Dominick Reyes and Johnny Walker completed their official staredown ahead of their light heavyweight matchup at UFC 327. The two former title contenders faced each other during the ceremonial weigh-in proceedings. No additional details about their contest or specific fight placement were mentioned. The staredown represents standard pre-fight protocol. Further context about the bout is not provided in the brief post.
Dominick Reyes and Johnny Walker stood face to face at the ceremonial weigh-in for UFC 327 on Thursday, completing their official staredown ahead of their light heavyweight matchup scheduled for Friday, April 11.

Reyes, 36, enters the bout ranked eighth in the light heavyweight division and carries a professional record of 16-5. The southpaw from the United States stands six-foot-four with a 77-inch reach and trains out of Teixeira MMA and Fitness. Known as "The Devastator," he is one of the more prolific strikers in the division, landing 5.39 significant strikes per minute at a 54 percent accuracy rate.
Walker, 34, holds the number-eleven ranking in the division and brings a 22-10 record into the contest. The Brazilian, who trains out of SBG Ireland, is a sizable presence at six-foot-six with an 82-inch reach — giving him a notable size advantage over Reyes. He lands 4.06 significant strikes per minute at 55 percent accuracy and attempts 0.8 submissions per 15 minutes, the higher of the two fighters in that category.

Why it matters
- Both men are ranked light heavyweights with legitimate title-contention histories, making the outcome meaningful for the division's pecking order.
- A Reyes win would push the number-eight ranked fighter closer to the top five; a Walker victory would be a significant boost for the number-eleven contender.
- The physical contrast is pronounced — Walker holds a two-inch height edge and a five-inch reach advantage, which could be a central factor in how the striking exchanges develop.
- Walker's submission threat, however modest, adds a dimension against Reyes, who averages fewer than one takedown attempt per 15 minutes.
Saturday, April 11, 2026






