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The results are in from Paycom Center — here's how every fight on the Du Plessis vs. Usman card played out, including the night's biggest upset.
If you filled out a grid for UFC Fight Night in Oklahoma City, the top line came down to grit. Dricus Du Plessis (23-3-0) and Kamaru Usman (21-4-0) went the full five rounds at Paycom Center, and it was Du Plessis who got the nod at the 5:00 mark of the fifth. No early finish, no shortcut — just twenty-five minutes of middleweight championship-level pressure, and Du Plessis coming out the other side with his hand raised.
For everyone who argued about this one all week, the takeaway is simple: Du Plessis keeps banking wins at 185, and Usman’s move up a division hits a wall at the very top of the card.
In the co-feature, Christian Leroy Duncan (14-2-0) handed veteran Jared Cannonier (18-9-0) a defeat, closing the show in the third round (5:00). Duncan walks away with real momentum in the middleweight picture, and it’s the kind of result that reshuffles who’s spoken about next in the division.
The fastest statement of the main card belonged to Chase Hooper (16-5-1), who put away Mitch Ramirez (8-3-0) in the very first round at 2:15. Quick, clean, done — exactly the type of early result that either won you the round on your grid or busted it wide open.
Here’s where a lot of predictions came undone. Fatima Kline (9-1-0) walked in to face Tabatha Ricci (12-4-0), the more experienced name at strawweight, and left with the win at the end of round three (5:00). Ricci carried the record and the reputation; Kline carried the night. If you had Ricci circled as a safe pick, this was the fight that cost you.
The 145-pound bouts gave the grid-fillers plenty to chew on. Tommy McMillen kept his record spotless at 10-0-0, finishing Alberto Montes (12-1-0) in the third round at 3:29 — an unbeaten fighter proving it against a live opponent. But the other featherweight scrap flipped the script: Jose Miguel Delgado (11-2-0) got the better of previously once-beaten Austin Bashi (14-1-0) over three full rounds (5:00), spoiling one of the more hyped prospects on the card.
At welterweight, Jean-Paul Lebosnoyani (10-2-0) edged out Seokhyeon Ko (13-2-0) across three rounds (5:00) — the kind of grind-it-out result that rewards anyone who trusted the busier man. And the light heavyweight opener saw experience win out: Felipe Franco (10-2-0) stopped the previously undefeated Levi Rodrigues Jr. (5-0-0) in the second round at 1:40, ending a perfect record early.
The headline is Du Plessis, still stacking wins at middleweight and still finding a way in the championship rounds. But the story of the night is how many favorites got tested — Kline over Ricci, Delgado over Bashi, Franco spoiling an unbeaten run. Two zeros stayed intact (McMillen at 10-0), and one fell (Rodrigues Jr.).
This is exactly the kind of card that separates the sharp grids from the lucky ones. Think you can read the next one better? Pull up the following card, lock in your picks fight by fight, and put your grid up against your friends’ — the results speak for themselves, and now you’ve got a full board of data to argue about.