of 62 | 4 of 4 | 8 of 8 | 28 of 62 | 4 of 6 | 2 of 6 |
| Cameron Smotherman | 29 of 99 | 29% | 23 of 89 | 5 of 9 | 1 of 1 | 25 of 94 | 4 of 5 | 0 of 0 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ricky Simón | 7 of 13 | 53% | 5 of 11 | 0 of 0 | 2 of 2 | 4 of 7 | 3 of 3 | 0 of 3 |
| Cameron Smotherman | 1 of 6 | 16% | 0 of 5 | 0 of 0 | 1 of 1 | 1 of 6 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 | |
| 2 | Ricky Simón | 16 of 31 | 51% | 8 of 23 | 3 of 3 | 5 of 5 | 14 of 28 | 0 of 0 | 2 of 3 |
| Cameron Smotherman | 11 of 37 | 29% | 9 of 35 | 2 of 2 | 0 of 0 | 10 of 36 | 1 of 1 | 0 of 0 | |
| 3 | Ricky Simón | 11 of 30 | 36% | 9 of 28 | 1 of 1 | 1 of 1 | 10 of 27 | 1 of 3 | 0 of 0 |
| Cameron Smotherman | 17 of 56 | 30% | 14 of 49 | 3 of 7 | 0 of 0 | 14 of 52 | 3 of 4 | 0 of 0 |
Play-by-Play
View on SherdogBETTING PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT | ODDS: Simon (-440), Smotherman (+340)
Round 1
On short notice, Simon (21-6, 9-5 UFC) now stands across the cage from high-flying Fury FC product Smotherman (12-5, 1-1 UFC). Simon was initially expected to battle Charles Jourdain, but it is what it is now. The bantamweights will be joined in the cage by referee Blake Grice, who claps them in as they choose to tap their gloves together. Smotherman jabs and low kicks, and Simon does the same. Simon turns his hips into one thudding kick, and he suddenly goes high with a kick that Smotherman barely blocks in time. Both swipe at the other with hooks, and Simon drops levels, stutter-steps and shoots for a single-leg takedown. Simon lifts Smotherman all the way in the air and chucks him to the mat, where Smotherman is quick to sit up against the wire. Simon hooks one leg in and starts peppering Smotherman with free left hands, and Smotherman is stuck unable to get back up. When Smotherman attempts to stand, Simon wrenches him back down again. Simon isolates Smotherman’s left arm in pursuit of a kimura, and Smotherman gives up position to defend against it. Simon takes advantage of this to step into full mount, and he allows Smotherman to turn over so he can start fishing for a rear-naked choke. Simon cannot get his hooks in, so Smotherman is able to fight back to his feet with about 30 seconds left in the round. Simon leans on him against the wire, kneeing him in the side of the head while trying to drag Smotherman back down. Simon rides out the round squeezing.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Simon
Devin Tejada scores the round: 10-9 Simon
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Simon
Round 2
Smotherman takes the center of the cage and marches forward to start off the second round, looking for a hook that he cannot find yet. Simon loops a right hand around the guard and plunks the front leg with a kick, and he dodges the counter to weave a right hand up top. Simon kicks the front leg and keeps his guard up to block the right hand aimed down the pipe, and he walks into a pair of punches but does not budge. Instead, Simon leaps in the air with a knee, and he lands and grabs hold of a double. Simon tackles Smotherman to his back, placing himself in half guard while exerting heavy shoulder pressure. Simon flattens his man out when Smotherman tries to buck and twist to get out, and he slashes down with a pair of elbows. Simon leans back a slight amount to wrap his arm around Smotherman’s neck, either for a guillotine setup or to push Smotherman down. Simon spins around to grab his foe from behind, and Smotherman stands back up in the process. Simon leans on Smotherman from the back while jamming Smotherman against the wall, and Smotherman starts chattering towards the grapple-heavy adversary. Simon ignores it and continues to embrace the grind, transitioning a single to a double and back to a single. Smotherman looks for a standing ninja choke, but Simon wriggles his neck out without concern. “The Baby-Faced Killer” drives a knee down the middle, and when it succeeds, he goes for another. Simon shrugs them off and loops a right hand up top and a left to the liver. Simon narrowly avoids a looping right hand as he scores a low kick, and Smotherman’s final strike of the round is a front kick to the chest. Grice has to get between the two when the horn sounds, ushering them back to their corners. Smotherman does not appear to be a happy man right now.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Simon
Devin Tejada scores the round: 10-9 Simon
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Simon
Round 3
Smotherman is fired up between rounds, and he starts throwing hands and grins when Simon obliges him. Simon takes a jab on the forehead and showboats while dodging the two follow-ups, looking away from the swinging Texan. Simon clips Smotherman with a right hand on the temple, and he grabs hold of Smotherman in a body lock and throws him to his knees. Smotherman powers back up to his feet, but Simon is a dog with a bone as he tries to go from a double to a single to a body lock. Simon pursues a double again when the other efforts fail, and Smotherman’s defense holds up even as he is stuck against the wire. Smotherman pushes off a knee, forcing Simon to wing two punches and shoot in for a double that finally succeeds. Smotherman is placed on his seat, and Simon holds him down and keeps his arms wrapped around a single to keep him in place. Smotherman still gets back to his feet, and he shakes Simon up with an elbow. Smotherman walks him down, firing a left to the body and a right to the head. When Simon counters, Smotherman hits him with a step-in knee. Simon eats a left hook to fire one back, and his right hand gets Smotherman’s attention and tells him it will not be as easy as walking through him with heavy fists. Simon shoots hard for a single, and Smotherman responds with a ninja choke and backs himself to the fencing. Simon is completely unfazed by the submission attempt, not budging and instead pressing on Smotherman until Smotherman bails on it. Smotherman breaks out of the takedown attempt and clinch to drive a pair of lefts to the liver and temple. Simon jabs to beat him to the punch a few times, and Smotherman is winding up with everything he has with his right hand. Simon is able to intercept him when he launches those missiles, slipping the most dangerous of the punches and hitting Smotherman back. Smotherman jabs to the body with the ball of his foot, winging a left to the same spot and a right up top. Simon shrugs at him, but he got stung with the power strikes. Smotherman unloads with pure power, tagging Simon a few times and eating some responsive blows until time expires.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Simon (30-27 Simon)
Devin Tejada scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman (29-28 Simon)
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman (29-28 Simon)
The Official Result
Ricky Simon def. Cameron Smotherman via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)
Connor is confident in Simón, believing his confidence is restored after a recent knockout win. He notes that Simón is a busy, multi-level fighter with good wrestling and striking, while Smotherman is not at this level and will give away initiative. Connor thinks Simón's speed and aggression will overwhelm Smotherman, who struggled against rangy fighters.
The Guru picks Ricky Simón, noting he is 'barely a favorite' and sees value. He highlights Simón's momentum from a KO win over Javid Basharat and his power in the pocket. He criticizes Smotherman's quick turnaround after a loss where he took damage, and trusts Simón's fundamentals and grappling options.
