

June 14, 2026 · The White House, Washington, D.C.
Ruffy
13-2-0
#9 LightweightSão Paulo, Brazil | 29 years old
Chandler
23-10-0
#13 LightweightHigh Ridge, Missouri, USA | 40 years old
The Finisher vs the Fallen Warrior
Mauricio Ruffy is 29 years old, finishes 92% of his wins, and owns the 2025 KO of the Year. Michael Chandler is 40, has been out 14 months, has gone 1-5 in his last six UFC fights, and his chin has been stopped three times in recent years — including by Paddy Pimblett. The line opened at Ruffy and moved all the way fight week. But "Iron" has a path: explosive first-round wrestling, and the only loss on Ruffy's UFC record came from exactly a wrestler chaining takedowns within the first 30 seconds. The defensive correction has never been pressure-tested against elite. This is not a gimme.
CHANDLER'S ONE REAL PATH
Ruffy Has the Ceiling. Chandler Has a Window. The Window Closes in Round Two.
Mauricio Ruffy has finished 12 of his 13 career wins. 92% completion rate. The spinning wheel kick that dropped King Green was voted 2025 KO of the Year by LowKickMMA and every credible outlet that covered it. The TKO over Rafael Fiziev in round two — the right hand that journalists said "sounded like a baseball bat" — was the highest-caliber entry on his resume. At 29 years old with a 190 cm reach and elite volume, Ruffy is a technical striker with genuine timing and a varied arsenal. The problem is singular: his only UFC loss came at the hands of Benoît Saint Denis, who chained takedowns within the first 30 seconds of round two in Paris and finished with a guillotine choke. The takedown defense that sat at "100%" against regional fighters and pure strikers was exposed immediately. And the corrected version — worked in camp with Alexander Volkanovski — has never been tested live against an elite wrestler in a real fight. Michael Chandler is a University of Missouri Division I wrestler, four-time NCAA qualifier, three-year team captain, 100 collegiate wins on record. The wrestling is real. What no longer exists at the same intensity is the athletic explosion that defined the Chandler of age 34, because he is now 40 and has been out of competition for 14 months. His last three fights showed a chin that is giving way: Oliveira TKO'd him in 19 seconds in round two in 2021, Pimblett — who is not a knockout artist — stopped him in round three via ground-and-pound. Every minute Chandler spends trading with Ruffy without getting the fight to the mat is a minute working against him. The American's path is real but narrow: explosive wrestling in round one, before the gas drops, against takedown defense that has been corrected but never proven under fire against elite. That tension is what this fight is.
Mauricio Ruffy has finished 12 of his 13 career wins. 92% completion rate. The spinning wheel kick that dropped King Green was voted 2025 KO of the Year by LowKickMMA and every credible outlet that covered it. The TKO over Rafael Fiziev in round two — the right hand that journalists said "sounded like a baseball bat" — was the highest-caliber entry on his resume. At 29 years old with a 190 cm reach and elite volume, Ruffy is a technical striker with genuine timing and a varied arsenal. The problem is singular: his only UFC loss came at the hands of Benoît Saint Denis, who chained takedowns within the first 30 seconds of round two in Paris and finished with a guillotine choke. The takedown defense that sat at "100%" against regional fighters and pure strikers was exposed immediately. And the corrected version — worked in camp with Alexander Volkanovski — has never been tested live against an elite wrestler in a real fight. Michael Chandler is a University of Missouri Division I wrestler, four-time NCAA qualifier, three-year team captain, 100 collegiate wins on record. The wrestling is real. What no longer exists at the same intensity is the athletic explosion that defined the Chandler of age 34, because he is now 40 and has been out of competition for 14 months. His last three fights showed a chin that is giving way: Oliveira TKO'd him in 19 seconds in round two in 2021, Pimblett — who is not a knockout artist — stopped him in round three via ground-and-pound. Every minute Chandler spends trading with Ruffy without getting the fight to the mat is a minute working against him. The American's path is real but narrow: explosive wrestling in round one, before the gas drops, against takedown defense that has been corrected but never proven under fire against elite. That tension is what this fight is.
