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UFC Fight Night Best Betting Picks for Du Plessis vs. Usman in OKC
For the first time in nearly a decade, the UFC Octagon lands in Sooner territory, as UFC Oklahoma City takes place on July 18. It’s the UFC’s first visit to the capital of Oklahoma since a Fight Night card in June 2017.
The main event will be a middleweight contest featuring the returns of two former champions, as Dricus Du Plessis battles Kamaru Usman.
This marks Du Plessis’ first fight since losing the UFC middleweight championship to Khamzat Chimaev at UFC 319 11 months ago. DDP captured the title by defeating Sean Strickland at UFC 297, successfully retaining against Israel Adesanya at UFC 305 and in a rematch with Strickland at UFC 312.
Meanwhile, this marks Usman’s first fight since defeating Joaquin Buckley in the main event of UFC Atlanta in June 2025. That fight was the former welterweight champion’s first since UFC 294 in October 2023, when he took a short-notice bout against Chimaev, marking Usman’s middleweight debut, with Usman losing via majority decision.
The co-main event will also be held at middleweight, as Jared Cannonier takes on Christian Leroy Duncan. Cannonier also last fought at UFC 319, losing to Michael “Venom” Page. He’s lost three of his last four. CLD is 7-2 in the UFC and has won four straight, most recently defeating Roman Dolidze at UFC London in March.
The rest of the main card will feature Chase Hooper vs. Mitch Ramirez, Tabatha Ricci vs. Fatima Kline, and Tommy McMillen vs. Alberto Montes.
DRICUS DU PLESSIS VS KAMARU USMAN
We’ve seen Dricus Du Plessis look to pressure his opponents and bring the fight to them early, looking to establish control from the get-go and wear down an opponent’s will over time. The problem is he’s taking on someone with a strong wrestling pedigree and someone who’s used to fights going a full 25 minutes in the Octagon. For Usman, it’ll be about using his grappling expertise to stop any DDP takedown attempts and aim for his own.
The question is going to be how Usman fares at a new weight class – because this time he has a full training camp for the fight. He’s got a similar size to DDP and both men have championship experience. So this is a perfect test for the former welterweight king.
BET: Du Plessis vs. Usman to go OVER 3.5 rounds (BetMGM: -200)
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JARED CANNONIER VS CHRISTIAN LEROY DUNCAN
Christian Leroy Duncan has been one of the most fun middleweights to watch since his 2023 UFC debut. The former Cage Warriors champion has some incredible striking to him, particularly with his kicks, and he finds creative ways to land on his opponent from all angles. Jared Cannonier is a pro with plenty of experience and a former title challenger. He’s got power and a good grappling game, but his momentum has stalled with three losses in his last four – as well as showing signs of his 42-year-old age.
CLD will have a bit of a size advantage here, and he should use his athletic, quicker self to keep distance and land where he can, chopping Cannonier down before exploding with combinations. Cannonier, meanwhile, should cut off the cage and look to make a pressure-filled fight, limiting CLD’s offense as he tries to test the younger fighter’s chin.
BET: Leroy Duncan via decision (FanDuel: +135)
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TOMMY MCMILLEN VS ALBERTO MONTES
I love this fight because it’s going to be all about violence with two known finishers. Tommy McMillen has scored first-round finishes in almost every fight he’s been in, including his impressive UFC debut against Manolo Zecchini in April. The only non-finish he has is his majority decision win over David Mgoyan on Dana White’s Contender Series last year. Montes, meanwhile, choked out Carlos Calderon on DWCS in 2024 and won his UFC debut this past March with a submission of Ricky Turcios.
Both men know the other can bring violence, and hints of bad blood between the two spark the idea more that they’ll throw down here. Both men might favor submission victories, but they’ll settle for just getting any kind of finish on the other. This one will be violent, but quick.
