

June 6, 2026 · Meta APEX, Las Vegas
Muhammad
24-5-0
#5 WelterweightChicago, USA | 37 years old
Bonfim
19-1-0
#11 WelterweightBrasília, Brazil | 28 years old
Championship Pedigree vs Youth and Finishing Power — 25 Minutes of Truth
Belal Muhammad, former welterweight champion, is 0-2 in his last two but carries six five-round fights on his resume and an elite gas tank. Gabriel Bonfim is 28 years old, riding four straight wins, and has 13 career submissions — but he has never made it past round three and his only loss was a dramatic cardio fade. The line opened inverted (Bonfim the favorite at PlayStar, Belal the underdog), then flipped: as of fight day Belal is the slight favorite and Bonfim the underdog. Our read lands on the favorite — but the reasoning isn't line-following. The edge is structural.
THE REAL COIN FLIP
The Young Man Has the Ceiling. The Veteran Has the Floor. In 25 Minutes, the Floor Weighs More.
Belal Muhammad is the definition of a high-floor fighter. He beat Leon Edwards, Gilbert Burns, Vicente Luque, Stephen Thompson, and Sean Brady — captured the welterweight title at UFC 304 with a dominating unanimous decision over Edwards (nine takedowns, over 12 minutes of control) — and carries 90% career takedown defense. He is 0-2 in his last two, but both losses came from the same archetype: long-range pure striker. Jack Della Maddalena controlled the distance for 25 minutes to win the title back. Ian Machado Garry did the same in Qatar. That is the key. Gabriel Bonfim is NOT that archetype. The 28-year-old wants to engage forward, set up against the cage, and get the fight to the ground, where he has 13 career finishes. But that cage-and-clinch setting is exactly where Muhammad lives. The real question in this main event is not technical — it is structural: can Bonfim finish before round three, or does this become a 25-minute pace test where youth turns into burned fuel? Bonfim's only career loss was precisely a cardio collapse, and he has never seen a fourth round.
Belal Muhammad is the definition of a high-floor fighter. He beat Leon Edwards, Gilbert Burns, Vicente Luque, Stephen Thompson, and Sean Brady — captured the welterweight title at UFC 304 with a dominating unanimous decision over Edwards (nine takedowns, over 12 minutes of control) — and carries 90% career takedown defense. He is 0-2 in his last two, but both losses came from the same archetype: long-range pure striker. Jack Della Maddalena controlled the distance for 25 minutes to win the title back. Ian Machado Garry did the same in Qatar. That is the key. Gabriel Bonfim is NOT that archetype. The 28-year-old wants to engage forward, set up against the cage, and get the fight to the ground, where he has 13 career finishes. But that cage-and-clinch setting is exactly where Muhammad lives. The real question in this main event is not technical — it is structural: can Bonfim finish before round three, or does this become a 25-minute pace test where youth turns into burned fuel? Bonfim's only career loss was precisely a cardio collapse, and he has never seen a fourth round.
Truth A
Muhammad has six five-round fights on tape, cardio recognized as among the best in the welterweight division, and has never been finished in 29 professional fights. He has won five championship-round fights by wearing down opponents and closing scorecards. His 90% takedown defense is elite. Both recent losses came from strikers who beat him on the feet at range — not grapplers who took him down. Bonfim wants exactly the clinch and cage-wall setting, the territory Muhammad controls.
Truth B
Bonfim is 28 years old versus Muhammad's 37, has 13 finishes in 19 wins (68% finish rate), and is riding four straight victories including a flying-knee KO of Randy Brown, a split over Stephen Thompson, and a D'Arce choke of Khaos Williams. He is a genuine offensive grappler, which makes Muhammad's takedown attempts less clean than they normally are — he cannot just get on top without risk. But he has never made it past round three, is in his first five-round fight, and his only loss (Nicolas Dalby) was a full gas-tank fade after dominating the opening seven minutes.
Tale of the Tape
Muhammad born Jul 1988 (37 years old). Bonfim born Aug 1997 (28 years old). Nine-year age gap — a real factor in a five-round main event.
Bonfim stands two inches taller. Height advantage to the Brazilian.
Bonfim with one centimeter more reach — 184 cm to 183 cm for Muhammad. Negligible reach difference with no real impact on the matchup.
