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The punch that O"malley reckons he landed happened in the first and was to the wrong side. Munhoz fought and won the round.
O'malley poked him in the eye as Pedro was coming in to close distance. O'malley was losing at range to the shortest reach in the top 10 and he knows it.
That's why he took a fight with a guy like Yan before he loses to the lower ranked guys and gets booted out of the rankings permanently.
The right eye was poked. The left eye that was shut was the result of the punch from the first round.
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Pedro admitted the punch in the first fucked his eye up, and Pedro didn't land a single punch on Sean in the entire fight. Sean was in control of that fight from start to finish.


Apparently you looked at his record but not the fight. Aljo got his ass beat just like Matt Hamil did against Jon Jones.he may have the disqualification victory but he definitely wasn’t winning.The fight he won ?
probably the best and least biased take i've seen here, well done sir.Dislike for O'Malley colors people's perception a little too much, so I'm going to try to just cover the obvious points.
O'Malley's clear advantages in these fight are his range, height, and striking accuracy. He is a very coordinated striker who works best at tip range, who throws great combinations from different angles at great speed, can throw from his back foot, and who uses a lot of feints and mixups extremely well. He tends to fare better against less mobile targets who are at a clear speed and range disadvantage, like Moutinho, where he can style off and chain combinations or use his speed advantage to land counters. In his last fight, Pedro adopted a mobile strategy, to move in and out of range, avoiding the boxing exchanges, and poking with leg kicks that while mostly checked also added up. O'Malley had trouble finding his range, even if he did manage to land a few good punches, including one that shut Pedro's right eye. Upon rewatching I thought he won that round. He is exceptionally good at chaining strikes and finding the counter punches, and avoiding head strikes.
Yan is even faster, has better movement, and a much more polished striking game, not to mention speed, than Pedro. He works at his best moving in and out with fast short combinations. Nothing particularly fancy, just tenacious, fast, and precise. He has a big reach disadvantage, but he moves in and out very well, and tends to find his range and pick it up as the fight moves forward. He will probably move laterally a lot and frustrate O'Malley, who will have to try to find his range against a much more mobile target than ever before. While O'Malley generally has a speed advantage, against Yan this might not be the case. Propensity for injury might be a factor, but it's impossible to factor in such things. Neither fighter seems to opt for wrestling offensive, though both have good takedown and submission defense.
The thing with O'Malley is that he is in love with the idea of becoming a KO artist like Conor or Anderson, while he should grow into a more dynamic MMA fighter like DJ or GSP, who could change gears mid fight if something was not working. His BJJ is actually surprisingly good, but he rarely has alternative gameplans and always seems to prefer to strike. He needs to get his ego in check, and realize styling off with strikes won't always be available as he fights the higher level competition moving forward, if he wants to be consistent.
I think this is a difficult fight to call; far more than people are making it out to be, though obviously it is an enormous step up in competition for Sean. I'm going to go out on a limb and say O'Malley shocks the world.
fans think hes a lot worse than he actually is more than anything.Yan is going to kill him with leg kicks and body kicks.
I used to be very high on O'Malley and predicted he would make easy work of Munhoz. Despite the narrative he has built, he lost almost every second of that fight. He just couldn't get anything going. It was a legitimate punch that caused Munhoz to quit but it was also a fluke injury.
Yan is one of the most talented strikers we have seen in the UFC. He's also more well rounded than O'Malley.
Styles make fights and Sterling was obviously a difficult fight for Yan. However, if Yan had fought O'Malley just after Sandhagen, I think he would've been a -1000 favourite and rightfully so, imo. Yan is still that guy. He's not old, he hasn't taken any serious damage, I still believe he has complete confidence in himself.
Although a very solid fighter, O'Malley definitely thinks he is a lot better than he is.
It's yan's fight to lose anyway you spin it. He might sleepwalk the first 2 rounds and lose a decision, but if he chooses to fight he's better in literally every metric. O'Malley does have a huge reach advantage, but Yan's defense is perhaps the most underrated thing about him. The man is almost impossible to hit clean.Dislike for O'Malley colors people's perception a little too much, so I'm going to try to just cover the obvious points.
O'Malley's clear advantages in these fight are his range, height, and striking accuracy. He is a very coordinated striker who works best at tip range, who throws great combinations from different angles at great speed, can throw from his back foot, and who uses a lot of feints and mixups extremely well. He tends to fare better against less mobile targets who are at a clear speed and range disadvantage, like Moutinho, where he can style off and chain combinations or use his speed advantage to land counters. In his last fight, Pedro adopted a mobile strategy, to move in and out of range, avoiding the boxing exchanges, and poking with leg kicks that while mostly checked also added up. O'Malley had trouble finding his range, even if he did manage to land a few good punches, including one that shut Pedro's right eye. Upon rewatching I thought he won that round. He is exceptionally good at chaining strikes and finding the counter punches, and avoiding head strikes.
Yan is even faster, has better movement, and a much more polished striking game, not to mention speed, than Pedro. He works at his best moving in and out with fast short combinations. Nothing particularly fancy, just tenacious, fast, and precise. He has a big reach disadvantage, but he moves in and out very well, and tends to find his range and pick it up as the fight moves forward. He will probably move laterally a lot and frustrate O'Malley, who will have to try to find his range against a much more mobile target than ever before. While O'Malley generally has a speed advantage, against Yan this might not be the case. Propensity for injury might be a factor, but it's impossible to factor in such things. Neither fighter seems to opt for wrestling offensive, though both have good takedown and submission defense.
The thing with O'Malley is that he is in love with the idea of becoming a KO artist like Conor or Anderson, while he should grow into a more dynamic MMA fighter like DJ or GSP, who could change gears mid fight if something was not working. His BJJ is actually surprisingly good, but he rarely has alternative gameplans and always seems to prefer to strike. He needs to get his ego in check, and realize styling off with strikes won't always be available as he fights the higher level competition moving forward, if he wants to be consistent.
I think this is a difficult fight to call; far more than people are making it out to be, though obviously it is an enormous step up in competition for Sean. I'm going to go out on a limb and say O'Malley shocks the world.
Yeah judges are wrong all the time, but this is hardly the thread to discuss that.One of the judges gave it to Sean
Vera destroyed him, and in my opinion Munhoz was winning the fight before the eye poke. I have no idea how he gets to fight Yan after his last performance. Yan should tune him up. His boxing is much crisper, and he has fought and finished higher caliber fighters than O’Malley has. If O’Malley finishes - or even decisions Yan, then I will accept that he is the real deal. Right now it just seems the UFC is giving him a push he doesn’t deserve. He seems very delusional about his skill set to be honest…..
It's yan's fight to lose anyway you spin it. He might sleepwalk the first 2 rounds and lose a decision, but if he chooses to fight he's better in literally every metric. O'Malley does have a huge reach advantage, but Yan's defense is perhaps the most underrated thing about him. The man is almost impossible to hit clean.
Apparently you looked at his record but not the fight. Aljo got his ass beat just like Matt Hamil did against Jon Jones.he may have the disqualification victory but he definitely wasn’t winning.
fans think hes a lot worse than he actually is more than anything.
Wonderboy said he's one of the most impressive strikers in the sport and someone to watch years back.
It only seems to be fans with these kinds of takes. The fighters and analysts aren't sleeping on him.
Even Aljo praised him.
If yan destroys Sean then He pretty much proved His point.Any moron can be right and still be a moron. It's not what you say, but how you argue for it.