The penultimate event between Stipe Miocic and Andrei Arlovski could determine the No. 1 heavyweight contender, who will fight the winner of the yet-to-be scheduled rematch between Cain Velasquez and Fabricio Werdum later this year.

Miocic, who at 240 pounds somehow seems to look as quick-footed as a lightweight, is the favorite, but Arlovski, who held the heavyweight championship 10 years ago, has been unstoppable in his last six fights. Bookmakers currently favor Miocic at minus-224, but Arlovski, whom bookmakers set at plus-190, trains with the likes of Jon Jones out of Jackson Wink Academy in Albuquerque and he doesn’t plan to make it an easy fight. No matter who wins, he said earlier this month, he predicts a knockout.

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“This particular fight against Stipe, it makes sense to me,” Arlovski said recently during his training camp (via Sherdog.com). “He likes to box. He likes to knock people out. So am I, and my opinion, it’s not going to a decision, so we’ll see.”

Contrary to UFC 193 and 194, which was overtaken by the bombastic personalities of Ronda Rousey and Conor McGregor, respectively, the lead-up to UFC 195 has been tame when it comes to trash-talk. Even main eventers Carlos Condit (30-8) and Robbie Lawler (26-10, 1 no contest), who will be duking it out for the welterweight title on Saturday, have kept things professional as the fight nears.

“He’s one of the best all-around guys,” Lawler, the current champ, said after Wednesday’s open workouts about Condit (via MMAJunkie.com). “There’s a really high-level of guys in the UFC and and my division. I have to be ready at all times.”

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Condit, meanwhile, has focused his pre-fight talk more about psyching himself up than psyching his opponent out.

“I’ve definitely grown up quite a bit just as a person, but also as an athlete and a fighter,” Condit said in a recent conference call, according to Sherdog. “You know, I’ve been through a couple titles, title fights and done the lead-up and dealt with the pressure.”

This duo’s calm demeanor will likely evaporate, however, once the two fighters step foot into the Octagon. Like Miocic and Arlovski, Lawler and Condit both like to hit. Lawler has won 77 percent of his fights via TKO or KO, while Condit’s finished 50 percent of his that way. Condit’s taken care of another 43 percent of his opponents by beating them via submission.

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With oddmakers setting the books on both men equally, there’s a good chance this fight could go long, similarly to Lawler’s most recent fight with Rory MacDonald, who he spectacularly beat in July with a ferocious fifth-round knockout. Stay tuned.

Here’s the full card for UFC 195:

To air on UFC Fight Pass, starting at 6:30 p.m. ET

Sheldon Westcott vs. Edgar Garcia (welterweight fight)

Joe Soto vs. Michinori Tanaka (bantamweight fight)

Dustin Poirier vs. Joe Duffy (lightweight fight)

To air on Fox Sports 1, starting at 8 p.m.

Scott Holtzman vs. Drew Dober (lightweight fight)

Justine Kish vs. Nina Ansaroff (strawweight fight)

Kyle Noke vs. Alex Morono (welterweight fight)

Michael McDonald vs. Masanori Kanehara (bantamweight fight)

To air on PPV, starting at 10 p.m.