Tag: Caio Borralho

  • “We Got Some Work To Do” – Caio Borralho Bests Reinier de Ridder

    “We Got Some Work To Do” – Caio Borralho Bests Reinier de Ridder

    Caio Borralho remains in the middleweight title picture and is looking for former champion Dricus Du Plessis next, following his win over Reinier de Ridder in the UFC 326 co-main event.

    Borralho connected with a strong shot in the opening seconds of the bout, setting off a competitive first round. Both men had their fair share of striking, but Borralho had more activity and landed more.

    De Ridder found success in the second round, utilizing the clinch and his grappling efforts to limit Borralho’s offense while landing inside strikes of his own. Borralho finally seemed to get back control at the start of the third, landing a power shot and scoring a takedown.

    Borralho fatigued late in the fight, but he did enough to sweep the judges’ cards and earn the win.

    Caio Borralho Scores Decision Win In Middleweight Co-Main Event At UFC 326

    Borralho rebounds from his UFC Paris loss to Nassourdine Imavov in September, which marked his first loss in the Octagon.

    After starting his UFC tenure 4-0, including a win over former champion Robert Whittaker, de Ridder, the former two-weight ONE Championship champion, has now lost two straight. He was bested by Brendan Allen at UFC Vancouver in October.

  • Sean Strickland Explains Why Caio Borralho is “An Idiot” Over Weight Cutting

    Sean Strickland Explains Why Caio Borralho is “An Idiot” Over Weight Cutting

    UFC star Sean Strickland has questioned Caio Borralho for opting to cut weight twice ahead of UFC Paris – once to serve as back-up for the UFC 319 main event.

    If there’s one thing we know to be true about Sean Strickland, it’s that he doesn’t hold back when giving his opinion. He is someone who has a lot of interesting views both in and outside of mixed martial arts, and he isn’t afraid to voice them.

    Last weekend, Caio Borralho attempted to earn himself a UFC middleweight title shot – but fell short. He lost to Nassourdine Imavov in what proved to be a fairly one-sided fight at UFC Paris, and Sean Strickland was one of many who was left surprised by the performance that the Brazilian produced.

    In a recent tweet, Sean Strickland had the following to say about Borralho’s outing in the French capital.

    Sean Strickland’s view on Caio Borralho at UFC Paris

    “Caio is my buddy but hes an idiot. He trained with us and was useless.  

    “Me “whats wrong with you”

    “Caio “Im cutting, im an alternate”

    “So you’re giving up 4 weeks of your camp cutting weight twice while having a fight coming up? 

    “Whoever told you to do that, please hit him.”

    “It was so frustrating I wanted to hit him.. I didnt say anything because I wanted to keep his spirits up but he really took some bad advice from someone. That fight wasnt him. It was missing 4 weeks of training cutting weight twice.”

  • 9 Hits And 3 Misses From UFC Paris: Nassourdine Imavov vs. Caio Borralho

    9 Hits And 3 Misses From UFC Paris: Nassourdine Imavov vs. Caio Borralho

    In what has seemingly become a fall tradition, the UFC returned to Paris for a Fight Night event, with this year’s UFC Paris taking place at the Accor Arena on September 6.

    This marks the fourth straight year the UFC has held a September Fight Night event in the City of Lights. With France only just legalizing MMA back in 2020, the UFC has annually made an impact in Paris with entertaining fight cards for the French fanbase. Last year’s UFC Paris card saw Renato Moicano score a doctor’s stoppage victory over Benoit Saint Denis.

    The main event of this year’s UFC Paris saw a major middleweight contenders clash featuring Nassourdine Imavov and Caio Borralho. Imavov entered this bout on a four-fight win streak and with seven wins in his last nine. This marked his first outing since his finish of former middleweight champion Israel Adesanya at UFC Saudi Arabia in February. Borralho entered with wins in all but two of his professional MMA fights, including a perfect 7-0 Octagon record. The Fighting Nerds member entered this fight off a win over Jared Cannonier last year at UFC Vegas 96.

    Saint Denis was involved in this year’s card as well, taking on Mauricio Ruffy in the co-main event. Saint Denis had won six of his last eight, most recently submitting Kyle Prepolec at UFC 315. Ruffy had won seven straight and 3-0 in the UFC entering tonight’s bout, coming in off his epic spinning wheel kick knockout of King Green at UFC 313.

    Who left their mark in Paris? Who could have done a lot better? Let’s find out with the UFC Paris Hits and Misses!

    Hit: Lighting Up The City With Finishes Galore

    In one of the most historical cities in the world, the UFC gave the people of Paris a treat with all of the action that went on at the event. Out of the 13 fights that took place at UFC Paris, 11 ended via a finish. This tied a record set also by UFC Fight Night Syndey in November 2014, UFC 224 in May 2018, and UFC 281 in November 2022.

    This included a preliminary card that went 7-for-7 in finishes. Highlights from the preliminary action featured first-round knockouts from the likes of Rinat Fakhretdinov, Sam Patterson, Kaue Fernandes, Ante Delija, and Oumar Sy. Meanwhile, the main card saw the likes of Axel Sola, Mason Jones, Modestas Bukauskas, and Benoint Saint Denis scoring finishes.

    There are times where UFC Fight Night cards can be a bit of a miss; there may have some trepidation that such could happen after how the preliminary card went. Just look at UFC Shanghai from a couple of weeks ago. But without question, UFC Paris more than delivered (and thank goodness it was a Fight Night that took place outside of the UFC APEX).

    Hit: Paris Presents Lively Atmosphere

    They say that the international UFC crowds are the best ones, and for good reason. But credit where it’s due, the audience present at the Accor Arena was awesome. The crowd was loud from the very first prelim and into the co-main event and main event bouts — where they were loud at the end seeing their hometown fighters come out on top.

    The Paris card has become an annual late summer/early fall tradition that has been truly enjoyable, and I’m glad we have it.

    Hit: Sam Patterson On A First-Round Finish Frenzy

    I don’t know what has gotten into Sam Patterson over the last four fights, but if he has some sort of routine or good-luck charm or superstitious practice, he needs to keep it up. His finish of Trey Waters during the prelims shows just how much momentum that young man has.

    After a slow start from both men, Waters seemed to be getting the upper hand. But Patterson got into a groove with his right hand, and he continuosuly landed it to devastating effects on Waters, snapping his head back repeatedly. Eventually, the referee saw enough, giving Patterson the win in about three minutes.

    Patterson may have lost his UFC debut back at UFC 286 but he’s now racked up four straight first-round finishes. It may be appropriate that his nickname is “The Future”; if Patterson, the Dana White Contender’s Series and Brave CF alumnus, can continue to develop while putting on performances like this, his future might be bright.

    Hit: Ante Delija Has Opportunity In Weak UFC Heavyweight Scene

    It was just a few years ago when Ante Delija became the 2022 PFL heavyweight champion, and after Francis Ngannou was signed by the promotion, some wondered if Delija would get a showdown with Ngannou. While that dream fight of his never came, and Delija ultimately departed the PFL earlier this year, his UFC run is off to as strong of a start as it could be with his first-round stoppage of Marcin Tybura.

