Will Ryan Loder or Robert Valentin become the next middleweight Ultimate Fighter season winner?
[autotag]Ryan Loder[/autotag] and [autotag]Robert Valentin[/autotag] meet Saturday on the main card of UFC on ESPN 62 at UFC Apex in Las Vegas for “The Ultimate Fighter 32” middleweight finale. Check out this quick breakdown of the matchup from MMA Junkie analyst Dan Tom.
Last event: 1-4 UFC main cards, 2024: 70-61-3
Ryan Loder vs. Robert Valentin UFC on ESPN 62 preview
Loder (6-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC) picked up one stoppage in the TUF house, finishing Tom Theocharis by first-round submission. His semifinal bout was a decision win over Omran Chaaban. … Valentin (10-3 MMA, 0-0 UFC) stopped both of his opponents during the TUF season. In the second fight of the show, Valentin knocked out Giannis Bachar and followed up with a submission win over Paddy McCorry. Both stoppages came in the first round.
Ryan Loder vs. Robert Valentin UFC on ESPN 62 expert pick, prediction
This Saturday’s card features one of two finales from this season of “The Ultimate Fighter,” with Loder taking on Valentin for the middleweight portion of the show.
Stepping onto the scene with all the spooky Viking vibes in tow, Valentin is the more potent finishing threat in the matchup both on the feet and the floor.
However, despite being a brown belt in judo, I suspect that Valentin’s defenses could be vulnerable to a committed wrestler like Loder.
A Division-1 All-American wrestler (who is also a purple belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu), Loder possesses a style that – while still a bit raw – works well in the smaller octagon.
So long as Loder can avoid being separated from his consciousness by the second coming of Ragnar, I think that the American can wrestle his way to a competitive decision win.
Ryan Loder vs. Robert Valentin UFC on ESPN 62 odds
The oddsmakers and the public are favoring the Swiss fighter, listing Valentin -172 and Loder +140 via FanDuel.
Ryan Loder vs. Robert Valentin UFC on ESPN 62 start time, how to watch
As the fourth fight on the main card, Loder and Valentin are expected to walk out to the cage at approximately 11:35 p.m. ET. The fight will air on ESPN+ pay-per-view.
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 62.
Will Angela Hill vs. Tabatha Ricci have the judges split in the UFC on ESPN 62 co-main event?
[autotag]Angela Hill[/autotag] and [autotag]Tabatha Ricci[/autotag] meet Saturday in the co-main event of UFC on ESPN 62 at UFC Apex in Las Vegas. Check out this quick breakdown of the matchup from MMA Junkie analyst Dan Tom.
Last event: 1-4 UFC main cards, 2024: 70-61-3
Angela Hill vs. Tabatha Ricci UFC on ESPN 62 preview
Hill (17-13 MMA, 10-7 UFC) is one win away from matching her best streak since 2020 when she won three straight. Over the years, “Overkill” has struggled to maintain momentum with mixed results, but enters this contest as a winner of back-to-back fights. In November, she won a unanimous decision over Denise Gomes. In May, Hill picked up her first career submission against Luana Pinheiro. … Ricci (10-2 MMA, 5-2 UFC) enters on a win, albeit a controversial split decision against Tecia Pennington in May. The fight prior was also a split decision, but two judges sided with Lupita Godinez, snapping a four-fight winning streak.
Angela Hill vs. Tabatha Ricci UFC on ESPN 62 expert pick, prediction
The co-main event in Las Vegas features a top 15 attraction at women’s strawweight between Hill and Ricci.
Although this appears to be a potential crossroads fight at first glance, Hill – despite being nearly 40 – is arguably fighting at her career best right now.
Whereas Ricci, who received an absolute gift from the judges in her last outing opposite Tecia Pennington, could quietly be going through some stylistic growing pains as a fighter who has been altering her style on the feet for her past few fights.
However, in Ricci’s defense, she did show some improvements and the ability to have a strong final frame (something that will likely come in handy against Hill).
I believe that Hill should still be the superior striker and possesses solid enough grappling defense and scrambling to avoid being finished or controlled for prolonged periods. That said, I don’t trust the judges (who have notoriously given “Overkill” the short end of the stick) to reward the cleaner striker over the more eye-catching one.
So, even though I’m anointing Hill as the more effective fighter on paper, I’m basically fading logic and my understanding of the scoring criteria due to my history of being on the wrong end of fights that scream close decision.
