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Eight standout fights on the PFL slate over the next five weeks

Bryan Battle will make his PFL debut against Johnny Eblen at PFL Pittsburgh on Saturday night. Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

The MMA landscape is ever-evolving, and the start of 2026 is bringing transformations that could prove dramatic. The industry leader is the UFC, which in three months will be cast under its shiniest spotlight at the White House, presenting a fight card headlined by the biggest championship bout currently on its books. Yet that landmark June 14 event could be overshadowed by the MMA entrance of Jake Paul's Most Valuable Promotions a month earlier. Several one-time massive UFC stars are lined up for the May 16 spectacle, which seems sure to find a sizable audience on streaming behemoth Netflix.

And then there's the PFL. Since its launch nearly a decade ago, the PFL has traveled various paths in an effort to distinguish itself from other MMA organizations. For several years, the promotion mimicked other major professional sports organizations with a season-and-playoffs format. Last year, the PFL experimented with a season-long, single-elimination tournament, featuring an expanded field of fighters acquired in the company's merger with Bellator MMA. The PFL has reinvented itself yet again this year, now operating under traditional MMA matchmaking.

The PFL is in the midst of a five-week stretch of fight cards in four major cities across the United States and Europe. Last week's kickoff in Madrid featured Costello van Steenis defending his middleweight title with a knockout of Fabian Edwards. There are intriguing fights sprinkled across the three remaining events. Here are a few to watch.


PFL Pittsburgh: Revival or survival

Saturday at 10 p.m. ET on ESPN2, prelims at 7 p.m. on ESPN+

The A-side: Johnny Eblen vs. Bryan Battle

Eblen has not fought since his snatching-defeat-from-the-jaws-of-victory loss to Costello van Steenis last summer. Such a sudden and shocking collapse can be difficult to get over, but the former middleweight champion had better get back up and get over it quickly. He has a high-level challenge ahead.

Battle will be making his PFL debut fresh out of the UFC, where he lost once in nine appearances. He's sure to be in a foul mood and ready to hit someone after a disappointing departure from the Octagon. Despite his robust record, the UFC released Battle last summer after he missed weight three times in six appearances from 2023 to '25, The final straw for Battle was at UFC 319, when his scheduled fight against Nursulton Ruziboev was canceled after Battle came in 4 pounds over the middleweight limit.

One imagines Eblen's coaches at American Top Team will ignore all that noisy turmoil and focus their film study on Battle's only UFC loss, in which ATT's Rinat Fakhretdinov scored seven takedowns and controlled Battle for over 14 minutes of their 15-minute fight in 2022.

Deeper cut: Impa Kasanganay vs. Dalton Rosta

If you watched the PFL's annual tournaments through the years, you saw plenty of these two guys. Kasanganay won the 2023 season and was a 2024 finalist, both at light heavyweight. Rosta was a finalist last year at middleweight, dropping the final to Fabian Edwards. This bout is at 185 pounds, which is not an unfamiliar weight for Kasanganay, who has bounced back and forth between divisions to find the best fights. He's found one.


PFL Chicago: Mystery to solve

April 11 at 9 p.m. ET on ESPN2, prelims at 6 p.m. on ESPN+

The A-side: Sergio Pettis vs. Mitch McKee

This matchup looks to be a showcase for Pettis. The former Bellator bantamweight champion and UFC competitor is from Milwaukee -- an hour and a half away -- and has proven in past Chicago appearances that his fans travel. That's because they have come to expect big things from Pettis, whose career is packed with notable conquests, from former UFC flyweight champion Brandon Moreno and flyweight title challenger Joseph Benavidez to Bellator titlists Patricio Pitbull and Kyoji Horiguchi.

Now Pettis faces a former collegiate wrestler who is little known to all but the hardcore fans. For McKee, this will be the biggest fight of his career, a massive test for his 10-0 record. Will he be in over his head, or is he ready to seize the opportunity?

Deeper cut: Raufeon Stots vs. Renat Khavalov

Stots is coming off a defeat last June to Pettis, his former training partner, that ended a run of 13 wins in 14 fights. Next up is a far-less-familiar face -- to Stots. MMA fans might remember Khavalov from the PFL's first fight card of the year, where he improved to 11-0. And if not Khavalov himself, fans at least will recognize the Dagestani's cornerman, Khabib Nurmagomedov.


PFL Belfast: Hometown hero

April 16 7 p.m. ET on ESPN/ESPN2, prelims at 3 p.m. on ESPN+

The A-side: Paul Hughes vs. Jay Jay Wilson

Home cooking will be a welcomed treat for Hughes, as the lightweight from Belfast, Northern Ireland, has lost two of his past three bouts -- though the defeats came in highly competitive title fights against undefeated champion Usman Nurmagomedov. This will be Hughes' fifth pro fight in his home city. He won the previous four by first-round finish.

His opponent is a fighter once grouped in with Nurmagomedov in ESPN's 2021 ranking of MMA fighters under age 25. Wilson was 8-0 at the time, but since then, he's not seen as much success as Nurmagomedov or another 155-pounder from that ranking, UFC champion Ilia Topuria. Can the fighter from New Zealand spoil the night for Hughes in his Northern Ireland backyard?

Deeper cut: Dovletdzhan Yagshimuradov vs. Tyson Pedro

The last time fans saw Yagshimuradov, he was falling short in his bid to become the PFL's inaugural light heavyweight champion, losing a decision to Corey Anderson in October. He earned that shot by winning the 2024 PFL tournament, beating the two previous season champions, Kasanganay (2023) and Rob Wilkinson (2022), along the way. Yagshimuradov's next challenge is Pedro, who is making his PFL debut after a decade in the UFC and a 1-0 detour into boxing.