🥊 Flyweight Bout • 3 Rounds

Cody Durden vs Alessandro Costa

Flyweight Bout • UFC 329: McGregor vs. Holloway 2

Saturday, July 11, 2026 • T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas

Fighter • Odds source: BetOnline
Pressure Wrestler / Grinder
Fighter • Odds source: BetOnline
Muay Thai Striker / Power Puncher
Cody Durden vs Alessandro Costa - UFC 329 flyweight bout poster

Explore Detailed Fighter Profiles

Click on either the fighter's name or profile image for each fighter to access comprehensive UFC statistics including striking metrics, grappling data, clinch performance, complete fight history, offensive & defensive analytics, and round-by-round breakdowns.

Cody Durden

Cody Durden

18-10-1

🤼 Pressure Wrestler / Grinder

Age:
34Veteran
Height:
5'7"+3" taller
Reach:
67"Even
Leg Reach:
38"+2" longer

Cody Durden

Fighter Metrics

Total UFC Fights
16
UFC Record
7-8-1
Current Streak
+2 W
Win Rate
62.1%
Finish Rate
67%
Avg Fight Duration
9:30
Victory Methods
Win Round Distribution
Alessandro Costa

Alessandro Costa

16-5-0

🥊 Muay Thai Striker / Power Puncher

Age:
29Prime
Height:
5'4"-3" shorter
Reach:
67"Even
Leg Reach:
36"-2" shorter

Alessandro Costa

Fighter Metrics

Total UFC Fights
7
UFC Record
4-3
Current Streak
+2 W
Win Rate
76.2%
Finish Rate
75%
Avg Fight Duration
10:56
Victory Methods
Win Round Distribution

📋 Last 5 Fights - Cody Durden

DateOpponentResultMethod
2025-05-17Matt SchnellWSUB — Guillotine (R2, 0:29)
2025-02-15Allan NascimentoLSUB — Anaconda Choke (R2, 3:13)
2024-12-14Jose OchoaLKO/TKO — Punch (R2, 0:11)
2024-12-07Joshua VanLDecision — Unanimous (R3, 5:00)
2024-08-03Jake HadleyWDecision — Unanimous (R3, 5:00)

📋 Last 5 Fights - Alessandro Costa

DateOpponentResultMethod
2026-06-06Matt SchnellWKO/TKO — Ground & Pound (R1, 2:28)
2026-04-04Stewart NicollWKO/TKO — Body Punch (R2, 4:56)
2025-03-08Alden CoriaLKO/TKO — Punches (R3, 0:47)
2024-09-14Kevin BorjasWKO/TKO — Punches from Mount (R2, 1:35)
2024-02-17Jimmy FlickWKO/TKO — Elbows from Half Guard (R2, 1:03)

Technical Analysis

Technical Score

55/10046.8/100
Cody
Alessandro
Cody +8.1%

Cardio Score

70/10048/100
Cody
Alessandro
Cody +18.6%

Overall Rating

62.5/10047.4/100
Cody
Alessandro
Cody +13.7%
📊 Technical Score

Calculated as the average of Striking Composite (40.6 vs 51.6) and Grappling Composite (69.3 vs 41.9). Costa edges the striking, but Durden's elite takedown engine drives a 27-point grappling gap that tips the overall technical score his way (55.0 vs 46.8).

💪 Cardio Score

Based on average fight duration, striking rate per minute, takedown rate, and finish rate. Measures cardiovascular endurance and ability to maintain pace throughout fights.

🎯 Overall Rating

Simple average of Technical Score and Cardio Score. Provides a holistic view of fighter capabilities combining skill level with physical conditioning and fight performance.