The official pick is for Ricci to pick up another controversial split-decision win.
Angela Hill vs. Tabatha Ricci UFC on ESPN 62 odds
Despite the oddsmakers opening the Brazilian as the favorite, public money has pushed this contest to practically pick’em odds, listing Ricci -114 and Hill -106 via FanDuel.
Angela Hill vs. Tabatha Ricci UFC on ESPN 62 start time, how to watch
As the co-main event, Hill and Ricci are expected to walk out to the cage at approximately 12:05 a.m. ET. The fight will air on ESPN+ pay-per-view.
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 62.
Dressed as the Joker at UFC on ESPN 62 weigh-ins, Wang Cong told Victoria Leonard she was crazy – and then knocked her out cold.
“I will win. I’m crazy,” is the promise [autotag]Wang Cong[/autotag] made to [autotag]Victoria Leonardo[/autotag] at UFC on ESPN 62 faceoffs Friday – all while wearing paint to resemble the Joker.
The on Saturday, Cong (6-0 MMA, 1-0 UFC) made good on that promise as she iced Leonardo (9-6 MMA, 1-4 UFC) with a one-punch right cross knockout at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. The stoppage came at 1:02 of Round 1.
Supplemental info:
+ Regional MMA titles
+ 10 KO victories
+ 2 submission wins
+ 7 first-round finishes
+ KO power
+ Improved ability to counter
^ Dangerous hooks and uppercuts
+ Hard leg kicks
^ From both stances
+ Strong inside the clinch
+ Serviceable wrestling ability
^ Defensively and offensively
+ Shows improved getups/scrambles
+ Works well from topside
^ Heavy ground-and-pound
+/- 4-2 opposite UFC-level southpaws
Supplemental info:
+ Regional MMA title
+ Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt
+ Judo brown belt
^ Multiple judo accolades
+ Muay Thai brown belt
+ 4 KO victories
+ 4 submission wins
+ 6 first-round finishes
+ Good feinting presence
+ Sneaky lead hand
+ Hard southpaw kicks and crosses
^ Attacks all three levels
+ Solid takedown ability
^ Inside the clinch or shots in the open
+ Solid transitional grappling
^ Works well to and from the back
Jared Cannonier vs. Caio Borralho point of interest: Middleweight mashup
The main event on ESPN features yet another middleweight matchup in the UFC’s Apex.
Steadily developing a hard-hitting game since stepping onto the UFC scene, [autotag]Jared Cannonier[/autotag] has made marked improvements under the care of John Crouch and the rest of the coaching staff at The MMA Lab. Now, moving much more smoothly, Cannonier can shift his stance pre or post-combination, punctuating his presence more effectively than before.
Typically utilizing pressure to create openings for offense, Cannonier keeps hard shots on a hair trigger, ready to come forward or counter at the drop of a dime. The 13-year pro has also seemingly picked up his stablemate’s knack for throwing the calf kick (or low leg kicks), showing the ability to attack his opponent’s lower extremities from both stances.
However, Cannonier is still not beyond being kicked or countered himself, so I’ll be curious to see how he approaches someone like [autotag]Caio Borralho[/autotag].
A converted southpaw who fights out of the somewhat still unheralded Fighting Nerds team, Borralho has been successfully learning on the job during his undefeated run inside the octagon.
Although his game initially smacked of a poor man’s Conor McGregor impression on the feet, Borralho has steadily been adding layers to his striking – especially when it comes to his lead hand. Borralho possesses the standard attacks from the southpaw power side, but does a quiet amount of his work off of his lead as a naturally right-handed fighter.
Playing particularly well off of his feints, Borralho, akin to his opposition, wields a sneaky right hook that’s used both coming forward and off the counter. Borralho has also been smartly incorporating more jabs into his repertoire, which should come in handy opposite Cannonier.
Jared Cannonier vs. Caio Borralho breakdown: Potential grappling threats
Considering that both parties are dangerous in their own way from topside, no one should be shocked if this party hits the floor this Saturday.
As the statistics would suggest, Borralho is the more likely man to look for takedowns in this fight.
An accoladed judoka who transitioned into Brazilian jiu-jitsu and MMA, Borralho demonstrates a deceptively flexible takedown game. Even though Borralho could do a better job of setting up his shots with strikes, the 31-year-old commands an athletic level-changing double that can be utilized offensively or as a reactionary counter in the open.
