🥊 Heavyweight Bout • 3 Rounds

Gable Steveson vs Elisha Ellison

Heavyweight Bout • UFC 329: McGregor vs. Holloway 2

Saturday, July 11, 2026 • T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas

Fighter • Odds source: BetOnline
Elite Freestyle Wrestler
Fighter • Odds source: BetOnline
Regional Power-Puncher
Gable Steveson vs Elisha Ellison - UFC 329

Explore Detailed Fighter Profiles

Click on either the fighter's name or profile image for each fighter to access comprehensive UFC statistics including striking metrics, grappling data, clinch performance, complete fight history, offensive & defensive analytics, and round-by-round breakdowns.

Gable Steveson

Gable Steveson

3-0-0

🤼 Elite Freestyle Wrestler

Age:
26Prime
Height:
6'1"Shorter (est.)
Reach:
74"-2" (est.)
Leg Reach:
44"Est.

Gable Steveson

Fighter Metrics

Total UFC Fights
0
UFC Record
0-0-0
Current Streak
W3
Win Rate
100%
Finish Rate
100%
Avg Fight Duration
1:57
Victory Methods
Win Round Distribution
Elisha Ellison

Elisha Ellison

"The Snack Panther"

5-2-0

🥊 Regional Power-Puncher

Age:
29+3 yrs
Height:
6'2"Taller (est.)
Reach:
76"+2" (est.)
Leg Reach:
45"Est.

Elisha Ellison

Fighter Metrics

Total UFC Fights
1
UFC Record
0-1-0
Current Streak
L1
Win Rate
71%
Finish Rate
100%
Avg Fight Duration
1:55
Victory Methods
Win Round Distribution

📋 Last 5 Fights - Gable Steveson

DateOpponentResultMethod
2026-02-19Hugo LezamaWTKO (Punches) (R1, 3:50)
2025-11-23Kevin HeinWKO (Punch) (R1, 0:24)
2025-09-12Braden PetersonWTKO (Punches) (R1, 1:38)

📋 Last 5 Fights - Elisha Ellison

DateOpponentResultMethod
2025-09-27Brando PericicLKO/TKO (Punches from Guard) (R1, 1:55)
2025Regional OpponentWKO/TKO (R1, )
2024Regional OpponentWKO/TKO (R1, )
2024Regional OpponentWSubmission (R1, )
2023Regional OpponentWKO/TKO (R1, )

Technical Analysis

Technical Score

70/10034/100
Gable
Elisha
Gable +34.6%

Cardio Score

62/10040/100
Gable
Elisha
Gable +21.6%

Overall Rating

66/10037/100
Gable
Elisha
Gable +28.2%
📊 Technical Score

Calculated as the average of Striking Composite (46.0 vs 43.0) and Grappling Composite (95.0 vs 24.0). All composites are clearly-labeled ESTIMATES — neither fighter has a DB-computed composite. The gap is driven almost entirely by Steveson's generational wrestling pedigree.

💪 Cardio Score

Based on average fight duration, striking rate per minute, takedown rate, and finish rate. Measures cardiovascular endurance and ability to maintain pace throughout fights.

🎯 Overall Rating

Simple average of Technical Score and Cardio Score. Provides a holistic view of fighter capabilities combining skill level with physical conditioning and fight performance.

Striking Composite

46/10043/100
Gable
Elisha
Gable +3.0%

Grappling Composite

95/10024/100
Gable
Elisha
Gable +59.7%
Advanced Analytics

Technical Radar Comparison

Visual comparison of key performance metrics between both fighters

Gable Steveson
VS
Elisha Ellison
Metrics Guide
👊
SLpMStrikes Landed/Min
🎯
Str AccStrike Accuracy
🛡️
Str DefStrike Defense
🤼
TD/15Takedowns/15min
📊
TD AccTD Accuracy
🚫
TD DefTD Defense
🔒
Sub/15Submissions/15min
Hover over the chart to see detailed values

