Tag: Belal Muhammad

  • “A New Contender” – Gabriel Bonfim Dominates Belal Muhammad

    “A New Contender” – Gabriel Bonfim Dominates Belal Muhammad

    In the biggest opportunity of his MMA career, Gabriel Bonfim fought the best performance he’s ever had in his career, defeating former welterweight champion Belal Muhammad in the UFC Vegas 118 main event.

    Muhammad got off to a head start in the opening frame, working well with his strikes despite being on the back foot. Bonfim, however, managed to string things well together, landing strong strikes late in the round to add to the pressure. Bonfim continued this in the second, landing some power while mixing in leg kicks to slow the former champ down.

    Muhammad looked for a takedown at the start of round three, but Bonfim was able to stuff it.

    Gabriel Bonfim Dominates Belal Muhammad In UFC Vegas 118 Main Event

    Bonfim has now won five straight and is 7-1 in the UFC. He came into this fight off a finish of Randy Brown this past November.

    Muhammad has now lost three straight since winning the UFC welterweight title at UFC 304. He came into this fight after losing the title to Jack Della Maddalena and losing to Ian Machado Garry in 2025.

  • UFC Vegas 118 Results: Muhammad vs. Bonfim Live Updates & Highlights

    UFC Vegas 118 Results: Muhammad vs. Bonfim Live Updates & Highlights

    MMA News updates UFC Vegas 118 results and highlights live as the action unfolds from the Meta Apex in Las Vegas, Nevada. The main event will feature a welterweight bout between Belal Muhammad and Gabriel Bonfim. MMANews has you covered with all the results and highlights!

    Belal Muhammad vs. Gabriel Bonfim – Welterweight Main Event

    Muhammad was on a win streak between 2019 and 2024, rising up the welterweight ranks en route to defeating Leon Edwards for the title at UFC 304. Muhammad, however, enters this fight off back-to-back losses. Muhammad dropped the welterweight title to Jack Della Maddalena at UFC 315 and lost to Ian Machado Garry at UFC Qatar in November.

    Bonfim is 6-1 since entering the UFC as an undefeated fighter off Dana White’s Contender Series. Bonfim most recently fought in November, finishing Randy Brown in the main event of UFC Vegas 111.

    The UFC Vegas 118 co-main event will feature Brendan Allen and Edmen Shahbazyan in a middleweight matchup.

    Allen has won two straight and nine of his last 11. He most recently fought on short notice in the main event of UFC Vancouver in October, knocking off Reinier de Ridder in a title eliminator.

    Shahbazyan has won three straight, most recently finishing Andre Muniz at UFC 320.

    If you can’t watch the action, check here for all the latest results and highlights from UFC Vegas 118!

    How to Watch UFC Vegas 118

    • Date: Saturday, June 6, 2026
    • Venue: Meta Apex, Las Vegas, Nevada
    • Streaming: Paramount+ (exclusive)
    • Prelims: 5 PM ET / 2 PM PT
    • Main Card: 8 PM ET / 5 PM PT

    UFC Vegas 118 Quick Results

    • Main Event: Belal Muhammad vs. Gabriel Bonfim — Gabriel Bonfim def. Belal Muhammad via unanimous decision (50-45 x3)
    • Co-Main Event: Brendan Allen vs. Edmen Shahbazyan — Brendan Allen def. Edmen Shahbazyan via unanimous decision (30-27 x2, 29-28)
    • Fares Ziam vs. Tom Nolan — Tom Nolan def. Fares Ziam via unanimous decision (29-28 x3)
    • Bryce Mitchell vs. Santiago Luna — Bryce Mitchell def. Santiago Luna via submission (arm-triangle choke) (Rd. 3, 4:52)
    • Iwo Baraniewski vs. Junior Tafa — Iwo Baraniewski def. Junior Tafa via TKO (Rd. 1, 1:25)

    UFC Vegas 118 Results & Highlights

    Preliminary Card (Paramount+, 5 PM ET)

    Women’s Strawweight: Ketlen Souza vs. Ariane Carnelossi

    Result: Ketlen Souza def. Ariane Carnelossi via TKO (Rd. 1, 1:34)

    Women’s Flyweight: Jeisla Chaves vs. Yuneisy Duben

    Result: Jeisla Chaves def. Yuneisy Duben via split decision (29-28 x2, 28-29)

    Featherweight: Jordan Leavitt vs. Joanderson Brito

    Result: Joanderson Brito def. Jordan Leavitt via submission (Ninja choke) (Rd. 1, 4:19)

    Women’s Bantamweight: Priscila Cachoeira vs. Chelsea Chandler

    Result: Chelsea Chandler def. Priscila Cachoeira via submission (armbar) (Rd. 1, 3:42)

    Flyweight: Bruno Silva vs. Edgar Chairez

    Result: Edgar Chairez def. Bruno Silva via submission (rear-naked choke) (Rd. 1, 4:13)

    Bantamweight: Marcus McGhee vs. John Yannis

    Result: Marcus McGhee def. John Yannis via unanimous decision (30-27 x2, 29-28)

    Catchweight (130 lbs.): Matt Schnell vs. Alessandro Costa

    Result: Alessandro Costa def. Matt Schnell via TKO (Rd. 1, 2:32)

    Main Card (Paramount+, 8 PM ET)

    Light Heavyweight: Iwo Baraniewski vs. Junior Tafa

    Result: Iwo Baraniewski def. Junior Tafa via TKO (Rd. 1, 1:25)

    Bantamweight: Bryce Mitchell vs. Santiago Luna

    Result: Bryce Mitchell def. Santiago Luna via submission (arm-triangle choke) (Rd. 3, 4:52)

    Lightweight: Fares Ziam vs. Tom Nolan

    Result: Tom Nolan def. Fares Ziam via unanimous decision (29-28 x3)

    Middleweight: Brendan Allen vs. Edmen Shahbazyan

    Result: Brendan Allen def. Edmen Shahbazyan via unanimous decision (30-27 x2, 29-28)

    Welterweight: Belal Muhammad vs. Gabriel Bonfim

    Result: Gabriel Bonfim def. Belal Muhammad via unanimous decision (50-45 x3)

  • UFC Fight Night: Muhammad vs. Bonfim Preview, Full Card, How to Watch

    UFC Fight Night: Muhammad vs. Bonfim Preview, Full Card, How to Watch

    UFC Fight Night returns to the Meta APEX in Las Vegas on Saturday, June 6, with a welterweight main event carrying real title-picture stakes. Former champion Belal Muhammad faces rising Brazilian contender Gabriel Bonfim in a 12-fight card streaming on Paramount+.

    Key Points

    • Main event: Belal Muhammad, ranked #5 at welterweight, looks to snap a two-fight skid against #11-ranked Gabriel Bonfim, who rides a four-fight win streak.
    • Co-main: #4 middleweight Brendan Allen meets Edmen Shahbazyan in a striker-versus-grinder matchup.
    • How to Watch: Prelims at 5 PM ET, main card at 8 PM ET, all on Paramount+.

    What’s at Stake

    Muhammad lost the welterweight title to Jack Della Maddalena and followed it with a decision loss to Ian Garry, the first back-to-back defeats of his career. A win keeps him in the contender mix. A loss likely drops him out of the title conversation entirely while Bonfim, beating a former champ, fast-tracks himself toward an elimination bout or a shot at gold.

    Full Card

    Bout Division
    Belal Muhammad vs. Gabriel Bonfim Welterweight
    Brendan Allen vs. Edmen Shahbazyan Middleweight
    Farès Ziam vs. Tom Nolan Lightweight
    Bryce Mitchell vs. Santiago Luna Bantamweight
    Iwo Baraniewski vs. Junior Tafa Light Heavyweight
    Matt Schnell vs. Alessandro Costa Catchweight
    Marcus McGhee vs. John Yannis Bantamweight
    Bruno Silva vs. Edgar Chairez Flyweight
    Priscila Cachoeira vs. Chelsea Chandler Women’s Bantamweight
    Jordan Leavitt vs. Joanderson Brito Featherweight
    Jeisla Chaves vs. Yuneisy Duben Women’s Flyweight
    Ketlen Souza vs. Ariane Carnelossi Women’s Strawweight

    Fights to Watch

    Welterweight: Belal Muhammad vs. Gabriel Bonfim

    A classic wrestler-versus-striker test that decides who stays relevant at the top of 170 pounds.

    • The matchup: Muhammad’s blueprint is to close distance, secure ties, and grind opponents into the fence. Bonfim wants to keep it standing and let his aggressive striking work.
    • The skid: Muhammad arrives off losses to Jack Della Maddalena and Ian Garry, the first two-fight slide of his career. Garry’s stock has only climbed since, with Islam Makhachev naming him the No. 1 welterweight contender.
    • The run: Bonfim enters on a four-fight win streak, most recently beating Randy Brown, in his second straight main event.
    • The question: Bonfim’s cardio has been flagged in three-round fights, raising doubts about how he handles a five-round headliner against a relentless pace.

    Middleweight: Brendan Allen vs. Edmen Shahbazyan

    The #4-ranked Allen draws a dangerous early finisher in Shahbazyan.

    • The styles: Shahbazyan is most threatening in the opening minutes; Allen’s grinding, submission-heavy approach is built to drag fights into deep water.
    • The stakes: A win keeps Allen near the title picture at 185 pounds.

    Lightweight: Farès Ziam vs. Tom Nolan

    Ranked #14 Ziam takes a sizable betting favorite role against Australia’s Tom Nolan in a contender-tier lightweight bout.

    Bantamweight: Bryce Mitchell vs. Santiago Luna

    Mitchell moves into a bantamweight scrap against Mexico’s Santiago Luna on the main card.