When working from the clinch, Borralho appears to be competent with everything from trips to shuck-bys from the bodylock. That said, Cannonier, at least at 185 pounds, has proven that he’s not easy to control.
From Cannonier’s improved ability to defensively scramble to the slugging shots that he sneaks in mid-transition, the 40-year-old has come a long way from the light heavyweight who was prone to playing guard when taken down. And when Cannonier is the one who ends up on topside, the “Killa Gorilla” is quick to unleash hell from above in the form of unforgiving ground-and-pound.
Borralho is a solid transitional grappler from topside (particularly when working against the fence), but he’ll need to demonstrate improved urgency should he end up underneath Cannonier.
Despite being a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt, Borralho has shown to be a bit too content to wait for submission or stand-up opportunities off of his back. That said, if Borralho can create scrambling scenarios from either side of the equation, then he could find some key back-taking opportunities opposite the getup style of Cannonier.
Even though Cannonier works with an excellent coach and camp that ingrains solid getup tactics, the general process tends to involve a bit of back exposure – which can be dangerous when paired up with a savvy backpacker like Borralho.
Jared Cannonier vs. Caio Borralho odds
The oddsmakers and the public are favoring the Brazilian, listing Borralho -250 and Cannonier +200 via FanDuel.
Jared Cannonier vs. Caio Borralho prediction, pick
Although the oddsmakers opened this fight a bit closer, MMA gamblers are doing their usual thing in regards to getting tumescent over the thought of fading an aging fighter.
I can’t say I agree with the width of the current spread above, but I don’t disagree with who is favored to win this fight.
Even though part of me wants to fall into my usual trap of fading the public hype by picking the more proven product at a discounted price, I see some potent stylistic openings that Borralho could find in this fight.
Cannonier may technically have a winning record opposite UFC-level southpaws at 4-2, but the MMA Lab product – outside of a controversial stoppage to Nassourdine Imavov and a couple of knockdowns to former champions like Robert Whittaker and Jan Blachowicz – has sustained the majority of his stoppage losses and knockdowns to southpaw fighters.
In fact, when looking back through Cannonier’s catalog, southpaw counters and fighters who could jab from either stance have traditionally been stylistic kryptonite for “The Killa Gorilla.”
Although Borralho running into the wall that is Cannonier and eventually imploding down the stretch is an outcome that’s absolutely on the table, I can’t help but see the Brazilian’s improved lead hand and counters having some serious play this Saturday. Add in the fact that Cannonier is coming off a quick, 2-month turnaround off of being wobbled in his last bout, and I smell of a club-and-sub for Borralho that comes off of a right hook in Round 2.
Prediction: Borralho inside the distance
Jared Cannonier vs. Caio Borralho start time, where to watch
As the main event, Cannonier and Borralho are expected to make their walks to the octagon at approximately 12:30 a.m. ET. The fight airs live on ESPN and streams on ESPN+ pay-per-view.
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 62.
Led by Caio Borralho and coach Pablo Sucupira, Nerds are taking over the UFC – and they’re looking for revenge.
[autotag]Caio Borralho[/autotag] sat in the corner of a São Paulo gym and glanced up at the clock on the wall. The time for the meetup was near, but there was no sign of his man yet.
Fighters filed in, ready for their training sessions. Behind them entered a smaller man. He didn’t strike Borralho as a fighter. Borralho wasn’t sure exactly who he was looking for, but this couldn’t be the guy.
“Are you Caio? Are you here to train?” he asked.
Borralho nodded and replied, “Yeah, I came to train.”
“Oh, yeah,” the man responded without hesitation. “Let’s go. You’re going to train with me.”
Borralho followed the man, questioning the decision making that led him to this point.
“With this guy?” Borralho thought to himself.
It was 2014 and a few weeks prior to the meetup with the man who would change the course of his life, Borralho asked friend and fellow fighter Bruno Murata how he could fast-track his striking game.
At that time, Borralho was solely a grappler. His standup game was novice, so Murata recommended a mutual friend, Pablo Sucupira, a muay Thai competitor and boxing specialist.
“What the f*ck? OK, I’m not going to go hard with this thin guy. I’m not going to hurt him his first day,” Borralho remembers thinking.