Zane agrees that Simón is too good across the board. He notes that Smotherman is a good athlete but lacks initiative and will be stuck in place against Simón's pressure. Zane points out that Simón's wrestling and striking are superior, and that Smotherman's recent loss showed his limitations. He calls it a terrible fight for Smotherman on short notice.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 58 of 134 | 43% | 61 of 137 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Serhiy Sidey | 0 | 55 of 132 | 41% | 66 of 149 | 5 of 12 | 41% | 1 | 0 | 4:12 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 22 of 43 | 51% | 25 of 46 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Serhiy Sidey | 0 | 27 of 50 | 54% | 28 of 51 | 0 of 1 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:55 | |
| 2 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 12 of 29 | 41% | 12 of 29 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Serhiy Sidey | 0 | 11 of 39 | 28% | 21 of 55 | 4 of 7 | 57% | 0 | 0 | 2:19 | |
| 3 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 24 of 62 | 38% | 24 of 62 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Serhiy Sidey | 0 | 17 of 43 | 39% | 17 of 43 | 1 of 4 | 25% | 1 | 0 | 0:58 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron Smotherman | 58 of 134 | 43% | 43 of 114 | 15 of 20 | 0 of 0 | 53 of 124 | 5 of 10 | 0 of 0 |
| Serhiy Sidey | 55 of 132 | 41% | 30 of 98 | 15 of 22 | 10 of 12 | 49 of 122 | 6 of 10 | 0 of 0 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cameron Smotherman | 22 of 43 | 51% | 16 of 34 | 6 of 9 | 0 of 0 | 22 of 40 | 0 of 3 | 0 of 0 |
| Serhiy Sidey | 27 of 50 | 54% | 12 of 33 | 7 of 8 | 8 of 9 | 23 of 45 | 4 of 5 | 0 of 0 | |
| 2 | Cameron Smotherman | 12 of 29 | 41% | 6 of 22 | 6 of 7 | 0 of 0 | 10 of 27 | 2 of 2 | 0 of 0 |
| Serhiy Sidey | 11 of 39 | 28% | 6 of 28 | 4 of 9 | 1 of 2 | 9 of 35 | 2 of 4 | 0 of 0 | |
| 3 | Cameron Smotherman | 24 of 62 | 38% | 21 of 58 | 3 of 4 | 0 of 0 | 21 of 57 | 3 of 5 | 0 of 0 |
| Serhiy Sidey | 17 of 43 | 39% | 12 of 37 | 4 of 5 | 1 of 1 | 17 of 42 | 0 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
Play-by-Play
View on SherdogBETTING PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT | ODDS: Sidey (-135), Smotherman (+114)
Round 1
Bantamweight wild men meet next, as Sidey and Smotherman face off under the supervision of referee Dan Miragliotta. Both are in orthodox stance and Smotherman creeps forward behind a high guard, as the visibly taller Sidey gives ground, sticks out a jab and lands an outside low kick. Sidey plants and throws a glancing one-two. Sidey lands a nice jab to the body. Smotherman continues to march forward at a deliberate pace, landing a nice body shot of his own. Sidey catches Smotherman with a hard leg kick. Sidey times Smotherman for a smooth as glass double-leg, but he can’t finish as he switches to a single and Smotherman hops backward on one leg all the way to the fence, where he extricates his limb and they reset in the middle of the Octagon. The bantamweights converge and throw simultaneously, both men landing in the exchange. Smotherman throws out a jab to the body, and Sidey collapses the pocket, changes levels and runs him to the fence again. Smotherman defends the takedown with ease, but as they come off the fence, Sidey lands another hard kick to Smotherman’s lead leg. With under a minute to go in the round, they have returned to the middle of the cage and Sidey is once again sliding laterally, sticking out his long jab. Sidey comes up short on a spinning back kick to the body right before the horn.
Sherdog Scores
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Sidey
Brian Knapp scores the round: 10-9 Sidey
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Sidey
Round 2
Smotherman marches forward to open Round 2, and Sidey meets him with a feint, then a quick single-leg that he uses to haul Smotherman to the mat near the fence. Smotherman gets back to a knee, then to his feet, with the Canadian stuck to his back. Miragliotta cautions Smotherman for grabbing the fence. A few seconds later Smotherman spins toward Sidey, and Sidey disengages, giving him room to get off the cage. Smotherman takes the center of the Octagon and advances towards Sidey, whose movement continues to give the Texan problems. Smotherman catches an errant blow, but he waves off Miragliotta’s offer of a time-out. Sidey tries for another takedown, but Smotherman sprawls and gets his hips out of danger, tagging Sidey with a glancing right hand on the break. Sidey closes the distance and grabs Smotherman as they go careening into the fence. Sidey elevates and dumps Smotherman to all fours, but he pops right back up. Sidey stays on him as he gets to a knee, then back to his feet. Sidey throws a couple of punches from behind as Smotherman stands, then hauls him back down. Smotherman gets back up quickly, but the round ends with Sidey still glued to him against the cage.
Sherdog Scores
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Sidey
Brian Knapp scores the round: 10-9 Sidey
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Sidey
Round 3
Round 3 starts with a touch of gloves, marking one of the few times so far in the fight that Smotherman has been able to get a glove on his opponent that easily. They go back to work in the center of the cage and Sidey tries for a quick takedown, which Smotherman defends. Sidey is on his horse, circling away from the pursuing Smotherman, and times him for a beautiful level change. He puts Smotherman on his behind with a double-leg, and as Smotherman stands, Sidey attempts an anaconda choke. A tense sequence ensues, as Smotherman carefully returns to his feet while keeping his air and blood supplies intact, but Sidey is eventually forced to let the choke go. They return to exchanging in space with under two minutes to go, and Sidey punctuates his stick-and-move with a little more stick, sitting down on his best single punch of the fight. Sidey tries for another takedown but Smotherman is all over it, and he returns fire with a good body shot as they come back up. Smotherman is pursuing Sidey at the 10-second clapper, coming up short on a flying knee attempt, and can’t land anything of consequence before the final horn.
Sherdog Scores
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Sidey (30-27 Sidey)
Brian Knapp scores the round: 10-9 Sidey (30-27 Sidey)
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Sidey (30-27 Sidey)
The Official Result
Serhiy Sidey def. Cameron Smotherman via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 29-28, 29-28)
Angelo picks the underdog Cameron Smotherman, believing he can get inside Serhiy Sidey's range and win. He criticizes Sidey's reliance on height and notes that Smotherman looked good on short notice against Jake Hadley. He is not sure if he will bet on it but is confident in the pick.
Big Brady picks Serhiy Sidey, citing his length, rangy striking, body shots, toughness, and sneaky grappling. He notes that Smotherman has terrible takedown defense and questionable durability, having been knocked down by a jab and starched by Charalampos Grigoriou. Brady expects a back-and-forth war but trusts Sidey's durability and ability to mix it up. He predicts Sidey will knock out Smotherman in the third round.
Connor picks Sidey, citing his dynamic striking and ability to build rhythm under pressure. He notes that Sidey's wildness and reach advantage could disrupt Smotherman's methodical pressure. Connor points out that Smotherman's win over Hadley may have been more about Hadley's poor performance than Smotherman's excellence. He believes Sidey's unpredictability and volume will be too much for Smotherman to handle.
Sidey has a range and height advantage that will help him dictate the pace. He has been training at MMA Lab and should show improvements. I expect him to land more shots from distance and win a decision.
The MMA Guru picks Cameron Smotherman, noting his body work and forward pressure. He believes Serhiy Sidey slows down and covers up when pressured, and that Smotherman can take over in the later rounds. He predicts a 29-28 decision win for Smotherman, with momentum shifting in the second round.
Zane picks Smotherman, impressed by his improved combination punching and pressure against Jake Hadley. He believes Smotherman can replicate that performance by targeting Sidey's body and staying consistent. However, he worries that Sidey's wild, unpredictable style could throw Smotherman off his game. Zane acknowledges that Smotherman's previous wins came against opponents who offered little resistance, and Sidey is more dynamic.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 60 of 165 | 36% | 70 of 176 | 1 of 2 | 50% | 0 | 0 | 1:53 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 96 of 259 | 37% | 97 of 260 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 24 of 58 | 41% | 24 of 58 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 37 of 79 | 46% | 37 of 79 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 2 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 18 of 57 | 31% | 27 of 67 | 1 of 1 | 100% | 0 | 0 | 1:07 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 25 of 75 | 33% | 26 of 76 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 3 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 18 of 50 | 36% | 19 of 51 | 0 of 1 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:46 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 34 of 105 | 32% | 34 of 105 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron Smotherman | 60 of 165 | 36% | 28 of 124 | 17 of 24 | 15 of 17 | 59 of 163 | 1 of 2 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 96 of 259 | 37% | 43 of 181 | 48 of 72 | 5 of 6 | 96 of 259 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cameron Smotherman | 24 of 58 | 41% | 8 of 40 | 7 of 7 | 9 of 11 | 24 of 58 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 37 of 79 | 46% | 13 of 48 | 23 of 30 | 1 of 1 | 37 of 79 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 | |