BET: McMillen vs. Montes to go UNDER 1.5 rounds (DraftKings & BetMGM: +100)
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Sports
BetBoom Team, Vici Gaming earn spots in Dota semis at Esports World Cup
Dota 2 competition at the Esports World Cup BetBoom Team and Vici Gaming became the final two teams to advance to the semifinals of the Esports World Cup Dota 2 tournament thanks to their wins Friday in Paris.
Vici opened the day with a 2-0 victory over Team Falcons, and BetBoom added a 2-0 win over Nigma Galaxy in the quarterfinal stage.
BetBoom and Vici will square off in one semifinal match Saturday with Team Yandex and PARIVISION going head to head in the other after both advanced on Thursday. The winners move on to the grand final on Sunday and the losers will compete in the third-place match.
The Dota 2 event at the Esports World Cup is the final championship of the ESL Pro Tour, now in its fourth season. The tournament has a $2 million prize pool, with $750,000 and 1,000 EWC club points going to the first-place team.
The format consists of three phases: a group stage of 24 teams that competed in a round robin, a survival phase (Tuesday-Wednesday) formatted into a single-elimination bracket that saw four teams advance, then a final playoff stage (Thursday-Sunday), which is single elimination.
The four group winners advanced directly to the playoffs. Teams finishing second through fourth in their groups went to the survival stage, a two-round bracket that decided the other four teams to make the playoff field of eight.
All matches in Phase 1 were two games, while the matches in Phases 2 and 3 are best-of-three until the best-of-five grand final.
On Friday, Vici prevailed in 57 on red and 32 minutes on green over Falcons. Guo “Xm” Hongcheng of China led the way for Vici with a kill-death-assist ratio of 29-5-21 across the two maps.
BetBoom took down Nigma in 35 minutes on red and 49 minutes on green. Ilya “Kiritych” Ulyanov of Russia put up a dominant 17-3-28 K-D-A for BetBoom.
The Esports World Cup features competition in 25 titles and a $75 million prize pool. Other upcoming events include League of Legends, PUBG, EA Sports FC, Call of Duty: Warzone, Call of Duty: Black Ops 7, Rocket League, Counter-Strike 2 and Fortnite.
The tournament continues Saturday with the semifinal matches:
— BetBoom Team vs. Vici Gaming
–Team Yandex vs. PARIVISION
Dota 2 Esports World Cup payouts (prize money, club points)
1. $750,000, 1,000 — TBD
2. $340,000, 750 — TBD
3. $200,000, 500 — TBD
4. $120,000, 300 — TBD
5-8. $70,000, 200 — Team Spirit, Rune Eaters, Nigma Galaxy, Team Falcons
9-12. $40,000, 0 — LGD Gaming, 1w, Team Liquid, Aurora Gaming
13-16. $20,000, 0 — MOUZ, Xtreme Gaming, Virtus.pro, PlayTime
17-20. $10,000, 0 — GamerLegion, Level UP, REKONIX, OG
21-24. $7,500, 0 — Poor Rangers, L1 Team, Team Nemesis, Inner Circle x Insanity
–Field Level Media
Sports
Flyers sign D Jamie Drysdale to 4-year deal
Apr 27, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Jamie Drysdale (9) skates with the puck against the Pittsburgh Penguins during the first period in game five of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images The Philadelphia Flyers secured a key piece of their blue line Friday, signing defenseman Jamie Drysdale to a four-year, $26 million contract, the team announced.
The deal allows the two sides to avoid arbitration, carries an average annual value of $6.5 million and keeps the 24-year-old under contract through the 2029-30 season.
Drysdale secured a long-term deal after his best NHL season. He scored a career-high eight goals (three game-winners) and tied his personal best with 32 points over 78 games in 2025-26, ranking second among Philadelphia defensemen in scoring.
“Since we acquired him, Jamie has worked extremely hard and taken big steps in his development,” general manager Daniel Briere said. “We believe his best hockey is still ahead of him, and he’s going to play an important role in strengthening our blue line as we continue to build.”
