A single match in the Tyler bracket decides which competitor advances and which is eliminated.
The winner gains tournament momentum and a better standing; the loser exits this portion of the event and may lose ranking or opportunity for a follow-up matchup.
Braden Shick and Aidan Mayo are the two fighters scheduled to meet.
Their coaches, the assigned referee, and the promotion’s matchmakers control preparations, last-minute confirmations, and any administrative rulings that could affect the bout.
Styles and conditioning shape how the contest unfolds: striking accuracy, takedown success, clinch control, and cardio determine round control.
Pre-fight health (cuts, weight), corner strategy between rounds, and judge or referee decisions are the real levers that shift win probabilities.
Look for the official weigh-in, medical clearances, and pre-fight face-offs or interviews in the 48–72 hours before the match.
On fight night monitor referee assignment, the early-round tempo, visible fatigue or damage, corner adjustments, and round-by-round scoring signals for momentum changes.