

June 6, 2026 · Meta APEX, Las Vegas
Baraniewski
8-0-0
Not RankedWarsaw, Poland | 27 years old
Tafa
7-5-0
Not RankedBrisbane, Australia | 29 years old
The Unbeaten Who's Never Seen Round 2 vs. Raw Power on a Fragile Floor
Iwo Baraniewski comes in 8-0 with ALL wins in Round 1 (Lane in 28 seconds, Aly in 20). Junior Tafa has 7 KO victories but dropped three of his last five by submission and stepped in on short notice. Light Heavyweight is brutal in the opening minutes — and Tafa is the one who drowns when the water gets deep. The market flipped: opened Tafa and closed Baraniewski.
THE CROSSROADS
The Unbeaten Prospect Dictates Where This Fight Lives. The Veteran Only Has the First 90 Seconds.
Iwo Baraniewski is a rare case: eight professional fights, eight finishes, every single one in Round 1. He's never seen the second round as a pro MMA fighter. He debuted in the UFC by stopping Ibo Aslan at 1:29 (UFC 323, Dec 2025) and shut off Austen Lane in 28 seconds (UFC London, Mar 2026). Before that, on DWCS, he knocked out Mahamed Aly in 20 seconds — one of the fastest KOs in the show's history. The base is judo (Junior World bronze in 2018) plus a Polish national ADCC title, and the record shows the mat closes fights for him too: his first two pro wins were Round 1 armbars. But the primary game plan is boxing — pressure forward, heavy hands, close the distance and turn the lights off. On the other side, Junior Tafa, the Juggernaut, brother of heavyweight Justin Tafa, is the photographic opposite. Seven wins, all by KO, genuine power that has already earned him a Performance of the Night. But the record tells the other half: 7-5, and three of those five losses came by submission — Walker (heel hook), Tokkos (arm-triangle), Elekana (rear-naked choke) — every single time when the fight outlasted his comfort window. Tafa stepped into this one on short notice, replacing the very same Billy Elekana who tapped him out in January. The question in this fight isn't technical — it's a window question. Tafa needs to land clean in the first 90 seconds. If he doesn't, he walks into exactly the territory where he's lost the most: the mat and the second round.
Iwo Baraniewski is a rare case: eight professional fights, eight finishes, every single one in Round 1. He's never seen the second round as a pro MMA fighter. He debuted in the UFC by stopping Ibo Aslan at 1:29 (UFC 323, Dec 2025) and shut off Austen Lane in 28 seconds (UFC London, Mar 2026). Before that, on DWCS, he knocked out Mahamed Aly in 20 seconds — one of the fastest KOs in the show's history. The base is judo (Junior World bronze in 2018) plus a Polish national ADCC title, and the record shows the mat closes fights for him too: his first two pro wins were Round 1 armbars. But the primary game plan is boxing — pressure forward, heavy hands, close the distance and turn the lights off. On the other side, Junior Tafa, the Juggernaut, brother of heavyweight Justin Tafa, is the photographic opposite. Seven wins, all by KO, genuine power that has already earned him a Performance of the Night. But the record tells the other half: 7-5, and three of those five losses came by submission — Walker (heel hook), Tokkos (arm-triangle), Elekana (rear-naked choke) — every single time when the fight outlasted his comfort window. Tafa stepped into this one on short notice, replacing the very same Billy Elekana who tapped him out in January. The question in this fight isn't technical — it's a window question. Tafa needs to land clean in the first 90 seconds. If he doesn't, he walks into exactly the territory where he's lost the most: the mat and the second round.
Truth A
Iwo Baraniewski is 8-0 with a 100% finishing rate and zero fights that went past Round 1. He debuted in the UFC with two fast knockouts against real octagon opponents in Aslan and Lane. He brings legitimate grappling — judo Junior World bronze in 2018 plus ADCC, with two armbars on his record — to choose where the fight happens and attack Tafa's documented weakness: submissions and cardio. His 15.77 SLpM is a tiny-sample stat from fights that lasted seconds, but it confirms he enters with volume and closes. He has never been hit clean, never been in deep water.
Truth B
Junior Tafa has KOs in all seven wins, real knockout power that can end any fight in the opening minutes, and stands two and a half inches taller with a four-centimeter reach advantage. He has more octagon experience than Baraniewski has racked up so far. But he's lost four of his last six overall, three losses by submission, a documented cardio problem, and he took this fight on short notice against the style of opponent — grappler who pressures forward — that has hurt him the most. His ceiling is a fast KO; his floor is sinking in Round 2.
