Next, Alex Pereira, at heavyweight physique, (~245 lbs, lean, same speed as his LHW but more durable and tougher, as he has shown it's his natural weight) stepping in with Tom Aspinall (~255 lbs on fight night).
Tom Aspinall vs Alex Pereira
My prediction
Round 1
Aspinall doesn't waste time circling light, probing with quick jabs and feints level changes. Pereira stands tall, stalking, hands high. Alex lands the inside low kick, drawing a flinch. Aspinall answers with a 1-2, catching Alex clean once, but Pereira as the striking master, stays composed and fires back with a left hook to the body. Mid round, Aspinall shoots low on a kick. Pereira sprawls, posts and frames off, escaping clean as proven by his very good grappling vs Ankalaev. In the closing minute, Pereira starts finding the rythm — jab, calf kick, jab again. Aspinall manages to sneak in a right hand upstairs but the leg is already hurt.
10 - 9 Pereira
Round 2
Aspinall tries to pressure more and forces exchanges. He doubles the jab and hits a clean right right that forces Pereira to reset. Tom uses the cage to trap Alex, briefly clinching, looking for a trip. Pereira is sturdy with no weight cut, frames off and land a sneaky right cross on the exit. Tom presses again, but Pereira lands a nasty left hook as Tom's entering tall. Tom absorbs it but slows down. Alex targets the body with kicks — front and side kicks that thuds loud. Aspinall rallies later with a big right cross and a short flurry at the fence. Tom edges volume but Pereira lands the sharper and heavier strikes, edging on impact.
10-9 Pereira (20-18 Pereira)
Round 3
Aspinall, aware he's down, shoots a deeper double off a jab. Pereira defends well the first, but Tom chains to a body lock and drags him down briefly into half guard. He hold position landing steady ground shots, but not devastating ones. Pereira posts (like vs Jiri first fight) and works back to his feet with a whizzer, eating knees on the way. Once standing, Alex goes back to the calf kick but Tom is now mixing stances to protect it. Tom manages to land a right hand that staggers Alex momentarily, but Alex lessens the impact by rolling with the punch and clinching briefly.
10-9 Aspinall (29-28 Pereira)
Round 4
Tom is already breathing heavier. Pereira reasserts his jab-low kick rythm now adding the high kick threat. Mid round, he fakes the jab and connects a left hook upstairs that wobbles Tom, forcing him to clinch desperately. Alex punishes with knees and short uppercuts. Tom hangs on, survives, but looks hurt. Alex stalks, patient, landing another calf kick that hobble Aspinall's lead leg and adds a jab as Tom briefly changes levels, wobbling Tom, who survives the bell. Almost stoppage.
10-9 Pereira (39 - 37 Pereira)
Round 5
Aspinall knows he needs a finish. He comes out aggressive, winging combinations. Pereira shells, rides the storm, then punishes with body work — right kick under the elbow, jab, left hook upstairs. Tom bites down and desperately shoots again, but his leg is too compromised to drive through. Alex sprawls, shoves him off, and lands a brutal right cross on the break. Both swing at the end but Alex still lands the cleaner shots and ends the fight marching forwards behind the jab with Tom retreating.
10-9 Pereira (49-46 Pereira)
After five rounds, Alex Pereira defeats Tom Aspinall by UD, Alex Pereira 49 - 46 Tom Aspinall
IMO Pereira's low kick game and body work slow Tom's trademark bounce and entry speed. Aspinall has success with some ground control and some heavy strikes, but over 25 minutes, Pereira's sharper, heavier strikes from being the best striker, and his proven grappling development along the years hold up in a dangerous but dominant win to me. Pereira's defensive anti wrestling has evolved a lot, having the best TDD in LHW, and training in high intensity with 260 lbs pro wrestlers in the sands recently. Plus, he's one of the best in the world at reading rythm and punishing defensive gaps from speedy chaotic straight liners strikers.
The calf kick at HW, with Pereira having a lean natural 245 lbs would imo compromise Tom's already not strong leg, which he depends on for quick entries, slowing him down significantly, like Rountree not being able to keep the same huge speed after the calf kick was paying dividends and the body and head strikes were adding up — something which would likely be even more damaging for a bigger guy who depends a lot on his lead leg for explosive entries IMO