Striking Composite

40.6/10051.6/100
Cody
Alessandro
Alessandro +11.0%

Grappling Composite

69.3/10041.9/100
Cody
Alessandro
Cody +24.6%
Advanced Analytics

Technical Radar Comparison

Visual comparison of key performance metrics between both fighters

Cody Durden
VS
Alessandro Costa
Metrics Guide
👊
SLpMStrikes Landed/Min
🎯
Str AccStrike Accuracy
🛡️
Str DefStrike Defense
🤼
TD/15Takedowns/15min
📊
TD AccTD Accuracy
🚫
TD DefTD Defense
🔒
Sub/15Submissions/15min
Hover over the chart to see detailed values

📊 Detailed Statistical Comparison

Strikes Landed/Min
Advantage:Alessandro (+5.8%)
3.44per min3.64per min
Cody
Alessandro
Difference: 0.20per min
Striking Accuracy
45%45%
Cody
Alessandro
Striking Defense
Advantage:Alessandro (+14.0%)
50%57%
Cody
Alessandro
Difference: 7.00%
Strikes Absorbed/Min
Advantage:Cody (+21.8%)
4.35per min3.57per min
Cody
Alessandro
Difference: 0.78per min
Takedowns/15min
Advantage:Cody (+797.8%)
4.13per 15min0.46per 15min
Cody
Difference: 3.67per 15min
Takedown Accuracy
Advantage:Cody (+182.4%)
48%17%
Cody
Alessandro
Difference: 31.00%
Takedown Defense
Advantage:Alessandro (+13.7%)
73%83%
Cody
Alessandro
Difference: 10.00%
Submissions/15min
Advantage:Cody (+58.7%)
0.73per 15min0.46per 15min
Cody
Alessandro
Difference: 0.27per 15min

🥊 Fight Analysis Breakdown

🧩 Cody Durden Key Advantages

🤼Elite Takedown Engine
9x TD volume

Durden's 4.13 takedowns per 15 minutes (rank 4 of 32 in the flyweight division) against Costa's 0.46 is the structural core of this fight — nearly a 9x volume gap. Costa controls just 19 seconds a round and spends 93.6% of his time standing, so he wants no part of the mat. His 83% takedown defense is genuinely good, but Durden's edge is volume and persistence: he chains takedowns off the clinch (34 clinch TDs at 47.9% accuracy) and will shoot every round for fifteen minutes, banking 100 seconds of control per round. Even a heavily-stuffed night still concedes meaningful control time and damage to a striker who fades.

📈Late-Round Surge
145% R3 output

Durden's output and control rise into the championship minutes — his R3/R1 output ratio is 145%, his R3 control peaks at 118 seconds, and the database tags him a "Strong Finisher." That curve is the perfect counter to Costa's collapse: Costa's output craters from 21.4 strikes in R1 to 6.7 in R3 (54% retention, "Fades Late"), and he has been TKO'd in the third round twice (Albazi, Coria). These two trajectories cross hard somewhere in round two. Durden does not merely win the late rounds on points — Costa has been finished in exactly the phase where Durden is strongest.

🔒Deep Water & Sub Threat
Elite SOS

Durden is the more battle-tested man: 29 fights of computed data, an Elite strength-of-schedule tier, six decision wins, and a 9:30 average fight time. He knows how to win ugly, deep-water rounds — exactly the fight shape this contest is most likely to produce. Layered on top is a one-directional submission threat: his attempts spike in round two (sub_r2 83.3%), and his guillotine (the fresh Matt Schnell finish) and triangle are live whenever Costa shoots a desperate takedown or ducks into a scramble. Costa's own submission offense is negligible (rank 20/32, no Octagon sub wins), so the grappling danger only flows one way.

⚠️ Unfavorable Scenarios

💥Early Power into a Slow Start

This is the upset blueprint. Durden slow-starts in 50% of his fights and has been stopped early before — KO'd by Jose Ochoa just 11 seconds into round two, TKO'd by Bruno Silva. Costa starts fast (0% slow start), bangs hard early (21.4 R1 strikes, R1 KD 0.20), and carries real one-shot power (KD average 0.69, rank 7/32; net-positive 1.50 knockdown exchange). If a clean Costa power shot finds Durden's suspect chin in the opening five minutes — before the wrestling rhythm sets in — Durden is genuinely finishable.

