Lightweights
#4 LW | Beneil Dariush (22-4-1, 16-4-1 UFC) vs. #1 LW | Charles Oliveira (33-9, 21-9 UFC)ODDS: Dariush (-140), Oliveira (+120)
Advertisement
Dariush never displayed the obvious mental struggles that marred the worst stretches of Oliveira’s career, but he has also found a new level of success by learning to embrace the madness of mixed martial arts. A Brazilian jiu-jitsu ace with a well-studied striking game, Dariush had the look of a potential title contender upon hitting the UFC. He was prone to some lapses, such as getting sparked by Ramsey Nijem in his second UFC fight or suffering a shocking submission loss to Michael Chiesa in 2016, but the general consensus was that Dariush was practiced and consistent enough to eventually keep working his way up the ladder into the higher tiers of the UFC’s historically deepest division. Then 2017 hit. Dariush was doing well against Edson Barboza up until the point that he got obliterated with a flying knee, but he followed that up with a flat performance in a draw against Evan Dunham. With that as the backdrop to Dariush’s first fight of 2018, which then saw him get flattened in 42 seconds by late replacement Alexander Hernandez, questions subsequently lingered as to whether he was chinny enough to suddenly be past his prime. Dariush righted the ship a bit in his next few fights, mostly by leaning on his wrestling and grappling, but there was not much evidence of any sort of breakthrough until his 2020 bout against Drakkar Klose. The Fight Ready rep seemingly had Dariush on the ropes for a near knockout but instead seemed to awaken something in him. Dariush started marching Klose down while throwing like a wildman, eventually earning a particularly brutal knockout. Things have not been quite that spectacular the whole rest of the way for Dariush, but the general outline remains the same. Dariush has unlocked a new level of aggression that has made him a consistently difficult force for opponents to deal with; he even outlasted Diego Ferreira and Mateusz Gamrot in the type of wrestling-heavy fights in which both opponents have typically thrived. This does all look to mean that Dariush is in the best form yet to take on a challenge like this version of Oliveira, but given the aggression that both men now bring to the table, this is essentially a coinflip. Dariush does have the combination of grappling skill and lack of fear that could lead him to replicate Makhachev’s performance against the former champ, but he is also a much more defensively flammable fighter to the Russian. The lean is that Dariush can survive things long enough to break Oliveira first, but a result either way would not be a shock. The pick is Dariush via second-round submission.
Jump To »
Nunes vs. Aldana
Dariush vs. Oliveira
Malott vs. Fugitt
Ige vs. Landwehr
Barriault vs. Anders
The Prelims
« Previous By The Numbers: UFC 289 Pre-Fight Edition
Next Amanda Nunes: Loss to Julianna Pena Made Me a Better Fighter »
More