Tale of the Tape
Baraniewski born Nov 1998, Tafa born Sep 1996. Tafa is slightly older, but no meaningful generational edge for either side.
Tafa stands nearly three inches taller. A clear size advantage in Light Heavyweight.
Tafa has four centimeters of extra reach. Real range advantage to keep Baraniewski on the end of punches.
Orthodox vs. orthodox. Closed-stance mirror matchup — whoever establishes the outside hand and closes distance first sets the terms.
Aligatores Fight Club in Poland — judo and boxing roots — versus NTG Fight & Fitness in Brisbane, kickboxing base. Opposite approaches: grappling and wrestling versus stand-up power.
Current Form
Iwo Baraniewski
UFC London. Shut off Austen Lane in 28 seconds with heavy hands. Second UFC win, second Round 1 KO.
TKO R1 (punches, 0:28)UFC 323. UFC debut. Pressured and knocked out Turkey's Ibo Aslan at 1:29 of Round 1.
KO R1 (punches, 1:29)Dana White's Contender Series. KO'd Mahamed Aly in 20 seconds and earned the contract. One of the fastest KOs in DWCS history.
KO R1 (punches, 0:20)Babilon MMA. TKO in Round 1 at 3:02 over Kamil Stachura, keeping his 100% finishing rate intact.
TKO R1 (punches, 3:02)Babilon MMA. TKO in Round 1 at 3:01. Another regional opponent switched off inside five minutes.
TKO R1 (punches, 3:01)A perfect, violent rise. Baraniewski is 8-0 with every single win coming in Round 1 — no exceptions. He came through Dana White's Contender Series (Sep 2025) by knocking out Mahamed Aly in 20 seconds, one of the fastest KOs in the show's history, then strung together two UFC wins: a KO over Ibo Aslan at 1:29 of Round 1 in his debut (UFC 323, Dec 2025) and a TKO of Austen Lane in 28 seconds at UFC London (Mar 2026). Before that, on the Polish Babilon MMA circuit, he stopped Sylwester Borys and Kamil Stachura by strikes, and opened his pro career with two Round 1 armbars (Kamil Bartosinski and Miroslav Uchytil). The base is judo — bronze at the Junior World Championships in 2018 and Polish national ADCC title in 2020 — but his MMA style is pure boxing: forward pressure, heavy hands, close the distance fast. At 27, he's one of the hottest prospects in Light Heavyweight. The only real unknown: what happens if the fight goes past Round 1, because he's simply never been there.
Junior Tafa
UFC Perth. Got back in the win column with a Round 1 KO at 2:42 over Kevin Christian. Put the career back on track after two straight submission losses.
KO R1 (punches, 2:42)Gas tank dropped and the mat cashed in. Elekana locked up the rear-naked choke in Round 2. Third submission loss of Tafa's career.
Sub R2 (rear-naked choke, 3:18)Same script. Tokkos survived the early onslaught and caught an arm-triangle in Round 2. Second straight submission when the fight left his comfort window.
Sub R2 (arm-triangle, 4:25)KO in Round 2 over Saud Sharaf. A win that proves when he connects clean, Tafa finishes.
KO R2 (punches, 2:15)UFC 305. Valter Walker attacked the legs and slapped on a heel hook in the closing seconds of Round 1. Tafa tapped and the ref waved it off. The first clear red flag on the ground.
Sub R1 (heel hook, 4:56)A rollercoaster that found some oxygen in his last outing. Tafa — the Juggernaut, brother of heavyweight Justin Tafa — is coming off a Round 1 KO of Kevin Christian at UFC Perth (May 2026), an important win after back-to-back submission losses. Before Christian, he was submitted by rear-naked choke in Round 2 by Billy Elekana (Jan 2026) and by an arm-triangle in Round 2 by Tuco Tokkos (Jul 2025). Further back, he was submitted by heel hook in Round 1 by Valter Walker (UFC 305, Aug 2024) and stopped by TKO in Round 2 by Marcos Rogerio de Lima (UFC 298, Feb 2024) — a fight he took on short notice filling in for his brother. The raw power is real: all seven wins by KO, a Performance of the Night already on his record. But the pattern writes itself: when the fight outlasts his comfort zone, his gas tank collapses and the mat becomes a trap. At 29, he stepped into this one on short notice, replacing the very same Elekana who submitted him in January.
