UFC Vegas 71: Sergei Pavlovich vs. Curtis Blaydes — Fights to make

The UFC Vegas 71 fight card is all done and dusted and, while it wasn’t a spectacular affair, it had some notable highlights. Most importantly, we learned that Sergei Pavlovich is absolutely ‘for real.’ The Russian heavyweight put it on Curtis Blaydes for the first round finish and should be looking at a chance for gold sometime soon. Otherwise Montel Jackson looked like a man on the rise, and Jeremiah Wells kept his welterweight win streak alive.

So, is Jon Jones going to stick around long enough to fight Sergei Pavlovich? Is Bruno Silva back on track as a feature action-fighter? Do we need to see King vs. Jared Gordon again?

To answer those questions—but not much else—I’ll be using the classic Silva/Shelby fight booking methodology from the UFC of years past. That means pitting winners against winners, losers against losers, and similarly tenured talent up against one another. Hopefully, by following that model, a few of these post-UFC 287 bout ideas will actually make it off the page and into the Octagon. Now, let’s get to the fights!

SERGEI PAVLOVICH

At more or less every turn of the page for Sergei Pavlovich, I’ve doubted that he would put it all together and make it to title contention. I don’t know if it was the Alistair Overeem loss in 2018, or the fact that all of his wins just seemed like he was catching each opponent by surprise, but none of it seemed terribly sustainable.

Add to it that practically every name on his hit list looked ripe for the picking in hindsight, and every time Sergei Pavlovich stepped up to the plate in his last three bouts, I’ve thought “This will be the time he strikes out.” Now, instead, I have to reckon with the idea of Sergei Pavlovich as a title contender.

Curtis Blaydes has been doing a lot of kickboxing lately inside the Octagon. Performances against Chris Daukaus and Derrick Lewis were noted for his complete willingness to stand and trade for extended periods of time. Apparently that was also the game plan against Sergei Pavlovich, since Blaydes waded in and elected to trade hands with the Russian for a solid couple minutes before deciding to shoot his first takedown. Unfortunately, by that time he was already in desperation mode, and Sergei Pavlovich was more than ready for the reaching shot. A couple more exchanges and that was all she wrote for ‘Razor’ Blaydes.

The only questions left now are: Does Jon Jones fight Stipe Miocic? And, if he wins that fight, does he stick around to defend his title again? If he does—and assuming Dana White is serious when he says he won’t work with Francis Ngannou again—then Sergei Pavlovich vs. Jon Jones is absolutely a fight I’d love to see. Likewise if Miocic wins and doesn’t retire. That’s a great fight too. Sergei Pavlovich vs. the Jones/Miocic winner is the obvious fight to make, I just wish I could be more sure it’ll happen.

CURTIS BLAYDES

First and foremost, I feel bad for Curtis Blaydes. The man has unbeaten heavyweight UFC runs of six fights, four fights, and three fights. In a division as starving for talent as this one, that could easily have been enough to warrant at least one shot at UFC gold. Six was enough to get Ciryl Gane his first shot at an interim title. It was enough to get Francis Ngannou his first shot at Stipe Miocic. Blaydes is only 32-years-old so there’s nothing to say he won’t get there some day. But for as long as it takes heavyweight champions to defend their belts, he’ll be out of contendership for at lest another year, possibly two.

On the flip side, that means we get a potential Sergei Pavlovich title fight instead of a Curtis Blaydes one and I can’t pretend I’m not 100% more excited about that proposition. Even his best boxing performances—like his finish over Daukaus—don’t carry the same thrill of raw violence that his Russian counterpart can deliver.

Curtis Blaydes got a quick win over Tom Aspinall before fighting Sergei Pavlovich.
Let’s give it another try. IMAGO / NurPhoto

All of that isn’t to say that Blaydes should be out of the running for big fights. Realistically, if we’re looking at the top of the division as it stands right this moment, a fight against Ciryl Gane makes fairly perfect sense. The other option, depending on what his return schedule looks like, would be a rematch against Tom Aspinall, whose knee exploded just 15-seconds into their fight last July.

If Aspinall is going to be back soon, it feels like he’d deserve another crack at Blaydes. Other, less tantalizing, options would include Tai Tuivasa, or Sergei Spivac. Since Aspinall’s been training hard lately and seems ready for a comeback, I’ll say Blaydes vs. Aspinall 2 is a rematch worth booking.