Truth A
Ruffy is the definition of a dangerous rising finisher: 92% finish rate, KO of the Year, a TKO over Fiziev with a punch that rattled the building, 29 years old with a full tank. The gap in momentum and age is massive. Chandler is in free fall — 5 losses in 6 UFC fights, his chin stopped three times in recent years including by Pimblett, 14 months of inactivity. The Iron who turned Bellator upside down is not the man walking into the Octagon at the White House.
Truth B
Ruffy's only UFC loss came via chained wrestling in the first 30 seconds. He has never been behind in a UFC fight — his response to real adversity is completely unknown. Chandler is a Division I wrestler with first-round explosive power (Hooker finished at 2:30 of round one, Ferguson flew in round two). If Chandler gets the takedown in the first two minutes before the gas drops and Ruffy's corrected defense doesn't hold, the path exists.
Tale of the Tape
Eleven years apart. In the context of a fighter with a worn chin, 14 months off, and a losing streak, the generational gap carries real weight.
Ruffy stands 7 cm taller — a structural height and reach advantage for him in stand-up exchanges.
Ruffy has nearly 9 cm of reach on Chandler. A real gap that becomes even more relevant when facing a wrestler who needs to close distance to work.
Both fighters in orthodox stance. No asymmetric stance advantage in play.
Ruffy left Fighting Nerds in May 2026 after a falling out with Jean Silva. Training independently with striking coach Lee Alves. Volkanovski, who worked takedown defense with him during camp, will be in the corner on fight night.
Current Form
Mauricio Ruffy
UFC 325, Sydney. Dropped Fiziev with a right hand in round two — described by media as sounding like a baseball bat. TKO confirmed at 4:30.
TKO R2UFC Paris. Saint Denis chained takedowns within the first 30 seconds of round two and finished with a guillotine choke. Only UFC loss.
Sub R2 (guillotine choke)UFC 313, Las Vegas. Spinning wheel kick to the temple at 2:07 of round one. Voted 2025 KO of the Year by LowKickMMA and specialized press.
KO R1 (spinning wheel kick)UFC 309, New York. The only UFC fight that went to a unanimous decision over three rounds. Opponent was making their UFC debut.
Unanimous DecisionUFC 301, Rio. UFC debut — flying knee into punches in round one. TKO at 4:42.
TKO R1 (flying knee + punches)A career trajectory built on spectacular finishes, with one real loss that defines the sole counterargument in this analysis. He made his UFC debut in May 2024 at UFC 301 in Rio and closed it out with a TKO in round one over Jamie Mullarkey — flying knee into punches. Won James Llontop by unanimous decision at UFC 309 in New York, the only UFC fight that went to the scorecards. In March 2025 at UFC 313 in Las Vegas, he ended King Green with a spinning wheel kick to the temple at 2:07 of round one — voted 2025 KO of the Year by the specialized press. In September 2025 in Paris, he was taken down by Benoît Saint Denis within 30 seconds of round two and finished via guillotine, his only UFC loss. Came back in January 2026 at UFC 325 in Sydney and dropped Fiziev with a right hand in round two at 4:30, TKO. Alexander Volkanovski was in camp and will be in the corner on fight night. Left Fighting Nerds in May 2026 after a falling out with Jean Silva, now training independently. Four wins in five UFC fights, all victories by finish.
Michael Chandler
UFC 314, Miami. Pimblett opened a cut with a knee in round three, controlled on the ground, finished with ground-and-pound. TKO at 3:07.
TKO R3UFC 309, New York. Dominated on the scorecards over five rounds. Oliveira controlled every round — 49-46 and 49-45 on the cards.
Unanimous DecisionUFC 281, New York. Tried to slam him in round three, Poirier slipped out, took the back, and locked up the rear-naked choke.
Sub R3 (rear-naked choke)UFC 274, Phoenix. KO with a front kick in round two at 0:17. His last UFC win — over four years ago.
KO R2 (front kick)UFC 268, New York. A three-round war, Gaethje controlled the late rounds. Both fighters absorbed serious damage. Chandler lost on the cards.
