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St. Pierre meets mercurial Diaz at UFC 158

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fighters Georges St-Pierre, left, and Nick Diaz, right, are separated by UFC president Dana White, center, during the weight-in for UFC 158 in Montreal on Friday March 15, 2013. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Ryan Remiorz)

MONTREAL >> Almost lost in the circus-like atmosphere surrounding Nick Diaz and UFC welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre this week is the fact that the two actually have to climb into a cage together.

“All the things that happen leading up to this fight, there’s going to be a fight on Saturday night,” UFC President Dana White said. “We’re almost there. This is almost over.”

The matchup pits the well-rounded St. Pierre (23-2) against the scrappy Diaz (27-8) at Montreal’s Bell Centre on Saturday night, headlining a card stacked with key welterweight bouts. No. 1 contender Johny Hendricks faces Carlos Condit, while Jake Ellenberger meets Nate Marquardt.

St. Pierre is hard to hit, avoiding 75.6 percent of his opponents’ strikes, best among welterweights and third-best in UFC history. And he has landed more significant strikes (1,048) and total strikes (2,188) than any UFC fighter.

The 31-year-old from Montreal also leads the UFC in takedowns with a 78.1 percent accuracy rate. And when he gets you down, he keeps you there and punishes you: His 409 significant ground strikes are the most in UFC history. In his last 15 fights, only one opponent has managed a reversal of a dominant position.

The champion’s takedown defense (88 percent) is fourth best in UFC history. St. Pierre has spent 45.3 percent of his fights on top of his opponent and only 3.2 percent on the bottom, while the same numbers for Diaz are 11.3 and 15.3 percent.

Put it together and you have a champion who can choose where the fight goes.

Diaz is a dangerous boxer who can score from distance — his 912 strikes landed at distance are the most in UFC/Strikeforce combined history.

The California fighter throws lots of punches, landing 8.28 significant strikes a minute in his last nine fights. No UFC fighter has matched that over the same time span.

And Diaz, like St. Pierre a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, is a threat off his back. He has tried 20 serious submission attempts in his last 25 bouts, half from the bottom position. Four of those off his back earned tapouts.

At 60 percent, Diaz’s striking defense is slightly above the UFC average. But Carlos Condit connected often in his win over Diaz last year, landing a UFC record 68 leg kicks and 151 significant strikes, fourth most by a welterweight in a single fight.

Both fighters are tough mentally.

The prickly Diaz is a pit bull, the kind of man you’d want at your back if you were backed into an alley facing a wave of attackers. St. Pierre sticks to his game plan, taking the fight to where his opponent doesn’t want to go.

Conventional wisdom has St. Pierre taking Diaz down, holding him there and beating him up. A grinding five-round decision that leaves both fighters marked, but Diaz worse for wear, could be in the cards.

“Control and the ground game is the way to win this fight,” former featherweight Mark Hominick said.

“Diaz is a great boxer. He has a very specific style,” added Marquardt, St. Pierre’s longtime training partner. “Georges can change his styles a lot better than Diaz, so I think Georges’ game plan is going to be able to negate any kind of offense that Diaz has. Georges is going to be able to find the takedowns pretty easily and on the ground his defense is really good.

“So that will be where the fight happens, I believe, on the ground, inside Diaz’s guard. So it’s really going to depend on how aggressive Diaz is at going for the submission. He’s very good at the armbar and there’s a couple of positions Georges puts himself in where he could be susceptible to the armbar.”

St. Pierre, while clearly antagonized by Diaz’s often weird verbal assaults this week, rarely fights with emotion. He is all business in the cage.

The champion has been unstoppable in seven straight title defenses since winning back the 170-pound title from Matt Serra in Montreal at UFC 83 in April 2008.

He made Josh Koscheck pay for his pre-fight taunts at UFC 124 with a stinging jab that sent Koscheck to the hospital afterward in need of facial surgery.

He took Jon Fitch down seven times at UFC 87, Thiago Alves 10 times at UFC 100, Dan Hardy 11 times at UFC 111 and Condit seven times at UFC 154.

Against Jake Shields, a dangerous jiu-jitsu fighter, he landed just two takedowns at UFC 129 in what the champion admitted was an off night.

Fighters at St. Pierre’s Tristar gym, not surprisingly, are in the champion’s corner.

“Georges is an animal, man,” lightweight Mike Ricci said. “He is what he is. He doesn’t stop. He’s consistently winning, winning, winning. He’s consistently working and preparing properly which is why he’s winning. This time is no different. I don’t expect this fight to be any different.

“It’s a tough fight. You know Nick will score some points, that’s for sure … but he won’t be able to get the upper hand on Georges for more than 10 seconds or 30 seconds out of a round.”

St. Pierre’s somewhat distant attitude, at least when not antagonized by Diaz, prior to this fight have led some to wonder how long the champion will continue.

A fight with Hendricks, providing he beats Condit on Saturday, is next. And a lucrative superfight with middleweight champion Anderson Silva looms in the distance.

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