| 2 | Cameron Smotherman | 18 of 57 | 31% | 6 of 40 | 7 of 12 | 5 of 5 | 17 of 56 | 1 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 25 of 75 | 33% | 13 of 52 | 10 of 21 | 2 of 2 | 25 of 75 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 | |
| 3 | Cameron Smotherman | 18 of 50 | 36% | 14 of 44 | 3 of 5 | 1 of 1 | 18 of 49 | 0 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 34 of 105 | 32% | 17 of 81 | 15 of 21 | 2 of 3 | 34 of 105 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
Play-by-Play
View on SherdogBETTING PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT | ODDS: Smotherman (+350), Hadley (-450)
Round 1
On short notice, Hadley (11-3, 3-3 UFC) goes from taking on Brady Hiestand to welcoming Fury FC staple Smotherman (11-4, 0-0 UFC) to the Octagon. When the dust settles, one of these two bantamweights will celebrate a record in the UFC above .500. The other will fall below the even line. Referee Chris Tognoni will be the third man in the cage for this one, and he observes a glove touch as they get started. Hadley strikes first with a low kick, using it to disrupt the forward movement of his opponent. Hadley lands it again as Smotherman comes towards him, and he keeps chipping away at a safe range. Smotherman lands a jab to the body and reaches with a right hand over the top, forcing Hadley to bounce off the fencing. Smotherman connects with a right to the body and checks a kick to unload a right hand around the guard. Hadley stays composed working on the front leg of his foe, and Smotherman is measuring his right hand for it. Smotherman digs a right to the solar plexus, and he walks Hadley down throwing hands. Hadley tries to catch him first, but Smotherman’s right hand is loaded for bear. Hadley lands a kick to the ribs, and Smotherman gives him a right hand to the side to think about. Smotherman keeps attacking the body, stalking Hadley down but not getting reckless, and he just misses with a massive left hand. Smotherman opens up head shots with rights to the midsection, and Hadley keeps moving so as to not get cornered. Smotherman is devoted to body shots, and he slips a left hand over the top. Smotherman kicks his way into a punch combo, and Hadley chomps down on his gumshield and lets go with a big left. Smotherman slips a few punches, mostly targeting the body with his responses, and he scores a solid body kick while Hadley escapes. Smotherman clips Hadley with one big right hand before the bell.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman
Round 2
The round begins with Hadley leading with a few punches, and he kicks low and bangs his instep into the newcomer’s cup. Tognoni calls time as Smotherman grimaces, and Hadley apologizes profusely for the inadvertent groin kick. Smotherman asks to get going after a little under a minute, and they resume fighting by trading jabs. The two box one another, setting their big punches up in combination. Smotherman lands, Hadley hits him back and Smotherman gives him one more to think about. Smotherman knocks his man back with a short left, and Hadley steps in to drill the debutant with a sharp left hook. Smotherman blinks it out, jabs the body and comes in with a short flurry. Hadley is away before most of the strikes find their target, constantly circling to his left which is in the direction of Smotherman’s power right hand. Jabs fly out from both sides, and Smotherman is the one to successfully chain one into four more punches including a pair of body shots. Smotherman digs two more under the guard, and he puts a right hand straight on the sternum. Hadley swings back with a right hand off the temple, and Smotherman is in front of him ready to pay him back with a hooking left. They trade body shots at the same time, a rare occurrence, and when trading hands, Hadley jams his fingers into both eye sockets like Moe from “The Three Stooges.” Smotherman turns away, not thrilled by the foul one bit, and Tognoni calls in the doctor to check on him before long. Smotherman informs the physician that some Vaseline slid into his eye, causing him issues seeing. Tognoni tells Smotherman he needs to take all the time he should to recover, and not hurry back. Smotherman wipes his eye a few times with a piece of gauze, before asking for a towel to help clear his vision better. Smotherman keeps checking to see how much time he has, and he is still having a hard time seeing even after a few minutes. Smotherman informs both Tognoni and the doctor that he is still fighting, and that he is good to go after four minutes. Tognoni takes one point for the eye poke, and Hadley protests but his complaint falls in deaf ears. When they resume, Smotherman is amped up, swinging wildly until Hadley threatens with a takedown. While Hadley gets him down, Smotherman climbs back to his feet before long. Hadley presses his man against the wire, and Smotherman gets free at the sound of the horn.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-8 Smotherman
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-8 Smotherman
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-8 Smotherman
Round 3
There is a double clap of hands to get started, and Smotherman is as aggressive as ever, swinging his way into close range. Hadley throws back but gets backed to the wall, and he is forced to shoot in for a double. Smotherman defends against it while being pinned to the fence, and Tognoni asks for more work as Hadley is largely stalling. Smotherman bursts out of the tie-up to walk Hadley down, eating a left hand so he can let his hands go. Hadley retreats and fails to counter effectively, with a leg kick his best weapon while Smotherman marches him down. Smotherman kicks him in the side, and he throws another kick to the same spot but absorbs a flush one-two in response. Smotherman digs a left to the liver and looks for a right to the head, and Hadley has a head kick waiting for him. Smotherman loads up a bit too much on his power strikes, and Hadley beats him to the punch when evading. Smotherman pounds on the ribs from both sides, landing cleanly and stepping in to knee “White Kong” in the guts. Smotherman goes body to head and then chains a knee after one, flowing with punches and knees while Hadley’s back is up against the fence. Hadley surprises the Texan with a left hand, and Smotherman’s legs wobble briefly as he gathers himself. Hadley measures out another big left, and Smotherman wears it well this time and lets off a front kick that bounces into Hadley’s cup. Tognoni is on top of it, giving Hadley time to recover as it is now Smotherman who has to apologize. Hadley is ready after about 40 seconds, and Smotherman walks him down as soon as they resume. Smotherman shoves an uppercut through the guard, and Hadley is warned for outstretched fingers as he tries to fence off. Smotherman strings several punches together, only for Hadley to blast him in the face with heavy blows and a head kick that further makes his knees quake. Hadley swings wildly, Smotherman defends from a body kick and gives his man one final overhand right to think about before the third round comes to a close.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Hadley (29-27 Smotherman)
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Hadley (29-27 Smotherman)
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman (30-26 Smotherman)
The Official Result
Cameron Smotherman def. Jake Hadley via Unanimous Decision (30-26, 29-27, 29-27)
Angelo picks Cameron Smotherman (referred to as Brady Hiestand, but the fight is Smotherman vs Hadley; likely a transcript error) because he believes Smotherman's wrestling, size, and strength will be too much for Jake Hadley. He notes Hadley's win over Ken Laramie was more about Laramie's poor performance than Hadley's skill. He thinks Smotherman's grit and takedown ability will dominate, and he expects the odds to widen further.
Big Brady picks Jake Hadley by second-round submission. He notes Smotherman has a questionable chin and non-existent takedown defense. Hadley can take him down easily and has a big BJJ advantage. He expects Hadley to make it look easy, possibly finishing by submission in the second round.
Connor also picks Hadley, emphasizing that Smotherman's lack of movement and poor defense make him a perfect opponent for Hadley's slick offensive boxing. He notes that Smotherman's only path to victory is if opponents let him pressure them, but Hadley will pour on volume and not be intimidated.
This fight was not discussed in the transcript.
Hadley has a big grappling advantage and Smotherman is taking this fight on short notice, having to cut to 135 lbs and flying from Abu Dhabi. Hadley is the better grappler and should have no problems taking the fight to the ground where Smotherman has shown issues. Look for Hadley to get a submission.
The Guru picks Smotherman (referred to as Brady Hiestand) despite acknowledging that picking against Jake Hadley often backfires. He notes Smotherman is bigger and has more experience, and expects him to lead the dance with pressure and cardio, winning a 29-28 decision by taking over in the last two rounds. He doubts Hadley's offensive grappling and sees him looking for submissions from bottom.
Zane picks Hadley, noting that Smotherman is extremely flat-footed and stands still, making him an easy target for Hadley's offensive boxing. He compares Smotherman to a statue who gets clocked when facing speed. Hadley's last fight against a similar flat-footed opponent (Caolan Loughran) went well, and this matchup is even more forgiving.