Unanimous DecisionA former champion in progressive decline during his UFC tenure. Three-time Bellator Lightweight champion before signing with the UFC in 2021. In his early UFC years he finished Dan Hooker via TKO in round one and knocked out Tony Ferguson in round two, but lost to Oliveira (TKO R2 for the belt), Gaethje (unanimous decision, dominant scoring), and Poirier (rear-naked choke in round three). Spent two years on the sideline between November 2022 and November 2024. In November 2024 at UFC 309 he lost to Oliveira again over five rounds, dominated on the cards. In April 2025 at UFC 314 in Miami, he lost to Paddy Pimblett via TKO in round three after Pimblett opened a cut with a knee and controlled the ground. Now at five losses in his last six UFC fights and 14 months inactive since the Pimblett defeat. Analysts and insiders are openly discussing a forced retirement if he loses again. He has been training twice a day including explosive lifts, but at 40 years old and coming off a losing streak, the math is what it is.
Level of Competition
No direct common opponents. What matters here is not the win-loss record, it's the context of the level. Chandler has five losses in the UFC, but he lost to Oliveira, Poirier, Gaethje, and Pimblett — absolute elite of the division. Ruffy went 4-1 in the UFC, but his highest-caliber win was Fiziev (solid, not elite), and his loss was to Saint Denis (top 15, elite grappler). The difference is that Chandler has failed against real elite competition. Ruffy has not yet been tested at that level. That doesn't invalidate the pick, but it is the reason conviction sits at 7 and not 8.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes per Minute
Both fighters bring high volume. Ruffy estimated at 5.0+ across multiple sources (UFCStats timeout, numbers consolidated from ESPN and search data). Chandler at 4.89 per StatsPros. Roughly even volume output, slight edge to Ruffy.
Strike Accuracy (%)
Ruffy lands at a higher rate. He is a technical striker who picks his shots — not pure volume. Chandler carries serious power but gets loopy when hunting the finish.
Strikes Absorbed/Min
KEY STAT. Chandler absorbs significantly more. 5.1 against Ruffy's ~3.8. In six UFC fights the American has been stopped by punches three times. The chin has been tested past its limit repeatedly.
Strike Defense (%)
Ruffy avoids a substantially higher percentage of incoming strikes. 58% against Chandler's 44%. The American tends to walk into damage even in fights he wins.
Takedowns per 15 Min
Chandler is hunting takedowns at a much higher rate. 2.37 per 15 minutes against near zero from Ruffy. The Brazilian does not use wrestling offensively. The takedown threat in this fight lives entirely on the Chandler side.
Takedown Accuracy (%)
Chandler hits at 41% accuracy on takedown attempts. Division I wrestling background — the threat is genuine. Ruffy is near zero because he almost never shoots offensively.
Takedown Defense (%)
CAVEAT STAT. Ruffy's takedown defense sat at 100% before Saint Denis, but those numbers came against pure strikers and regional-level wrestlers. Saint Denis exposed it within 30 seconds. The corrected version with Volkanovski has not been tested in a real fight. The 70% estimate reflects the post-BSD uncertainty, not confidence in his current defense.
Ruffy leads in 4 categories · Chandler leads in 3
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Ruffy is the most extreme finisher in the Lightweight division: 92% of wins by KO/TKO, zero submissions on record, one decision in 13 wins — and that decision came against a UFC debutant. He does not grind out cards if he can avoid it. Chandler, by contrast, shows a more balanced distribution: nearly half by KO/TKO (11), seven submissions, five decisions. Both men hunt the finish, but they hunt differently. If this ends early, it is almost certainly Ruffy landing on Chandler's chin. If it somehow goes the distance, Chandler has more experience navigating three full rounds on the scorecards.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
The loss columns reveal the danger zones. Ruffy has two career losses: one by submission (Saint Denis in Paris, who exposed the takedown defense via chain wrestling) and one from his regional circuit era (KO/TKO, pre-UFC). He has never been stopped by strikes in the Octagon. Chandler has 10 losses: five by KO/TKO (50%), one by submission (Poirier), four by decision. Those five KO/TKO losses are the most important signal in this entire fight: Freire put him away in 61 seconds, Oliveira in 19 seconds of round two, and Pimblett — not a legitimate knockout threat — finished him in round three via ground-and-pound after a cut. The Iron chin is clearly not what it was in 2016. For betting methodology: Ruffy's most likely path to victory runs through the striking game — which is exactly where Chandler's worst collapse history lives.
