

June 6, 2026 · Meta APEX, Las Vegas
Silva
15-8-2 (1 NC)
Unranked FlyweightBrazil | 36 years old
Chairez
13-6 (1 NC)
Unranked FlyweightMexicali, Mexico | 30 years old
The Bulldog's Pressure vs. The Finisher from Mexicali
Silva is forward pressure, takedown attempts, and heavy hands — but he absorbs more than he lands and has been stopped twice by TKO in round three over the past year. Chairez is dangerous on the bottom, with eight of 13 wins by submission, and he came back strong down the stretch against Bunes. Three rounds at the APEX decide who keeps his job in the Flyweight division. The market has Silva, Chairez.
THE COIN FLIP
The Market Bets on Pressure. The Read Bets on Who Finishes Strong.
This is a genuine coin-flip, and the Crenas read leans slightly to the underdog. Bruno "Bulldog" Silva is forward pressure, heavy hands (six KOs in 15 wins), a durable chin, and co-holds the all-time knockdown record in UFC Flyweight history. But there are two structural problems the market is partially ignoring. First, he absorbs more than he lands: 4.69 strikes absorbed per minute against 3.95 landed. Second, at 36 he has faded late in two of his last fights — stopped by TKO in round three by Manel Kape (Dec 2024) and by TKO in round three by Joshua Van (Jun 2025), who became champion. On the other side, Edgar "Puro Chicali" Chairez is a 30-year-old Mexican finisher with eight of 13 wins by rear-naked choke and strangles, dangerous from the bottom. It's important to be straight here: unlike what was said in the initial read, Chairez HAS been finished — twice (guillotine by Jesus Aguilar in 2020, triangle by Axel Osuna in 2018) — both on the regional circuit. The thesis is NOT bulletproof durability. Against Felipe Bunes in February 2026, he survived back control and a near rear-naked choke in round one, then outworked him in rounds two and three to win on the cards. That is the real Chairez path: weather the early storm, win the transitions on the mat, and cash in on a tired opponent in rounds two and three. The fight's central question isn't technical — it's about late-fight gas and who dictates the address. Silva wants to pressure, clinch, and take it down, but putting the Mexican on his back is putting him in his best position.
This is a genuine coin-flip, and the Crenas read leans slightly to the underdog. Bruno "Bulldog" Silva is forward pressure, heavy hands (six KOs in 15 wins), a durable chin, and co-holds the all-time knockdown record in UFC Flyweight history. But there are two structural problems the market is partially ignoring. First, he absorbs more than he lands: 4.69 strikes absorbed per minute against 3.95 landed. Second, at 36 he has faded late in two of his last fights — stopped by TKO in round three by Manel Kape (Dec 2024) and by TKO in round three by Joshua Van (Jun 2025), who became champion. On the other side, Edgar "Puro Chicali" Chairez is a 30-year-old Mexican finisher with eight of 13 wins by rear-naked choke and strangles, dangerous from the bottom. It's important to be straight here: unlike what was said in the initial read, Chairez HAS been finished — twice (guillotine by Jesus Aguilar in 2020, triangle by Axel Osuna in 2018) — both on the regional circuit. The thesis is NOT bulletproof durability. Against Felipe Bunes in February 2026, he survived back control and a near rear-naked choke in round one, then outworked him in rounds two and three to win on the cards. That is the real Chairez path: weather the early storm, win the transitions on the mat, and cash in on a tired opponent in rounds two and three. The fight's central question isn't technical — it's about late-fight gas and who dictates the address. Silva wants to pressure, clinch, and take it down, but putting the Mexican on his back is putting him in his best position.
Truth A
Bruno Silva is the market favorite for a real reason. He makes the fight happen on his terms: forward pressure, clinch work, and 2.01 takedown attempts per 15 minutes with 72% takedown defense. Heavy hands that stopped Cody Durden by TKO in round two (Jul 2024) and co-hold the Flyweight knockdown record. A durable chin that absorbs punishment. Coming off a submission win over HyunSung Park (Oct 2025).
