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Preview: UFC on ABC 3 ‘Ortega vs. Rodriguez’

Salikhov vs. Li


Welterweights

Muslim Salikhov (18-2, 5-1 UFC) vs. #14 WW | Jingliang Li (18-7, 10-5 UFC)

ODDS: Salikhov (-175), Li (+150)

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Salikhov has certainly rebounded from a disappointing UFC debut. A multi-time champion in wushu sanda, Salikhov came to the UFC in 2017 as a hyped talent who figured to help the promotion break into the Asian market. However, after getting outwrestled and tapped out by Alex Garcia in his first trip to the Octagon, “The King of Kung Fu” was easily written off. Since then, everything has clicked wonderfully for Salikhov. Some of it has been matchmaking, but Salikhov has also obviously improved his takedown defense from a mixed martial arts standpoint, leading to a string of steady wins and an undefeated record since the loss to Garcia. Despite Salikhov’s predilection for flashy offense at times, his success has mostly gone under the radar—he has only fought at a pace of about one fight per calendar year, and none of those bouts have been in a particularly high-profile position—but at 38 years old, he gets a big chance at a breakthrough win against Li. It is now common to see Chinese fighters dotting UFC cards, but there was a while when Li was the lone relevant Chinese fighter on the roster. The UFC initially attempted to crack the Chinese market back in 2014, and “The Leech” was the only talent that stuck. He has done well to adapt. Li came to the UFC as a grinding wrestler—hence the nickname—but quickly realized he had to pivot to a more effective approach, building a sharp and counter-heavy striking attack. Li does appear to have a clear ceiling when it comes to actual contender status, as Neil Magny and Khamzat Chimaev beat him without much difficulty, but recent victories over Elizeu Zaleski dos Santos and Santiago Ponzinibbio sandwiching those losses do prove that he is a solid fighter who can present a problem for most of the welterweight division—a far cry from what was expected from him back upon his entry to the UFC. Salikhov is probably the rightful favorite. Li does sometimes show up in his worst form against opponents who can keep him at range, and his approach of slow starts giving way to counters and wrestling does seem like a poor stylistic matchup against the Russian. However, Salikhov does deal with some thin margins due to a slow pace, and at 38 years old and facing a big step up in competition, it does seem worth taking a flier on Li to warm up down the stretch and turn this into the type of grimy fight that he can win. The pick is Li via decision.



Jump To »
Ortega vs. Rodriguez
Lemos vs. Waterson
Salikhov vs. Li
Mudaerji vs. Schnell
Burgos vs. Jourdain
Tate vs. Murphy
The Prelims

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