Showing posts with label UFC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UFC. Show all posts

Saturday 12 November 2022

UFC Adesanya vs Pereira Full Fight HD: UFC 281 Full Show HD

 

UFC 281: Adesanya vs. Pereira PPV Pay Per View 11/12/22 12th November 2022



Countdown To Prelims Countdown To Maincard


Watch UFC 281 Full Show HD 12 Parts


EarlyPrelims  Part 1  Part 2  Part 3 Part 4 Part 5 Part 6 Part 7


 Part 8 Part 9  Part 10 Part 11  Last




Watch UFC 281 Full Show HD 3 Parts


  Part 1  Part 2  Part 3

Israel Adesanya, Alex Pereira and the Real Winners and Losers from UFC 281

Sana Ejaz Khan

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 11: (L-R) Opponents Israel Adesanya of Nigeria and Alex Pereira of Brazil face off during the UFC 281 ceremonial weigh-in at Radio City Music Hall on November 11, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

    The sport's most successful promotion in the world's most famous arena.

    If nothing else, the power of marketing guaranteed that the UFC's annual visit to Midtown Manhattan would provide for a memorable Saturday night.

    The 28 fighters across the 14-bout card did their part to make it happen too, led by the presence of Israel Adesanya and Carla Esparza making title defenses atop the pay-per-view portion of the UFC 281 extravaganza at Madison Square Garden.

    Adesanya was risking his middleweight strap for the sixth time since winning it three years ago and encountering a familiar foe while doing so in two-time kickboxing opponent and fourth-ranked contender Alex Pereira in the main event.

    Esparza, meanwhile, was appearing for the first time since wresting the strawweight belt from Rose Namajunas in May and becoming one of the few fighters with multiple reigns atop a weight class. She'd previously held the title for three months bridging 2014 and 2015.

    The PPV show was produced by ESPN+, and the B/R combat sports team was in place to take it all in and compile a definitive list of the event's real winners and losers. Scroll through to get our reactions and drop a take or two of your own in the comments section.

Winner: Unexpected Title Change

1 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12: (L-R) Alex Pereira of Brazil punches Israel Adesanya of Nigeria in the UFC middleweight championship bout during the UFC 281 event at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

    For the second time in three months, it happened.

    A seemingly unbeatable champion and pound-for-pound kingpin entered the fifth round of a title fight with a clear-cut victory within reach.

    And for the second time in three months, that very same champion couldn't seal the deal.

    First Kamaru Usman at UFC 278. Now Israel Adesanya at UFC 281.

    The Last Stylebender was up three rounds to one and had driven Alex Pereira to the point of exhaustion thanks to precision punching and intermittent groundwork, but he found himself pinned against the fence and battered in the fifth for a shocking KO at 2:01.

    It was the sixth world title change in four UFC events at Madison Square Garden.

    The five-defense champion was rattled with a right hand and hurt badly with a left and was unable to escape the follow-up barrage. He stumbled to his right and was slumped over at the waist and taking uncontested punches when referee Marc Goddard intervened.

    Similarly, Usman was well ahead of challenger Leon Edwards in their welterweight fight in late August before he was KO'd with a single head kick with just 56 seconds left.

    It's Pereira's third victory in three meetings with Adesanya after he'd beaten him twice in kickboxing, including a one-punch KO in 2017.

    "I feel so good. All my life I worked so hard for this," Pereira said.

    “I had to battle. It was a very hard fight. But just like [training partner] Glover Teixeira said, I was going for a five-fight every day in the gym. I can go five rounds again. I'm ready for the next."

Winner: Reclaiming a Throne

2 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12:  Weili Zhang celebrates after defeating Carla Esparza to win their Women Strawweight fight UFC 281 at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
    Jamie Squire/Getty Images

    It was surprising to some that Carla Esparza, a reigning strawweight champion, was both a significant betting underdog and audibly not the crowd favorite in New York.

    But it took barely more than six minutes for it to all make sense.

    Former belt-holder Zhang Weili, who's from China, joined the American as a two-time champion at 115 pounds, surviving through a back-and-forth first round to score a quick takedown in the second and lock in the decisive rear-naked choke that ended matters and signaled her coronation at 1:05.

