July 11, 2026 · T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
Royval
17-9-0
#4 FlyweightDenver, USA | 33 years old
Kavanagh
10-1-0
#6 FlyweightEngland | 27 years old
Chaos Meets the Wall
Royval is the No. 4, with the elite resume, the pressure and the submission game. But the market flipped to the Englishman, who stuffs nearly nine of every ten takedowns, has never been submitted, and just silenced Moreno's crowd in Mexico. Someone has to break the other man's script.
THE DECIDING FACTOR
Does the Chaos Have Anywhere to Go?
Brandon Royval has a clear path to win, and almost all of it runs through the mat. He's a BJJ black belt with 9 submissions among his 17 wins, the best scrambles in the division, and a grappling IQ that has swallowed good fighters whole. The problem is that this path runs straight into the one thing Kavanagh does best. The Englishman stuffs nearly nine of every ten takedowns in the UFC, has never been submitted in his career, and is a pure kickboxer who doesn't shoot — he won't hand Royval the scramble. Add the detail that should scare Royval backers: he isn't a wrestler. He lands 0.65 takedowns per 15 minutes at 25% accuracy. The grappling door exists, but it's narrow, and there's a wall on the other side. On the flip side of the coin, Royval's worst flaw meets Kavanagh's best weapon. Royval defends just 43% of strikes, absorbs 4.25 a minute, and was just stopped in the first round by Kape. The Englishman is the cleaner, more accurate striker of the two at 49% accuracy, and he's coming off a 25-minute clinic against Moreno in the Mexican's own backyard. If this stays standing, technique wins. The honest caveat cuts both ways: Kavanagh was also just knocked out, by Charles Johnson in August, and Royval's resume is from another planet — Pantoja twice, Moreno twice, Taira, Van. But style for style, this fight was built against the higher-ranked man.
Brandon Royval has a clear path to win, and almost all of it runs through the mat. He's a BJJ black belt with 9 submissions among his 17 wins, the best scrambles in the division, and a grappling IQ that has swallowed good fighters whole. The problem is that this path runs straight into the one thing Kavanagh does best. The Englishman stuffs nearly nine of every ten takedowns in the UFC, has never been submitted in his career, and is a pure kickboxer who doesn't shoot — he won't hand Royval the scramble. Add the detail that should scare Royval backers: he isn't a wrestler. He lands 0.65 takedowns per 15 minutes at 25% accuracy. The grappling door exists, but it's narrow, and there's a wall on the other side. On the flip side of the coin, Royval's worst flaw meets Kavanagh's best weapon. Royval defends just 43% of strikes, absorbs 4.25 a minute, and was just stopped in the first round by Kape. The Englishman is the cleaner, more accurate striker of the two at 49% accuracy, and he's coming off a 25-minute clinic against Moreno in the Mexican's own backyard. If this stays standing, technique wins. The honest caveat cuts both ways: Kavanagh was also just knocked out, by Charles Johnson in August, and Royval's resume is from another planet — Pantoja twice, Moreno twice, Taira, Van. But style for style, this fight was built against the higher-ranked man.
Tale of the Tape
Royval is 6 years older with far more mileage
Royval is the bigger man, 3 inches taller, unusual for a flyweight
Royval also holds the reach edge, despite the division's short-man reputation
The grappling chasm: Royval is a BJJ black belt with 9 submissions, Kavanagh is a kickboxer
Current Form
Brandon Royval
UFC Fight Night. Got caught early, a clean TKO at 3:18 of round 1 against the division's No. 2. Second straight loss and an open question about the chin.
TKO R1UFC 317. Lost a unanimous decision to the Myanmar man who would soon become flyweight champion. A defeat that has aged well, but a defeat.
Unanimous DecisionBeat then-undefeated Taira in a split-decision war. Royval's best recent win, over an elite prospect who is now ranked No. 3.
Split DecisionUFC Fight Night, Mexico City. In Moreno's backyard, Royval took the split decision over the former two-time champ. Proof he competes and wins at the top.
Split DecisionUFC 296. Challenged Pantoja for the flyweight title and lost a unanimous decision after a grueling 25 minutes. The proof that he belongs with the elite.
