
UPCOMING·Saturday, August 22, 2026
UFC Fight Night: Hernandez vs Rodrigues
Golden 1 Center·Sacramento
46Modest
Card rating
Modest
- Ranked
- 5top-15
- Hot streak
- 3WGregory Rodrigues
Full Card Research Hub
The whole card by the numbers — auto-generated from per-round UFC stats and fight history, the same data behind every matchup page. A research starting point, not a prediction.
Main event spotlight · Middleweight

#6Anthony Hernandez
15-3

#12Gregory Rodrigues
19-6
Top matchup edges
Submission
Hernandez
Pace
Hernandez
Wrestling
Hernandez
Full matchup breakdown →
Card insights
Biggest statistical mismatch
MiddleweightHernandez leads 3 of 3 categories
Anthony HernandezvsGregory Rodrigues
Hernandez holds the edge in submission, pace, and wrestling.
SubmissionPaceWrestling
Least likely to reach a decision
HeavyweightBuilt to finish
Serghei SpivacvsVitor Petrino
Both end fights early — only 21% of Spivac’s fights and 25% of Petrino’s reach a decision.
SpivacPetrinoGoes the distance21%25%Finishes their wins83%71%Has been finished67%100%
Biggest pace gap
Light HeavyweightRidder sets the pace
Roman DolidzevsReinier de Ridder
Ridder pushes the higher work rate over the fight — Dolidze's pace builds while Ridder's fades
DolidzeRidderWork rate / min — full fight4.85.7Work rate / min — rounds 1–24.86.4Pace trend+4%/rd-21%/rd
Full card· 7 bouts · sortable
#6Anthony Hernandezvs#12Gregory Rodrigues Middleweight·Hernandez — submission & pace | — | – | – | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#14Roman Dolidzevs#8Reinier de Ridder Light Heavyweight·Ridder — pace & finishing | — | – | – | ||
#6Serghei SpivacvsVitor Petrino Heavyweight·Petrino — wrestling | — | – | – | ||
Kennedy NzechukwuvsShamil Gaziev Heavyweight·Nzechukwu — finishing & pace | — | – | |||
Carli JudicevsJeisla Chaves Women's Strawweight·Limited data | — | – | – | – | – |
Wes SchultzvsJackson McVey Middleweight·Limited data | — | – | – | – | – |
Shanelle DyervsElise Reed Women's Strawweight·Limited data | — | – | – | – | – |
Tap any column header to sort the card by it. Each bar points to the fighter who holds that edge (left = first-listed fighter); longer = stronger. “Finish lean” weighs a finishing threat against the opponent’s durability. Fights with too little data are left ungraded. Descriptive research — not predictions.