BRUNO SILVA

Brad Tavares looked pretty sharp for a couple minutes. Stepping in on hard 1-2s, keeping the pace and output on Bruno Silva, slipping hard shots and countering in the pocket. Then he overstepped himself on one combination and walked into a massive right hand counter. From that point, the fight was all in Silva’s court. The Brazilian just hits so damn hard. If an opponent lets him land one bomb, lots more bombs are going to follow.

Don’t be Joe Pyfer, fight Joe Pyfer. IMAGO / ZUMA Wire

Tavares protested the finish a bit, and I can commiserate with him there, the ref definitely stepped in a little soon. But the chances that the 35-year-old Xtreme Couture talent was about to rally and not just take more damage felt pretty damn slim.

As a result, that puts ‘Blindado’ back in the saddle in the middleweight division, in search of his next action fight. I was going to say he should face someone like Jun Yong Park (just because I love that guy), but then I realized that there’s only one perfect booking: Burno Silva against Joe Pyfer. Pyfer is fresh off a win over Gerald Meerschaert, who schooled Silva back when they met August of last year. Pyfer vs. Silva would be a singularly violent event.

KING & JARED GORDON

This isn’t a fight I would have ever thought needed to be run twice (and I can still see arguments to just have both men move on), but the 1st round no-contest via head clash felt exactly like the least satisfying version of this bout we could have gotten. Doubly so considering that Jared Gordon was really doing a good job adjusting to King’s [Bobby Green’s] game.

He was digging to the body well, countering in combination, and keeping up with King’s pace. Even standing through the first few minutes, this fight was close. Then King stepped in on a wild 1-2, met Gordon’s temple with his forehead, and sent him crashing to the mat.

One more time. IMAGO / ZUMA Wire

Unfortunately, he then got to drop five or six shots on Gordon that knocked ‘Flash’ all the way cold, so the Kill Cliff FC fighter might need some time to recover. If that’s the case, then book King for a rematch with Drakkar Klose and get Gordon in against Vinc Pichel. But really, a rematch between these two is probably the best option here.

To read the rest of this editorial, please subscribe to the Bloody Elbow Substack. Paid subscriptions there fund Bloody Elbow during its transition from being a Vox Media property to an independent publication (a change that began on April 1, 2023). Your paid subscriptions are helping build our new site and keeping hope alive that our staff will remain in tact. If you haven’t already, please pledge with a paid subscription today.

One fight cancelled after UFC Vegas 71 weigh-ins

For the most part, this week’s UFC Vegas 71 event stayed relatively intact. At least as long as fans don’t think too hard about Song Yadong vs. Ricky Simon being pulled to bolster next week’s Fight Night. Everyone on the main card made weight, the main event between Sergei Pavlovich and Curtis Blaydes is still on, and that’s the really important thing.

But, it wouldn’t be MMA and it wouldn’t be fight week, without at least one last minute cancellation. This time around it’s an undercard bout between Priscila Cachoeira and Karine Silva. Cachoeira weighed in at 140-pounds, four over the flyweight limit. While expectations were, initially, that ‘Zombie Girl’ would merely forfeit a percentage of her purse and the bout would go on as a catchweight, UFC officials later announced that the fight had been removed from the event altogether.

“Hey guys, I’m here to let you know that my fight is off the card,” Silva wrote in a post to her Instagram account, suggesting that she turned down the catchweight. “Unfortunately, my opponent missed weight and it wouldn’t be fair, after I’ve done my work correctly, for me to just accept that kind of behavior.

“I appreciate all the support and love. We’re ready and waiting for another opponent.”

Cachoeira has missed weight before

UFC Vegas 71 isn’t the first time Priscila Cachoeira has had trouble on the scales. Back in 2021, the Brazilian missed the flyweight limit by three pounds, coming in at 129-pounds for her bout against Gillian Robertson. While that kind of miss is often seen as an advantage for the fighter who didn’t make weight, Robertson accepted the bout anyway—and won by first round rear-naked choke submission.

Following that miss, Cachoeira fought at flyweight successfully just a couple months later, defeating Kim Ji-yeon by unanimous decision on the undercard of UFC Fight Night: Makhachev vs. Green. Perhaps due to her weigh-in struggles, however, the 34-year-old’s next bout came up at 135-pounds, against Ariane Lipski, with Cachoeira taking home a first round knockout. Her fight against Silva was to mark her return back down to flyweight where she’s spent the bulk of her career.