Wrong.
What surprised Borralho more than Sucupira’s unassuming appearance was the beatdown he dished out during their first training session. Borralho remembers peeling himself up off the mat, depleted after just a few minutes.
“Man, that was the biggest ass beating I’ve ever gotten in my life,” Borralho recalled.
Nerds unite
The hard training session that day marked the start of a beautiful bond between teacher and pupil. Initially, Sucupira had one foot in the boxing world and Borralho cross-training with Demian Maia’s team. But as time passed, Sucupira became Borralho’s go-to coach, and Borralho became Sucupira’s star student. Eventually, Sucupira turned his full attention to MMA and decided to start his own gym. Borralho, of course, went with him.
The Fighting Nerds team now consists of one dozen coaches and dozens more fighters. But at the start, there was just two men.
“The name of the fighter who started all of this was Caio Borralho,” Sucupira told MMA Junkie. “When he arrived in the team, he was very raw, yes. I started to work with him. I always had a different vision of the fight. He was one of the guys who truly believed in myself and my vision. He paid the price doing the different things that I proposed to him and the different way of fighting. Then things started to pay off.”
Their gym, formally named Combat Club São Paulo, was literally built with a hammer and a nail by Sucupira.
“I painted the walls,” Borralho told MMA Junkie, laughing. “We built a big ring. We put a big octagon, the same size as the UFC octagon. We built that inside the gym. We actually built that together.”
The team slowly gained more members. Maia’s grappling coach, Wagner Mota, jumped on board, but Sucupira wanted an MMA-centric mind too. So he sought out Flavio Alvaro, a Brazilian legend with more than 70 fights.
“He said, ‘Oh, Pablo. I don’t know. Maybe if you pay me a lot,'” Sucupira recalls. “I didn’t have any money. I said, ‘No, no, no, brother.’ I don’t have money. If you want to come, you have to believe in what we’re doing here. Because it’s going to be a bet. I promise you’ll have something. But now, we just have the athletes.’
“He went to our gym, and I spoke with him a lot about my vision. He met Caio and the other guys. By the end, he said, ‘Hey, I’m here for free. I don’t want any money. Let’s make those guys big stars and then I get some money.'”
Classroom mentality
The MMA landscape is full of “Pitbulls” and “Lionhearts.” Sucupira and Borralho refused trying to fabricate faux street cred. They were unapologetically nerdy.
Growing up, Borralho loved school. He taught math and chemistry to peers for money. Sucupira worked a desk job as a copywriter.
“Nobody (at work) gave me credit,” Sucupira said. “They said, ‘You’re too crazy. Your ideas are too wild.’ This hurt me a lot. I quit the marketing and just started fighting. But one day I needed to use that.”
One day he did use that marketing background in a monumental way. Brainstorming team names, he blurted out “The Fighting Nerds.” It was an instant selection.
“I was (immediately) like, ‘That’s the name. That’s the name that consumes everything,'” Borralho remembers.
Of all the Fighting Nerd branding angles, none is more distinct than the signature glasses sported by the fighters and corners, and even occasionally in-cage interviewers Joe Rogan and Daniel Cormier. Even the UFC, with its generally restrictive policy against props, approved the glasses after some convincing by Sucupira.
“In the beginning, they said no,” Sucupira said. “But what I told them is I’m not making any money. I’m not selling glasses. I don’t have a sponsorship with glasses. It’s just the logo of our team. It’s the wig of Paddy Pimblett or Khabib. It’s the same as the big wig that they use. So it’s the same. I just put the glasses on.”
Unanimously, the glasses were a hit.
“This is an easy gift to give to people and attach people to our team,” Sucupira said. “So The Fighting Nerd glasses show to the world that the fighters are smart, because they think when nobody can think. When you’re inside a fight, inside a cage, with another fighter trying to kill you, it’s hard to think inside there. The adrenaline is too strong. If you’re able to think in that situation, you are one of the smartest guys in the world. This is what the glasses represent, that we think when nobody can think. We think when bullets are being fired.
“The Fighting Nerds are the most intelligent guys in the world, because they think when they are throwing kicks, throwing punches inside the cage.”
Sucupira buys hundreds of pairs of lens-less black plastic glasses at a time. The signature piece of tape on each pair, Sucupira adds by hand.