Orthodox versus orthodox. Matchup comes down to lead-foot positioning and jab control.
Muhammad trains out of Chicago with a wrestling-and-pressure base. Bonfim represents a Brazilian camp built around an elite submission game. Distinct approaches.
Current Form
Belal Muhammad
UFC Qatar. Garry controlled the striking at range for three rounds and neutralized the takedowns. Muhammad was never hurt — he just lost the cards.
Unanimous DecisionUFC 315, title defense. Della Maddalena won by UD over five rounds in one of the year's best fights. Muhammad went the full 25 minutes.
Unanimous DecisionUFC 304, main event. Won the title over Edwards with nine takedowns and over 12 minutes of control across five rounds.
Unanimous DecisionUD in three rounds. Controlled with wrestling and volume against one of the division's most dangerous submission artists.
Unanimous DecisionUD over five rounds in a main event. Constant pressure and pace management against an unbeaten fighter at the time.
Unanimous DecisionThe trajectory of a man who climbed to the top and stumbled twice in a row for the first time. He captured the welterweight title by beating Leon Edwards via unanimous decision at UFC 304 in July 2024 — nine takedowns, over 12 minutes of control, scores 48-47, 48-47, 49-46. He defended the belt against Jack Della Maddalena at UFC 315 in May 2025 and lost by unanimous decision in one of the year's best five-round fights. He turned around fast and took Ian Machado Garry at UFC Qatar in November 2025 — lost again by unanimous decision, with Garry outworking him at range every round and stuffing the takedowns. Before the JDM loss, he had strung together UDs over Edwards, Gilbert Burns (Mar 2024), and Sean Brady. At 37 years old with a career 90% takedown defense and an elite gas tank, he is the most experienced, most durable man in this fight. He has never been finished in 29 professional bouts. The honest read: both losses came from range-heavy strikers, not from anyone who tried to take him down.
Gabriel Bonfim
UFC Vegas. Planted a flying knee on Brown and finished with punches in round two. Performance of the Night, showed real forward power.
KO R2 (knee, 1:40)Split decision over a surgical veteran striker. Controversial win that divided opinions.
Split DecisionD'Arce choke in round two. Sharp transition game — locked it in after relentless forward pressure.
Sub R2 (D'Arce)UFC Denver. UD 30-27, 30-27, 29-28 over three rounds. His first UFC fight that went to the cards.
Unanimous DecisionOnly loss. Dominated the first seven minutes, ran out of gas, and got TKO'd by a body shot in round two. A full cardio fade.
TKO R2 (body shot, 4:33)The arc of a young finisher on a steady climb. He made his UFC debut in January 2023 at UFC 283 in Rio and built a 6-1 record in the organization with four straight wins. He's coming off a flying-knee KO of Randy Brown in round two back in November 2025, a controversial split decision over Stephen Thompson in July 2025, a D'Arce choke of Khaos Williams in round two in February 2025, and a UD over Ange Loosa in July 2024 — the only decision win in the UFC run. His lone career loss came against Nicolas Dalby in November 2023: TKO in round two via body shot at 4:33, after dominating the first seven minutes and running out of gas. At 28, he has 13 career submissions in 19 wins and is a genuine offensive grappler — forward pressure, dangerous ground game. His average fight time is short because he finishes early. But this is his first five-round fight, and he has never seen round four in his life.
Level of Competition
No direct common opponents. The caliber gap is the central theme of this matchup. Muhammad has beaten Leon Edwards (champion), Gilbert Burns, Vicente Luque, Stephen Thompson, and Sean Brady — and lost close to Della Maddalena (champion) and Garry, two of the best strikers in the division. Even his losses carry more resume value than most of Bonfim's wins. Bonfim built his UFC record over Randy Brown, Khaos Williams, Ange Loosa, and a controversial split over a 42-year-old Stephen Thompson at the tail end of his career. Solid roster, but no top-five opponents yet. One connection worth noting: Thompson was faced by both men, and Muhammad was far more convincing.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes per Minute
Muhammad edges Bonfim in volume — 4.43 to 3.68 sig strikes per minute. Bonfim throws less but at 46% accuracy. Over five rounds, Muhammad's pace and pressure tend to compound.
Strike Accuracy (%)
Bonfim has a three-point accuracy edge. Small difference overall — both are in the 43-46% range.