Drysdale’s teammates selected him as the recipient of the Pelle Lindbergh Memorial Trophy, awarded annually to Philadelphia’s most improved player.
Philadelphia acquired Drysdale and a 2025 second-round draft pick from the Anaheim Ducks in January 2024 in exchange for forward Cutter Gauthier. The Toronto native was originally selected sixth overall by Anaheim in the 2020 NHL Draft.
Drysdale has registered 25 goals and 77 assists in 295 career games with the Ducks and Flyers. He reached 100 career points during the past season, becoming the third-fastest defenseman from his draft class to hit the milestone.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Bryson DeChambeau: 'Onto the weekend' after 2-stroke penalty
Jul 17, 2026; Southport, ENG; Bryson DeChambeau reacts after making a birdie putt on the ninth green during the second round of The Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Birkdale. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Bryson DeChambeau was handed a two-stroke penalty following his second round at the Open Championship on Friday in Southport, England, after R&A rules officials determined he had taken actions to improve “the area of his intended swing” on a shot 13 holes earlier.
For a few hours, there was a legitimate question as to whether DeChambeau would continue playing the final major championship of the year. He declined to speak to reporters about his penalty, and his agent, Brett Falkoff, claimed he was “100 percent” serious when he appeared to tell rules officials he won’t be back for the third round.
At 12:02 a.m. local time, DeChambeau posted to social media and left no doubt about where he’d be Saturday.
“Obviously disappointed with the ruling,” he wrote. “I don’t agree with it, but it is what it is. This fires me up. Onto the weekend. Let’s get it.”
A popular but divisive figure in the world of golf, the LIV Golf star originally posted a 4-under 66 to move to 7 under, one shot behind Australia’s Lucas Herbert. Now, rather than waking up Saturday in second place and the final pairing for the third round, DeChambeau will enter the weekend three behind Herbert instead of one, his bogey 5 at the fifth hole changed to a triple-bogey 7.
The downgrade for DeChambeau altered Saturday pairings, pushing Jackson Suber to the final group with Herbert. DeChambeau and Sam Burns, who shot 62 on Friday, are scheduled to tee off at 10:30 a.m. ET followed by Cameron Young and Ryan Gerard, then Suber and Herbert.
DeChambeau hit his drive at the par-4 fifth hole far right and eventually found the ball in a native area. Replays showed the two-time major winner stamping down on different patches of tall grass near his ball. It may have affected not the lie of the ball, but the path for his eventual swing.
DeChambeau vehemently disagreed with the ruling as officials shuttled him back to the scene of the alleged misdeed before he could enter the scoring trailer to sign his second-round scorecard.
U.S. TV cameras captured a discussion several minutes long, and at points DeChambeau could be seen gesticulating and getting animated.
“He’s a lot of things. He’s not a cheater,” Falkoff later told reporters. “He’s a big boy. He’ll see how he feels. But he certainly feels he was unfairly penalized.”
More than an hour after his round ended, the R&A, who organize The Open, cemented their decision. A new score was reflected on the massive leaderboard between the 18th green and where DeChambeau stood ripping golf balls on the driving range.
Following that session on the range, which commenced immediately after DeChambeau and his team left scoring, the narrative was less about the infraction and more about what comes next.
TV cameras had shown DeChambeau appear to tell rules officials “I just won’t play tomorrow” before they boarded multiple carts to return to the scoring trailer and the R&A released its decision.
DeChambeau didn’t have a choice whether he would play the weekend at the first three majors of the year, as he missed the cut at the Masters, the PGA Championship and the U.S. Open.
The R&A, which organizes The Open, confirmed DeChambeau’s penalty was not for improving the lie of his ball, but rather the path for his eventual swing.
“An improvement means to alter one or more of the conditions affecting the stroke so that the player gains a potential advantage for the stroke,” Grant Moir, the R&A’s executive director for governance, told reporters. “Now, I’ll stress that this applies even when the action is accidental, as it was in Bryson’s case.”
–Field Level Media
