• The upgrade to XenForo 2.3.7 has now been completed. Please report any issues to our administrators.

PBP UFC on ABC 7 - Sandhagen vs. Nurmagomedov Official PBP Discussion: Sat. 8/3 at 12pm ET

Who Wins?


  • Total voters
    111
  • Poll closed .
I had it the same. I agree it cheapens Umar's performance. Instead of showing that he can fight back from adversity and adjust, we know have the narrative that he dominated Cory everywhere.
Umar couldn't get his A game going until the 5th round. The 3rd he started to take over and the 4th he kept the pressure on. That's way more impressive than some imagined 50-45 were he was getting outstruck and outscrambled initially, but ultimately wore down the veteran and adjusted to beat him across 3 rounds. Imagine if that was a 3 round fight and Umar got the win 30-27...
Would have rightfully been called a robbery. Abu Dhabi is weird man. I'm glad we get good cards there (for the most part), but the fuckery around multiple aspects makes events there leave a bad taste in my mouth more often than not. Really sucks because I was looking forward to Corey challenging for the title. I thought he was robbed against TJ, as did most people I believe, which halted his momentum, and now he's just kind of in limbo again.
At least the guy takes fights.
 


Umar Nurmagomedov put the Ultimate Fighting Championship bantamweight division on notice and cemented himself as a legitimate title contender with perhaps his most complete bell-to-bell performance to date.

Efficient standup, tactical takedowns and doggedness in the scrambles carried the undefeated Russian to a unanimous decision over Elevation Fight Team’s Cory Sandhagen in their five-round UFC on ABC 7 headliner on Saturday at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. All three judges sided with Nurmagomedov (18-0, 6-0 UFC): 50-45, 49-46 and 49-46.


Sandhagen (17-5, 10-4 UFC) competed from start to finish but failed to shake the American Kickboxing Academy star’s steely resolve. Nurmagomedov excelled, on the feet and on the ground. He routinely dragged Sandhagen down from behind, putting him in potentially compromising situations and forcing him to burn energy through intricate, drawn-out scrambles. Nurmagomedov also proved superior in a majority of the standup exchanges, relying on a potent jab and crisp, well-timed combinations.

Meanwhile, ballyhooed GOR MMA export Sharaputdin Magomedov kept his perfect professional record intact, as he took a clear-cut unanimous decision from Michal Oleksiejczuk in their three-round middleweight co-main event. Scores were 30-27, 30-27 and 29-28—all for Magomedov (14-0, 3-0 UFC).

Related » UFC Abu Dhabi Round-by-Round Scoring


Oleksiejczuk (19-9, 7-7 UFC) marched forward throughout the 15-minute encounter but mostly just walked into the Russian’s wide range of offensive toys. Magomedov called upon the hyperactive kicking game for which he has become known and connected with purpose at all levels; his side kicks to the head drew oohs and aahs from the crowd more than once. He also mixed in clinch knees, Superman punches, hooks from both hands and short-range elbows, one of which opened a cut on his opponent’s forehead. Oleksiejczuk never stopped trying to crowd the former Arena Global champion, but outside of a few takedowns, his efforts were largely ineffective.

The 29-year-old Oleksiejczuk has lost three fights in a row.

Further down the card, Pitbull Brothers rep Deiveson Figueiredo established himself as a potential title contender at 135 pounds with a unanimous decision over Marlon Vera in their three-round bantamweight attraction. Figueiredo (24-3-1, 13-3-1 UFC), a two-time UFC flyweight champion, swept the scorecards with 29-28, 29-28 and 30-27 marks from the cageside judiciary.

Vera (23-10-1, 15-9 UFC) was slow out of the gate and failed to keep pace with his Brazilian adversary in the first round before he found another gear in the middle stanza. There, he paired crushing leg kicks with punishing body blows and seemed to alter the trajectory of the bout. However, Figueiredo answered. He upped his pace in Round 3, sat down “Chito” with a sharp right hand and managed to stay a step ahead down the stretch through bursts of aggression and elusive movement.

Figueiredo, 36, will ride into his next assignment on the strength of three straight wins.

Elsewhere, Sikjitsu mainstay Michael Chiesa dispatched “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 13 winner Tony Ferguson with a rear-naked choke in the first round of their welterweight feature. Now on an eight-fight losing streak, Ferguson (25-11, 15-9 UFC) raised the white flag of surrender 3:44 into Round 1.

Chiesa (17-7, 12-7 UFC) bided his time, closed the distance on a takedown and maneuvered behind the Californian, securing his position with a body triangle. Soon after, his arms were in place for the choke. Ferguson did all he could to release the pressure around his neck, only to have his seasoned opponent calmly readjust his grip, tighten his squeeze and force the tapout.

The victory was Chiesa’s first since Jan. 20, 2021.