    How to Watch

    • Date: Saturday, June 6, 2026
    • Venue: Meta APEX, Las Vegas, Nevada
    • Prelims: 5:00 PM ET on Paramount+
    • Main Card: 8:00 PM ET on Paramount+

    Paramount continues to expand its UFC footprint, recently confirmed to become the exclusive Canadian home of UFC numbered events in 2027.

    Don’t Miss MMA News Coverage

    Stay tuned to MMANews.com for live results, fight recaps, and full post-event fallout.

  • UFC Vegas 118 Full Card Revealed With Belal Muhammad vs. Gabriel Bonfim Headlining

    UFC Vegas 118 Full Card Revealed With Belal Muhammad vs. Gabriel Bonfim Headlining

    The UFC has revealed the full card for UFC Vegas 118 on June 6 at the UFC APEX in Las Vegas, with former welterweight champion Belal Muhammad headlining against rising contender Gabriel Bonfim.

    Muhammad enters the fight on a two-fight losing streak following a decision loss to Ian Machado Garry in November. Bonfim, meanwhile, has won four consecutive fights, including a stoppage of Randy Brown at UFC Vegas 111 in the same month.

    The co-main event features a middleweight matchup between Brendan Allen and Edmen Shahbazyan. Bryce Mitchell takes on Victor Henry in a bantamweight featured bout, while ranked lightweight Fares Ziam faces Contender Series product Tom Nolan. Ranked flyweight Bruno Silva faces Edgar Chairez, and Jordan Leavitt meets Joanderson Brito in a lightweight contest.

    The event serves as the final card before UFC Freedom 250 at the White House the following week on June 14.

    The full card is as follows: Belal Muhammad vs. Gabriel Bonfim, Brendan Allen vs. Edmen Shahbazyan, Bryce Mitchell vs. Victor Henry, Fares Ziam vs. Tom Nolan, Iwo Baraniewski vs. Billy Elekana, Imanol Rodriguez vs. Matt Schnell, Marcus McGhee vs. Jakub Wiklacz, Bruno Silva vs. Edgar Chairez, Jordan Leavitt vs. Joanderson Brito, Ketlen Souza vs. Ariane Carnelossi, Priscila Cachoeira vs. Chelsea Chandler, and Jeisla Chavez vs. Yuneisy Duben.

  • ‘No Way He Deserves A Title Shot’ – Henry Cejudo, Kamaru Usman, Michael Morales, And Other Fighters & Fans Debate Crowded Welterweight Title Picture After Ian Machado Garry Beats Belal Muhammad At UFC Qatar

    ‘No Way He Deserves A Title Shot’ – Henry Cejudo, Kamaru Usman, Michael Morales, And Other Fighters & Fans Debate Crowded Welterweight Title Picture After Ian Machado Garry Beats Belal Muhammad At UFC Qatar

    Ian Machado Garry has now made his case for the next title shot in a crowded welterweight scene, scoring a win over former champion Belal Muhammad in the co-main event of UFC Qatar.

    Machado Garry looked to use his range, while Muhammad appeared to try and pressure and engage in a striking battle with the Irishman. While Muhammad had some control during the opening round, it appeared Machado Garry was landing better with his strikes.

    Machado Garry looked to have the upper hand again early in round two, but Muhammad connected a solid right early. Muhammad’s first attempted to get Machado Garry to the ground saw him get back control but unable to score the takedown. Machado Garry fought off another pair of takedown attempts, and he even threatened one of his own.

    Machado Garry continued to get the better of Muhammad while using his striking defense to take the third round and win on the scorecards.

    Ian Machado Garry Bests Belal Muhammad At UFC Qatar

    Machado Garry is now 10-1 in the UFC, including two straight wins now since his sole loss against Shavkat Rakhmonov.

    Muhammad defeated Leon Edwards for the UFC welterweight championship at UFC 304 but lost it in his first defense against Jack Della Maddalena at UFC 315. This was his first fight since losing the belt.

  • Leon Edwards vs Carlos Prates: Belal Muhammad says ‘Rocky’ is in a tough spot

    Leon Edwards vs Carlos Prates: Belal Muhammad says ‘Rocky’ is in a tough spot

    Belal Muhammad has given his thoughts on the upcoming fight between Leon Edwards and Carlos Prates at UFC 322.

    As we know, Leon Edwards is on a poor run of form as of late. He lost his UFC welterweight championship to Belal Muhammad and then in his next outing, he was beaten pretty comprehensively by Sean Brady.

    At this point, Leon Edwards needs to go out there and prove that he’s still as good as he has always been – or, at the very least, showcase that he’s far more competent against natural strikers as opposed to wrestlers.

    In a recent video, his former foe Belal Muhammad gave his thoughts on this bout.

    Belal Muhammad’s view on Leon Edwards vs Carlos Prates

    “Leon, coming off of two losses in a row, is in a very tough spot,” Muhammad said on his YouTube channel. “You never want to be in a spot where you’re on two losses in a row because we’re going to see how bad he wants it. You don’t get any easier fights when you’re the champ. 

    “Every fight after that is still a tough fight. Every fight after that is still one shot, one win away from getting to a title fight. You’re not getting an easy one with Prates. Prates is very long, he’s a southpaw, he has great power, and he’s very confident coming off of that spinning elbow.”

    “So for Leon, you just need to get back on your rhythm,” Muhammad said. “Your last fight, you got taken down by Sean Brady. Before that, you got taken down by me. Now you’re going against a striker, so this is more of your world. But I do think you need to implement striking. 

    “You need to go with kind of the game plan Ian Garry used of lateral movements, staying out of his power, staying out of his reach, using your kicks. He’s going to be longer than you, and when he overextends, you take him down. We’ve seen you shoot, we’ve seen you wrestle, and we’ve seen you wrestle stupidly with Sean Brady. But with this one, you shoot a bad shot on Prates, he’s not going to make you pay for it.”

    Quotes via MMA Junkie

  • UFC Qatar To Be Headlined By Arman Tsarukyan vs. Dan Hooker With Belal Muhammad vs. Ian Garry As Co Main Event On Nov. 22

    UFC Qatar To Be Headlined By Arman Tsarukyan vs. Dan Hooker With Belal Muhammad vs. Ian Garry As Co Main Event On Nov. 22

    UFC Qatar is set to showcase several big-name fighters.

    The MMA promotion is set to make its debut in Qatar with a Fight Night event scheduled for Saturday, November 22, at the Ali Bin Hamad Al-Attiyah Arena (ABHA Arena) in Doha.

    On Wednesday, UFC CEO Dana White announed that UFC Qatar will feature a pivotal lightweight showdown in the main event, as top contender Arman Tsarukyan takes on Dan Hooker.

    Tsarukyan has not competed since defeating out former 155-pound champion Charles Oliveira by split decision at UFC 300 in April 2024. “Ahalkalakets” was originally scheduled to challenge then-titleholder Islam Makhachev at UFC 311 this past January, but a back injury suffered during fight week forced him to withdraw from the bout.

    He is currently riding a four-fight win streak and holds a 9-2 record in the UFC, with four of those victories coming by way of finish.

    On the other hand, Hooker returns to action after edging out Mateusz Gamrot by split decision at UFC 305 in August 2024. The 35-year-old New Zealander has long been calling for a showdown with Tsarukyan, but a string of recurring injuries has repeatedly kept him sidelined.

    “The Hangman” comes into the fight on a three-fight winning streak and owns a 14-8 record in the UFC, including nine victories by stoppage.

    Meanwhile, the co-main event of UFC Qatar will see former welterweight champion Belal Muhammad facing off against Ian Garry. Muhammad returns to the Octagon following a unanimous decision loss to Jack Della Maddalena at UFC 315 in May, a defeat that ended both his title reign and an 11-fight unbeaten streak. “Remember the Name” currently holds a 15-4 record with one no-contest in the UFC.

    Garry was last seen in the Octagon at UFC Kansas City in April, where he bounced back from his first career loss by earning a unanimous decision victory over Carlos Prates. His only defeat came against Shavkat Rakhmonov at UFC 310 in December 2024. “The Future” currently boasts a 9-1 record in the UFC, including three stoppage wins.

    How Is The UFC Qatar Card Shaping Up?

    Here’s the current lineup for UFC Qatar (bout order may vary):

    • Lightweight bout: Arman Tsarukyan vs. Dan Hooker
    • Welterweight bout: Belal Muhammad vs. Ian Garry
    • Light heavyweight bout: Jan Błachowicz vs. Bogdan Guskov
    • Flyweight bout: Alex Perez vs. Asu Almabayev
    • Heavyweight bout: Serghei Spivac vs. Shamil Gaziev
    • Welterweight bout: Jack Hermansson vs. Myktybek Orolbai
    • Bantamweight bout: Bekzat Almakhan vs. Aleksandre Topuria
    • Light Heavyweight bout: Abdul Rakhman Yakhyaev vs. Rafael Cerqueira
    • Bantamweight bout: Felipe Lima vs. Daniel Marcos
    • Heavyweight bout: Marek Bujło vs. Denzel Freeman
    • Middleweight bout: Ismail Naurdiev vs. Ryan Loder
    • Flyweight bout: Tagir Ulanbekov vs. Kyoji Horiguchi
    Photo by Tim Wheaton


  • UFC Insider: Belal Muhammad vs Shavkat Rakhmonov – High Stakes, But No Clear Path to Islam Makhachev

    UFC Insider: Belal Muhammad vs Shavkat Rakhmonov – High Stakes, But No Clear Path to Islam Makhachev

    Belal Muhammad and his reported clash with Shavkat Rakhmonov in the Fall could perhaps see Islam Makhachev emerge as a roadblock according to one of MMA’s most widely known analysts. On his personal YouTube channel recently, Chael Sonnen discussed the recently reported clash for Oct. between Muhammad and Rakhmonov that came from Jon Anik during a recent episode of The Anik & Florian Podcast.

