“The moment I hit this man,” Thurman said to Fight Hub TV, “there’s going to be a signal on a cellular level… warning. Heavy hitter. Damage.”
Thurman tied that claim to Fundora’s knockout loss to Brian Mendoza. He believes that once a fighter has been stopped, the experience never fully disappears. It stays in the background and can surface again under the right impact.
“When I strike and he gets that warning,” Thurman said, “it’s going to put him into PTSD. This can’t be helped.”
The phrasing was vivid, but the point was clear. Thurman is arguing that knockout memory is real and that certain punches bring it back. He is describing instinct, not fragility.
Fundora applies steady pressure and throws in volume, yet Thurman believes authority carries more weight than accumulation. He argues that one clean punch can shift how exchanges unfold from that point forward. He tied that belief directly to his identity.
“My name is Keith ‘One Time’ Thurman,” he said. “I put one good one on you; it’s over.”
In recent years Thurman has relied more on movement and ring control than knockout pursuit. Against Fundora, he says his intent is different. He acknowledged that he drifted from his early emphasis on finishing fights and suggested this bout demands a sharper approach.
For Thurman, this is a psychological fight. He believes the first heavy connection will influence how Fundora responds as the bout develops.
Fundora has improved since the Mendoza loss, but Thurman does not think growth erases memory. He expects the first clean impact to show whether that experience still lingers.

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