    “I came back. Now it feels like a dream,” said Weili, who'd lost her belt in April 2021 to Rose Namajunas, the fighter Esparza had beaten earlier this year to begin her second reign. "Every day since I lost [to Namajunas], I dreamed this belt would come back. Every single moment."

    Weili lost a split decision to Namajunas in a rematch last November and had fought and won once since. She picked up social media fanfare recently thanks to training videos in which she'd worked out with UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou and was able to pick him up off the ground.

    "I feel all the support from you guys," she said. "I'm the Weili that belongs to all the world."

    Esparza initially held the strawweight belt in 2014 and 2015 and was 8-3 in non-title fights before regaining the belt. She was able to chase submissions periodically against Weili but never stayed in control during the frequent scrambles.

    "I expected her to be good everywhere," Esparza said. "At this level fighting former champs, you can only expect the best."

Winner: Fan-Friendly Violence

3 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12: (R-L) Michael Chandler punches Dustin Poirier in a lightweight bout during the UFC 281 event at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
    Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

    The polls have closed. The voting is complete.

    The best fight of 2022 has occurred. And Dustin Poirier won it.

    The fan favorite known as the "Diamond" was on the verge of a KO loss in the first round and was forced to elude a series of submissions in the second but rallied in the third for a dramatic choke-out of a bloodied, exhausted Michael Chandler in the culmination of a rivalry that had turned decidedly bitter.

    The end came at 2:00 after Poirier rolled through Chandler's takedown slam to take his foe's back.

    It was Chandler's third loss in five fights since arriving to the UFC in early 2021. But he's consistently produced action-packed instant classics, and the scrap with Poirier was no different thanks to a tumultuous first round in which he had Poirier badly hurt with a series of hard right hands before the Louisiana native got to his feet and had Chandler nearly out on his feet as the horn sounded.

    Chandler's loss to Justin Gaethje at UFC 268 was widely considered 2021's best fight, and he'd already been the Fight of the Year front-runner for 2022 after KO'ing Tony Ferguson with a front kick in May.

    "I couldn't see," Poirier said. "Good thing he throws looping shots. If he'd have thrown straight shots, he'd have probably gotten me out of there. He's very explosive."

    Poirier seemingly started the second round on the verge of a KO win, but Chandler immediately went for a takedown, got him to the floor and kept him there for the entire five minutes thanks to positioning.

    He was never able to lock in after several attempts at a rear-naked choke, however, which further drained him entering the third and again left him looking exhausted. Chandler did get Poirier up in the air at the start of the third and slammed him to the mat, but Poirier quickly spun through to a superior position and quickly went for his own rear-naked choke when he got Chandler’s back.

    The fighters and their corners appeared to exchange words in the immediate aftermath, and Poirier angrily told referee Dan Miragliotta that Chandler had used an illegal fish-hook maneuver while he'd been chasing the choke submission in the second.

    Cooler heads ultimately prevailed, though, and they bumped fists and congratulated each other before leaving the cage.

    "He was a little bit more durable than I thought he would be," Poirier said. "I thought if I hurt him, he wouldn't be there."

Loser: Celebrating Retirement

4 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12:  Chris Gutierrez knocks out Frankie Edgar with a knee to the face during their bantamweight fight at UFC 281 at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
    Jamie Squire/Getty Images

    So much for retirement parties.

    Former lightweight champion Frankie Edgar basked in the adoration of the MSG crowd on the way to the Octagon and got smiles from his wife and children at cageside, but the party was quickly cut short by up-and-coming opponent Chris Gutierrez in the night's most devastating knockout.

    The 41-year-old announced during the show's run-up that it would be the last fight of his UFC career. He debuted with the promotion 15 years ago at UFC 67. He'd gone 18-10-1 in 29 fights since then but hadn’t won since 2020 and had dropped two straight by finishes in 2021.