Skills Profile
Ruffy
vs
Chandler
Technical Striking and Variety
+4 Ruffy
Ruffy brings timing, accuracy, and a genuine arsenal — heavy right hand, spinning wheel kick, flying knee. Chandler is more direct and predictable, relying on explosiveness more than pure technique.
Knockout Power
+2 Ruffy
Ruffy finishes 92% of wins with 12 KO/TKOs in 13. Chandler has power too, but his chin has crumbled three times recently. Ruffy's power is fresher and carries more damage potential against this opponent.
Wrestling and Takedown Threat
+3 Chandler
Chandler is a Mizzou Division I wrestler with real explosive power. It is his only viable path in this fight. Ruffy almost never shoots offensively, and his takedown defense was exposed by Saint Denis.
Takedown Defense (tested)
Even
Saint Denis exposed Ruffy's takedown defense. The Volkanovski correction exists but has never been tested in a real fight under pressure. Chandler hits at 41% TD accuracy — not dominant. Toss-up with a caveat: the unknown lives on Ruffy's side.
Chin and Durability
+4 Ruffy
Chandler has been stopped three times in recent years — including by Pimblett, who is not a finisher. Oliveira TKO'd him in 19 seconds. Freire finished him in 61 seconds in 2019. Ruffy has never been stopped by strikes, never been visibly hurt in the Octagon.
Momentum and Career Trajectory
+5 Ruffy
Total asymmetry. Ruffy is on the rise with four finishes in five UFC fights, 29 years old, KO of the Year. Chandler has gone 1-5 in his last six UFC fights, is 40 years old, has been inactive for 14 months, and his chin is a known liability.
Ruffy wins the striking, the technique, the durability, and the momentum columns. Chandler holds the one real advantage that matters: Division I explosive wrestling. His window is narrow — he needs to get the fight to the mat in rounds one or two before the gas drops and before Ruffy times him. If the fight stays standing for more than a full round, the probability swings heavily toward the Brazilian. The one thing keeping conviction at 7: Ruffy's post-BSD takedown defense still hasn't been tested in a real fight, and Chandler is a Division I wrestler.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis: Mauricio Ruffy wins because (1) Chandler's chin has crumbled three times in recent years — including against Pimblett, who is not a knockout artist — and Ruffy carries a 92% finish rate with a right hand described as exceptionally heavy; the stand-up exchange is destructive for the American (source: CBS Sports/EssentiallySports/LowKickMMA); (2) Chandler's wrestling has lost effectiveness at 40 years old and 14 months inactive: he failed to impose wrestling across five rounds against Oliveira in 2024 and had his grappling turned against him by Pimblett in round three, while Ruffy specifically worked takedown defense with Volkanovski in camp (source: Yahoo Sports/UFC.com); (3) the momentum and career trajectory are completely asymmetric, with Chandler going 1-5 in his last six UFC fights and Ruffy rising with four finishes in five UFC fights (source: Verdict MMA/roster.watch). The most likely path is Chandler attempting wrestling in rounds one or two, Ruffy defending (or not — and that's the upset), and the Brazilian closing the distance with heavy shots as the American gasses in the later stages.
The thesis: Mauricio Ruffy wins because (1) Chandler's chin has crumbled three times in recent years — including against Pimblett, who is not a knockout artist — and Ruffy carries a 92% finish rate with a right hand described as exceptionally heavy; the stand-up exchange is destructive for the American (source: CBS Sports/EssentiallySports/LowKickMMA); (2) Chandler's wrestling has lost effectiveness at 40 years old and 14 months inactive: he failed to impose wrestling across five rounds against Oliveira in 2024 and had his grappling turned against him by Pimblett in round three, while Ruffy specifically worked takedown defense with Volkanovski in camp (source: Yahoo Sports/UFC.com); (3) the momentum and career trajectory are completely asymmetric, with Chandler going 1-5 in his last six UFC fights and Ruffy rising with four finishes in five UFC fights (source: Verdict MMA/roster.watch). The most likely path is Chandler attempting wrestling in rounds one or two, Ruffy defending (or not — and that's the upset), and the Brazilian closing the distance with heavy shots as the American gasses in the later stages.
