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UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya released a YouTube video last weekend in which he broke down Saturday’s main event fight between his “children” Paulo Costa and Marvin Vettori.

On its face, Costa vs. Vettori is an outstanding main event featuring two of the UFC’s top middleweights. Costa and Vettori are ranked Nos. 2 and 5, respectively, by the UFC. They’re Nos. 3 and 6 in the ESPN rankings.

As good as this matchup is, however, it’s worth pointing out Adesanya’s presence. Both Costa (13-1) and Vettori (17-4-1) are coming off losses to the champion — and frankly, neither appeared to handle the loss particularly well. How each of them will look in this first appearance back is a major question.

In the aftermath of his TKO loss to Adesanya in September 2020, Costa, 30, essentially said he was hungover during the fight, after drinking an entire bottle of wine the night before. He demanded Adesanya accept an immediate rematch, despite the fact he was out-landed in total strikes by 55 to 12. Costa has since pulled out of two scheduled fights, citing illness and contract issues. This week he alerted the UFC that he would not make the middleweight limit of 186 pounds for a nontitle bout, and Vettori agreed to adjust the fight, first to a 195-pound catchweight, then to the 205-pound light heavyweight limit.

Vettori, 28, suffered a unanimous decision loss to Adesanya at UFC 263 in June. At the conclusion of the five-round fight, Vettori felt he had done enough to win the fight — even though it was clear to virtually every observer that he’d come up short. Judges scored the championship fight a clean 50-45 sweep for Adesanya.

How much does either scenario mean moving forward? Most likely, they both matter very little. No one is doubting Costa or Vettori’s place at 185 pounds.

However, their individual reactions to those losses are part of the narrative heading into this main event. As long as Adesanya is the target at middleweight — he is expected to defend his title next against Robert Whittaker in the first quarter of 2022 — he will likely be seen as holding a mental advantage over Costa and Vettori.

The winner of Saturday’s high-profile, fan-friendly contest can stifle that narrative a bit, though, as this matchup truly is seen as two of the absolute best squaring off.

Saturday’s fights are on ESPN+, with the main card starting at 4 p.m. ET and prelims at 1 p.m.



Numbers matchup: 11 vs. 0

11: Knockouts by Costa among his 13 career fights, including four KO/TKO wins since 2017, tied for the most in the UFC middleweight division over that time. Adding in his one submission victory, Costa has a finish rate of 92%. Nine of his wins have come by first-round finish.

0: Fights in which Vettori has been finished during his 23-bout career.

Sources: ESPN Stats & Information and UFC Stats



Why it’s not a middleweight fight

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1:55

Paulo Costa and Marvin Vettori discuss what weight they plan to fight at in Saturday’s UFC Fight Night main event.


And the winner is …

Israel Adesanya has had good experiences with both guys. He fought Vettori twice,” James Krause, UFC welterweight and a coach at Glory MMA, said. “He said Costa is going to beat Vettori. I don’t know if there’s emotions to that, but he thought Costa was going to stop the takedowns. Who else knows these two better? So, I’m going to ride with Izzy on this one.”

Check out how Krause and other experts break down the main event and predict a winner.


Saturday’s fight card

ESPN+, 4 p.m. ET
Light heavyweight: Paulo Costa vs. Marvin Vettori
Lightweight: Grant Dawson vs. Ricky Glenn
Women’s bantamweight: Jessica-Rose Clark vs. Joselyne Edwards
Men’s featherweight: Alex Caceres vs. Seungwoo Choi
Welterweight: Dwight Grant vs. Francisco Trinaldo
Light heavyweight: Nicolae Negumereanu vs. Ike Villanueva
ESPN+, 1 p.m. ET
Middleweight: Junyong Park vs. Gregory Rodrigues
Lightweight: Alan Patrick vs. Mason Jones
Strawweight: Tabatha Ricci vs. Maria Oliveira
Middleweight: Jamie Pickett vs. Laureano Staropoli
Lightweight: Khama Worthy vs. Jai Herbert
Men’s flyweight: Jeff Molina vs. Daniel Lacerda
Strawweight: Livinha Souza vs. Randa Markos
Men’s bantamweight: Aaron Phillips vs. Jonathan Martinez


The best bet to make is ….