    Gutierrez flitted around the mat as Edgar pursued in the first minute-plus, but the lights went out—literally—when he leapt forward with a left knee that crashed directly into the right side of Edgar's face, drawing an immediate wave-off at 2:01 of the first round.

    "I love this sport," he said. "I didn't want to go out like that, but this sport is a b---h. I've got my family here, and that's all that matters."

    Edgar was 3-0-1 in his first four title fights in 2010 and 2011 before losing his last five title tries at lightweight and featherweight. He'll finish with a career mark of 23-11-1.

    "The vast majority of our heroes go out like that, on their backs," Cormier said. "And it sucks. When they walk away, they generally go out like that, to a younger fighter that has not accomplished the things they have. It's not fair, but that's the game we play."

Winner: Regaining Career Momentum

5 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12: Dan Hooker of New Zealand reacts after his victory over Claudio Puelles of Peru in a lightweight bout during the UFC 281 event at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
    Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

    Rumors of Dan Hooker's demise were apparently greatly exaggerated.

    The 32-year-old arrived at Saturday's main card mired in a career-worst skid, having lost four of five fights and getting stopped in three of them, including a first-round KO by Arnold Allen in March.

    But just when it looked like streaking 26-year-old phenom Claudio Puelles would drive the final nail into Hooker's competitive coffin, Hooker found himself back in control of his destiny.

    Puelles had won five straight fights and submitted three foes in doing so, and he quickly tried to seize Hooker's left leg with a series of Imanari rolls. But Adesanya's training teammate worked out of the only real finishing attempt midway through Round 1.

    The Peruvian export continued to roll at Hooker's legs but was never successful in locking his foe up again and quickly turned the crowd against him.

    From there, Hooker took over on the feet, piecing Puelles up with punches and kicks from a standing distance and ultimately ending his night with a hard front kick to the belly.

    Puelles went to the floor and didn't get up, ending the fight by TKO at 4:06 of the second round.

    "They didn't believe in us. No one did. No one did," Hooker said. "I'm 6-foot with a vicious hook. When I bite down on this mouthpiece. I make nails look soft."

Winner: Cutting the Perfect Promo

6 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12: Renato Moicano of Brazil reacts after his submission victory over Brad Riddell of New Zealand in a lightweight bout during the UFC 281 event at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

    Jon Anik put it simply.

    "That," referring to Renato Moicano's F-bomb-laden chat with Joe Rogan, "was the greatest post-fight interview in UFC history."

    The typically reserved Brazilian took his mic promo skills to another stratosphere after he'd done precisely the same thing in the prelim finale, getting opponent Brad Riddell to the ground and prompting his surrender by rear-naked choke at 3:20 of the first round.

    By the time the New Zealander tapped, the squeeze put on him by Moicano was menacingly forcing blood to ooze from a facial cut.

    "There's a moment when a guy just comes into his own and hits another level," Rogan said. following the submission, Moicano's 10th in 17 pro wins and sixth in the UFC.

    But neither Riddell, Rogan or the rest of us had seen anything yet.

    The 33-year-old snatched the mic from Rogan and launched into full-blown fanboy mode, referring to him as the smartest man in the world and claiming he listens to the online lightning rod's podcast every day.

    And then, it was about the fight.

    "Let's go New York," he said. "Let's make some f--king noise."

    "I'm here to take over," he said. "I've lost to the best, but today, I'm the f--king best. I want the f--king bonus. Moicano wants money. Moicano doesn't give a s--t."

Loser: 3 Strikes at Redemption

7 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12:  The referee stops the fight after Ryan Spann knocks down Dominick Reyes in the 1st round of their fight during UFC 281 at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
    Jamie Squire/Getty Images

    Dominick Reyes could have been a world champion.

    In fact, he's not alone in suggesting he should have been a world champion.

    But ever since a February 2020 loss to Jon Jones, he's never recaptured the mojo.

    Now 32, the seventh-ranked light heavyweight saw yet another chance to do so go awry on Saturday night, instead getting knocked stiff by a left hand from No. 12 Ryan Spann and losing via first-round KO after just 80 seconds.

    Reyes was 12-0 before the Jones fight. He's now 12-4 and hasn't won since 2019.