Level of Competition
No direct common opponents. Baraniewski's 8-0 record is partially inflated by the Polish Babilon MMA regional circuit and DWCS, but his two UFC wins are legitimate: KO of Ibo Aslan and TKO of Austen Lane, both in Round 1. Tafa's 7-5 carries a higher octagon caliber in terms of named opponents — Marcos Rogerio de Lima, Valter Walker, Billy Elekana, Tuco Tokkos — but it also carries four losses in his last six and three submissions. The most useful proxy is stylistic: Tafa has already lost to grapplers and pressure fighters (Walker heel hook, Tokkos and Elekana by submission in Round 2), which is exactly Baraniewski's archetype. The experience gap is less about names and more about trajectory — one is ascending unbeaten, the other is treading water near the cut line.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes per Minute
Baraniewski's 15.77 SLpM is a microscopic sample — fights that lasted seconds in Round 1. What it shows is that he enters with volume and closes. Tafa's 3.62 is a more seasoned number.
Strike Accuracy (%)
Both fighters hit clean when they connect. Baraniewski at 71% on a handful of shots that ended fights. Tafa at 53% with genuine finishing power.
Strikes Absorbed/Min
Baraniewski's 14.01 is inflated because he was exchanging in fights that lasted a matter of seconds. Tafa absorbs less per minute (2.66), but his longer fights ended in submissions.
Strike Defense (%)
Defense numbers are misleading here. Baraniewski's 47% and Tafa's 51% come from short samples in different contexts. Baraniewski's real defense is getting out before Round 2.
Takedowns per 15 Min
Neither fighter has recorded a takedown in the UFC (0.00 on the books). But Baraniewski's judo and ADCC are real — the threat of taking this to the mat is live whenever he decides to use it.
Takedown Accuracy (%)
No UFC data for takedown accuracy on either fighter (zero attempts recorded). Baraniewski's grappling lives in clinch entries and judo trips, not classic double-leg setups.
Takedown Defense (%)
Tafa shows 72% takedown defense in the UFC, but he's lost three fights by submission on the ground. The number doesn't capture his fragility in scrambles and leg-lock entries.
Baraniewski leads in 3 categories · Tafa leads in 2
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Both fighters are finishers — but they get there completely differently. Baraniewski has a 100% finishing rate: six of eight wins by KO/TKO (75%) and two by submission (25%, both Round 1 armbars against Kamil Bartosinski and Miroslav Uchytil on the Babilon MMA circuit), zero decisions, and every one in Round 1. It's the cleanest finishing record on the card. Tafa has seven wins, all by KO (100%), zero submissions and zero decisions — which says everything about his style: either he turns the lights off on his feet, or he has no Plan B. Baraniewski brings versatility (can finish standing or on the mat) while Tafa brings specialization (only finishes standing). In a fight where Baraniewski gets to choose the terrain, Tafa's one-dimensionality becomes a real problem.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
This is where the thesis lives. Baraniewski has ZERO losses in eight pro fights. Never been knocked out, never been submitted, never seen Round 2. Tafa has five losses: three by submission (60% — Walker heel hook R1, Tokkos arm-triangle R2, Elekana rear-naked choke R2), one by KO/TKO (20% — Marcos Rogerio de Lima R2), and one by decision (20% — Mohammed Usman). The pattern is glaring: three of five losses came the moment someone put him on the mat or pushed the fight deep. For method betting: Baraniewski finishing Tafa is statistically supported, whether by KO under pressure or by submission exploiting the exact vulnerability that has already cost the Australian three losses. Tafa's only path to a win is narrow and singular — an early KO before the conditioning clock starts ticking.
Skills Profile
Baraniewski
vs
Tafa
Knockout Power
+3 Tafa
Tafa has KOs in all seven wins — raw, concussive power that ends fights. Baraniewski finishes too, but the isolated knockout punch belongs to Tafa.
Pressure and Volume
+2 Baraniewski
Baraniewski presses forward without stopping and closes the distance to unload. The KOs of Aslan and Lane were built on exactly that. Tafa is more of a counter-puncher.
Grappling and Control
+4 Baraniewski
Baraniewski carries judo (Junior World bronze in 2018), a national ADCC title, and two armbars on his record. Tafa has lost three fights by submission. The gap on the ground and in the clinch is enormous.