Marvin Vettori ( -150) vs. Paulo Costa (+125)

After a year-long layoff since his TKO loss to Israel Adesanya, Costa returns to the cage, looking to prove to the world that he still belongs at the top of the division. In order to win, Costa will have to do something that no opponent has been able to do to Vettori: knock him out. Costa has a ton of power and can end the fight at any point. However, I don’t see the fight going that way. Vettori has never been finished, and I don’t believe that starts now.

Look for Vettori to come forward and dictate the pace. Vettori’s cardio and output will be his biggest advantages, as Costa tends to slow down and throws with power only one punch at a time. Vettori will also have the edge in the wrestling department, which he can fall back on if he decides to put Costa on his back, completely taking away his power. If Vettori keeps up the pace over five rounds, I don’t see Costa being able to keep up.

Pick: Vettori to win at -150.

— Ian Parker

For more tips from Parker on this fight card’s best bets, go here.


How to watch the fights

Watch all of the fights 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.


Four more things to know (from ESPN Stats & Information)

1. Grant Dawson will be trying to keep an unbeaten UFC run going when he takes on lightweight Ricky Glenn in the co-main event. Dawson, a Dana White’s Contender Series alum from Season 1, is 5-0 since making his debut in 2019.

2. Francisco Trinaldo, who fights welterweight Dwight Grant, has won 16 fights since his UFC debut in 2012, tied for sixth most of any fighter over that time. Grant has won three of his last four.

3. Both Alex Caceres and Seungwoo Choi are riding winning streaks into their featherweight bout. Caceres has won four straight fights and Choi three.

4. Jeff Molina made an explosive UFC debut in April, winning a decision over Aori Qileng on the strength of connecting on 189 significant strikes, the most in a flyweight fight in UFC history and the most by a fighter making a UFC debut in any weight class. Molina faces Daniel Lacerda on the prelims.

ESPN’s Jeff Wagenheim also contributed to this fight preview.

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Mike Trout still wants to win — and only with the Angels

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Mike Trout still wants to win -- and only with the Angels

ON AN UNCOMMONLY crisp afternoon in the middle of December, new Los Angeles Angels manager Ron Washington arrived in Bridgeton, New Jersey, for his first meeting with his most important player. Washington, hired a month earlier, drove up to Mike Trout‘s sprawling, custom-built mansion alongside his two new outfield coaches, Bo Porter and Eric Young Sr. They toured Trout’s expansive basement workout room, put up some shots in the neighboring basketball court and settled into the den for a conversation that lasted close to four hours.

Trout, 32, was coming off a ninth consecutive playoff-less season and a third consecutive injury-shortened one. Less than a week earlier, Shohei Ohtani, who once provided Trout his best chance at the October runs that famously elude him, had left to join the crosstown Los Angeles Dodgers. But Trout, those who attended the meeting said, didn’t spend much time lamenting. He pushed forward. He prodded the new staff about its vision, talked constantly about a desire to run the bases more freely and emphasized what he has consistently said publicly:

That he not only yearns to win, but that he wants to do so with — and only with — the Angels.

“This man has a lot invested in here,” Porter said, “and it showed.”

The speculation around Trout playing somewhere other than the Angels seems to intensify with every irrelevant month of September. It isn’t just fans and pundits; it’s players, coaches, scouts and executives who regularly wonder why the three-time MVP won’t demand a trade from the organization that has thus far failed to capitalize on his prime. Trout, however, remains unwavering in his commitment. Some have taken it as an indication that winning isn’t enough of a priority, a suggestion those who know him scoff at. Nobody, they say, is more competitive. Nobody is more hellbent on changing the narrative.

“He wants to stay,” said Torii Hunter, the longtime major league outfielder who once played with Trout and is now an Angels special assistant. “For the people that say he should get traded — it’s not their decision. It’s Trout’s decision. For people to say that he doesn’t want to win a championship — that’s 100% false. This guy’s always had fire and a desire to win.”

