This Saturday, for the first time in promotional history, the UFC hosts an event in Beijing, China.

The event comes one year (to the day) after the UFC’s first venture into mainland China, where a Shanghai crowd saw Kelvin Gastelum defeat Michael Bisping.

This time around, Curtis Blaydes (10-1 MMA, 5-1 UFC) will rematch the man responsible for his sole career blemish, Francis Ngannou (11-3 MMA, 6-2 UFC). Ngannou defeated Blaydes via TKO (doctor’s stoppage) at the end of the second round of their April 2016 bout.

Let’s take a look at the recent results of the two men in Saturday’s main event:

Just over a year ago, Blaydes defeated Alexey Oleynik via second-round TKO in unusual fashion. The referee halted the action after Blaydes threw an illegal strike to a downed Oleynik, who looked unable to continue and on the verge of a victory by way of DQ. After reviewing the instant replay, however, the referee correctly determined that the strike had barely grazed the ear of Oleynik and Blaydes was declared the winner by TKO.

Blaydes returned to action in February, surviving a first-round knockdown to secure a unanimous decision victory over Mark Hunt before scoring a brutal third-round TKO stoppage of Alistair Overeem in June.

Last December, Ngannou scored one of the most memorable knockouts in UFC history as he stopped Alistair Overeem in the first round with a finish that won most publications’ Knockout of the Year award.

Such was the hype surrounding Ngannou that he was instilled as the betting favorite heading into a title challenge against the most successful UFC heavyweight champion in history, Stipe Miocic. Ngannou lost a wide unanimous decision against Miocic in January before dropping another decision (in one of the least-eventful fights in MMA history) against Derrick Lewis in July.