

May 30, 2026 · Galaxy Arena, Macau
Asakura
21-6-0
Unranked BantamweightToyohashi, Japan | 32 years old
Smotherman
12-6-0
Unranked BantamweightHouston, Texas | 28 years old
The Former Champ Comes Home
Asakura returns to bantamweight — the division where he reigned twice as a RIZIN champion — after going 0-2 at flyweight in the UFC. He draws a Smotherman who literally faceplanted at UFC 324 weigh-ins and lives off one heavy right hand. The market has Asakura.
THE CONTRAST
The Guy In a UFC Slump Comes Home. The Other Guy Brings the Worst Image of His Career.
Kai Asakura sits 0-2 in the UFC and the public read is "Japanese prospect couldn't hang at the top level." That read needs context. Both losses came with Asakura DROPPING down to flyweight — a division he'd never lived in — after building his whole career at bantamweight as a two-time RIZIN champion. Pantoja submitted him in a title fight on debut. Tim Elliott locked in a guillotine at 4:39 of round 2. Both breakdown points came via grappling, not stand-up. On the feet, Asakura held his own against Pantoja in round 1 of a championship fight, and this is the same guy who KO'd Kyoji Horiguchi in 68 seconds when Horiguchi was a global top dog. Now he's back at his natural weight. On the other side, Cameron Smotherman is the kind of opponent the script asked for: pure striker, heavy hands, 8 KOs on the regional circuit, Houston Fury FC roots. But his UFC body of work is thin. Debut win over Hadley on short notice, second fight losing a clear decision to Simón again on short notice, and the latest image of him is collapsing face-first on the UFC 324 weigh-in stage in January 2026. The heavy hands are real. The elite cardio is not. The whole fight hinges on one question: can Smotherman crack Asakura with the right hand inside the first 5 minutes before Asakura opens up the range?
Kai Asakura sits 0-2 in the UFC and the public read is "Japanese prospect couldn't hang at the top level." That read needs context. Both losses came with Asakura DROPPING down to flyweight — a division he'd never lived in — after building his whole career at bantamweight as a two-time RIZIN champion. Pantoja submitted him in a title fight on debut. Tim Elliott locked in a guillotine at 4:39 of round 2. Both breakdown points came via grappling, not stand-up. On the feet, Asakura held his own against Pantoja in round 1 of a championship fight, and this is the same guy who KO'd Kyoji Horiguchi in 68 seconds when Horiguchi was a global top dog. Now he's back at his natural weight. On the other side, Cameron Smotherman is the kind of opponent the script asked for: pure striker, heavy hands, 8 KOs on the regional circuit, Houston Fury FC roots. But his UFC body of work is thin. Debut win over Hadley on short notice, second fight losing a clear decision to Simón again on short notice, and the latest image of him is collapsing face-first on the UFC 324 weigh-in stage in January 2026. The heavy hands are real. The elite cardio is not. The whole fight hinges on one question: can Smotherman crack Asakura with the right hand inside the first 5 minutes before Asakura opens up the range?
Truth A
Smotherman has legit one-shot power — 8 KOs in 12 wins, 58% finish rate on the regional circuit — and Asakura has been knocked out once before (Horiguchi rematch, RIZIN 26, 2020, TKO round 1). In 90 seconds of clean stand-up with the right hand, any chin pays. And Smotherman comes in motivated after the public humiliation of the faceplant.
Truth B
Asakura returns to his natural division (bantamweight, where he was a two-time RIZIN champion) with the cardio question solved, draws an opponent with NO grappling threat (the only dimension where Pantoja and Tim Elliott caught him), and brings striking pedigree against superior calibre opposition (KO Horiguchi, KO Archuleta, flying knee Motoya). Smotherman comes off a lost decision to Simón and a faceplant on the scale. Cardio question priced in versus cardio coming in fresh.
Tale of the Tape
Asakura born 10/31/1993 (32 on fight night). Smotherman 28. Four-year gap, both still in their offensive window.
Smotherman 3 cm taller. Minimal edge.
Identical reach. No range edge either way.
Both orthodox. Symmetrical stance matchup, clean exchanges down the center.
Japan Top Team vs. Metro Fight Club Houston. Different calibre of camps — Asakura has global tools, Smotherman has Texas regional roots.
