
At a wrestling show, there’s a moment when the audience reacts to something unplanned—no pyro, no entrance music, just a group double-take. When Montez Ford left a WWE NXT live event in early February 2026, fans instantly reached for their phones. There was a change. The man had a different appearance. larger. thicker in the shoulders and chest. Compared to the lean, explosive athlete that people had grown accustomed to seeing flip across rings on Friday nights, he was noticeably heavier.
Ford made no effort to conceal it. He was heard directly addressing fans at the NXT house show, saying, “I got my weight up.” There was no post-injury bloat or off-season laziness, just a casual confidence that suggests this wasn’t an accident. This was intentional. If you’ve been watching wrestling long enough, you are aware that there is typically a reason why an athletic performer decides to bulk up.
| Bio & Professional Information | |
|---|---|
| Real Name | Kenneth Crawford |
| Ring Name | Montez Ford |
| Date of Birth | May 31, 1990 |
| Birthplace | Chicago, Illinois, USA |
| Height | 6 ft 1 in (185 cm) |
| Billed Weight | 232 lb (105 kg) |
| Spouse | Bianca Belair (married 2018) |
| Tag Team | The Street Profits (with Angelo Dawkins) |
| Championships | 2x WWE Tag Team Champion, 1x Raw Tag Team Champion, 1x NXT Tag Team Champion |
| Military Service | U.S. Marine Corps & U.S. Navy (2008–2012) |
| Debut | September 26, 2015 |
| Reference | Wikipedia – Montez Ford |
According to online estimates, Ford weighed between 230 and 235 pounds during his most recent appearances, up from what many thought was closer to 215 to 220 pounds before his hiatus. Suddenly, the billed weight of 232 pounds seems reasonable rather than extravagant. Fans at ringside noticed the difference immediately, and the photos and short clips that spread across wrestling social media were enough to spark a full conversation — some praising the new look, some cracking jokes, and more than a few asking whether this signals a serious singles push on the horizon.
The most charming part of the whole story came from Bianca Belair herself. When she and Ford posted a Valentine’s Day photoshoot together in matching red jackets, she captioned it with her own winking confession: “Sorry for the (weight)… lol wait. I’ve been feeding him good, so I thought I would feed y’all too. Happy Valentine’s Day — The Crawfords.” It’s a throwaway line written with the ease of someone who knows exactly how funny it is. Belair, sidelined since WrestleMania 41 with a finger injury she suffered last April, has clearly been keeping herself busy in other ways.
The cooking joke may be just that — a joke. But there’s also something worth reading into it. Ford was away from WWE television for an extended stretch. He had time. Time to train differently, to eat with intention, to reshape his body in ways that weekly TV schedules and travel don’t easily allow. Athletes do this. NFL players bulk up in the offseason. Boxers change weight classes when they want a new challenge. The question here isn’t whether Ford gained weight — he clearly did — but why, and what it’s supposed to unlock.
The case for a solo push isn’t hard to make. Ford has been one of the most athletically gifted performers on the roster for years, turning in highlights that get replayed on social media long after the matches themselves are forgotten. His frog splash is genuinely one of the more spectacular moves in WWE. But tag team wrestling, as entertaining as the Street Profits have been, has a ceiling. The belts come and go. The feud’s cycle. Ford is 35 now, with a military background, a music career quietly running in parallel, and a profile boosted by the Hulu reality series he and Belair starred in together. The raw materials for a main event run have always been there. The weight gain — if it’s as purposeful as it appears — might be the physical statement that goes along with that ambition.
There’s a sense in WWE circles, reinforced by fan reaction, that the company has occasionally underestimated what Ford could do at the top of the card. He’s been positioned as exciting support for years. The new physique doesn’t change his in-ring style overnight, but it does change the visual — and in professional wrestling, the visual matters enormously. A heavier frame communicates a different kind of threat, especially if the speed and agility remain intact.
Even setting aside career speculation, the moment itself was oddly wholesome. A husband steps away from the spotlight for a while. His wife, also injured and sidelined, feeds him well and jokes about it publicly on Valentine’s Day. He shows up to a house show looking noticeably different, tells the fans without prompting, and the whole thing gets clipped, shared, and debated. It’s a small story. But in a business built on personas and physical storytelling, small stories often point toward bigger ones.
Now, with Belair announcing her pregnancy at WrestleMania 42 in Las Vegas — a genuinely emotional moment at Allegiant Stadium — the Crawford family is in a new chapter entirely. Bianca won’t be back in a ring for the foreseeable future. Montez Ford, carrying a few extra pounds and a lot of quiet ambition, is left to carry the flag for a while. It’s still unclear whether WWE will pull the trigger on a serious singles program for him soon. But watching him at that NXT house show — bigger, confident, telling the crowd exactly what he wanted them to know — it’s hard not to feel like something is coming.