Truth B
Edgar Chairez's only UFC losses are to Joshua Van (the champion) and Tatsuro Taira (a title challenger), both by close decision — he was never stopped. Eight submissions in 13 wins, a 1.31 sub average per 15 minutes, and a ground game that punishes whoever takes him down. He turned up the volume late against Bunes after surviving a rough round one. At 30, he is six years younger than Silva. The honest caveat: he has two career submission losses (Aguilar and Osuna, both on the regional circuit), so he can be finished — it just hasn't happened in the UFC.
Tale of the Tape
Silva born Mar 1990 (36), Chairez born Jan 1996 (30). Six years younger for the Mexican — relevant in a late-fight scenario.
Chairez is 7 cm taller. A clear height edge at Flyweight.
Chairez with 15 cm more reach. A significant difference for the division — helps control range if he wants to use it.
Similar stances in practice. Silva orthodox, Chairez listed as freestyle but fights from an orthodox base.
Fight Ready in Arizona (Brazilian roots) against Entram Gym in Mexicali. Different levels of infrastructure, different approaches.
Current Form
Bruno Silva
Johnson came in as a late replacement and took the fight on the cards. Silva pressured but couldn't close the volume gap.
Split DecisionSubmission in round three in Vancouver. Silva imposed his ground game and closed it out in the third against a South Korean prospect.
Sub R3UFC 316. Van pushed the pace and stopped Silva by TKO at 4:01 of round three. Second straight late TKO loss — this time to the future champion.
TKO R3Kape accumulated damage and stopped Silva by TKO at 1:57 of round three. First clear sign of a late-fight fade.
TKO R3Comeback via uppercut. Silva absorbed pressure and landed a violent uppercut that stopped Durden by TKO in round two.
TKO R2A rollercoaster stretch that's trending the wrong way. Silva is 1-3 in his last four, and the pattern is concerning: stopped by TKO in round three by Manel Kape in December 2024, stopped again by TKO in round three by Joshua Van in June 2025 (now the Flyweight champion), and then a split decision loss to Charles Johnson in March 2026. Mixed in there are a submission win over HyunSung Park in round three (Oct 2025) and the vicious uppercut KO over Cody Durden in round two (Jul 2024) — reminders that the heavy hands are still real. Silva co-holds the all-time knockdown record in UFC Flyweight history. At 36, he trains at Fight Ready with a Muay Thai and jiu-jitsu base. The red flag is the late-fight fade: both TKO stoppages came in the third round, signaling that his gas tank and recovery are starting to cost him when fights go deep.
Edgar Chairez
Survived back control and a near rear-naked choke in round one, then outworked Bunes in rounds two and three to take the cards. Shows comeback ability and a strong late-fight engine.
Split DecisionStrangle in round one in Mexico City, with a Performance of the Night bonus. Pure submission hunting.
Sub R1 (strangle)UFC 306. Van came in on short notice and won a unanimous decision over three rounds. Loss to the guy who'd become champion.
Unanimous DecisionRear-naked choke in round one. Chairez got to the back and finished quickly against Lacerda in the rematch from the No Contest.
Sub R1 (rear-naked choke)UFC 290 debut at catchweight. Knocked Taira down in round one, but lost the cards to the future title challenger.
Unanimous DecisionA finisher's trajectory built entirely against elite-level UFC competition. Chairez debuted at UFC 290 in July 2023, dropping a narrow unanimous decision to Tatsuro Taira at catchweight — he actually scored a knockdown on Taira in round one. Since then he's strung together submissions: a rear-naked choke on Daniel Lacerda in round one (Feb 2024) and a strangle on CJ Vergara in round one with a Performance of the Night bonus (Mar 2025). His only other UFC loss was a unanimous decision to Joshua Van in September 2024 — who became champion. The most recent fight tells you everything: against Felipe Bunes in February 2026, Chairez survived back control and a near-rear-naked choke in round one, then turned up the volume in rounds two and three to win a split decision. At 30, he trains at Entram Gym in Mexicali, and his transition game and bottom-position submission hunting are the core of his style. Honest caveat on his record: both submissions he's suffered in his career came on the Mexican regional circuit (guillotine by Jesus Aguilar in 2020, triangle by Axel Osuna in 2018) — not in the UFC, where he's only lost to Taira and Van by decision.