Since their initial meeting, Washington, Porter and Young have seen a man resolute on proving something, to both himself and those around him. In their first spring training together, they talked about him being first in drills and never shy about speaking out and consistently projecting joy. They noticed him setting a tone for everybody else.

“He’s been the one leading the charge out here, every single day — getting after it, having fun in the clubhouse, talking to the players, enjoying the work that we’ve been doing out here,” Washington said from Tempe, Arizona, last month. “His enjoying the work is making everyone else enjoy the work.”

A dozen years ago, Hunter mentored Trout during the historic rookie season that put him on a path to potentially — before injuries slowed the trajectory — become the greatest baseball player who ever lived. Hunter still sees elements of the ebullient 20-year-old who peppered him with questions about center field and ribbed him about his Dallas Cowboys. Now, though, he also sees more fight. More edge. More urgency to not only prove he’s still elite, but that he can do what few believe he can: lead the Ohtani-less Angels into the playoffs.

In Hunter’s words, “His ‘why’ is starting to become bigger.”


IF THERE’S ONE thing almost universally known about Trout, it’s that he’s loyal. It comes from his parents, he said, “and how I was brought up.” It’s a loyalty shown through his family and his closest friends, many of whom date back to grade school, and extends to almost every aspect of his life, most notably, it seems, to his employer. “But it starts when you’re a kid,” Trout said.

Trout grew up idolizing Derek Jeter, the iconic New York Yankees shortstop who famously wore only one uniform. When Trout signed his record-breaking, $426.5 million extension in the spring of 2019, he said following in Jeter’s footsteps was “something — obviously not totally, but something in the back of my mind.”

Those who know Trout have noted over the years that there’s a certain comfort that comes with separating his home life in the Northeast from his baseball life in Southern California, adding that he seems disinterested in the hoopla that would come with playing for the Yankees or Philadelphia Phillies. Some bring up his perpetual optimism — that he always shows up to spring training believing the Angels are capable of winning around him, no matter the circumstances. Others — most recently current Angels closer Carlos Estévez — say Trout will never forget that the Angels drafted him after 21 teams passed on him in the 2009 draft.

As Young said, “I think he has that feeling of responsibility.”

Whatever the reason, Trout wants to stay. He promises. You don’t have to believe him, but he’ll keep saying it.

“It ultimately comes down to what I want, what Jess wants, as a family,” said Trout, referencing his wife and 3-year-old son, who will have a baby brother in a few months. “The overall, outside perspective doesn’t influence me one bit.”

Trout was by far the greatest player in his sport from 2012 to 2019, an eight-year stretch in which he finished within the top two in MVP voting seven times and accumulated 70.5 FanGraphs wins above replacement (second on that list is Max Scherzer, who put up 48.5 fWAR). During that span, the Angels did not win a single postseason game, a reminder of the depth required to thrive in Major League Baseball and the team’s mind-numbing inability to capitalize on such a clear head start.

Ohtani’s emergence as a two-way phenomenon from 2021 to 2023 coincided with Trout playing in only 237 of a potential 486 games because of injuries to his right calf, back and left hand. Anthony Rendon, the third baseman signed to a hefty contract before the 2020 season to be the team’s third star, played in only 30% of his games during that same stretch. The Angels never finished fewer than 17 games out of first place.

Their shortcomings, however, stretch much further. Trout’s only playoff appearance came in 2014, a first-round sweep at the hands of the Kansas City Royals. His last winning season came the year after. And yet his loyalty remains.

“He signed here, he knew what he was getting into, and he wants to stay here,” said former Angels ace Jered Weaver, Trout’s teammate from 2011 to 2016. “Like he said, it would mean even more to win here after people are saying he should leave. ‘We want to see you somewhere else.’ Well, that’s not what he wants. He wants to stay here; I think people should respect that. It’s going to make it even better when they do start winning and win something to be an ‘I told you so’ type thing.”

