June 27, 2026 · National Gymnastics Arena, Baku
Yakhyaev
9-0-0
N/RChechnya, Russia | 25 years old
Walker
7-2-0
N/RNew Haven, USA | 26 years old
The Undefeated Hunter
Yakhyaev arrived in the UFC with the fastest submission in light heavyweight history. Walker has heavy hands, but his striking defense is leaky and he's never faced a sambist who lives on your back.
O PONTO QUE DECIDE
It's a Ground Fight or It Isn't
Yakhyaev is an undefeated sambist who lives off one thing: close the distance, get the takedown, and choke. He's 9-0 with eight wins by finish, seven of them in the first round. In his UFC debut, he locked up a rear-naked choke on Cerqueira in 33 seconds, the fastest submission in promotional light heavyweight history. He followed it up with another rear-naked choke on Ribeiro, also in round one. A Master of Sports in Combat Sambo, he doesn't trade to win a debate, he trades to close the gap and drag you onto his turf. Julius Walker is exactly the kind of opponent that profile feasts on. The American has heavy hands, four KOs in seven wins, but his striking defense sits at 43% and Jacoby proved in February that he sits down when the clean right hand lands. More to the point: Walker is an initiative fighter who shoots for his own takedowns, and when they don't land, the way they didn't against Menifield, he burns energy in the clinch without finishing them. Against a sambist who stuffs takedowns and hunts the back, that's the worst possible script. The question isn't whether Yakhyaev wants this on the mat. It's whether Walker can stop it.
Yakhyaev is an undefeated sambist who lives off one thing: close the distance, get the takedown, and choke. He's 9-0 with eight wins by finish, seven of them in the first round. In his UFC debut, he locked up a rear-naked choke on Cerqueira in 33 seconds, the fastest submission in promotional light heavyweight history. He followed it up with another rear-naked choke on Ribeiro, also in round one. A Master of Sports in Combat Sambo, he doesn't trade to win a debate, he trades to close the gap and drag you onto his turf. Julius Walker is exactly the kind of opponent that profile feasts on. The American has heavy hands, four KOs in seven wins, but his striking defense sits at 43% and Jacoby proved in February that he sits down when the clean right hand lands. More to the point: Walker is an initiative fighter who shoots for his own takedowns, and when they don't land, the way they didn't against Menifield, he burns energy in the clinch without finishing them. Against a sambist who stuffs takedowns and hunts the back, that's the worst possible script. The question isn't whether Yakhyaev wants this on the mat. It's whether Walker can stop it.
Truth A
Walker genuinely hits hard, and Yakhyaev's chin has never been tested in a long round against a light heavyweight who lands clean. If this stays standing long enough, the American has the power to flip everything with one shot, and nobody has seen the Russian past the first round in years.
Truth B
But for that, the fight has to stay standing, and everything in Yakhyaev's game is built to keep it from staying there. Takedown defense, clinch entries, back-takes. Walker has never faced anyone with this kind of control-and-finish pressure.
Tale of the Tape
Yakhyaev is 1 year younger
Walker is 2 inches taller
Current Form
Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev
UFC Vegas 115. Closed the distance, took the back, and locked in the rear-naked choke. Second finish in two UFC outings, once again in round one.
Sub R1UFC debut. Rear-naked choke in 33 seconds, the fastest submission in promotional light heavyweight history. A ridiculous calling card.
Sub R1Dana White's Contender Series. Landed an overhand right right off the opening bell and swarmed with punches and knees. Contract earned in seconds.
TKO R1Another first-round rear-naked choke on the European regional scene. The close-the-distance-and-choke pattern on repeat.
Sub R1First-round guillotine. When the opponent shoots or drops levels, the Russian capitalizes and locks up the finish.
Sub R1Undefeated at 9-0, 2-0 in the UFC, and both promotional wins came by first-round rear-naked choke. The 33-second submission of Cerqueira is the fastest sub in UFC light heavyweight history. He rolls in off three straight first-round finishes, all quick. The signal is a prospect on fire, with one honest caveat: it's been years since anyone has seen the Russian need a second round.