    When loosely touching on the looming welterweight title fight between Islam Makhachev and champion Jack Della Maddalena as well as the training partner connectivity that would prevent a Muhammad vs. Makhachev fight down the line, Chael Sonnen said,

    “Now, I don’t know how we got there. Belal versus Shavkat Rakhmonov is a problem for one reason—which is, if Belal wins, there’s nowhere to go. Belal can’t draw in to Islam. He just can’t. He can’t, after Islam already did him the same favor. Islam said, “I will not draw in if it’s against you.” So, if Muhammad was to beat Rakhmonov, I would have to assume that’s a number one contender’s match. Now, Rakhmonov… I’m not trying to slight Shavkat, that’s not my goal here, to slight Shavkat or give you an underhanded prediction that he can’t win.”

    “I’m just talking about the parity of matchups. I love the idea, and most importantly, I love that Belal has his mind on it. I will watch guys—the world is a big place—and I will watch guys get stuck in the cracks, and they can’t get out of them. They stay stuck in the cracks. Your next move—right, your next move is always your most important move. Your next move off of a loss is such an important move. But there’s one more thing to it, which is the time between now and your next move.”

    Sonnen continued, “It is one of the key elements. Don’t wait. Don’t wait any longer off a loss than you would a victory. Those are some of the keys that all have to stay the same. You keep your demeanor the same, you never let them see you sweat—all these adages that you hear, but they all tie in.”

    Ian Garry, Shavkat Rakhmonov at UFC 310
    Image: @UFCEurope/X

    Belal Muhammad vs. Shavkat Rakhmonov and the initial booking attempt

    Belal Muhammad and Shavkat Rakhmonov was initially supposed to transpire at UFC 310 last Dec. Muhammad was looking to make the first defense of his 170 pound crown against Rakhmonov until the then-welterweight champion had to pull out due to a significant infection that compromised Muhammad’s foot and bone.

    Alexandre Pantoja defending his flyweight belt against former Rizin champion Kai Asakura was then eventually bumped up as the headliner for that pay-per-view in late 2024. Belal Muhammad vesus Shavkat Rakhmonov has still not been formally announced by the promotion at this juncture.

  • 7 Hits & 3 Misses From UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena

    7 Hits & 3 Misses From UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena

    For the first time in a decade, the UFC arrived to Montreal, looking to bring the Bell Centre a night of memorable action with two title fights and some rising stars to watch out for.

    It was the UFC’s first visit to the biggest city in the Canadian province of Quebec since UFC 186 in 2015 — a card that was headlined by Demetrious Johnson retaining the UFC flyweight title against Kyoji Horiguchui.

    Though Canadian talent was featured during the course of the evening, the main event’s focus was on the welterweight championship clash between Belal Muhammad and Jack Della Maddalena.

    Muhammad had entered UFC 315 on an unbeaten streak that stretched back to 2019. He had risen his way up the ranks and all the way up to the UFC championship, taking out names such as Demian Maia, Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson, Sean Brady and Gilbert Burns. He captured the gold with a decision win over Leon Edwards at UFC 304.

    Standing across the cage from him was Jack Della Maddalena — who was given this opportunity a couple of months ago when Shavkat Rakhmonov was still unable to make the walk due to injury. JDM hadn’t lost since dropping his first two bouts as a pro and was a perfect 7-0 in the UFC. It was also JDM’s first fight since defeating Burns at UFC 299 last year.

    Gold was also on the line in the co-main event as Valentina Shevchenko looked to defend the UFC women’s flyweight championship against Manon Fiorot.

    This was Shevchenko’s first fight not against Alexa Grasso since recapturing the 125-pound title in their trilogy fight back in September. Outside of the 20 months or so that Grasso was wearing the gold, Shevchenko had been dominating the division since winning the title at UFC 231 in December 2018. Most, if not all, challengers that came up against her were completely outclassed.

    Like her title challenger counterpart on the evening, Fiorot hadn’t lost a fight since her own professional MMA debut. Fiorot had quickly made impressions since entering the UFC, taking out notable names in the division that included Mayra Bueno Silva, Jennifer Maia, Katlyn Cerminara, Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield.

    Who delivered in Canada? Who didn’t? Let’s go into it together with the hits and misses of UFC 315!

    Hit – Hometown Hero Barriault

    I had been in debate about whether or not to include this, given Bruno Silva being stretchered out at the end of this fight. But with Silva seemingly okay in the UFC’s updates, and “bonuses” misses I need to give, I’ve decided to give this a hit.

    Marc-André Barriault had one of the earliest strong performances on the night, finishing Silva during the early prelims. After both men landed big early and Silva momentarily dumped Barriault to the mat, Barriault put Silva away with some vicious elbows in the clinch. They didn’t just do big damage, but one of them dropped Silva out cold.

    It was an incredible and much-needed performance for Barriault. Coming into this fight off three straight losses, Barriault may have been facing the chopping block with a loss here. Instead, he gets to have a major knockout and memorable performance in front of a crowd in his home country.

    Miss – Whatever Those Judges’ Scorecards Were

    To quote commentary after Melvin Manhoef vs. Rafael Carvalho at Bellator 155, “The only thing more disappointing than that fight, was that horrendous decision.” Not only was Mondestas Bukauskas vs. Ion Cutelaba a letdown, but the nature of the bout’s decision left MMA fans either scratching their heads or filled with rage.

    Though it wasn’t his most exciting performance, Cutelaba appeared to do enough over three rounds. He applied early pressured, delivered damaging calf kicks and had strong clinch work. Though Bukauskas had his moments — especially in the final round where he stuffed takedowns and landed counters — his overall output was inconsistent. Despite Cutelaba’s early work, the judges were split in baffling fashion.

    Even if you don’t consider this fight a robbery, the nature of the scorecards being all over the place is what is confusing. How do we get to a point where there is a 30-27 scorecard for one fighter and a 30-27 for the other? How the heck did Pasquale Procopio see all three rounds for Bukauskas anyway? There are more questions than answers, and we’re never going to get any (I have problems with two judges giving Belal Muhammad round one in his fight against Jack Della Maddalena, too, but I digress…)

    Once again, coming out of an MMA card, we’re talking about bad judging. How is it 2025 and we’re still on this? It’s tiring, and if we’re not going to get the Global/PRIDE scoring system into the Unified Rules of MMA, then why can’t we at least hear from judges after controversial scorecards like these? Sadly, that’ll never happen.

    Hit – Jasmine Jasudavicius On The Rise

    I’ve been a fan of Jasmine Jasudavicius for a little while now, and it’s clear that she may be a future star in the flyweight division after the performance she put on in the win over former strawweight champion Jessica Andrade.

    Using her physical advantages, Jasudavicius overwhelmed Andrade on the feet before taking her down with ease. She then swiftly transitioned into a rear-naked choke for the submission win.

    The performance was as emphatic as it was efficient, pushing Jasudavicius firmly into title contention. Will she be next in line for a shot at the title? No. But this fight has shown she’s ready for top competition. And it will be interesting to see what Jasudavicius can do against another notable contender in the division right now — be it former champ Alexa Grasso, Erin Blanchfield, Maycee Barber or Rose Namajunas.

    Hit – Is Natalia Silva Ready For A Title Shot?

    Jasmine Jasudavicius may be still another couple of fights away from a title shot. Natalia Silva, on the other hand, may be next in line after her strong win over former champion Alexa Grasso.

    Silva utilized her speed and sharp strikes to control all three rounds against the former champion. Silva repeatedly found success with leg kicks, quick combinations and slick footwork, while Grasso struggled to find openings and momentum.

    Silva has now scored victories over two former UFC champions in Jessica Andrade and Grasso. And the kind of performance she put on against the very woman who interrupted Valentina Shevchenko’s dominance at 125 might be enough to make her next in line for the gold. If not, a title eliminator against another top-5 ranked performer isn’t out of the question — and a win there would make it undeniable.

    Hit – A Wild Third Round Between Jose Aldo And Aiemann Zahabi

    Jose Aldo’s MMA career might not have ended with a win or a tribute video package. But it did end with an exciting bout against Aiemann Zahabi that included a final round that could be up for Round of the Year nominations in any MMA End of Year awards.

    Aldo’s forward pressure and combinations had brought him an early edge in the fight, but a strong performance in the second round from Zahabi made the fight close. The third round, however, saw wild momentum swings. Aldo dropped Zahabi early but couldn’t find the finish. A fatigued Aldo when saw Zahabi capitalize, unloading punches, elbows, and ground-and-pound as he looked for a finish of his own. In a fight that saw so close, Zahabi’s late momentum in the final two rounds earned him the nod in a fight that could have been scored either way.

    Though Zahabi is 37, this win continues a string of success he has been on for the last five years now. People will have their opinions on how he’d perform against the best contenders in a stacked bantamweight division, but it can’t be denied that he’s at least earned the opportunity to fight a top-10 contender at 135 now.

    Hit – A Tribute To A Legendary Career

    I could focus on Aldo’s weight issues entering this week. I could focus on his gas tank emptying out during the flurry in the third round. But I’m not going to do any of that.

    I’m instead going to take the time and pay my respects to one of the greatest careers this sport has seen. Jose Aldo is one of the reasons we talk about the lighter weight classes in the modern day and age of MMA. During the times when the UFC wasn’t hosting fights below 155 pounds, people like Jose Aldo were making a killing and showing their talents. Aldo dominated the featherweight scene in the WEC, and that continued when he became the inaugural UFC featherweight champion, pulling off victory after victory before competing against Conor McGregor at UFC 194 — one of the industry’s most memorable and highly publicized title fights.

    From Cub Swanson to Urijah Faber, from Chad Mendes to “The Korean Zombie” Chan Sung-Jung, from Frankie Edgar to Max Holloway, Jose Aldo has been in the cage with some of the greatest to ever be in this sport. And not only did he dominate in his prime, but Aldo even showed he could still go as he nears 39 years of age.

