Brendan Loughnane had to adapt and overcome some mental hurdles after suffering the first stoppage loss of his career.
While his first fight of 2024 went his way, Loughnane explained in the post-fight press conference that the loss to Pinedo haunted him. Loughnane mentioned that he even considered leaving the sport behind after the crushing defeat.
“That was the best Brendan Loughnane,” he said during the post-fight press conference. “I don’t make excuses for fights, but that’s the first time I've been healthy for so long... I think I put the featherweight division and the world on notice to get like, ‘Brendan’s a serious contender, yeah?’ I feel like people forgot about me after the knockout a bit.”
The 2022 PFL champ continued, “‘Oh yeah Brendan, he wasn’t that good anyway, he got knocked out.’ You know even I was half considering, ‘Can I really do this anymore?’ After that knockout. I suffered from it. I was knocked out, [for] fifteen minutes, didn’t know where I was. Was watching the knockout back like, ‘wow, that was weird.’ Now imagine that in over 50 contests, I’ve never been dropped [or] knocked down [or] anything. So, I had to really think, ‘Is this me anymore?’ Then I started hard sparring and realized that the chin still works and then the rest is history. I just bit down on my gumshield, got training, went to Thailand. On Christmas day, I started training for this moment on Christmas day. So, on April 19, I stand here in front of you over the moon.”
The Manchester, England, native is now the points leader (six) in the featherweight divisional standings, and is confident in his ability to secure the 2024 PFL Championship along with the coveted million-dollar prize.
“I'll be honest, I didn’t really see too much this year. I was watching the screens thinking, ‘It’s wide open for me again.’ It really is. That’s no disrespect to anyone else, I’m being deadly honest. So, I look forward to June and another win,” he concluded.