Paddy Pimblett and the âhate watchesâ that fuel his UFC redemption story
Paddy Pimblett and the âhate watchesâ that fuel his UFC redemption story

Will CastleWed, July 8, 2026 at 5:58 AM UTC
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Paddy Pimblett alongside Jamie Carragher after the Champions League final in Budapest (Getty)
Paddy Pimblett was in the rafters of the Puskas Arena in Budapest when he was invited onto CBS Sportsâs build-up for the Champions League final. Stood beside another one of Liverpoolâs own in Jamie Carragher, he was asked by Kate Scott about his vocal scorn for Arsenal fans, when Pimblett made his allegiance for that day clear. âForza PSG,â he declared.
He wanted Paris Saint-Germain to inflict a 5-0 demolition on Arsenal, just like they did to Inter Milan a year earlier. What transpired was even sweeter for Pimblett. As Gabriel blazed his decisive penalty over the crossbar, there was no doubt that Paddy âThe Baddyâ was basking in his rivalsâ heartbreak.
This would be a familiar feeling for Pimblett just over a fortnight later as he watched his bitter, long-term rival Ilia Topuria stunned by Justin Gaethje in the main event of UFC Freedom 250 at the White House, with the Georgian-Spaniard having his lightweight title and undefeated record ripped from his grasp.
âI've had two major hate watches in the past two weeks that have been successful,â Pimblett tells the Independent, keeping his glee somewhat concealed in a half-smile.
But it wasnât simply Topuriaâs demise, which saw him hospitalised with two broken orbital bones and a busted nose, that satisfied 31-year-old Pimblett. The UFC lightweight contender had spent the first half of 2026 bombarded by jibes about his own devastating defeat to Gaethje at UFC 324.

Justin Gaethje beat Paddy Pimblett in a brutal fight in January (Getty)
Though perceived by many to have been âfast-trackedâ to a main-event title shot, Pimblett went into that match for interim gold as the favourite, with Gaethje considered well past his prime. What followed was a five-round war that left Pimblett bloodied and bruised as Gaethje scored a statement win.
The American less so received plaudits for his performance than Pimblett was taunted for failing to live up to the hype. Four months on, the top comment accompanying the viral video of him pledging his PSG support was, âGot absolutely schooled by a 37-year-old Gaethjeâ, as if that should be an insult. By then shocking the world to demolish the previously-untouchable Topuria, the legend killer, inside four rounds, Gaethje demonstrated beyond doubt that losing to him is no embarrassment.
âI knew that anyway, you know what I mean?â Pimblett assures us. âThere was a bit of vindication. But at the same time, I knew how good he was. I had Gaethje to win. Everyone laughed at me, didnât think that it could happen. But itâs the fight game, lad. Anything can happen.â
Pimblett insisted his confidence never dropped following that defeat, one that he claims was influenced by an illegal move from Gaethje, adding: â[I went] five rounds with who is now the undisputed world champion, and I made the fight competitive all the way through it. One judge thought I won two rounds of the five, and I think I only lost the second round because he poked me in the eye and punched me straight after it. It wasnât even an eye poke, it was an eye gouge.â
Stressing his own heart, Pimblett publicly took issue with the way Topuria lost on the South Lawn. One round after very nearly having the fight ended by doctor stoppage, Topuriaâs corner threw in the towel after heâd been battered in the fourth â but that wasnât how Pimblett saw things. He ferociously lambasted âEl Matadorâ for âquitting on the stoolâ on his YouTube channel, before reiterating his scathing criticism in this interview.
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Pimblett claimed Ilia Topuria âquit on the stoolâ in scathing criticism of his rival (Reuters)
ââI didnât quit on the stool like a little b****,â he declared. âThat's what I didnâât do.
âThatâs how I saw it. If my corner team says we're gonna [stop] the fight, Iâm going to say: âNo, weâre not. Weâre carrying on. Weâre getting this fight done.â I will fight with every last breath I have in my body to win this fight, just like I did when I fought him [Gaethje].â
Pimblett emphatically called out Gaethje for a rematch after his win at the White House, feeling it would be a just reward for finishing Benoit Saint-Denis, as he has vowed to do, in the co-main event of UFC 329 â the 11 July card headlined by Conor McGregorâs long-anticipated return against Max Holloway.
However, âBSDâ is anything but a lay-up for Pimblett. An ex-French special forces soldier, Saint-Denis has arguably the greatest punching power at 155lb. This poses a serious test Pimblettâs so-far unbroken chin, which has still been the subject of criticism during his time in the UFC for being left dangerously exposed in striking exchanges.

Ex-French special forces soldier Benoit Saint-Denis is one of the UFC's scariest lightweight contenders (Getty)
Pimblett doesnât believe the BSD hype, though. ââI didn't think Justin Gaethje hit that hard, and everyone says heâs the hardest hitter that youâve ever been hit by. BSDâs slow compared to Justin. I canât see him hitting me that much, and even if he does, Iâll laugh in his face.â
Assuming Pimblettâs confidence is well-founded, what could come after Saint-Denis?
Pimblett has made clear his desire to run it back with Gaethje, but now is probably the closest weâve been to getting the grudge match with Topuria. Their blood feud has been boiling ever since online trash talk led to an altercation in a hotel ahead in 2022, and a title eliminator could make sense if Pimblett is victorious at UFC 329.
The Liverpudlian, just like Darren Till before him, seems willing to fight anyone and everyone, and will not turn his nose up at the Topuria fight, even if it isnât his first choice. âSound, letâs go,â Pimblett says.

Has the door opened for Pimblett and Topuria to finally share the cage? (Getty)
However, circumstances could act as a blockage. Topuriaâs injuries may rule him out beyond the end of the year, and he could choose to take some more time off for his own wellbeing, with the year between his last two fights consumed by a highly-publicised divorce. Pimblett expresses sympathy over his rivalâs personal situation: âHeâs got a lot of s*** going on outside the cage.â
Nevertheless, Pimblett does not seem willing to sit around waiting for the money fight with Topuria. Activity is his priority.
ââI want to fight again before the end of the year, and I doubt if heâs going to be ready to,â he added. âHeâs not fighting until next year at least, I donât think. He needs to get a lot of surgeries and all the stuff like that. If he needs surgeries on his face, heâs not fighting until next year. Iâm hoping to get BSD out of there within two rounds and then fight again before the end of the year.â
Source: âAOL Sportsâ