    It was his third straight stoppage loss since the Jones disappointment, which was followed by second-round finishes by Jan Blachowicz later in 2020 and Jiří Procházka in 2021.

    He'd already been rattled by punches from the 6'5" Spann, who'd finished 17 of his 20 wins inside the distance, before the decisive left hand and a follow-up overhand right that clipped the back of his head as he fell. Spann connected with one left-hand ground strike to his defenseless chin just as referee Marc Goddard pulled the winner away.

    Spann is 21-7 as a pro, 7-2 in the UFC and has now won two straight.

    "I trained. I've never trained for a fight before today," he said. "I just came in here to flow and be free. I've been scared to get tired. I wasn't scared to get tired. Damn, I looked good."

Winner: A Cold-Blooded Flyweight

8 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12: Erin Blanchfield celebrates after her submission victory over Molly McCann of England in a flyweight bout during the UFC 281 event at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

    Attention, Valentina Shevchenko: There may be a challenger in your midst.

    Nearby New Jersey native Erin Blanchfield was booed by a New York crowd as she entered the cage to meet popular British export Molly McCann, but the crowd's dissatisfaction was by far the only adversity she faced on Saturday night.

    The 23-year-old was ranked 12th among the world's flyweights heading into the match with her 15th-ranked opponent, and she looked ready to leap several spots while dominating the streaking McCann on the ground on the way to a submission win by kimura.

    Dubbed the "Meatball" by adoring crowds in England, McCann was cheered loudly by the MSG fans but quickly found herself on the wrong end of a takedown in the first minute. She was soon locked into a prone crucifix position that allowed Blanchfield to strafe her with punches and elbows.

    The fight wasn't stopped in spite of a 93-7 advantage in strikes, so Blanchfield pursued and ultimately locked in a kimura on McCann's left arm, drawing a surrender at 3:37.

    "That was pure domination by Erin Blanchfield," ESPN analyst Daniel Cormier said. "What a performance."

    It was Blanchfield's 10th win in 11 pro fights and her fourth straight as a UFC flyweight, boosting her to a tie for the third-longest win streak in the division behind Shevchenko's nine and Manon Fiorot's five.

    "It felt really good, and I think that was worth 50K right there," Blanchfield said. "I was definitely surprised [referee Kevin MacDonald] didn't stop it. I thought I could have gotten it stopped a lot earlier."

Loser: Ottman's 1st-Round Empire

9 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12: (R-L) Matt Frevola knocks out Ottman Azaitar of Morocco in a lightweight bout during the UFC 281 event at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

    Given Ottman Azaitar's first-round track record, it's not surprising that his early prelim feature on Saturday night was finished in less than five minutes.

    What was a shock, however, was the result.

    The only unbeaten fighter among the 28 on the card tasted defeat for the first time as professional when a counter left hand from opponent Matt Frevola dropped him to the floor and rendered him instantly defenseless to prompt referee Dan Miragliotta's intervention at 2:30.

    "This is unreal," Frevola said. "This feels like a dream right now."

    Azaitar, too, was struggling to grasp reality in his semi-conscious state, asking his corner several times what had happened to end the fight so abruptly. He'd arrived to the cage at 13-0 as a pro and 2-0 in the UFC, with all but three wins having come in Round 1.

    The German-born Moroccan hadn't appeared in the Octagon for more than two years since stopping Khama Worthy in 93 seconds in September 2020.

    Azaitar was memorably fired from the company for violating COVID-19 protocols before a scheduled January 2021 meeting with Frevola on Fight Island in Abu Dhabi but was reinstated within a few months. However, he'd not fought since.

    Frevola, a native of nearby Long Island, arrived to the cage with the trumpet-heavy music made popular last summer by New York Mets relief pitcher Edwin Díaz.

    He pressured Azaitar early on but was driven backward by a left hand as his foe began taking the aggressive initiative. Azaitar was stepping forward when Frevola clipped him along the fence with a right hand, then followed with the left that prompted the wave-off.

    Before exiting, Frevola called out streaking British lightweight Paddy Pimblett, who's scheduled to fight Jared Gordon at UFC 282 in December.