Deeper into the main draw, 2015 Abu Dhabi Combat Club Submission Fighting World Championships gold medalist Mackenzie Dern rebounded from back-to-back losses to Jessica Andrade and Amanda Lemos with a unanimous decision over Lupita Godinez in a three-round women’s strawweight showdown. All three cageside judges scored it the same: 29-28 for Dern (14-5, 9-5 UFC).

Related » UFC on ABC 7 Prelims: Murzakanov Wrecks Menifield


Godinez (12-5, 7-5 UFC) too often relied on throwing single strikes, mostly jabs and left hooks. Dern answered with basic one-twos, sporadic leg kicks and occasional punching combinations. The Jason Parillo protégé executed takedowns in the first and third rounds, and while she failed to consolidate them with control or damage, they allowed her to check off another box in a closely contested confrontation at 115 pounds.

A former Legacy Fighting Alliance titleholder, the 30-year-old Godinez has suffered back-to-back defeats for the first time in her 17-fight career.

Finally, Bandog Fight Club standout Joel Alvarez put away Elves Brener with a sustained volley of knees and punches in the third round of their lightweight appetizer. In his first outing in more than a year, Alvarez (21-3, 6-2 UFC) brought it to an emphatic close 3:36 into Round 3.

Brener (16-5, 3-2 UFC) was simply outgunned, and while he enjoyed some success with inside leg kicks, he lacked the weaponry necessary to give the Spaniard true pause. Alvarez almost finished it with a brabo choke near the end of the first round and otherwise picked apart the Chute Boxe rep with a stinging jab, hooks to the body from both hands and the occasional head kick. He set Brener on skates with a counter left hook in Round 3 and gave chase with a relentless barrage of knee strikes and punches. Alvarez eventually forced the battered Brazilian to retreat to the ground, where he was met with additional punishment that prompted the stoppage.

All 21 of Alvarez’s victories have resulted in finishes.

Continue Reading » UFC on ABC 7 Prelims: Fernandes Registers First Octagon Win

 


Joel Alvarez simply doesn’t go to the judges when he wins fights, and his latest effort in that regard made him $50,000 richer.

The Spaniard earned a “Performance of the Night” bonus for his third-round stoppage of Elves Brener in the main card opener at UFC on ABC 7 at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi on Saturday. Alvarez gradually built momentum before rocking his foe with a left and unleashing a stream of knees to the head in Round 3. “El Fenomeno” polished off his victory with a pair of punches on the ground to bring an end to the lightweight bout at the 3:36 mark of the period.

Elsewhere, Azamat Murzakanov received a $50,000 “Peformance of the Night” award for putting away Alonzo Menifield in their preliminary light heavyweight clash. “The Professional” sent his adversary tumbling to the canvas with a series of heavy shots, and he needed just two follow-up ground strikes before the contest was halted 3:18 into the second stanza.

Finally, Sharabutdin Magomedov and Michal Oleksiejczuk garnered “Fight of the Night” honors and $50,000 apiece for their co-main event scrap. “Shara Bullet” weathered a game effort from his Polish opponent to capture a unanimous decision in the middleweight bout.

 





 
Just watched the card on replay. Great main event, really enjoyed it, no way was it a 50-45. I was real suprised that Cory didn't make the read that Umar kept wanting to grab the leg everytime he went low. I would've thought he'd fake a bit and go high. Great technical fight

Shara is hittable and beatable, but he's super fun to watch. Once he gets to the higher calibre fighters, he could easily lose.

Deividson vs Aldo would've been the fight for me to make next. He looks good, but I found it interesting, him and Chito, both just really pot shotted, no combos thrown. He must be really strong and must carry that power well.
 
Would have rightfully been called a robbery. Abu Dhabi is weird man. I'm glad we get good cards there (for the most part), but the fuckery around multiple aspects makes events there leave a bad taste in my mouth more often than not. Really sucks because I was looking forward to Corey challenging for the title. I thought he was robbed against TJ, as did most people I believe, which halted his momentum, and now he's just kind of in limbo again.
At least the guy takes fights.
I am not a fan of the Abu dhabi cards with local favourites. Too many weird decisions and ref calls. The rightful person won tonight, but if Cory had dominated that 5th round and lost, I would be pretty pissed off. Umar looks good technically and atleast has a second gameplan when the wrestling doesn't go his way. I would have liked him to actually commit to things a bit more earlier in the fight. If he gets tagged like that against the rest of the division with a left hook, he is going to get dropped.
 
Just watched the fights.

Glad I was able to fast forward all the bullshit. Really makes watching these cards alot less tedious lol. Instead of a 3 hour ordeal I was able to catch up on everything in a little over an hour


I thought Umar won every round. The first two rounds being very close, and the last 3 being decisive.