📊 Detailed Statistical Comparison

Strikes Landed/Min
Advantage:Elisha (+6.7%)
3per min3.2per min
Gable
Elisha
Difference: 0.20per min
Striking Accuracy
Advantage:Gable (+4.2%)
50%48%
Gable
Elisha
Difference: 2.00%
Striking Defense
Advantage:Gable (+19.0%)
50%42%
Gable
Elisha
Difference: 8.00%
Strikes Absorbed/Min
Advantage:Elisha (+28.6%)
3.5per min4.5per min
Gable
Elisha
Difference: 1.00per min
Takedowns/15min
Advantage:Gable (+900.0%)
5per 15min0.5per 15min
Gable
Difference: 4.50per 15min
Takedown Accuracy
Advantage:Gable (+140.0%)
60%25%
Gable
Elisha
Difference: 35.00%
Takedown Defense
Advantage:Gable (+200.0%)
75%25%
Gable
Difference: 50.00%
Submissions/15min
Advantage:Gable (+33.3%)
0.4per 15min0.3per 15min
Gable
Elisha
Difference: 0.10per 15min

🥊 Fight Analysis Breakdown

🧩 Gable Steveson Key Advantages

🤼Generational Wrestling
Olympic GOLD

This is the central, almost comically lopsided matchup: a 2020 Olympic gold medalist (125 kg freestyle) and two-time NCAA Division I champion against a fighter whose only elite-level film shows him being finished on his back. Steveson can dictate where the fight happens essentially at will. Ellison has shown no ability to keep it standing against a real wrestler — because he has never had to, and the one time the level rose, he was on the mat in under two minutes. Against zero documented takedown defense, the level change should be high-percentage, and once it lands Ellison is in the exact position that already got him finished once.

🛡️Two-Way KO Power
3/3 R1 KOs

The subtle point that makes this near-airtight: Steveson is 3-0 with three first-round knockouts by strikes, not chokes — including a 24-second KO of Kevin Hein. He has neutralized Ellison's only path (a standup power-puncher's chance) by also being a knockout artist. Ellison cannot simply "keep it standing and bang" to safety, because Steveson wins that exchange too — and Ellison has the worse chin on record (one verified KO loss vs. Steveson's zero). Striking is the one phase where Ellison is closest to competitive, yet even there he is not clearly ahead — and Steveson controls whether the fight stays standing at all.

🏋️The Pericic Blueprint
Public & repeatable

Ellison's lone UFC loss is a literal instruction manual: get him down, posture in his guard, rain strikes. Brando Pericic — a far less credentialed grappler than Steveson — executed it in 1:55 (punches to the head from guard). Steveson's wrestling makes that exact sequence not just possible but probable, and likely faster. Heavyweight math favors him twice over: the division baseline rewards both wrestling (TD/15 1.97) and power (KD avg 1.14), and Steveson is elite-to-good in both while Ellison is one-dimensional in only the second. Reported work with Jon Jones, boxing under Greg Johnson, and jiu-jitsu with Gordon Ryan is sanding his rough edges.

⚠️ Unfavorable Scenarios

💥Untested Chin

The single live upset path: Steveson overcommits to striking to please the crowd, gets caught by an Ellison overhand in the first exchange, and his untested chin fails. He has roughly six minutes of pro cage time, has never been hit hard, never been past R1, and never faced a UFC-level heavyweight — so the chin is a genuine unknown. With small heavyweight gloves and Ellison's legitimate one-punch pop, a single clean shot in the opening exchange can rewrite the night before the wrestling phase ever begins.

🎯Debut Nerves on a Big Stage

Cage rust or debut nerves on the sport's biggest stage (a McGregor-headlined PPV) could cause uncharacteristic hesitation in the first 60 seconds — Ellison's only dangerous window. A sloppy, telegraphed shot against a possibly longer man risks a knee or uppercut on the entry, dragging Steveson into a scramble he has never experienced. MMA is not freestyle wrestling: a wild early Ellison flurry could expose defensive holes that no opponent has yet had the chance to find, since none of his three pro foes lasted long enough to test them.