Strikes Absorbed/Min
Near even. Muhammad absorbs 3.82 per minute, Bonfim 3.68. Both eat comparable volume.
Strike Defense (%)
Bonfim at 63% versus Muhammad at 56%. The Brazilian defends more on the feet — but Muhammad's recent losses came from opponents who exploited his range, not volume.
Takedowns per 15 Min
Bonfim attempts more takedowns on paper (3.60 vs 2.14), a product of his finishing-oriented game. But Muhammad is the one who dictates cage-wall positioning.
Takedown Accuracy (%)
Bonfim connects on 56% of his attempts; Muhammad at 37%. The Brazilian lands more when he shoots — but against 90% takedown defense, that number will be tested like never before.
Takedown Defense (%)
KEY STAT. Muhammad at 90% (division elite) versus Bonfim at 76% — a 14-point gap. If Bonfim wants the ground, he has to earn it the hard way.
Muhammad leads in 2 categories · Bonfim leads in 5
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Opposite profiles. Muhammad is extreme decision-heavy: 18 of 24 wins by decision (75%), with five KO/TKOs (21%) and one submission (4%). His template is control, win rounds, close scorecards — not hunting finishes. Bonfim is the mirror image: 13 of 19 wins by submission (68%), four by KO/TKO (21%), and only two by decision (11%). For method betting, this is revealing. If the fight goes to the scorecards, that is Muhammad's home court — he builds scorecard wins better than almost anyone in the division. If the fight ends before the final bell, it is almost certainly Bonfim finishing it, because Muhammad rarely hunts the knockout. The clash of profiles defines where each man has to win.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
The structural stat that drives the method bet. Muhammad has five career losses: four by decision (80%) and just one by KO/TKO (Vicente Luque in round one back in 2016, early in his career). He has NEVER been submitted in 29 professional fights. His two recent losses (Della Maddalena and Garry) were unanimous decisions where he went the full distance without being hurt. Bonfim has one career loss — a TKO by body shot (Nicolas Dalby, R2, Nov 2023) that was a full cardio collapse after dominating the opening seven minutes. For method betting: Bonfim's path is early finish, because Muhammad has never been finished and is almost never knocked cold by anyone who isn't a heavyweight-level puncher. The most likely path for Muhammad is dragging this to the scorecards — which is exactly how Dalby exposed Bonfim's gas tank by extending the pace.
Skills Profile
Muhammad
vs
Bonfim
Striking Volume
+1 Muhammad
Muhammad edges Bonfim in volume — 4.43 sig strikes per minute to 3.68 — and uses his striking to open takedowns and apply pressure. Bonfim throws less per minute but with more accuracy and intent to finish. Pure volume edge goes to the veteran.
Knockout Power
+2 Bonfim
Bonfim with four KOs and real forward power — the flying knee on Brown was legitimately violent. Muhammad has five stoppages in 24 wins but is primarily a control fighter. Knockout power edge to the young man.
Offensive Grappling / Submission Game
+3 Bonfim
Bonfim has 13 submissions and an elite offensive ground game. Muhammad has never been finished in 29 fights, but Bonfim's submission threat is real — and the biggest he has ever faced.
Takedown Defense / Cage Control
+3 Muhammad
Muhammad at 90% takedown defense (division elite) versus Bonfim at 76%. Muhammad dictates the cage-wall and clinch setting — exactly the environment Bonfim wants to fight in.
Cardio / Five-Round Capacity
+4 Muhammad
Muhammad has six five-round fights, recognized elite cardio. Bonfim has never made it past round three and his only loss was a full gas-tank fade against Dalby. This is the biggest gap in the fight.
Strength of Schedule
+4 Muhammad
Muhammad has beaten champions and top-ten opponents and lost close to two elite strikers. Bonfim has not yet faced a top-five opponent. The level-of-competition gap is enormous.
