Light Heavyweights
#3 LHW | Jamahal Hill (12-2, 6-2 UFC) vs. #2 LHW | Jiri Prochazka (30-5-1, 4-2 UFC)ODDS: Hill (-115), Prochazka (-105)
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When Prochazka vacated the light heavyweight title in 2022, Hill was somewhere between prospect and fringe contender. A 2019 alumnus of Dana White’s Contender Series, “Sweet Dreams” looked like a solid long-term prospect upon earning a contract. Hill needed to warm up over the course of his fights but did a decent job of keeping a pace and eventually overwhelming his opponents through striking offense. It was a basic but effective approach, and as Hill simply gained experience and rounded things out, surprisingly few light heavyweights were able to stand up to what he brought to the table. His lone misstep during his rise through the ranks came on the ground to submission expert Paul Craig. Hill kicked off 2022 with main event wins over Johnny Walker and Thiago Santos, but the expectation was that he would still need a few more impressive victories to crack into contention. Instead, he somehow wound up the light heavyweight champion within months. After the rematch between Prochazka and Teixeira fell through, the UFC pivoted to a fight between Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev for the vacant belt. When that bout ended in an uninspiring draw, the promotion hastily threw together a title fight between Teixeira and Hill out of frustration for the following month, with the end result being the Chicago native cruising his way to a clear decision victory. Hill’s title reign never got off the ground, however, as he quickly suffered an injury that once again required the championship to be vacated, setting the stage for Pereira’s eventual reign; and once Hill was able to make his return, Pereira unceremoniously knocked him out in short order to cap UFC 300. Hill is certainly somewhere between a Top 5 and Top 10 light heavyweight at the very worst, but despite being a former champion, he’s still unproven enough that this fight is somewhat of a question mark. Hill hasn’t found himself under pressure often, and it hasn’t gone well the few times he has—mostly against Pereira. Still, there’s a decent chance he can skate by here given how much of Prochazka’s game is an absolute mess. With that said, Prochazka’s career is littered with fights where he’s technically outmatched until the point he springs into action and blows his opponent out of the water, and there’s not much to suggest that Hill can survive the buzzsaw that has downed so many other opponents once things get going. The pick is Prochazka via second-round knockout.
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