Submission Defense
+3 Baraniewski
Tafa has been submitted three times — heel hook, arm-triangle, rear-naked choke. Baraniewski has never been submitted. Submission defense is the chasm in this matchup.
Cardio in Deep Water
+3 Baraniewski
Tafa's gas tank is documented fragility — it collapses in Round 2, and he's been submitted twice there. Baraniewski has never gone past Round 1, so his conditioning is an unknown, but Tafa's is a known liability.
Reach and Size
+1 Tafa
Tafa is nearly three inches taller with a four-centimeter reach edge. Real physical advantage to keep Baraniewski on the end of punches in the opening minutes.
Tafa carries the one tool that can end things early: raw knockout power and reach to catch Baraniewski on the way in. But Baraniewski owns every other layer. Pressure, judo and ADCC grappling, airtight submission defense, and a well-placed bet that Tafa's conditioning craters if this goes past Round 1. The fight is a race between Tafa connecting in the first 90 seconds and Baraniewski imposing his game at any other moment. The Pole's floor beats the Australian's ceiling.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis: Iwo Baraniewski wins by KO/TKO because his floor beats Tafa's ceiling and he dictates where the fight happens. Three pillars.
The thesis: Iwo Baraniewski wins by KO/TKO because his floor beats Tafa's ceiling and he dictates where the fight happens. Three pillars.
First, the style matchup is cruel for Tafa: he's dropped three of five by submission and three of five in Round 2, and he's now facing a judo/ADCC grappler who pressures forward and closes distance.
Second, Baraniewski dominates every layer that matters past the first 90 seconds — pressure, grappling, airtight submission defense (never been finished in eight fights) — and the smart money on Tafa's conditioning collapsing if this goes past Round 1 is well placed.
Third, the mechanism is concrete and the vulnerability is proven: Baraniewski can strike or take it down, and Tafa has no tool to stop either path or capitalize on the ground. The road is: press, survive Tafa's early power window, then switch it off standing in the pocket or on the mat targeting his documented submission problems.
This collapses if Tafa lands the right hand clean inside the first 90 seconds before grappling enters the picture.
Conviction
Conviction 7 — not 8 — because even though the style matchup heavily favors Baraniewski, two genuine unknowns remain. First, Baraniewski has NEVER seen Round 2 in eight fights, so his conditioning in deep water is pure speculation, and his chin under real Light Heavyweight power has never been tested clean. Second, Tafa brings genuine knockout power (7 KOs in 7 wins) that keeps the first-90-second lottery ticket alive, and he's physically bigger. Doesn't drop below 7, though, because Baraniewski's winning mechanism is concrete (forward pressure plus judo/ADCC grappling) and targets exactly Tafa's documented weakness (three submission losses, three Round 2 defeats, documented cardio issues, short-notice camp). The unbeaten prospect's floor beats the veteran's ceiling.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
Tafa connects clean with the heavy right hand inside the first 90 seconds before grappling enters the fight (genuine knockout power, 7 KOs in 7 wins)
- 02
Baraniewski's chin cracks under real Light Heavyweight power — still a pure unknown since he's never been hit clean
- 03
Baraniewski charges in head-down without respecting Tafa's counter and gets caught on the end of the reach advantage
- 04
Baraniewski's own gas tank fails in deep water — territory he has never once entered in eight fights
Underdog Path
Tafa's path is singular and early: KO in the first 90 seconds. He has genuine knockout power (7 KOs in 7 wins) and four centimeters of reach to catch Baraniewski on the way in, when the Pole is closing distance to pressure. If Baraniewski charges forward with his head down without respecting Tafa's right hand in that first minute, the overhand or cross can finish it. That's the only realistic scenario, because once the opening minutes pass, the gas tank drains and the mat becomes a trap.
Required Conditions
- Land the heavy shot clean in the first 90 seconds, before grappling and conditioning enter the equation
- Use the reach advantage to keep Baraniewski on the end of punches and deny the clinch
- Defend the first judo trip or takedown attempt to stay off the mat
- Keep the fight from going past Round 1, where the historical record shows he sinks
— Precedent: Tafa KO'd Parker Porter and Kevin Christian in Round 1 and took Performance of the Night honors, proving that when he connects early he finishes anyone. But it's worth marking: every time the fight exceeded his comfort zone — Walker, Tokkos, Elekana, Marcos Rogerio de Lima — he lost, three of those by submission. The early-KO precedent exists, but the precedent for collapsing in deep water is stronger.
