Mateusz Gamrot has escalated promotion for a potential matchup with Paddy Pimblett through social media posts. Gamrot posted aggressive callout content claiming he will "shave him bald and make him tap in the first round." The post describes the content as generated material on X (formerly Twitter). No official fight announcement has been made between the two lightweight contenders. The callout suggests Gamrot is actively pursuing a bout with the popular British fighter.
Mateusz Gamrot has taken to social media to publicly call out fellow lightweight contender Paddy Pimblett, posting aggressive content on X in which he claims he will "shave him bald and make him tap in the first round." No official fight announcement has followed, but the Polish fighter is clearly angling for the matchup.

Gamrot, nicknamed "Gamer," enters the conversation ranked tenth in the lightweight division at 35 years old. Fighting out of American Top Team, the southpaw carries a record of 26-4-0 and has built his reputation as one of the division's most relentless wrestlers, averaging an impressive 5.15 takedowns per 15 minutes. He lands 3.29 significant strikes per minute at 51 percent accuracy, blending his grappling with a steady offensive output.
Pimblett, ranked fourth spots above Gamrot at number six, holds a 23-4-0 record and has become one of the sport's most recognizable names. The 31-year-old Liverpudlian, training out of Next Generation MMA Liverpool, presents a notably different profile. "The Baddy" lands a high-volume 5.49 significant strikes per minute at 52 percent accuracy and averages 1.2 submission attempts per 15 minutes, making him a threat on the feet and off his back. His 73-inch reach gives him a three-inch advantage over Gamrot's 70-inch wingspan.

Why it matters
- A win over the sixth-ranked Pimblett would push Gamrot firmly into title contention from his current tenth-place position.
- The stylistic contrast is sharp — Gamrot's elite takedown volume against Pimblett's submission threat and striking output sets up a compelling grappling chess match.
- Pimblett's mainstream popularity means the bout carries significant promotional weight beyond pure rankings value.