Level of Competition
No common opponents directly. The cleanest caliber proxy is Joshua Van, the current Flyweight champion, who beat both: he stopped Silva by TKO in round three (Jun 2025) and beat Chairez by unanimous decision (Sep 2024). The difference is in the type of loss: Silva was stopped by strikes in the third round, Chairez went the full 15 minutes against Van without being finished. Chairez's only UFC losses are to Van and Tatsuro Taira (a title challenger), both by decision. Silva is 1-3 in his last four with two late TKO stoppages. The recent strength of schedule is comparable, but the ceiling against elite competition leans slightly toward Chairez: he has never been stopped in the UFC, while Silva has been stopped twice in 12 months.
Statistical Comparison
Sig. Strikes per Minute
Silva generates slightly more volume. The Bulldog's forward pressure vs. the Mexican's output.
Strike Accuracy (%)
Silva six points higher in accuracy. Cleaner and heavier when he connects.
Strikes Absorbed/Min
KEY STAT. Both fighters absorb MORE than they land. Silva takes 4.69 per minute against 3.95 landed. The signal behind the two round-three TKO stoppages.
Strike Defense (%)
Weak strike defense on both sides. Silva 52% against 46%. This is an open exchange — neither fighter is hard to hit.
Takedowns per 15 Min
Silva attempts more than twice as many. 2.01 per 15 minutes against Chairez's 0.00 — the Mexican doesn't look for takedowns. But taking Chairez down is high-risk.
Takedown Accuracy (%)
Silva converts only 25% of his attempts. Chairez doesn't attempt. Low conversion on both sides.
Takedown Defense (%)
Silva 72% (solid) against Chairez's 39% (vulnerable). Looks like a Silva edge — but Chairez accepts going down because he's dangerous from the bottom.
Silva leads in 7 categories · Chairez leads in 0
Win & Loss Distribution
Wins
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
Finisher profiles on both sides. Silva's 15 wins are well-spread: six by KO/TKO (40%), five by submission (33%), four by decision (27%), with heavy hands that co-hold the Flyweight knockdown record. Chairez is more of a ground specialist: of his 13 wins, eight are by submission (62%), four by KO/TKO (31%), and just one by decision (8%). The key difference for method betting is that Chairez's most natural path to victory is the submission from the bottom or in transition — exactly where Silva's takedown game would put him. Taking this fight to the mat against this opponent is high-risk.
Losses
KO/TKO
Submission
Decision
A structural stat that matters here — corrected from the initial read. Silva has eight losses: four by decision (50%), three by KO/TKO (38%), and one by submission (13%). Both recent TKO stoppages (Kape and Van) came in round three, pointing to a late-fight vulnerability at 36. Chairez has six losses: four by decision (67%) and two by submission (33%), zero by KO/TKO. Both submission losses happened on the Mexican regional circuit (guillotine by Jesus Aguilar, Sep 2020; triangle by Axel Osuna, Oct 2018) — not in the UFC, where he's only lost to Taira and Van by decision. For method betting, this changes the picture: you can't say Chairez is impossible to submit — he's been finished twice. But Silva's style, which takes the fight to the mat and puts the Mexican on his back, actually works against him in that department. Chairez by submission on Silva remains viable (Silva has been finished once and is regularly put on the ground). The underdog path runs through late-fight cardio and comeback ability, not infinite submission resistance.
Skills Profile
Silva
vs
Chairez
Stand-Up Striking
+1 Silva
Silva at 3.95 sig strikes per minute with 51% accuracy and genuine finishing power (Flyweight knockdown record). Pressure-forward striker, but his defense leaks.
Jiu-Jitsu and Submissions
+2 Chairez
Chairez with eight submissions in 13 wins, a 1.31 sub average, dangerous in transitions and from the bottom. Silva has five subs but doesn't hunt from the bottom. The mat favors the Mexican.
Wrestling
+2 Silva
Silva attempts 2.01 takedowns per 15 minutes with 72% takedown defense. Chairez attempts 0.00 offensively and defends at 39%. Silva controls the wrestling game — but using it here is high-risk.
Gas Tank and Late-Fight Recovery
+1 Chairez
Chairez went the full 15 minutes against Van and Taira in the UFC, but has been submitted twice on the regional circuit (Aguilar, Osuna). Silva has been stopped by TKO twice in 12 months in round three. Late-fight gas leans to the Mexican; durability is not absolute on either side.
