UFC Fight Night 52 Main Card Betting Odds and Predictions

The UFC returns to Japan this weekend for UFC Fight Night 52.
Headlining the six-fight main card is a Top 10 heavyweight tilt between No. 6-ranked Mark Hunt and No. 8-ranked Roy Nelson. It could be one of the most fun heavyweight fights of 2014, but it…

The UFC returns to Japan this weekend for UFC Fight Night 52.

Headlining the six-fight main card is a Top 10 heavyweight tilt between No. 6-ranked Mark Hunt and No. 8-ranked Roy Nelson. It could be one of the most fun heavyweight fights of 2014, but it is not the only exciting fight on the card.

No. 9-ranked lightweight contender Myles Jury takes on Takanori Gomi in the co-main event. And let’s not leave out Rin Nakai making her UFC debut against No. 2-ranked contender Miesha Tate.

Let’s take a gander at the full main card and its betting odds. All odds information is here to help you make better informed decisions this weekend.

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Alistair Overeem vs. Stefan Struve Set for UFC on Fox 13

It’ll be a quick turnaround for Alistair Overeem, who is coming off a shocking TKO loss to Ben Rothwell, when he steps back into the Octagon on December 13 at UFC on Fox 13 to take on fellow ranked heavyweight Stefan Struve, according to the UFC’…

It’ll be a quick turnaround for Alistair Overeem, who is coming off a shocking TKO loss to Ben Rothwell, when he steps back into the Octagon on December 13 at UFC on Fox 13 to take on fellow ranked heavyweight Stefan Struve, according to the UFC’s official Twitter account.

 

It has been a slippery slope for the former Strikeforce heavyweight champ since defeating Brock Lesnar in his UFC debut nearly three years ago.

He is 1-3 in his last four fights, with every UFC loss coming by way of knockout.

While every loss is disappointing to a world-renowned talent like Overeem, there really wasn’t any reason to ring the alarm bells considering the losses came to bona fide heavyweight contenders in Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva and Travis Browne.

However, opinions began to change after seeing “The Reem” get clobbered and danced on by Rothwell, a highly underrated yet inconsistent heavyweight.

After the bout, UFC President Dana White told MMA journalist Ariel Helwani during an interview on Fox that “we’ll see what happens” when asked if he wanted to see Overeem get another shot in the Octagon. He later clarified his statement the following week during an appearance on UFC Tonight, per MMAFighting.com: “He’s still ranked in the top-10. He’s still one of the top-10 heavyweights in the world, and we’ll get him another fight.”

For Overeem, things won’t get any easier against Stefan “Skyscraper” Struve, a promising heavyweight contender plagued with health problems. The Dutchman capped off a four-fight win streak back in 2012 with a highly impressive second-round TKO victory over Stipe Miocic.

He would then go on to lose to Mark Hunt before the discovery of an enlarged heart and a leaking aortic valve forced him to step away from fighting. His Octagon return was slated for July 5 at UFC 175 against Matt Mitrione, but the fight was called on the evening of the event after Struve fainted in the dressing room.

He has since been cleared by doctors to compete.

UFC on Fox 13 takes place in Phoenix, Arizona, at the US Airways Center. Lightweights Jamie Varner and Drew Dober are expected to be in action.

According to UFC Tonight’s Helwani, per MMAFighting.com, a heavyweight showdown between former UFC champ Junior Dos Santos and Miocic is also under consideration for the event.

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA writer for Rocktagon.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Mark Hunt: I want one chance for that title shot

Unlike most people in MMA, Mark Hunt never wanted to be a fighter.  It’s a point he makes abundantly clear several times even in a short conversation.

Being a fighter is something he believes he was put on this Earth to be, and he’s fine with that, and having fun with that, but he makes it clear it was not his decision but simply his fate. He was born with a powerful punch and an inordinate amount of durability.

His punch, and ability to take a punch, allowed him to make up ground quickly both in kickboxing and later in MMA, beating far more skilled and experienced people. And it allows him to still be a main event fighter, and perhaps even a title contender, after he has passed his 40th birthday.

“I’ve had 23 years of fighting, and in that time, I’ve had two ACL reconstructions and a broken hand,” he points out regarding an injury history remarkably short for a man who has been fighting the top level competition, and been in several notable wars, in three different sports (he briefly boxed as well) for so long. “I feel blessed by God. This is what I’m supposed to be doing in life. I never wanted to be a fighter. This is what God said I’m going to do, and I’m happy with that. The end is the same, if I win, lose or draw.”