Jake Hadley - Fight History
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 60 of 165 | 36% | 70 of 176 | 1 of 2 | 50% | 0 | 0 | 1:53 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 96 of 259 | 37% | 97 of 260 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 24 of 58 | 41% | 24 of 58 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 37 of 79 | 46% | 37 of 79 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 2 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 18 of 57 | 31% | 27 of 67 | 1 of 1 | 100% | 0 | 0 | 1:07 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 25 of 75 | 33% | 26 of 76 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 3 | Cameron Smotherman | 0 | 18 of 50 | 36% | 19 of 51 | 0 of 1 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:46 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 34 of 105 | 32% | 34 of 105 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron Smotherman | 60 of 165 | 36% | 28 of 124 | 17 of 24 | 15 of 17 | 59 of 163 | 1 of 2 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 96 of 259 | 37% | 43 of 181 | 48 of 72 | 5 of 6 | 96 of 259 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cameron Smotherman | 24 of 58 | 41% | 8 of 40 | 7 of 7 | 9 of 11 | 24 of 58 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 37 of 79 | 46% | 13 of 48 | 23 of 30 | 1 of 1 | 37 of 79 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 | |
| 2 | Cameron Smotherman | 18 of 57 | 31% | 6 of 40 | 7 of 12 | 5 of 5 | 17 of 56 | 1 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 25 of 75 | 33% | 13 of 52 | 10 of 21 | 2 of 2 | 25 of 75 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 | |
| 3 | Cameron Smotherman | 18 of 50 | 36% | 14 of 44 | 3 of 5 | 1 of 1 | 18 of 49 | 0 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 34 of 105 | 32% | 17 of 81 | 15 of 21 | 2 of 3 | 34 of 105 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
Play-by-Play
View on SherdogBETTING PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT | ODDS: Smotherman (+350), Hadley (-450)
Round 1
On short notice, Hadley (11-3, 3-3 UFC) goes from taking on Brady Hiestand to welcoming Fury FC staple Smotherman (11-4, 0-0 UFC) to the Octagon. When the dust settles, one of these two bantamweights will celebrate a record in the UFC above .500. The other will fall below the even line. Referee Chris Tognoni will be the third man in the cage for this one, and he observes a glove touch as they get started. Hadley strikes first with a low kick, using it to disrupt the forward movement of his opponent. Hadley lands it again as Smotherman comes towards him, and he keeps chipping away at a safe range. Smotherman lands a jab to the body and reaches with a right hand over the top, forcing Hadley to bounce off the fencing. Smotherman connects with a right to the body and checks a kick to unload a right hand around the guard. Hadley stays composed working on the front leg of his foe, and Smotherman is measuring his right hand for it. Smotherman digs a right to the solar plexus, and he walks Hadley down throwing hands. Hadley tries to catch him first, but Smotherman’s right hand is loaded for bear. Hadley lands a kick to the ribs, and Smotherman gives him a right hand to the side to think about. Smotherman keeps attacking the body, stalking Hadley down but not getting reckless, and he just misses with a massive left hand. Smotherman opens up head shots with rights to the midsection, and Hadley keeps moving so as to not get cornered. Smotherman is devoted to body shots, and he slips a left hand over the top. Smotherman kicks his way into a punch combo, and Hadley chomps down on his gumshield and lets go with a big left. Smotherman slips a few punches, mostly targeting the body with his responses, and he scores a solid body kick while Hadley escapes. Smotherman clips Hadley with one big right hand before the bell.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman
Round 2
The round begins with Hadley leading with a few punches, and he kicks low and bangs his instep into the newcomer’s cup. Tognoni calls time as Smotherman grimaces, and Hadley apologizes profusely for the inadvertent groin kick. Smotherman asks to get going after a little under a minute, and they resume fighting by trading jabs. The two box one another, setting their big punches up in combination. Smotherman lands, Hadley hits him back and Smotherman gives him one more to think about. Smotherman knocks his man back with a short left, and Hadley steps in to drill the debutant with a sharp left hook. Smotherman blinks it out, jabs the body and comes in with a short flurry. Hadley is away before most of the strikes find their target, constantly circling to his left which is in the direction of Smotherman’s power right hand. Jabs fly out from both sides, and Smotherman is the one to successfully chain one into four more punches including a pair of body shots. Smotherman digs two more under the guard, and he puts a right hand straight on the sternum. Hadley swings back with a right hand off the temple, and Smotherman is in front of him ready to pay him back with a hooking left. They trade body shots at the same time, a rare occurrence, and when trading hands, Hadley jams his fingers into both eye sockets like Moe from “The Three Stooges.” Smotherman turns away, not thrilled by the foul one bit, and Tognoni calls in the doctor to check on him before long. Smotherman informs the physician that some Vaseline slid into his eye, causing him issues seeing. Tognoni tells Smotherman he needs to take all the time he should to recover, and not hurry back. Smotherman wipes his eye a few times with a piece of gauze, before asking for a towel to help clear his vision better. Smotherman keeps checking to see how much time he has, and he is still having a hard time seeing even after a few minutes. Smotherman informs both Tognoni and the doctor that he is still fighting, and that he is good to go after four minutes. Tognoni takes one point for the eye poke, and Hadley protests but his complaint falls in deaf ears. When they resume, Smotherman is amped up, swinging wildly until Hadley threatens with a takedown. While Hadley gets him down, Smotherman climbs back to his feet before long. Hadley presses his man against the wire, and Smotherman gets free at the sound of the horn.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-8 Smotherman
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-8 Smotherman
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-8 Smotherman
Round 3
There is a double clap of hands to get started, and Smotherman is as aggressive as ever, swinging his way into close range. Hadley throws back but gets backed to the wall, and he is forced to shoot in for a double. Smotherman defends against it while being pinned to the fence, and Tognoni asks for more work as Hadley is largely stalling. Smotherman bursts out of the tie-up to walk Hadley down, eating a left hand so he can let his hands go. Hadley retreats and fails to counter effectively, with a leg kick his best weapon while Smotherman marches him down. Smotherman kicks him in the side, and he throws another kick to the same spot but absorbs a flush one-two in response. Smotherman digs a left to the liver and looks for a right to the head, and Hadley has a head kick waiting for him. Smotherman loads up a bit too much on his power strikes, and Hadley beats him to the punch when evading. Smotherman pounds on the ribs from both sides, landing cleanly and stepping in to knee “White Kong” in the guts. Smotherman goes body to head and then chains a knee after one, flowing with punches and knees while Hadley’s back is up against the fence. Hadley surprises the Texan with a left hand, and Smotherman’s legs wobble briefly as he gathers himself. Hadley measures out another big left, and Smotherman wears it well this time and lets off a front kick that bounces into Hadley’s cup. Tognoni is on top of it, giving Hadley time to recover as it is now Smotherman who has to apologize. Hadley is ready after about 40 seconds, and Smotherman walks him down as soon as they resume. Smotherman shoves an uppercut through the guard, and Hadley is warned for outstretched fingers as he tries to fence off. Smotherman strings several punches together, only for Hadley to blast him in the face with heavy blows and a head kick that further makes his knees quake. Hadley swings wildly, Smotherman defends from a body kick and gives his man one final overhand right to think about before the third round comes to a close.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Hadley (29-27 Smotherman)
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Hadley (29-27 Smotherman)
Scottie Smith scores the round: 10-9 Smotherman (30-26 Smotherman)
The Official Result
Cameron Smotherman def. Jake Hadley via Unanimous Decision (30-26, 29-27, 29-27)
Angelo picks Cameron Smotherman (referred to as Brady Hiestand, but the fight is Smotherman vs Hadley; likely a transcript error) because he believes Smotherman's wrestling, size, and strength will be too much for Jake Hadley. He notes Hadley's win over Ken Laramie was more about Laramie's poor performance than Hadley's skill. He thinks Smotherman's grit and takedown ability will dominate, and he expects the odds to widen further.
Big Brady picks Jake Hadley by second-round submission. He notes Smotherman has a questionable chin and non-existent takedown defense. Hadley can take him down easily and has a big BJJ advantage. He expects Hadley to make it look easy, possibly finishing by submission in the second round.
Connor also picks Hadley, emphasizing that Smotherman's lack of movement and poor defense make him a perfect opponent for Hadley's slick offensive boxing. He notes that Smotherman's only path to victory is if opponents let him pressure them, but Hadley will pour on volume and not be intimidated.
This fight was not discussed in the transcript.
Hadley has a big grappling advantage and Smotherman is taking this fight on short notice, having to cut to 135 lbs and flying from Abu Dhabi. Hadley is the better grappler and should have no problems taking the fight to the ground where Smotherman has shown issues. Look for Hadley to get a submission.
The Guru picks Smotherman (referred to as Brady Hiestand) despite acknowledging that picking against Jake Hadley often backfires. He notes Smotherman is bigger and has more experience, and expects him to lead the dance with pressure and cardio, winning a 29-28 decision by taking over in the last two rounds. He doubts Hadley's offensive grappling and sees him looking for submissions from bottom.
Zane picks Hadley, noting that Smotherman is extremely flat-footed and stands still, making him an easy target for Hadley's offensive boxing. He compares Smotherman to a statue who gets clocked when facing speed. Hadley's last fight against a similar flat-footed opponent (Caolan Loughran) went well, and this matchup is even more forgiving.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 81 of 154 | 52% | 107 of 181 | 0 of 1 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:07 |
| Caolán Loughran | 0 | 66 of 181 | 36% | 68 of 188 | 1 of 8 | 12% | 0 | 0 | 1:47 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jake Hadley | 0 | 27 of 48 | 56% | 27 of 48 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Caolán Loughran | 0 | 19 of 41 | 46% | 19 of 41 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 2 | Jake Hadley | 0 | 24 of 49 | 48% | 36 of 62 | 0 of 1 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:01 |
| Caolán Loughran | 0 | 22 of 67 | 32% | 24 of 73 | 1 of 5 | 20% | 0 | 0 | 1:14 | |
| 3 | Jake Hadley | 0 | 30 of 57 | 52% | 44 of 71 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:06 |
| Caolán Loughran | 0 | 25 of 73 | 34% | 25 of 74 | 0 of 3 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:33 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jake Hadley | 81 of 154 | 52% | 35 of 106 | 13 of 15 | 33 of 33 | 78 of 150 | 3 of 4 | 0 of 0 |
| Caolán Loughran | 66 of 181 | 36% | 33 of 136 | 18 of 29 | 15 of 16 | 64 of 178 | 1 of 2 | 1 of 1 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jake Hadley | 27 of 48 | 56% | 6 of 27 | 7 of 7 | 14 of 14 | 27 of 48 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
| Caolán Loughran | 19 of 41 | 46% | 8 of 27 | 9 of 12 | 2 of 2 | 19 of 41 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 | |
| 2 | Jake Hadley | 24 of 49 | 48% | 11 of 36 | 4 of 4 | 9 of 9 | 22 of 47 | 2 of 2 | 0 of 0 |
| Caolán Loughran | 22 of 67 | 32% | 13 of 52 | 4 of 9 | 5 of 6 | 21 of 66 | 0 of 0 | 1 of 1 | |
| 3 | Jake Hadley | 30 of 57 | 52% | 18 of 43 | 2 of 4 | 10 of 10 | 29 of 55 | 1 of 2 | 0 of 0 |
| Caolán Loughran | 25 of 73 | 34% | 12 of 57 | 5 of 8 | 8 of 8 | 24 of 71 | 1 of 2 | 0 of 0 |
Angelo picks Caolán Loughran due to the size advantage, as Jake Hadley is moving up on short notice. He notes that Loughran will use his size to bully Hadley against the cage and slow the pace. Angelo acknowledges that Hadley is the better technical striker but believes the weight difference and Loughran's pressure will be decisive. He also mentions a potential plus 3.5 round bet on Hadley.