Just a nightmare matchup for Cody. His awkward striking wasn't able to create angles and score like he normally does.. Umar was too slick for that. He was outmatched in the grappling. Perhaps some early takedown attempts of his own could have at least given Umar something the think about but I think the result was gonna be the same. The big thing that Cory doesn't have that he needed in this fight was punching power. That's just something he doesn't really have .. and the kicks just weren't working here. I don't really think he had a patch to victory tonight, and that's like the third time he's fought a champion caliber fighter in a 5 round fight and lost. He might want to think about changing weight classes or something. Maybe he would pack a little more power at 145.
 
I actually fell asleep during the main event towards the end of round 1 and woke up around the end of round 4, so I really only caught 2 rounds worth of that fight. I'm trying to decide if it's worth watching the whole thing now that I know the results.
 
I had it the same. I agree it cheapens Umar's performance. Instead of showing that he can fight back from adversity and adjust, we know have the narrative that he dominated Cory everywhere.
Umar couldn't get his A game going until the 5th round. The 3rd he started to take over and the 4th he kept the pressure on. That's way more impressive than some imagined 50-45 were he was getting outstruck and outscrambled initially, but ultimately wore down the veteran and adjusted to beat him across 3 rounds. Imagine if that was a 3 round fight and Umar got the win 30-27...
The only explanation is Corey's lack of power might create a different story live combined with whatever angle the judge was viewing the fight. Rigging that fight with a 50-45 seems too stupid and unnecessary for anything other than a mistake. Corey is top 5 in the world but without more power he might never be champ. Think about the damage Sean did to Yan, Vera and Aljo and how much that threat would of changed Umar's game plan. The same knee Yan and Vera took could be a massive problem for Merab. Corey's a badass btw and IMO really did not lose any respect, the dude is for sure the top 5 in the world. That division is insane really maybe more than lightweight.
 
The only explanation is Corey's lack of power might create a different story live combined with whatever angle the judge was viewing the fight. Rigging that fight with a 50-45 seems too stupid and unnecessary for anything other than a mistake. Corey is top 5 in the world but without more power he might never be champ. Think about the damage Sean did to Yan, Vera and Aljo and how much that threat would of changed Umar's game plan. The same knee Yan and Vera took could be a massive problem for Merab. Corey's a badass btw and IMO really did not lose any respect, the dude is for sure the top 5 in the world. That division is insane really maybe more than lightweight.
Most of Umars stuff was landing on the guard of Sandhagen, in comparison with Cory landing good clean shots. MMA is scored based off impact and damage, so whilst Umar was landing clean less, his shots had more impact so it's the right way to score. 50-45 is terrible. Sandhagen took 2 rounds anywhere but Abu dhabi. I am not saying they intentionally rigged it, but at some point we have to hold the judges accountable. Abu dhabi seems to have some pretty funky scores and officiating on the regular. The commission is still effectively being overlooked by the UFC. People that can't be sanctioned in other countries, have no issues getting sanctioned there.

Don't get me wrong, Umar won that fight, but saying he shut Cory out across 5 rounds, doesn't tell the true story.
IMO people need to call out this crap officiating even when they get the right call ultimately. As I said if this was a 3 round fight I think Sandhagen should have won, but that's what's really impressive about this win. Umar out lasted and wore down Cory in a 5 rounder. Most assumed a 5 rounder suited Cory. That good performance is less because every will just think he shut Cory out instead of overcoming a scoring deficit to find a great win.
 
Most of Umars stuff was landing on the guard of Sandhagen, in comparison with Cory landing good clean shots. MMA is scored based off impact and damage, so whilst Umar was landing clean less, his shots had more impact so it's the right way to score. 50-45 is terrible. Sandhagen took 2 rounds anywhere but Abu dhabi. I am not saying they intentionally rigged it, but at some point we have to hold the judges accountable. Abu dhabi seems to have some pretty funky scores and officiating on the regular. The commission is still effectively being overlooked by the UFC. People that can't be sanctioned in other countries, have no issues getting sanctioned there.

Don't get me wrong, Umar won that fight, but saying he shut Cory out across 5 rounds, doesn't tell the true story.
IMO people need to call out this crap officiating even when they get the right call ultimately. As I said if this was a 3 round fight I think Sandhagen should have won, but that's what's really impressive about this win. Umar out lasted and wore down Cory in a 5 rounder. Most assumed a 5 rounder suited Cory. That good performance is less because every will just think he shut Cory out instead of overcoming a scoring deficit to find a great win.
Straight on.. When Gambino
 
Most of Umars stuff was landing on the guard of Sandhagen, in comparison with Cory landing good clean shots. MMA is scored based off impact and damage, so whilst Umar was landing clean less, his shots had more impact so it's the right way to score. 50-45 is terrible. Sandhagen took 2 rounds anywhere but Abu dhabi. I am not saying they intentionally rigged it, but at some point we have to hold the judges accountable. Abu dhabi seems to have some pretty funky scores and officiating on the regular. The commission is still effectively being overlooked by the UFC. People that can't be sanctioned in other countries, have no issues getting sanctioned there.