📋 Likely Gameplan

🔗Respect 45s, Then Change Levels

Don't trade wildly early; weather Ellison's one dangerous burst in the opening 45 seconds, then change levels and put him where the tape says he breaks — on his back. A couple of stiff jabs and crosses serve as a deterrent, forcing Ellison to respect the standup and opening the level change. Every second that passes favors Steveson, so the priority is surviving the lone high-variance window and then transitioning to the phase Ellison has no answer for.

⛓️Body-Lock to Ground-and-Pound

Body-lock or double-leg against the fence, drive to the mat, posture up in guard, and replicate the Pericic finish with heavier, more controlled ground-and-pound. Hunt the developing submission if the GnP is defended (Gordon Ryan influence), but the KO from top is the higher-percentage exit given his finishing history. Crucially, don't gas chasing the finish — his cardio is unproven, so a measured top-control grind toward a stoppage beats a frantic swarm if the early finish doesn't come.

🚀 Elisha Ellison Key Advantages

🛡️Heavyweight Power
4 R1 KO wins

The great equalizer, and his only real one. Ellison has four first-round KO wins and legitimate one-punch pop. At heavyweight, with small gloves, anyone can be knocked out — including a 3-fight novice with an unproven chin. If Ellison lands flush in the first 45 seconds before Steveson changes levels, none of the wrestling matters. There may even be a thin length edge: if his UFC height/reach listing is accurate, he is the longer man and can meet level changes with knees and uppercuts on the entry and frame on the fence. This is a real, if narrow, path.

Steveson's Inexperience
~6 min cage time

Steveson has roughly six minutes of pro cage time, has never been hit hard, never been past R1, and never faced a UFC-level heavyweight. MMA is not freestyle wrestling — strikes change everything. A wild early Ellison flurry could expose defensive holes that no opponent has had the chance to find; the "untested chin" cuts both ways. As a heavy underdog walking into a hype-train debut, Ellison carries zero pressure and one job: swing for the fences early. Desperation plus power is the classic upset recipe, and he is exactly the kind of regional banger who occasionally derails a prospect.

⚠️ Unfavorable Scenarios

🤼‍♂️The Pericic Fight, Rerun

The most probable outcome in the building: the Pericic fight run back against a far better wrestler — takedown inside 90 seconds, posture in guard, ground-and-pound stoppage. Once Steveson clinches, the fight may never return to the feet, turning into a long, hopeless grind toward a finish. Ellison has shown no Plan B if his early power doesn't land, no evidence he can defend a takedown, and no evidence he can survive on bottom against an elite grappler. This is the exact geometry that already finished him once.

🪫Out-Struck Standing

Even if Ellison's early power shot misses and the fight briefly stays standing, there is no safe striking refuge: Steveson's power is real (a 24-second KO on record) and Ellison's chin has already failed once at this level. He can be out-struck standing as well as out-wrestled on the mat. And if this fight somehow reached deep water, Ellison would be the one expending energy defending takedowns and fighting off bottom — the most exhausting place to be — against an Olympic wrestler, with conditioning neither man has ever had to use past Round 1.

📋 Likely Gameplan

📐Swing Early, Swing Hard

His only viable plan: load up in the first minute and try to land the fight-ending shot before the wrestling starts. Every second that passes favors Steveson. If he is the longer man, he should use length and frames on the fence — meeting the level change with knees and underhooks and making Steveson pay for every entry. Bluntly, his win condition is a single clean shot in the opening exchange, not a strategic 15-minute battle he has no tools to win.

⏱️Stay Off the Cage, Scramble Up

Keep the fight in open space where his power lives — the clinch is death, so stay off the cage and circle. If taken down, stand up immediately: though there is little evidence he can, his only mat survival is explosive scrambles back to the feet, not guard-playing (where he was already finished). Front-load everything into the first 45-second window and pray for the puncher's chance, because the longer the fight lasts the more inevitable the takedown-to-finish becomes.