Verdict
Winner
Iwo Baraniewski
Method
KO/TKO
Most Likely
- 01
Method
Baraniewski by KO/TKO
Primary pick. Baraniewski is at 100% finishing rate over eight fights (six KO/TKO), every win in Round 1, against a Tafa whose chin has already been tested (TKO by Marcos Rogerio de Lima) and who falls apart on the ground. Combines the winner with the most likely method. Best straight play in the fight.
- 02
Method Alt
Baraniewski by submission
Underrated. Tafa has been submitted in three of his five losses — heel hook, arm-triangle, rear-naked choke — and Baraniewski carries judo bronze at Junior Worlds, a national ADCC title, and two armbars on his record. If the KO doesn't come on the feet, submission is the second-most-probable path, attacking exactly Tafa's historical weakness.
- 03
Total Rounds
Fight doesn't go past 1.5 rounds (Under)
All eight of Baraniewski's wins landed in Round 1. Tafa has already lost three times in Round 2. Statistically the fight trends toward an early finish. Be careful if this turns into a patience game, but both fighters' raw tendencies point to a stoppage before the halfway mark.
- 04
Method Underdog
Tafa by KO/TKO
High-risk hedge. Only runs if Tafa lands in the first 90 seconds. His total upset probability sits around 26%, almost entirely concentrated in that early KO window, so the KO specific is worth roughly 22-24%. The implied is around 29% — no direct value, but it's the right hedge for the Round 1 KO scenario.
Most Likely Outcome
Baraniewski by KO/TKO
Best direct value in the fight. Pairs the winner (Baraniewski) with the locked-in method (KO/TKO) on a fighter with a 100% finishing rate and every win in Round 1, against a Tafa with a tested chin and a proven tendency to fall apart when the fight goes long. The style-matchup numbers (8 of 8 in Round 1 for the Pole vs. 3 of 5 losses in Round 2 for the Australian) back the method. Solid edge.
Stats That Matter
8 of 8
Baraniewski Round 1 Finishes
100% finishing rate, every single win in Round 1. He has never seen Round 2 as a pro. Lane in 28 seconds, Aly in 20.
3 of 5
Tafa Submission Losses
Heel hook (Walker), arm-triangle (Tokkos), rear-naked choke (Elekana). The ground is the proven weakness Baraniewski attacks directly.
3 of 5
Tafa Losses in Round 2
Tokkos, Elekana, and Marcos Rogerio de Lima all cashed in during Round 2. When the fight exits his comfort zone, the cardio collapses and he loses.
Line Reversal
Opened Tafa as the favorite and closed with Baraniewski as a clear chalk. Sharp money read the style matchup.
The Trap
Trap: Tafa by KO Because He's Bigger and Hits Harder
The market opened Tafa as the favorite for exactly this reason: seven wins by KO, two and a half inches taller, heavyweight's brother, raw concussive power. It's easy to look at the tale of the tape and back the bigger man. But there are three holes in that read. First, Tafa's power hasn't solved grapplers — he dropped losses to Walker, Tokkos, and Elekana without ever connecting before getting dominated on the ground. Second, Baraniewski has never been put down clean in eight fights, and his forward pressure eats up the timing needed for a counter shot. Third, Tafa's gas tank is a documented liability — backing him is a bet the fight ends in the opening minutes, because after that his floor craters. The line that opened on Tafa was the trap, and the market already corrected to the other side.
The market opened Tafa as the favorite for exactly this reason: seven wins by KO, two and a half inches taller, heavyweight's brother, raw concussive power. It's easy to look at the tale of the tape and back the bigger man. But there are three holes in that read. First, Tafa's power hasn't solved grapplers — he dropped losses to Walker, Tokkos, and Elekana without ever connecting before getting dominated on the ground. Second, Baraniewski has never been put down clean in eight fights, and his forward pressure eats up the timing needed for a counter shot. Third, Tafa's gas tank is a documented liability — backing him is a bet the fight ends in the opening minutes, because after that his floor craters. The line that opened on Tafa was the trap, and the market already corrected to the other side.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Iwo "Rudy" Baraniewski vs Junior "The Juggernaut" Tafa | UFC Fight Night: Muhammad vs Bonfim | June 6, 2026 | Meta APEX, Las Vegas
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