Cardio and Recovery
+2 Chairez
Chairez outworked Bunes in rounds two and three after a rough round one. Silva faded in round three against both Kape and Van. Six years of age difference shows in the third round.
Ceiling Against Elite Competition
+1 Chairez
Both of Chairez's UFC losses came against Van (champion) and Taira (title challenger), neither by stoppage. Silva is 0-2 against the top five and has been stopped twice. Ceiling against elite competition leans slightly to the Mexican.
Silva has the edge in the early rounds: pressure, pop in his hands, and the wrestling to change levels. But the problem is that every path he takes runs into Chairez's strongest attribute. If he strikes, Silva absorbs more than he lands and has already faded late twice. If he takes it down, he puts the Mexican exactly where Chairez hunts submissions. Important not to overstate the thesis: Chairez has been submitted twice on the regional circuit, so he's not airtight — but in the UFC he has never been stopped and he finds another gear late. Chairez doesn't need to win early; he needs to survive the opening minutes and cash in on gas and submission hunting in rounds two and three. In a coin-flip, the side with the higher floor on late-fight recovery, age, and level of competition is the underdog — with the caveat that the floor doesn't include submission immunity.
Final Prediction
The Thesis
The thesis: Edgar Chairez wins because this is a coin-flip fight where his floor is slightly higher. Silva absorbs more than he lands and has been stopped by TKO in round three twice in 12 months, while Chairez posts volume late and has never been stopped in the UFC. Silva's takedown game leads directly to Chairez's best position — eight of 13 wins by submission with a 1.31 sub average.
The thesis: Edgar Chairez wins because this is a coin-flip fight where his floor is slightly higher. Silva absorbs more than he lands and has been stopped by TKO in round three twice in 12 months, while Chairez posts volume late and has never been stopped in the UFC. Silva's takedown game leads directly to Chairez's best position — eight of 13 wins by submission with a 1.31 sub average.
The path runs through Chairez surviving the early pressure and cashing in on a tired Silva in rounds two and three via gas tank, transitions, and submission hunting. HONEST CAVEAT: the initial read leaned on Chairez's perceived durability as bulletproof — that is FALSE, Chairez has been finished twice on the regional circuit (Aguilar, Osuna). Without that pillar, the thesis is weaker. It collapses if Silva lands the heavy hands early or finds the finish on the ground, since Chairez is not submission-proof.
Conviction
Conviction 5 (honest coin-flip, flagged for human review) because (1) Chairez's floor is marginally higher on late-fight cardio, recovery, and age, plus level of competition (only losses to Van and Taira), and (2) Silva's takedown game feeds right into Chairez's submission game. BUT the durability pillar — 'never been finished' — that anchored the initial read has been knocked down: Chairez has two submission losses on the regional circuit. With that gone, Silva is the market favorite for real reasons, including heavy hands that co-hold the all-time knockdown record in UFC Flyweight history, (b) if Silva's pressure works in the first ten minutes he can stop Chairez before the gas turns, and (c) Silva can potentially finish Chairez on the ground — a scenario the earlier read wrongly dismissed. Can't go above 5, and frankly the case for revisiting whether the underdog is even worth holding is real.
What Breaks This Pick
- 01
Silva lands the heavy hands — uppercut or cross — in the first ten minutes before the gas turns, the way he finished Durden
- 02
Silva keeps the fight on the feet and avoids taking it down, denying Chairez's ground game and winning on the cards via pressure
- 03
Silva finds the finish on the ground — a real scenario, since Chairez has been submitted twice in his career
Underdog Path
Chairez survives Silva's early pressure and heavy hands without getting stopped, accepts or engineers the ground game, and hunts the rear-naked choke or strangle in transition during rounds two and three — or outworks Silva on the feet and takes the cards when Silva's gas runs out in the third.