His philosophy is very Japanese-like, where it’s about entertaining the spectators first and the result isn’t as important. During both the K-1 and Pride heydays, nobody was concerned with win-loss records. It was all about getting the fans to like you.

Unlike many fighters who a few days out from a fight that could either be a ticket to a title run or the end of the line, Hunt seems remarkably calm and care-free. He’s going into a five-round main event fight at his home away from home, the Saitama Super Arena, just outside of Tokyo. Hunt, whose 9-8-1 career record seems like a contradiction to his being ranked as the No. 6 contender for champion Cain Velasquez, faces Roy Nelson, who at 20-9, is the No. 8 contender.

The expected haymaker throw-down takes place on Saturday night in Japan, which is very early Saturday morning in the U.S., on a show that will air exclusively on Fight Pass. The show internally has been dubbed Fight Pass Mania, because it’s considered the biggest event with the most name talent of any show on UFC’s streaming service since its inception.

“I’m excited about the match-up,” he said. “I’m not going to underestimate any fighter. I did that once, and I got knocked out. He’s one of the top fighters in the world. We’re kind of similar. I’m looking forward to Saturday night and having a great performance.”

It’s Hunt’s first match back since a rare injury, the broken hand, coming from a unique draw against Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva. That fight, on Dec. 7, in Brisbane Australia, was considered one of the best heavyweight fights in UFC history. Silva tested positive for an elevated level of testosterone that night, so the fight on Silva’s record is considered a no-contest, but on Hunt’s record, it’s still a draw.

The Saitama Super Arena is part of Hunt’s home away from home. For most of his career, he was two people. He was a relative unknown living in Australia, after growing up in New Zealand. When he flew to Japan, he became “The Super Samoan,” a Japanese celebrity who was almost a comic book figure come to life.

But this trip was different, having been shaken up by the Tokyo earthquake as soon as he arrived on Tuesday.

“We just landed and it was the earthquake, damn,” he said about his reaction. “When God says it’s time for one of us to go, we’re done.”

But Hunt doesn’t feel like he’s done in any way.

“It’s good for me to be doing what I’m doing at my age,” he said. “I love doing what I’m doing. But when I’m finished, I’m not going to come back. I won’t need the money. The only reason I’m still fighting is because I believe I’m still the best fighter in the world. I want to beat Roy on Saturday night, and then I want to fight a top-five guy. Then I want to challenge for the title once, whoever that may be against. That’s all I’m interested in. I want one chance for that title shot.”

It’s been nearly 13 years since the two Mark Hunts were born. It was on Dec. 8, 2001, at the Tokyo Dome, before a sold out crowd of 55,000 fans, and with 23 million more watching on television. Hunt, who had only fought once prior in Japan, was thought to be out of his league in the K-1 World Grand Prix. He was a heavy underdog in all of his fights.

But he knocked out Jerome LeBanner, won via decision over Stefan Leko, and won an overtime decision over Francisco Filho to win the one-night eight-man tournament. The idea of a 5-foot-9 and 271-pound powerhouse, who had only debuted in Japan two months earlier, knocking off three major stars in one night with his main skill being a knockout punch, and a granite chin, made him an instant star in Japan. It’s a status that he’s largely maintained even though both the kickboxing and MMA era in that country is long over.

He was able to reach the top rung in kickboxing with little experience – his first pro fight came four days after he was seen by a bouncer at a night club knocking multiple people out in an Auckland, New Zealand bar. The next thing he knew, he was in the ring. But MMA proved to be a little tougher.

That career started in 2004, when the Pride Fighting Championships upped his pay greatly to lure him from K-1, largely as one of K-1’s biggest superstars, during a promotional war. The idea was to find a big guy with a big name that the public knew was tough, but wasn’t an MMA fighter, to feed to Hidehiko Yoshida, a Japanese gold medalist in judo that Pride was trying to build its company around. It was Hunt’s first MMA fight, as well as his first fight at the Saitama Super Arena. He lasted only 5:25 before losing via armbar. But even with no ground training, his natural power allowed him to survive far longer than he should have.

“I had to learn a whole new sport,” he said about the move to MMA at the age of 30. “It was difficult coming from a striking background, and I had to learn the hard way. I had only three or four weeks of training, and I got armbarred by a gold medalist. It was kind of tough to come from a standing striking background. I was like a fish out of water. It was a totally new and different challenge.”