🎯The Sprawl Holds at 83%

Costa's 83% takedown defense is the best Durden has faced in this window. If the sprawl holds at anything near that rate, Durden's single structural edge is neutralized and he is forced into a kickboxing match he loses: his striking defense is below average (rank 21/32) and he absorbs a lot (4.35 SApM, rank 25/32). Costa's repeated R1 leg kicks (31.8% of his round-one targeting) can also chop Durden's lead leg and degrade the level-change base his takedown volume depends on — quietly evaporating the American Top Team wrestler's only structural advantage.

📋 Likely Gameplan

🔗Weather R1, Then Clinch

The single most important instruction: survive the opening five minutes. Durden must respect Costa's R1 power and leg kicks, stay defensively disciplined, and avoid getting cracked while slow-starting. His striking is not winning at range, so the job is to use level-change feints and forward pressure to back Costa to the fence — the one place Durden thrives (70.1% clinch accuracy, 47.9% clinch takedowns). Survive round one roughly even and the fight tilts hard his way.

⛓️Out-Volume & Grind the Third

Even at 83% stuffed, attempting 4+ takedowns a round forces Costa to expend energy defending, accelerates his fade, and lands enough — plus the control behind them — to bank rounds. Round two is the grind round (and the window where Durden's guillotine/triangle is live off a Costa scramble), so prioritize position over wild exchanges. Then pour it on in round three: this is where the data says Durden wins, as Costa lands fewer than seven strikes and gets walled up 70% of the round while Durden's control and output peak — the exact late TKO that Albazi and Coria already produced.

🚀 Alessandro Costa Key Advantages

💣Real One-Shot Power
KD rank 7/32

Costa is the cleaner, more dangerous striker. His knockdown average of 0.69 ranks 7th of 32 in the division (+60% above average), and his knockdown exchange is net-positive at 1.50 (6 dealt / 4 absorbed) — both of his UFC wins are highlight knockouts (Borjas, Flick). That genuine concussive threat meets Durden's 50% slow-start rate and crackable chin. Costa starts fast (0% slow start) and bangs early (21.4 R1 strikes, R1 KD 0.20). Every clean standup minute is a Costa minute, and in the opening five he is the most likely man to end the night.

🚫Elite Takedown Defense
83% TDDef

Costa's 83% takedown defense is the single biggest reason this is competitive and not a one-sided wrestling clinic. If his sprawl holds near that rate, he forces the fight into the phase he wins — better striking defense (rank 14/32 vs Durden's 21), real power, and higher early volume. The whole upset hinges on keeping it vertical, and Costa's Muay Thai leg-kick game (31.8% of his R1 targeting) is built to chop Durden's base, compromise his level-change explosiveness, and make every takedown entry more telegraphed and tiring.

⚠️ Unfavorable Scenarios

🪫The R3 Collapse Arrives

Durden survives the R1 power window — his single most likely failure point passes — the fight reaches round two, and the wrestling rhythm sets in. From there Costa's documented fade arrives on schedule: output craters to single digits (6.7 strikes), he is pressed to the fence 70% of the third round, and Durden's R3 control surge (118 seconds) plus ground-and-pound produces a late TKO — the exact way Amir Albazi and Alden Coria already beat him. The deeper the fight goes, the worse Costa's position becomes.

🔗Scramble Into a Choke

A desperate, tiring takedown attempt or a scramble in round two hands Durden the guillotine or triangle he hunts in that exact window (sub_r2 83.3%, the fresh Schnell guillotine precedent). Costa's own submission offense is minimal (rank 20/32, no UFC sub finishes), so any grappling exchange runs one direction. Even if the sprawl holds at 70% rather than 83% against Durden's sheer volume, the 30% that get through — plus the control they generate — is enough to lose all three rounds on the cards.

📋 Likely Gameplan

🔥Empty the Clip Early

Costa's whole edge is front-loaded, so he must start fast (his 0% slow-start strength), commit to the power and the 31.8% R1 leg-kick game, and hunt the early KO against a slow-starting, chin-questionable opponent — while chopping the base to take away the shot before the wrestling rhythm ever sets in. Turning the opening five minutes into a kickboxing match is the entire path to victory.