    "Paddy's got to go out and win his fight," he said, "because he's the guy I want."

Full Card Results

10 OF 10

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 12: (R-L) Karolina Kowalkiewicz of Poland punches Silvana Gomez Juarez of Argentina in a strawweight bout during the UFC 281 event at Madison Square Garden on November 12, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
    Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC

    Main Card

    Alex Pereira def. Israel Adesanya by KO (punches), 2:01, Round 5

    Zhang Weili def. Carla Esparza by submission (rear-naked choke), 1:05, Round 2

    Dustin Poirier def. Michael Chandler by submission (rear-naked choke), 2:00, Round 3

    Chris Gutierrez def. Frankie Edgar by KO (flying knee), 2:01, Round 1

    Dan Hooker def. Claudio Puelles by KO (body kick), 4:06, Round 2


    Prelims

    Renato Moicano def. Brad Riddell by submission (rear-naked choke), 3:20, Round 1

    Ryan Spann def. Dominick Reyes by KO (punch), 1:20, Round 1

    Erin Blanchfield def. Molly McCann by submission (kimura), 3:37, Round 1

    Andre Petroski def. Wellington Turman by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)


    Early Prelims

    Matt Frevola def. Ottman Azaitar by KO (punch), 2:30, Round 1

    Karolina Kowalkiewicz def. Silvana Gomez Juarez by unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

    Michael Trizano def. Seungwoo Choi by KO (punch), 4:51, Round 1

    Montel Jackson def. Julio Arce by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)

    Carlos Ulberg def. Nicolae Negumereanu by KO (punch), 3:44, Round 1

Saturday 29 October 2022

UFC Fight Night Kattar vs Allen Full Fight HD

 

UFC Fight Night: Kattar vs. Allen 10/29/22 October 29th 2022

Watch UFC Fight Night: Kattar vs. Allen 10/29/22 October 29th 2022 Online Full Show Free

Match Card ~ Timing ~ Channel List.

Countdown To Prelims Countdown To Maincard

Live Streaming Links

(if you Face any Problem inform us in Comments )


Stream 88 SD Stream 88 LQ Stream 88 HD 
Stream 87 SD Stream 87 LQ

 Stream 87 HD

DailyMotion 4 Parts
Will be updated midway into live 1hr parts

Reddrive 4 Parts
Will be updated midway into live 1hr parts

Mystream 4 Parts
Will be updated midway into live 1hr parts

Final Replay
Dailymotion 3 Parts Fullshow Reldrive, Pvphd Download | Fullshow SD / HD / LQ Will be available after live over.



Watch UFC Fight Night: Kattar vs. Allen 10/29/22 October 29th 2022 Online Full Show Free 720p HD Live stream, 29th October 2022 Dailymotion Live 10 Parts Stream during live broadcast, UFC Fight Night: Kattar vs. Allen 29th October 2022 10/29/22 3 Parts Full HD after show is over

We try our best to give links of all hosts mentioned above, Some times links are switched in deleted hosts, If you need video in any particular host,


Watch UFC Fight Night: Kattar vs. Allen 10/29/22 October 29th 2022 Online Full Show Free Stream

Prelims – 4PM ET – #87 & 88 HD SD LQ Channels


# Middleweight – Phil Hawes vs. Roman Dolidze
# Heavyweight РAndrei Arlovski vs. Marcos Rog̩rio de Lima
# Middleweight – Park Jun-yong vs. Joseph Holmes
# Featherweight – Chase Hooper vs. Steve Garcia
# Flyweight – Carlos Mota vs. Cody Durden
# Catchweight – Christian Rodriguez vs. Joshua Weems


Maincard – 7.00PM ET – #87 & 88 HD SD LQ Channels


# Featherweight – Calvin Kattar vs. Arnold Allen
# Welterweight – Max Griffin vs. Tim Means
# Heavyweight – Jared Vanderaa vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta
# Middleweight – Josh Fremd vs. Tresean Gore
# Light Heavyweight – Dustin Jacoby vs. Khalil Rountree Jr.