He learned fast, knocking out huge American wrestler Daniel Bobish, before competing in his first New Year’s Eve event on Dec. 31, 2004, and winning a freak show fight over Wanderlei Silva, who he outweighed that night by 76 pounds. He fought several more times on New Year’s Eve, the biggest fighting day of the year in Japan. In recent years, with fighting no longer popular, Tokyo has still been his New Year’s Eve destination, as he’s competed with athletes from a number of sports in arm wrestling and tug-of-wars, winning the championship once in the latter sport.

Still, even with wins over legends like Silva and Mirko Cro Cop in his early MMA fights, UFC wanted no part of him when his contract came to them in 2007 with the purchase of the assets of the Pride Fighting Championships. The feeling is he was lacking in ground skills. The UFC was willing to pay him off to just go away, but he wanted to fight MMA at the top level. After a legal battle which lasted three years, the UFC ended up on the losing side and Hunt debuted, losing via straight armbar to journeyman fighter Sean McCorkle. At that point, Hunt was considered past his prime, at 36 years old, but his contract, because it came from Pride, didn’t allow UFC to cut him.

Then he started winning, going all the way to a title eliminator in 2013 where he lost via knockout to Junior Dos Santos.

“I’ve always thought i was the best fighter in the world,” he said. “Coming from a standing background in striking, I couldn’t catch up to the guys with 20 plus years of training on the ground. I had to learn submissions. I found out it wasn’t an easy road. I had six losses in a row, but I still felt I was the best fighter in the world.”

Saturday’s fight will be his 11th at the Saitama Super Arena, with wins and losses against a who’s who of heavyweights from the Pride generation, including Yoshida, Cro Cop, Fedor Emelianenko and Josh Barnett.

Nelson and Hunt have some obvious similarities. Both are short powerhouses with one-punch knockout power and both are difficult to stop. Both don’t look anything like a classic striker, being short and thick, with more than ample weight around the middle. Hunt figures he’s got the takedown defense to keep the fight standing. Nelson, a black belt in Jiu Jitsu, would figure to have a major edge on the ground, but Hunt doesn’t seem concerned.

“If the fight goes to the ground, I don’t care,” Hunt said. “We’ll see what Roy’s got. We’re just going to battle.”

Unlike most people in MMA, Mark Hunt never wanted to be a fighter.  It’s a point he makes abundantly clear several times even in a short conversation.

Being a fighter is something he believes he was put on this Earth to be, and he’s fine with that, and having fun with that, but he makes it clear it was not his decision but simply his fate. He was born with a powerful punch and an inordinate amount of durability.

His punch, and ability to take a punch, allowed him to make up ground quickly both in kickboxing and later in MMA, beating far more skilled and experienced people. And it allows him to still be a main event fighter, and perhaps even a title contender, after he has passed his 40th birthday.

“I’ve had 23 years of fighting, and in that time, I’ve had two ACL reconstructions and a broken hand,” he points out regarding an injury history remarkably short for a man who has been fighting the top level competition, and been in several notable wars, in three different sports (he briefly boxed as well) for so long. “I feel blessed by God. This is what I’m supposed to be doing in life. I never wanted to be a fighter. This is what God said I’m going to do, and I’m happy with that. The end is the same, if I win, lose or draw.”

His philosophy is very Japanese-like, where it’s about entertaining the spectators first and the result isn’t as important. During both the K-1 and Pride heydays, nobody was concerned with win-loss records. It was all about getting the fans to like you.

Unlike many fighters who a few days out from a fight that could either be a ticket to a title run or the end of the line, Hunt seems remarkably calm and care-free. He’s going into a five-round main event fight at his home away from home, the Saitama Super Arena, just outside of Tokyo. Hunt, whose 9-8-1 career record seems like a contradiction to his being ranked as the No. 6 contender for champion Cain Velasquez, faces Roy Nelson, who at 20-9, is the No. 8 contender.

The expected haymaker throw-down takes place on Saturday night in Japan, which is very early Saturday morning in the U.S., on a show that will air exclusively on Fight Pass. The show internally has been dubbed Fight Pass Mania, because it’s considered the biggest event with the most name talent of any show on UFC’s streaming service since its inception.

