July 11, 2026 · T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
Gandra
9-1-0
UnrankedBelo Horizonte, Brazil | 31 years old
Reese
10-3-0 (1 NC)
UnrankedHouston, Texas, USA | 32 years old
Power Against Reach
Gandra rolls in hot: 8 wins, 5 straight finishes, and he flatlined in 41 seconds the man Reese needed 15 minutes to beat. But the Texan is three inches taller, has actually toured the UFC, and carries a chin that's already proven it cracks. New power against real road miles.
O PONTO QUE DECIDE
New Power Against Real UFC Road Miles
Ryan Gandra is the hottest finisher you've barely seen fight. Eight straight wins, five straight finishes, and a UFC debut that made the room jump: 41 seconds to flatline Jose Daniel Medina in February. Before that, he knocked out Trent Miller to earn his contract on the Contender Series. The problem, and the reason this isn't the walkover the crowd wants, is the level. That entire streak was built on the Brazilian regional scene, in the LFA and on Contender Series, against developmental opposition. There's only one data point that screams the power is real against the top tier: Medina. Reese beat that same Medina on the cards over three full rounds in 2024. Gandra switched him off in 41 seconds in 2026. Same man, results from different planets. Across from him stands a bigger, longer, far more seasoned fighter with one fatal flaw. Reese is 6'4", 77-inch reach, range Muay Thai, eight UFC fights, wins over Todorovic and Medina, and he held up through three hard rounds with Michel Pereira. But he's been knocked out twice, both in round one (Brundage and Bekoev), and never submitted. He only folds to power — and power is exactly and only what Gandra brings. The fight is a referendum. Can Reese use the three-inch height and the reach to keep the Brazilian on the end of his jab, survive the early storm and drag the fight into UFC water Gandra has never touched? Or does Problema close the gap and land clean on a chin that's already cracked twice? If Reese gets past round one, the unknowns — Gandra's level, Gandra's UFC gas tank — start working for him. If he doesn't, the highlight reel gets one more clip.
Ryan Gandra is the hottest finisher you've barely seen fight. Eight straight wins, five straight finishes, and a UFC debut that made the room jump: 41 seconds to flatline Jose Daniel Medina in February. Before that, he knocked out Trent Miller to earn his contract on the Contender Series. The problem, and the reason this isn't the walkover the crowd wants, is the level. That entire streak was built on the Brazilian regional scene, in the LFA and on Contender Series, against developmental opposition. There's only one data point that screams the power is real against the top tier: Medina. Reese beat that same Medina on the cards over three full rounds in 2024. Gandra switched him off in 41 seconds in 2026. Same man, results from different planets. Across from him stands a bigger, longer, far more seasoned fighter with one fatal flaw. Reese is 6'4", 77-inch reach, range Muay Thai, eight UFC fights, wins over Todorovic and Medina, and he held up through three hard rounds with Michel Pereira. But he's been knocked out twice, both in round one (Brundage and Bekoev), and never submitted. He only folds to power — and power is exactly and only what Gandra brings. The fight is a referendum. Can Reese use the three-inch height and the reach to keep the Brazilian on the end of his jab, survive the early storm and drag the fight into UFC water Gandra has never touched? Or does Problema close the gap and land clean on a chin that's already cracked twice? If Reese gets past round one, the unknowns — Gandra's level, Gandra's UFC gas tank — start working for him. If he doesn't, the highlight reel gets one more clip.
Tale of the Tape
Essentially the same age, both in their physical prime.
Reese is three inches taller, a real size edge at middleweight.
Reese carries a 2.5-inch reach edge, the longer man and the one who controls range if he wants.
The central asymmetry of the fight: the Brazilian is essentially brand-new to the UFC, the Texan has toured the circuit and gone to decision three times.
Current Form
Ryan Gandra
UFC debut. Landed the hand and flatlined Jose Daniel Medina in 41 seconds. The same Medina that Reese needed three rounds and the judges to beat two years earlier. The scariest calling card of the night.
KO/TKO R1Contender Series, week 3. A first-round TKO that earned the UFC contract. Power stamped by Dana White.
KO/TKO R1LFA 197. Another round-one blackout, the trademark. The finishing streak that carried him to the Contender Series.
KO/TKO R1LFA 171. A second-round TKO, one of the few times one of his fights got past five minutes.
KO/TKO R2Bison Kombat 3. An arm-triangle submission in round one. A reminder that Problema can finish on the mat too, not just knock people out.