Cody picks Caolán Loughran, citing his physicality, pressure, and durability. He notes that Jake Hadley has looked defeated in recent fights, has poor cardio, and is moving up on short notice. Cody believes Loughran's constant forward pressure and takedowns will overwhelm Hadley, who has shown no ability to overcome adversity.
Daniel picks Caolán Loughran, citing his physical strength and the fact that Hadley is moving up a weight class on short notice. He notes Hadley has been inconsistent and struggled in his last two fights, and doesn't think he'll fare better against a stronger opponent.
Daniel thinks Caolán Loughran is the more physical fighter who can bully Jake Hadley with takedowns and top control. He notes Hadley's takedown defense issues and Loughran's durability, though Loughran is hittable. He picks Loughran to win by grinding out a decision.
Paul also picks Loughran, noting that Hadley's pace is unsustainable and that Loughran's volume (140 significant strikes in his last fight) will be too much. He believes Hadley will get outmuscled and that Loughran's wrestling and pressure will secure the win.
The MMA Guru picks Caolán Loughran, calling Jake Hadley's decision to take this fight on short notice 'awful.' He believes Loughran will have a significant size and strength advantage, being a natural bantamweight, while Hadley is a small flyweight. The Guru notes that Hadley has been 'wet blanketed' by larger grapplers before and expects Loughran to dominate with his grappling. He thinks Hadley's submission skills won't be enough to overcome the weight difference.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charles Johnson | 1 | 70 of 168 | 41% | 88 of 188 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:19 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 48 of 128 | 37% | 50 of 130 | 0 of 11 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 2:12 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Charles Johnson | 0 | 19 of 40 | 47% | 22 of 44 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 17 of 47 | 36% | 17 of 47 | 0 of 3 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:35 | |
| 2 | Charles Johnson | 1 | 32 of 74 | 43% | 37 of 80 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:19 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 20 of 38 | 52% | 22 of 40 | 0 of 3 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:27 | |
| 3 | Charles Johnson | 0 | 19 of 54 | 35% | 29 of 64 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 11 of 43 | 25% | 11 of 43 | 0 of 5 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 1:10 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charles Johnson | 70 of 168 | 41% | 36 of 125 | 12 of 18 | 22 of 25 | 66 of 159 | 0 of 2 | 4 of 7 |
| Jake Hadley | 48 of 128 | 37% | 15 of 86 | 15 of 22 | 18 of 20 | 46 of 124 | 2 of 4 | 0 of 0 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Charles Johnson | 19 of 40 | 47% | 5 of 21 | 5 of 8 | 9 of 11 | 19 of 39 | 0 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 17 of 47 | 36% | 3 of 27 | 6 of 10 | 8 of 10 | 15 of 43 | 2 of 4 | 0 of 0 | |
| 2 | Charles Johnson | 32 of 74 | 43% | 19 of 58 | 4 of 7 | 9 of 9 | 28 of 67 | 0 of 0 | 4 of 7 |
| Jake Hadley | 20 of 38 | 52% | 6 of 22 | 5 of 7 | 9 of 9 | 20 of 38 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 | |
| 3 | Charles Johnson | 19 of 54 | 35% | 12 of 46 | 3 of 3 | 4 of 5 | 19 of 53 | 0 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 11 of 43 | 25% | 6 of 37 | 4 of 5 | 1 of 1 | 11 of 43 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
Play-by-Play
View on SherdogBETTING PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT | ODDS: Hadley (-170), Johnson (+142)
Round 1
The next matchup comes at the men’s flyweight bracket, with a fighter in St. Louis’ own Johnson (14-6, 3-4 UFC), who is looking to push his UFC record to .500. If he does so, his opponent Hadley (10-2, 2-2 UFC) will slide beneath the midpoint mark, so something might have to give here. Referee Gary Copeland will take charge of the cage in this pairing, one that begins with a glove touch. The two paw at one another with jabs and low kicks to get going, and Hadley walks Johnson down to crowd him and back him against the cage. Hadley feeds his foe a steady diet of jabs and leg kicks, and Johnson responds in kind. Johnson mixes things up with a kick to the chest, and Hadley replies with a left hook. Hadley measures his left hook again, and it bounces off the pectorals harmlessly. Hadley keeps pressuring forward, staying active and giving Johnson plenty of reads. Johnson escapes to the side and eats part of a right hook, and Hadley takes advantage of this to clip him with a left and shoot in for a double-leg takedown. “InnerG” hits the mat and bounces back up as if he had springs in his shorts. They chip away at one another with leg kicks, and Hadley tries again for a level change but is intercepted and met with effective dirty boxing from the Missouri native. Johnson doubles up on his jab, and he leans back as a left hand flies past him. One after the other, they throw body kicks, and Johnson hops away to avoid a big left. Johnson blocks a head kick and the two otherwise potshot each other with effective but not overly powerful blows. Johnson backs his man off briefly with a one-two, and Hadley aims his own similar combination to the midsection. Johnson kicks the chest and punches the midsection, and Hadley also targets the body with a few punches. Johnson gets off two low kicks, and the extremely close round ends.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Hadley
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Hadley
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Hadley
Round 2
The flyweights touch ‘em up, and Johnson reintroduces himself with a head kick that Hadley barely blocks. Johnson follows it with a straight right hand that wobbles the Brit’s legs, and Hadley smiles at him and corks back his left hand to prepare a counter. Johnson does not get reckless and walk into anything dangerous, and instead picks at him as Hadley gets his sea legs back beneath him. Hadley tries to shoot for a takedown, only for Johnson to stop it before it materializes and push away. Johnson switches stances, puts three hands on his foe’s face, and slips away before “White Kong” hits back. Johnson aims another high kick that bounces off the guard, and Hadley steels himself and digs a left hand to the liver. Johnson does not bat an eye and eats a body kick and another left to the same spot. Johnson wipes his face and rifles out a right hand and a hard low kick. Johnson stifles a half-hearted takedown and shoves his man back. When Hadley misses with a one-two, Johnson is there to jab and then string a few punches together after it. Leg kicks from both men get through, and Johnson stabs the midsection with his toes. Hadley’s leg kick leads to him backing away and eating two punches, and Johnson digs a right to the body. Hadley keeps working on the long lead leg of his opponent, and he absorbs a right hook flush on the face. Johnson lands a right hand, slips a punch and drills him with a right. As Hadley blinks it out, Johnson unloads with a vicious right hand that sends the Brit collapsing to his seat. The cobwebs are almost immediately cleared, as Hadley shoots in for a takedown and puts Johnson on his seat for half a second. Johnson climbs back up, Hadley hangs on from behind, and the round ends with the two men giving it up to one another.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Johnson
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Johnson
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Johnson
Round 3
The crowd is alive and fully in support of their local man, who has momentum after dropping his opponent in the last round. Chants of “USA” echo through the building, and the two high five before getting going. Hadley tries to take them out of it by pressuring forward, but Johnson’s footwork allows him to not only get away from heavy shots but also stop any takedowns from getting remotely close. Johnson tries to counter shots as Hadley crowds him, and a good right hand intercepts and bloodies Hadley’s nose as Hadley goes for a low single-leg takedown. If Johnson was officially grounded, it was only for a second before “InnerG” is back on his feet. In the position with Hadley hanging on, Johnson elbows the calf over a dozen times before Hadley sets his leg down. The two separate, and the audience is elated. Johnson strafes from side to side offering jabs, and Hadley’s offense has waned to single left hands. Johnson pushes his hand out and a finger jams in the Brit’s eye, and Hadley waves Copeland off and says he wants to get right back to it. Johnson strings a few punches together on the restart, and Hadley ducks down but fails to take the fight down. Johnson keeps volume relatively high and his combinations steady, generally tossing at least two strikes in an exchange at a time. Johnson parries the oncoming hands and jabs the body with his foot, peppering “White Kong” from his preferred range. Johnson gives chase and scores a solid left hook on the nose, and Hadley sits down and delivers two left hands of his own. Johnson lets his hands go, resulting in a Hadley low single. Johnson sprawls and tosses it aside, where he ends the fight chasing after Hadley with punches and kicks. The two flyweights hug it out after 15 minutes of combat, and it could be a tough one to score depending on this last round.
