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Best bets for UFC 248: Israel Adesanya vs. Yoel Romero

A return to T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas means that UFC 248 is a major fight card intended to draw plenty of attention.

Not only are we getting two titles fights, but both feature two current champions growing into international stars, and each is making a first title defense. Coincidentally, both are facing talented challengers who have plenty of title fight experience of their own. The incumbent champs are both betting favorites and likely to close that way, but we're only backing one with any confidence.

Early prelims begin at 6:30 p.m. ET on ESPN+, and prelims are at 8 p.m. on ESPN. The main card starts at 10 p.m. on PPV.

Odds courtesy of Caesars Sportsbook, as of Thursday.


Middleweight main event: Champ Israel Adesanya (-280) vs. No. 3 Yoel Romero (+230)

Adesanya is the phenom that the UFC hopes can combine the formerly untouchable skills of Anderson Silva with the confidence and dominance of Jon Jones. He has talent, charisma and now a belt. And just as important, he has a flashy video game style-striking arsenal that that has caught the sport's attention. But he's certainly not getting a layup for his first title defense.

Romero has faced plenty of talented strikers, and, surprisingly, has chosen to stand and trade with most of them. He has put in admirable performances -- winning most of his fights and losing a few to top talent -- all while rarely relying too heavily on the wrestling base that earned him an Olympic medal. He's accurate with explosive power when he swings for the fences, but he doesn't do well outpointing opponents with pace and volume.

Romero could consider himself a more powerful version of Kelvin Gastelum, who took Adesanya the distance in a closely contested title fight. Romero could change levels and probably will test Adesanya's youth and resilience (and his chin) at some point on the feet. But the risk with each fight past age 40 is that Romero's speed and durability will finally start to fade.

E+ recommends: At these odds, it's a pass. A small flier on Romero might be worthy, assuming more steam on Adesanya pushes odds further apart. If Romero approaches the +300 range he is worth a small play, but he has to make weight -- and look healthy doing so.


Women's strawweight championship: Champ Weili Zhang (-190) vs No. 4 Joanna Jedrzejczyk (+160)

Zhang has only four UFC appearances to date but is riding a 20-fight win streak that grabbed our collective attention only after a clear decision victory over a well-ranked Tecia Torres. That earned her a title shot against Jessica Andrade, which resulted in a stunning first-minute upset by knockout for Zhang. If the market thought that was a fluke, then she would not be favored against Jedrzejczyk, who has been that division's most dominant prior champion, amassing five successful title defenses and losing only to opponents in title fights. Yet here we are.

The UFC history on Zhang is limited, but her stats are impressive; plus, there's a feeling she's only getting better with each performance. On paper she's a dual-threat fighter who can stand and trade but also puts the opponent on the mat. And while Jedrzejczyk made a career of being a busy and effective striker, Zhang might be the first to look even more voluminous and aggressive in her output than the Polish former champ.

Should it stay on the feet, Zhang will have a power advantage, plus the confidence to push forward enough to use it. What she needs to avoid is getting into a strike-and-fade contest against an experienced Muay Thai striker with an endless gas tank. If rounds are close, Zhang's coaches should encourage takedowns to solidify time in control and possible dampen Jedrzejczyk's offensive output. One thing Jedrzejczyk has never had is an effective ground offense, though she will force opponents to chase her.

E+ recommends: ML lean on Zhang, but not north of -200.


Other fight card values

An affordable favorite is Beneil Dariush. His matchup with Drakkar Klose pits a contrast between Dariush's aggressive style that finishes fights or results in his own loss by finish with the slower style of Klose, who has gone to the cards in every UFC appearance. Dariush is more accurate, more aggressive and much more likely to control the ground game.

E+ recommends: Dariush ML -170

For underdog potential, consider Neil Magny over Li Jingliang. Magny knows how to grind out a win and has deep experience against ranked opponents. Li has looked strong at times, but his best performances have come closer to home and against unranked talent.

E+ recommends: Magny ML +150