This paper analyzes key performance metrics from the main card of UFC 310, focusing on striking accuracy, significant strikes landed per minute, and takedown defense rates. Using video analysis of the 720p WEBRip broadcast, we compare winners and losers across three main-card bouts. Results indicate that fighters who maintained a 58% or higher takedown defense and threw over 4.5 significant strikes per minute won 90% of decisions. These findings align with broader UFC trends emphasizing volume striking and defensive wrestling.
Below is a about UFC 310, assuming it were a real event (note: as of my knowledge cutoff in mid-2025, UFC 310 has not officially occurred; I will treat it hypothetically). Title: Technical Analysis of Striking Efficiency and Takedown Defense at UFC 310: A Case Study of the Main Card UFC.310.720p.WEBRip.2CH.x265.HEVC-PSA.part2.rar
Despite losers often having higher control time (e.g., Fighter B with 8:45), judges prioritized damage from standing strikes. This confirms a shift away from wrestling-centric scoring, first noted in post-2022 UFC rule clarifications. This paper analyzes key performance metrics from the
Across all bouts, winners averaged 5.8 sig. strikes/min vs. 3.3 for losers, and defended 78% of takedowns vs. 51% for losers. These findings align with broader UFC trends emphasizing
UFC 310, held hypothetically in late 2025, featured a welterweight title fight and two top-10 lightweight clashes. The event provided an opportunity to test whether modern UFC judging criteria—prioritizing damage and aggression—favor high-volume strikers over control-based grapplers.
UFC 310 reinforced that volume striking combined with takedown defense—not just control—is the clearest path to victory under current unified rules. Future research should expand to preliminary cards and use higher-resolution footage for strike impact analysis.