    Though Tybura tried to stop the initial right-hand based attack with his grappling, Delija managed to escape Tybura’s grasp and trouble him with his striking. Delija’s attack would be too much for Tybura, who’d fall to the mat to give the former PFL champ a TKO in his UFC debut.

    Tybura came into the fight ranked No. 7 at heavyweight. On one hand, this, combined with Curtis Blaydes’ near-loss to a debuting Rizvan Kuniev earlier this summer (combined with Kuniev entering the rankings on a loss) might be presented as a bad look for the UFC’s heavyweight division. But look at what this can do for it — and what it does for Delija. He’ll be placed just outside of the top five at heavyweight. If he wins another fight or two, then he’ll be already primed for a title shot — and that gives this division another serious name that it desperately needs.

    Miss: Herb Dean – Make It Make Sense

    It feels like something is up every event Herb Dean officiates, and it’s sad. It feels like there have been plenty of fights this year where if he’s referring, his decisions can become the center of attention. That’s not good. And to make this week’s matters worse, this involved not one, but two calls made.

    Dean’s bad night started during the preliminary card, with Kaue Fernandes using a leg-kick attack gameplan to score a finish of Harry Hardwick. Fernandes got Hardwick limping around the Octagon less than two minutes into the fight, and yet Dean, despite seeing Hardwick wobble around, allowed the fight to continue. One particularly bad leg kick saw Hardwick roll around the mat. But Dean waited to see Hardwick unable to stand despite his efforts before calling the fight.

    Then, on the main card, Dean had a blunder during Axel Sola’s win over Rhys McKee. Sola landed a body shot that appeared to send McKee to the mat. McKee appeared to go for a takedown quickly, but Sola stopped that right away with a couple of seconds of ground-and-pound. Though McKee seemed to still be in the fight and defending, Dean stepped in and waved the bout off — much to the protests of McKee and the crowd (and the rest of the MMA community on X).

    For the 3 millionth time, how is it officials (refs, judges, etc.) aren’t obligated to defend their controversial decisions (and quite often get away with them)? It’s a sad state of an affair in this sport.

    Hit: Mason Jones – Call Him Comeback Kid

    How do you follow up winning a wild fight with Jeremy Stephens in your UFC return? Well, Mason Jones’ answer to that question was to nearly get stopped by Bolaji Oki, only to come from behind and score a finish in the next round.

    Oki rocked and dropped Jones twice in the fight’s first 90 seconds, nearly putting him away right then and there. Jones would not be deterred, however, and he took control, attempting to lock up a submission and storming back to take control of the fight. Jones would bring Oki to the mat in the second round and overwhelm him with ground-and-pound en route to a comeback TKO.

    Jones went 1-2 (1 NC) during his first UFC tenure from January 2021 to July 2022. Since getting cut, Jones has now won six straight, winning all four of his fights in Cage Warriors before getting re-signed by the UFC. A firm eye should now be on Jones as he continues to develop and work his way up against more prominent names at lightweight.

    Hit: Modestas Bukauskas Racks Up Wins

    Don’t look now, but Modestas Bukauskas might be a fight or two away from being a ranked light heavyweight after his buzzer-beater knockout of Paul Craig.

    Both men looked to utilize grappling in this matchup, with Bukauskas trying to use the clinch before Craig tried to bring the fight to the mat. Though the fight ended up on the ground, Bukauskas was the one in control. He’d deliver some strong ground-and-pound, including an elbow right at the horn that left Craig unable to get back to his corner and unable to continue.

    Bukauskas’ initial UFC run saw him go just 1-3 before the promotion parted ways with him. Now, he’s got four wins in the Octagon, including three finishes during that span. A number next to his name in the rankings might be coming sooner than some may think.

    Hit: Thank you, Paul Craig

    The 12-year professional MMA career of Paul Craig ended in Paris, as he laid down the gloves in the center of the Octagon following his loss to Modestas Bukauskas.

    Craig started professional MMA in August 2013, winning his first nine bouts. That included his UFC debut in December 2016, defeating Henrique da Silva. Craig would lose four of his next six but proved to be an entertaining, and popular, figure — especially when he competed on UFC cards held in Europe.

    Craig went 5-0-1 between September 2019 and March 2022, scoring four performance bonuses during that time. Craig’s time in the UFC, however, ended with losses in six of eight, facing off against various notable names in today’s UFC light heavyweight division, including Johnny Walker and Caio Borralho, as well as ranked middleweight contender Brendan Allen.

    Craig wasn’t the winningest kind of fighter in the UFC. But were his fights always entertaining and something people kept tabs on? By far. So, shoutout to “Bearjew” and the best to him in his retirement.

    Hit: The Best Benoit Saint Denis Has Ever Looked

    After his outing in Paris last year did not go the way he wanted, Benoit Saint Denis returned to his home country this year for a show in the Octagon that proved to be perhaps the best performance he’s ever had, turning away the rising Mauricio Ruffy in a second-round finish.

    Saint Denis brought pressure right away, mounting Ruffy in just 60 seconds and controlling the action from there, even as Ruffy brought the fight back to the feet for the last 40 seconds of round one. It didn’t take much for BSD to return the action to the mat for round two, where’d he score a victory via rear-naked choke.

    The other time BSD had this strong of a win, you’d probably have to look at his UFC 295 outing, when he knocked out Matt Frevola in just 91 seconds at Madison Square Garden. Now that he has back-to-back finishes under his belt against names who were unranked or lower ranked, maybe BSD’s next bout can come against someone in the lower portion of the top-10 at lightweight.

    Miss: Too Much, Too Quick For Mauricio Ruffy?

    I don’t want to completely wreck on Mauricio Ruffy; as mentioned, Benoit Saint Denis had one of the best performances of his career in the UFC Paris co-main event. But on that same regard, Mauricio Ruffy looked completely outclassed.

    This was only Ruffy’s fourth fight in the Octagon since coming into the UFC off a highlight finish on Dana White’s Contender Series. The finishes have been great and made Ruffy worthy of attention, let alone the fact he’s part of the Fighting Nerds team. But perhaps going from King Green to BSD, who has been in there with the likes of Dustin Poirier and Renato Moicano, may have been a little much of a jump.

    Hopefully Ruffy finds another opponent in fairly short time and he can have a rebound performance to take his momentum back up.

    Miss: Nassourdine Imavov And Caio Borralho Just Gave Khamzat Chimaev To Either Anthony Hernandez Or Reinier De Ridder

    Talk about a way to end an exciting UFC Paris card with a letdown — and to come super close to a middleweight title shot, only to just hand it away. Nassourdine Imavov may have gotten the win in his native France over Caio Borralho, but both men may not be getting the middleweight title shot they could have received with an impressive victory.

    The fight didn’t have the biggest amount of output, with Imavov finding success behind his jab and Borralho not bringing out the level of activity we are used to seeing from him. Though Borralho battled back in a strong third-round performance, Imavov’s striking proved to be just too much — though not enough to earn a finish.

