UFC Seattle is less than 24 hours away …
It all goes down this weekend (Sat., March 28, 2026) from inside Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, Washington. In the Paramount+-streamed main event, former two-time Middleweight champion, Israel Adesanya, collides with knockout artist, Joe Pyfer.
We have a weekly series at MMAmania.com called “Weekend Lock,” where we share one bet that we predict will slap in “Rain City” when the chaotic dust settles. We also want to hear what our readers think (that’s you!), so please tell us your most confident UFC Seattle betting lock in the comments section below (see full UFC Seattle odds here)
Last week’s recap: After a brutal multi-week skid, we are back with back-to-back Weekend Lock winners as Luke Riley defeated Michael Aswell in UFC London’s co-main event.
Let’s keep rolling below:
MIAMI, FLORIDA – APRIL 12: Julian Erosa reacts after a TKO victory against Darren Elkins in a featherweight bout during the UFC 314 event at Kaseya Center on April 12, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Zuffa LLC)
On the main card, Octagon veteran, Julian Erosa, takes on knockout artist, Lerryan Douglas, who makes his UFC debut in what feels like a guaranteed violent banger. Therefore, this week, I’m locking in Erosa vs. Douglas to, “not start Round 3 at (-280).”
Let’s be real — this fight is not built to go long. The “doesn’t go the distance” prop is sitting around -550, which tells you everything you need to know about how oddsmakers view this matchup. That price is just too steep to play, but the, “not to start Round 3” line gives us a much better number, while still aligning with the most likely outcome: chaos ending early.
Douglas is a legitimate problem. He’s riding a five-fight win streak, and all five victories have come by knockout. He hits hard, he starts fast and he’s looking to make a statement in his biggest opportunity yet. Fighters with that kind of momentum (and power) rarely let fights drift into the later rounds.
And then there’s Erosa. If there’s one thing you can say about him, it’s that he’s never in a boring fight. Ever. He’s aggressive, wild, and always willing to trade — especially fighting in front of a home crowd, where you know he’s going to push the pace even harder. That’s exciting, but it also comes with risk. Erosa has been knocked out multiple times, with six of his eight UFC losses coming via technical (knockout).
Indeed, when he gets clipped, he tends to go.
Stylistically, this is a perfect storm. Two aggressive fighters, both hunting finishes, both comfortable in chaos, and neither known for taking a backward step. It’s hard to find a realistic path where this turns into a slow, technical fight that drags into the third round.
And while I do think Douglas is going to stop Erosa, Erosa by submission at +650 is tasty.
Erosa is notoriously tough and has a knack for surviving bad spots, while Douglas is still relatively untested at this level. If the early storm doesn’t produce a finish and both fighters settle into a more measured pace, the clock could creep past that 10-minute mark.
For what it’s worth, Erosa went 15 minutes with Melquizael Costa, who just knocked out Dan Ige.
Still, given the styles, histories and finishing trends, Erosa vs. Douglas to, “not start Round 3 at (-280).” feels like one of the most reliable violence plays on UFC Seattle’s card.
Julian Erosa To Win By KO/TKO/DQ: +750Julian Erosa To Win By Submission: +650Julian Erosa To Win By Decision: +1200Lerryan Douglas To Win By KO/TKO/DQ: -185Lerryan Douglas by Submission: +650Lerryan Douglas To Win By Decision: +1200
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