Gilbert Burns and Mike Malott both registered identical weights of 77.56 kg at the official weigh-ins for their UFC Winnipeg main event bout. The remarkable coincidence of both fighters hitting the exact same weight on the scale adds an interesting note to their welterweight matchup. Both fighters successfully made the welterweight non-title limit, making the fight official. The identical weights suggest both fighters are in optimal condition heading into their main event clash.
Gilbert Burns and Mike Malott both stepped on the scale at an identical 77.56 kg ahead of their welterweight main event at UFC Winnipeg, with the rare coincidence making the bout official as both men came in comfortably under the non-title limit.

Burns, the Brazilian veteran known as "Durinho," enters the fight at 39 years old with a professional record of 22-10-0, currently ranked 13th in the welterweight division while competing out of Kill Cliff FC. Standing five-foot-ten with a 71-inch reach, Burns brings a well-rounded offensive game to the octagon, averaging 3.15 significant strikes per minute at 48 percent accuracy while also threatening with 2.12 takedown attempts per 15 minutes.
His opponent, Canadian fighter Mike Malott — nicknamed "Proper" — carries a record of 14-2-1 and represents Team Alpha Male. At 34 years old, the six-foot-one Malott holds a slight size advantage with a 73-inch reach. He edges Burns in striking volume, landing 3.93 significant strikes per minute at the same 48 percent accuracy, and poses a submission threat with 0.8 attempts per 15 minutes, nearly double Burns's rate in that category.

Why it matters
- Burns, ranked 13th at welterweight, needs a strong performance to climb back into title contention at 39
- Malott fights in front of a home Canadian crowd, adding significant pressure and motivation
- Both fighters share identical striking accuracy, setting up a closely matched technical exchange on the feet
- Malott's submission threat versus Burns's takedown volume creates an intriguing grappling dynamic that could determine the outcome