Sherdog Scores
Jay Pettry scores the round: 10-9 Johnson (29-28 Johnson)
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Johnson (29-28 Johnson)
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Johnson (29-28 Johnson)
The Official Result
Charles Johnson def. Jake Hadley via Unanimous Decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
Angelo leans towards Jake Hadley because he cannot trust Charles Johnson's one phenomenal showing over several mediocre ones. He notes Hadley has good takedowns and BJJ, though his takedown accuracy is low due to bailing on attempts. He acknowledges that if the version of Johnson that beat Azat Maksum shows up, he wins, but that version has only appeared once.
Big Brady picks Charles Johnson, citing the hometown advantage in St. Louis and the possibility that Johnson can do enough on the feet while mixing in takedowns. He notes that Johnson has been taken down in every UFC fight but that Hadley has zero takedowns in the UFC, so the fight likely stays standing. He is not confident because Johnson can be low volume and hesitant, but if the version that fought Maxim shows up, he can win. He expects a decision and thinks the hometown rub could help Johnson in a close fight.
Cody picks Johnson as a confident underdog. He argues that Hadley is overhyped, with poor cardio, weak striking, and a questionable chin. Johnson has excellent get-up game, having been taken down many times but always getting back up. He also has superior boxing and volume. Cody believes Johnson can stuff takedowns or get up quickly, and outwork Hadley on the feet. He notes that Hadley has looked bad against wrestlers and grapplers, and Johnson is a tough veteran.
Daniel Vreeland picks Charles Johnson, noting that the fighters who beat Johnson are relentless wrestlers, which Hadley is not. He believes Johnson's cardio and volume will be key, and that Hadley's weight cut (walking around 160 lbs) will be a factor. He predicts a unanimous decision win for Johnson.
Paul picks Johnson, echoing Cody's reasoning. He notes that Johnson showed improved takedown defense in his last fight and has never been submitted. Hadley's cardio and striking are suspect, and Johnson's volume should win rounds. Paul thinks Johnson's get-up game and durability will be key. He is confident in the underdog.
The MMA Guru picks Charles Johnson as an underdog over Jake Hadley. He criticizes Hadley's performance against Cody Durden, particularly his inability to secure takedowns and his stationary style. He praises Johnson's elusiveness, outside movement, Olympic-level cardio, and world-class takedown defense. He believes Johnson's style will frustrate Hadley and that Hadley's best wins come against fighters who stand in front of him.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cody Durden | 0 | 38 of 85 | 44% | 63 of 122 | 4 of 6 | 66% | 1 | 0 | 7:25 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 26 of 83 | 31% | 45 of 106 | 0 of 3 | 0% | 3 | 1 | 2:04 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cody Durden | 0 | 12 of 30 | 40% | 12 of 32 | 3 of 4 | 75% | 0 | 0 | 2:48 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 7 of 37 | 18% | 9 of 39 | 0 of 0 | --- | 1 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 2 | Cody Durden | 0 | 11 of 24 | 45% | 18 of 35 | 1 of 2 | 50% | 1 | 0 | 1:54 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 12 of 22 | 54% | 27 of 40 | 0 of 1 | 0% | 2 | 1 | 2:01 | |
| 3 | Cody Durden | 0 | 15 of 31 | 48% | 33 of 55 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 2:43 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 7 of 24 | 29% | 9 of 27 | 0 of 2 | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0:03 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cody Durden | 38 of 85 | 44% | 23 of 66 | 9 of 11 | 6 of 8 | 30 of 67 | 1 of 1 | 7 of 17 |
| Jake Hadley | 26 of 83 | 31% | 12 of 61 | 10 of 16 | 4 of 6 | 23 of 76 | 3 of 7 | 0 of 0 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cody Durden | 12 of 30 | 40% | 6 of 22 | 5 of 6 | 1 of 2 | 10 of 26 | 1 of 1 | 1 of 3 |
| Jake Hadley | 7 of 37 | 18% | 2 of 28 | 5 of 8 | 0 of 1 | 4 of 33 | 3 of 4 | 0 of 0 | |
| 2 | Cody Durden | 11 of 24 | 45% | 10 of 22 | 0 of 1 | 1 of 1 | 7 of 14 | 0 of 0 | 4 of 10 |
| Jake Hadley | 12 of 22 | 54% | 4 of 11 | 5 of 8 | 3 of 3 | 12 of 19 | 0 of 3 | 0 of 0 | |
| 3 | Cody Durden | 15 of 31 | 48% | 7 of 22 | 4 of 4 | 4 of 5 | 13 of 27 | 0 of 0 | 2 of 4 |
| Jake Hadley | 7 of 24 | 29% | 6 of 22 | 0 of 0 | 1 of 2 | 7 of 24 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
Play-by-Play
View on SherdogBETTING PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT | ODDS: Hadley (-198), Durden (+164)
Round 1
Jimmy Neely will oversee this flyweight clash. A counter right partially lands for Durden. He follows with a body kick and doges a Hadley counter. A stiff right lands for Durden, another nice counter. Durden fires off another right but it’s blocked. Durden goes to the body. Durden pressures with a combination, then smiles and points at his foe. Durden lands a body kick an descapes after Hadley catches it. Another right lands and Hadley goes to the canvas. Hadley is cut open from an elbow that landed earlier. Durden follows his man to the mat, moving from half guard to the back. Hadley looks to control the wrists, and Durden spins around to side control. The American stays heavy from this position. Hadley works his way up in a scramble, but Durden dumps him on his back immediately. Durden stands, and Hadley hustles his way up. The flyweights trade in the pocket before Durden shoots for a takedown. Hadley locks in a guillotine on the way down. Fortunately for Durden, the choke comes in the last 10 seconds and he survives.
Sherdog Scores
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Durden
Brian Knapp scores the round: 10-9 Durden
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Durden
Round 2
Durden changes levels on a Hadley kick and grounds his man within the first 15 seconds. Hadley looks to create a scramble and he’s up in short order. They trade punches before Durden steps in with a pair of heavy elbows. Durden has a takedown denied and Hadley turns him around into the fence. Hadley shoots for a takedown but Durden sprawls. Durden locks in an anaconda. Hadley defends and gives a thumbs up before scrambling to take Durden’s back. Hadley has a triangle now, and he punches away at Durden’s head. Hadley looks to isolate the arm and he goes belly down. Durden is in no man’s land. He’s grimacing as Hadley works to extend the arm. Hadley adjusts the hold, torquing the arm with the triangle locked in. Somehow, Durden frees himself and ends the frame landing a series of right hands from top position.
Sherdog Scores
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Hadley
Brian Knapp scores the round: 10-9 Hadley
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Hadley
Round 3
It’s up for grabs in this round. Hadley lands a left following a Durden body kick. A Durden right finds the mark, and an ensuing inside leg kick stumbles Hadley. Another right gets through for Durden. A left from Hadley gets through the guard of Durden. Hadley steps in with another left. they trade low kicks and Durden sticks his right hand yet again. A 1-2 connects for Durden. Hadley changes levels for a takedown, but Durden sprawls nicely. Durden thinks about a choke with Hadley on his knees, but the Englishman’s submission defense is solid. Durden stands and hovers over his foe, kicking at Hadley’s legs. Hadley shoots for a takedown as he stands but Durden sprawls well. They’re in a stalemate near the fence, but Durden powers his foe to his back with less than 20 seconds to go. With Hadley clinging to a leg, Durden pounds away with left hands, urging on the Nashville crowd. The horn sounds and Durden stands and flips the bird at his opponent.
Sherdog Scores
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Durden (29-28 Durden)
Brian Knapp scores the round: 10-9 Durden (29-28 Durden)
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Durden (29-28 Durden)
The Official Result
Cody Durden def. Jake Hadley (30-27, 30-27, 30-27) R3 5:00
Angelo leans toward Cody Durden for the upset, despite Jake Hadley being a near 2-1 favorite. He notes Durden's heavy hands and relentless wrestling pace, but acknowledges Hadley is the better overall fighter with dangerous BJJ. He points out that Hadley has been taken down in almost every fight and given up control time. Angelo plans to wait for line movement and may bet Durden if he becomes a bigger underdog, comparing it to missing out on CJ Vergara.
Big Brady is confident in Hadley, citing his improved striking, volume, and BJJ black belt. He notes Durden has been submitted three times (twice in UFC) and is taking this fight on short notice. He expects Hadley to break Durden and submit him in the second round, possibly after Durden makes a mistake on the mat.
Cody picks Hadley, citing his superior boxing, power, and opportunistic submission game. He notes Durden's short notice and tendency to make mistakes leading to submissions. He believes Hadley can survive Durden's wrestling early and take over in later rounds. He also likes Hadley by submission at +225.