    A happy retirement to the legend and UFC Hall of Famer! A toast to his memorable career!

    Hit – One Step Closer To The Next Women’s Superfight?

    There were plenty of questions about Valentina Shevchenko heading into this fight. In spite of winning back the women’s flyweight title in September, the interruption to her reign, combined with Manon Fiorot’s size and winning streak, led to Shevchenko being pegged as the underdog heading into this fight despite being defending champ.

    But Shevchenko proved how oddsmakers sometimes just don’t get it.

    Shevchenko started strong with sharp striking and a takedown in the first round, but Fiorot took control in the middle rounds with clinch control and increased aggression. Shevchenko tried to take momentum back in the fourth with powerful body kicks, a takedown, and a knockdown in the closing seconds. The fifth round remained tight, but Shevchenko’s consistency and impactful moments throughout earned her the unanimous decision on all three scorecards.

    So, what’s next for Shevchenko? There are still a couple of names in contention (like the aforementioned Silva and Jasudavicius). But, of course, the fight plenty of people want to see is a superfight between Shevchenko and women’s strawweight champion Weili Zhang. Zhang will probably still have to deal with Virna Jandiroba, then depending on if the UFC matchmakers want Silva as the next flyweight challenger or not, a Zhang win there could mean there can’t be another fight but it.

    Hit – JDM Turns Opportunity Into Gold

    Jack Della Maddalena would have gotten the opportunity to be a champion tonight. He was supposed to be fighting in the main event of UFC London a couple of months ago, taking on Leon Edwards. But with Shavkat Rakhmonov still on the sidelines, JDM was granted the chance to challenge Belal Muhammad. Now, after 25 minutes in the Octagon, JDM has managed to turn a sudden chance into a jackpot, walking out of UFC 315 the new UFC welterweight champion.

    JDM largely dictated the pace with technical striking. Muhammad held his own early and even managed to secure some positional control late, including a takedown and brief back control in round four. JDM’s striking volume and accuracy, as well as his ability to stuff takedowns, however, kept him in control for most of the fight. Despite Muhammad’s best efforts in the fifth, including a moment where he appeared to wobble his challenger in the fifth and landed ground control, JDM consistently rebounded and reasserted his rhythm, likely sealing a close but clear decision win and the championship.

    You have to feel good for someone like JDM completing his rise toward the gold. This opens up a lot of potential options for what could be next at 170, and here’s hoping that this injects some excitement in the division.

    On that note of what could be next, however…

    Miss – No Islam Makhachev vs. Ilia Topuria?

    A longstanding belief heading into this past weekend’s card was that a JDM win would result in Islam Makhachev moving up to 170 to challenge him for the UFC welterweight championship. That very well may still be the case even though there’s no official announcement yet.

    But it those are the plans, then unfortunately JDM’s victory brings us a monkey’s paw scenario. As it would mean a lightweight title fight between Islam Makhachev and Ilia Topuria would be off.

    Let me state this for the record: I was not a fan of Topuria’s decision to vacate the featherweight championship. Though he won the belt and retained it once against two of the greats in, respectively, Alexander Volkanovski and Max Holloway (the former of whom has now regained the title), there were still fights to be had for Topuria at 145. He didn’t clear the division; Diego Lopes and Movsar Evloev were chomping at the bit for title opportunities. Topuria’s reign was supposed to present us with fresh ideas for the division.

    That said, if we don’t get to see Topuria vs. Makhachev, it will be a disappoint. These two are without question two of the best athletes in the sport. And in a time when we say MMA is in a recession, in a time when Jon Jones seems to not want to unify the heavyweight title with Tom Aspinall, in a time in which the sport’s biggest star ever in Conor McGregor appears to be out of the picture for good now (for better or worse [maybe and instead of or]), and when one of the UFC’s other pound-for-pound names in Alex Pereira appears to be having negotiation issues with the promotion, a major fight like Topuria vs. Makhachev is a welcome sight.

    Topuria vs. Oliveira and JDM vs. Makhachev are solid fights, but it will be a case of “what could have been” if this is the case. And if Topuria vs. Makhachev does ever end up getting booked, we’d hope it’s not a case of “[insert timeframe here] too late.”

    But on that note…

    Miss – STILL No UFC 317 Main Event?

    UFC CEO Dana White promised us an answer to the questions regarding a UFC 317 main event (including the situations seen above) following UFC 315. But lo and behold, UFC 315 has come and gone, and we still don’t have an answer.

    White didn’t even appear at the press conference. Instead, Dave Shaw, the UFC’s Senior Vice President of International Operations, was there and promised an answer would be delivered in the coming week.

    To which my response is, it better.

    From the time of this piece’s publication, we are 47 days out from UFC 317, which is this year’s International Fight Week card. It’s had it’s fair share of shake-ups to main events in its history, but it’s always an event UFC puts a lot of stock into.

    And with just under seven weeks to go, an event that has all these attached events to it — a Hall of Fame induction ceremony, fan expo, etc. — has no announced main event. Even UFC 318 to be held the following month has a main event announced.

    UFC 315 was supposed to give us answers. Right now we’re still left with questions, and if we don’t get answers in a few days time, the UFC needs to be given even more flack.

  • ‘We Just Lost Islam Makhachev vs. Ilia Topuria’ – Islam Makhachev, Other Fighters & Fans React To Jack Della Maddalena Capturing UFC Welterweight Championship At UFC 315

    ‘We Just Lost Islam Makhachev vs. Ilia Topuria’ – Islam Makhachev, Other Fighters & Fans React To Jack Della Maddalena Capturing UFC Welterweight Championship At UFC 315

    At the end of 2024, the expectation was Shavkat Rakhmonov would be the first challenger for UFC welterweight champion Belal Muhammad. But injury to Rakhmonov led to opportunity for Jack Della Maddalena, who was thrusted from planned Fight Night London main event to a title shot.

    And JDM has made the most of his sudden opportunity, defeating Muhammad in a major upset to become the new UFC welterweight champion in the main event of UFC 315 in Montreal.

    The first round featured plenty of striking as the two felt each other out. Della Maddalena was getting the better of the exchanges and even shoved off an attempt by Muhammad to pin him against the fence. Muhammad was clearly holding his own in the striking department, however. This continued into the second round; JDM continued to dictate the pace, with Muhammad attempting to go strike-for-strike with him. Even when Muhammad attempted to get the fight to the ground, Della Maddalena was able to prevent it.

    By round three, Della Maddalena was in a solid flow, connecting at will on the defending champion, especially with his straight shots. Muhammad was answering and going toe-to-toe, but JDM seemed to remain in control. Muhammad looked to pick up the pace in round four, increasing the volume in his striking. JDM prevented another takedown, but Muhammad was able to get to his back. Muhammad, who appeared to be landing the stronger strikes in the round, pressed the action late with JDM against the fence.

    JDM connected on a few solid straights early in the fifth round, busting open Muhammad. But Muhammad wobbled JDM with a straight of his own before scoring a takedown. JDM was able to work his way back up with about two minutes left. He started to connect more on Muhammad, and he appeared hurt. JDM went into a clinch, however, giving Muhammad another opportunity. Muhammad rolled through on a takedown attempt and got on top. Despite some difficulty, JDM was able to get back to his feet.

    Jack Della Maddalena Upsets Belal Muhammad For UFC Welterweight Title At UFC 315

    JDM originally came into the UFC through Dana White’s Contender Series in 2021, and he’s now 8-0 and a world champion in the Octagon. Della Maddalena, who hasn’t lost since dropping his first two professional MMA fights, fought for the first time tonight since defeating Gilbert Burns in March 2024.

    This loss snaps an 11-fight win streak Muhammad had been on since 2019. It was his first defense of the UFC welterweight championship since defeating Leon Edwards at UFC 304 back in July.

    The expectation now is that Islam Makhachev will give up the UFC lightweight championship to challenge JDM for the 170-pound title in the future.

  • UFC 315 Results & Highlights: Jack Della Maddalena Decisions Belal Muhammad 

    UFC 315 Results & Highlights: Jack Della Maddalena Decisions Belal Muhammad 

    UFC 315 took place tonight from the Bell Centre in Montreal, Canada and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, Belal Muhammad and Jack Della Maddalena faced off for the welterweight title. While in the co-main event, Valentina Shevchenko looked to defend her flyweight belt against Manon Fiorot. 

    UFC 315 Results: Main Card

    • Welterweight Championship: Jack Della Maddalena def. Belal Muhammad via unanimous decision (48-47×2, 49-46)
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko def. Manon Fiorot via unanimous decision (48-47×3)
    • Featherweight: Aiemann Zahabi def. Jose Aldo via unanimous decision (29-28×3)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Natália Silva def. Alexa Grasso via unanimous decision (30-27×3)
    • Lightweight: Benoît Saint Denis def. Kyle Prepolec via submission: R2, 2.35

     
    Preliminary Card

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott def. Charles Radtke via KO: R2, 0.26
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jasmine Jasudavicius def. Jéssica Andrade via submission: R2, 2.40
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas def. Ion Cutelaba via split decision (30-27, 29-28, 27-30) 
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling def. Ivan Erslan via unanimous decision (29-28×2, 29-27) 

     
    Early Preliminary Card

    • Middleweight: Marc-André Barriault def. Bruno Silva via KO: R1, 1.27 
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos def. Lee Jeong-yeong via unanimous decision (30-27×3)

    Bantamweight: Bekzat Almakhan def. Brad Katona via KO: R1, 1.04

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Bekzat Almakhan def. Brad Katona

    Bekzat Almakhan got UFC 315 off to a huge start with a first-round TKO of Brad Katona.