Saturday 22 October 2022

Oliveira vs Makhachev Full Fight HD UFC 280 Full Show HD 22 October 2022

UFC 280: Oliveira vs. Makhachev PPV Pay Per View 10/22/22 October 22nd 2022

Watch UFC 280: Oliveira vs. Makhachev PPV Pay Per View 10/22/22 October 22nd 2022 Online Full Show Free

Watch Full UFC 280 HD 
EarlyPrelims Prelims Part 1 Part 2


 Part 3 Part 4



Match Card ~ Timing ~ Channel List.

    ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 21: (L-R) Opponents Charles Oliveira of Brazil and Islam Makhachev of Russia face off during the UFC 280 ceremonial weigh-in at Etihad Arena on October 21, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
    Charles Oliveira and Islam Makhachev square off before UFC 280. (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

Islam Makhachev and the Real Winners and Losers from UFC 280

    ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: Islam Makhachev of Russia celebrates after his victory over Charles Oliveira of Brazil in their UFC lightweight championship fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

Full Card Results

    9 OF 9

      ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: (R-L) Armen Petrosyan of Russia and AJ Dobson trade punches in a middleweight fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
      Armen Petrosyan (right) was more active across 15 minutes in winning a competitive but unanimous decision over AJ Dobson (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

      Main Card

      Islam Makhachev def. Charles Oliveira by submission (head and arm choke), 3:16, Round 2

      Aljamain Sterling def. TJ Dillashaw by TKO (punches), 3:44, Round 2

      Sean O'Malley def. Petr Yan by split decision (28-29, 29-28, 29-28)

      Beneil Dariush def. Mateusz Gamrot by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)

      Manon Fiorot def. Katlyn Chookagian by unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

      Preliminary Card

      Belal Muhammad def. Sean Brady by TKO (punches), 4:47, Round 2

      Caio Borralho def. Makhmud Muradov by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)

      Nikita Krylov def. Volkan Oezdemir by unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 29-28)

      Abubakar Nurmagomedov def. Gadzhi Omargadzhiev by unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-27)

      Armen Petrosyan def. AJ Dobson by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

      Muhammad Mokaev def. Malcolm Gordon by submission (armbar), 4:26, Round 3

      Karol Rosa def. Lina Lansberg by majority decision (29-27, 29-27, 28-28)

      There are fight cards. And then there are stacked fight cards.

      The 12-bout show crammed into the Etihad Arena—dubbed "Fight Island" in the early days of the pandemic two years ago—in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, certainly qualified as the latter.

      Championship matches at lightweight and bantamweight topped UFC 280's top-end portion, which included a scrap involving the top contender at 135 pounds.

      The five-bout segment was broadcast Saturday afternoon (U.S. time) on ESPN+ pay-per-view with a familiar crew that included Jon Anik, Daniel Cormier and Paul Felder at the announce table, while Megan Olivi worked the room for breaking news and features.

      The B/R combat sports team was in its assigned seats as well to take in the action and put together a definitive list of the big event's winners. Scroll through to see what we came up with and drop a thought or two in the comments section.

Winner: Keeping a Promise

    1 OF 9

      ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: (L-R) Islam Makhachev of Russia punches Charles Oliveira of Brazil in their UFC lightweight championship fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
      Islam Makhachev landed a right hand that dropped Charles Oliveira and set up a fight-ending submission (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

      Go ahead and call it Khabib 2.0.

      Khabib Nurmagomedov protégé and training partner Islam Makhachev told anyone who’d listen during a 10-fight win streak that he’d be the next lightweight champion from the Dagestan region of Russia.

      On Saturday, in less than 10 minutes, he delivered on his promise.

      The 31-year-old walked through the fire that was Charles Oliveira’s striking and jiu-jitsu and emerged victorious after he submitted the streaking Brazilian with a head-and-arm choke at 3:16 of the second round of Saturday’s main event.

      “I always ask God for everything, and he gives me more than what I asked,” Makhachev said. “I trained so hard for this minute. All my life, when I was a kid, I was preparing for that moment.”