Bonfim has the advantage in the first 15 minutes: forward power, a dangerous finishing game, and youth. Muhammad has the structural advantage as the fight stretches: five-round cardio, 90% takedown defense, cage-wall control, and a strength of schedule that is in a different league. The fight is a race — can Bonfim finish early, or does Muhammad impose his pace and take over in the late rounds? The detail that matters most: Bonfim wants to fight exactly where Muhammad is strongest, in the clinch and on the cage, which is the opposite of the long-range strikers who have recently beaten Muhammad.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis: Muhammad wins because (1) this is a five-round main event and he has six 25-minute fights on tape, elite cardio, going up against a 28-year-old who has never seen round four and whose only career loss was a full cardio collapse, (2) Bonfim wants to fight exactly where Muhammad is strongest — clinch work and cage wrestling — unlike the long-range strikers (Della Maddalena, Garry) who recently beat Muhammad on the feet, and Muhammad's 90% takedown defense plus his zero-finishes-in-29-fights record wall off Bonfim's primary path, (3) Muhammad's strength of schedule is miles ahead — he has beaten champions and top-10 fighters and lost close to elite strikers, while Bonfim has yet to face a top-five opponent.
The thesis: Muhammad wins because (1) this is a five-round main event and he has six 25-minute fights on tape, elite cardio, going up against a 28-year-old who has never seen round four and whose only career loss was a full cardio collapse, (2) Bonfim wants to fight exactly where Muhammad is strongest — clinch work and cage wrestling — unlike the long-range strikers (Della Maddalena, Garry) who recently beat Muhammad on the feet, and Muhammad's 90% takedown defense plus his zero-finishes-in-29-fights record wall off Bonfim's primary path, (3) Muhammad's strength of schedule is miles ahead — he has beaten champions and top-10 fighters and lost close to elite strikers, while Bonfim has yet to face a top-five opponent.
The path runs through Muhammad surviving the first ten minutes of power and submission threat, getting established at the cage wall, controlling in the clinch, and building the scorecards as Bonfim's gas fades in the late rounds.
This collapses if Bonfim lands his power early or catches a transition before the pace test kicks in.
Conviction
Conviction 6 (not 7) because (1) the five-round cardio gap is the biggest weapon in this fight and historically reliable for Muhammad, (2) Muhammad's 90% takedown defense and Bonfim walking directly into the clinch-and-cage setting where Muhammad excels, (3) Muhammad has never been finished in 29 fights, walling off Bonfim's main path, (4) the strength of schedule gap is stark. But Muhammad is 37 and coming off back-to-back losses — possible decline that cannot be ignored, (b) Bonfim is a genuine offensive finisher with 13 subs, the biggest submission threat Muhammad has ever faced, (c) Bonfim's forward power, as shown on Brown, is real in those first ten minutes. That is why we are not going to 7. This is a genuine coin flip where we are choosing the side with the higher floor.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
Bonfim lands his forward power — knee, straight right — in the first ten minutes before gas becomes a problem
- 02
Bonfim catches a submission transition off a clinch or takedown attempt, the setting where he has 13 career finishes
- 03
Muhammad underestimates the young man's pressure and exchanges at close range without managing distance and pace
- 04
Real physical decline at 37 coming off two losses means Muhammad's gas tank does not hold up the way his track record suggests
Underdog Path
Bonfim has two windows, both must open early. Path A (submission): pressure forward in rounds one and two, force clinch or a scramble, and lock in one of his 13 career finishes before the gas becomes a factor. Path B (KO): land his forward power — the flying knee that ended Brown showed real impact — when Muhammad tries to establish cage control. Both paths require ending the fight in the first 10 to 15 minutes, because after that the territory belongs to Muhammad and Bonfim's gas tank, never tested in a championship round, becomes the most dangerous variable in his career.
Required Conditions
- Land power or a submission attempt in the first ten minutes, before the pace test begins
- Force the clinch and the ground without giving Muhammad time to establish cage control
- Survive and neutralize Muhammad's wrestling pressure without burning excessive gas
- Do not let the fight go past round three, where his untested cardio becomes the biggest risk of his career
— Precedent: Bonfim's flying-knee KO of Randy Brown (Nov 2025) and his D'Arce choke of Khaos Williams (Feb 2025) show that his power and finishing game close fights early when he connects. But the precedent that cuts the other way is his own loss: against Nicolas Dalby (Nov 2023) he dominated for seven minutes then collapsed from gas in round two. In a five-round main event, that is the most important data point — and none of his wins have gone beyond round three.