This collapses if Chandler executes a takedown within the first two minutes at the chain-wrestling level Saint Denis deployed, before Ruffy's post-BSD correction has been proven under fire.
Conviction
Conviction at 7 and not 8 because two real countersignals need to be named. First, the Saint Denis blueprint exists: BSD beat Ruffy with chained wrestling that started within 30 seconds and ended in round two. Chandler is a Division I wrestler with real explosive burst on the first shot, and the quick-takedown pattern has direct precedent in this specific matchup. The archetype difference matters (BSD is a sustained-pressure wrestler; Chandler is a single-burst explosive), but the path is open. Second, Ruffy's takedown defense correction with Volkanovski has never been tested in a fight. His only post-BSD bout was against Fiziev, a pure striker who never shot once. There is zero live evidence that the correction held. That is the biggest unknown in this fight. What pushes to 7 rather than dropping to 6: Chandler's chin has absorbed too much damage to trust he survives a clean exchange if Ruffy lands flush, and Chandler's wrestling style (single explosive burst, not sustained chain wrestling like BSD) makes the path narrower than his Division I background implies. In a three-round fight with a 40-year-old Chandler returning from 14 months off, the wrestling window closes fast.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
Chandler executes the takedown within the first 90 seconds of round one with chain wrestling and maintains control before the gas drops — the same mechanics Saint Denis used in round two
- 02
Ruffy has never been behind in a UFC fight: his response to real adversity and to an elite takedown threat is a complete unknown
- 03
Leaving Fighting Nerds in May 2026 created camp instability: Ruffy trains independently, his main striking coach is Lee Alves, and Volkanovski is flying in from across the world to corner him. Team cohesion on a historic outdoor night is a genuine variable.
Underdog Path
Chandler enters round one with his explosive wrestler burst, closes distance before Ruffy establishes his jab and right hand, and takes the fight to the mat in the first 90 seconds. On the ground, with seven career submissions and heavy ground-and-pound, the American gets a finish before round two. Timing is everything: Chandler's wrestling window is round one and maybe the first half of round two before the gas goes. If he doesn't get the takedown in those opening minutes, the fight becomes a KO clinic for Ruffy.
Required Conditions
- Takedown executed within the first 90 seconds of round one, before Ruffy establishes his striking timing
- Ruffy's post-BSD takedown defense failing under Division I explosive wrestling pressure
- Maintaining ground control without eating knees from the bottom or getting reversed in a scramble
- Chandler having enough gas at 40 years old and 14 months inactive to execute the opening burst at full intensity
— Precedent: Benoît Saint Denis used chain wrestling against Ruffy in Paris (Sep 2025): went in within 30 seconds of round two, got the takedown with minimal resistance, finished with a guillotine. Chandler is a different wrestling archetype (single explosive burst versus BSD's sustained chain pressure), but the pattern of "take Ruffy off his feet before the striking game starts" has direct and recent precedent. The caveat: Saint Denis executed that in a round two of a fight with a specific rhythm. In round one of a historic outdoor card, with Chandler at 40 and 14 months out, the execution is considerably more uncertain.
Verdict
Winner
Mauricio Ruffy
Method
KO/TKO or Decision
Most Likely
- 01
Method
Ruffy by KO/TKO
Ruffy by KO/TKO because 92% of his wins end inside the distance and Chandler's chin has been stopped three times in recent years — including by Pimblett. With Chandler needing to close distance and walk into Ruffy's range to set up takedowns, he is going to eat clean shots. The probability of Ruffy winning AND winning by KO/TKO is high given both fighters' profiles. The market misprices Ruffy's moneyline (implied ~88%). The method within a Ruffy win carries more value. Collapses if Chandler secures the takedown in round one and maintains control without standing back up.
- 02
Winner
Chandler
This is not the main pick — it is the hedge bet for anyone who believes in the upset scenario. The implied probability on Chandler is ~16%. Our estimate is 27%. That's a genuine 11-point value gap. The path is narrow (takedown in round one plus control), but it exists with direct historical precedent — Saint Denis used the same blueprint. For bettors with bankroll dedicated to positive expected value, the Chandler side is the pure value play in this matchup. High risk, mathematically sound. Collapses if Ruffy defends the first takedown and finds his timing on the feet.