Current Form
Kai Asakura
UFC 319 in Chicago. Tim Elliott returned after nearly two years off and still locked in the mounted guillotine at 4:39 of round 2. Second straight submission loss for Asakura, both on the ground.
Sub R2 (mounted guillotine, 4:39)UFC debut straight into a flyweight title fight. Asakura weathered Pantoja's frantic pace in round 1, hit the mat in round 2, got finished by RNC at 2:05. His striking showed up, his ground game didn't.
Sub R2 (RNC, 2:05)RIZIN 45, New Year's Eve card. Asakura knocked out Juan Archuleta in round 2 to claim his second RIZIN bantamweight title. His final RIZIN fight before signing with the UFC.
KO R2RIZIN 42. A flying knee in round 2 left Yuki Motoya out cold. Asakura flashing the full standing-finisher menu.
KO R2 (flying knee)RIZIN 18 — the fight that put Asakura on the global map. Horiguchi came in hot, Asakura feinted, fired the right hand, closed it with knees. 68 seconds. Career-defining win.
KO R1 (right hand, 1:08)0-2 in the UFC, and both chapters hurt. Debuted in December 2024 straight into a title fight against Alexandre Pantoja at UFC 310, dropping to flyweight after a career built at bantamweight as a two-time RIZIN champion. Pantoja locked in a rear-naked choke at 2:05 of round 2 in a high-octane back-and-forth, with Asakura trading clean on the feet until the fight hit the mat. He returned in August 2025 at UFC 319 against Tim Elliott — a veteran coming off 20 months on the sidelines — and got caught with a mounted guillotine at 4:39 of round 2. The pattern is clear: his striking holds up standing, but his ground game has been exposed twice in two tries. Now he's moving back to his natural weight, where he built his name with two RIZIN title reigns and a historic 68-second KO of Kyoji Horiguchi (RIZIN 18, August 2019). He trains at Japan Top Team. The bump back to bantamweight solves the cardio drain that came from cutting to 125, but the submission defense remains the structural weak spot of his entire career.
Cameron Smotherman
UFC 324. Hit 135.5 on the scale, walked 6 steps, collapsed face-first onto the stage. Fight cancelled. Stitches in his chin, cleared afterward. Massive red flag for cardio and weight cut.
NC (faceplant at weigh-ins, fight scrapped)UFC Atlanta. Took the fight on under a week's notice replacing Charles Jourdain. Simón ran the full 15 minutes. 30-27, 30-27, 29-28.
Unanimous DecisionShort-notice UFC debut. Worked the body kick and combinations all night. UD 29-27, 29-27, 30-26 over a favored Hadley.
Unanimous DecisionFury FC 89 in Houston. Three-round split decision. The kind of regional win that kept him on the UFC radar.
Split DecisionFury Challenger Series 10. Jumping knee at 3:22 of round 3 — the kind of KO that built the heavy-handed reputation.
KO R3 (jumping knee, 3:22)1-2 in the UFC, and the lasting image is him faceplanting at UFC 324 weigh-ins in January 2026 — 135.5 on the scale, six steps off the platform, lights out on stage. The fight with Mitch Raposo was scrapped on the spot. Before that, he debuted in October 2024 against Jake Hadley on the shortest of short notice (got the call in the middle of the night Tuesday of fight week, flew back from Saudi Arabia where he was helping Raufeon Stots train, cut weight scrambling and won UD 29-27, 29-27, 30-26) — body kicks and combinations did the work. He returned in June 2025 at UFC Atlanta against Ricky Simón, again on under a week's notice replacing an injured Charles Jourdain, and lost a clear UD 30-27, 30-27, 29-28. Before the UFC he was a Fury FC product out of Houston, 8 KOs in 12 wins, heavy right hand. He trains at Metro Fight Club in Texas. The profile is pure striker, one-shot KO power, no real grappling threat.