Trout pushed the front office to sign other stars this offseason, but instead the team scaled back payroll, from a franchise record of $212 million going into 2023 to $170 million in 2024. They lost Ohtani to a heavily deferred 10-year, $700 million contract that Angels owner Arte Moreno declined to match, largely, sources with knowledge of the situation said, because he’s categorically against the concept of deferrals. Pursuits of Blake Snell and J.D. Martinez did not materialize. Their biggest offseason expenditure, $33 million, went to relief pitcher Robert Stephenson, who might have serious arm issues.

And yet Trout arrived in spring training and talked about how much more it would mean to win with the Angels. It was an unintended acknowledgment of the arduous task in front of him, but it seems to have been appreciated.

“Knowing that your best player wants to be here and earn it and win a championship, and that’s been the message and the drive — I just think that really helps everything,” Angels left fielder Taylor Ward said. “It fires me up knowing that stuff.”

Trout struck out against Ohtani and fell just short of a title during last year’s World Baseball Classic, but Team USA’s stirring run energized him, reminding him of what he’d been missing. On the bus ride back from the ballpark after the championship game, Trout sent a text message to his manager at the time, Phil Nevin. “I needed this,” he wrote.

Since then, and probably before it, winning has been Trout’s only driver.

“He’s chasing dead people,” Porter said. “When you look at Mike Trout’s career — if he was to retire today, he’s a first-ballot Hall of Farmer. So, the accolades, I don’t even think that’s a driving force anymore. I think his No. 1 goal is to be the last team standing in the middle of the diamond at this point in his career. And he wants that to happen in an Angels uniform.”


TROUT’S EXPRESSED DESIRE to stay isn’t all that’s preventing him from moving. He entered 2024 with seven years and nearly $250 million remaining on a contract that will pay him through his age-38 season. Couple that with recent injuries, and there are very few teams, if any, that would be willing to take on the money and provide promising young players in return, which the Angels would probably demand if they’re parting with an icon. Trout’s ability to block any trade only limits the market further.

Before any trade is even possible, rival evaluators say, Trout needs a healthy and productive season.

Trout wants to get back to the full version of himself.

Young noticed that during their first meeting four months ago, when he kept hearing one phrase over and over again from Trout — that he wants to get back to “playing baseball.” It means he wants to run again. More specifically, he wants to get back to stealing bases.

“He just wants to be set free,” Young said. “And so I kept hearing that and hearing that, and I go to Wash and I say, ‘Man, I hope you don’t put no damn handcuffs or anything on him. Just let him be free.'”

There isn’t just a single aspect of Trout’s game that makes him great. It’s all of it — the lightning-fast hands, the 80-grade power, the astute strike-zone awareness, the propensity for highlight-reel catches and the elite, game-changing speed. The latter skill has not shown up as prominently in recent years. Trout stole 196 bases from 2012 to 2019, ninth most in the majors. From 2020 to 2023, amid a more conservative game plan, he amassed just six.

Trout spent a lot of time in spring training working with Porter on pitcher tendencies in hopes of creating more opportunities to run. He wants to steal at least 20 bases this year, a pursuit he doesn’t believe to be in conflict with his desire to remain healthy.

“If you’re out there holding back, sometimes it puts you in a worse position,” Trout said. “I’m not saying that’s what happened, but I feel like — if I want to steal a base, I’m going to steal a base.”

Amid the optimism for all that was new, one thing kept nagging at Trout dating back to when he first started seeing live pitching in the middle of February: His head kept moving in the batter’s box. He couldn’t keep it still, a big reason, he explained, for his struggles against fastballs last season. Finally, during a cage session from Miami on April 1, something clicked — if he loads only halfway, rather than all the way back, he remains more still and his head stays locked in, putting him in a better position before unloading his swing. Trout has taken off ever since.

“When I feel like myself at the plate,” Trout said, “no one can stop me.”

Through the Angels’ first 17 games, Trout is slashing .284/.360/.672 with seven home runs and, yep, three stolen bases, already his highest total in five years. Beyond the numbers, though, teammates have noticed a different level of intensity.

