AgentMMA fuses strike pace, reaction data, and grappling leverage to map the fight flow.AI analysis of striking, defense, and grappling to project the fight outcome.


Adam Fugitt's been through the UFC grinder and it shows. The Fight Ready southpaw switched training camps heading into this one, and he's promising violence against Ty Miller at UFC 324. Fugitt's coming off a brutal first round knockout loss to Islam Dulatov back in July, getting caught with a punch just over four minutes in. That's back to back knockout losses after Michael Morales put him away in the third round at UFC 277. The guy's tough as nails though, he went the distance with Josh Quinlan in a split decision win that had everyone arguing about the scorecards. Here's the thing about Fugitt.
When he's on, he can finish fights. Remember when he mounted Yusaku Kinoshita and rained down elbows for the stoppage? That was nasty. But he's also been caught by guillotines (Mike Malott wrapped him up in round two) and big punches. The southpaw stance gives guys problems, but at welterweight, everyone hits hard and Fugitt's been on the wrong end of that power lately. Ty Miller's a total mystery here.
No UFC history, no fight data to break down. That makes this dangerous for both guys. Fugitt needs a win badly after those knockout losses, and switching camps shows he knows something had to change. He's talking about expecting a violent fight, which probably means he's planning to bring the pressure early and test Miller right away.
UFC Record Breakdown
Fugitt's finishes come early when they come, so the first round is where this one gets tested.

Ty Miller finish map

Ty Miller breakdown
Adam Fugitt's been through the UFC grinder and it shows. The Fight Ready southpaw switched training camps heading into this one, and he's promising violence against Ty Miller at UFC 324. Fugitt's coming off a brutal first round knockout loss to Islam Dulatov back in July, getting caught with a punch just over four minutes in. That's back to back knockout losses after Michael Morales put him away in the third round at UFC 277. The guy's tough as nails though, he went the distance with Josh Quinlan in a split decision win that had everyone arguing about the scorecards. Here's the thing about Fugitt.
When he's on, he can finish fights. Remember when he mounted Yusaku Kinoshita and rained down elbows for the stoppage? That was nasty. But he's also been caught by guillotines (Mike Malott wrapped him up in round two) and big punches. The southpaw stance gives guys problems, but at welterweight, everyone hits hard and Fugitt's been on the wrong end of that power lately. Ty Miller's a total mystery here.
No UFC history, no fight data to break down. That makes this dangerous for both guys. Fugitt needs a win badly after those knockout losses, and switching camps shows he knows something had to change. He's talking about expecting a violent fight, which probably means he's planning to bring the pressure early and test Miller right away.
Fugitt's finishes come early when they come, so the first round is where this one gets tested.

Adam Fugitt finish map

Adam Fugitt breakdown
Pace delta
+4.6 significant strikes/min
Adam Fugitt averages 4.6 significant strikes per minute while Ty Miller sits at 0.0.
AI confidence
93%
Probability weighting from the AgentMMA simulator.
Finish radar
High-conviction finish window detected. Unlock for full breakdown.
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