UFC best betting sites and the best MMA odds and gambling news
Twitter Reacts To Explosive UFC St. Louis Main Event
UFC Fight Night 124 went down tonight (Sunday, January 14, 2018) from the Scottrade Center as the octagon came to St. Louis, MO for the first time. The evening was headlined by a featherweight clash between longtime UFC vet Jeremy Stephens and exciting up-and-comer Doo Ho Choi. A simmering first round gave way to a […]
UFC Fight Night 124 went down tonight (Sunday, January 14, 2018) from the Scottrade Center as the octagon came to St. Louis, MO for the first time. The evening was headlined by a featherweight clash between longtime UFC vet Jeremy Stephens and exciting up-and-comer Doo Ho Choi.
A simmering first round gave way to a break-neck second. Leg kicks, jabs, and occasional punching combinations flew from both men, with “The Korean Superboy” likely edging out the first frame. He opened the second with a front kick to Stephens’ face, and that set off a borderline brawl. Stephens eventually settled into pressuring Choi backward, getting his jab going effectively. A winging right hand clipped and dropped Choi, spelling the beginning of the end. Stephens closed the show with vicious, crushing ground and pound punches and elbows, some standing, some diving. In the third main event spot of his career, Stephens finally got a W, the biggest of his career.
After the original co-feature between Uriah Hall and Vitor Belfort fell out the day of the weigh-ins, flyweights Paige VanZant and Jessica-Rose Clark were promoted to co-headliner duty. Clark got the job done, turning away the kick-happy VanZant with takedowns and top control in the first two rounds. She did not press the wrestling in the final round, though, and paid for it as “12 Guage” Paige teed off with kicks to the body and jumping knees and kicks, some coming perilously close to landing flush. This despite VanZant apparently suffering a broken right arm, seemingly from a spinning back-fist she landed in the second. Clark survived to see the final bell and had done enough work in the first ten minutes to take a unanimous decision.
See how Twitter reacted to these exciting bouts below:
I really could see this going either way. Both have the potential to be each others Kryptonite. But if I have to call it…I’d say Choi will catch Stephens with a straight right while Jeremy throws a wild lead left hook #UFCSTL
You just CANNOT rely on your chin against @LiLHeathenMMA. He will just flat out steal your consciousness from your body. You can't give him that opening. #UFCSTL
No shocker there. Give even a middling power puncher like Stephens enough free hooks and you'll get KO'd eventually. Stop matching Choi against guys who can hit.
That's the best performance of Jeremy Stephens' career even if he had to overcome a few of his own tough guy freakouts. Pressure and leg kicks remain the catalyst for his best successes.
If you want to play the kind of stick-and-move outside kicking game VanZant seems to have settled on, you need skills – footwork, variety, defense, timing – she doesn't possess. #UFCSTL
Twitter Reacts To Explosive UFC St. Louis Main Event
UFC Fight Night 124 went down tonight (Sunday, January 14, 2018) from the Scottrade Center as the octagon came to St. Louis, MO for the first time. The evening was headlined by a featherweight clash between longtime UFC vet Jeremy Stephens and exciting up-and-comer Doo Ho Choi. A simmering first round gave way to a […]
UFC Fight Night 124 went down tonight (Sunday, January 14, 2018) from the Scottrade Center as the octagon came to St. Louis, MO for the first time. The evening was headlined by a featherweight clash between longtime UFC vet Jeremy Stephens and exciting up-and-comer Doo Ho Choi.
A simmering first round gave way to a break-neck second. Leg kicks, jabs, and occasional punching combinations flew from both men, with “The Korean Superboy” likely edging out the first frame. He opened the second with a front kick to Stephens’ face, and that set off a borderline brawl. Stephens eventually settled into pressuring Choi backward, getting his jab going effectively. A winging right hand clipped and dropped Choi, spelling the beginning of the end. Stephens closed the show with vicious, crushing ground and pound punches and elbows, some standing, some diving. In the third main event spot of his career, Stephens finally got a W, the biggest of his career.
After the original co-feature between Uriah Hall and Vitor Belfort fell out the day of the weigh-ins, flyweights Paige VanZant and Jessica-Rose Clark were promoted to co-headliner duty. Clark got the job done, turning away the kick-happy VanZant with takedowns and top control in the first two rounds. She did not press the wrestling in the final round, though, and paid for it as “12 Guage” Paige teed off with kicks to the body and jumping knees and kicks, some coming perilously close to landing flush. This despite VanZant apparently suffering a broken right arm, seemingly from a spinning back-fist she landed in the second. Clark survived to see the final bell and had done enough work in the first ten minutes to take a unanimous decision.
See how Twitter reacted to these exciting bouts below:
I really could see this going either way. Both have the potential to be each others Kryptonite. But if I have to call it…I’d say Choi will catch Stephens with a straight right while Jeremy throws a wild lead left hook #UFCSTL
You just CANNOT rely on your chin against @LiLHeathenMMA. He will just flat out steal your consciousness from your body. You can't give him that opening. #UFCSTL
No shocker there. Give even a middling power puncher like Stephens enough free hooks and you'll get KO'd eventually. Stop matching Choi against guys who can hit.
That's the best performance of Jeremy Stephens' career even if he had to overcome a few of his own tough guy freakouts. Pressure and leg kicks remain the catalyst for his best successes.
If you want to play the kind of stick-and-move outside kicking game VanZant seems to have settled on, you need skills – footwork, variety, defense, timing – she doesn't possess. #UFCSTL