A dominant 50-45 shutout of former champion Belal Muhammad at UFC Vegas 118 has lifted the Brazilian to number five in the world and set up one of the most compelling title queues in recent memory at 170 pounds.

Gabriel Bonfim’s performance at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas on June 6 was not a close-run thing. Five rounds of calf kicks, clean jabs, and sustained pressure produced three identical 50-45 scorecards, a unanimous decision result that moved Bonfim from 11th to fifth in the official UFC welterweight rankings. He is 28 years old, now 20-1, and according to UFC Stats landed 128 significant strikes in the main event, more than he had managed across his previous three UFC outings combined.
The victim was no ordinary opponent. Belal Muhammad came in ranked fifth himself, a former welterweight champion who had gone 10 fights unbeaten before losing the title to Jack Della Maddalena at UFC 315 in May 2025. Three defeats in a row since that night have now moved Muhammad down to seventh, and the question being asked across the sport this week is whether one of the division’s most durable top-10 fixtures has hit a wall he cannot climb.
For Bonfim, the calculus is simpler. “JDM stay there,” he said at the post-fight press conference, calling out former champion Della Maddalena. “You’re next.” A message that carries more weight than it might have 48 hours ago.
Calf Kicks and Control: How Bonfim Dismantled Muhammad’s Game Plan
The tactical blueprint Bonfim used against Muhammad was not complicated, but it was executed with a precision that left few answers. The calf kick was the primary weapon. Muhammad, a calculating southpaw who has built his career on wrestling and volume striking, repeatedly switched stances to absorb the damage. It slowed his footwork, disrupted his timing, and prevented him from establishing the pressure game that has been central to his identity since 2019.
According to RotoWire, whose expert coverage includes Caesars Sportsbook promo code and comprehensive sportsbook analysis, the UFC welterweight division is generating some of the heaviest betting interest of the 2026 combat sports calendar, with sharp action on Bonfim’s title trajectory reflecting wider confidence in his run toward 170-pound gold.
“The way Bonfim targeted the lead leg from round one changed the entire fight,” one observer noted. “Muhammad usually controls distance, but he was on the back foot every time he tried to load up. The calf kick basically took his wrestling threat off the table because he could not plant his feet.”
Bonfim also bloodied Muhammad’s nose early, a superficial injury that accumulated over 25 minutes and added to the sense that the Brazilian was winning every exchange. By the championship rounds, there was no tension in the arena. All three judges scored every round for the same fighter. It was a technical dismantling, not a war.
The Queue Above Him Is Short and Complicated
Bonfim’s call-out of Della Maddalena is strategically sound. JDM, who lost the title to Islam Makhachev at UFC 322 in November 2025 and then dropped a third-round TKO to Carlos Prates in Perth in May 2026, is no longer the champion but remains one of the most marketable fighters at 170 pounds. A fight between the two would draw, tell a clean story, and settle where Della Maddalena sits in the new landscape of the division.
The broader picture at welterweight is, by any measure, unusually rich. Makhachev holds the belt after beating Della Maddalena in New York and is set to make his first welterweight defense at UFC 329 in July. Ahead of Bonfim in the rankings sit Ian Machado Garry, Carlos Prates, Michael Morales, and the champion. Behind him, Sean Brady at sixth has already flagged interest in a Bonfim fight.
“He’s a tough matchup, he’s a big guy for 170, good submissions, good on his feet,” Brady said on the Paramount+ post-show. “But I think I’m the best in the world, and I have to go prove it and beat guys like Gabriel Bonfim.” Whether the matchmakers set that fight or book Bonfim against Della Maddalena is the question that will likely be answered inside the next few weeks.
Muhammad and the Reckoning a Third Loss Demands
Belal Muhammad’s slide from champion to seventh-ranked contender inside 13 months is one of the more striking collapses of a fighter’s peak in recent UFC history. He is 36 years old. His last two defeats, to Della Maddalena and now to Bonfim, were not competitive fights that went the wrong way. There were losses in which the winner controlled the action for the majority of the contest.
“There is a clear pattern in how Belal is losing,” a data analyst noted. “He cannot stop the jab-to-calf-kick combination that both Garry and now Bonfim have used against him. His level changes are slower, his wrestling entries are being read, and he is carrying his hands lower between exchanges than he did in 2022 and 2023. Whether that is wear, age, or a technical problem that can be fixed is the real question going into his next camp.”
A return to form is not impossible. Muhammad’s record over a decade of competition earns him that doubt. But a fourth loss, should one come, would likely move him out of title contention entirely.
What the Numbers Say About Bonfim’s Ceiling
Bonfim’s rise is not a surprise to anyone who has tracked the FightMatrix algorithmic rankings, which had him moving steadily up the computerized welterweight list since late 2025. His win over Randy Brown in November 2025, in which he landed 23 leg strikes before finishing with a standing knee, showcased the same lower-body targeting that unraveled Muhammad in Las Vegas. FightMatrix’s pre-fight projections for the card had flagged Bonfim’s superior striking activity and pressure game as the decisive factor, a read that held up across all five rounds. That full statistical preview is available at FightMatrix’s UFC Fight Night 278 analysis.
The FightMatrix welterweight rankings show Bonfim with a five-fight winning streak stretching back to early 2025. His striking volume, finishing rate, and grappling defence statistics place him among the top four or five most well-rounded fighters in the division by output metrics. The title shot may not be next, but the data suggests he is built for the level above where he was 10 days ago.
Bonfim leaped over three former welterweight champions with one night’s work. Whether he gets Della Maddalena, Brady, or a longer wait for Makhachev, he has made the UFC’s most crowded division considerably more interesting.