    Marc-André Barriault def. Bruno Silva

    Marc-André Barriault earned a first-round KO of Bruno Silva.

    Jasmine Jasudavicius def. Jéssica Andrade

    Jasmine Jasudavicius took care of Jéssica Andrade with a rear-naked choke in round two.

    Mike Malott def. Charles Radtke

    Mike Malott earned a second round KO of Charles Radtke in their welterweight bout.

    Main Card Highlights

    Benoît Saint Denis def. Kyle Prepolec

    Benoît Saint Denis submitted Kyle Prepolec in the second round.

    https://twitter.com/ufc/status/1921393187463049407

    Natália Silva def. Alexa Grasso

    Natália Silva got it done on the scorecards.

    Aiemann Zahabi def. Jose Aldo

    Aiemann Zahabi earned a unanimous decision against Jose Aldo.

    Valentina Shevchenko def. Manon Fiorot

    In the co-main event, Valentina Shevchenko retained her flyweight title with a decision win.

    Jack Della Maddalena def. Belal Muhammad

    In the main event, Jack Della Maddalena claimed the welterweight title from Belal Muhammad with a decision win.

  • UFC 315 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena, Shevchenko vs. Fiorot, And More

    UFC 315 Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena, Shevchenko vs. Fiorot, And More

    UFC 315 is almost here, and we here at MMANews are here to provide you the latest on betting odds for the card.

    The card takes place from the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on Saturday, May 10. The pay-per-view main card portion of the event will start at 10PM ET/7PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 6:30PM ET/3:30PM PT.

    The headline attraction for the event will feature Belal Muhammad defending the UFC welterweight championship for the first time, as he takes on Jack Della Maddalena.

    Fan favorite Valentina Shevchenko, eight months after reclaiming the UFC women’s flyweight championship, will defend the title against Manon Fiorot.

    The pay-per-view card will also feature Jose Aldo taking on Aiemann Zahabi, Alexa Grasso battling Natália Silva and Benoît Saint Denis in action against Kyle Prepolec.

    UFC 315: Muhammad vs. Della Maddalena Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC 315 as of May 9 at 7:30pm ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Belal Muhammad (-185) vs. Jack Della Maddalena (+154)
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko (+114) vs. Manon Fiorot (-135)
    • Featherweight: Jose Aldo (-185) vs. Aiemann Zahabi (+154)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso (+200) vs. Natália Silva (-245)
    • Lightweight: Benoît Saint Denis (-1600) vs. Kyle Prepolec (+900)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott (-205) vs. Charles Radtke (+170)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jéssica Andrade (+235) vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius (-290)
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas (+105) vs. Ion Cutelaba (-125)
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling (-310) vs. Ivan Erslan (+250)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Marc-André Barriault (-166) vs. Bruno Silva (+140)
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos (+124) vs. Lee Jeong-yeong (-148)
    • Bantamweight: Brad Katona (+124) vs. Bekzat Almakhan (-148)
  • Watch Belal Muhammad, Jack Della Maddalena Face Off At UFC 315 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    Watch Belal Muhammad, Jack Della Maddalena Face Off At UFC 315 Ceremonial Weigh-Ins

    We’re about 24 hours away from UFC 315, and MMANews is here to bring you the video from the ceremonial weigh-ins for the card!

    UFC 315 takes place on May 10 from the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada — the first visit of Montreal for the UFC since UFC 186 10 years ago!

    The event will feature the first welterweight title defense for Belal Muhammad, as he meets the challenge of Jack Della Maddalena. Plus, Valentina Shevchenko makes her first appearance since regaining the UFC women’s flyweight championship, as she defends the gold against Manon Fiorot.

    The legendary Jose Aldo will be in action on this night, too, as he takes on Aiemann Zahabi. Alexa Grasso, who lost the flyweight title to Shevchenko at Noche UFC 2, returns to battle Natália Silva, and French lightweight Benoît Saint Denis does battle against short-notice replacement opponent Kyle Prepolec.

    Ahead of the event, nearly all fighters made weight, with the sole exception being Bruno Silva, who came in a pound heavy over the non-title middleweight limit. Nevertheless, all fights are still in tact.

    The ceremonial weigh-ins present the last opportunity for opponents to face off before they meet inside the Octagon. Check them out below via the UFC’s official YouTube channel!

    UFC 315 Ceremonial Weigh-In Video

  • UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena Full Weigh-In Results

    UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena Full Weigh-In Results

    UFC 315 goes down in just over 24 hours’ time, and we’ve got the official weigh-in results for you here at MMANews.

    For the first time in 10 years, the UFC returns to Montreal, bringing the Canadian province of Quebec two title fights and more action, including a couple of different ranked contender battles.

    The main event sees Belal Muhammad make his first defense of the UFC welterweight championship, as he takes on Jack Della Maddalena. In the co-main event, Valentina Shevchenko starts her second reign as UFC women’s flyweight champion, as she defends the title against French rising star Manon Fiorot.

    Also on the main card will be the legendary Jose Aldo taking on Aiemann Zahabi, former flyweight champ Alexa Grasso battling Natália Silva and Benoît Saint Denis in action against Kyle Prepolec.

    UFC 315 Weigh-In Video, Results

    UFC 315 takes place Saturday, May 10 at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The main card begins at 10 PM ET/7 PM PT, with the preliminary card starting at 6:30 PM ET/3:30 PM PT.

    See above for a replay of the UFC 315 Weigh-In Show, and check out the full results below.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Belal Muhammad (170) vs. Jack Della Maddalena (170) (Backup Fighter: Ian Machado Garry (168))
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko (124) vs. Manon Fiorot (125)
    • Bantamweight: Jose Aldo (143) vs. Aiemann Zahabi (142) — fight moved from bantamweight to featherweight
    • Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso (126) vs. Natália Silva (126)
    • Lightweight: Benoît Saint Denis (156) vs. Kyle Prepolec (156)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott (171) vs. Charles Radtke (171)
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jéssica Andrade (126) vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius (124)
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas (203) vs. Ion Cutelaba (205)
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling (205) vs. Ivan Erslan (205)

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Marc-André Barriault (185) vs. Bruno Silva (187*)
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos (146**) vs. Lee Jeong-yeong (146)
    • Bantamweight: Brad Katona (136) vs. Bekzat Almakhan (136)

    *Silva missed weight, fined 20 percent of his purse
    **Santos originally weighed in at 147, made weight on second attempt

  • UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena Staff Predictions

    UFC 315: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena Staff Predictions

    For the first time since UFC 186 a decade ago, the UFC has landed in Montreal for UFC 315. Get yourself ready and in the know with another edition of MMA News staff fight predictions.

    The event will be available exclusively on ESPN+ pay-per-view on Saturday, May 10. The main card will begin at its usual 10pm ET start time, with preliminary card action kicking off at 6:30pm ET.

    The main event of UFC 315 will see Belal Muhammad look to further make people remember his name with his first defense of the UFC welterweight championship, taking on Jack Della Maddalena. This will be Muhammad’s first fight since capturing the gold with a win over Leon Edwards at UFC 304 last summer. He’s unbeaten in his last 11 fights and has won 14 of his last 16. Standing across the cage from him will be the 28-year-old Della Maddalena, an Australian native who has been on the rise at 170. He was scheduled to face Edwards in the UFC London main event a couple of months ago but was pulled for this title opportunity. This will be JDM’s first fight since knocking out former title challenger Gilbert Burns at UFC 299 last year.

    The co-main event will also be a title bout, featuring one of the most popular female fighters in the world, Valentina Shevchenko, defending the women’s flyweight championship against No. 2 contender Manon Fiorot. After coming up short against Alexa Grasso twice in their trilogy — a loss and a draw — Shevchenko finally got her win at UFC 306: Noche UFC 2 in September, reclaiming the women’s 125-pound title she had lost to Grasso at UFC 285. Fiorot, meanwhile, has not lost after dropping her professional MMA debut, a 12-fight win streak with a perfect 7-0 Octagon record. She enters this title shot off a win over Erin Blanchfield last year.

    The rest of the main card will also be one to look out for, with the legendary Jose Aldo stepping in against rising bantamweight Aiemann Zahabi and a battle of top flyweight contenders between Alexa Grasso, the former champion, and Natália Silva.

    UFC 315: MMA News Staff Predictions

    With UFC 315 just a couple of short days away,  Ryan Jarrell, Pranav Pandey, and myself (Thomas Albano) have provided our picks for the fights that make up the main card.

    Below, you can check out the current leaderboard through four cards in 2025.

    1. Thomas Albano (11-7) & Pranav Pandey (11-7)
    2. Ryan Jarrell (10-8)
    3. Aakrit Sharma (7-11)

    And now, let’s take a look at everyone’s picks for UFC 315!

    Women’s Flyweight: Jéssica Andrade vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: Jéssica Andrade will be the toughest test that Jasmine Jasudavicius has ever faced. Andrade is a former strawweight champion and has battled some of the toughest women to have ever stepped foot inside the Octagon. She brings knockout power and pressure that can make even the toughest crumbling. That said, Jasudavicius may be getting Andrade at the right time.

    Andrade returned to flyweight in her last outing and lost to Natalia Silva, making it four losses in her last six fights. Jasudavicius, who earned a UFC contract off a Dana White’s Contender Series performance in September 2021, she’s risen through the ranks with a 7-2 Octagon record, including a current four-fight win streak. Add in the size and that Jasudavicius has, combined with wrestling skills that could trouble Andrade, as other wrestlers have, Jasudavicius may have a night here that proves she’s ready to take on the top contenders at 125. (Prediction: Jasudavicius)

    Ryan Jarrell: This is such an important fight for Jasudaviscius. The Canadian is on a 4 fight win streak and the time to capitalize is now if she hopes to get into title contention one day. Andrade will have a significant height and reach disadvantage, but that’s a common theme for the veteran fighter. Andrade always boasts fight altering power that could be a major factor in this fight. If Jasmine fights intelligently, however, she should be able to win a decision and continue her win streak. I am going to lean towards this fight going the distance and the judges leaning towards the hometown fighter. (Prediction: Jasudavicius)

    Pranav Pandey: While Andrade still manages to rack up wins here and there, it’s clear she’s no longer the force of nature she once was. She’s dropped seven of her last thirteen fights, and that kind of inconsistency speaks volumes at this level. On the flip side, Jasudavicius, despite being three years older is the fresher, more composed fighter in my eyes, and her recent performances back that up.

