Czech-Slovak Demolition 🇨🇿🇸🇰 | OKTAGON 87 Highlights (Liberec)
OKTAGON 87 Highlights: Liberec Got the Kind of Night People Rewatch
This is the version of OKTAGON MMA that keeps building momentum in Europe: a loud arena, a heavy Czech-Slovak presence on the card, and finishes that don’t need context to hit. OKTAGON 87 in Liberec wasn’t a slow-burn show. It was a highlights-friendly event from the first clip to the title-fight ending, with moments that feel designed for replay — even when they weren’t.
The “Československá demolice” label fits because the tone is set early. You get the home-fighter energy, the crowd reacting to every clean shot, and that particular OKTAGON vibe where fights rarely stay quiet for long. If you’re landing here off the highlight video, the best way to use it is simple: pick the names that stood out, then follow them forward — because OKTAGON cards are built to turn one good performance into a bigger next booking.
The Early Czech-Slovak Clips: Four Quick Introductions
The opener chunk is a good example of how OKTAGON builds “local heat” without forcing it. Alex Hutyra vs Umut Birdal is the type of fight where the pace is the story — short bursts, quick resets, and a crowd that’s ready to explode if someone gets hurt.
Václav Štěpán vs Firas Daud brings a different feel: tighter exchanges, more structure, and that “don’t give away a free mistake” discipline you see when both guys know one clean moment decides everything.
And Vladimir Lengál vs Ozan Aslaner is exactly why people search OKTAGON highlights in the first place: it has that “something could happen any second” tension. Lengál’s fights tend to live in that space, and it shows even in quick edits.
The Moments That Shook the Arena: Mudroch, Roušal, Humburger
One of the most unique clips in the whole rundown is Tomas Mudroch in a caged boxing match. That’s not normal MMA pacing, and that’s the point — it breaks up the card and gives the crowd something different to latch onto. If you like combat sports that feel raw and immediate, this is the part of the highlights that doesn’t look like the rest.
Then you get the violence that travels: Radek Roušal bringing the kind of knockout energy that turns a highlight clip into a “send this to your friend” moment. Across Europe, Roušal has become one of those names where fans don’t ask “is he exciting?” anymore — they ask “how fast did it end?”
And the homecoming vibe peaks with Dominik Humburger in front of his people. His clash with Zebaztian Kadestam has that classic OKTAGON tension: local hero, big-name opponent, and the crowd willing the fight into a higher gear.
Szabová vs Fernandes: The Title Fight That Put a Bow on the Night
The highlight reel closes the right way: with the flyweight title fight between Lucia Szabová and Leidiane Fernandes. Even if you didn’t watch the full event, you can tell immediately this is the centerpiece. Title fights carry a different type of pressure, and Szabová’s “Silent Killer” identity is built for exactly these moments — calm, clean, and ruthless when the opening shows up.
Fernandes isn’t in there as a passenger either. She’s a champion with her own momentum and her own belief, and that contrast is what makes the ending feel like a statement instead of “just another win.” In a night full of clips, this is the one that anchors OKTAGON 87 in people’s memory.
Next Up: OKTAGON 88 Is Already Calling
OKTAGON never lets a big night sit for too long. The next stop is OKTAGON 88, and the headline matchup is the featherweight title fight Machaev vs Palokaj. If OKTAGON 87 was about Czech-Slovak emotion in Liberec, OKTAGON 88 is about pushing the brand forward with a title centerpiece that fans across Europe will actually search for.
There’s more depth too: Holzer vs Taha and Orlov vs Biyong are the kind of fights that quietly turn into “best fight of the night” candidates. And if you enjoyed the Liberec chaos, names like Roušal and Humburger are exactly the type of fighters OKTAGON can keep building around.
So treat this highlight cut like it’s meant to be treated: not as a recap, but as a map. OKTAGON 87 gave you the moments. OKTAGON 88 is where the next ones land.