UFC welterweight Jorge Masvidal. Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

While Khamzat Chimaev has taken the UFC by storm and has quickly become one of the promotion’s most popular stars, “BMF” champion Jorge Masvidal is not a believer in the hype surrounding the 28-year-old star.

Chimaev is one of the brightest young talents in all of MMA and the undefeated Russian was an absolute wrecking machine over his first four fights in the UFC. However, in April he was taken to the brink of defeat by former title challenger Gilbert Burns. For some, the victory proved that “Borz” is an elite-level fighter and a serious welterweight title contender.

However, two-time 170-pound title challenger Masvidal thought the highly competitive bout at UFC 273 proved that Chimaev is not as good as many MMA observers thought.

“That was supposed to be his coming out party and it didn’t go according to plan," Masvidal said via MMA Fighting. "A lot of people felt Gilbert won that fight — a lot of people still think Gilbert won that fight. I don’t really think Khamzat is as good as they say he is. I’m more of a see than believe [guy] and I haven’t seen anything that makes me a believer in this guy yet. I, personally, would love to break his face.”

The follow-up to Chimaev’s pay-per-view showcase in the spring will be a main event spot against UFC superstar Nate Diaz at UFC 279. The matchup is one of the most highly anticipated showdowns left on the 2022 UFC schedule. While it features two popular competitors, bookmakers have installed Chimaev as a massive favorite to win in September.

The odds are understandable since Diaz has notoriously had trouble with talented wrestlers, and “Borz” is arguably the biggest and best wrestler at welterweight. Although Masvidal thinks Chimaev should get the W on Sept. 10, he does believe there is a real possibility that the Californian’s endless cardio could play a major role if it reaches the fourth and fifth round.

Masvidal knows all about that gas tank after facing Diaz in the headlining scrap at UFC 244, inside New York’s Madison Square Garden three years ago. A fight “Gamebred” won by third-round technical knockout due to a bad cut.

“I think Khamzat probably wins, but I can see Nate putting him away in rounds four or five because Khamzat doesn’t have that gas tank," Masvidal added. "He doesn’t have that experience, and I think he gets too in the moment where he’s wasting energy doing stupid s—. Nate is going to conserve all of that energy and get in his face when it counts. I think Khamzat should win, but I won’t be surprised if Nate stops his a—.”

UFC 279 takes place at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

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