    The Canadian also enters the bout with a considerable length and size advantage, which could prove to be a real factor — especially if the fight hits the mat. That’s where I think she’ll try to steer the contest. She’s had solid success in grounding opponents and keeping them there, and I wouldn’t be surprised if she uses that blueprint again. (Prediction: Jasudavicius)

    Consensus: 3-0 Jasudavicius

    Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso vs. Natália Silva

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: It’s now been about eight months since we saw Alexa Grasso, losing the UFC women’s flyweight title to Valentina Shevchenko in their trilogy fight. Though she didn’t come out of the rivalry with the gold at the end, the three wars she had with Shevchenko have shown that Grasso is a top name in the division – one that will be hard to top.

    Natália Silva is a perfect 6-0 in the Octagon though, coming into this fight with a 12-fight win streak. She’s displayed great striking and forward pressure could be an issue for someone like Grasso. Having said that, I’m still leaning on the experience of the former champion to help her edge out a tight decision. I really don’t understand the people who are easily writing off Grasso in this one.

    I may not be the biggest fight better, but I agree with Ryan’s advice – avoid this match at all costs in your fight night bets and parlays. (Prediction: Grasso)

    Ryan Jarrell: This is a real tough one to pick. I will definitely not be adding this fight into a parlay I feel confident about. I can see this fight going either way and I expect both ladies to have their moments throughout the fight. In the end if I have to make a pick, and I do, I’m leaning towards the former champion to land a little bit more volume to get her hand raised and get back into the win column. (Prediction: Grasso)

    Pranav Pandey: This is a tightly contested matchup on paper, and I genuinely torn on who has the edge. Silva is on an impressive run—young, hungry, and firing on all cylinders. She’s a true threat wherever the fight goes, showcasing sharp striking and a slick ground game. The Brazilian is as well-rounded as they come.

    But even so, I still see Alexa Grasso as the crème de la crème of the flyweight division. I think she has the skill set, composure, and experience to answer whatever Silva throws her way. More importantly, after that lopsided loss to Shevchenko, Grasso is coming in with something to prove — and I believe that matters. In my eyes, this will be a competitive battle from start to finish, but I see the former champ edging it out. (Prediction: Grasso)

    Consensus: 3-0 Grasso

    Featherweight: Jose Aldo vs. Aiemann Zahabi

    Images: UFC.com

    Note: This fight was originally scheduled as a bantamweight fight but was changed to featherweight not long after press time.

    Thomas Albano: Jose Aldo’s return to the Octagon, coming out of retirement last year, has been decent thus far. He looked fantastic against Jonathan Martinez, and the Mario Bautista split-decision loss is still filled with plenty of debate over who won. At 38, Jose Aldo, obviously, isn’t the Jose Aldo that ruled over the featherweight scene in the 2000-10s. Yet, he is a living legend who has proven he can still go with the younger names of today.

    Aiemann Zahabi, meanwhile, has been someone to watch for since the start of his current five-fight win streak in 2021. Zahabi took out Pedro Munhoz in his last outing back in November, and he has continued to develop as a boxer. Having said that, Aldo and his experience is probably going to overwhelm Zahabi even in a stand-up battle. And given Zahabi isn’t too far removed from Aldo in terms of age, give me the legend in this one. (Prediction: Aldo)

    Ryan Jarrell: The Canadian is on an impressive win streak and this matchup will be one that would catapult him up the division if he can find a way to pull off the upset. I don’t mean to sound like Aieman Zahabi doesn’t have a chance in this fight, but I would be shocked if he beats Jose Aldo. Zahabi will have the hometown crowd cheering him on and if it goes to a decision, you never know what the judges will do. But give me Jose Aldo to dictate where this fight takes place and look in control throughout the contest. (Prediction: Aldo)

    Pranav Pandey: I genuinely don’t understand why the UFC keeps throwing José Aldo into such high-risk matchups since his return. That said, I still believe he’s still has more than enough in reserve to handle business—especially against someone like Zahabi.

    Zahabi is a sharp striker, no doubt, but he’s far from flawless. He tends to absorb more damage than he should, and rarely leans on his grappling background, which could prove costly against someone as seasoned and precise as Aldo.

    To me, Aldo remains one of the sharpest strikers the sport has ever seen—his combinations are still lightning-fast, and his takedown defense is arguably the best in MMA history. I think he’s going to methodically dismantle Zahabi with calculated precision over the course of three rounds and walk away with a well-earned decision. (Prediction: Aldo)

    Consensus: 3-0 Aldo

    UFC Women’s Flyweight Title: Valentina Shevchenko vs. Manon Fiorot

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: This is a tough one for me if only for the fact that I have watched Manon Fiorot rise her way in the sport – stretching back to her days competing in EFC Africa. Fiorot has been in the mix for some time now in the flyweight title picture. Her wins over Jennifer Maia, Katlyn Chookagian, Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield, combined with not having lost since dropping her pro debut, really adds to the run she’s had.

    That said, she’s taking on the legend herself, Valentina Shevchenko. “Bullet” is making her first defense after re-capturing the women’s flyweight gold in her trilogy bout with Alexa Grasso in September, and she’ll make it more than tough to get a win over her. Fiorot will have a slight height advantage, and it feels like she’s someone who could match Shevchenko power-for-power in striking. I’d probably lean to “Bullet” for grappling, but it feels like Fiorot and her body may pose some issues.

    I’ll go with the champ and her years of experience as being one of the best in this sport. That said, anyone who is saying that this fight is easily in the bag for Shevchenko is sorely mistaken. This will be a tough outing – but a win could make an eventual showdown with Weili Zhang (I hope) even more appetizing. (Prediction: Shevchenko)

    Ryan Jarrell: As long as she is fighting, I will always feel hesitant to pick against Valentina Shevchenko. At her best, she is the best pound for pound female fighter in the world, in my humble opinion. However, this will be a very tough test for the champion. Manon Fiorot is on a 14 fight win streak with big wins over the likes of Rose Namajunas and Erin Blanchfield. Not only is the challenger two years younger, but she will also have a modest height and reach advantage. Seeing how Fiorot has a whopping zero submission victories in her career, it’s safe to say she will not be submitting someone as well rounded as Bullet. If the fight stays on the feet, I just like the championship experience Valentina has to be the difference in this one. (Prediction: Shevchenko)

    Pranav Pandey: I see Fiorot as a dangerous, technically sound striker with a well-rounded skill set. She leans heavily on her crisp boxing to break opponents down and isn’t afraid to wade into gritty, blood-and-guts territory when the fight gets tough. She’s sharp, durable, and undeniably tough — but this time, she’s stepping in against a different kind of elite technician.

    Even if she’s not quite the unstoppable force she was a few years ago, her striking remains surgically precise and blisteringly quick, and her grappling continues to be criminally underrated. I think “The Beast” brings the kind of challenge that will force Shevchenko to show her full arsenal — and when that happens, I still believe she is superior in every department.

    I made the mistake of underestimating “Bullet” in her trilogy bout against Alexa Grasso. This time, I’m not making that same error. I’m all in on Shevchenko to remind the world why she’s still championship material and retain her title. (Prediction: Shevchenko)

    Consensus: 3-0 Shevchenko

    UFC Welterweight Title: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena

    Images: UFC.com

    Thomas Albano: This is such a huge opportunity for a young fighter like Jack Della Maddalena. He’s only been on the UFC scene for a few years, but a huge win streak that’s seen him gone unbeaten since dropping his first two pro MMA fights – combined with wins over Kevin Holland and Gilbert Burns, combined with Shavkat Rakhmonov dealing with injury – now grants JDM a title shot. It’ll be a great experience for JDM, but that’s all it will be.

    As much as he has his win streak and the pair of wins previously mentioned, this still feels a little too much, too soon for the Australian. It probably would have worked better in his favor if he had competed one or two more times (perhaps at least once in his native Australia) before a fight like this. Muhammad may not be the most popular figure in the UFC, but he’s experienced and talented. He wouldn’t be UFC champion without either of those, and that experience and his own winning momentum should win out against Della Maddalena’s.

    Expect this fight to go one of two ways – JDM tries to grapple with Muhammad and pays the price, or Muhammad uses his grappling to counter act any of JDM’s striking offense. It may not be the most popular method, it may not be the most entertaining fight, but it will get the job done. (Prediction: Muhammad)

    Ryan Jarrell: I am a big fan of Jack Della Maddalena. I think he is an exciting fighter to watch and more importantly, a class act and role model outside of the cage. JDM has all the tools to be a champion one day. But that day will not be at UFC 315. The first time title challenger is still only 28 years old, and still somewhat new ish to the UFC. I believe right now is Belal’s time to reign as welterweight king and I except to see a diverse attack put on display by the current champ. If Belal gets in trouble on the feet, he will use his elite grappling attack to mix things up and keep the Australian a step behind throughout the fight. (Prediction: Muhammad)

    Pranav Pandey: I believe this matchup could turn out to be far more thrilling and competitive than many are anticipating. While I see Maddalena as the cleaner and more dangerous striker, I also think he has some clear vulnerabilities that Muhammad can capitalize on. We’ve seen Maddalena give up takedowns in past fights, and I expect the champ to target that weakness with a relentless game plan. I think he’s going to pressure the Aussie with bursts of strikes to close the distance, then chain those into takedown attempts—similar to what he tried to do against Leon Edwards.

