Best Prospects From Argintina

Featherweight, Lucas Miletich (13-2)

Miletich has been on a tear since his loss to Inglesson de Lara, rattling off five straight wins. Avenging that defeat feels likely if they were to meet again today. He’s an aggressive fighter who consistently presses forward, often with a reckless edge. Luckily, his durability and power tend to carry him through those exchanges.

 

He’s shown a solid chin and the kind of natural punching power that can end fights with a single shot. While he’s capable of wrestling and can capitalize on submission opportunities, that’s not where he’s most comfortable. Miletich would much rather keep things standing and trade.

 

Miletich is an action fighter through and through, and his style makes him an easy watch. As the Samurai Fight House featherweight champion, it feels like a bigger opportunity is on the horizon.

 

Bantamweight, Abril Lizardo (1-0)

Lizardo is still very new to MMA, but she brings a strong combat sports background. A decorated BJJ competitor, she won the absolute division at the 2025 Curitiba BJJ Pro in Brazil and also took gold at the 2025 Floripa Winter tournament, establishing herself on the regional grappling scene. She even picked up a win in a kickboxing bout before transitioning to MMA.

 

It’s difficult to fully assess her level off a single, short fight, but the early signs were promising. Her striking looked composed in the limited exchanges, and once the fight hit the mat, she immediately took over. She threatened with a triangle, opened her opponent up with sharp elbows, and transitioned seamlessly to an armbar, forcing a brutal finish.

 

It was a nasty, eye-catching sequence—more than enough to put her firmly on the radar moving forward.

 

Bantamweight, Juan Medina (1-0)

Medina made his professional debut with LUX and delivered a dominant first-round submission win. Before that, he went 2–0 as an amateur, and all three of his victories have come by armbar.

 

From what’s been shown so far, he appears to be a grappling-focused fighter. He uses effective trips along the cage and quickly looks to take the back, constantly threatening submissions. Medina does a good job allowing just enough space for opponents to make mistakes, then capitalizing on them.

 

There’s still a lot to learn about his overall game, but his pro debut was impressive and left a clear desire to see more.

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