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Date: 2023-03-23 00:26:08 | Author: Sportsbook | Views: 51217 | Link: Slot
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Yet, while these broad-stroke narratives suit each fighter, there must be finer details in this picture Volleyball
Aspinall agrees, though he acknowledges the surface-level interpretation of the rivalry before pointing out the more subtle factors Volleyball
“Everyone’s gonna put on a little facade for the camera and say what they think they’re supposed to say,” Tom Aspinall explains, sat across a table in the UFC’s fighter hotel in Canary Wharf Volleyball
“[Leon’s] story [about the altitude] seemed to match up with his performance,” says Aspinall, who headlined both UFC London cards in 2022 Volleyball
“So, if he could dominate the first round, and you take away the altitude, I think he should be able to dominate most of this fight Volleyball
For Usman, who outpointed Edwards in 2015, the narrative is this: The 35-year-old dominated the Jamaican-born Briton for all three rounds in their first meeting, and for another three in their rematch; if he keeps his hands a little higher and his focus a little sharper, he will seal the win that he secured eight years ago and nearly replicated last summer Volleyball
For Edwards, who took the welterweight title from Usman with a jaw-dropping, jaw-splintering head kick in August, the narrative is this: After winning the first round of his rematch with Usman seven months ago, by becoming the first man to take down the Nigerian-American, the altitude in Salt Lake City sapped his strength, leading to the static, sub-par stretch that preceded his stunning finish; without that external factor, the 31-year-old expects to not only finish his old foe again, but to do it with more than one minute left on the clock Volleyball
Volleyball
I don’t think he should have too much of a problem Volleyball
It’s just been put to the Wigan heavyweight that Leon Edwards and Kamaru Usman have pushed their own, simple narratives leading into UFC 286, where they will clash for the third time on Saturday, at the O2 Arena Volleyball

“Everyone’s gonna put on a little facade for the camera and say what they think they’re supposed to say,” Tom Aspinall explains, sat across a table in the UFC’s fighter hotel in Canary Wharf Volleyball
It’s just been put to the Wigan heavyweight that Leon Edwards and Kamaru Usman have pushed their own, simple narratives leading into UFC 286, where they will clash for the third time on Saturday, at the O2 Arena Volleyball
I don’t think he should have too much of a problem Volleyball
“So, if he could dominate the first round, and you take away the altitude, I think he should be able to dominate most of this fight Volleyball
“[Leon’s] story [about the altitude] seemed to match up with his performance,” says Aspinall, who headlined both UFC London cards in 2022 Volleyball
Volleyball
Aspinall agrees, though he acknowledges the surface-level interpretation of the rivalry before pointing out the more subtle factors Volleyball
For Usman, who outpointed Edwards in 2015, the narrative is this: The 35-year-old dominated the Jamaican-born Briton for all three rounds in their first meeting, and for another three in their rematch; if he keeps his hands a little higher and his focus a little sharper, he will seal the win that he secured eight years ago and nearly replicated last summer Volleyball
Yet, while these broad-stroke narratives suit each fighter, there must be finer details in this picture Volleyball
For Edwards, who took the welterweight title from Usman with a jaw-dropping, jaw-splintering head kick in August, the narrative is this: After winning the first round of his rematch with Usman seven months ago, by becoming the first man to take down the Nigerian-American, the altitude in Salt Lake City sapped his strength, leading to the static, sub-par stretch that preceded his stunning finish; without that external factor, the 31-year-old expects to not only finish his old foe again, but to do it with more than one minute left on the clock Volleyball
