Billy Ward locked in Jake Matthews at +140 (would play to +120) after Chidi Njokuani missed weight for the second straight fight, tipping the scales at 171.5 despite pushing his cut to the absolute limit. Ward loves fading this specific type of miss—when a fighter drains himself to within half a pound, durability and cardio almost always suffer. Njokuani is 36, has needed a split versus Reece McKee and a tepid decision over Jared Gooden, and again looked gaunt on the scale. Matthews, ten years younger, is the sturdier athlete and carries the clear grappling upside; Ward expects him to take over once Chidi’s early power fades. The plan is two-fold: pre-fight exposure down to +120 and an automatic live add after Round 1 when the Australian’s price should still be plus money but Njokuani’s gas tank has already begun to sputter. Ward believes Matthews wins this at better than 45 % long-term, particularly if he survives the first three minutes and starts stringing takedowns together.