Chances are this will be fun, quick and violent. Tafa was
particularly raw when the UFC picked him up in 2019, but
Australia’s “Bad Man” at least did well to learn on the job. After
rushing into a knockout loss in his UFC debut, Tafa quickly learned
to pivot into being a hard-hitting counterpuncher. That approach
has still run him into trouble against opponents either willing to
stay patient or out-wrestle him, but there’s a wide swath of
heavyweights who are willing to charge into danger as Tafa once
did, so he can probably keep scoring knockouts for as long as the
UFC wants to keep him around. This time, Tafa welcomes a Brazilian
newcomer in Teixeira, a 6-foot-7 heavyweight who certainly cuts an
impressive figure.
Teixeira has shown some potential thus far, running through all of
his competition within a round, though there are some questions as
to how he will handle an opponent who can stand his ground and
return fire like Tafa. This probably ends one of two ways, with
Teixeira either overwhelming Tafa quickly or eating the first
knockout punch of his career; and at this point, Tafa is the much
more proven entity. The pick is Tafa via first-round knockout.