
A third Devon Larratt match with Levan Saginashvili could end 6-0 and still matter. That sentence will annoy people who like clean matchmaking. Good. Clean matchmaking has never been the only engine in arm wrestling.
Some matches become era markers. They tell everyone where the ceiling sits, even when the challenger leaves with the same lesson carved deeper into the hand.
The Score Can Lie About The Temperature
Levan’s wins over Devon were decisive. No serious reading gets around that. He has owned the scoreboard and the late-round direction.
But fans remember moments. Devon getting a bite on the wrist. Levan needing to adjust. The brief second when the giant looked like he had to solve something instead of simply finish breakfast.
That is why the science experiment angle has legs. A third match would measure whether those moments can turn into a real position.
Close on paper means rounds. Close in arm wrestling can also mean a champion needing Plan B before the pin.
Devon Sells The Question
Devon brings a rare thing. Even when he looks outgunned, he makes the table feel like a conversation. He complains, adjusts, climbs, bleeds time, and somehow turns a bad position into theater.
That can be irritating. It can also be the reason a rematch feels alive.
The stronger Devon conversation has become less about gym numbers and more about function. Can he hold the shape he needs and make Levan press from farther away? Can he keep enough hand to force one honest grind?
Fans do not need to believe he wins. They need to believe the first round teaches them something new.
The Sport Needs Measuring Sticks
Levan is the current measuring stick on the right arm. Devon is the sport’s loudest measuring device. Put them together and the community starts arguing in useful ways.
Who deserves the shot? Who gives Levan the strangest problem? Does Vitaly have the better physical lane? Did Devon’s win over Vitaly settle the ranking side while leaving the style debate open?
Those arguments are part of the product now. Arm wrestling lives on the table and in the aftermath. The videos after the match may run longer than the match itself, and honestly, that feels on brand.
Would Devon versus Levan III need to be close to matter? It would need to reveal something. In this sport, revelation can be one round, one stop, or one champion finally showing which door he closes first.

I was born in the 1980s, so like a lot of fans, Over the Top was my first introduction to pro arm wrestling. Years later, Devon Larratt’s YouTube channel pulled me back in, and I’ve been hooked ever since. Rewatching classic matches, following the modern supermatch hype, and keeping up with the personalities, rivalries, and culture that make arm wrestling so addictive.