Don't get me wrong, Umar won that fight, but saying he shut Cory out across 5 rounds, doesn't tell the true story.
IMO people need to call out this crap officiating even when they get the right call ultimately. As I said if this was a 3 round fight I think Sandhagen should have won, but that's what's really impressive about this win. Umar out lasted and wore down Cory in a 5 rounder. Most assumed a 5 rounder suited Cory. That good performance is less because every will just think he shut Cory out instead of overcoming a scoring deficit to find a great win.
I initially tried to be diplomatic about this fight, as I respect both fighters. Umar won, and Corey proved he's an absolute beast. However, if people are outraged by these scorecards and want to use this case to demand accountability, I fully support that.

If the PFL can do these 2 things or the UFC does not address these two things I could see things being very different in a couple of years.

1. Fucking fix the problem with the judging. Hire lawyers, endorse politicians, create think tanks or setup something to correct crazy decisions as every single one makes the UFC look shady because for some crazy reason many weird scorecards align with "trajectories" the UFC seems to push. (Which leads me to the second)

2. Stop with the fucking commentator biases who I assume are getting tips on who to push during a fight. These guys are not actors, they are retired athletes who always over-act and it's embarrassing for everybody. If biases are not being pushed and its just the commentators doing what they think the company wants, not fixing that seems like an almost unbelievable over-site.
 
giphy.webp

I wish I could have been here in 1985..

 


Tony Ferguson doesn’t want to retire despite suffering his eighth consecutive loss against Michael Chiesa at UFC on ABC 7.


Ferguson suffered a first-round submission loss against Chiesa at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi on Saturday. Ferguson revealed that he was feeling nauseous due to nervousness leading up to the fight.

“Well, I thought it was gonna go a lot further,” he told Full Send MMA. “Time difference is kind of crazy. Right before we walked out I kept on feeling like I was throwing up, kind of feeling just a little bit bad. Lot of nerves going into this s—t. I got 12 [wins] and eight [losses] now, so it’s kind of crazy. Not very happy with my performance. Obviously, could have did a little bit more resting and warming up today. But what the f—k you gonna say man? Good job Mike.”

Ferguson left one of his gloves in the Octagon after his loss to Chiesa, labeling it a “see you later” instead of a retirement. While “El Cucuy” was riding the longest winning streak in UFC lightweight history at one point, his latest loss puts him on the longest losing streak in the history of the promotion. However, Ferguson wants to continue in the UFC even though he doesn’t really have a strong case to make for a spot on the roster.

“I’m very honored to be able to represent the UFC to the top of my abilities,” he said. “I say I’m not ready [to retire]. I’m not done yet, but I don’t know what to say. Should have went out there, should have got that done, obviously. But I’m an athlete, I don’t anything else to do besides go out there and f—-ing play… UFC’s awesome man. I’m the CSO, that’s the Chief Security Officer, so without me s—t wouldn’t have happened. So I love this company. I love everything that it stands for, and I’m here for the company the same way they’re here for me.”
 


Umar Nurmagomedov was surprised by multiple aspects of his opponent’s game in a unanimous decision win over Cory Sandhagen at UFC on ABC 7.



Nurmagomedov put on an MMA masterclass en route to an impressive unanimous decision win over Sandhagen in the main event at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi on Saturday. The Dagestani star subsequently admitted being surprised by both the stand up and grappling aspects of Sandhagen’s game. According to Nurmagomedov, while Sandhagen’s grappling defense was better than he expected, “The Sandman” surprisingly didn’t impress him with his striking.

“He was more tough than I expect,” Nurmagomedov told ESPN. “And his defense much better than I [anticipated]. When I take his back, he almost defense, he go out. I was surprised. It was very hard to hold him, take him down. He is very good. But my strike is much better than him. That I accept. I think he will be much better than me, but I’m not bad. I was not bad today.”

After seemingly getting outstruck by Sandhagen in the opening frame, Nurmagomedov made the necessary adjustments to completely turn the fight around from the second round onward. The bantamweight contender revealed that it was his corner, consisting of the likes of Khabib Nurmagomedov and Javier Mendez, who gave him the confidence to strike with Sandhagen.

“When I understand I can beat him in striking, I changed little bit my plan,” he said. “And I’m beginning to find moments to take him down, like correct moment when I can do these safe takedowns… My corner tell me when I come after one round. They said, ‘Man you have to believe [in] your striking. You much faster than him, you much better than him, you have to work.’”


 
Back
Top