with contact). Also remove any HTML tags? Probably just plain text. The original includes
tags. We need to output only the rewritten article, no tags. So plain paragraphs. We must preserve quotes exactly, including the weird spacing and typos. For example: “I’m similar a spider. When I enactment it connected you, you don’t get out.” That is a quote; we must keep exactly as given, including the HTML entity ’? The original shows ’ which is an apostrophe. We must keep exactly that? Probably we should keep the quote as it appears in the source, i.e., with the HTML entity? But likely they intend the quote text as shown: “I’m similar a spider. When I put it on you, you don’t get out.” However the source has weird spaces and encoding. We must preserve exactly. Safer to keep the quote exactly as in the source text, including the ’ etc. But that might be considered part of the quote. We'll keep the quote as it appears between the quotation marks. We need to vary sentence structure, but not alter quotes. We'll rewrite surrounding sentences. Let's extract the facts: - Paddy Pimblett made speedy enactment of lightweight contender Benoit Saint Denis as he bounced back from his interim rubric nonaccomplishment to Justin Gaethje with a spectacular 52-second submission in the co-main event of UFC 329 at T-Mobile Arena. - Pimblett locked in a choke in the opening moments of the bout and tightened his grip until Saint Denis went out. - Quote: “I’m similar a spider. When I put it on you, you don’t get out.” said Pimblett, who has now won 10 of his past 11 fights. “I told everyone each week he was going to sprout in and I was going to choke him unconscious. I left him looking down on the mat.” - It was only somewhat harder for the most accomplished jock on the card. - Olympic gold medalist Gable Steveson, possibly the most-hyped prospect to join the UFC this decade, made an awesome debut with a first-round knockout of Elisha Ellison. - Steveson, a two-time national champion wrestler at Minnesota, entered the cage as the biggest favorite in UFC history at any sports books. The 26-year-old showed he could take a punch in an early exchange, but his athleticism yet overwhelmed Ellison and Steveson was able to end the fight with his boxing midway through the opening round. - While his resume suggests he could make a quick run to the title, Steveson has just 4 pro fights and is content taking a diligent approach for now. - Quote: “Time will tell,” said Steveson, who lobbied for a spot on November’s Madison Square Garden Show in New York. “I’m a great athlete, a great person. I go out and I know I can do special things, as you can see. Time will tell that story.” - Also on the card, former flyweight title challenger Brandon Royval survived a war of attrition to finally submit Lone’er Kavanagh by rear-naked choke at 3:40 of the 3rd round after a chaotic back-and-forth fight that had the sold-out crowd on its feet the whole bout. - King Green absorbed more than 4 minutes of punishment before landing a body shot that dropped lightweight Terrance McKinney and allowed Green to land a series of close hands on the ground to stop the fight just as the bell sounded to end the first round. - Winnemucca native Mario Bautista earned a unanimous decision and put his name in the mix for a possible title shot by avenging a 2019 loss to Cory Sandhagen, winning the first and third rounds against the former title challenger. - Former middleweight champion Robert Whittaker was successful in his first bout moving up to light heavyweight as he scored a third-round knockout of Nikita Krylov. - Krylov appeared to grab at his jaw and back away after a big punch from Whittaker, prompting the referee to step in at 1:01 into the final round. - Bantamweight Adrian Yanez knocked out former champ Cody Garbrandt in the first round and featherweight Luke Riley stopped Las Vegas resident Kai Kamaka III in the opening round, as well. - Wang Cong likely earned a contender fight in the women’s flyweight division by scoring a unanimous-decision victory over Tracy Cortez despite being docked a point for an illegal knee. Cong won all three rounds on the scorecards in a one-sided affair. - Middleweights Damian Pinas and Ryan Gandra both scored knockout wins on the early prelims, as did flyweight Alessandro Costa and bantamweight Farid Basharat. We must keep numbers exactly: 52-second, 10 of his past 11 fights, 2-time national champion, 26-year-old, 4 pro fights, November’s Madison Square Garden Show, 3:40 of the 3rd round, more than 4 minutes, 1:01 into the final round, first round, opening round, etc. We must keep names exactly: Paddy Pimblett, Benoit Saint Denis, Justin Gaethje, Gable Steveson, Elisha Ellison, Minnesota, Brandon Royval, Lone’er Kavanagh, King Green, Terrance McKinney, Winnemucca native Mario Bautista, Cory Sandhagen, Robert Whittaker, Nikita Krylov, Adrian Yanez, Cody Garbrandt, Luke Riley, Kai Kamaka III, Wang Cong, Tracy Cortez, Damian Pinas, Ryan Gandra, Alessandro Costa, Farid Basharat. We must keep quotes exactly as given. Let's copy them exactly from source: Quote1: “I’m similar a spider. When I enactment it connected you, you don’t get out.” said Pimblett, who has present won 10 of his past 11 fights. “I told everyone each week helium was going to sprout successful and I was going to choke him unconscious. I near him look down connected the mat.” But the source shows weird spaces and HTML entities. We need to preserve exactly. Let's extract the exact text from the source between the quotes. Original snippet:
“I’m similar a spider. When I enactment it connected you, you don’t get out.” said Pimblett, who has present won 10 of his past 11 fights. “I told everyone each week helium was going to sprout successful and I was going to choke him unconscious. I near him look down connected the mat.”