Julius Walker
UFC Vegas 113. Competitive opening round, but Jacoby made adjustments, sat him down with the right, and finished in the second. The chin got rattled for real.
TKO R2First UFC win. Weathered all three rounds and took the unanimous decision, proof he has the gas for a long fight when one happens.
Unanimous DecisionShort-notice UFC debut. Split-decision loss to Menifield in a war that earned Fight of the Night. Shot for takedowns and couldn't finish them.
Split DecisionFirst-round knockout on the regional scene. Heavy hands solving it early, like in almost every pre-UFC win.
TKO R1Another first-round knockout. A run of quick finishes that built his puncher's reputation before the UFC call.
TKO R11-2 in the UFC and coming off a hard knockout. In February, Jacoby sat him down with the right hand and stopped him in the second. Before that, a decision over Cerqueira and a close debut loss to Menifield that earned Fight of the Night. Walker has the power and the nerve to scrap with anyone, but the arrow is pointing down, and the last shot he took was a reminder that his chin has already been rattled.
Level of Competition
Both men share one opponent, and the contrast is the heart of this analysis: Raffael Cerqueira. Yakhyaev submitted Cerqueira with a rear-naked choke in 33 seconds. Walker needed all three rounds to beat the same man on the cards. It doesn't prove everything, but it shows the gap in finishing ability between the two. Beyond that, neither has faced the top of the division. Walker has slightly more tested octagon experience, with hard fights against Menifield and Jacoby, but his UFC ledger reads 1-2. Yakhyaev is the rawer resume, but the more dominant in what he delivered.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes por Minuto
Yakhyaev's output is much higher, even if on a small octagon sample
Precisão de Strikes (%)
Strikes Absorvidos/Min
Walker absorbs far more and got sat down by Jacoby
Defesa de Strikes (%)
Walker's leaky defense is the doorway into this fight
Takedowns por 15 Min
Yakhyaev is the sambist who lives off takedowns, high number on a short sample
Precisão de Takedown (%)
Defesa de Takedown (%)
Both show 100% takedown defense, but on tiny octagon time
Submissões por 15 Min
The number that defines the profile: Yakhyaev is a submission machine, Walker is no threat off his back
Yakhyaev leads in 7 categories · Walker leads in 0
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Yakhyaev is a submission machine: five of his nine wins by sub, three by knockout, and just one by decision, with eight of nine wins by finish and seven of them in the first round. The rear-naked choke is the primary weapon, but the overhand finishes too. Walker is a different kind of finisher: four KOs in seven wins, all quick on the regional scene, plus two submissions and one decision. It matters for the method: both can end it early, but Yakhyaev's path runs through the mat and Walker's through the stand-up. Whoever imposes his own turf gets the finish.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Yakhyaev has never lost: 9-0, zero defeats, nothing to dissect and everything to prove against real adversity. Walker shows exactly the profile that worries you in this matchup. His two losses came in different ways, one by knockout (Jacoby sat him down with the right in February) and one by split decision (Menifield, who stuffed his takedowns and won on the cards). The read is straightforward: Walker is finishable on the feet when his chin gets rattled, and he's never been tested by a grappler who hunts the back the way Yakhyaev does. There's no submission loss on record because he hasn't faced that profile yet. That's exactly what's coming.
Skills Profile
Yakhyaev
vs
Walker
Striking em Distância
+1 Walker
Walker has the heavier hands and more long-range octagon experience, but the Russian also hits hard and is more accurate.
Striking em Curta Distância
+3 Yakhyaev
Up close, Yakhyaev shortens the distance to take you down and Walker gets exposed. His 43% defense becomes a serious problem here.
Poder de Nocaute
+1 Walker
Both hit hard. Walker has four KOs in seven wins, Yakhyaev has the overhand that flattened Lorenz off the opening bell at DWCS.