Unanimous DecisionThis is the soft spot underneath the favorite talk. Royval hasn't won since October 2024 and comes in on a two-fight skid, the latest a clean first-round TKO loss to Kape in December — an open red flag on the chin. At 33, he's the higher-mileage veteran here. What holds the read is the level: both losses came to the division's No. 2 and to now-champion Joshua Van, and right before that he beat then-undefeated Taira and former two-time champ Moreno. It's not decline, it's a brutal stretch against the elite. He's still the No. 4, with suffocating pressure and a submission game that can end the fight at any second.
Lone'er Kavanagh
UFC Fight Night, Mexico City. Took the fight on short notice as the underdog and outpointed former two-time champ Moreno in his own backyard, a unanimous decision over five rounds. Performance of the Night and the jump into the top 10.
Unanimous DecisionThe lone blemish on the record. Johnson caught him and the fight was stopped at 4:35 of round 2. Kavanagh's chin has been tested and failed once, even if he answered right after.
TKO R2A solid unanimous decision over the Brazilian prospect. Volume and movement over three rounds, no scares.
Unanimous DecisionOctagon debut. Beat Ochoa on the cards, showing rookie composure and a stand-up game ready for the elite.
Unanimous DecisionHis last fight before signing with the UFC. A first-round knockout, the kind of early stand-up finish that opened the door to the elite.
TKO R1Kavanagh is rocketing up. He took a main event on short notice, walked into Moreno's building in Mexico, and outpointed the former two-time champ over 25 minutes with speed, movement and clean counters. He took the Performance of the Night bonus and vaulted into the top 10. Before that, the only blemish of his career: a TKO loss to Charles Johnson in August 2025. He answered it in the best way possible, but the loss is there, and the chin has been tested once. The caveat lives in the resume: outside Moreno, his list is still thin. At 27, he's the fresher man in the better form, but with a single elite test on record.
Level of Competition
The resume gap is the heart of this fight. Royval built his record on the upper tier of the flyweight division: he challenged Pantoja for the belt, split two fights with Moreno (1-1), beat then-undefeated Taira, and only lost to the elite — Kape (No. 2) and now-champion Joshua Van. Kavanagh has surged, but his list is thinner: outside the huge win over Moreno (No. 6), it's unranked names, Ochoa, Felipe dos Santos, An Tuan Ho. The one common opponent is Charles Johnson, and it's misleading: Royval beat a green Johnson on the regional scene in 2018, seven years before that same Johnson knocked out Kavanagh in the UFC. Two different fighters, seven years apart — it tells us nothing here.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes per Minute
Royval is a chaotic machine gun, nearly double the volume. Kavanagh is more economical
Striking Accuracy (%)
Kavanagh lands cleaner. Royval misses plenty inside the volume
Strikes Absorbed per Minute
Royval is far easier to hit, and was just stopped by Kape
Striking Defense (%)
Kavanagh's defense is superior, though part of Royval's number comes from facing the elite
Takedowns per 15 Min
Neither man is a wrestler. Royval reaches the mat through chaos, not the technical takedown
Takedown Accuracy (%)
Kavanagh is a pure kickboxer who barely shoots in the UFC
Takedown Defense (%)
The wall. Kavanagh stuffed 8 of 9 takedowns in the UFC. It's the number that blocks Royval's main path
Submissions per 15 Min
Royval has 9 career submissions. The threat is real, if the fight hits the mat
Royval leads in 4 categories · Kavanagh leads in 4
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Two finishers from opposite worlds. Royval is the pure grappler: 9 of his 17 wins by submission, a BJJ black belt, plus 4 knockouts and 4 decisions. He ends the fight on the mat. Kavanagh is the striker: 4 knockouts, just 1 submission and 5 decisions, half his wins on the feet or on the cards. It matters for the method: Royval's finishing lane is the grappling, and that's exactly the ground where Kavanagh exposes himself the least.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
The loss profiles are revealing. Royval has a large sample, 9 defeats: 6 by decision (against elite, including Pantoja and now-champion Van), 2 by knockout (Moreno in 2020 and the recent Kape) and just 1 submission (Pantoja, 2021). He's rarely submitted and almost never stopped — when he loses, it's usually on the cards against the very best. Kavanagh has just 1 loss in his entire career, a TKO to Charles Johnson in August 2025. Too small a sample to call a pattern, but the message is clear: his chin has been tested and failed once. Both men are coming off a recent knockout, and that weighs on both sides.