Verdict
Winner
Belal Muhammad
Method
Unanimous Decision
Most Likely
- 01
Method
Muhammad by Decision
Muhammad is extreme decision-heavy — 75% of his wins have gone to the cards — and has never been finished in 29 fights. Bonfim has only two career decision wins and faded against the one opponent who extended the pace. If the fight goes long, the scorecards belong to Muhammad. This is the best direct value on the card: it cashes the main pick at plus money.
- 02
Total Rounds
Over 2.5 Rounds
Muhammad has never been finished and is rarely knocked out cold. Bonfim's path is early finish, but 90% takedown defense and the most durable chin in the division make that harder than the record suggests. The statistical lean is toward this fight stretching into Muhammad's territory.
- 03
Winner
Muhammad
Main pick. The line opened with Bonfim as the favorite and moved to Muhammad by fight day. The implied probability is roughly 56%, and our estimate is 60%. There is a small edge of about 4 points — not the fat value that existed at the open. The moneyline is the right side, but the price is close to fair and it is not the best value play on the card.
- 04
Method Underdog
Bonfim by Submission
High-risk, against-the-grain play. Only works if Bonfim lands the submission in the first ten minutes against a man who has never been finished. Real probability is 12 to 15%. No direct edge at these odds — it is a hedge for anyone who believes in Bonfim's ceiling.
Most Likely Outcome
Muhammad by Decision
With the line already corrected to Muhammad as a slight favorite, the straight moneyline has lost the fat value it had at the open and is now close to a fair price. The best bet is method: Muhammad by decision at plus money. He is extreme decision-heavy (75% of his wins went to the scorecards), has never been finished in 29 fights, and closes cards by grinding pace — while Bonfim has only two career decision wins and his only loss was a full cardio fade. The most likely path for this fight (Muhammad taking it deep and winning late rounds as Bonfim's gas fades) pays above — real advantage well above the current moneyline price. The downside: if Bonfim lands the early finish, this loses immediately, which is why it should not be a base-of-bankroll bet.
Stats That Matter
6 vs 0
Five-round fights on resume
Muhammad has been 25 minutes six times and beat a champion by extending the pace. Bonfim has never made it past round three.
90% vs 76%
Takedown defense: Muhammad vs Bonfim
A 14-point gap. Muhammad controls the clinch and the cage wall — exactly where Bonfim wants to fight to finish.
0
Times Muhammad has been finished
Zero finishes in 29 fights. Bonfim's primary path — submission — runs into the sturdiest wall in the division.
37 vs 28
Age
Nine-year gap. The caveat on this pick: Muhammad is coming off two straight losses at 37, possible decline that cannot be ignored. That's why conviction sits at 6, not 7.
The Trap
Trap: Bonfim by Early Finish
The line opened with Bonfim as the favorite and recreational money still wants to back his finishing ability — 13 career subs and four straight wins is a compelling story. Even with the market having already shifted to Muhammad as a slight favorite, the thesis of Bonfim ending it early remains popular. But there are two problems. First, Muhammad has NEVER been finished in 29 professional fights and carries 90% takedown defense, which makes an early finish far harder than Bonfim's resume implies. Second — and this is the bigger point — Bonfim has never gone past round three and his only loss was a dramatic cardio fade against Dalby, exactly the kind of pace test that Muhammad applies better than anyone in the division. Betting on Bonfim to finish Muhammad in a five-round main event is betting he does to Muhammad what he has never done to anyone — finish a man before the gas runs out, against the most durable fighter in the division.
The line opened with Bonfim as the favorite and recreational money still wants to back his finishing ability — 13 career subs and four straight wins is a compelling story. Even with the market having already shifted to Muhammad as a slight favorite, the thesis of Bonfim ending it early remains popular. But there are two problems. First, Muhammad has NEVER been finished in 29 professional fights and carries 90% takedown defense, which makes an early finish far harder than Bonfim's resume implies. Second — and this is the bigger point — Bonfim has never gone past round three and his only loss was a dramatic cardio fade against Dalby, exactly the kind of pace test that Muhammad applies better than anyone in the division. Betting on Bonfim to finish Muhammad in a five-round main event is betting he does to Muhammad what he has never done to anyone — finish a man before the gas runs out, against the most durable fighter in the division.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Belal "Remember The Name" Muhammad vs Gabriel "Marretinha" Bonfim | UFC Fight Night: Muhammad vs Bonfim | June 6, 2026 | Meta APEX, Las Vegas
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