2024-07-03 14:45:17
Live updates and results as welterweights, lightweights vie for spot in $1 million finals – Daily Sporting News
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Live updates and results as welterweights, lightweights vie for spot in $1 million finals

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Live updates and results as welterweights, lightweights vie for spot in $1 million finals

The welterweight champions from both of the PFL’s past seasons are here. So is a champ from another promotion who was brought in to raise the bar for this season. And then there’s the surprise star who has found recent success in both boxing and MMA who spoiled the party for a high-profile former UFC titlist.

As the PFL playoffs get underway with semifinals in the lightweight and welterweight divisions (Live, ESPN+ & ESPN2), there are a lot of stories unfolding Friday evening at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Florida.

Headlining the event is a clash that many inside and outside the PFL anticipated before the season when the company signed former Bellator welterweight champion and UFC title challenger Rory MacDonald. He takes on 2019 season champion and 2018 finalist Ray Cooper III.

The 2018 welterweight champ is in the co-main event. Magomed Magomedkerimov, fighting for just the second time this year, takes on late replacement Sadibou Sy.

At lightweight, the main attraction is Clay Collard — but he wasn’t supposed to be. Collard, a longtime MMA fighter who became an unlikely sensation in boxing by winning five straight bouts in 2020, opened the season by upsetting Anthony Pettis.

Collard takes on Raush Manfio, while the other semifinal features No. 1 seed Loik Radzhabov vs. No. 4 Alexander Martinez in a rematch from the regular season. Martinez, the lower seed, actually won that first fight.

The action from Florida gets underway with six non-tournament bouts in the 155- and 170-pound divisions. Follow along throughout the night for live results and insights.


Current fight

Welterweight: No. 2 Rory MacDonald vs. No. 3 Ray Cooper III

Betting odds: MacDonald -150 | Cooper III +125


Welterweight: No. 4 Magomed Magomedkerimov def. No. 5 Sadibou Sy via unanimous decision

Twelve seconds. That’s how long it took for Magomedkerimov to take down Sy, a dangerous kickboxer, and put him out of his element. Magomedkerimov controlled the rest of the round from top position, and he also had the better of the action in the two rounds that followed.

Ultimately, Magomedkerimov earned his 13th straight victory and a spot in the PFL welterweight final, where the Russian will attempt to become a two-time PFL champion.

Magomedkerimov did not get an immediate takedown in Round 2 — the bout didn’t go to the canvas until there was just over a minute left in the round — and he never got Sy to the mat in the final round. That was a positive for Sy, but the 34-year-old Swede — an alternate entry in this semifinal because top seed Joao Zeferino was unable to compete — was so focused on takedown defense that he did not manage much offense.

All three judges scored the bout 30-27 for Magomedkerimov, the 2018 PFL welterweight champ. He is 9-0 in the promotion and has not lost a fight since 2015.

Lightweight: No. 3 Raush Manfio def. No. 2 Clay Collard via unanimous decision

As the verdict was being read, it was announced that all three judges had scored the bout 29-28. Collard raised his right arm triumphantly, waiting to hear his name. Manfio stood there with head bowed — or he did, until he heard his name. Then Manfio exalted.

Manfio was a lightweight finalist. Still alive was his dream of following in the footsteps of his close friend and training partner, Natan Schulte, the 145-pound season champion in the PFL’s previous two seasons.

“I have to keep this belt in the family,” Manfio said. “It’s gonna stay at American Top Team, and I will bring one more belt to Natan’s house.”

It was a close fight that, to this observer, appeared to be going Collard’s way. He seemed to get the better of a close Round 1 and he was a clear winner of the second round. When Manfio surged back to control Round 3, but didn’t get a finish, it seemed to be too little, too late. But that was not the case.

The 29-year-old from Brazil, who trains alongside Schulte in South Florida, earned a spot in the final against Loik Radzhabov, who had won his semifinal bout just prior to this fight.

Collard landed a greater diversity of strikes and with more volume, and while Manfio was throwing with more power, he was the one whose face was bloodied and more bruised at the end of three rounds. But as neither man put a beatdown on the other, scorecards, as they often can, went in an unexpected direction.

Lightweight semifinals: No. 1 Loik Radzhabov def. No. 4 Alexander Martinez by unanimous decision

Radzhabov and Martinez fought each other less than four months ago. One judge scored the bout for Radzhabov that night, but the other two were the deciding majority in a split-decision win for Martinez, and the reason why Martinez qualified for the playoffs.

Both lightweights made adjustments for the high-stakes rematch, and Radzhabov’s relentless wrestling was the difference, producing six takedowns and long spells of ground control to secure the victory and a spot in the PFL lightweight final for the second straight time.