- 03
Total Rounds
Under 2.5 rounds
Ruffy finished four of his five UFC fights before round three. Chandler lost three of his last four by finish. If Chandler doesn't get the takedown and the fight stays on the feet, Ruffy likely ends it before the midpoint of round two. If Chandler does get the takedown and dominates, the fight could end on the mat before the final bell. The scenario that goes to a decision requires both men to avoid finishing — Ruffy defending every takedown attempt while Chandler survives three rounds of striking. Unlikely given both fighters' histories.
- 04
Method Underdog
Chandler by Submission
Far from the main pick — a speculative bet. Chandler has seven career submissions and solid ground reads. If he executes the takedown and dominates the way Saint Denis did, submission is his most viable path to a finish — more so than a KO on the feet where Ruffy's chin is untested and his hands are sharper. Even a 1-2% bankroll allocation carries positive expected value. Not a conviction bet — a coverage bet for a Chandler special performance.
Most Likely Outcome
Ruffy by KO/TKO
With Ruffy's moneyline (implied ~88% against our 70% estimate), the straight ML has no value. The best bet is the method: Ruffy by KO/TKO. He finishes 92% of wins and Chandler's chin has been stopped three times in recent years. The implied probability sits around 64%, and our estimate of Ruffy winning by KO/TKO is ~55-60% (70% win probability multiplied by roughly 80% of his winning scenarios ending by finish). The value spread is smaller than the Chandler, but this is the method play inside the main pick that pays more than it should. Alternative: for bettors comfortable with risk, Chandler carries genuine mathematical value of 11 points against our 27% estimate. Different bets for different bankroll profiles.
Stats That Matter
92%
Ruffy's finish rate
12 KO/TKOs in 13 wins. Chandler has been stopped by punches three times in recent years — including by Pimblett.
5 of 6
Chandler's UFC losses
Last UFC win: Tony Ferguson in May 2022. Over four years without beating a quality opponent.
14 months
Chandler's layoff
Inactive since the loss to Pimblett in April 2025. At 40 years old, his longest stretch away from competition in the UFC era.
0
Times Ruffy has been stopped by strikes
He has never been in danger of a KO. Chandler needs the takedown — stand-up is Ruffy's territory.
The Trap
Trap: Chandler by Wrestling as the Main Bet
The popular narrative is that Chandler will "impose his wrestling" because that's exactly what beat Ruffy before. The problem with that betting thesis stacks up fast. First, Saint Denis beat Ruffy with sustained chain wrestling — but Saint Denis is a European-trained wrestler built around sustained pressure. Chandler is an explosive burst wrestler, far more dangerous on the first shot than in continuous chain sequences. These are entirely different wrestling archetypes. Second, Chandler failed to impose wrestling over five rounds against Oliveira in 2024 — a fighter with 70% takedown defense — and his wrestling ended up being used against him by Pimblett's ground control. Third, he is 14 months inactive at age 40, and the burst that finished Hooker in 2020 belonged to a different Chandler. Betting Chandler's wrestling as a sustained game plan means betting on a tool he no longer has the capacity to run for three rounds.
The popular narrative is that Chandler will "impose his wrestling" because that's exactly what beat Ruffy before. The problem with that betting thesis stacks up fast. First, Saint Denis beat Ruffy with sustained chain wrestling — but Saint Denis is a European-trained wrestler built around sustained pressure. Chandler is an explosive burst wrestler, far more dangerous on the first shot than in continuous chain sequences. These are entirely different wrestling archetypes. Second, Chandler failed to impose wrestling over five rounds against Oliveira in 2024 — a fighter with 70% takedown defense — and his wrestling ended up being used against him by Pimblett's ground control. Third, he is 14 months inactive at age 40, and the burst that finished Hooker in 2020 belonged to a different Chandler. Betting Chandler's wrestling as a sustained game plan means betting on a tool he no longer has the capacity to run for three rounds.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Mauricio "Ruffy" de Lima Santos vs Michael "Iron" Chandler | UFC Freedom 250 | June 14, 2026 | The White House, Washington, D.C.
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