🛡️Win the Sprawl, Stay Off the Fence

Costa cannot win a fifteen-minute grind, so he needs a finish in R1–R2 or a 2-rounds-to-1 sprint that survives the fade. That means winning the takedown-defense battle outright — sprawl, frame, circle off the cage, and refuse to let Durden establish the clinch. The data screams the warning for the third: 6.7 strikes, 70% clinch time, two prior R3 KO losses. If it reaches R3, Costa must create space, keep it at range, and above all avoid being held against the fence while tired.

🎯 Fight Prediction Analysis

Data-driven prediction model based on statistical analysis

56%
Cody Durden Win Probability
Elite takedown volume and a late-round grind
44%
Alessandro Costa Win Probability
Early KO power into Durden's slow start

📊Detailed Analysis Summary

📉The Crossing Curves

Strip everything else away and this fight is two output curves moving in opposite directions. Costa fades hard: 21.4 → 13.4 → 6.7 significant strikes by round. Durden is a "Strong Finisher" whose control climbs 110 → 76 → 118 seconds and whose R3/R1 output ratio is 145%. The curves cross somewhere around the seven-to-nine-minute mark. Before the crossing point this is Costa's fight — faster, harder, more accurate at range. After it, it is comprehensively Durden's. The entire contest is a race between Costa's early-finish clock and Durden's grind clock, and a fifteen-minute fight simply contains more late minutes than early ones.

🎯Technical Breakdown

The two are near mirror images in raw striking — both about 3.5 SLpM, both 45% accuracy, both ranked 16–17 of 32 — so the fight is decided in the margins. Costa owns the quality-of- striking margins: better defense (rank 14 vs 21), real power (KD rank 7 vs 23), and a net-positive 1.50 knockdown exchange. Durden owns the two structural pillars that win 15-minute fights: an elite takedown engine (4.13 TD/15, rank 4/32, +129% above the division) and a late-round trajectory that inverts Costa's (Durden 145% R3/R1 output vs Costa 54%). Because the grappling gap (27 points of composite) is more than twice the striking gap, and grappling control compounds over the fight, the net technical edge is Durden's (55.0 vs 46.8).

🧩Key Battle Areas

Three areas decide it: the slow-start / fast-start collision in round one, the 83% takedown-defense question, and the fade-vs-finish collision late. Durden slow-starts 50% of the time into a man who starts fast and hits hard — the opening five minutes are Costa's highest-probability window and the upset's launch pad. But Costa's 83% takedown defense was earned largely against strikers, not a top-four-volume clinch-wrestler; Durden doesn't need his average, he needs to land enough and bank the control behind the attempts. By round three Costa's own profile shows him pressed to the fence 70% of the round — evidence the defense erodes exactly when Durden surges.

🏁Final Prediction

The single most likely outcome is Cody Durden by Decision (30%) — the classic wrestle-and-accumulate path his six career decision wins and Elite SOS support. His submission lane (14%) captures the R2 guillotine/triangle off a Costa scramble (sub_r2 83%), and his KO/TKO lane (12%) is mostly the late ground-and-pound TKO on a faded, fence-pinned Costa that Albazi and Coria already produced. Costa's best path is his 22% KO/TKO — early power into Durden's slow start and crackable chin, the highest single finish probability in the fight — plus a 14% decision and 8% submission floor. The read is simple: if it ends early, it ends Costa's way; if it goes long, it goes Durden's — and there are more late minutes than early ones.

💰 Betting Analysis: Model vs Market

Detailed value assessment in the betting market

📊Market Odds

Implied Probability: N/A
Implied Probability: N/A

🤖Analytical Model

Cody Durden-135
Model Probability: 56%
Alessandro Costa+115
Model Probability: 44%

💎Value Opportunities

⭐⭐⭐
MAXIMUM VALUE
Over 2.5 Rounds (-110)

Model: ~62% | Implied: 52.4% — both finish patterns skew late, not early.

PROBABILITY:
~62%
⭐⭐
GOOD VALUE
Over 1.5 Rounds (-250)

Model: ~82% | Implied: 71.4% — a fast R1 stoppage is the least likely finish in this matchup.

ALIGNED:
~82%
SLIGHT VALUE
Fight Ends in Round 2 (+300)

Model: ~27% | Implied: 25.0% — R2 is Durden's submission window and Costa's last live finishing round.