Defesa de Striking
+2 Yakhyaev
Walker absorbs 4.03 strikes per minute and got sat down by Jacoby. Yakhyaev is harder to hit clean, with 57% defense.
Grappling e Clinch
+4 Yakhyaev
This is the chasm of the fight. Yakhyaev is a Master of Sports in Combat Sambo, lives off takedowns and the rear-naked choke, and submitted five of nine opponents. Walker is no threat off his back and couldn't even finish a takedown against Menifield.
Cardio (5 rounds)
+2 Walker
Walker has already weathered three hard rounds against Menifield and Cerqueira. Yakhyaev hasn't needed a second round in years, so his cardio in a long fight is an unknown.
Walker has the edge if the fight stays standing at long range for a while, where his power and trading experience show up. Yakhyaev wins almost everywhere else, and especially where it matters most: in close, in the clinch, and on the mat. The grappling chasm is so wide that the only real question is whether Walker can keep it standing, and nothing in his history suggests he can.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis is: Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev wins because he's an undefeated sambist who finishes on the mat and draws exactly the right opponent for it, with five submissions in nine wins and the fastest sub in UFC light heavyweight history, because Walker's 43% striking defense and already-rattled chin, sat down by Jacoby in February, turn any close-range exchange into real risk, and because the American never completed a single takedown against Menifield and has no way to stop a grappler who lives off shortening the distance and hunting the back.
The thesis is: Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev wins because he's an undefeated sambist who finishes on the mat and draws exactly the right opponent for it, with five submissions in nine wins and the fastest sub in UFC light heavyweight history, because Walker's 43% striking defense and already-rattled chin, sat down by Jacoby in February, turn any close-range exchange into real risk, and because the American never completed a single takedown against Menifield and has no way to stop a grappler who lives off shortening the distance and hunting the back.
The path is Yakhyaev weathering the early long-range trading, closing into the clinch, getting the takedown, and locking the rear-naked choke in the first or second round. It breaks down if Walker uses his 2-inch height and punching power to land the clean right early, before the Russian gets to the clinch, or if Yakhyaev's cardio, untested in a long round for years, comes due in a fight that drags past the second round on the feet.
Conviction
Conviction 7, no higher, because the thesis leans on four distinct dimensions that converge: style (finishing sambist against a striker with leaky defense), stats (five subs in nine, Walker's 43% striking defense), momentum (Yakhyaev on three straight quick finishes, Walker coming off a knockout), and the physical (Walker's already-rattled chin against the Russian's control pressure). The grappling chasm is the most solid factor: Walker didn't complete a takedown even against Menifield and has no tool off his back. What holds the conviction at 7 instead of pushing it to 8 or 9 is honesty about what we don't know: Yakhyaev has roughly four minutes of total octagon time, hasn't been past the first round in years, and Walker has real punching power to punish any miscalculated entry. This isn't a market read. The edge comes from the style matchup and Walker's leaky defense, not from the line.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
If Walker lands the clean right in the early minutes, before the clinch, he has the power to sit down a Yakhyaev whose chin has never been tested by a light heavyweight who hits hard.
- 02
If Yakhyaev can't land the first takedown and the fight stays standing for a while, his cardio, untaxed in a long round for years, becomes the biggest unknown of the night.
- 03
If Walker repeats the takedown-defense posture he tried to impose on Menifield, but now from the right side, stuffing the Russian's entries with underhooks, the submission thesis falls apart.
- 04
If the fight gets past the second round, Yakhyaev's entire history of quick finishes loses predictive value, because nobody has seen how he operates once an opponent survives.
Underdog Path
Walker keeps the fight at long range, uses the jab and his height to deny Yakhyaev the entry, and hunts the right hand that flattened opponents on the regional scene. The Russian has never been forced into a long round against a light heavyweight who hits hard, so if Walker survives the first takedown attempt and drags the fight into the later minutes standing, his power can show up in a single shot, the same way it showed up for Jacoby on the other side.
