46%
% Wins - Prediction by RTF
54%
Biggs
Winner
UD
Win method
Round amount
Detailed Fight Review
On paper, 23-year-old Dylan Biggs is a perpetual pressure fighter. Blessed with imposing size and raw strength, he likes to march forward, sling power shots, and muscle his way inside.
By contrast, 21-year-old Petro Frolov is typically the slick, mobile operator—happy to box second, meet the aggressor with counters, and steer clear of the danger zone.
That’s the statistical snapshot. Reality, of course, can turn the data on its head.
In the Grand Prix’s second round Frolov had to bite down. In the very first frame against Saldívar both men tasted the canvas, and the firefight never really cooled. The Ukrainian still prevailed, showing that quality of execution can trump quantity of chaos—an asset he’ll need against Biggs. Trading at mid-range with the Australian makes little sense; out-boxing him does.
The birthdays don’t matter much, but the ring mileage does. Biggs has already felt real public pressure: his 2023 all-prospects showdown with Nikita Tszyu. Dylan scored an early knockdown yet crumbled as Tszyu—smaller on paper but physically stout—forced him backward and ripped a body shot home in round five for the stoppage.
Yes, it’s a KO loss—but the sort of lesson that forges a tougher fighter. Since then Biggs is 5-0, two finishes.
Frolov hasn’t faced a single spotlight that bright. The minus? Lack of that acid test. The plus? He’s a true road warrior—Ukraine, Poland, Turkey, Italy, Germany, Saudi Arabia—unfazed by venue or rival.
Frolov is the busier man. Judges’ tallies show he averaged 400+ punches over six rounds in his first two Grand Prix outings. Biggs, by comparison, averaged a thrifty ≈250.
Jabs: 203 vs 106 in Petro’s favor. Power shots: a slimmer edge, 224 vs 181.
Accuracy tells a different story: Biggs lands 37 % overall, 40 % power; Frolov sits at 35 % overall, 34 % power—but holds a logical jab edge, 35 % to 31 %.
Both men lace up every two months, and the regular cadence plus a familiar Riyadh stage seems to suit them. Each cruised through the last round of the tournament: Frolov dropped a single round on one card across two fights; Biggs surrendered just two on two cards.
Biggs is sturdy and athletic—60 % KO rate against Frolov’s 33.3 %. Pure horsepower sits with the Australian.
Still, sleep on Petro’s timing at your peril; a well-placed shot can neutralize brute force.
Roughly even. Biggs absorbed heavy fire from Tszyu, backed off under pressure, and was stopped. Frolov’s never been stopped but was quickly dropped in Grand Prix Round 2; the knockdown lingered in his legs for a spell.
Riyadh offers no true home-field boost for either camp. If both men handle the climate and kickoff time, the better boxer wins—straight up.
Motivation is crystal-clear: the Grand Prix finals loom. No trash talk, no distractions—just a prime stage to showcase maximum form.
When Frolov locks into his focused, precise groove, he can outwork nearly anyone in the bracket—fleet, awkward, hard to time. Biggs must drag him into a fight.
If Dylan succeeds, Petro could be in trouble; brawling with the heavier man is unwise. Planting his feet in front of Biggs would be worse. Dylan needs pauses, exchanges, proof that Petro can’t just box—he has to fight, or surrender rounds to Biggs’s accuracy.