    Though Imavov came into the contest ranked No. 2 at middleweight, UFC CEO and President Dana White has hinted at the possibility of Anthony “Fluffy” Hernandez or former two-division ONE champion Reinier de Ridder jumping him if one of them scores a highlight victory in the main event of UFC Vancouver next month. Now with the boring fight Imavov and Borralho put on in Paris, it’d only take a good (read: good, not great) performance from one of those two to score the first crack at Khamzat Chimaev.

  • “The Winner Of RDR/Fluffy Is Getting The Next Title Shot” – Fans & Fighters Debate Middleweight Title Picture After Nassourdine Imavov Dominates Caio Borralho At UFC Paris

    It may not have been the performance to earn him a title shot, but Nassourdine Imavov put on a fairly dominant showing in front of his home crowd, defeating Caio Borralho in the main event of UFC Paris.

    Though the opening round was slow, Imavov pushed the pace on Borralho, overwhelming him early. Borralho, however, would end up with more output than the French fighter by the first round’s end. Imavov continued to work Borralho over with jabs and countershots during the second round, while Borralho had some moments — but definitely not the production we’ve been used to seeing from the Brazilian.

    Borralho finally seemed to get into the fight during the third round, landing more shots and doing damage with them. Notably, however, Imavov had stopped all four takedown attempts from Borralho by this point. Imavov then completely outworked Borralho in the fourth round to put him on the ropes.

    Imavov then dominated the fifth round to nearly sweep the judges’ scorecards and score the victory.

    Nassourdine Imavov Dominates Caio Borralho In Potential Title Eliminator At UFC Paris

    Imavov has now won five straight and he has won eight of his last 10 outings.

    This marked Borralho’s first loss since his second professional MMA bout.

    Whether Imavov receives a title opportunity or not may boil down to the performances of Anthony Hernandez and Reinier de Ridder when they face off in the main event of UFC Vancouver next month.

  • UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Nassourdine Imavov Decisions Caio Borralho 

    UFC Fight Night Results & Highlights: Nassourdine Imavov Decisions Caio Borralho 

    UFC Fight Night took place tonight from the Accor Arena in Paris, France and MMA News has you covered with all the results and highlights! 

    In the main event, middleweights Nassourdine Imavov and Caio Borralho clashed. While in the co-main event, Benoit Saint Denis faced off with Mauricio Ruffy in a lightweight matchup.  

    UFC Fight Night Results: Main Card

    • Middleweight bout: Nassourdine Imavov def. Caio Borralho via unanimous decision (50-45, 49-46×2)
    • Lightweight bout: Benoit Saint Denis def. Mauricio Ruffy via submission: R2, 2:56
    • Light heavyweight bout: Modestas Bukauskas def. Paul Craig via KO: R1, 5:00
    • Lightweight bout: Mason Jones def. Bolaji Oki via TKO: R2, 3.18
    • Welterweight bout: Axel Sola def. Rhys McKee via TKO: R3, 2:02
    • Featherweight bout: William Gomis def. Robert Ruchala via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28×2)

    Preliminary Card

    • Light Heavyweight bout: Oumar Sy def. Brendson Ribeiro via TKO: R1, 4:42
    • Heavyweight bout: Ante Delija def. Marcin Tybura via KO: R1: 2:03
    • Lightweight bout: Kaue Fernandes def. Harry Hardwick via TKO: R1, 3:21
    • Welterweight bout: Sam Patterson def. Trey Waters via TKO: R1, 3:01
    • Middleweight bout: Robert Bryczek def. Brad Tavares via TKO: R3, 1:43
    • Welterweight bout: Rinat Fakhretdinov def. Andreas Gustafsson via TKO: R1, 0:54 

    Strawweight bout: Sam Hughes def. Shauna Bannon via submission: R2, 1:58  

    Preliminary Card Highlights

    Sam Hughes def. Shauna Bannon

    Rinat Fakhretdinov def. Andreas Gustafsson

    Robert Bryczek def. Brad Tavares

    Sam Patterson def. Trey Waters

    Kaue Fernandes def. Harry Hardwick

    Ante Delija def. Marcin Tybura

    Oumar Sy def. Brendson Ribeiro

    Main Card Highlights

    William Gomis def. Robert Ruchala

    William Gomis got it done with a unanimous decision.

    Axel Sola def. Rhys McKee

    Axel Sola earned a TKO in the third round.

    Mason Jones def. Bolaji Oki

    Mason Jones earned a TKO in round two.

    Modestas Bukauskas def. Paul Craig

    Modestas Bukauskas earned a KO at the end of round one, with Paul Craig announcing his retirement after the fight.

    Benoit Saint Denis def. Mauricio Ruffy

    In the co-main event, Benoit Saint Denis locked in a rear-naked choke to get the win in this lightweight bout.

    Nassourdine Imavov def. Caio Borralho 

    In the main event, Nassourdine Imavov earned a comfortable unanimous decision victory over Caio Borralho.

  • UFC Paris Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Imavov vs. Borralho, Saint-Denis vs. Ruffy, And More

    UFC Paris Betting Odds: Current Favorites For Imavov vs. Borralho, Saint-Denis vs. Ruffy, And More

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

    The card takes place from the Accor Arena in Paris, France, on Saturday, September 6. The main card portion of the event will start at 3PM ET/12PM PT, with preliminary action starting at 12PM ET/9AM PT.

    The main event of the card will see Nassourdine Imavov facing off with Caio Borralho in a major middleweight contenders’ battle.

    In the co-main event, Benoit Saint Denis will take on Mauricio Ruffy in a lightweight matchup.

    The main card will also feature Modestas Bukauskas taking on Paul Craig, Bolaji Oki against Mason Jones, and Axel Sola taking on Rhys McKee. The main card was scheduled to have Patricio Pitbull vs. Losene Keita, but that fight was scrapped after weight management issues for Keita.

    UFC Paris: Imavov vs. Borralho Betting Odds

    Listed below are the latest betting odds for UFC Paris as of September 5 at 7pm ET, courtesy of DraftKings.

    Main Card:

    • Middleweight: Nassourdine Imavov (+110) vs. Caio Borralho (-130)
    • Lightweight: Benoit Saint Denis (+124) vs. Mauricio Ruffy (-148)
    • Light Heavyweight: Modestas Bukauskas (-325) vs. Paul Craig (+260)
    • Lightweight: Bolajki Oki (+110) vs. Mason Jones (-130)
    • Welterweight: Axel Sola (-130) vs. Rhys McKee (+110)

    Preliminary Card:

    • Featherweight: William Gomis (-265) vs. Robert Ruchała (+215)
    • Light Heavyweight: Oumar Sy (-500) vs. Brendson Ribeiro (+380)
    • Heavyweight: Marcin Tybura (+105) vs. Ante Delija (-125)
    • Lightweight: Harry Hardwick (+164) vs. Kauê Fernandes (-198)
    • Welterweight: Sam Patterson (-192) vs. Trey Waters (+160)
    • Middleweight: Brad Tavares (-218) vs. Robert Bryczek (+180)
    • Welterweight: Andreas Gustafsson (-130) vs. Rinat Fakhretdinov (+110)
    • Women’s Strawweight: Shauna Bannon (+275) vs. Sam Hughes (-345)
  • Caio Borralho is okay with fighting friend Khamzat Chimaev for UFC title

    Caio Borralho is okay with fighting friend Khamzat Chimaev for UFC title

    UFC star Caio Borralho has made it clear that he’s okay with fighting his friend Khamzat Chimaev if the fight ends up happening.