Sub R1Gandra is flying. Eight straight wins, five straight finishes, and a UFC debut that took the breath out of the building: 41 seconds to flatline Jose Daniel Medina in February. Before that, he knocked out Trent Miller to earn the UFC contract on the Contender Series. The caveat is the level. The whole streak was built on the Brazilian regional circuit, in the LFA and on Contender Series, against developmental opposition. The real UFC is another floor, and Reese is his first true test of size and experience. His only career loss was a first-round TKO back in 2022, early on — a reminder that his chin will also go if he eats one first.
Zachary Reese
Lost a split decision to veteran Michel Pereira in a tight fight that went to the cards. A respectable loss to a far more seasoned name, and proof Reese can hold up over three hard rounds.
Split DecisionRear-naked choke in round two. A reminder that Reese's submission game is real, especially once he gets to the back.
Sub R2Noche UFC. Ruled a no-contest in round one after an accidental foul. A fight that never really happened.
No Contest (R1)Unanimous decision over Serbian veteran Todorovic across three full rounds. Proof of a gas tank and that Reese can win at a pace, not just in a flurry.
Unanimous DecisionUFC 311. Knocked out in round one. His second UFC TKO loss (the first was Brundage), and the data point that scares most against a finisher like Gandra. The chin has gone more than once.
KO/TKO R1Reese is the definition of streaky. In his last five: a split-decision loss to Pereira, a submission of McVey, a no-contest with Dumas, a decision win over Todorovic, and a knockout loss to Bekoev. Up and down. But buried in that seesaw is something Gandra hasn't shown in the UFC: he's gone three rounds and won on the cards more than once, and he's toured the top of the division (Pereira, Todorovic, Brundage, Marquez, Medina). The problem is the chin. Two first-round TKO losses across his UFC run, to Brundage and Bekoev, and he's never been submitted. He goes down to power, not to points — and power is exactly what Gandra brings.
Level of Competition
The perfect meeting point: both men beat Jose Daniel Medina. Reese needed three rounds and the judges, in August 2024. Gandra needed 41 seconds, in February 2026. It's the most direct comparison that exists between the two, and it sells the Brazilian's power. The honest caveat: these are different windows, nearly 18 months apart, and the Medina that Gandra caught may not have been the same fighter. But the contrast in method — a 15-minute grind against an instant blackout — is real and it weighs. Beyond that, the two resumes diverge badly. Reese has toured the UFC (Pereira, Todorovic, Brundage, Bekoev, Marquez), while Gandra built his name on the Brazilian circuit and in the LFA. Reese knows the top floor. Gandra is still proving he belongs on it.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes por Minuto
Careful with Gandra's 13.0: it comes from a single UFC fight that lasted 41 seconds. It's not a real rate, it's a sample-size mirage. Gandra is a one-shot finisher, not a volume machine. Reese's 4.48 is a genuine sample, eight fights.
Precisão de Strikes (%)
Numbers close together, but Gandra's comes from 41 seconds. Both land clean when they connect.
Strikes Absorvidos/Min
Gandra's 1.70 is from 41 seconds, not a proven defense. Reese's 3.92 is real and high, consistent with two knockouts suffered: he takes a lot of damage.
Defesa de Strikes (%)
Gandra's 81% comes from 41 seconds, ignore it. Reese's 44% is real and low, which is exactly why he's already been knocked out twice in the UFC.
Takedowns por 15 Min
Neither man lives off takedowns, but Reese at least mixes them in, and that's where a path opens for the underdog. Gandra is 100% on the feet and has never had to defend a takedown in the UFC.
Defesa de Takedown (%)
Gandra's 100% is a tiny 41-second sample; his UFC takedown defense is a total unknown. Reese's 52% is real and middling: a wrestler (Brundage) has already controlled him.
Submissões por 15 Min
Reese carries a live submission game (rear-naked choke, guillotine, back-takes). Gandra barely hunts submissions. The fight should stay standing, but this is the Texan's hidden weapon.
