DeGale vs Floyd headlines BKFC 81. Get Manchester fight picks, method angles and top sportsbook odds for every bout.
DeGale vs Floyd headlines BKFC 81. Get Manchester fight picks, method angles and top sportsbook odds for every bout.
The Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship touches down in Manchester for BKFC 81, topped by the long-anticipated promotion debut of former world boxing champ James DeGale against the heavy-handed Matt Floyd.
The rest of the slate mixes reality-TV crossovers, UK circuit standouts, and seasoned pros — expect fast starts and plenty of cuts.
Here’s your full breakdown of the BKFC 81 fight card, complete with matchup analysis, betting picks, and top odds from leading sportsbooks.
James DeGale (0-0) controls range with southpaw angles, a spearing jab, and a straight left that lands before opponents reset; keeping the center and making Floyd reach should stack clean scoring touches for the favorite.
Matt Floyd (0-0) carries straight-line power but relies on chaotic pocket exchanges that DeGale’s footwork and timing are built to avoid.
Aaron Chalmers (1-0) lands his best work behind a busy jab and straight, compact crosses, then resets clean to deny returns — exactly the structure that wins rounds here.
Jack Fincham (0-0) is durable and scrappy, but his looping entries are tailor-made for Chalmers’ straight shots and clinch-break counters.
Navid Mansouri (1-0) builds pressure behind a high guard and thudding body work, cutting the ring and piling damage in the small space.
Jonny Graham (2-1) hunts counters off switches, but his best looks require time and room that Mansouri’s steady march takes away.
Lewis Garside (1-0) owns cleaner feet and a crisp one-two that lands early and often; once the jab is established, he controls pace and placement.
Jonno Chipchase (3-1) is awkward and busy, but his flurries leave lanes that Garside’s straight shots exploit.
David Oskar (5-2) works a heavy jab to head and body, then steps off to reset, owning center and stabbing the midsection to drain legs.
Travis Dickinson (1-1) is rugged in clinch, but if his lead hand gets jammed and he’s kept at end range, Oskar’s straight work wins the minutes.
Jon Telfer (0-0) is a composed counterpuncher who slips inside the jab and slots the right hand down the middle; if he wins first contact and makes Król reach, his timing takes over.
Bartłomiej Król (5-1) drives pace behind a stiff step-jab and body work, but overextended entries leave lanes that Telfer can punish.
Joe Lister (1-0) stays fundamental and body-first, using a busy lead hand to command space and balanced exits to deny counters.
Sean Weir (0-0) is gritty and dangerous in scrappy pockets, but Lister’s straight scoring squeezes those windows.
Andy Thornton (1-0) is a mid-range puncher who scores with the right hand, then leans in clinch to sap pace and land short shots on the break.
Matty Hill (1-1) moves well, but if he’s steered to the rails, Thornton’s physicality dictates.
Gaz Corran (1-0) plays disciplined attrition: jab to chest, hook to liver, then back upstairs while walking opponents down.
Danny Moir (3-1) has quick hands in space, but Corran’s lead-hand control and body work steadily shut the door.
Mikey Henderson (1-0) fires straighter, cleaner punches, holds center, and lands the eye-catching shots judges like.
Benjamin Lowe (0-1) brings awkward volume, but if he’s kept at end range, Henderson’s accuracy and balance carry the minutes.