“I’m excited about the match-up,” he said. “I’m not going to underestimate any fighter. I did that once, and I got knocked out. He’s one of the top fighters in the world. We’re kind of similar. I’m looking forward to Saturday night and having a great performance.”

It’s Hunt’s first match back since a rare injury, the broken hand, coming from a unique draw against Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva. That fight, on Dec. 7, in Brisbane Australia, was considered one of the best heavyweight fights in UFC history. Silva tested positive for an elevated level of testosterone that night, so the fight on Silva’s record is considered a no-contest, but on Hunt’s record, it’s still a draw.

The Saitama Super Arena is part of Hunt’s home away from home. For most of his career, he was two people. He was a relative unknown living in Australia, after growing up in New Zealand. When he flew to Japan, he became “The Super Samoan,” a Japanese celebrity who was almost a comic book figure come to life.

But this trip was different, having been shaken up by the Tokyo earthquake as soon as he arrived on Tuesday.

“We just landed and it was the earthquake, damn,” he said about his reaction. “When God says it’s time for one of us to go, we’re done.”

But Hunt doesn’t feel like he’s done in any way.

“It’s good for me to be doing what I’m doing at my age,” he said. “I love doing what I’m doing. But when I’m finished, I’m not going to come back. I won’t need the money. The only reason I’m still fighting is because I believe I’m still the best fighter in the world. I want to beat Roy on Saturday night, and then I want to fight a top-five guy. Then I want to challenge for the title once, whoever that may be against. That’s all I’m interested in. I want one chance for that title shot.”

It’s been nearly 13 years since the two Mark Hunts were born. It was on Dec. 8, 2001, at the Tokyo Dome, before a sold out crowd of 55,000 fans, and with 23 million more watching on television. Hunt, who had only fought once prior in Japan, was thought to be out of his league in the K-1 World Grand Prix. He was a heavy underdog in all of his fights.

But he knocked out Jerome LeBanner, won via decision over Stefan Leko, and won an overtime decision over Francisco Filho to win the one-night eight-man tournament. The idea of a 5-foot-9 and 271-pound powerhouse, who had only debuted in Japan two months earlier, knocking off three major stars in one night with his main skill being a knockout punch, and a granite chin, made him an instant star in Japan. It’s a status that he’s largely maintained even though both the kickboxing and MMA era in that country is long over.

He was able to reach the top rung in kickboxing with little experience – his first pro fight came four days after he was seen by a bouncer at a night club knocking multiple people out in an Auckland, New Zealand bar. The next thing he knew, he was in the ring. But MMA proved to be a little tougher.

That career started in 2004, when the Pride Fighting Championships upped his pay greatly to lure him from K-1, largely as one of K-1’s biggest superstars, during a promotional war. The idea was to find a big guy with a big name that the public knew was tough, but wasn’t an MMA fighter, to feed to Hidehiko Yoshida, a Japanese gold medalist in judo that Pride was trying to build its company around. It was Hunt’s first MMA fight, as well as his first fight at the Saitama Super Arena. He lasted only 5:25 before losing via armbar. But even with no ground training, his natural power allowed him to survive far longer than he should have.

“I had to learn a whole new sport,” he said about the move to MMA at the age of 30. “It was difficult coming from a striking background, and I had to learn the hard way. I had only three or four weeks of training, and I got armbarred by a gold medalist. It was kind of tough to come from a standing striking background. I was like a fish out of water. It was a totally new and different challenge.”

He learned fast, knocking out huge American wrestler Daniel Bobish, before competing in his first New Year’s Eve event on Dec. 31, 2004, and winning a freak show fight over Wanderlei Silva, who he outweighed that night by 76 pounds. He fought several more times on New Year’s Eve, the biggest fighting day of the year in Japan. In recent years, with fighting no longer popular, Tokyo has still been his New Year’s Eve destination, as he’s competed with athletes from a number of sports in arm wrestling and tug-of-wars, winning the championship once in the latter sport.

Still, even with wins over legends like Silva and Mirko Cro Cop in his early MMA fights, UFC wanted no part of him when his contract came to them in 2007 with the purchase of the assets of the Pride Fighting Championships. The feeling is he was lacking in ground skills. The UFC was willing to pay him off to just go away, but he wanted to fight MMA at the top level. After a legal battle which lasted three years, the UFC ended up on the losing side and Hunt debuted, losing via straight armbar to journeyman fighter Sean McCorkle. At that point, Hunt was considered past his prime, at 36 years old, but his contract, because it came from Pride, didn’t allow UFC to cut him.