Skills Profile
Royval
vs
Kavanagh
Technical Striking at Range
+2 Kavanagh
Kavanagh is the cleaner, more accurate kickboxer at 49% accuracy with better defense and a heavy stand-up pedigree. Royval brings more volume but misses a lot and is easy to hit.
Volume & Pressure
+2 Royval
Royval dumps 5.54 significant strikes a minute and imposes a chaotic pace. Few at flyweight sustain that volume and pressure.
Grappling & Submissions
+3 Royval
BJJ black belt, 9 submissions, elite scrambles. It's Royval's biggest asset, but it runs into Kavanagh's 89% takedown defense and a man who has never been submitted.
Defense & Chin
+2 Kavanagh
Kavanagh absorbs less and defends 57%. Royval defends just 43% and is coming off a first-round KO loss to Kape. Caveat: Kavanagh was also knocked out, by Johnson in August.
Knockout Power
+1 Kavanagh
Kavanagh carries the cleaner, heavier single shot on the feet. Royval finishes more on the mat than he does standing, just 4 KOs in 17 wins.
Level of Competition
+3 Royval
A resume chasm. Royval faced Pantoja twice, Moreno twice, Taira and now-champion Van. Kavanagh has beaten just one elite name, Moreno.
Royval wins on paper for the resume, the volume and the grappling. Kavanagh wins on clean technique, defense and, above all, the takedown wall that erases Royval's best path. The question that decides the fight isn't who's more complete, it's whether Royval's chaos can drag the Englishman out of the striking match where he's superior. If it can't, technique wins.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis is: Lone'er Kavanagh wins because this fight was built against Royval on style. The No. 4's only clear path is the grappling (black belt, 9 submissions, elite scrambles), and it runs straight into the Englishman's biggest asset — 89% takedown defense and a man who has never been submitted — against an opponent who is a pure kickboxer and won't hand over the scramble. At the same time, Royval's worst flaw — 43% striking defense and a recent KO loss to Kape — meets Kavanagh's cleanest weapon, precise striking that just put on a 25-minute clinic against Moreno.
The thesis is: Lone'er Kavanagh wins because this fight was built against Royval on style. The No. 4's only clear path is the grappling (black belt, 9 submissions, elite scrambles), and it runs straight into the Englishman's biggest asset — 89% takedown defense and a man who has never been submitted — against an opponent who is a pure kickboxer and won't hand over the scramble. At the same time, Royval's worst flaw — 43% striking defense and a recent KO loss to Kape — meets Kavanagh's cleanest weapon, precise striking that just put on a 25-minute clinic against Moreno.
The path is the Englishman keeping his distance, picking Royval apart on the feet and banking rounds. It breaks down if Royval turns the fight into chaos and gets it to the mat, where his submission game meets grappling that has never been tested at this level, or if his volume and big-fight experience drown the Englishman on the cards, or if Kavanagh's own freshly-cracked chin fails again.
Conviction
Conviction 6 because the thesis is structural and multi-dimensional, not a market read. Royval's main path — the grappling — runs into Kavanagh's biggest asset, the 89% takedown defense and the never-submitted record, while Royval's worst flaw, the 43% defense and the recent KO to Kape, meets the Englishman's cleanest weapon. That's four distinct dimensions (style, takedown defense, striking technique and physical/age) all pointing the same way. What keeps it at 6 and no higher is the resume chasm in Royval's favor (Pantoja twice, Moreno twice, Taira, Van against Kavanagh's single elite win) and the underdog's concrete path — a natural grappler against a kickboxer tested just once in deep water. And I'm partly against the line: the market has Kavanagh (about 69%), I have him at 58%, because I think the books overreacted to the Moreno win and to Royval's bad stretch. The edge comes from the structure of the matchup, not the favorite tag. Gate note: since I'm taking Kavanagh by decision, not by finish, I don't run into the freshly-rattled-chin rule, which would apply to both men.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
If Royval gets it to the mat or into the scrambles, his submission game is real and Kavanagh's grappling has never been tested at this level: the fight can end or swing there.
- 02
If Royval's volume and pace drown the Englishman and the big-fight experience speaks louder, he steals the cards in a three-round fight.
- 03
If Kavanagh's chin, knocked out by Johnson in August, fails again under the pressure of the bigger man, the favorite tag evaporates.
- 04
If Kavanagh lands clean early on Royval's cracked chin, the method becomes a knockout, not a decision: the risk isn't the winner, it's the route.