Daniel Levi picks Cody Durden, citing his relentless wrestling, pace, and improvements training with champion Alexandre Pantoja. He notes that Durden's balls-to-the-wall style can leave openings for submissions, but believes if Durden avoids those, his path to victory is clear via wrestling and pressure. Levi acknowledges Hadley's opportunistic finishing ability but thinks Durden's grappling and cardio will overwhelm Hadley over three rounds. He is biased as Durden's friend but still makes a strong case.
James is confident Jake Hadley wins, either by submission or on the feet. He notes Hadley's jiu-jitsu is elite and can counteract Durden's wrestling, and that Durden has been submitted before. He also favors Hadley in striking, matching power. He expects Durden to shoot takedowns and put himself in bad positions.
Hadley is the better striker and has good defensive grappling to counter Durden's wrestling. Durden is fragile against resistance. I like the under 2.5 rounds more than the moneyline because Hadley is likely to finish Durden, though there's a chance Durden grinds out a decision. I'm going with Hadley by finish under 2.5 rounds.
Paul leans towards Durden as an underdog, citing his wrestling and ability to control the fight. He notes Hadley's takedown defense issues and believes Durden can grind out a decision. However, he is not confident and sees it as a live bet opportunity.
The host picks Jake Hadley, calling him a more complete mixed martial artist with higher upside. He praises Hadley's BJJ, striking diversity, and youth (27), but notes the key is stuffing Durden's takedowns. He acknowledges Durden's wrestling and physical prime but believes Hadley's skill set prevails. He advises against betting Hadley at current odds (-186) and sees value on Durden as a dog.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jake Hadley | 1 | 10 of 21 | 47% | 13 of 24 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:04 |
| Malcolm Gordon | 0 | 3 of 15 | 20% | 3 of 15 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jake Hadley | 1 | 10 of 21 | 47% | 13 of 24 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:04 |
| Malcolm Gordon | 0 | 3 of 15 | 20% | 3 of 15 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jake Hadley | 10 of 21 | 47% | 7 of 18 | 2 of 2 | 1 of 1 | 5 of 15 | 0 of 0 | 5 of 6 |
| Malcolm Gordon | 3 of 15 | 20% | 1 of 13 | 0 of 0 | 2 of 2 | 3 of 15 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jake Hadley | 10 of 21 | 47% | 7 of 18 | 2 of 2 | 1 of 1 | 5 of 15 | 0 of 0 | 5 of 6 |
| Malcolm Gordon | 3 of 15 | 20% | 1 of 13 | 0 of 0 | 2 of 2 | 3 of 15 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 |
Angelo is confident Jake Hadley wins and thinks the odds should be wider. He notes Hadley has solid boxing and aggressive BJJ, while Malcolm Gordon is chinny and gets finished. He thinks Gordon's performance against Makayev is misleading because Makayev is not dangerous. He expects Hadley to beat Gordon up on the feet and survive any submission attempts.
Big Brady picks Jake Hadley, citing Malcolm Gordon's poor durability (all losses inside distance) and 9% takedown defense. He notes Hadley's takedown defense is a concern (37%), but believes Hadley can finish via KO or submission. He predicts a second-round submission, but acknowledges Gordon is a solid fighter otherwise.
Cody picks Hadley, citing his significant advantages in boxing and wrestling. He notes Gordon has durability issues and has been submitted recently. He thinks Hadley can dictate where the fight goes and will likely finish Gordon by knockout or submission. He says Hadley is more refined and has beaten better competition.
Connor picks Hadley, citing Gordon's severe durability issues. He notes that Gordon's aggressive style leaves him open to counters, and Hadley has the chin to absorb punishment and keep fighting. Connor believes Hadley's pressure and volume will eventually break Gordon, who has a history of getting knocked out.
Jacob thinks Jake Hadley is the better fighter and should win, but he is worried about Malcolm Gordon's wildness and aggression. He notes Gordon goes out on his shield and takes chances, which could lead to a submission or scramble that catches Hadley. He has Hadley in a parlay but is a bit worried about it.
Hadley has crisp boxing and a dangerous submission game, as shown in his last win over Candelario. Gordon is a BJJ black belt but his striking is uncomfortable and he crashes the pocket recklessly to get takedowns. Hadley is the better striker and grappler, and should be able to dictate where the fight goes. A finish inside the distance is likely, either by knockout or club-and-sub.
Paul picks Hadley but is more interested in the plus money on fight goes to decision. He notes Hadley hasn't shown huge power and Gordon is durable enough to go the distance. He likes Hadley by decision at plus 400 and thinks it could grow to plus 500. He says Hadley at home should get the nod in a close fight.
The MMA Guru picks Jake Hadley to win by TKO or submission, praising his composure and improvement since his debut. He notes Gordon's chin is suspect and Hadley has the striking and grappling advantage. He predicts Hadley will pressure Gordon, hurt him on the feet, and potentially latch on a rear-naked choke after dropping him.
Zane also picks Hadley, agreeing that Gordon's chin is a fatal flaw. He notes that Hadley is hittable but durable, and his aggressive style will create opportunities. Zane points out that Gordon's only UFC win came against a fading opponent, and he is always in danger of getting finished.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 69 of 148 | 46% | 69 of 148 | 1 of 1 | 100% | 0 | 0 | 1:39 |
| Carlos Candelario | 0 | 90 of 169 | 53% | 107 of 188 | 0 of 0 | --- | 1 | 0 | 0:00 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jake Hadley | 0 | 58 of 123 | 47% | 58 of 123 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 |
| Carlos Candelario | 0 | 50 of 116 | 43% | 50 of 116 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:00 | |
| 2 | Jake Hadley | 0 | 11 of 25 | 44% | 11 of 25 | 1 of 1 | 100% | 0 | 0 | 1:39 |
| Carlos Candelario | 0 | 40 of 53 | 75% | 57 of 72 | 0 of 0 | --- | 1 | 0 | 0:00 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jake Hadley | 69 of 148 | 46% | 31 of 100 | 22 of 31 | 16 of 17 | 67 of 146 | 2 of 2 | 0 of 0 |
| Carlos Candelario | 90 of 169 | 53% | 45 of 118 | 24 of 30 | 21 of 21 | 65 of 142 | 2 of 3 | 23 of 24 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jake Hadley | 58 of 123 | 47% | 26 of 83 | 17 of 24 | 15 of 16 | 57 of 122 | 1 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Carlos Candelario | 50 of 116 | 43% | 15 of 76 | 19 of 24 | 16 of 16 | 50 of 115 | 0 of 1 | 0 of 0 | |
| 2 | Jake Hadley | 11 of 25 | 44% | 5 of 17 | 5 of 7 | 1 of 1 | 10 of 24 | 1 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Carlos Candelario | 40 of 53 | 75% | 30 of 42 | 5 of 6 | 5 of 5 | 15 of 27 | 2 of 2 | 23 of 24 |
Angelo picks Jake Hadley, calling him the cleaner, more technical fighter with solid boxing, takedowns, and BJJ. He notes Candelario is gritty and a dog, but hasn't been the same since a four-year layoff. He warns that if Hadley gets sucked into a scrap, he could have trouble, but overall likes Hadley to get it done.
Big Brady views this as a tailor-made matchup for Hadley, citing Candelario's historically poor takedown defense. He believes Hadley's wrestling and grappling will dominate, and he can grind out a decision. The only concern is Hadley's UFC debut where he failed to take down Nascimento, but Candelario's takedown defense is much worse. He expects Hadley to dictate where the fight takes place and win by decision.
Cody picks Carlos Candelario as an underdog. He notes that Candelario has good defensive grappling, surviving against high-level BJJ guys like Ronald Candido and Tatsuya Taira. He thinks Candelario has better volume and offensive wrestling, as seen against Victor Altamirano (5 takedowns). Hadley has shown poor grappling off his back, getting taken down by Alan Nascimento and unable to get up. Cody thinks Candelario can take Hadley down and grind him out, but acknowledges Hadley may be stronger. He is leaning towards Candelario but not fully locked in.
Connor agrees, noting that Candelario is difficult to submit and control, and his aggressive style will force mistakes from Hadley. Hadley's guard game is unlikely to succeed at flyweight, and Candelario's cardio and scrambling should win out. Connor acknowledges Hadley could win if he improves, but needs to see it first.
Daniel Levi leans Jake Hadley, noting he may be more physically imposing and should scrape by. He acknowledges Candelario's toughness but sees Hadley as the better fighter. He is not interested in laying -255 on him.
The host likes Hadley's offensive grappling but is cautious about the wide line (-275). He notes Hadley struggled against opponents who could contend on the ground, and Candelario showed good submission defense in his last fight. He expects Hadley to control the fight via grappling but likely go to decision, as Candelario may survive submission attempts. He prefers to wait for over/under totals rather than play the moneyline.