One other weight miss at UFC Vegas 71

While Cachoeira vs. Silva represented the only fight cancellation on UFC Vegas 71 this week, there was one other fighter who didn’t make their agreed upon limit. Also on the undercard, William Gomis hit the scales at 147-pounds for his featherweight contest against Francis Marshall. That’s just one pound over, but Gomis apparently couldn’t cut any more weight, and decided to give up 20% of his purse to his opponent.

UFC Vegas 71 takes place at the Apex facility in Las Vegas, NV. The card is set to be headlined by a heavyweight bout between Sergei Pavlovich and Curtis Blaydes. A middleweight fight between Brad Tavares and Bruno Silva is expected for the co-main event.

‘Like Kanye, like Prince’ — Bobby Green retiring his name after Saturday’s UFC fight

Come Saturday night, MMA fans will see Bobby Green step inside the Octagon for the last time. No, he’s not retiring—although he’s been telling everyone he would be—he’s not testing free agency, he’s not even looking to making the jump to boxing like so many other veteran talents. In fact, he’s not going anywhere.

But, following UFC Vegas 71—this weekend at the UFC’s Apex facility in Las Vegas, NV—Bobby Green will be gone. In his place will be shiny new action lightweight fighter King. That’s right, the former Strikeforce talent and KOTC champion is taking his nickname legal. From that day forward he won’t just be ‘King’ inside the Octagon, he’ll be King everywhere he goes.

“I’ve been telling everybody that I was retiring after this fight, and what I meant was, I was retiring as Bobby Green,” Green said in a recent interview with John Morgan and the MMA Underground (transcript via MMA Fighting). “I’m going to be changing my name, and I will no longer be Bobby Green. I’m changing my name to just King. No last name. Just one name. And so this is just the beginning of a new chapter for me.”

Bobby Green wanted to make the change years ago

For those worried this decision might be a rash one, born of sudden impulse, it turns out Green has been on this kick for a while now. The only reason he didn’t make the change sooner, to hear him tell it, is that he “was fighting so many cases with my baby mommas” over “child support and sh-t.” Under those circumstances, the courts wouldn’t allow him to switch up his moniker. Now that he’s apparently got that side of his life right, however, he can go ahead and leave Bobby behind him.

“I was fighting so many cases with my baby mommas, child support and sh-t like that. They told me, I think I spent like $1,000 or maybe $1,200 to change my name, and they were like, ‘Hey, no, you can’t do that bro, because you’ve got another case, and you’ve got another case,’ and everything, and they didn’t give me money back either,” Green said.

“They just took my money, so I was like, ‘F-ck.’ I just thought about it for years, and now here it is again, where now I’ve gotten cool with the women in my life and we’re all good, and so I’m just going to [change it]. Now I can do what I want to do and take care of these things.

“I’m just doing something different, like Kanye, like Prince,” he added. “I’m just going to be me, bro. I’m just different than everybody else that’s coming around this joint.”

Bobby Green set to face off against Jared Gordon

Free of his baby momma drama, Green is stepping into the middle of a whole different feud. While he’ll be looking at this Saturday as a chance at rejuvenation, for his opponent Jared Gordon it may be that Green is just a stepping stone to another fight. A rematch with Paddy Pimblett.

Gordon and Pimblett faced off in a mildly lackluster affair last December, at UFC 282, in Vegas. Despite a competitive first round and a grinding third for Gordon, ‘The Baddy’ walked away with a unanimous judges decision. The scorecards led to heavy backlash from fans and pundits alike.

“Yeah, he [Jared Gordon] got f-cked and that’s unfortunate,” UFC commentator Joe Rogan said of Pimblett’s decision win. “You know, I don’t like when someone gets by just because they’re famous and they have this big personality and everybody loves them.”

The criticism got so bad that it has even had Pimblett wanting to run the bout back again. The Liverpool-based fighter recently wished Gordon luck in his next bout, with the hope that he and ‘Flash’ could face off again sometime this winter after Pimblett recovers from surgery. For the moment, however, Gordon doesn’t sound like he’s that interested.

“If I thought I won a fight and I wanted to move on and upward, I wouldn’t be talking about Paddy Pimblett from my hospital bed,” Gordon explained during UFC Vegas 71 media day. The Kill Cliff FC talent went on to add that if he beats Green, fighting Pimblett would be a step backwards. “If they offer me something good, and money, I might think about it.”

UFC Vegas 71 goes down on April 22nd. The fight card is set to be headlined by a heavyweight clash between Sergei Pavlovich & Curtis Blaydes. A middleweight bout between Brad Tavares and Bruno Silva is planned for the co-main.