      Makhachev stood up well to Oliveira’s striking and countered well before getting the fight to the mat in the first minute of the first round. Then kept his foe there for nearly four minutes while running up a 51-10 margin in strikes.

      In the second round, he countered a knee strike with a right hand that dropped Oliveira to the floor, and he immediately pounced, locking up Oliveira’s left arm as part of a head-and-arm choke that prompted a quick tapout and an intervention from referee Jason Herzog.

      “I always figured this was not going to be an easy fight,” Makhachev said. “But I knew he was going to care about my wrestling skills. That’s why he pushed so much.”

      Makhachev was emotional upon receiving the belt and immediately draping it over the shoulder of Nurmagomedov, with whom he’s trained, along with the Hall of Famer’s late father, for most of his life.

      “This my belt is for my coach,” he said. “Many years ago, he told me ‘Train hard and you’ll be champion.’”

      Nurmagomedov took the microphone, credited his charge for the victory and on Makhachev’s behalf called out featherweight king Alexander Volkanovski for a pound-for-pound showdown in Australia.

      Volkanovski was in the crowd and went into the cage to accept the challenge and shake the new champion’s hand.

      Oliveira, clearly devastated by his first loss since 2017, called for a rematch.

      “Sometimes we’re here and it’s not our day,” he said.

      “But I promise you I’m gonna get this back. Dana [White], [UFC executive] Hunter [Campbell], I’ve always been there for you guys. Give me the chance to be the next guy.”

Loser: Making It Definitive

    2 OF 9

      Aljamain Sterling (L) competes against TJ Dillashaw in the bantamweight championship at the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) event at the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi on October 22, 2022. (Photo by Giuseppe CACACE / AFP) (Photo by GIUSEPPE CACACE/AFP via Getty Images)
      Matched with an opponent compromised by injury, Aljamain Sterling was quick to defend his bantamweight title (GIUSEPPE CACACE/AFP via Getty Images)

      One of these days, Aljamain Sterling will avoid the chaos.

      The self-proclaimed “Funkmaster” won his bantamweight title with a disqualification when he was hit by an illegal knee from Petr Yan and then defended the belt against Yan with a split decision that more than a few people thought the ex-champion deserved.

      This time, against former two-time champ TJ Dillashaw, it was something else.

      Dillashaw followed an injury-riddled training camp with a first round in which he dislocated a left shoulder upon falling to the ground. He was unable to keep Sterling off him with any effectiveness on the way to a second-round TKO win for the champ in Saturday’s co-main event.

      Dillashaw said afterward that he separated the shoulder several times during training camp and told referee Marc Goddard in the dressing room beforehand that it might come out again during the fight.

      Sterling kept his rival on the ground once it did and chased submissions while mixing in punishing strikes until the final horn.

      The champion said he was unaware of Dillashaw’s compromised condition until his corner team told him after the round. He quickly pursued another takedown and landed it after just 45 seconds of the second frame.

      Dillashaw had no way to escape once in a controlled position, and Sterling simply continued with heavy strikes to his shelled-up and flattened-out opponent until Goddard intervened at 3:44.

      “The guys pointed it out to me. I had no idea because I was just in the zone,” Sterling said. “I made sure and kept on the pressure. Anaconda. Human Backpack. I take you down and it’s a wrap wrap.”

      Sterling suggested a handful of opponents for his next defense, including former champ Henry Cejudo, Sean O’Malley, Marlon Vera and Cory Sandhagen. Dillashaw, meanwhile, apologized to the rest of the contenders in the weight class for holding things up when he knew he was fighting injured.

      “I couldn’t push up once he took me down,” Dillashaw said. “I was hoping I could come out in the second round and hopefully land some big shots, but hats off to Aljamain for doing what he does.”

Loser: Being Sweeter Than 'Suga'

    3 OF 9

      ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: Sean O'Malley reacts after his victory over Petr Yan of Russia in a bantamweight fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
      Sean O'Malley (right) got the decision after a compelling scrap with ex-bantamweight champ Petr Yan (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

      Sean O’Malley didn’t look like a winner.