    But that’s only half the story. Keeping Maddalena grounded and dominating him on the mat is a puzzle no one has convincingly solved yet. He’s dangerous even off his back—punishing opponents with vicious body shots and sharp, snapping hooks the moment they try to close the distance. And if you ask me, I think “Remember the Name” is in for a taste of that same resistance.

    While Muhammad has shown noticeable improvement in his striking over the years, I still believe he’d be in deep waters on the feet. If he can’t drag Maddalena into a grappling-heavy contest, I see the Aussie putting on a clinic and potentially overwhelming him with precision and power. (Prediction: Della Maddalena)

    Consensus: 2-1 Muhammad


    That’ll do it for our UFC 315 staff picks! What do you think? Do your predictions look similar? Let us know in the comments section!

    Also, you can check out the full UFC 315 card below.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Belal Muhammad vs. Jack Della Maddalena
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko vs. Manon Fiorot
    • Bantamweight: Jose Aldo vs. Aiemann Zahabi
    • Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso vs. Natália Silva
    • Lightweight: Benoît Saint Denis vs. Kyle Prepolec

    Preliminary Card:

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott vs. Charles Radtke
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jéssica Andrade vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas vs. Ion Cutelaba
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling vs. Ivan Erslan

    Early Preliminary Card:

    • Middleweight: Marc-André Barriault vs. Bruno Silva
    • Featherweight: Daniel Santos vs. Lee Jeong-yeong
    • Bantamweight: Brad Katona vs. Bekzat Almakhan
  • UFC Champion Belal Muhammad Vows to Raise Palestinian Flag in Montreal: ‘Nothing Is Going to Stop Me’

    UFC Champion Belal Muhammad Vows to Raise Palestinian Flag in Montreal: ‘Nothing Is Going to Stop Me’

    The UFC welterweight champion Belal Muhammad has confirmed he will carry the Palestinian flag during his walkout at UFC 315 in Montreal, despite a brief controversy over its removal from his UFC profile last month. In an exclusive interview with Damon Martin for MMA Fighting, Muhammad stated he has already cleared the plan with UFC officials.

    “Yeah, 100 percent. We’ve talked about it and they’ve accepted it — nothing is going to stop me from doing it,” the champion declared.

    The Chicago-born fighter, whose parents are Palestinian, explained that displaying the flag helps him remain connected to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza throughout his training camp.

    “It’s hard, especially right now… the people over there are in so much pain. The world’s just watching it,” Muhammad reflected.

    For Muhammad, the symbolism serves as powerful motivation:

    “It makes me go to the gym, run that extra mile, lift that extra weight, because I can’t lose… when they see me win that day, they’re going to see that flag get raised.”

    Beyond symbolic gestures, Muhammad has taken concrete action by organizing fundraisers and leveraging his social media platform to highlight critical shortages of medicine, fuel, and food in Gaza. He views his continued success in the Octagon as essential to amplifying his advocacy efforts.

    “The only way I can be their voice is by continuing to win,” Muhammad emphasized.

    UFC welterweight champion Belal Muhammad (c) will face Jack Della Maddalena in the main event of UFC 315 on May 10, 2025, at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

    Muhammad’s Title Reign

    The 36-year-old “Remember the Name” captured UFC gold in July 2024 by defeating Leon Edwards via unanimous decision at UFC 304 in Manchester, England. Since claiming the title, Muhammad has maintained an undefeated streak spanning 11 fights, with his last loss dating back to 2019. His technical striking and relentless pressure have made him one of the most dominant champions in the welterweight division’s recent history.

  • Khabib Nurmagomedov Praises ‘Underrated Aspect’ Of Belal Muhammad’s Game

    Khabib Nurmagomedov Praises ‘Underrated Aspect’ Of Belal Muhammad’s Game

    UFC legend Khabib Nurmagomedov has pinpointed one area of Belal Muhammad’s arsenal that he believes puts the reigning welterweight champion above his peers.

    Muhammad has consistently proved his detractors wrong in recent years, mounting an impressive 11-fight unbeaten run en route to the championship at 170 pounds.

    Among the helping hands along the way in “Remember the Name’s” corner was Khabib, who has regularly welcomed the Palestinian-American into his team.

    During a recent interview with Adam Zubayraev, Khabib laid heavy praise on Muhammad while questioning who has what it takes to unseat him from the welterweight throne.

    “I believe it will be very hard to beat Belal,” Khabib said. “If (Della) Maddalena or Shavkat don’t finish him early, Belal is just going to keep pressing. … His endurance is really good. In fact, I think it’s the most underrated aspect in MMA today. Belal’s cardio is the best in this division for sure, and maybe even in all of UFC.”

    Jack Della Maddalena will have the first chance to make Muhammad’s reign a short-lived one. Due to an injury to Shavkat Rakhmonov, the Australian has been brought in to challenge the champ at UFC 315 in Montreal next month.

  • Belal Muhammad Pinpoints Diego Lopes’ Mistake In UFC 314 Title Fight Loss

    Belal Muhammad Pinpoints Diego Lopes’ Mistake In UFC 314 Title Fight Loss

    UFC Welterweight Champion Belal Muhammad has given his take on Diego Lopes’ approach to his first title shot.

    Lopes competed with gold on the line for the first time in this past weekend’s UFC 314 pay-per-view main event, challenging for the vacant featherweight title.

    In the Brazilian’s way of a title crowning was Alexander Volkanovski, a legendary former champ looking to regain his place on the throne following back-to-back knockouts at the hands of Islam Makhachev and Ilia Topuria.

    “Alexander the Great” ultimately proved to be a hurdle too tall for Lopes, who fell to a convincing defeat on the scorecards following five rounds of action.

    The bout wasn’t without moments of success for Lopes, however. The 30-year-old scored a knockdown in round two before finishing the fight with a late flurry.

    And his pedal to the metal approach to the final minute in Miami is exactly how Muhammad thinks the Brazilian should have fought from the start.

    “Diego Should’ve fought the whole fight like he did that last minute,” Muhammad wrote on X.

    Diego Lopes will now look to bounce back following his disappointing night in Miami to ensure his name stays in the championship mix at 145 pounds.

    For now, the only other man to defeat him in the UFC, undefeated Russian contender Movsar Evloev, will push for his first title opportunity in the UFC.

  • What’s Next After UFC 314? Full Confirmed UFC 315 Main Card For Montreal On May 10

    What’s Next After UFC 314? Full Confirmed UFC 315 Main Card For Montreal On May 10

    UFC 314 is in the books, meaning attention will soon turn to the mixed martial arts leader’s next pay-per-view offering, UFC 315 in Montreal.

    The promotion was in Miami last week, where the Kaseya Center played host to a number of intriguing matchups for its fourth numbered event of the year. Of note were headline wins for Alexander Volkanovski and Paddy Pimblett, as well as important victories for Yair Rodriguez, Jean Silva, and Dominick Reyes.

    While the aftermath of the April 12 card is currently the talk of the town, it won’t be long until focus sways to the next PPV, and from the featherweight title picture to the welterweight championship conversation.

    At UFC 315, set for the Bell Centre on May 10, reigning kingpin Belal Muhammad will open his account for the year in defense of his 170-pound gold. After his crowning against Leon Edwards last July, the first challenge to the Palestinian-American’s reign will come from Australia’s Jack Della Maddalena.

    Stakes will also be high in the co-headliner, as two-time flyweight champ Valentina Shevchenko looks to defend her belt for the first time since winning it back at the expense of Alexa Grasso in 2024. In her way of a continued reign will be the charging Manon Fiorot.

    Aldo, Grasso, Saint Denis Set The Stage For Title Headliners At UFC 315

    Before Muhammad and Shevchenko make the walk to put their championships on the line, a number of notable names will take to the Octagon looking to make the most of their position on the major UFC 315 card.

    That includes mixed martial arts legend Jose Aldo. After having his record since returning from retirement leveled at 1-1 courtesy of Mario Bautista’s efforts last October, the Brazilian former champ will look to avoid falling to a losing skid by snapping the winning run of home favorite Aiemann Zahabi.

    Prior to that, another ex-titleholder in Grasso will be in action. After being thrust off the 125-pound throne by Shevchenko in their trilogy inside the Sphere seven months ago, the Mexican will look to stake her claim for a shot at regaining the gold by handing surging contender Natalia Silva her first defeat in the UFC.

    And opening the UFC 315 main card will be “God of War” Benoit Saint Denis. After a difficult 2024 in which he suffered crushing defeats to Dustin Poirier and Renato Moicano, the Frenchman must now defend his spot in the lightweight top 15 opposite Spain’s Joel Alvarez.

    Those pairings have currently gotten the nod to feature on the main card over the likes of Canada’s own Mike Malott and former strawweight queen Jessica Andrade, who are slated to feature on the prelims.

    See below for the UFC 315 lineup, as it stands.

    Main Card:

    • Welterweight Championship: Belal Muhammad (C) vs. Jack Della Maddalena
    • Women’s Flyweight Championship: Valentina Shevchenko (C) vs. Manon Fiorot
    • Bantamweight: Jose Aldo vs. Aiemann Zahabi
    • Women’s Flyweight: Alexa Grasso vs. Natalia Silva
    • Lightweight: Benoit Saint Denis vs. Joel Alvarez

    Preliminary Card (bout order TBA):

    • Welterweight: Mike Malott vs. Charles Radtke
    • Women’s Flyweight: Jessica Andrade vs. Jasmine Jasudavicius
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas vs. Ion Cutelaba
    • Bantamweight: Brad Katona vs. Bekzat Almakhan
    • Middleweight: Marc-Andre Barriault vs. Bruno Silva
    • Light Heavyweight: Navajo Stirling vs. Ivan Erslan
    Jose Aldo
    Image: Alexandre Loureiro/Zuffa LLC
  • Jack Della Maddalena Compares Belal Muhammad’s ‘Boring Style’ To GSP’s

    Jack Della Maddalena Compares Belal Muhammad’s ‘Boring Style’ To GSP’s

    UFC welterweight title challenger Jack Della Maddalena sees similarities between reigning champion Belal Muhammad and legend Georges St-Pierre’s approach to fighting.

