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UFC 292 and PFL playoffs expert picks and best bets: Can O'Malley end Sterling's title run?
ESPN PLUS $ MATERIALUFC men's bantamweight champion, Aljamain Sterling will go for a record-setting fourth 135-pound title defense when he takes on Sean O'Malley in the main event at UFC 292 in Boston on Saturday night (10 p.m. ET on ESPN+ PPV).
Sterling, ESPN's No. 7 ranked pound-for-pound fighter, is riding a nine-fight win streak. Most recently he beat former division champ, Henry Cejudo by split decision at UFC 288 in May. O'Malley, ranked No. 4 in ESPN's divisional rankings, has won four of his last five bouts. He also won his last fight by split decision, beating Petr Yan at UFC 280 last October.
In the co-main event, women's strawweight champion Zhang Weili will fight Amanda Lemos. Zhang, sits atop ESPN's women's pound-for-pound rankings, she beat Cara Esparza to reclaim the title at UFC 281 in November 2022. Lemos, ranked No. 3 in ESPN's divisional rankings, has won back-to-back fights via stoppage.
Former UFC women's featherweight and current ESPN MMA analyst Megan Anderson gives her perspective on the 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.
Bantamweight title fight: Aljamain Sterling vs. Sean O'Malley
Megan Anderson, Former UFC women's featherweight and current ESPN MMA analyst
Tale Of The Tape
STERLING | O'MALLEY | |
---|---|---|
Age | 34.1 | 28.8 |
Height | 67.0 | 71.0 |
Reach | 71.0 | 72.0 |
Stance | Orthodox | Switch |
Last Fight | May 6, 2023 | Oct. 22, 2022 |
The way he uses his wrestling to create scrambles, and then get the takedown to get the opponent's back is so impressive. We saw him do it against top-level guys like Cejudo, Yan and Cory Sandhagen. None of them had an answer for it. Sometimes Sterling is able to get the submission from that position and other times he's just able to control from there. Although the success rate of landing those submissions has decreased as he moved up in competition, but even when he doesn't get them he uses the threat of submissions to dominate rounds. Sterling is going to have to use that ability against O'Malley. He can't allow O'Malley to find his range. Even though both fighters have a similar reach, O'Malley has so many more ways to put Sterling away on the feet.
How O'Malley wins: He's going to have to keep this fight on the feet. O'Malley's ability to find his opponent's chin is outstanding. He is a master of movement and range and with his head movement and the diversity in his strikes, it makes him a very tough matchup.
O'Malley stance switches a lot, which helps him maintain lateral movement. Plus, he is dangerous from both stances. His jabs and straight punches are fast and clean. When you get a guy like Sterling, who has okay striking -- but not at the level of O'Malley -- and has a tendency to keep his hands low, that's a recipe for trouble against O'Malley who is a sniper. At some point in the fight, O'Malley is going to find his opponent's chin.
As we saw in his fight against Yan, O'Malley was able to use his knees to disrupt Yan's wrestling and even cut him open. Those strikes slowed down the pressure of Yan. I could see him using a similar game plan against the heavy wrestling approach of Sterling.
X-factor: What does O'Malley look like in the championship rounds? We've seen him go the distance in a hard-fought split decision over Yan in his last fight, but that was a three-round fight. We've never seen O'Malley in a five-round fight. However, we know Sterling can go for 25 minutes. How is O'Malley's cardio? What does his strike output look like in the later rounds?
Prediction: If I have to pick, it's probably Sterling by decision.
Betting analysis
UFC 292: Sterling Vs. O'Malley
Stand-up striking offense | Sterling | O'Malley |
Total knockdown ratio (Knockdowns/times knocked down) | 0:4 | 5:0 |
Distance knockdown rate | 0.0% | 1.8% |
Head jab accuracy | 34% | 49% |
Head power accuracy | 33% | 58% |
Standup strike ratio (Attempted vs. opp. attempted) | 1.4 | 1.4 |
Wrestling and grappling | ||
TD Attempts per Min Standing/Clinch | 0.80 | 0.08 |
Takedown Accuracy | 25% | 43% |
Advances per takedown/top control | 0.6 | 0.3 |
Opponent takedown attempts | 42 | 26 |
Takedown defense | 45% | 58% |
Share of fight time in ground control | 65% | 12% |
Submission Attempts per Trip to Ground | 0.23 | 0.21 |
Table compiled by Reed Kuhn |