Gandra leads in 4 categories · Reese leads in 3
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Both men finish, but in different ways. Gandra is the pure hunter: 6 TKOs and 1 submission in 9 wins, nearly all in round one, and just 2 decisions (both on the regional circuit). He needs early impact. Reese is more varied: 5 knockouts, 3 submissions and 2 decisions, including decision wins inside the UFC itself. It matters for the method: Gandra wants it over quickly, Reese can also build and win at a pace.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
The loss profiles tell the story, and both men fold only to strikes. Careful with Gandra's sample: he has just 1 loss, a first-round TKO way back in 2022, early in his career, so it's thin evidence on his chin, but it proves he'll also go if he eats one first. Reese has a larger, more revealing sample: 3 losses, 2 by TKO (Brundage and Bekoev, both in round one) and 1 by decision. He's never been submitted. The practical read: neither man goes down to submissions, both go down to power, and whoever lands the clean shot first decides it. It's a chin-against-chin duel, and Reese's has already cracked twice.
Skills Profile
Gandra
vs
Reese
Poder de Nocaute
+2 Gandra
Gandra's shot looks a tier above: flatlined Medina in 41 seconds, 6 TKOs and early finishes. Reese has pop too (a 20-second KO of Marquez), but the one-shot power leans Brazilian.
Explosão no Primeiro Round
+2 Gandra
Gandra's entire game is ending it early. Nearly all his wins came in round one. He's the most dangerous man in the fight while the clock reads zero.
Striking em Distância
+2 Reese
With three inches of height and 2.5 inches of reach, Reese's range Muay Thai controls the real estate if he stays disciplined. Gandra has to close; Reese has to keep it long.
Cardio (3 rounds)
+2 Reese
Reese has gone three rounds and won on the cards more than once in the UFC. Gandra has 41 seconds of Octagon time. The Brazilian's UFC gas tank is unknown territory.
Grappling e Finalização no Chão
+2 Reese
Reese mixes in takedowns, climbs to the back and finishes (rear-naked choke, guillotine). Gandra's takedown defense in the UFC has never been tested. If the stand-up goes wrong, it's the underdog's road.
Experiência e QI de Luta
+3 Reese
A glaring experience gap. Reese has 8 UFC fights against Pereira, Todorovic, Brundage, Bekoev, Marquez. Gandra has 41 seconds. Fight IQ on the top floor leans Texan.
Reese wins more boxes on paper: reach, UFC experience, deep water, the ground game. But the two Gandra wins — knockout power and first-round explosion — are the ones that end fights. And Reese's chin has cracked twice. The question isn't who has the better resume, it's Reese. The question is whether he survives the first five minutes and drags the Brazilian into UFC territory Gandra has never set foot in.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis is: Ryan Gandra wins because his one-shot power is real and translated instantly to the UFC (flatlined Medina in 41 seconds, a man Reese needed 15 minutes to beat), because Reese's chin has already gone twice in round one (Brundage and Bekoev) against exactly this kind of puncher, and because Gandra arrives on an 8-fight win streak with 5 straight finishes and all the momentum.
The thesis is: Ryan Gandra wins because his one-shot power is real and translated instantly to the UFC (flatlined Medina in 41 seconds, a man Reese needed 15 minutes to beat), because Reese's chin has already gone twice in round one (Brundage and Bekoev) against exactly this kind of puncher, and because Gandra arrives on an 8-fight win streak with 5 straight finishes and all the momentum.
The path is Gandra closing the distance, walking through the early exchanges, and landing on the already-cracked chin, most likely inside two rounds. It breaks down if Reese has the discipline to fight behind his 2.5-inch reach, keep the Brazilian on the end of his Muay Thai, survive the early storm and drag the fight into deep water where Gandra has zero UFC sample and Reese has three completed decisions — or if the Texan changes levels and takes down a man whose UFC takedown defense nobody has ever seen.
Conviction
Conviction 6, no higher, because I'm leaning on a genuinely strong stylistic read (power against a proven-crackable chin, plus the direct Medina parallel), but half the equation — Gandra's true level — is a near-total unknown: one UFC fight, 41 seconds, a streak built on regional and developmental opposition. The thesis is multi-dimensional (power, chin history, common opponent and momentum), not just stats plus odds, which lifts it off the 5 cap, but the missing sample on Gandra holds it at 6. This isn't a contrarian call: the books have Gandra favored too. But the edge doesn't come from the line, it comes from the Medina contrast and the two round-one knockouts Reese has already taken. It's a coin-flip with a slight tilt toward the power, and worth noting the analysis is split — good judges are on Reese for his size and wrestling.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
If Gandra's power and level are a regional-circuit mirage and Reese's UFC experience simply out-classes him at range, the pick is wrong.
- 02
If Reese fights disciplined and never lets Gandra land clean, he banks a range decision on the cards.