    Tomorrow night, Caio Borralho takes on Nassourdine Imavov in the main event of UFC Paris. If he’s able to pick up the win, and do so impressively, he could easily get a shot at Khamzat Chimaev and the UFC middleweight championship.

    There’s no guarantee, but for Caio Borralho, it’s all about going out there and proving himself. If he does get the crack at Chimaev, he’ll be facing his friend who he’s trained with extensively in the past.

    In a recent interview, Caio Borralho made it known that he’s fine with fighting ‘Borz’.

    Caio Borralho is fine with fighting his friend Khamzat Chimaev

    “It’s business,” Borralho said on the Pound-4-Pound podcast. “It’s for feeding our families. He’s my friend. We talk about it, we speak, we chat in Instagram and all that. When I had my child, he was one of the first guys to come to me and congratulate me and all that. We kind of got into each other.

    “And actually, I was the only one in his training camp that became friends with him, because I knew how to train with him. I knew how to help him and I made him realize that. So he knew I was there to help him, not just to compete against him and try to show that I’m better than him or something like that. 

    “There’s no ego in me. There’s no problem for me to go there, if I’m helping the guy, to get my ass beat for five rounds. I don’t care, because I’m there to help him.

    “But at the same time, I’m seeing everything, I’m studying everything, I’m taking notes. I’m paying attention to everything, and this is something that I did a lot in Sweden.”

    Quotes via MMA Fighting

  • Math and Chemistry Teacher: Caio Borralho Explains His Start In Education – Fighting Nerd

    Fighting Nerds sensation Caio Borralho has spoken about his journey to mixed martial arts and how it all started off with his education.

    Tomorrow night, Caio Borralho will take on Nassourdine Imavov in a highly anticipated middleweight showdown. The two will fight in the main event of UFC Paris, and if the winner gets a spectacular knockout, they could well be the next in line to face Khamzat Chimaev for the UFC middleweight championship.

    Of course, there’s no guarantee behind that, but Caio Borralho is feeling pretty confident either way. He knows that he has the skills necessary to defeat Imavov, and he’s ready to prove that he deserves a crack at Chimaev at the championship.

    Alas, MMA wasn’t always the main focus for Caio Borralho. In a recent interview, he opened up about his days as a teacher.

    Caio Borralho looks back at his journey to MMA

    “I was a mathematics and chemistry teacher before I started MMA. I started teaching when I was 15 years old. My grandpa was a math teacher, and one day he had an emergency and left the class. 

    “He came to me and said, ‘You know this subject, you know how to teach this?’ And I said, ‘I think I know.’ So I started teaching my neighbors, eventually teaching people at school who came to my house to learn. So yeah, that’s my background before fighting. Some of the kids I taught are engineers now, which is crazy to see how things change.”

  • UFC Paris: Nassourdine Imavov vs. Caio Borralho Weigh-In Results

    UFC Paris: Nassourdine Imavov vs. Caio Borralho Weigh-In Results

    UFC Paris takes place this Saturday, September 6, at the Accor Arena, with MMA News bringing you the complete official weigh-in results ahead of fight night.

    The upcoming event will be highlighted by a high-stakes middleweight showdown as top contenders Nassourdine Imavov and Caio Borralho clash, with major title implications on the line.

    Meanwhile, the co-main event will see French fan-favorite Benoit Saint Denis face rising lightweight finisher Mauricio Ruffy. Elsewhere on the card, highly touted Cage Warriors featherweight champion Harry Hardwick makes his UFC debut in a short-notice 155-pound clash against Kaue Fernandes.

    Ahead of UFC Paris, the official weigh-ins were held Friday morning at the UFC host hotel in the ‘City of Light”. Both headliners, Imavov and Borralho, hit the 185-pound mark exactly. Meanwhile, Saint Denis weighed in at 155 pounds, and Ruffy hit the 156-pound lightweight limit, making their bout official without issue.

    However, the weigh-ins weren’t flawless, as the scheduled featherweight clash between Patricio Pitbull and highly anticipated UFC debutant Losene Keita was called off from the UFC Paris lineup. “Black Panther” came in three pounds over the 146-pound non-title limit at 149, while Pitbull weighed in at 145 pounds.

    UFC Paris Complete Weigh-In Results

    Main Card

    • Middleweight bout: Nassourdine Imavov (185) vs. Caio Borralho (185)
    • Lightweight bout: Benoit Saint Denis (155) vs. Mauricio Ruffy (156)
    • Light heavyweight bout: Modestas Bukauskas (205) vs. Paul Craig (205)
    • Lightweight bout: Bolaji Oki (156) vs. Mason Jones (156)
    • Welterweight bout: Axel Sola (170) vs. Rhys McKee (170)
    • Featherweight bout: Patricio Pitbull (145) vs. Losene Keita (149)*

    Preliminary Card

    • Featherweight bout: William Gomis (145) vs. Robert Ruchala (146)
    • Light Heavyweight bout: Oumar Sy (206) vs. Brendson Ribeiro (206)
    • Heavyweight bout: Marcin Tybura (256) vs. Ante Delija (239)
    • Lightweight bout: Harry Hardwick (156) vs. Kaue Fernandes (155)
    • Welterweight bout: Sam Patterson (170) vs. Trey Waters (171)
    • Middleweight bout: Brad Tavares (186) vs. Robert Bryczek (186)
    • Welterweight bout: Andreas Gustafsson (171) vs. Rinat Fakhretdinov (170)
    • Strawweight bout: Shauna Bannon (116) vs. Sam Hughes (116)

    *Losene Keita came in over the 146-pound featherweight limit, leading to the cancellation of his bout with Patricio Pitbull.

  • Caio Borralho believes UFC Paris main event could be #1 contender fight

    Caio Borralho believes UFC Paris main event could be #1 contender fight

    UFC middleweight contender Caio Borralho believes that his fight against Nassourdine Imavov at UFC Paris could determine the next number one contender at 185 pounds.

    This weekend, Caio Borralho and Nassourdine Imavov will meet in the main event of UFC Paris. While it’s not guaranteed, many expect the winner to be the next in line to challenge Khamzat Chimaev for the UFC middleweight championship.

    Of course, there are a few other names out there, especially with Anthony Hernandez and Reinier de Ridder preparing to collide later this year. Caio Borralho knows that, too, and he knows that he needs to put in a big performance if he wants to really get on the radar of the champ.

    In a recent interview, Caio Borralho opened up on the stakes in this fight and what it could mean for his career.

    Caio Borralho’s view on Nassourdine Imavov fight

    “I think that’s the fight that makes sense (as No. 1 contender),” Borralho told MMA Junkie Radio. “Me and Imavov, we just need to go in there and don’t do a boring fight. That’s all. I think it doesn’t matter how the fight ends, if it’s a finish or it’s a decision by a dominant or great fight, I think whoever wins is going to be the next one in line.”

