Prediction: Joshua Van via Decision
Van is special. Not just because he pressures well or because he’s tough—plenty of guys do that. What separates Van is his timing. The way he reads strikes, slips, and fires back with precise counters is next-level for his age. Watch that Bruno Silva fight. That dude had speed, power, movement—didn’t matter. Van saw everything, made reads instantly, and started walking him down like he was glitching the game. Then go watch him against Rei Tsuruya, a decorated grappler with real wrestling credentials—Van shrugged off the takedowns, stayed calm in scrambles, and still got off clean, damaging offense. He’s not just pressure—he’s intelligent violence.
And that’s exactly what makes him a nightmare for Brandon Royval.
Royval is the definition of chaos. He’s rangy, he’s unpredictable, he throws volume like it’s his job—and it kind of is. But what’s never changed with him, no matter how long he’s been in the UFC, is that defensive recklessness. He still throws with his chin high and his hands low. He still wades into the pocket without cleaning up his entries. And while that worked against some mid-level guys and even caught some elite ones off guard, you can’t keep getting away with that against someone as sharp and poised as Van.
This isn’t just a puncher vs volume guy either. Van closes distance like a sniper. He doesn’t need wild blitzes. He inches in, reads the rhythm, and rips tight combos right down the pipe. He’s also defensively responsible—head movement, high guard, smart exits—and he does it all while keeping a ridiculous pace. Combine that with his ability to stuff takedowns and punish level changes, and Royval’s gonna have to fight a damn-near perfect fight just to stay even.
The biggest threat from Royval is his knees and his kicks, especially if Van gets lazy in the mid-range. Royval throws heat up the middle and has hurt plenty of guys with those shots. But Van has shown over and over that he sees everything. His eyes and timing make him a serious counter threat, especially against someone like Royval who keeps leaving hmself open for counters.
This is a high-paced, high-skill flyweight scrap—and Van is built for it. He’s composed, explosive, and fights like he’s been doing this for a decade longer than he actually has. Getting him at -105 when his line closed at -715 in his last outing. That’s insane value.
Joshua Van isn’t just a prospect anymore—he’s the future. And this is the fight where he proves it against a respected vet with holes tailor-made for him to exploit.