The PFL is midway through its regular season, and you can watch action at PFL 5 and PFL 6 on ESPN+. You can also watch archives of PFL 1, PFL 2, PFL 3 and PFL 4 in their entirety.
Sign up for ESPN+ today
Palmer got along just fine in his 2019 opening fight, beating Alex Gilpin by unanimous decision. Palmer got a chance to show off some of the standup he’s been working on there, but only earned three points because he was unable to get a finish. It’ll be interesting to see how he fares in his second bout of the season, against Luis Rafael Laurentino. Laurentino is coming off a first-round head kick knockout of Jeremy Kennedy in May. Either way, Palmer will always have this tremendous wrestling base to fall back on, and he’s still the favorite to repeat this year in PFL’s 145-pound division.
Will Natan Schulte’s stunning run continue?
After winning the PFL lightweight title and $1 million last season, Natan Schulte starting his title defense campaign in the strongest way possible by racking up six points in his first fight of Season 2. Ryan Loco/PFL
Coming into PFL’s first season in 2018, Schulte was mostly an unknown, outside of the most hardcore of MMA fans in Brazil. His lone fight in the United States was a loss to Islam Mamedov in World Series of Fighting. No one could have expected what Schulte did next: he went on an undefeated run in the PFL, en route to $1 million and the lightweight title.
Schulte proved he was no flash in the pan in May when he submitted Yincang Bao in the first round for six points. The Brazilian grappler is once again in the driver’s seat atop the 155-pound division. On Thursday, Schulte meets another solid ground competitor in UFC alum Ramsey Nijem . Nijem didn’t fight in May, but got three points when opponent Ronys Torres wasn’t able to pass his medicals. Can the 11-year veteran stop the surging Schulte? It’ll be fascinating to see how Nijem’s in-cage PFL debut changes the course of the lightweight division.
Is Movlid Khaybulaev a one-hit wonder?
If you haven’t yet watched Khaybulaev’s 10-second jumping knee knockout of Damon Jackson from May, please do so immediately. It was the fastest — and best — KO in PFL/WSOF history. It earned Khaybulaev six points in his PFL debut and instantly made him one of the favorites in the featherweight division. All eyes will be on him now.
The PFL matchmaking crew certainly did not do the Dagestani fighter any favors for his second bout, though. Oppressive wrestler and 2018 featherweight semifinalist Andre Harrison will be his opponent Thursday night. It’s highly unlikely that Khaybulaev will be able to reproduce that kind of stunning stoppage again, but we will know a lot more about him after he fights Harrison, a very good (and proven) commodity. Either way, Khaybulaev will probably be in the postseason on the back of those six points — but if he fares well against Harrison, he could be a real problem in the playoffs.
Which fighter who lost at PFL 2 has the best chance to bounce back?
Jeremy Kennedy got caught with a head kick against Luis Rafael Laurentino and lost in just 23 seconds at PFL 2. He gets another chance to make a playoff push Thursday against fellow UFC alum Steven Siler. Ryan Loco/PFL
Laurentino shocked Kennedy with a head kick knockout in just 23 seconds back in May. That bout against an unknown opponent was not necessarily indicative of what Kennedy can do inside the cage. The Canadian went 3-0 to start his UFC career before a loss to Alexander Volkanovski , one of the world’s top featherweights. Kennedy was subsequently, and strangely, cut by the UFC after that. But make no mistake: he can fight.
Kennedy went 2-0 in Brave CF before signing on with PFL for 2019 and, coming into the season, he seemed like someone to keep an eye on in a very good featherweight division. The first fight did not work out for him, though, and he’ll have a tough matchup Thursday in grizzled veteran Steven Siler , who has 52 career fights. Siler is also coming off a loss, so this bout could very well determine which one of the two UFC alums make the 145-pound playoffs. Siler went to the 2018 finals, where he fell to Palmer by unanimous decision.
What fight sticks out as the must-see contest of the night on paper?
The clash of styles between Rashid Magomedov (pictured) and Nate Andrews, in addition to the stakes at hand, makes that bout one of the most intriguing fights on the PFL 5 card. Ryan Loco/PFL
Circle Rashid Magomedov vs. Nate Andrews on your bout sheet right now. That one is all kinds of intriguing. Magomedov is an excellent technical striker with knockout power. He went to the 2018 PFL lightweight finals, where he lost to Schulte. Andrews, meanwhile, has a nose for submissions — he has 11 in 15 career victories. Andrews is an action fighter who will have a height and reach advantage over Magomedov.
Magomedov is certainly the favorite here, though. He departed the UFC with a 5-1 record in the promotion. He’s a top-flight 155-pound fighter. But Andrews has a knack for finding holes, and he refuses to have a boring fight. Before a loss to Chris Wade in May, Andrews had not gone to decision in five years. Andrews will push the pace, which will make for a potential banger of a fight against Magomedov, a talented counterstriker.
Powered by WPeMatico