Sports

Fight Night in focus: Anthony Smith isn’t out of the title picture just yet

Just one year ago, UFC light heavyweight Anthony Smith‘s career was in jeopardy. At least that’s surely how it felt.

At this time in 2020, Smith (35-16) was coming off back-to-back losses to Glover Teixeira and Aleksandar Rakic. The losses came just three months apart, which was remarkable considering the amount of damage Smith absorbed in the first one.

Smith, who faces Ryan Spann (19-6) in the main event of UFC Fight Night on Saturday in Las Vegas, is only 33. By comparison, 205-pound champion Jan Blachowicz is 38 and the No. 1 contender, Teixeira, is 41. But those two losses had Smith at a real crossroads.

He took a concerning amount of damage in a TKO loss to Teixeira in May 2020, including a moment in which he complained of his “teeth falling out.” And after he lost again, convincingly, to Rakic at the end of August, Smith required a good amount of soul searching around if and why he still wanted to continue in this sport.

Fortunately for him, the results have been great since. Smith, who fought Jon Jones for the UFC championship in March 2019, has finished his past two opponents, Devin Clark and Jimmy Crute.

Smith is regarded as one of the toughest, smartest athletes in the sport — but that two-fight skid does still follow him, in a way. As good as he has looked in his last two, the memory of a disappointing effort against Jones in 2019 and two bad losses in 2020 lingers. It does. Smith is a reliable headliner for the UFC, and a staple of the 205-pound rankings, but he’s not close to title contention right now.

The fact he’s fighting Spann this weekend is evidence of that. This is not a title eliminator for Smith, not even close. It’s a matchup in which he’s being tasked to defend his spot against a rising contender with half as many professional bouts on his record. Spann is 5-1 in the UFC, and a win over Smith does a whole lot more for Spann than a win over Spann does for Smith.

But that’s the spot Smith put himself in last year, and he understands he’s still coming out of it. In fact, he wanted to take on the younger, up-and-coming generation — after some fans criticized the path he took to a title shot because it featured a few names past their primes.

This main event will produce either a further resurgence by Smith or the emergence of a potential new title contender in Spann.

Saturday’s UFC Fight Night is on ESPN+, with the main card starting at 7 p.m. ET and the prelims at 4 p.m.


The deciding factor?

5: Ryan Spann comes into his first main event winning five of his first six UFC fights, including a 61-second knockout of Misha Cirkunov in his last fight in March.

4: Spann has the fourth-highest knockdown rate per 15 minutes among active light heavyweights, scoring four knockdowns and never being knocked down. Spann has an 84% finish rate; 16 finishes in 19 wins; 11 by submission, 5 by knockout.

91: Finish rate for Smith, who has accumulated 32 finishes in 35 wins, 19 by KO and 13 by submission.

6: Smith’s six finishes at light heavyweight is tied for most since 2018 (3 by knockout, 3 by submission).

Sources: ESPN Stats & Information and UFC Stats


And the winner is …

UFC light heavyweight Devin Clark has fought both Smith and Spann by submission and he believes Smith’s experience could be the difference in this fight.

“I think Anthony will edge him out, because of his experience,” Clark said. “At the same time, Spann has more power. He’s stronger. That will counter Anthony’s ground game. When I fought Anthony, I kind of countered his first attack with my strength. But I think Anthony’s overall knowledge and being a veteran, he should be able to edge it out.”

Check out more fight predictions here.


How to watch the fights

Watch on ESPN+. Download the ESPN App

Don’t have ESPN+? Get it here.

There’s also FightCenter, which offers live updates for every UFC card.


Saturday’s fight card

ESPN+, 7 p.m. ET
Light heavyweight: Anthony Smith vs. Ryan Spann
Light heavyweight: Ion Cutelaba vs. Devin Clark
Women’s flyweight: Ariane Lipski vs. Mandy Bohm
Lightweight: Arman Tsarukyan vs. Christos Giagos
Men’s bantamweight: Nate Maness vs. Tony Gravely
Middleweight: Joaquin Buckley vs. Antonio Arroyo
ESPN+, 4 p.m. ET
Light heavyweight: Mike Rodriguez vs. Tafon Nchukwi
Women’s bantamweight: Pannie Kianzad vs. Raquel Pennington
Lightweight: Dakota Bush vs. Rong Zhu
Lightweight: Nikolas Motta vs. Cameron VanCamp
Men’s bantamweight: Montel Jackson vs. JP Buys
Women’s flyweight: Erin Blanchfield vs. Sarah Alpar
Welterweight: Impa Kasanganay vs. Carlston Harris
Men’s bantamweight: Gustavo Lopez vs. Heili Alateng
Women’s flyweight: Emily Whitmire vs. Hannah Goldy


…and something else you should know

  • Raquel Pennington fights on the prelim card against Pannie Kianzad at women’s bantamweight. When the fight begins, Pennington will have the most fights in division history with 14, breaking a tie with Marion Reneau. Pennington has eight wins at 135 pounds, second only to Amanda Nunes, who has 11.

  • The only undefeated fighter on this card is flyweight Mandy Bohm, who is making her UFC debut and enters her fight with Ariane Lipski with a record of 7-0. Bohm fights out of SBG Ireland and most recently fought in Bellator in Oct. 2020.

  • Ion Cutelaba fights in the co-main event against Devin Clark, looking for his first win since September 2019. Cutelaba landed nine takedowns in his draw against Dustin Jacoby, giving him 19 for his UFC career. His 57.6% takedown accuracy is tied for the second-highest rate in light heavyweight history.

Sources: ESPN Stats & Information and UFC Stats

ESPN’s Jeff Wagenheim contributed to this fight preview.

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