EDGE:
+2.0%
⚠️Key Market Discrepancies
  • Overweights Costa's early KO – Underprices Durden's grind and the late-round path.
  • Undervalues the takedown engine – 4.13 TD/15 (rank 4/32) plus control accumulation over 15 minutes.
  • Misreads the fade collision – Costa's R3 output craters to 6.7 strikes; this fight lives in the late minutes.

🎯 Comprehensive Probabilistic Analysis

100 hypothetical fight simulation based on statistical data

🏆Outcome Distribution - Cody Durden

By Decision30%

Most likely outcome — wrestle and accumulate to 29-28 / 30-27

By Submission14%

R2 guillotine/triangle off a Costa scramble (sub_r2 83%)

By KO/TKO12%

Late ground-and-pound TKO on a faded, fence-pinned Costa

💥Outcome Distribution - Alessandro Costa

By KO/TKO22%

Dominant path — early power into Durden's slow start

By Decision14%

Requires 83% TDDef to hold and surviving the R3 fade

By Submission8%

Floor figure — BJJ background, but no UFC sub finishes

Fight Timeline Analysis

R1
Advantage: Costa
Fast start, power & leg kicks vs Durden's 50% slow start
R2
Advantage: Even
Costa still live early; Durden's clinch & sub window opens
R3
Advantage: Durden
Costa fades to 6.7 strikes / 70% fence; Durden surges (118s)
Window of Opportunity - Alessandro Costa
  • First 5–7 minutes: Highest early-KO equity into a slow starter.
  • Win the sprawl: 83% TDDef keeps it a kickboxing match.
  • Chop the base: 31.8% R1 leg kicks to kill the level change.
🎯Progressive Dominance - Cody Durden
  • Out-volume the TDD: 4+ shots a round tire Costa and bank control.
  • R2 scramble traps: guillotine/triangle live off any Costa shot.
  • Pour it on in R3: 145% output and 118s control chase the late TKO.

🎯 Final Confidence Assessment

Confidence level and uncertainty factors

5/10

Confidence Level

A clear-but-modest lean to Durden — a true pick-em with a grinder's edge

Supporting Factors

  • • Widest metric in the fight — TD/15 4.13 vs 0.46 (rank 4/32)
  • • Fade-vs-finish collision: Costa 54% R3 output, two R3 TKO losses
  • • Durden's 145% R3 output and 118s control own the late rounds
  • • Elite SOS, deep-water comfort, one-directional sub threat

⚠️Risk Factors

  • • Costa's power (KD 7/32) into Durden's 50% slow start
  • • 83% TDDef is the best Durden has faced in this window
  • • Archetype baseline (47.8%) leans Costa; both "Good" chins

🏁Executive Summary

This is a fight of two halves. In roughly the first five-to-seven minutes, Alessandro Costa is the better, more dangerous man — faster, harder, kicking the legs, and hunting the knockout against a wary, slow-starting Cody Durden. His power is real (KD rank 7/32, net-positive 1.50 exchange) and his 83% takedown defense is the best Durden has faced in this window, so the upset lane is genuine: about 44 of 100 sims go his way, mostly an early KO or a striking-led result before the fade. But in the other 56 the fight survives that window and tips into Durden's world — clinch entries, takedown attempts that wear down an 83%-but-tiring defense, accumulating control, and a third round where Costa's output falls off a cliff (6.7 strikes, 70% fence time) while Durden's surges (145% output, 118 seconds of control). The archetype baseline (47.8% for the Technical Striker) is an honest reason for humility, but Durden's individual deviations — elite takedown volume and a documented late-round edge — clear it.

Prediction: Cody Durden by Decision most likely (30%), with a one-directional R2 submission threat (14%) and a late ground-and-pound TKO (12%) rounding out his 56% win probability; Costa's upset engine is his 22% early KO/TKO into Durden's slow start. This fight is decided by the clock — if it ends early it ends Costa's way, if it goes long it goes Durden's — and a fifteen-minute fight has more late minutes than early ones.

Skip to main content
Use Tab to navigate through elements, Enter to activate buttons and links.