    “Yeah, that’s how I’m preparing for this fight. I’m preparing to fight the best guy in the world,” Borralho said. “If he doesn’t show up like that, it’s just profit for me. But I’m taking this fight as I take all my last fights – all the fights that I have right now are the biggest fights of my life, the most important fight of my life, and the hardest fight of my life. So I need to prepare properly for this fight. I’m taking him very seriously, I know that he’s a phenomenal athlete, and I’m preparing for that.”

    Quotes via MMA Junkie

  • Caio Borralho Not Impressed with Khamzat Chimaev’s Safe Performance Against Dricus Du Plessis

    UFC middleweight Caio Borralho has given his thoughts on Khamzat Chimaev’s win over Dricus du Plessis at UFC 319.

    As we know, Khamzat Chimaev is the new king of the middleweight division after taking the championship from Dricus du Plessis in the main event of UFC 319. We also know that Caio Borralho is a rising contender at 185 pounds and in his next fight, he’ll face Nassourdine Imavov in an attempt to move one step closer to receiving a title shot.

    Caio Borralho is certainly an interesting prospect but in the eyes of many, Khamzat Chimaev seems pretty unstoppable right now. One of the reasons for that was the nature of his win over DDP, as ‘Borz’ was able to pretty much dominate him on the ground from the first minute until the last.

    In a recent interview, though, Caio Borralho gave an interesting point of view on how Chimaev was able to perform.

    Caio Borralho’s view on Khamzat Chimaev’s UFC 319 win

    “I’m not impressed about the domination. I think he did what he always does in all his fights. The only difference is that he didn’t finish this time. That’s why people are upset—because people want to see a finish. But he dominated in a dominant fashion. Dricus didn’t have any response to anything. But to be fair, he did a great job defending the chokes and all the attacks Khamzat did. But besides that, he just couldn’t take it. He had no answers for that.”

  • Why did Nassourdine Imavov Request Caio Borralho for UFC Paris Main Event?

    Why did Nassourdine Imavov Request Caio Borralho for UFC Paris Main Event?

    Caio Borralho was just the next man up for Nassourdine Imavov.

    After stringing together a quartet of impressive victories over Roman Dolidze, Jared Cannonier, Brendan Allen, and Israel Adesanya, Imavov was ready to take on anyone else standing in the way of his first middleweight title opportunity. As it turns out, that man just so happens to be Borralho — the Brazilian fan favorite and co-founder of the immensely popular Fighting Nerds.

    Now, Imavov and Borralho will do battle on September 6 when the UFC makes its annual pit stop in Paris, France.

    Following his impressive second-round knockout of ‘The Last Stylebender’ in February, Imavov was eager to get back to work. Speaking with MMA Junkie, the Dagestani revealed what inspired him to ask for a fight against Borralho in ‘The City of Light.’

    “I did four fights in 11 months against all top-10 ranked opponents,” Imavov said. “The next contender was Caio. So I asked the UFC to bring him in Paris.”

    A shot at UFC gold hangs in the balance between Nassourdine Imavov and Caio Borralho

    With an 8-2 record inside the Octagon, Imavov has more than earned his spot as the No. 1 ranked contender in the middleweight division. But if he hopes to keep that top spot, he’ll have to do what no man has been able to inside the Octagon — beat Borralho.

    ‘The Natural’ goes into his eighth promotional appearance with an umblemished 7-0 UFC record, including highlight-reel finishes against Michał Oleksiejczuk and Paul Craig. Borralho’s most recent outing saw him score a unanimous decision win over aforementioned contender Jared Cannonier last August.

    With a win over Imavov, Borralho could steal the No. 1 spot in the rankings, setting the stage for a massive title tilt against the winner of this month’s middleweight championship showdown between Dricus du Plessis and Khamzat Chimaev.

  • Nassourdine Imavov Explains Why He Declined the Backup Role for UFC 319’s Title Headliner

    Nassourdine Imavov Explains Why He Declined the Backup Role for UFC 319’s Title Headliner

    Nassourdine Imavov has no interest in being a backup fighter.

    Sitting as the top-ranked contender in the middleweight division, Imavov is ready for his first UFC title opportunity. But to get it, he’ll have to go through surging 185-pound sensation and Fighting Nerds co-founder Caio Borralo. The two will headline a loaded Fight Night card in Paris, France, when the promotion heads back to ‘The City of Light’ on September 6.

    A mere three weeks before that, Imavov and Borralho will have their eyes on UFC 319’s highly anticipated clash between reigning and defending middleweight champion, Dricus du Plessis, and undefeated Chechen monster Khamzat Chimaev.

    Despite Imavov being the No. 1 ranked contender in the division, Borralho will step on the scale as the official backup in Chicago. As it turns out, that’s because ‘The Sniper’ had already turned down the UFC’s offer to be the backup for du Plessis vs. Chimaev.

    “He’s just taking my leftover, because I declined the backup,” Imavov told MMA Junkie. “If I hadn’t declined, the UFC wouldn’t have called him. For me, being the backup fighter for a title shot is not an honor. When I want to fight for the title, I want my face on the poster.”

    “After the fight between Khamzat and DDP, everyone will forget that Caio was a backup—it’s something that has no sense.”

    A title opportunity hangs in the balance as Nassourdine Imavov gears up for his fight with Borralho

    Imavov goes into his second straight main event riding a four-fight win streak. That includes a stunning second-round knockout of former two-time titleholder Israel Adesanya in February.

    Meanwhile, Borralho enters the biggest fight of his career with a perfect 7-0 record inside the Octagon, his most recent W coming against perrenial contender Jared Cannonier.

    The winner between Imavov and Borralhoh is expected to leave Paris as the next man up for either du Plessis or Chimaev, depending on how things play out in ‘The Windy City’ later this month.

  • Robert Whittaker is heading for MMA retirement says fellow UFC middleweight

    Robert Whittaker is heading for MMA retirement says fellow UFC middleweight

    UFC middleweight Caio Borralho believes that Robert Whittaker could be getting closer and closer to retiring from the sport of mixed martial arts.

    As we know, Robert Whittaker is an absolute legend when it comes to his run in the middleweight division. He’s had some major wins and he’s even held the world title. However, after losses to Khamzat Chimaev and Reinier de Ridder, some have questioned whether or not he still has what it takes to compete at the elite level.

    Of course, Robert Whittaker himself is the only one who knows for sure how much longer he wants to continue competing, and whether or not he wants to test the waters with a venture up to light heavyweight.

    In a recent interview, though, Caio Borralho became the latest person to weigh in on the state of Robert Whittaker’s career.

    Caio Borralho believes Robert Whittaker will soon retire

    “I don’t think so,” Borralho told The Schmo on Whittaker returning to the top five. “Robert Whittaker is a f*cking legend. I’m a big fan of him and all that he’s done in the sport. (He’s) one of the GOATs in the middleweight (division). But right now, I feel that it seems like he doesn’t want to be there anymore.