“I’m putting big hopes on the final fight,” Radzhabov said. “This is the time that I have to take the title. I have to make the million. And I have to bring the belt and the title to my home country, Tajikistan. People are watching, and I want them to be proud of me.”

Radzhabov, 30, was a 2019 PFL lightweight finalist, ultimately losing to back-to-back champ Natan Schulte.

In the rematch against Martinez, Radzhabov landed the bigger punches — one of which bloodied Martinez in the first round. But grappling is what won Radzhabov the bout. He did have to fend off a couple of Martinez submission attempts, though, including a tight standing guillotine in the closing minute of the fight.

The verdict was clear this time, as the judges’ scores were 30-27, 30-27 and 29-28.

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Gleison Tibau earned his second straight win in the PFL with a first-round submission over Micah Terrill.

Welterweight: Gleison Tibau def. Micah Terrill by first-round submission (arm triangle choke)

Tibau showed off his submission grappling once the fight hit the canvas two minutes in, quickly securing an arm triangle choke and getting the finish seconds later. Terrill appeared to be ready to tap out, but then his arm went limp and referee Gary Copeland stepped in to end the bout at 2:17 of Round 1.

Tibau, who has 15 submissions in his career, looked comfortable on his feet in the early going, trading punches before grabbing Terrill, a late-replacement opponent, and throwing him to the mat. Tibau, a 38-year-old Brazilian, immediately gained top position in side control, and 17 seconds later he had the finish. He won his second straight fight in the PFL, pushing his record to 36-15.

Lightweight: Olivier Aubin-Mercier def. Darrell Horcher by unanimous decision

Aubin-Mercier put on a clinic in this battle of UFC veterans, dominating all three rounds to claim a clear decision. He immobilized Horcher with more than a dozen calf kicks in Round 1, then finished the round on top, landing a barrage of punches. That ground-and-pound beatdown continued in the other two rounds as well.

Horcher had no answer for the grappling, but he did have one brief moment of success on the feet in the first round, catching an OAM punch and countering with a flurry of punches that dropped Aubin-Mercier. That apparently impressed two judges enough that they scored the round for Horcher — the scores were 30-26, 29-28 and 29-27 — but Aubin-Mercier recovered quickly and seized control in Rounds 2 and 3. Aubin-Mercier moved to 2-0 in the PFL, bumping his career record to 13-5. Horcher, making his PFL debut, dropped to 14-5.

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In Round 1 of their PFL bout, Brett Cooper sends Tyler Hill to the canvas with a devastating combination.

Lightweight: Brett Cooper def. Tyler Hill by first-round TKO (punches)

Cooper came into the bout with more career knockouts (17) than Hill had fights (15), and the disparity of experience quickly showed in a dominant performance. Cooper, whose 43-fight career has included a Bellator title fight and tournament final, was all over Hill from the start, staggering Hill with an aggressive attack and finishing him brutally on the feet. In his first fight in nearly two years, the win moved Cooper to 28-15 in his career.

Cooper packed a lot of punishment into just 2:32, getting three takedowns and landing 47 strikes (to Hill’s seven) before referee Keith Peterson mercifully stepped in to wave off the barrage. With the loss, Hill fell to 10-6.


Welterweight: Magomed Umalatov def. Micah Terrill by unanimous decision

This meeting between Umalatov, who is primarily a wrestler, and Silva, a jiu-jitsu practitioner, ended up playing out almost entirely on the feet, and Umalatov used busy, all-angles striking and swift, unpredictable footwork to remain unbeaten.

It was, however, the first time the now 11-0 Russian has gone the distance — all 10 of his previous wins had been finishes, with seven of them coming in the first round. Silva dropped to 25-10-1 in his pro career.


Welterweight: Michael Lombardo def. Kyron Bowen via first-round TKO (calf kicks/punches)

At 6-foot-2, Bowen is tall for a welterweight. But Lombardo chopped him down to size, first landing several overhand rights upward to Bowen’s head, and then hobbling Bowen with kicks to the left calf.

The first made him limp backward, the second dropped him and made Bowen yell and grab his leg. Lombardo grabbed Bowen’s compromised leg with one hand and then punched it with his other hand, before landing a third kick to a grounded Bowen’s calf. That last kick, and Bowen’s painful yell, brought referee Copeland in to wave off the fight at 3:42 of Round 1. Lombardo moved to 12-2 with one no contest in his career, while Bowen dropped to 9-7.


Lightweight: Elvin Espinoza def. Hopeton Stewart via first-round technical submission (rear-naked choke)

The card opened with a matchup of two Miami-based fighters both making their PFL debuts, and the unbeaten Espinoza was in control from the start. Espinoza got an early takedown and worked for a rear-naked choke, which he was able to lock in. The choke rendered Stewart unconscious, and referee Keith Peterson stepped in to end the fight at 2:45 of Round 1.

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