“Just for this fight, I brought 350,” Sucupira said with a big grin. “… We make them. I bought just the glasses and then put the tape here. We keep the whole day doing it. It’s like therapy.”
The best thing about the glasses, explained Borralho (who admits he wore taped glasses in high school), is how it’s shown them how much they are respected across the globe after years being ridiculed for their name and appearance on the Brazilian regional scene.
“When I am in the (UFC Performance Institute), guys from other teams go, ‘Oh, give me a glasses,’ and they put the glasses on,” Sucupira said. “The most impressive thing, in Brazil, we had a fight. We fought, and our fighter won the fight, but the other guy went to our locker room and asked for a glasses, a Fighting Nerd glasses. He said, ‘I lost the fight, but can I have a Fighting Nerd glasses?’
“I thought, ‘This is bigger than the team.'”
Not f*cking leaving
The Fighting Nerds breakthrough moment finally came in 2021. Seven years after the journey began, Borralho received an offer to compete for a UFC contract on Dana White’s Contender Series.
In Sucupira’s coaching methodology, fighting is a problem needing to be solved. A proponent of formulating game plans specific to individual opponents, Sucupira instilled in Borralho a mentality of fighting smarter, not tougher.
“You have to find the best way to solve any problem,” Sucupira explained. “A fight is a big problem to solve.”
When Borralho fought Aaron Jeffery on the series, he solved the equation … but only part of it. The fight wasn’t exciting enough for Dana White, who passed on extending a contract offer.
The shuttle ride back to the hotel was quiet until Borralho perked up.
“Pablo, I’m not coming back,” Borralho said.
Sucupira replied, “How’s that, Caio? You have to come back.”
“No, I’m not coming back. I’m just coming back with the contract,” Borralho argued back. “I’m just going to train here.”
Sucupira texted Mick Maynard to inform him of the impromptu decision.
The response dots appeared. Maynard was typing.
“Awesome,” Maynard wrote back.
The gamble paid off. Maynard circled back a few weeks later and offered Borralho a short notice fill-in spot, up a weight class vs. Jesse Murray.
It was an easy yes. This time, however, the approach needed tweaking. Excitement was a necessary part of the equation.
“We knew that we needed to put on a show,” Sucupira said. “That was the way to solve that problem – and he did that. He put on a show.”
Borralho finished Murray in Round 1, and the UFC contract came, a massive moment for the entire squad of Nerds.
“I felt it was really hard to burst onto the scene,” Sucupira said. “But when we did that, it was a takeover.”
Nerd World Order
Three years later, it’s another milestone. Saturday’s UFC on ESPN 62 headliner between Borralho and Jared Cannonier will mark the team’s first main event.
The Nerds enter with a tremendous amount of momentum. Although Borralho is the unofficial captain, other clubhouse leaders have emerged. Fans have become attached to the fighters – and their personalities.
“Everyone is different,” Borralho said. “We see [autotag]Carlos Prates[/autotag]. He smokes cigarettes and all this sh*t. He drinks a lot and other stuff. But when it comes about fighting, about studying, about putting a serious thing on the line, he’s one of the best. He trains his ass off. He’s very into it. Then we have [autotag]Jean Silva[/autotag], who is a crazy motherf*cker that barks, that talks sh*t a lot and other stuff. But when it comes about training, about fighting, about studying, he’s one of the hardest workers that I’ve ever seen.”
More than the glasses or their in-cage success, the team is tied by the message they want to send. It’s time for nerds to get their revenge – and inspire.
“When you think about a nerd guy, you always see a guy who wants to be the best in the class room,” Borralho said. “The nerd, if he’s going into a test and he took a B+, he would be upset. Like, ‘I wanted my A+.’ …We have a big message to inspire people. We’ve seen a lot of bully things happening in the world. A lot of this sh*t happening, it’s bully payback time.
“… Imagine a guy who suffers bullying all the time for being a nerd or wearing glasses or anything like that, and he sees big nerds fighting on the biggest stages of the world, fighting the baddest guys in the world and beating their ass. It’s really bully payback, so that really inspires them, not just to fight but just to be whoever they want. They have this powerful thing inside of them, just to overcome everything that happens in their life about bullying and other sh*t.”
Sucupira echoed, “We prove that you don’t need to be a bully to win fights. You don’t need to be angry to beat a guy. You don’t need to vibe in a bad way. We knock people out. We do bonus performances. But we do it in a love vibe. We do it liking each other.”