Level of Competition
No direct common opponents. The calibre comparison is the real story: Asakura sits 0-2 against UFC top-tier opposition (Pantoja, the flyweight champion; Tim Elliott, a ranked veteran), but his résumé runs 13-3 in RIZIN as a two-time bantamweight champ with a KO of Horiguchi (champion), a title-winning KO of Archuleta, and a flying-knee finish over Motoya. Smotherman is 1-2 in the UFC, with a win over Jake Hadley (unranked) and a loss to Simón (established top 15), plus the cancelled UFC 324 booking after passing out on the scale. His pre-UFC body of work was entirely at Fury FC in Houston — heavy hands against regional competition. The calibre gap is real: Asakura has a much deeper reservoir of elite-level combat, even with the two UFC losses. Smotherman is still building sample size against top-tier opponents.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes per Minute
Smotherman produces 79% more raw volume on the UFC sample. But Asakura's UFC numbers came with the cut wrecking his cardio.
Striking Accuracy (%)
Smotherman 5 points higher. Even so, his 37% accuracy is below the bantamweight average (44-45%).
Strikes Absorbed per Min
Effectively even. Both absorb roughly 3.5 strikes per minute.
Striking Defense (%)
Smotherman 6 points higher. Sample is smaller (3 UFC fights).
Takedowns per 15 Min
Neither attempts takedowns. Category essentially null.
Takedown Accuracy (%)
Neither has a meaningful statistical sample. Category N/A.
Takedown Defense (%)
Smotherman 12 points higher on a small sample. Asakura's 50% TDD would matter if Smotherman wanted to take it to the floor (unlikely).
Asakura leads in 0 categories · Smotherman leads in 5
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Asakura is the complete finisher: 13 KOs in 21 wins, plus the submission victories give him a 19/21 finish-rate baseline across his career (the math crosses because Tapology splits methods differently — use 13 KO + 5 sub + 3 dec under the UFCStats split). Smotherman is also a heavy-handed finisher: 8 KOs in 12 wins (66%). But Smotherman's KO résumé lives at Fury FC, with no UFC finishes on file yet (UD over Hadley, UD loss to Simón). The qualitative difference: Asakura's KOs are against Horiguchi and Archuleta calibre. Smotherman's KOs are against Fury FC Houston calibre. Both finish. They finish in different leagues.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Heavy structural stat for this matchup. Asakura carries 6 losses: 1 KO (Horiguchi rematch 2020), 4 submissions (Pantoja at UFC 310, Tim Elliott at UFC 319, and 2 early-career RIZIN subs), and 1 decision. The pattern is clear: where Asakura cracks is grappling, not stand-up. All 4 submission losses came on the ground. Smotherman is a pure striker with no documented UFC ground game, which means Asakura's weak spot isn't on the table tonight. Smotherman has 6 losses: 1 KO (regional), 0 documented UFC submissions, and 5 decisions. His pattern is gassing and losing on the cards, not getting finished. For method betting: Smotherman by submission against Asakura is improbable (Smotherman has no grappling weapon), Asakura by submission is possible but not the favorite (he finishes on the feet, not on the floor). The most likely outcome is decision or a late KO.
Skills Profile
Asakura
vs
Smotherman
Striking Volume
+2 Smotherman
Smotherman 4.07 SLpM to Asakura's 2.27 SLpM on the UFC sample. Raw American volume is 79% higher. But Asakura's RIZIN sample was significantly more offensive, and the return to natural bantamweight should lift his rate.
Standing Technique and Variety
+3 Asakura
Asakura has documented striking pedigree: KO over Horiguchi (RIZIN champion), KO over Archuleta, flying knee on Motoya. Smotherman's KOs are heavy-handed regional finishes against Fury FC calibre.
Knockout Power
+1 Smotherman
Smotherman 8 KOs in 12 wins (66%). Asakura 13 KOs in 21 wins (62%). Both are stand-up finishers. Smotherman has bigger one-shot power; Asakura has bigger variety (knees, right hand, combinations).
Wrestling and Takedown Defense
+2 Smotherman
Asakura 50% TDD, Smotherman 62% TDD on the small UFC sample. Neither attacks takedowns (0% TD avg both). Category essentially weightless in this fight.
Stylistic Fit (no grappling threat)
+4 Asakura
Asakura has never been submitted on the feet, and Smotherman brings no real grappling threat in the UFC. Asakura's weak spot (submission defense) isn't on the table tonight. Huge structural edge.
Cardio and Gas Tank
+3 Asakura
Smotherman clearly gassed against Simón (lost 30-27 across all three cards) and faceplanted on the UFC 324 scale. Asakura returns to natural weight after the flyweight cut. Cardio Asakura > Smotherman, especially in rounds 2 and 3.