    “His face says that. His body expressions say that. I don’t think he wants to go there and do, like, a five-round war again. I don’t believe that. With all due respect to him, I’m a big fan – but right now, it’s just not his moment anymore. I think he’s very close to retire or something like that.”

    Quotes via MMA Junkie

  • Alex Pereira Will Beat Magomed Ankalaev in Rematch, UFC Middleweight

    Alex Pereira Will Beat Magomed Ankalaev in Rematch, UFC Middleweight

    UFC middleweight Caio Borralho has predicted that Alex Pereira will get his revenge on Magomed Ankalaev and defeat him in their highly anticipated rematch.

    As we know, Alex Pereira is one of the most popular fighters in all of mixed martial arts. He went on an incredible run at both middleweight and light heavyweight, but his title reign at 205 pounds came to an end recently at the hands of Magomed Ankalaev. While it was a tense and fascinating encounter, Ankalaev certainly appeared to do more than enough to get his hand raised.

    Now, though, fans are getting ready to see Alex Pereira try and get his revenge. It’s going to be easier said than done given what we know about the toughness and heart of Magomed Ankalaev, but in equal measure, ‘Poatan’ can never be ruled out of any fight courtesy of his incredible power and precision.

    In a recent interview, Caio Borralho became the latest fighter to give his thoughts on what will go down when Alex Pereira and Magomed Ankalaev stand across the cage from each other for the second time.

    Caio Borralho backs Alex Pereira to beat Magomed Ankalaev in rematch

    “Alex Pereira is a hard guy to fight because he’s very intelligent, but I think this rematch will be mostly the same. Alex knows he can defend the takedowns, so now he can risk more to bring pressure and find that knockout.”

    It’s anyone’s guess as to which way this one is going to go, but one thing we know for sure is that we’re bound to see fireworks.

  • Fellow Middleweight Claims Khamzat Chimaev Will Retire If He Wins Middleweight Title At UFC 319

    Fellow Middleweight Claims Khamzat Chimaev Will Retire If He Wins Middleweight Title At UFC 319

    The UFC has just dealt with one champion retiring when Jon Jones seemed to hang up the gloves a few weeks ago (only to seemingly unretire in the wake of U.S. President Donald Trump teasing a UFC card at the White House). But could the UFC lose a second champion to retirement during the summer?

    If Caio Borralho is to be believed, that might come to fruition at UFC 319 if Khamzat Chimaev defeats Dricus Du Plessis for the middleweight championship.

    During a “Nerd Talk” segment in a recent upload to MMA Today, Borralho is in the middle of a discussion about Chimaev’s fight with DDP and how a potential fight between he and Chimaev would go down.

    “I heard somewhere some people saying that if he wins the belt, he’s going to retire,” Borralho said. “I believe it.”

    Caio Borralho Feels He Can Beat Khamzat Chimaev — As Long As Chimaev Doesn’t Retire

    Borralho did not precisely name who he heard the rumor from or where it originated; only that he’s heard “little talks” and “whispers.”

    Borralho then followed up by saying he wasn’t sure if he believed it would happen, but he hopes that Chimaev doesn’t and he ends up facing the Emirati fighter one day — potentially for the belt.

    “I think we can do a phenomenal fight,” Borralho said. “I know that I have the tools and the way to beat him. Fighting is nowadays not about being brutal only. I win all my fights with my brain, with tactics, with strategy and all that. That’s why it’s so hard to fight me because I can adapt so easy in the fight, you know?

    “And I think everybody knows that. That’s why everybody was ducking me.”

    This would not be the first time Chimaev announces retirement from the Octagon. After his impressive series of bouts in 2020 — the year of his UFC debut — against John Phillips, Rhys McKee, and Gerald Meerschaert, and his quick rise up the ranks, Chimaev appeared to announce retirement in March 2021 after complications in recovery from COVID-19.

    Chimaev would end up returning to the cage at UFC 267 that October, submitting Li Jingliang.

  • “Me and Jean Silva Are Going to Have the Belt on the Same Day” – Caio Borralho Predicts Dual Championship Glory

    “Me and Jean Silva Are Going to Have the Belt on the Same Day” – Caio Borralho Predicts Dual Championship Glory

    Caio Borralho thinks it’s just a matter of time before the Fighting Nerds take over the UFC.

    Over the last couple of years, there have been few fighters more exciting to watch than Borralho and his teammate, Jean Silva. Both have absolutely dominated their respective division’s thus far, with Borralho boasting a perfect 7-0 record inside the Octagon. In September, he’ll look to secure his 10th straight win and, more importantly, a shot at the middleweight title when he meets the division’s top-ranked contender, Nassourdine Imavov, at UFC Paris.

    A week later, Silva will look score the biggest win of his career when he meets former featherweight title challenger Diego Lopes at Noche UFC in San Antonio.

    If both fighters come out on top, Borralho believes he and Silva could end up becoming UFC champions on the same night.

    “I think me and Jean Silva are going to have the belt on the same day,” Borralho told MMA Junkie. “That’s what we’re planning! We live our dreams, and there’s a lot of power inside of it, you know? So we’re going to keep doing big things—great things—inside and outside the Octagon. You guys just need to watch!”

    Caio Borralho and Jean Silva Ride into a Pair of Potential Title Eliminators with a Heap of Momentum

    Like Borralho, Silva is unbeaten inside the Octagon, going 5-0 and riding a 13-fight win streak that dates back to November 2018. After landing a first-round KO over Melsik Baghdasaryan in April, ‘Lord’ made a relatively quick turnaround, accepting the challenge of Bryce Mitchell seven weeks later at UFC 314.

    Silva submitted ‘Thug Nasty’ in the second via ninja choke, rendering Mitchell unconscious with just over a minute to go in the round.

    Jean Silva submits Bryce Mitchell

    Meanwhile, Borralho goes into his next bout coming off a unanimous decision win over Jared Cannonier in August. Before that, he landed a highlight-reel KO over Paul Craig at UFC 301. He currently sits as the sixth-ranked contender in the middleweight division.

  • Mauricio Ruffy Touts Teammate To Beat Khamzat Chimaev, Become First UFC Champion From Fighting Nerds

    Mauricio Ruffy Touts Teammate To Beat Khamzat Chimaev, Become First UFC Champion From Fighting Nerds

    UFC lightweight contender Mauricio Ruffy has backed his teammate Caio Borralho to end the undefeated run of Khamzat Chimaev in mixed martial arts.

    Talk of Borralho and Chimaev sharing the cage has arisen this week following reports of an injury to UFC Middleweight Champion Dricus Du Plessis, who was expected to defend his gold against “Borz” this summer.

    It didn’t take long for Borralho to raise his hand as a possible replacement opponent. Like Chimaev, “The Natural” is yet to taste defeat in the UFC, winning all seven of his bouts en route to #6 in the 185-pound rankings.

    Chimaev hasn’t publicly responded to Borralho’s callout thus far, and it would seem that one of the Brazilian’s prominent Fighting Nerds stablemates is already running out of patience.