Then he started winning, going all the way to a title eliminator in 2013 where he lost via knockout to Junior Dos Santos.

“I’ve always thought i was the best fighter in the world,” he said. “Coming from a standing background in striking, I couldn’t catch up to the guys with 20 plus years of training on the ground. I had to learn submissions. I found out it wasn’t an easy road. I had six losses in a row, but I still felt I was the best fighter in the world.”

Saturday’s fight will be his 11th at the Saitama Super Arena, with wins and losses against a who’s who of heavyweights from the Pride generation, including Yoshida, Cro Cop, Fedor Emelianenko and Josh Barnett.

Nelson and Hunt have some obvious similarities. Both are short powerhouses with one-punch knockout power and both are difficult to stop. Both don’t look anything like a classic striker, being short and thick, with more than ample weight around the middle. Hunt figures he’s got the takedown defense to keep the fight standing. Nelson, a black belt in Jiu Jitsu, would figure to have a major edge on the ground, but Hunt doesn’t seem concerned.

“If the fight goes to the ground, I don’t care,” Hunt said. “We’ll see what Roy’s got. We’re just going to battle.”

Wanderlei Silva’s Camp Files Reply in Support of Motion to Dismiss Case

Veteran mixed martial arts fighter Wanderlei Silva has filed a reply in support of motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction in the case brought against him by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
The motion was filed on Tuesday by Silva’s Las Vegas-…

Veteran mixed martial arts fighter Wanderlei Silva has filed a reply in support of motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction in the case brought against him by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

The motion was filed on Tuesday by Silva’s Las Vegas-based lawyer, Ross Goodman, and was stamped as received by the Nevada Attorney General’s administration office on Wednesday. Bleacher Report obtained a copy of the reply from Goodman Law Group. A full version of the reply may be viewed here.

Goodman told Bleacher Report that the motion is set to be heard on September 23.

The Attorney General’s office filed a formal complaint against Silva on August 5 after the fighter fled from a random drug screening earlier this year. The complaint urged the Nevada Athletic Commission to punish Silva for evading a random drug screening during the lead-up to his scheduled fight with Chael Sonnen earlier this year.

Silva’s defense has been that he was not licensed at the time of the attempted drug screening and therefore cannot be held responsible for the results. Goodman’s response letter follows these same lines. In the opening paragraphs, Goodman cites NAC code 467.850 (the code that governs unarmed combat in Nevada), which says:

“A licensee who violates any provision of this section is subject to disciplinary action by the Commission.”

Goodman follows up by stating:

It was no accident that the Complaint omitted any reference of the mandatory requirement. There is no dispute that the NSAC cannot lawfully take disciplinary action against Mr. Silva based on a NAC 467.850(1), (2) or (5) violation because Mr. Silva was not licensed as required by NAC 467.850.

Goodman’s second reply revolves around the NSAC‘s assertion that unarmed combatants do not necessarily need to be licensed. Goodman notes that, by NAC rules, an unarmed combatant is “engaged in unarmed combat in a contest.” Silva was not licensed at the time, and Goodman, citing NAC 467.0038(1), said he would have been required to obtain a license in order to compete in a contest.

All contestants, promoters, managers, seconds, trainers and ring officials must be licensed by the Commission. No person may participate, directly or indirectly, in any professional contest or exhibition of unarmed combat unless the person has first procured a license from the Commission.

The commission claimed that NAC 467.850(1) allowed it to take disciplinary action against an unarmed combatant. Goodman argues that the reference to an unarmed combatant in NAC 467.850(6) allows the commission to change the results of a contest if an unarmed combatant commits a violation of 467.850. For example, a fighter fails a post-fight drug test and his win is overturned to a no-contest.

In closing, Goodman said the NSAC lacks the authority to discipline a non-licensed person, and that any attempt to exceed an agency’s jurisdiction is without law. Goodman also says Nevada Deputy Attorney General Christopher Eccles has confused the standard for dismissal of factual issues with legal issues.

Lastly, the Attorney General’s office confuses the standard for dismissal of factual issues with legal issues. The dismissal standard of accepting all factual allegations as true is irrelevant to a question of law subject to de novo review of whether the NSAC exceeded its statutory authority.

He cites several Nevada cases: Andrews vs. Nevada State Board of Cosmetology, Clark County School District vs. Clark County Classroom Teachers Assn and City of Henderson vs. Kilgore.