🎯 Fight Prediction Analysis

Data-driven prediction model based on statistical analysis

88%
Gable Steveson Win Probability
Generational wrestling + first-round finishing power
12%
Elisha Ellison Win Probability
Early KO equity — the puncher's 45-second window

📊Detailed Analysis Summary

🏟️The Credential Gap Is the Story

Most analyses turn on subtle statistical deviations; this one turns on a credential so large it overwhelms the missing data. Olympic gold at 125 kg freestyle is not a number we can plug into a composite — it is a ceiling indicator that historically translates to dominant MMA control wrestling. When the only verified MMA data point on the opponent's side is "finished on his back via ground strikes," the pattern recognition is trivial: elite top wrestler + opponent who folds on bottom = takedown-to-finish. This is a 3-round heavyweight squash-match audition, and the absence of computed metrics widens our error bars on how lopsided it is, not whether.

🎯Technical Breakdown

The honest limitation: per-fighter advanced stats (SLpM, StrAcc, TD/15, TDDef) do not exist in the database for either man — Steveson has no DB row, and Ellison's career-stats and computed-metrics rows are empty. The only verified quantitative anchor is the heavyweight division baseline (22 fighters): SLpM 4.54, StrAcc 53.18%, TD/15 1.97, KD avg 1.14. The estimated composites tell the story directionally — grappling ~95 vs ~24 is the widest mismatch we have ever assessed, while striking (~46 vs ~43) is roughly level, both raw power-punchers. The entire technical gap is grappling, where Steveson holds what may be the single largest credential advantage on the card.

🧩Key Battle Areas

The whole fight lives in one window. The opening 45 seconds are the highest-variance sliver — if Ellison lands a clean overhand before Steveson commits to wrestling, his power can end it; this is essentially his entire case. From roughly 0:45 onward Steveson's window opens: a level change to a double or a body-lock against the fence against an opponent with no documented takedown defense, then the Pericic-pattern ground-and-pound (Ellison's lone UFC loss ended at 1:55 from exactly that position). The puncher's chance is real but small — a time-limited, high-variance path, not a coin flip — and Ellison must win it before the phase of the fight he cannot survive begins.

🏁Final Prediction

The most likely outcome is Gable Steveson by KO/TKO (62% probability) — largely ground-and-pound from top (the Pericic pattern), with a meaningful slice of standing KO given his demonstrated power. His submission path (11%) reflects a developing top game and reported Gordon Ryan tutelage, while a control-grind decision (15%) captures the path where unproven cardio or a measured approach prevents the finish and his wrestling banks a wide card. Ellison's entire realistic win condition is an early KO/TKO (11%) — a clean power shot before the wrestling takes over — with a near-rounding-error submission (1%) and a functionally zero decision (0%), since he has never been past R1 and cannot out-grapple an Olympian for 15 minutes. Method probabilities sum exactly: Steveson 62 + 11 + 15 = 88%; Ellison 11 + 1 + 0 = 12%.

💰 Betting Analysis: Model vs Market

Detailed value assessment in the betting market

📊Market Odds

Implied Probability: N/A
Implied Probability: N/A

🤖Analytical Model

Gable Steveson-750
Model Probability: 88%
Elisha Ellison+625
Model Probability: 12%

💎Value Opportunities

⭐⭐⭐
MAXIMUM VALUE
Steveson Inside Distance (-260)

Model: 73% | Fair: -270

PROBABILITY:
73%
⭐⭐
GOOD VALUE
Fight Ends in Round 1 (-125)

Model: 56% | Fair: -127

ALIGNED:
56%
SLIGHT VALUE
Ellison by KO/TKO (+650)

Model: 11% | Fair: +809

EDGE:
Longshot
⚠️Key Market Discrepancies
  • Market is wider than the model – Street opened ~-2800/+1300 (~96% implied); our model sits at 88%, pricing in Steveson's total MMA inexperience and HW variance.
  • Moneyline is poor risk/reward – Laying -2800 on a 3-fight novice with an untested chin is bad value; the edge is on method/round props, not the ML.
  • Props capture the script – "Inside distance" and "Round 1" price the takedown-to-GnP finish far better; "Ellison by KO/TKO" is the live longshot ticket.

