Diego Pacheco was bigger than Kevin Lele Sadjo at the weigh-in. Everyone saw that. You don’t need words for it.
What matters is how long that size means anything once Sadjo starts walking him down and making it physical. Because that’s what Sadjo does. He doesn’t admire frames. He tests them.
Pacheco has had things his own way lately. Long range, clean work, early control, early nights. Sadjo isn’t built for that kind of cooperation. He’s short, thick, and stubborn, and he’s fine taking shots if it gets him inside. If he’s still there after the first few rounds, this turns into something Pacheco hasn’t had to manage much yet.
That’s where patience matters. So does discipline. If Pacheco starts chasing a statement instead of keeping the fight in shape, the rounds stop looking comfortable very quickly.
Sadjo doesn’t need to win the stare-downs or the photos. He needs to lean, crowd, make exchanges ugly, and see what Pacheco looks like when the fight refuses to end early.
That’s the test on Saturday. Not size. Control.
Diego Pacheco 167.2 vs. Kevin Lele Sadjo 166
Joe Cordina 135 vs. Gabe Flores Jr 134.8
Ernesto Mercado 139 vs. Antonio Moran 140
Skye Nicolson 121.4 vs. Yuliahn Luna 120
Arturo Cardenas 121.8 vs. Cesar Vaca 120.8
Chev Clarke 199.4 vs. Anthony Hollaway 196.6
Sachery Sam 125.6 vs. Brandon Medina Guerrero 124.8
Cesar Olvera 131.2 vs. Victor Saravia 132





