Goodman closes the reply:

“Accordingly, the NSAC has no alternative except to dismiss the Complaint or subject itself to reversal on appeal for disciplining a non-licensed person.”

Silva has been out of action since a win over Brian Stann in March 2013. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

5 Controversial but Justified Referee Stoppages

It’s fair to say that MMA referees take their fair share of stick from both fans and media. As viewers, we have a tendency to underestimate just how difficult a referee’s job is, and determining when to stop a fight may be its most challeng…

It’s fair to say that MMA referees take their fair share of stick from both fans and media. As viewers, we have a tendency to underestimate just how difficult a referee’s job is, and determining when to stop a fight may be its most challenging feature.

Referees are charged with giving the athlete every opportunity to recover from bad positions, but they are also tasked with ensuring the fighter’s safety. The ability to strike the correct balance between these contradictory aims is often what separates the Herb Deans from the Steve Mazzagattis of the refereeing world.

Step in a fraction of a second too late, and you’re guilty of allowing the fighter to take too much punishment. Step in a little too early, and you’ve potentially cost the fighter thousands of dollars, months of training they can never get back and set their career back a few months at the very least.

With that in mind, let’s take a moment to give these much-maligned officials the benefit of the doubt. Read on for a rundown of five controversial but justifiable stoppages.

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UFC Booking Alert: Alistair Overeem vs. Stefan Struve, Lyoto Machida vs. CB Dollaway Added to December Cards


(“Whoooo…whoooo…whoooo wrecked another one of my goddamned parlays?” / Photo via instagram.com/alistairovereem)

With three knockout losses in his last four fights, Alistair Overeem has become almost the biggest bust in UFC history. But he’ll get at least one more chance to salvage his career later this year, when he faces fellow Dutch heavyweight Stefan Struve at UFC on FOX 13 (December 13th, Phoenix). UFC officials confirmed the booking yesterday.

Overeem was most recently spotted enjoying a private performance of Ben Rothwell’s celebratory jig, earlier this month at UFC Fight Night 50. Struve hasn’t competed since his jaw-breakin’ TKO loss to Mark Hunt back in March 2013. Since then, “Skyscraper” has been sidelined due to a heart condition. Struve was slated to face Matt Mitrione at UFC 175 in July, but fainted backstage before his fight and was not allowed to compete.

UFC on FOX 13 will also feature a win-or-get-fired lightweight bout between Jamie Varner and Drew Dober, and will “more than likely” host a heavyweight match between ex-champion Junior Dos Santos and highly regarded contender Stipe Miocic; we’ll let you know when that one is finalized.

In other UFC booking news…


(“Whoooo…whoooo…whoooo wrecked another one of my goddamned parlays?” / Photo via instagram.com/alistairovereem)

With three knockout losses in his last four fights, Alistair Overeem has become almost the biggest bust in UFC history. But he’ll get at least one more chance to salvage his career later this year, when he faces fellow Dutch heavyweight Stefan Struve at UFC on FOX 13 (December 13th, Phoenix). UFC officials confirmed the booking yesterday.

Overeem was most recently spotted enjoying a private performance of Ben Rothwell’s celebratory jig, earlier this month at UFC Fight Night 50. Struve hasn’t competed since his jaw-breakin’ TKO loss to Mark Hunt back in March 2013. Since then, “Skyscraper” has been sidelined due to a heart condition. Struve was slated to face Matt Mitrione at UFC 175 in July, but fainted backstage before his fight and was not allowed to compete.

UFC on FOX 13 will also feature a win-or-get-fired lightweight bout between Jamie Varner and Drew Dober, and will “more than likely” host a heavyweight match between ex-champion Junior Dos Santos and highly regarded contender Stipe Miocic; we’ll let you know when that one is finalized.

In other UFC booking news…

After falling short in his middleweight title challenge against Chris Weidman during their fantastic fight at UFC 175, Lyoto Machida will rebound against CB Dollaway, who has posted back-to-back wins against Cezar “Mutante” Ferreira and Frankie Cars (RIP). The matchup — which was confirmed yesterday by MMA journalist Ronda Rousey — will take place at UFC Fight Night 58, December 20th at the Jose Correa Arena in Barueri, Sao Paulo, Brazil, and is expected to air on FOX Sports 1.

So yes, we think Machida should take this one.