Beyond Borralho and the cigarette-smoking sniper Prates and the barking Silva, there’s [autotag]Mauricio Ruffy[/autotag], a powerful striker who already has fans buzzing after just one UFC appearance. There’s [autotag]Bruna Brasil[/autotag], who recently beat Molly McCann. There’s veteran [autotag]Thiago Moises[/autotag], who joined the team after years at American Top Team. There’s UFC lightweight [autotag]Kaynan Kruschewsky[/autotag].
Sucupira and Borralho say to also keep an eye out for unsigned prospects Icaro Brito, Geovanis Palacios, Natalia Alves, Felipe Douglas, and Fabricio Azevedo, who could make a splash in years to come.
“I’m more hungry. I’m more pumped,” Sucupira said. “I like to be the best that I can. Now we are in the UFC, I think we have the structure to go one step ahead also. You can expect a better Fighting Nerds each year, more guys, more performances, and you can count on that. In one or two years, you can count on a Fighting Nerd champion.”
Sucupira and Borralho constructed a gym. They crafted a mentality. They formed a team around them and built a culture. Borralho gets emotional reflecting on the journey now that it’s paying off.
“I’m always thankful because when we started this sh*t, we were like, ‘Maybe we’re just crazy guys who believe a lot in ourselves. Let’s see if this works.’ We didn’t know. We already knew, but we didn’t know,” Borralho said. “To see it all the way through and all that we have already accomplished and to see all that we will accomplish, because it’s just the beginning of the takeover.
“… Seeing everything changing: money perspective, fame perspective, sparring perspective. It’s crazy. It’s weird to think about how far we’ve come and how far we’re still going. It’s the first headliner, the first of many. I’m top 12 in the world, soon to be top five.”
And perhaps someday, Sucupira and Borralho will break out the hammers and nails once more – to hang up something special.
“We’ll put a big belt on the wall for sure,” Borralho said.
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 62.
Featherweight finalist Mairon Santos goes inside his experience on “The Ultimate Fighter” ahead of his UFC debut.
Mairon Santos
Age: 24 Record: 14-1 Nickname: A Lenda Division: Featherweight Opponent: Kaan Ofli (11-2-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC) Path to final: Split decision over Edwin Cooper Jr., unanimous decision over Guillermo Torres
On getting to the UFC
“It feels right, but at the same time it’s weird because it’s new. But I think I’m doing pretty good. It seems like everything’s going so fast, but I’m enjoying every moment – like taking pictures, signing posters. I think yesterday when I was signing posters, I was like, ‘Oh my God. I’m here. I’m in the UFC.’ But everything since ‘TUF,’ I’m kind of getting used to some things, but some things are new to me. But everything has been great.”
On his TUF experience
“My first weight cut was pretty hard. I went through a lot of bad things, and between my first fight and my second fight, I couldn’t train properly because I was injured, and that wasn’t playing in my favor to help me to cut weight again 13 days after. So I had like nine days training to cut, I don’t know – 30 pounds. They didn’t show that.”
On opponent Kaan Ofli
“I think he’ll try to grab me all the time, like all my opponents, because they never want to strike with me. I’m just training what I trained for for all my fights.”
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 62.
UFC on ESPN 62 ceremonial weigh-ins are complete, and the fighters came face-to-face one final time before Saturday’s event.
LAS VEGAS – UFC on ESPN 62 weigh-ins took place Friday, and the fighters came face-to-face one final time before Saturday’s event.
The weigh-ins took place at the UFC Apex, which hosts Saturday’s event (ESPN/ESPN+). Check out the video above to see the athletes from all 12 scheduled matchups come face-to-face, and don’t miss the photo gallery below.
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 62.
The main event for the UFC’s latest home show is official after the headliners made weight Friday.
LAS VEGAS – The main event for the UFC’s latest home show is official after the headliners made weight Friday.
Ahead of UFC on ESPN 62 (ESPN/ESPN+), which takes place Saturday at the UFC Apex, middleweights [autotag]Jared Cannonier[/autotag] (17-7 MMA, 10-7 UFC) and [autotag]Caio Borralho[/autotag] (16-1 MMA, 6-0 UFC) stepped on the scale at the official weigh-ins.
Check out the video from their trips to the scale above.
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC on ESPN 62.