Required Conditions
- Defend the first and second takedown entry from Yakhyaev without hitting the mat
- Keep the fight at long range with the jab and the 2-inch height edge, never accepting the clinch up close
- Land the clean right before the Russian shortens the distance, exploiting that Yakhyaev's chin has never been tested
- Push the fight into the later minutes on the feet and bet that the prospect's cardio, never taxed in a long round, comes due
— Precedent: Menifield vs Walker (UFC Seattle, February 2025): Menifield stuffed Walker's takedowns with underhooks and won on the cards, showing the American's grappling pressure can be neutralized. Here the roles flip, but it proves takedown defense decides the night. For Walker's side, it's the punching power against a Russian who's raw in the octagon, in the mold of what Jacoby did to Walker himself.
Verdict
Winner
Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev
Method
Submission
Most Likely
- 01
Winner
Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev
Yakhyaev because the grappling chasm is real and Walker has no way to keep this standing against a sambist who lives off shortening the distance. The price is short and the market already sees it, so there's no fat value. Breaks if Walker lands the right early or stuffs every takedown.
- 02
Método
Yakhyaev by submission
Submission because it's the Russian's primary weapon, five subs in nine wins and two rear-naked chokes in the UFC, against a Walker with no tested ground defense at this level. It pays well by not locking a round. Breaks if the fight stays standing or the knockout comes first.
- 03
Como termina (qualquer lutador)
Fight does not go to decision
No decision because both are finishers, Yakhyaev by sub or knockout and Walker by punching power if it stays standing. Both profiles push toward a finish. Breaks only in a tactical, stalled-out fight, rare for these styles.
- 04
Vencedor azarão
Julius Walker by KO/TKO
Walker by knockout as a longshot because it's the cleanest way the underdog wins: the heavy right on a Russian who's raw in the octagon, with a chin never tested, before the clinch. The market underrates the American's power. Breaks if Yakhyaev shortens the distance and gets it to the mat early.
Most Likely Outcome
Yakhyaev by submission
It's the soundest read in the analysis: the Russian is a submission machine and Walker has no tool off his back and no tested ground defense. The price still pays because it doesn't lock a round. Conviction 7 means don't size it up, because the prospect's cardio and chin remain unknowns and Walker's power is real.
Stats That Matter
33s
Yakhyaev's submission of Cerqueira, the fastest sub in UFC light heavyweight history
Walker needed all three rounds to beat the same Cerqueira on the cards
43%
Walker's striking defense, leaky up close and punished by Jacoby in February
It's the doorway into the Russian's clinch and takedown
ZERO
completed takedowns by Walker against Menifield, who stuffed everything with underhooks
No tool off his back against a sambist who hunts the choke
The Trap
Yakhyaev by rear-naked choke in R1
The public will look at the 33-second submission and bet heavily on Yakhyaev by sub in the first round, assuming it repeats. But that ignores that Walker has already weathered three hard rounds against Menifield and Cerqueira and isn't the type to hand over his neck right away. The submission path is real, but it may take longer than the public projects, and Walker's rattled chin also opens the knockout door. Locking everything into an R1 sub at a short price is taking the bait on the record.
The public will look at the 33-second submission and bet heavily on Yakhyaev by sub in the first round, assuming it repeats. But that ignores that Walker has already weathered three hard rounds against Menifield and Cerqueira and isn't the type to hand over his neck right away. The submission path is real, but it may take longer than the public projects, and Walker's rattled chin also opens the knockout door. Locking everything into an R1 sub at a short price is taking the bait on the record.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Abdul-Rakhman "The Hunter" Yakhyaev vs Julius "Juice Box" Walker | UFC Fight Night: Fiziev vs Torres | June 27, 2026 | National Gymnastics Arena, Baku
Read the whole card, free
Drop your email and unlock every fight's breakdown on the card. No payment, no password.
- Every fight on the card, full breakdown
- Scenarios and the model's call for each fight
- Access to upcoming cards too
By continuing you agree to receive Coliseum updates and to our Privacy Policy. Opt out anytime.