🎯 Comprehensive Probabilistic Analysis

100 hypothetical fight simulation based on statistical data

🏆Outcome Distribution - Gable Steveson

By KO/TKO62%

Ground-and-pound from top (Pericic pattern) + standing KO

By Decision15%

Control-grind decision if the finish doesn't come

By Submission11%

Developing top game w/ Gordon Ryan tutelage

💥Outcome Distribution - Elisha Ellison

By KO/TKO11%

Clean power shot in the early standup window

By Decision0%

Never past R1; no path to out-grapple for 15 minutes

By Submission1%

Near rounding-error scramble/guillotine on the entry

Fight Timeline Analysis

R1
Advantage: Steveson
Ellison's 45s KO window, then takedown-to-GnP
R2
Advantage: Steveson
Control grind if R1 finish doesn't land
R3
Advantage: Steveson
Late finish or a wide control decision
Window of Opportunity - Elisha Ellison
  • First 45 seconds: Highest KO equity, before the wrestling phase begins.
  • Open space: Stay off the cage, swing for the fences with one-punch power.
  • Scramble up: Explosive returns to the feet if taken down — never play guard.
🎯Progressive Dominance - Gable Steveson
  • Level change: Body-lock or double after weathering the early burst.
  • Top control: Posture in guard and replicate the Pericic ground-and-pound.
  • Don't gas: A measured grind beats a frantic swarm if the early finish doesn't come.

🎯 Final Confidence Assessment

Confidence level and uncertainty factors

8/10

Confidence Level

High-conviction wrestling edge, capped below "lock" by thin data and heavyweight KO variance

Supporting Factors

  • • Widest grappling gap ever assessed — Olympic gold + 2× NCAA champ vs. zero documented takedown defense
  • • Steveson neutralizes Ellison's only weapon by also being a first-round knockout artist (3/3 R1 KOs)
  • • The Pericic loss is a public, repeatable ground-and-pound blueprint a better wrestler should execute faster
  • • Heavyweight baseline (KD 1.14, TD/15 1.97) doubly favors Steveson's two biggest edges

⚠️Risk Factors

  • • Steveson is a near-total MMA unknown — ~6 min cage time, never past R1, untested chin, high-pressure PPV debut
  • • Ellison's legitimate one-punch power (4 R1 KOs) keeps a narrow ~45-second upset window live
  • • No DB-computed metrics for either fighter — wider error bars than any other analysis in this series

🏁Executive Summary

Across 100 simulations the recurring picture is stark: in roughly 88 of them, Gable Steveson's wrestling — the most decorated to enter the UFC heavyweight division in memory — finds Elisha Ellison's back inside the first round and the fight ends the same way Ellison's last one did, by strikes from top. In a healthy chunk of the rest, Steveson simply out-bangs a one-dimensional power-puncher and stops him standing. The single verified piece of MMA data we hold on Ellison — a first-round ground-and-pound loss to Brando Pericic at 1:55 — is a perfect preview of the most likely outcome, only now the man on top is an Olympic gold medalist. In the remaining ~12, Ellison does the one thing he is built to do: he lands the bomb in the opening exchange, before the wrestling phase begins, and a 3-fight novice's untested chin gives way. It is a real path — but a narrow, time-limited, high-variance one, and it is the entirety of his case.

Prediction: Gable Steveson (88%) by KO/TKO most likely (62%) — largely ground-and-pound from top, the Pericic pattern run back — with a developing submission (11%) and a control-grind decision (15%) rounding out his paths. Elisha Ellison's entire upset lane (12%) is an early KO/TKO (11%) in the first 45 seconds before the wrestling takes over. This fight is a wrestling referendum, and Ellison has no answer for the question; at heavyweight, though, with gloves this small and a chin this untested, "overwhelming" still leaves a puncher's door cracked open.

Skip to main content
Use Tab to navigate through elements, Enter to activate buttons and links.