- 03
If Reese changes levels and takes Gandra down, the Brazilian's UFC takedown defense and bottom game are a blank page.
- 04
If it gets past round one, Gandra's cardio and composure in deep UFC water have never been seen: the unknown becomes a real risk.
Underdog Path
Reese doesn't have one road, he has two. The cleanest: use the three-inch height and 2.5-inch reach to fight long, jab Gandra's pressure, survive the first round and win on the cards, the way he did against Todorovic and Medina. Plan B lives in the wrestling: if the stand-up gets dangerous, he changes levels, takes the Brazilian down and tests Gandra's takedown defense and bottom game, both brand-new in the UFC, where the Texan climbs to the back and finishes. Both routes run through the same door: get through the first five minutes.
Required Conditions
- Fight behind the jab and the reach, without getting lured into a phone-booth war up close
- Survive Gandra's power surge in round one, the most dangerous moment of the fight
- If he's losing the exchange, use the size to clinch, take Gandra down and get it to the mat, where Gandra's takedown defense is an unknown
- Stretch the fight into rounds 2 and 3, where Gandra has no deep-water UFC sample at all
— Precedent: Reese himself beat Todorovic and Medina over three full rounds, proving he can win at range and in the cardio game. And Cody Brundage already showed a wrestler can control and knock out middleweights of this profile. A long, experienced striker beating a shorter pressure fighter, and a grappler exposing untested takedown defense, are classic MMA outcomes. The path is concrete, not a hope.
Verdict
Winner
Ryan Gandra
Method
KO/TKO
Most Likely
- 01
Winner
Ryan Gandra
Gandra because his power is real, Reese's chin has gone twice in round one, and the Medina contrast (41 seconds versus 15 minutes) sells the gap in pop. The market already sees it, so it's a moderate stake, no fat edge. Breaks if Reese fights long and disciplined or uses the wrestling on a man untested in UFC takedown defense.
- 02
Method (favorite)
Gandra by KO/TKO
It's the read most consistent with everything: Gandra finishes almost everyone early and Reese only goes down to power, never to points or submission. The method line is thinly posted on this prelim, so the number is an estimate. Breaks if Reese survives round one and stretches the fight.
- 03
Method (underdog)
Reese by decision
The cleanest road to the upset and it has to be acknowledged: Reese uses reach and cardio, pulls Gandra out of the finish-early script and takes it to the cards, the way he did against Todorovic and Medina. A conscious longshot, an estimated number, not the main read. Breaks if Gandra's power lands early.
Most Likely Outcome
Ryan Gandra, moderate stake
In a conviction-6 fight, the moneyline captures both the knockout and any decision Gandra might build, at a fair price, without betting on his UFC gas tank, which is exactly the unproven part. Moderate stake because Reese's size, reach and experience keep the upset alive the whole way.
Stats That Matter
41
seconds for Gandra to flatline Jose Daniel Medina, the same man Reese needed 15 minutes and three rounds to beat
The most direct parallel between the two, and it sells the Brazilian's power
2
TKO losses Reese has suffered in the UFC, both in round one (Brundage and Bekoev). He's never been submitted, he only goes down to power
Against a one-shot finisher like Gandra, it's the data point that scares most
8
UFC fights for Reese, with three trips to decision. He knows the deep water that Gandra, with 41 seconds of Octagon time, has never visited
If it gets past round one, the territory is unknown for the Brazilian
The Trap
Gandra by automatic R1 knockout
The public saw the 41-second clip and the two knockouts Reese has suffered, and treats the early blackout as a lock. The trap is ignoring the context. Gandra has never faced anyone with Reese's size, reach and UFC mileage, and his streak was built on the Brazilian circuit and in the LFA. Betting Gandra by R1 KO has logic and pays, but if the shot doesn't come early, the Texan's reach, proven cardio and ground game flip the equation against a man with 41 seconds of Octagon time.
The public saw the 41-second clip and the two knockouts Reese has suffered, and treats the early blackout as a lock. The trap is ignoring the context. Gandra has never faced anyone with Reese's size, reach and UFC mileage, and his streak was built on the Brazilian circuit and in the LFA. Betting Gandra by R1 KO has logic and pays, but if the shot doesn't come early, the Texan's reach, proven cardio and ground game flip the equation against a man with 41 seconds of Octagon time.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Ryan "Problema" Gandra vs Zachary "Savage" Reese | UFC 329: McGregor vs Holloway 2 | July 11, 2026 | T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
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