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Magomed Ankalaev UFC Return: Preview & Prediction vs. Khalil Rountree Jr.
MMAStacks Staff·June 30, 2026·4 min read
<h2><p></p></h2><h1><h1><h2><h2>Fight Overview</h2></h2></h1></h1><p></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal;">Magomed Ankalaev hasn't fought since October, when he lost the light heavyweight title to Alex Pereira in a fight a lot of people, myself included, thought he'd won. Now he's back, and the timing of his UFC return matters. A win over Khalil Rountree Jr. at UFC Fight Night in Abu Dhabi on July 25 doesn't just get him a check in the win column. It puts him right back at the front of the line for a rematch nobody outside Pereira's camp seems to want to see again so soon, but that's the business. Rountree's situation is simpler and arguably more interesting. He's coming off a win, not a loss, something the original talking points around this fight keep getting wrong, and he knows beating a former champion changes the entire shape of his career overnight.</span></p>
<p></p><h2 style="">Khalil Rountree Jr. </h2><p></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal;">Rountree's sitting at 15-7-0, ranked fifth in a division that's gotten brutally deep over the last two years. The guy can punch. Anyone who watched his run through Modestas Bukauskas and Anthony Smith back in 2023 knows that much. What's trickier to figure out is which version of Rountree shows up these days, because his last three fights don't paint one clean picture. He lost to Pereira by TKO at UFC 307. He turned around and beat Jamahal Hill by decision, which is no small thing, Hill's a former champion himself. Then Procházka knocked him out at UFC 320, and not with a takedown or a grappling exchange, just better hands on the night. That loss is the one that should worry Rountree fans heading into this fight, honestly, because it wasn't really about wrestling at all. It was about getting hit by someone with real power and finding no answer. Against Ankalaev, the question changes completely. This isn't a kickboxing match. It's a grappling problem, and Rountree's takedown defense has been shaky since he was a middling prospect years ago. Nothing about his recent tape suggests that's fixed.</span></p>
<p></p><h2 style=""></h2><h2>Magomed Ankalaev :</h2><p></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal;">He's 21-2-1 now and a heavy favorite here, somewhere around -310 depending where you're looking. There's a reason for that beyond just the name recognition. Ankalaev fights like someone who studied film for a living before he ever turned pro. His judo's legitimate, not just a label thrown around by commentators. He controls range with a jab most people undersell because it doesn't end fights on its own, but it sets up literally everything he does after. When he decides to clinch, he clinches. When he decides to take you down, you're going down. That's not hyperbole, it's just what's happened to almost everyone he's shared a cage with. People call his fights boring sometimes, and I get why if all you want is a highlight reel. But watch what he does to an opponent's gas tank and their will to keep fighting back over five rounds, and "boring" starts to feel like the wrong word. Even Pereira, who beat him, needed every bit of those 25 minutes to do it.</span></p>
<p></p><h3></h3><h3></h3><h2>The Key Matchup :</h2><p></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal;">Everything here comes down to the clinch. Rountree needs room to throw his hands the way he wants to throw them, and Ankalaev's whole approach is built to take that room away from him. Once Ankalaev gets a tie up against the cage, Rountree's footwork basically stops being relevant, no matter how good it looked in his last few wins. His counters in that range have never been strong, a few underhooks here and there, nothing that's consistently worked against a real wrestler. And Ankalaev's resume includes guys with real wrestling pedigree, which Rountree hasn't had to deal with in a while. Procházka beat him with power, not grappling. This is a different threat entirely. If Rountree's going to win, it has to happen early and it has to happen violently, before Ankalaev settles into any kind of rhythm. Give him too much time and Rountree ends up against the fence by the second round, maybe sooner.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal;"></span></p><h2> My Prediction :</h2><p></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: normal;">I've got Ankalaev winning by unanimous decision, somewhere around 49-46 on the cards. Look for him to start working clinch entries almost immediately, get a takedown sometime around the three minute mark of round one, and just sit on top of Rountree from there for most of the fight. Rountree will get his moments, probably in round two or three when Ankalaev resets position, and he'll land something clean enough to make the crowd believe for a second. It won't be enough. The volume and control Ankalaev brings over fifteen or twenty five minutes is too much to overcome with isolated bursts. This fight is step one of Ankalaev working his way back to a title shot, and depending how dominant the performance looks, that path could open up faster than people expect.</span></p>
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