Curtis Blaydes suffered a broken orbital bone and a broken nose during his fight at UFC 327. He was released from the hospital in Miami and will travel home to Colorado to continue his recovery. The injuries occurred during the bout, though the post does not specify the result of the fight or his opponent.
Curtis Blaydes walked out of a Miami hospital with a broken orbital bone and a broken nose following his appearance at UFC 327 on April 11, and will now return to Colorado to begin his recovery.
Blaydes, known as "Razor," is a 35-year-old heavyweight from the United States who trains out of Elevation Fight Team. Ranked fourth in the heavyweight division, he carries a professional record of 19-6-0 and is one of the most accomplished wrestlers in the weight class, averaging 5.38 takedowns per 15 minutes. He also mixes in a credible striking game, landing 3.56 significant strikes per minute at 50 percent accuracy over the course of his career.

Why it matters
- Blaydes is ranked fourth at heavyweight, meaning time away from competition could affect his positioning in a division where the title picture moves quickly.
- The facial fractures — orbital and nasal — are the kind of injuries that typically require weeks of recovery before any contact training can resume.
- His elite takedown output makes him a perennial threat in the division, and any extended layoff would delay a potential push toward a title shot.
No details about the outcome of his UFC 327 bout or the identity of his opponent have been confirmed alongside this injury report. Blaydes and his team have not issued a public timeline for his return to training or competition.
Saturday, April 11, 2026





