The bantamweight bout between Mitch Raposo (1-2 UFC) and Allan Nascimento (4-1 UFC) has been postponed from UFC Winnipeg this weekend to UFC Vegas 119 on June 20. The fight was canceled due to health issues, specifically a virus affecting Raposo. Both fighters will now have additional time to prepare for their rescheduled encounter. The matchup was originally slated for this weekend's card but the postponement allows Raposo time to recover.
A bantamweight clash between Mitch Raposo and Allan "Puro Osso" Nascimento has been pushed back from UFC Winnipeg this weekend to UFC Vegas 119 on June 20, after Raposo was forced out of the original booking due to a virus.

Raposo, 27, represents the United States and trains out of Regiment Training Center. He carries an 11-3-0 professional record with a 1-2 mark inside the UFC. Standing five-foot-five with a 64-inch reach, the switch-stance fighter averages 1.98 takedowns per 15 minutes, making him a consistent grappling threat at bantamweight, though his striking volume sits at 1.91 significant strikes landed per minute with a 38 percent accuracy rate.
Nascimento, known as "Puro Osso," is a 34-year-old Brazilian out of Chute Boxe Diego Lima who brings a 22-7-0 record and a 4-1 UFC ledger into the rescheduled bout. At five-foot-eight with a 69-inch reach, he is the taller and longer fighter in this matchup. His 3.2 significant strikes landed per minute and 51 percent striking accuracy mark him as one of the sharper offensive strikers in the division at this level. He also averages 0.9 submission attempts per 15 minutes, adding a ground threat to his arsenal.

Why it matters
- Nascimento's 4-1 UFC run puts him in position to push toward the ranked portion of the bantamweight division with another win.
- The style matchup pits Raposo's takedown-heavy approach against Nascimento's accurate, high-output striking and submission attempts.
- Raposo will enter with extra recovery time following the illness that forced the postponement, potentially leveling any conditioning concerns.
- The June 20 Las Vegas card now gains a competitive 135-pound contest with meaningful implications for both men's UFC futures.






