63%
% Wins - Prediction by RTF
37%
Pacheco
Winner
UD
Win method
Round amount
Detailed Fight Review
This is a great fight for the young Pacheco, and a solid chance for McCumby to make a strong comeback. Both fighters are fairly technical and smart. They build their offense not just on physical strength but on breaking down opponents from range.
At the same time, when Trevor gets tagged, he responds with maximum intensity — as he did against Caleb Plant, when two technical boxers turned their matchup into a quality brawl. This time, McCumby also has to contend with the physical size of his opponent, who is ten centimeters taller and has a longer reach.
Diego boxes with intelligence. He times his power shots well, uses an effective jab, and he's doing all of this at just 24 years old.
McCumby is only 32, but there's an eight-year age gap in favor of Pacheco. Diego is young, tough, and physically imposing. His resume includes decent opposition, but his most recognizable win is likely over Maciej Sulecki, whom he stopped in six rounds.
It’s not like McCumby has faced elite-level fighters, either. The biggest name on his record is Caleb Plant — a fight he lost via stoppage in round nine.
Don’t expect a high-paced shootout. On average, both fighters throw fewer than 250 punches per bout. Their styles focus on identifying and exploiting weaknesses rather than going to war.
The key difference is accuracy. Overall, Pacheco holds a 5% edge — 30% punch accuracy compared to 25% for McCumby. The gap becomes more apparent in specifics: Diego lands 21% of his jabs compared to Trevor’s 13%, and lands a highly impressive 48% of his power punches, while McCumby connects on 38% — solid, but notably lower.
McCumby hasn’t fought yet this year — he’s still inactive following the loss to Plant.
Pacheco, on the other hand, has been busy. He knocked out Sulecki in 2024, and this year he outboxed Steven Nelson, a member of Terence Crawford’s team. It wasn’t smooth sailing early on, but Diego made the adjustments and pulled away with class.
Both men can punch. But again, the edge goes to Pacheco, thanks to his superior accuracy. He knows how to land power shots, how to create the right openings, and then fire the right shot.
Against Diego, you need to protect both your head and body at all times.
To be honest, Pacheco hasn’t truly been tested yet. We can only analyze specific moments where he was challenged — and he handled them.
Both fighters appear to have decent chins. Neither drops from the first touch, but neither has the kind of granite jaw that shrugs off anything either.
Pacheco has already fought once in Frisco — in 2020, he won a decision over a fighter with a 21-12-1 record at the time.
For McCumby, this will be his first bout in this city and on this stage.
This is a valuable test and opportunity for both men. A chance to showcase themselves against quality opposition and attract attention.
That’s particularly true for Trevor. He had a solid showing against Plant, even if he lost by stoppage. At 32, there’s still time to make a move — and beating a rising contender like Pacheco could fast-track him toward bigger fights.
For Diego, this is an important skill test against a solid opponent. His last two wins were over aging fighters. McCumby is 32 and clearly in shape. So the hope is that Trevor, at the very least, gives Pacheco a serious fight and truly puts him to the test.