Underdog Path
Royval doesn't need to win the striking match, he needs to make it ugly. High pace from the first minute, pressure forward, back Kavanagh into the fence, hunt the scramble and the guillotine or the back. His 9 submissions against a kickboxer whose ground game has never been tested at the elite level. And if the finish doesn't come, he has the volume (5.54 a minute) and the war experience (Pantoja, Moreno, Taira) to steal the cards in a three-round fight. If Kavanagh has to fight going backward inside the chaos, the higher-ranked man's tools show up.
Required Conditions
- Turn the fight into high-pace chaos and drag Kavanagh out of the clean striking match, where the Englishman is superior
- Get to the mat or the scrambles, where Royval's 9 submissions meet a kickboxer never submitted and untested in elite grappling
- Sustain the volume and lean on the big-fight experience to steal the cards if the finish doesn't come
- Survive Kavanagh's clean shot early: Royval's chin, stopped by Kape, is the breaking point
— Precedent: Royval has beaten technical strikers by turning the fight into chaos: he out-scrambled then-undefeated Taira and submitted Kai Kara-France after getting rocked. And Kavanagh himself was knocked out by Charles Johnson in August 2025, proof that he can be overwhelmed. The underdog's profile — a grappler who imposes chaos — is exactly the kind that tests a pure kickboxer in deep water.
Verdict
Winner
Lone'er Kavanagh
Method
Decision
Most Likely
- 01
Winner
Lone'er Kavanagh
Kavanagh is the right side: the 89% takedown defense erases Royval's grappling and the cleaner striking punishes the No. 4's porous defense. But is too rich for a fight this live — I have the Englishman at 58% (fair would be around ). No value at the price, so it's parlay material or a minimum stake, not a fat play.
- 02
Method (favorite)
Kavanagh by decision
It's the most likely scenario and it pays better than the moneyline. All of Kavanagh's UFC wins came by decision, and Royval is durable at distance against the elite (he went 25 minutes with Pantoja twice, Taira, Van). Kavanagh picks him apart and takes the cards. Approximate consensus line. Breaks if either man ends it early.
- 03
Winner (underdog value)
Brandon Royval
This is where the real value lives. I have Royval at 40% (fair would be around ), and the market. A No. 4 with a far superior resume, a suffocating pace and a submission game the market is discounting is an underdog with positive expected value. It's not my main pick, but the line is wrong in his favor. Breaks if Kavanagh keeps the fight standing and clean.
Most Likely Outcome
Brandon Royval, small stake (underdog value)
The honest read separates the pick from the bet. My pick to win is Kavanagh, but the price makes Royval the better bet: I have the underdog at 40% and the market pays as if it's about 35%. Positive value, small stake because Kavanagh's style genuinely tends to win the fight. The edge comes from the inflated line, not from following the favorite.
Stats That Matter
89%
Kavanagh takedown defense in the UFC (8 of 9). The wall that blocks Royval's main path
Royval is a BJJ black belt, but has no wrestling to force the mat
9
of Royval's 17 wins came by submission, but Kavanagh has never been submitted in his career
The underdog's biggest weapon runs into a man who won't go to the mat
1
elite win on Kavanagh's record (Moreno). Royval made his career against the top
Pantoja twice, Moreno twice, Taira, Van: the resume chasm
The Trap
Kavanagh is easy money after the Moreno win
The market flipped the Englishman to favorite after the Moreno win, and the public is treating Royval as washed. The trap is buying that at the price. Royval's two losses came to the division's No. 2 (Kape) and to the now-champion (Van) — that's not decline, it's a brutal stretch against the elite. He's still the No. 4, with a suffocating pace and a submission game that can drown a fighter who has one elite fight on his record. while assuming Royval is a stepping stone ignores that this underdog is very much alive.
The market flipped the Englishman to favorite after the Moreno win, and the public is treating Royval as washed. The trap is buying that at the price. Royval's two losses came to the division's No. 2 (Kape) and to the now-champion (Van) — that's not decline, it's a brutal stretch against the elite. He's still the No. 4, with a suffocating pace and a submission game that can drown a fighter who has one elite fight on his record. while assuming Royval is a stepping stone ignores that this underdog is very much alive.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Brandon "Raw Dawg" Royval vs Lone'er Kavanagh | UFC 329: McGregor vs Holloway 2 | July 11, 2026 | T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
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