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UFC 299: Expert picks and best bets for O'Malley vs. Vera 2
ESPN PLUS $ MATERIALUFC men's bantamweight champion Sean O'Malley looks to avenge his only professional loss and earn his first title defense when he takes on Marlon "Chito" Vera in the main event of UFC 299 on Saturday at the Kaseya Center in Miami (10 p.m. ET on ESPN+ PPV, with prelims at 8 p.m. on ESPNews/ESPN+ and early prelims at 6 p.m. on ESPN+).
O'Malley (17-1, 1 NC) has bounced back well since losing to Vera in 2020. The champ has beaten all but two of his six opponents during that time by knockout, including a second-round TKO win over Aljamain Sterling in August to claim the title. O'Malley is No. 10 in ESPN's pound-for-pound rankings.
Vera (23-8-1) has won five of his past six bouts. His only loss during that stretch was a split decision to Cory Sandhagen in March 2023. Vera is ranked No. 8 in ESPN's bantamweight rankings.
In the co-main event, two-time lightweight title challenger Dustin Poirier takes on rising contender Benoit Saint Denis. Poirier, ranked No. 5 in ESPN's lightweight rankings, enters the fight following a second-round knockout loss to Justin Gaethje last July. Saint Denis, unranked by ESPN, has won his past five fights via finish (3 knockouts, 2 submissions).
Marc Raimondi spoke to Fight Ready MMA coach Santino DeFranco to get his perspective on the UFC main event. ESPN's betting experts Reed Kuhn and Ian Parker add their insights and analysis on the main event and other intriguing bets they like on the card.
Editor's note: Responses have been edited for brevity and clarity.
Men's bantamweight title fight: Sean O'Malley vs. Marlon Vera
Santino DeFranco, Fight Ready MMA coach
Tale Of The Tape
O'MALLEY | VERA | |
---|---|---|
Age | 29.4 | 31.3 |
Height | 71.0 | 68.0 |
Reach | 72.0 | 70.5 |
Stance | Switch | Switch |
Last Fight | Aug. 19, 2023 | Aug. 19, 2023 |
The thing with O'Malley is going to be, can he knock "Chito" out early because he is just so durable. That's the big question. If he cannot knock him out early, does he have the cardio to push in the later rounds and not get steamrolled as he gets tired?
How Vera wins: "Chito" has to withstand Round 1. He has to not get hurt in the first two rounds, but not just sit back and calculate where he gives up those rounds for nothing. If he's going to be there and not put the pace on, he's got to do enough to get O'Malley tired. Otherwise, O'Malley can win Rounds 1 and 2 before "Chito" gets going. And then O'Malley needs to win one more round out of the last three. And if he wins one more round out of the last three, it doesn't matter if he loses the last two rounds as long as he doesn't get finished.
Vera pushes the pace, but he doesn't really push the pace in terms of volume. He pushes the pace in terms of range. People want to fight at their range, where they're comfortable, and Vera is OK smothering that range a little bit, and he suffocates people. They're uncomfortable when people are in a more traditional boxing than a kickboxing range, and they punch when they don't want to. They shoot when they don't want to, forcing them to make bigger movements than they want, getting their heart rate up more and breathing heavier. It's that range. That's the real pressure of "Chito."
X factor: Does Vera's chin hold up longer than O'Malley's body and cardio? And we've seen O'Malley get pushed around, we've seen him get rocked. We've seen him get his ankle hurt. We've seen these middle kicks and body shots slow him down a bit, and then we've seen him tire. We've seen him throw so many punches at Kris Moutinho and not put him away that he was almost like in the Homer Simpson situation where he punched himself out, and Moutinho was still standing. So, the durability factor of both fighters and the cardio factor of both fighters is the key to this entire fight. Can O'Malley put "Chito" away? And if the answer is yes, then I think he wins. If he cannot put him away, I believe that Vera's pressure will break O'Malley, and I think Vera will walk away with the decision to win.
Prediction: I think O'Malley is the better fighter everywhere, and I could see a place where "Chito" is just durable and won't die, and nobody's giving him a chance to win, and he just somehow toughs it out and finds his way to a victory in the last rounds by just pushing out a little bit more volume and cardio. If it goes to a decision, it's Vera. If it's a finish, it's O'Malley in Rounds 1 or 2. I lean Vera 51% to 49% on the narrowest margins. I hate to flip-flop on it, but I can see O'Malley just starching him and looking amazing. But that pressure and cardio of Vera and his calmness and durability -- if the fight goes later -- makes me lean on that.
Betting analysis
UFC 299: O'Malley Vs. Vera 2
Standup striking offense | O'Malley | Vera |
Total knockdown ratio (knockdowns/times knocked down) | 6:0 | 12:0 |
Distance knockdown rate | 2.1% | 3.4% |
Head jab accuracy | 49% | 41% |
Head power accuracy | 58% | 32% |
Standup strike ratio (attempted vs. opp. attempted) | 1.3 | 0.8 |
Wrestling and grappling | ||
TD attempts per minutes standing/clinch | 0.08 | 0.13 |
Takedown accuracy | 43% | 39% |
Advances per takedown/top control | 0.3 | 1.7 |
Opponent takedown attempts | 28 | 74 |
Takedown defense | 61% | 70% |
Share of fight time in ground control | 15% | 30% |
Submission attempts per trip to ground | 0.21 | 0.55 |
Table compiled by Reed Kuhn |