Smotherman has the raw-volume edge and one-shot power in the first 5 minutes. Asakura has the edge in striking pedigree, technical variety, stylistic fit (no grappling threat), and cardio. The fight turns on a single race: Smotherman lands the right hand early, or Asakura imposes pace from round 2 on.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis is: Kai Asakura wins because he's moving back to his natural division (bantamweight, where he built his career as a two-time RIZIN champion), leaving behind the brutal cut to flyweight that drained him through both prior UFC losses; he draws a gift stylistic matchup — Smotherman is a heavy-handed striker with zero grappling threat, which means Asakura's structural weakness (he was submitted by both Pantoja and Tim Elliott via ground game) isn't even on the table; and he brings documented striking pedigree (KO of Horiguchi in 2019, multiple RIZIN finishes) against a Smotherman who literally collapsed on the UFC 324 weigh-in stage, flashing serious cardio and weight cut issues.
The thesis is: Kai Asakura wins because he's moving back to his natural division (bantamweight, where he built his career as a two-time RIZIN champion), leaving behind the brutal cut to flyweight that drained him through both prior UFC losses; he draws a gift stylistic matchup — Smotherman is a heavy-handed striker with zero grappling threat, which means Asakura's structural weakness (he was submitted by both Pantoja and Tim Elliott via ground game) isn't even on the table; and he brings documented striking pedigree (KO of Horiguchi in 2019, multiple RIZIN finishes) against a Smotherman who literally collapsed on the UFC 324 weigh-in stage, flashing serious cardio and weight cut issues.
The path is Asakura working volume and movement in the first 2 minutes of round 1, avoiding clean pocket exchanges where Smotherman's one-shot power lives, landing short combinations on the exit, then leaning on pressure as Smotherman fades in rounds 2 and 3 (his established pattern).
This collapses if Smotherman lands a clean overhand right in the first 90 seconds before Asakura sets his rhythm.
Conviction
Conviction sits at 6 (not 7) because the flyweight cut was wrecking Asakura's cardio, and the move back to bantamweight structurally solves that problem, (b) the stylistic matchup is a dream for Asakura, with zero grappling threat coming his way, (c) Smotherman's weigh-in faceplant is a massive red flag for cardio and weight cut. But (1) Smotherman has legitimate one-shot power, (2) Asakura's chin did crack against Horiguchi in 2020 (five years ago, but the precedent stays on file), (3) Asakura comes in 0-2 in the UFC with confidence shaken. The market line puts Asakura at, implied around 75%. The 65-33-2 split reflects the stylistic mismatch without overinflating the favorite.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
Smotherman lands a clean overhand right inside the first 90 seconds and puts Asakura out (Horiguchi 2020 precedent, even if 5 years removed)
- 02
Asakura comes in mentally rusty after back-to-back submission losses, fights too conservatively, and hands round 1 over for free
- 03
Smotherman holds the cardio he didn't hold against Simón and forces sustained volume, taking 2 of the 3 rounds
Underdog Path
Smotherman has one central path: Path A, an early KO via the overhand. Plant the foot in the pocket, land the right hand or the cross on an Asakura who's moving up in weight and still carries a question mark on his chin (the 2020 Horiguchi KO still lives in fan memory). 8 KOs in 12 wins, 58% finish rate at the regional level. But outside Path A, Smotherman doesn't carry a real grappling threat, so if he doesn't crack Asakura in rounds 1 or 2, the fight opens up for the Japanese veteran. Path B, decision via sustained pressure, is unlikely given his pattern of cardio fades (Simón won 30-27 doing exactly that).
Required Conditions
- Land a clean overhand right in the first 90 seconds before Asakura warms up
- Force pocket exchanges without ceding distance back
- Don't gas in round 1 — he's coming in with a real weight-cut concern (UFC 324 weigh-in faceplant)
- Survive sustained volume in rounds 2 and 3 if the early KO doesn't materialize
— Precedent: Smotherman has 8 KOs in 12 career wins. His last UFC W was a UD over Jake Hadley on short notice, and the rest of his finishing résumé was built at Fury FC in Houston. The power is real, but the calibre of opponents stops at regional or bottom-of-the-roster UFC. He's never beaten a top-15 ranked fighter.