Paul picks Candelario and has already bet him at +225. He notes that Hadley got exposed against Nascimento, who negated his grappling. Candelario has proven he can survive on the ground and has better striking volume. Paul thinks Candelario's offensive wrestling could be key, as he scored takedowns against Taira. He sees Candelario as a live underdog.
The MMA Guru picks Jake Hadley, noting he is a 3-to-1 favorite with 92% of tapology picks. He believes Hadley should beat Candelario if he initiates grappling early rather than striking. He criticizes Candelario's performance against Tatsuro Taira and notes Hadley's strong competition outside the UFC. He predicts a submission win in the second round, but disagrees with the wide odds, suggesting Candelario is not bad.
Zane picks Candelario because Hadley showed poor takedown defense in his debut, easily giving up takedowns and playing guard, which is disastrous at flyweight. Candelario is aggressive, hard to submit, and will push a high pace over three rounds. Hadley's willingness to fight off his back is a major liability.
Totals
| Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allan Nascimento | 0 | 8 of 29 | 27% | 26 of 47 | 0 of 0 | --- | 1 | 1 | 3:50 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 19 of 52 | 36% | 36 of 69 | 2 of 4 | 50% | 0 | 3 | 9:27 |
Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | KD | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Total Str. | TD | TD % | Sub. Att | Rev. | Ctrl |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Allan Nascimento | 0 | 3 of 14 | 21% | 11 of 22 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 1 | 1:23 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 4 of 11 | 36% | 14 of 21 | 1 of 1 | 100% | 0 | 1 | 2:59 | |
| 2 | Allan Nascimento | 0 | 2 of 5 | 40% | 9 of 12 | 0 of 0 | --- | 0 | 0 | 0:25 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 9 of 21 | 42% | 14 of 26 | 1 of 1 | 100% | 0 | 0 | 4:04 | |
| 3 | Allan Nascimento | 0 | 3 of 10 | 30% | 6 of 13 | 0 of 0 | --- | 1 | 0 | 2:02 |
| Jake Hadley | 0 | 6 of 20 | 30% | 8 of 22 | 0 of 2 | 0% | 0 | 2 | 2:24 |
Significant Strikes
| Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allan Nascimento | 8 of 29 | 27% | 5 of 25 | 3 of 4 | 0 of 0 | 3 of 20 | 1 of 1 | 4 of 8 |
| Jake Hadley | 19 of 52 | 36% | 7 of 32 | 8 of 16 | 4 of 4 | 10 of 27 | 1 of 2 | 8 of 23 |
Significant Strikes Per Round
| Rd | Fighter | Sig. Str. | Sig. Str. % | Head | Body | Leg | Distance | Clinch | Ground |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Allan Nascimento | 3 of 14 | 21% | 1 of 11 | 2 of 3 | 0 of 0 | 1 of 9 | 0 of 0 | 2 of 5 |
| Jake Hadley | 4 of 11 | 36% | 1 of 6 | 1 of 3 | 2 of 2 | 3 of 9 | 0 of 0 | 1 of 2 | |
| 2 | Allan Nascimento | 2 of 5 | 40% | 1 of 4 | 1 of 1 | 0 of 0 | 1 of 4 | 1 of 1 | 0 of 0 |
| Jake Hadley | 9 of 21 | 42% | 3 of 11 | 5 of 9 | 1 of 1 | 4 of 10 | 1 of 2 | 4 of 9 | |
| 3 | Allan Nascimento | 3 of 10 | 30% | 3 of 10 | 0 of 0 | 0 of 0 | 1 of 7 | 0 of 0 | 2 of 3 |
| Jake Hadley | 6 of 20 | 30% | 3 of 15 | 2 of 4 | 1 of 1 | 3 of 8 | 0 of 0 | 3 of 12 |
Play-by-Play
View on SherdogBETTING PREVIEW | SCOUTING REPORT | ODDS: Hadley (-210), Nascimento (+175)
Round 1
Undefeated Brit prospect Hadley makes his debut against “Puro Osso,” with referee Mike Beltran set to oversee the proceedings. The flyweights begin exchanging right away, with Hadley in southpaw to Nascimento’s orthodox stance. Nascimento catches a kick and runs Hadley to the canvas. Hadley immediately uses an omoplata to sweep to top position, setting up in the Brazilian’s guard. He moves to half guard, pins Nascimento’s right arm and moves to the back. Nascimento keeps hold of Hadley’s leg, preventing him from completing the back take, then threatens with a heel hook before sweeping to top position. Hadley closes up his guard, then applies a body triangle from the bottom. With a minute left, it’s still Nascimento on top, throwing short shoulder strikes and driving Hadley toward the fence. Nascimento tries to pass Hadley’s guard, but time expires before he can.
Sherdog Scores
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento
Round 2
Hadley rushes forward to open the round and is met by a flying knee from Nascimento. A moment later, Nascimento changes levels and intercepts the advancing Hadley with a nice double-leg. Hadley immediately looks to use rubber guard, but Nascimento extracts his arms and “White Kong” changes to conventional guard. Two minutes into the round, the Brazilian is still in top position, where he advances to half guard. Hadley is active on the bottom, shifting his hips and looking for a chance to escape or sweep. Hadley uses feet on hips to kick Nascimento off of him, but Nascimento dives right back into his guard. Under a minute left, and Hadley stands up against the fence. They clinch there, with Nascimento’s back against the cage. Hadley throws a couple of short knees before the horn.
Sherdog Scores
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento
Round 3
The flyweights touch gloves to open the final round. Hadley scores with an overhand left. A moment later, Hadley grabs a standing guillotine choke. He cranks it hard, and though he loses the choke, he uses it to drive Nascimento down to the mat. Hadley pounces and ends up with a slightly out-of-position brabo choke. He readjusts and moves to the back, but Nascimento shrugs him off, spins and lands on top. Nascimento is in loose half-guard and working for a D’Arce choke. Nascimento loses the choke but spins to the back. Hadley scrambles away and ends up on his back with the Brazilian standing over him. Hadley gets up to his knees and Nascimento grabs a front headlock. He loses the headlock and Hadley takes him back down. Hadley tries for a guillotine choke, but gets swept for his trouble. Under 30 seconds left, Nascimento is on top. The final horn sounds on 15 minutes of frenetic grappling.
Sherdog Scores
Ben Duffy scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento (30-27 Nascimento)
Tristen Critchfield scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento (30-27 Nascimento)
Tyler Treese scores the round: 10-9 Nascimento (30-27 Nascimento)
The Official Result
Allan Nascimento def. Jake Hadley via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
Cody picks Nascimento as a live underdog. He notes Nascimento is tricky off his back, has good cardio, and keeps fights close. He mentions Hadley missed weight, has attitude issues, and is still adjusting to North America. He thinks the plus money is worth a shot.
Paul also picks Nascimento, calling it a dogger pass. He notes Nascimento is competitive, has good striking volume, and attacks non-stop off his back. He thinks Hadley is talented but has red flags like missing weight and rubbing matchmakers the wrong way. He likes the plus money.
Expert Picks (7)
Angelo picks Cameron Smotherman (referred to as Brady Hiestand, but the fight is Smotherman vs Hadley; likely a transcript error) because he believes Smotherman's wrestling, size, and strength will be too much for Jake Hadley. He notes Hadley's win over Ken Laramie was more about Laramie's poor performance than Hadley's skill. He thinks Smotherman's grit and takedown ability will dominate, and he expects the odds to widen further.
Big Brady picks Jake Hadley by second-round submission. He notes Smotherman has a questionable chin and non-existent takedown defense. Hadley can take him down easily and has a big BJJ advantage. He expects Hadley to make it look easy, possibly finishing by submission in the second round.
Connor also picks Hadley, emphasizing that Smotherman's lack of movement and poor defense make him a perfect opponent for Hadley's slick offensive boxing. He notes that Smotherman's only path to victory is if opponents let him pressure them, but Hadley will pour on volume and not be intimidated.
This fight was not discussed in the transcript.
Hadley has a big grappling advantage and Smotherman is taking this fight on short notice, having to cut to 135 lbs and flying from Abu Dhabi. Hadley is the better grappler and should have no problems taking the fight to the ground where Smotherman has shown issues. Look for Hadley to get a submission.
The Guru picks Smotherman (referred to as Brady Hiestand) despite acknowledging that picking against Jake Hadley often backfires. He notes Smotherman is bigger and has more experience, and expects him to lead the dance with pressure and cardio, winning a 29-28 decision by taking over in the last two rounds. He doubts Hadley's offensive grappling and sees him looking for submissions from bottom.
Zane picks Hadley, noting that Smotherman is extremely flat-footed and stands still, making him an easy target for Hadley's offensive boxing. He compares Smotherman to a statue who gets clocked when facing speed. Hadley's last fight against a similar flat-footed opponent (Caolan Loughran) went well, and this matchup is even more forgiving.
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