    Della Maddalena has received a surprise opportunity this year owing to an injury to original top contender Shavkat Rakhmonov.

    As a result, the Australian was pulled from his scheduled London main event against Leon Edwards and thrust into a title clash with Muhammad at UFC 315 in Canada next month.

    With his preparation ongoing, Della Maddalena has been analysing the man he’ll need to beat to bring UFC gold back Down Under. And like plenty of the champ’s detractors, he had one word in mine during a recent interview on Fox Sports Australia’s mainevent — “boring.”

    “It’s no question he’s got a boring fight style,” Della Maddalena said of Belal Muhammad. “He’s good at holding people down and getting victories. GSP (Georges St-Pierre) got flak back in the day for being a boring style. I definitely think it’s a boring style, but winning is obviously his number one goal, and fair play to him. But I feel like I can beat him.”

    Muhammad has aspirations of reaching and surpassing the legacy of the great St-Pierre, who achieved title glory in two divisions and cemented his place in the GOAT debate despite a fight style widely branded less than entertaining.

  • ‘Still On 5 AM Time’ – Belal Muhammad Mocks Leon Edwards’ UFC London Loss

    ‘Still On 5 AM Time’ – Belal Muhammad Mocks Leon Edwards’ UFC London Loss

    UFC Welterweight Champion Belal Muhammad was close by to rub Saturday’s losing result for Leon Edwards in.

    Edwards returned to action in this weekend’s UFC London main event, making his first appearance since having his title reign brought to an emphatic end by Muhammad in Manchester last July.

    “Rocky” was hoping to bounce back on home soil inside The O2 in England’s capital, believing a victory would see him granted a shot at regaining the gold. But that script was flipped by Philadelphia’s Sean Brady.

    Like Muhammad, the American contender took advantage of the holes in Edwards’ grappling game, controlling him and landing heavy damage across the first three rounds. And in the fourth, Brady found the finish by way of guillotine choke submission.

    Among those taking joy in the result was Muhammad, who fired shots at his former two-time opponent.

    One specific post saw him reference Leon Edwards’ claim that the overnight fight time last summer contributed to his title defeat, considering Saturday’s event took place in UK primetime.

    “Leon’s still on 5 am time zone,” Muhammad wrote on X.

    That marked one of many posts from the champ, who well and truly took the opportunity to poke fun at his longtime rival’s second straight setback.

  • Belal Muhammad: Leon Edwards Will Lose To Brady Because Of ‘Flashbacks’ From UFC 304

    Belal Muhammad: Leon Edwards Will Lose To Brady Because Of ‘Flashbacks’ From UFC 304

    UFC Welterweight Champion Belal Muhammad believes the memory of his dominance over Leon Edwards will play a part in this weekend’s main event.

    Edwards is set to return to action on Saturday for the first time since losing his grip on the 170-pound gold last July. “Rocky” was comfortably beaten by Muhammad across five rounds in the UFC 304 headliner.

    In his pursuit of a second title reign, Edwards will share the Octagon with another grappler in the rising Sean Brady inside The O2 in London on March 22.

    Edwards anticipates a victory earning him a shot at regaining the welterweight title. The man who took it from him, however, doesn’t foresee a victory on home soil for the Brit.

    In a recent social media post, Muhammad reacted to Edwards’ continuing claim that injuries and a struggle to adapt to the 5 AM fight time impacted his performance last summer.

    “Remember the Name” pointed to such remarks as evidence that his longtime rival is “weak mentally,” and predicted that the memory of UFC 304 will ultimately hamper Edwards when he makes the walk in a few days’ time.

    “This guys full of excuses that’s why Brady will beat him,” Muhammad wrote on X. “I predict once Brady gets him down two or three times he’ll find a submission…because Leon’s weak mentally and he’ll have flash backs from what I did to him”

    While Leon Edwards looks to prove the champ wrong this weekend, Belal Muhammad will soon return to action himself.

    After having plans for his first defense against Shavkat Rakhmonov late last year scrapped due to injury, the Palestinian-American will instead put the belt on the line against Jack Della Maddalena at the Montreal-held UFC 315 pay-per-view on May 10.

  • Leon Edwards Backs Jack Della Maddalena To Dethrone Belal Muhammad At UFC 315

    Leon Edwards Backs Jack Della Maddalena To Dethrone Belal Muhammad At UFC 315

    Former UFC welterweight champion Leon Edwards doesn’t expect the man who removed him from the division’s throne to occupy it for much longer.

    After losing his grip on the 170-pound title courtesy of Belal Muhammad last July, Edwards was expecting to return to action opposite Jack Della Maddalena in London this weekend.

    That changed last month, however, when the Australian contender was pulled from the UFC Fight Night main event to challenge Muhammad at UFC 315 on May 10 in Montreal. Edwards, meanwhile, will now battle Sean Brady on March 22.

    Ahead of his appearance at The O2, Edwards has been vocal in stating that a victory will earn him a quick shot at returning to the welterweight mountaintop.

    While he’d like nothing more than to exact revenge on Muhammad, he seemingly doesn’t foresee “Remember the Name” still being on the throne by the time he gets back to it.

    “If I had to put money on it, I’d probably favor JDM,” Leon Edwards said during an appearance on Monday’s episode of The Ariel Helwani Show on Uncrowned. “I feel like JDM, his boxing is what will probably shut him (Muhammad) down. And he’s a good anti-grappler, JDM. It’s easy to take him down, but his scrambles on the floor are good. I feel like Belal won’t be enough to hold him down for that long. So maybe JDM, if I had to put money on it.”

    Muhammad’s first title defense was expected to come against Shavkat Rakhmonov. But after an injury to the champion scrapped that last December, the Kazakh contender is now the one ruled out.

    The Palestinian-American’s clash with Della Maddalena will mark one of two title bouts on the UFC 315 card, with Valentina Shevchenko also putting her flyweight title on the line opposite France’s Manon Fiorot.

  • Watch Fired-Up Belal Muhammad’s Corner Reaction To Ignacio Bahamondes Win At UFC 313

    Watch Fired-Up Belal Muhammad’s Corner Reaction To Ignacio Bahamondes Win At UFC 313

    UFC Welterweight Champion Belal Muhammad was an animated figure in the corner of Ignacio Bahamondes this weekend.

    Bahamondes was among those tasked with setting the stage for Saturday’s championship headliner at UFC 313, and the highly touted lightweight prospect emerged as one of the event’s top performers.

    “La Jaula” made the most of his opportunity to break into the rankings, submitting the once fast-rising Jalin Turner with a shock triangle choke in the very first round.

    Talking the Chilean 27-year-old through the action cageside was a notable teammate of his in Belal Muhammad. And the UFC posted footage of the champ’s ecstatic reaction as his man forced a tap from “The Tarantula.”

    “Let’s go! Best in the world, I told you guys,” Muhammad said to the camera. “He can strike and he can grapple, he does it all!”

    Turned revealed his intentions to retire in the aftermath of Saturday’s bout, admitting he’d been pondering the decision since his setback to Renato Moicano at UFC 300 last April.

    Bahamondes will likely inherit his #13 position in the lightweight rankings, having moved to a three-fight winning streak with his triumph at UFC 313.

  • Belal Muhammad Gets Palestine Flag Added To UFC Profile After Dana White Steps In

    Belal Muhammad Gets Palestine Flag Added To UFC Profile After Dana White Steps In

    Belal Muhammad’s grievance reached Dana White, who wasted no time setting things right.

    Muhammad will make his first welterweight title defense at UFC 315 on May 10, headlining against Jack Della Maddalena at the Bell Centre, in Montreal, Canada.

    UFC fighters usually have their national flags displayed on their profiles on the promotion’s official website, but “Remember the Name”, who represents Palestine, was the only one among the 22 fighters on the UFC 315 lineup without one.

    The Chicago-born reigning UFC 170-pound champion has never wavered in his pride for his Palestinian heritage. Throughout his UFC career, he has made it a point to represent his roots, always carrying the Palestinian flag as a symbol of his identity.

    After noticing his flag was missing, Muhammad took to social media on Thursday, urging the UFC CEO to take action on the matter. Now, it appears his message has been acknowledged.

    “Remember the Name” recently turned to X to announce that his profile now features the Palestinian flag. He expressed gratitude to White for taking prompt repsonse and commended the UFC for allowing fighters to express themselves freely.

    “I just want to give a quick shoutout to Dana,” Belal Muhammad said. I talked to him, he said the flag’s back up tonight. [He] apologized, and that’s why I love the UFC. I love this company, and that’s why Dana’s the man. The only organization that lets you be yourself. And true to his word, and doesn’t let other people sway his attitude or what he’s going to do. So, shout out to Dana. Shout out to the UFC. Flag is back, baby.”

    As of now, the once-absent Palestinian flag has been restored to Muhammad’s profile on the UFC’s official website.

    Belal Muhammad is set to return to action after a 10-month hiatus. He last fought at UFC 304 in July, where he earned a dominant unanimous decision victory over Leon Edwards to clinch the welterweight title.

    The 36-year-old American was originally set to defend his championship against the undefeated Shavkat Rakhmonov at UFC 310 in December. However, a leg infection forced Muhammad to withdraw, leading to the bout’s cancellation.