“He’s just mad,” Estévez said. “He couldn’t stay healthy last year, and he’s just mad at that.”

ESPN’s ranking of the sport’s top 100 players at the start of the season listed Trout 19th, just below another center fielder, the 23-year-old Julio Rodriguez. Trout’s standing in the game has never been in question like this.

“That’s what happens when you get injured,” Trout said. “If I was out there a full season, I think it’d be a different story. That’s just the way I feel.”

A conservative offseason means the Angels’ best chance at the playoffs lies in-house. They’re hoping that Trout and Rendon can stay healthy. That Washington, two weeks away from his 72nd birthday, still has some magic left in him. And that a promising young nucleus — headlined by catcher Logan O’Hoppe, shortstop Zach Neto and starting pitcher Reid Detmers — will emerge quickly enough to contend within a difficult American League West.

This year will help determine whether the Angels have a winning foundation.

Will it determine whether Trout wants to stay?

“I’m not putting it on one year — this year, that year,” he said. “I have six [years on my contract] after this. I told a lot of people this — if something, I don’t know what it is, but if I feel some type of way, you guys will know.”

So you’ll know when you know?

“Yeah. And it hasn’t even crossed my mind yet.”

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Verlander to make season debut Friday vs. Nats

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Verlander to make season debut Friday vs. Nats

HOUSTON — Houston Astros ace Justin Verlander will make his season debut Friday night at the Washington Nationals.

Houston manager Joe Espada made the announcement Wednesday.

“Getting him back is huge because it brings a level of confidence to our team, a boost of confidence that we’re going to get someone who’s been an MVP, a Cy Young [winner] on the mound,” Espada said. “It’s [good] for the morale and to get stuff started and moving in the right direction.”

The three-time Cy Young Award winner opened the season on the injured list with inflammation in his right shoulder. He made two rehabilitation starts, the first for Triple-A Sugar Land on April 7 and the second on Saturday for Double-A Corpus Christi.

Espada wouldn’t say how many pitches Verlander, 41, would be limited to but said they’ll keep an eye on his workload.

“We’ve got to be careful how hard we push him early,” Espada said. “I know he’s going to want to go and stay out there and give us an opportunity to win, but we’ve got to be cautious of how hard we push him early in the season.”

Verlander wasn’t thrilled with the results in his rehabilitation starts, but he said Monday that those games were valuable in getting him prepared to come off the IL.

He allowed seven hits and six runs — five earned — in four innings against Frisco on Saturday. He struck out three, walked one and threw 51 of 77 pitches for strikes.

Verlander allowed six earned runs and struck out six while pitching into the fourth inning for Sugar Land on April 7.

The Astros have gotten off to a tough start with Verlander and fellow starters Framber Valdez and José Urquidy on the injured list. They enter Wednesday’s games last in the AL West with a 6-13 record.

Espada hopes Verlander can be the boost the team needs to get on track.

“It’s good to get him back in the rotation,” Espada said. “With what he means to this club, just to get him back on track, getting some innings from him [to] build our rotation with the pieces that we need to move forward is exciting.”

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Padres’ Darvish goes on IL with neck tightness

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Padres' Darvish goes on IL with neck tightness

San Diego Padres ace Yu Darvish landed on the 15-day injured list Wednesday with neck tightness.

The Padres’ Opening Day starter, Darvish last pitched Sunday, allowing three runs on four hits in five innings in a no-decision against the rival Los Angeles Dodgers. The 37-year-old right-hander’s designation is retroactive to Monday.

The five-time All-Star is 0-1 with a 4.18 ERA through five starts this season. He is 103-86 with a 3.60 ERA and 1,951 strikeouts in 271 career starts with the Texas Rangers (2012-14, 2016-17), Dodgers (2017), Chicago Cubs (2018-20) and Padres.

San Diego recalled right-hander Logan Gillaspie from Triple-A El Paso in a corresponding transaction. He is 0-0 with a 9.00 ERA in five relief appearances for El Paso this season.

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