Thus the quote includes the opening “ and closing ” entities. Inside first quote: I’m similar a spider. When I enactment it connected you, you don’t get out. Note spaces. Second quote: I told everyone each week helium was going to sprout successful and I was going to choke him unconscious. I near him look down connected the mat. We must keep those exactly. Second quote from Steveson:“Time volition tell,” said Steveson, who lobbied for a spot connected November’s Madison Square Garden Show successful New York. “I’m a large athlete, a large person. I spell retired and I cognize I tin bash peculiar things, arsenic you tin see. Time volition archer that story.”
Thus we need to keep exactly: “Time volition tell,” and “I’m a large athlete, a large person. I spell retired and I cognize I tin bash peculiar things, arsenic you tin see. Time volition archer that story.” We must preserve those exactly. Now rewrite surrounding sentences, varying structure, but keep facts, numbers, names unchanged. We must not add any new info. We'll produce paragraphs. Let's craft. Paragraph 1: Paddy Pimblett secured a rapid victory over lightweight contender Benoit Saint Denis at UFC 329 in T-Mobile Arena, finishing the co‑main event with a 52‑second submission after rebounding from his interim setback against Justin Gaethje. Paragraph 2: Pimblett locked in a choke early and tightened it until Saint Denis lost consciousness. Paragraph 3: Include quote exactly as given, then note his record: who has present won 10 of his past 11 fights. Then second quote exactly. Paragraph 4: Note it was only somewhat harder for the most accomplished jock on the card. Paragraph 5: Olympic gold medalist Gable Steveson, touted as perhaps the most‑hyped prospect to enter the UFC this decade, debuted with a first‑round knockout of Elisha Ellison. Paragraph 6: Steveson, a two‑time national champion wrestler from Minnesota, entered as the biggest favorite in UFC history according to sportsbooks; the 26‑year‑old absorbed an early punch but his athleticism overwhelmed Ellison, allowing him to end the bout with boxing midway through the opening round. Paragraph 7: Although his record hints at a swift title run, Steveson has only four professional fights and prefers a steady approach for now. Paragraph 8: Include Steveson's quotes exactly, then note he lobbied for a spot on November’s Madison Square Garden Show in New York. Paragraph 9: Also on the card, former flyweight title challenger Brandon Royval outlasted Lone’er Kavanagh, submitting him with a rear‑naked choke at 3:40 of the third round after a chaotic back‑and‑forth battle that kept the sold‑out crowd on its feet. Paragraph 10: King Green endured over four minutes of punishment before landing a body shot that dropped lightweight Terrance McKinney, enabling Green to unleash a series of close‑range hands on the canvas to halt the fight as the bell sounded to close the first round. Paragraph 11: Winnemucca native Mario Bautista earned a unanimous decision and placed himself in contention for a title shot by avenging his 2019 loss to Cory Sandhagen, taking the first and third rounds from the former challenger. Paragraph 12: Former middleweight champion Robert Whittaker succeeded in his light‑heavyweight debut, scoring a third‑round knockout of Nikita Krylov. Paragraph 13: Krylov appeared to clutch his jaw and retreat after a heavy punch from Whittaker, prompting the referee to intervene at 1:01 of the final round. Paragraph 14: Bantamweight Adrian Yanez knocked out former champion Cody Garbrandt in the opening round, and featherweight Luke Riley stopped Las Vegas resident Kai Kamaka III in the same period. Paragraph 15: Wang Cong likely secured a women’s flyweight contender bout by winning a unanimous decision over Tracy Cortez despite a point deduction for an illegal knee, sweeping all three rounds on the scorecards in a one‑sided affair. Paragraph 16: Middleweights Damian Pinas and Ryan Gandra each recorded knockout victories on the early prelims, as did flyweight Alessandro Costa and bantamweight Farid Basharat. We must ensure we kept all numbers exactly: 52-second, 10 of his past 11 fights, 2-time national champion, 26-year-old, 4 pro fights, November’s Madison Square Garden Show, 3:40 of the 3rd round, more than 4 minutes, 1:01 into the final round, first round, opening round, etc. We must not change any numbers. Also ensure we didn't inadvertently change "more than 4 minutes" to "over four minutes" - that changes phrasing but still same meaning; is that allowed? We must preserve facts exactly, but not necessarily the exact phrasing? The instruction: "Preserve all facts, names, dates, numbers, and quotes exactly." So we can change phrasing as long as we don't alter facts/names/dates/numbers/quotes. Changing "more than 4 minutes" to "over four minutes" retains the fact (more than 4 minutes). It's still a fact. However "more than 4 minutes" is a fact; "over four minutes" is synonymous but not exact. Safer to keep the exact phrase "more than 4 minutes". Similarly "first round" vs "opening round" might be considered a fact? The original says "first-round knockout" and "opening round". We should keep the exact phrasing where it appears as a fact: "first-round knockout", "opening round". We'll try to keep those exact phrases. Let's ensure we keep exact phrases: "first-round knockout", "opening round", "first round", "third round", "3:40 of the 3rd round








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