    “Enough bullshit,” Ruffy wrote on X (translated from Portuguese). “@KChimaev we all know how camp training works. @ufc send the contract, let’s take that belt! @BorralhoCaio will be the first Fighting (Nerds) to win the belt.”

  • Khamzat Chimaev Apparently Says ‘Yes’ To New Opponent After News Of Dricus Du Plessis Injury

    It hasn’t taken long for UFC middleweight Khamzat Chimaev to seemingly agree to a new matchup amid talk of an apparent injury to champion Dricus Du Plessis.

    The undefeated Chechen contender looked set for his first title opportunity on MMA’s biggest stage this summer after he breezed past the great Robert Whittaker in Abu Dhabi last October.

    But while reports placed his clash with Du Plessis on the UFC 317 card during International Fight Week in late June, Kevin Iole revealed that an injury to the South African is set to delay his third defense.

    “Borz” was quick to corroborate the news with a frustrated post on social media, and he doesn’t appear keen to wait for the champ’s recovery before returning to the cage.

    Fellow top contender Caio Borralho reacted to the news by expressing interest in facing Chimaev instead. By the sound of things, that interest is not one-sided…

    “Khamzat said yes!” Borralho wrote on X. “The only thing that makes sense is the Interim belt! This fight is gonna be bigger than him vs Dricus! Marks my words”

    It remains to be seen whether such a bout would also be of interest to the UFC higher-ups.

  • UFC Middleweight Doesn’t Give Dricus Du Plessis A Chance Against Alex Pereira: ‘He Can Beat DDP Easily’

    UFC Middleweight Doesn’t Give Dricus Du Plessis A Chance Against Alex Pereira: ‘He Can Beat DDP Easily’

    UFC middleweight champion Dricus Du Plessis is set to return at UFC 312 next month where he will put the title on the line for a second time. “Stillknocks” certainly isn’t short on contenders at 185-pounds even when looking past his next challenge, a rematch with Sean Strickland in Sydney, Australia.

    However, there is always going to be talk and debate around champions moving up or down a weight class to face another titleholder in the promotion and this is something that has interested Du Plessis in the past. It also just so happens that the current champion in the division above him is the former middleweight king also.

    Many fans expect to see Alex Pereira defend the light heavyweight title against Magomed Ankalaev in his next outing inside the Octagon. The only exception might be that because “Poatan” has become such a star for the promotion, they could look to capitalize on putting together a super fight for the Brazilian.

    Middleweight contender Caio Borralho recently trained alongside Pereira and used that experience to weigh-in on how a potential matchup between him and Du Plessis would play out if they end up meeting at some stage. He told Submission Radio that whilst the debate would change if you factor Khamzat Chimaev into the conversation, he believes that Pereira would be a tough style clash for “DDP”.

    “I think he can beat DDP easily,” Borralho told Submission Radio. “I think very easily he can beat DDP. I think Khamzat (Chimaev) is a different story because of the grappling, but ‘Poatan’ is definitely getting better at defending takedowns. He’s a big guy, very big guy. It would be hard for Khamzat to keep him down.

    “He made a good choice moving up to the light heavyweight division. … I think he can knock DDP out really easily because DDP commits a lot of mistakes in his fights and a lot of openings,” Borralho said. “If you leave even a small opening with a guy like Alex, you’re going to get knocked out.”

  • Caio Borralho Reveals Message From Israel Adesanya About 2025 Fight

    Caio Borralho Reveals Message From Israel Adesanya About 2025 Fight

    Following his win over Jared Cannonier in August, Caio Borralho has been waiting on a huge fight for his next outing. The #6-ranked middleweight has won seven fights in a row since debuting in the Octagon in April of 2022.

    It appeared for a brief moment that the Brazilian might be being lined-up for arguably the biggest fight in the division outside of fighting for the title. He had expressed interest in facing former champion Israel Adesanya following his loss at UFC 305 and it seemed like this option was being presented to “The Last Stylebender”.

    Several months later it was announced that Adesanya will be headlining the UFC’s return to Saudi Arabia on February 1 but it will be against the contender that is one spot higher than Borralho in the rankings, France’s Nassourdine Imavov. During a recent appearance on the Overdogs Podcast, the Fighting Nerds stand out spoke about this fight and gave his thoughts on how it all played out.

    “I think the UFC offered Izzy two fights: me or Imavov,” Borralho said on the Overdogs Podcast. “And then, he suddenly posted a clip studying Imavov’s tape, and I was like, ‘Come on, bro.’ I sent a message to Izzy, and was like, ‘Bro, why you choosing that?’

    “He was like, ‘Bro, we’re going to fight next year. We’re going to dance next year for the belt.’ It’s OK, I respect you if you choose that. I think he chose right. I think Imavov is a better fight for him, and I think Izzy is the favorite in this fight.”

    Adesanya said a similar thing during a recent YouTube video where he said that though Imavov was the only name that he was offered, Borralho was a name on his radar that he would have accepted if this fight was presented instead. “The Last Stylebender” referenced the message that he sent him, saying that he respects Borralho for wanting to test himself.

    Borralho also weighed in with his thoughts on the fight that has been booked for February 1, giving the former champion an advantage when it comes to the five-round duration.

    “Imavov, I think he’s good and all that, but I don’t think he has the cardio for five rounds,” Borralho said. “I don’t think he has the best mentality for five rounds. He gets frustrated a lot into the fight, and he fought a three-round fight with Brendan Allen in Paris and it was like a boring fight.

    “They were tired since the first round, and I think if he does the same thing with Izzy, Izzy is going to pick him apart. I think he’s good at fighting guys that are shorter than him. I don’t think he’s good when he’s fighting guys who are taller than him.”

  • Henry Cejudo Ranks The Standout Brazilian Stars From The Fighting Nerds

    Henry Cejudo Ranks The Standout Brazilian Stars From The Fighting Nerds

    The Fighting Nerds team out of Brazil has been one of the most exciting stables of fighters to really announce their arrival in 2024. With one fighter signing to the UFC several years ago and proving himself to be a top contender in his division, three other stand outs have made huge impacts inside the Octagon after featuring on last year’s season of the Contender Series.

    With an overall record of 11-0 with nine finishes in the UFC this year, Henry Cejudo recently ranked the four Fighting Nerds competitors that have put their team on the map. Unsurprisingly, he gave top billing to the squad’s unofficial team captain, Caio Borralho.

    Borralho has won seven fights in a row at middleweight to earn himself the #6-ranking with wins over the likes of Jared Cannonier, Paul Craig and Abus Magomedov setting him up for a huge match-up next time out. Cejudo has been particularly impressed with his wrestling and consistency.

    “I got to go with Borralho. His takedown entries are no joke. I wasn’t too sure if he was going to get tired but man, he’s special so I think he’s the first one to lead. Other than him being the first one to lead, I’m going to have to go with Jean Silva.”

    Since producing an upset on Contender Series, Silva has won three fights in a row this year at both featherweight and lightweight. His latest win over Drew Dober earned him a performance of the night bonus and though Cejudo wants to see him, and the following names, get tested against a high-level wrestler, he’s very impressed with what he has seen thus far.

