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In this Monday, April 13, 2015, photo, mixed martial arts fighter Paige VanZant  poses after her workout at the Ultimate Fitness gym in Sacramento, Calif. VanZant, 21, will fight Felice Herrig in an Ultimate Fighting Championship strawweight match, in New Jersey on Saturday. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
In this Monday, April 13, 2015, photo, mixed martial arts fighter Paige VanZant poses after her workout at the Ultimate Fitness gym in Sacramento, Calif. VanZant, 21, will fight Felice Herrig in an Ultimate Fighting Championship strawweight match, in New Jersey on Saturday. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press

The UFC Giving Paige VanZant a Squash Match Is the Right Strategy

Nathan McCarterJun 24, 2015

Paige VanZant (5-1) has her next fight booked, but it's not against Top 10 opposition. She will meet Alex Chambers (5-2) at UFC 191 on September 5.

VanZant stunned almost everyone with her impressive UFC debut against Kailin Curran and followed that up with a drubbing of Felice Herrig. The win moved her into the Top 10, where she is the No. 8-ranked contender in the strawweight division. As a Top 10 fighter with a lot of buzz, the UFC could have easily put her in a prime-time bout with potential title implications, but it made the right decision not to.

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Chambers is not a big threat to VanZant. She is a former atomweight with a decent overall game but shouldn't pose a risk to VanZant in a serious manner. Chambers scored an upset over Curran earlier this year via armbar, but she was losing that fight until that point. VanZant should be able to dominate this fight.

The biggest reason the UFC is right in making this fight? VanZant is 21 years old.

The company has no reason to rush one of its most talked-about prospects up the ladder. She is still a developing fighter. Prior to making her UFC debut, she met Tecia Torres in Invicta FC, where she lost a decisive decision. It wasn't until everyone saw how much she grew as a fighter in her UFC debut that she was taken as a serious prospect. She has a high ceiling, and pushing her into the deep end of the pool is nonsensical at this juncture.

The UFC has, for years, rushed young prospects into beatings against elite opposition. It has been a common critique of how it treated prospects. This should be a welcome change. At just 21, VanZant has much to learn. Team Alpha Male is the perfect camp to hone her skills, and with time she could become a legitimate threat to the title—but that time is not now.

Chambers is a great opponent for her development. Chambers will not be a danger to VanZant but is good enough to potentially find success on the feet or the floor. She will force VanZant to be sharp. It is a low-risk fight with possible high-end rewards for 12 Gauge.

Do fights against Claudia Gadelha, Jessica Aguilar or even Joanna Jedrzejczyk make sense for VanZant? Does pitting her against other prospects such as Rose Namajunas serve the UFC better? No.

The options for Top 10 opponents were slim, and even if there were more options, the UFC made the right call to put VanZant on the slow path to the top. It has an investment in her and wants to maximize the rewards.

With an impressive victory against Chambers, VanZant could then take a bigger fight on the back end of the Top 15. And another victory could then put her into talks for an elite fight. But not now. As it stands in mid-2015, there is no reason VanZant should be fighting the elite.

The UFC should be commended for treating a prospect like a prospect. It made the right call.

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