Verdict
Winner
Kai Asakura
Method
KO/TKO or Decision
Most Likely
- 01
Method
Asakura by Decision
The most likely outcome within the main thesis. Asakura returns fresh at bantamweight, runs the full 15 minutes without needing to hunt the finish. Smotherman wasn't finished in two of his three UFC fights (UD loss to Simón, UD win over Hadley), reinforcing that he gets to the cards. Asakura by decision catches the most likely method with direct value.
- 02
Total Rounds
Over 1.5 Rounds
Smotherman went the full three rounds in all three of his UFC fights. Asakura is a measured striker who'd rather build than chase an early finish. The probability of the fight going past round 1 and a half is high. Safe play on the card.
- 03
Winner
Asakura
Real probability estimated at 65%, implied is 75%. No direct ML edge — the market already priced the favorite aggressively. The structural thesis is solid (stylistic matchup, natural division), but the straight moneyline doesn't pay enough. Taking Asakura via method delivers better value.
- 04
Method (underdog)
Smotherman by KO/TKO in Round 1
Controlled-risk hedge for anyone wanting underdog exposure. Real probability estimated 18-22% (33% total for Smotherman, concentrated in the early KO). The implied is 25%, so depending on book pricing it can offer thin value. Specific pick, not the main recommendation.
Most Likely Outcome
Asakura by Decision
Best direct value on the fight. Asakura comes back to his natural weight, draws a pure striker with no grappling threat, controls 3 rounds without needing to take risk. Smotherman wasn't finished in either of his two UFC fights that went the distance (one UD loss, one UD win), reinforcing that this gets to the cards. The implied is 36%, estimated 40-45% given the stylistic matchup plus the priced-in cardio concern on the American. Edge of 5-8 points, solid play.
Stats That Matter
12/21
Asakura career finish rate
57% finish rate on wins (13 KOs + 12 subs across 21 wins). Genuine heavy-handed striker at his natural bantamweight.
1W-1L
Smotherman UFC short-notice record
Two of his three UFC bookings came on under a week's notice. The accumulated cardio toll is showing.
13 vs 0
Asakura career KOs vs submissions absorbed
Asakura has never been knocked out in 27 pro fights. He's been submitted 4 times via grappling. His vulnerability lives on the ground, not in stand-up exchanges.
Asakura odds
Implied probability 75%, estimated 65%. No direct moneyline edge; better value lives in the method props (decision) and secondary lines.
The Trap
Trap: Smotherman by KO at Short Odds
The public path to the upset here is "Smotherman cracks Asakura's chin," calling back to the KO Asakura took from Horiguchi at RIZIN 26 in 2020. Expect to see or on Smotherman by KO/TKO. Pump the brakes. Asakura's chin breaking was five years ago against a peak Horiguchi who was a global top fighter, not a Fury FC alum with a wrecked cardio profile. Asakura also runs 50% takedown defense and 52% striking defense — he can weather the first storm. Smotherman does have real one-shot power (8 KOs in 12 wins), but his UFC body of work is two decision losses and zero finishes. on a specific KO from a guy who hasn't finished anyone inside the Octagon is betting against the statistical baseline. The underdog path is real, but the price you'll see won't be worth it.
The public path to the upset here is "Smotherman cracks Asakura's chin," calling back to the KO Asakura took from Horiguchi at RIZIN 26 in 2020. Expect to see or on Smotherman by KO/TKO. Pump the brakes. Asakura's chin breaking was five years ago against a peak Horiguchi who was a global top fighter, not a Fury FC alum with a wrecked cardio profile. Asakura also runs 50% takedown defense and 52% striking defense — he can weather the first storm. Smotherman does have real one-shot power (8 KOs in 12 wins), but his UFC body of work is two decision losses and zero finishes. on a specific KO from a guy who hasn't finished anyone inside the Octagon is betting against the statistical baseline. The underdog path is real, but the price you'll see won't be worth it.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Kai Asakura vs Cameron "The Baby-Faced Killa" Smotherman | UFC Fight Night: Song vs. Figueiredo | May 30, 2026 | Galaxy Arena, Macau
Keep reading the full analysis
Round-by-round scenarios, skill profile, win distribution, paths to victory and final model prediction.
- Full analysis of every main card fight
- Round-by-round scenarios and predictions
- Access every new event automatically
By subscribing you agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. See the Refund Policy.