
De Ridder’s grappling brilliance on full display – how he outclassed Whittaker at UFC Abu Dhabi. Full breakdown on puneripages.in
By Prashant for PuneriPages.in
Look, this was one of those fights that had me glued to the screen from the first walkout. You’ve got Whittaker, the calm assassin with hands like lightning, and de Ridder, a guy who looks like he’d rather wrestle a bear than strike with anyone. This wasn’t just a clash of styles—it was a real test of what wins fights in 2025: elite movement or relentless pressure.
Table of Contents
Quick Results
- Winner: Reinier de Ridder
- Loser: Robert Whittaker
- Method: Unanimous Decision (30-26, 30-27, 30-27)
- Round: 3
- Event: UFC Abu Dhabi, July 27, 2025
A Grappler vs. Striker Battle for the Nerds (and the Fans)
Going in, most of us were wondering: can Whittaker do what he’s always done—stick, move, and sprawl his way to another win? He looked sharp early. I even thought, “Okay, maybe Rob’s got this.” The movement was there, the low kicks were landing, and de Ridder wasn’t exactly speeding into range.
But then the Dutchman started doing what he does best—close the distance and drag the fight into the kind of ugly, grinding space where he thrives. He got Rob against the cage, started chaining clinch attempts, and suddenly it felt like the tide had shifted.
Where It All Changed
Round 2. That was it. De Ridder fakes the jab, times Whittaker’s step just right, and BOOM—body-lock takedown. From that moment, you could almost feel the fight drain out of Whittaker. Not in heart, but in options.
Once it hit the canvas, de Ridder was like a weighted blanket. Constant pressure, subtle passes, and short shots that kept Rob from even thinking about exploding up.
Post-fight, de Ridder put it plainly: “Once I had him down, I knew I could control him.” And he wasn’t kidding.
Breaking Down the Fight (Without Boring You)
- On the Feet: Whittaker tried to circle and punish with leg kicks. He did well… until he didn’t.
- In the Clinch: De Ridder is deceptively strong. His underhook game and hand-fighting killed any of Rob’s frames or space.
- On the Ground: Pure suffocation. Every time Rob moved, de Ridder was already a step ahead.
So What Now?
For De Ridder:
Let’s be honest—this was the breakout moment. He just beat a former champ, convincingly, and with a skill set that nobody seems to have answers for. A title eliminator next? 100%. Maybe against Strickland or Cannonier.
For Whittaker:
Rob’s still elite, but this is two tough losses in recent memory. Maybe now he becomes the litmus test for up-and-comers. A fight with someone like Bo Nickal could be brutal but also brilliant matchmaking.
Words from the Warriors
- De Ridder: “This was just the beginning. I came here to be champion, and I’m one fight away.”
- Whittaker: “No excuses. He was the better man tonight. I’ll be back.”
Final Thoughts
Reinier de Ridder didn’t just win—he proved a point. Grappling, when done right, still rules the sport. And tonight, Whittaker learned that the hard way. If you’re into fights that feel like chess with fists, this one was a masterclass.
More fight talk, breakdowns, and behind-the-scenes stuff? You know where to be: puneripages.in. We don’t just report fights—we live them.