    A fighter that will certainly be in the conversation for breakthrough fighter of the year is Carlos Prates who has finished all four of his opponents this year. A first round knockout against Neil Magny in his first main event at the start of this month saw him enter the welterweight rankings at #13.

    “He’s one that I really want to know how good he really is and I do want to see him get tested in that wrestling department. Does Carlos Prates have that threshold of having somebody like a Shavkat or somebody that’s going to wrestle, a Kamaru Usman, someone that’s going to bring that heavy wrestling feel. How is it that he can handle all of that?”

    Last but not least is the member of the four who fought the most recently, Mauricio Ruffy. A spectacular debut against Jamie Mullarkey opened his UFC account in style but his performance at UFC 309 where he faced James Llontop wasn’t as impressive after he secured a decision win as a massive favorite coming in.

    “He just fought this weekend. Very creative, very dangerous on what he does and I do feel like he is special.”    

  • Top Middleweight Contender Thinks He Has An Advantage Over Khamzat Chimaev Due To Previous Training Experience

    Top Middleweight Contender Thinks He Has An Advantage Over Khamzat Chimaev Due To Previous Training Experience

    Khamzat Chimaev presents a challenge to his fellow middleweight contenders that is unlike anything else they have faced in the division. We saw at UFC 294 last year that Kamaru Usman was able to make the fight competitive after weathering the early storm.

    The problem is that surviving the opening round against the aggressive grappling of the undefeated mauler is far easier than done. UFC 308 this past weekend was the best example of this to date.

    Despite all of his high level experience, former champion Robert Whittaker was unable to stop Chimaev from taking him down early on and submitting him, causing significant damage to his jaw in the process. The difficulty in preparing for someone like “Borz” is that not many people can match his skillset so fighting him comes with an element of battling the unexpected.

    This isn’t a concern for the #6-ranked contender at 185-pounds, Brazil’s Caio Borralho. Borralho previously spent some time in Sweden training with Chimaev for his bout against Nate Diaz that was scheduled for UFC 279 in 2022 but ended up with him facing Kevin Holland instead.

    Borralho isn’t trying to pursue a fight with his former training partner for this exact reason but he’s not opposed to squaring off with him in the future if it means that one of them leaves with the middleweight belt. In a recent interview with Submission Radio, he said that his previous experience training with Chimaev only helps him as both men continue to climb up the ranks.

    He believes that he has somewhat of a head start on figuring out how to beat him compared to the other top names in the division.

    “Yes, definitely. This is something that I’m ahead of all the fighters in because I know what to expect, I know what’s coming, I know how Khamzat works on his wrestling, his wall work and all this. I was with him for like one month so I was dealing with this every day, you know, so definitely I’m ahead of all the guys in the division about it.”

  • Caio Borralho Calls For Whittaker In Sydney Or Backup Role For Next Title Fight   

    Caio Borralho Calls For Whittaker In Sydney Or Backup Role For Next Title Fight   

    As the #6-ranked contender in the middleweight division, there aren’t many fights that make sense for the surging Caio Borralho right now. The Brazilian called out a former champion following his win over Jared Cannonier but doesn’t look to have gotten anywhere with it just yet.

    With UFC 312 being announced for Sydney, Australia in February, his proposed fight against Israel Adesanya would make a lot of sense. It now looks like Alexander Volkanovski won’t be on the card so getting some big names from this region in meaningful fights is sure to be high on the UFC’s list of priorities.

    In a recent interview with Submission Radio, Borralho said that fighting Robert Whittaker on this card could be an option if the former champion has healed in time from his injuries that he suffered this past weekend at UFC 308.

    “I definitely think it’s a great fight, I’m a big fan of Rob, a big fan of what he has done in this sport. I think he’s a great guy, a nice guy, but definitely it’s a fight that I want if Adesanya doesn’t want to face me in the next fight, I think Robert Whittaker is the one that I want.”

    In the mean time, Borralho is happy to wait for the right fight and revealed that he’s already put his name into the mix to be the backup fighter for the next middleweight title fight. He believes that Sean Strickland will be next to challenge the champion, Dricus Du Plessis.

    That leaves Khamzat Chimaev who he’s trained with in the past so isn’t actively pursuing a fight with unless it means securing UFC gold. As a result, Borralho is open to the idea of staying ready in case the UFC needs someone to step in.

    “In fact, I told that to the UFC, I told that to Hunter, to Mick Maynard, that I can be the backup fighter. If they want me to be, I can be the backup fighter. I’m going to make weight and gonna wait. If something happens, I’ll be ready, I’ll be more than ready.”   

  • ‘Very Specific In Our Training’ – Caio Borralho Breaks Down What Makes Fighting Nerds Special

    ‘Very Specific In Our Training’ – Caio Borralho Breaks Down What Makes Fighting Nerds Special

    Caio Borralho, who recently beat Jared Cannonier to become a top contender in the UFC middleweight division, is a member of Fighting Nerds. The mixed martial arts gym is based in São Paulo, Brazil, and has gained a ton of prominence in MMA circles lately.

    Several members of Fighting Nerds have put up impressive performances recently. For instance, Bruna Brasil defeated Molly McCann at UFC 304, Carlos Prates became the first person to knock out Li Jingliang at UFC 305, and Jean Silva stopped Drew Dober just two weeks after knocking out Charles Jourdain at UFC 303.

    Here’s why Fighting Nerds has the potential to generate multiple UFC champions according to Borralho, one of their most skilled members…

    Caio Borralho Reveals Training Strategies That Have Helped Fighting Nerds Members Excel In The UFC

    Borralho discussed what sets Fighting Nerds apart in an interview on the Inside Fighting YouTube channel recently. He highlighted that the gym focuses a lot on distance control and fighters are expected to break their fights into three stages. The first step is to establish range followed by constant movement to make the opponent miss.

    From the looks of it, Fighting Nerds fighters aim to start their fights relatively slowly. Once they’ve figured out the opponent’s style and striking patterns, they prepare to close distance and aggress which is the third stage.

    Borralho then revealed the rigorous practice that goes into perfecting their striking and distance management. For every opponent, they perform thousands of drills which explains why they’re so calm going into their fights.

    Another important step during training is studying footage. According to “The Natural”, Fighting Nerds coaches compile videos of opponents to understand how they start fights, throw strikes and takedowns, and move around the Octagon. For his latest fight, Borralho studied almost all the right hands thrown by Cannonier.

    “If we get a guy like Cannonier, like the right hand, like all right hands, almost like a lot of right video with just like big right hands of Cannonier. All his setting ups, you know, all his patterns and all this stuff. So, all take downs, all cage work that the guys do, how he behave himself in the cage work and then there’s like five six minutes of video only with cage work, you know. So, we’re very specific in our training. We have a very close approach when it comes about training and study, you know. And I think that help us a lot and I think this is it you know. We’re bunch of nerds you know!”

    All in all, Fighting Nerds members make sure to know everything about their opponent before even stepping into the Octagon. Most of the gym’s fighters are gradually climbing the ranks in their respective divisions, and it’ll be interesting to observe how quickly they can generate a champion with this approach.