Required Conditions
- Survive Silva's pressure and heavy hands in the first ten minutes without being stopped
- Convert Silva's takedown attempts into transitions and bottom-position submission hunting without getting finished himself
- Accelerate in rounds two and three and cash in on Silva's late fade — which materialized against both Kape and Van
— Precedent: Against Felipe Bunes (Feb 2026), Chairez survived back control and a near rear-naked choke in round one, then outworked him in rounds two and three to win a split decision — exactly the late-fight pattern this matchup demands. Caveat: that precedent supports his cardio and comeback ability, not submission-proof durability. He was submitted twice in regional competition (Aguilar, Osuna), so the comparison holds for gas tank and recovery, not invincibility on the mat.
Verdict
Winner
Edgar Chairez
Method
Decision or Submission
Most Likely
- 01
Winner Underdog
Chairez
The main pick of the fight, flagged for review. The implied probability is 48% — the Crenas estimate is 51%. Coin-flip where the underdog has the marginal edge on late-fight cardio, recovery, and age, plus the ground game that punishes Silva's takedown instinct. Edge is small and fragile now that the durability thesis fell apart (Chairez has two submission losses on the regional circuit). Treat as a low-conviction read.
- 02
Method
Chairez by Submission
Speculative value play. Eight of Chairez's 13 wins are by submission and Silva has been finished before while actively hunting takedowns that open transitions. If it goes to the ground, the rear-naked choke is the most natural Chairez outcome. High risk, high reward. Note: this is a bet on Chairez's offensive ground game, not on his durability — which is not the argument here.
- 03
Total Rounds
Fight goes to R2+ (Over 1.5 rounds)
The fight tends toward rounds two and three, where the read favors the underdog. Chairez has never been stopped in the UFC and protects against an early KO from Silva in round one. This is the safest play on the board given how uncertain the moneyline has become.
- 04
Favorite Method
Silva by KO/TKO
Hedge on the other side. Only fires if Silva's pressure and heavy hands work in the first ten minutes before the gas turns. Real probability around 20-25%. This is a protection play for the upset-alert scenario — which became more plausible after the durability revision.
Most Likely Outcome
Fight goes to R2+ (Over 1.5 rounds)
With Chairez's durability thesis knocked down (two submission losses on the regional circuit), the moneyline underdog play became a fragile low-conviction read and the fight goes to human review. The over-1.5-rounds is the most defensible position: the fight tends to run deep where age and gas favor the Mexican, and Chairez has never been stopped early in the UFC. Not a high-confidence pick — just the least exposed bet in a fight that remains a true coin-flip.
Stats That Matter
2 TKOs in R3
Silva's late stoppages in 12 months
Kape (Dec 2024) and Van (Jun 2025) both stopped Silva in the third round. A clear late-fight fade signal at 36 years old.
8 of 13
Chairez wins by submission
62% of his wins come by strangle or choke. Sub average 1.31. He hunts from the bottom — exactly where Silva's takedown game would put him.
0 UFC stoppages
Chairez never stopped in the UFC
Only losses are decisions to Van and Taira in the UFC. Caveat: he was finished twice on the regional circuit (Aguilar, Osuna), so he can be submitted.
Silva's odds at
Market has Silva as a slight favorite. The Crenas pick is the underdog Chairez, going against the line.
The Trap
Trap: Silva by Clean Decision
The market will pay on Silva by decision based on his pressure and the assumption that he dictates where the fight takes place. But here's the detail: four of Silva's eight losses came by decision, and both recent stoppages happened specifically in round three, when the gas ran out. A comfortable decision win for Silva assumes he can sustain the pace for all 15 minutes against an opponent six years younger who turns up the volume late. His recent track record says otherwise. Betting Silva by decision at short odds ignores the fact that the third round belongs to Chairez.
The market will pay on Silva by decision based on his pressure and the assumption that he dictates where the fight takes place. But here's the detail: four of Silva's eight losses came by decision, and both recent stoppages happened specifically in round three, when the gas ran out. A comfortable decision win for Silva assumes he can sustain the pace for all 15 minutes against an opponent six years younger who turns up the volume late. His recent track record says otherwise. Betting Silva by decision at short odds ignores the fact that the third round belongs to Chairez.
COLISEUM - Statistical and tactical analysis. Data sourced from ufcstats.com and public sources.
Bruno "Bulldog" Silva vs Edgar "Puro Chicali" Chairez | UFC Fight Night: Muhammad vs Bonfim | June 6, 2026 | Meta APEX, Las Vegas
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