      He walked to the center of the Octagon and hung his head and exhaled as Bruce Buffer prepared to make the verdict of O’Malley’s fight with ex-bantamweight champ Petr Yan official.

      But then something unexpected happened. He won.

      O’Malley came out on the high end of two scorecards that read 29-28, offsetting a third 29-28 count in Yan’s favor and giving him the high-profile win in one of the sport’s highest-profile careers.

      “I didn’t know,” he said moments afterward. “I thought it could have gone either way.”

      Frequently, that’s code for “I didn’t think I deserved it,” and it wouldn’t have been hard to find folks in the crowd at a Yan-friendly Etihad Arena who thought their man did. Yan didn’t give much of an initial reaction other than shaking his head and flicking his hand before exiting the cage.

      “Fighting is the craziest sport in the world,” O’Malley said. “I had to go someplace I’d never been before. I was hurt more than I’ve ever been in a fight, considering I’ve never been hit.”

      He was hit Saturday. And taken down. A lot.

      Yan pressed forward consistently in the first round, landed 28 strikes to O’Malley’s 23 and scored the session’s lone takedown while racking up 70 seconds of control time. He was wobbled badly by a left hand from O’Malley in the second but rallied with a looping left of his own and got things back to the mat with three more takedowns and better than half a round of control time.

      O’Malley landed a high knee that left Yan with a ghastly cut over his right eye in the opening minute of the final round and landed 40 significant strikes in the frame. Yan scored two more takedowns and finished six for the fight in addition to a 97-91 overall edge in total strikes, but it was O’Malley’s significance—both literal and figurative—that apparently mattered most.

      Dana White said before the fight that the winner would get a title shot, and O’Malley showed little reservation in following that path rather than reencountering Yan again right away.

      “I think the people would love to see me be the bantamweight champ,” O’Malley said. “We’ll give the people what they want.”

Loser: Finding a Foil

    4 OF 9

      ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: (L-R) Katlyn Chookagian punches Manon Fiorot of France in a flyweight fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
      Manon Fiorot (right) defeated the No. 1 flyweight contender in Katlyn Chookagian but it wasn't a dominant performance (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

      Valentina Shevchenko is an undisputed UFC superstar.

      She’s been a flyweight champion for nearly four years, has defended her title seven times and has lost just three times in her 19-year pro career—avenging an early TKO by Liz Carmouche and dropping two narrow, debatable decisions to consensus GOAT Amanda Nunes.

      But she’s having a hard time finding a rival worthy of her skills.

      Shevchenko has already beaten the first-, second-, third-, fourth- and eighth-ranked contenders at 125 pounds, so it’s a fair bet she was hoping for an impressive performance from unbeaten No. 6 Manon Fiorot to create a new threat and fuel her competitive motivation.

      Didn’t happen.

      Though Fiorot was indeed successful in handing incumbent No. 1 Katlyn Chookagian a defeat by unanimous decision, the 15 minutes were rarely more than tedious as the fighters exchanged tactical strikes from a distance, never engaged in a prolonged volley and went to the floor just once.

      “While it feels like she’s winning,” Cormier said midway through the third round, “it hasn’t been anything spectacular that’s going to stick in anyone’s mind.”

      The lone takedown attempt came about 90 seconds later, but Chookagian quickly got back to her feet and the intermittently violent dance continued without drama through the last minute.

      All three judges gave Fiorot the nod by 29-28 verdicts, bumping her record to 10-1 overall and 5-0 in the UFC.

      “I really wanted to fight up to my standard and win by KO, but it is what it is,” she said. “I really think she wanted to wrestle me, but perhaps I should have wrestled her some more because I had one attempt and one takedown. I’ll take everyone in the division and then after that we’ll talk about Valentina.”

Winner: Fighting Disrespect

    5 OF 9

      ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: (R-L) Belal Muhammad punches Sean Brady in a welterweight fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
      Belal Muhammad finished Sean Brady with a frightening barrage of punches in a matchup of ranked welterweights (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

      Here's a tip: Don't disrespect Belal Muhammad.

      The UFC's fifth-ranked welterweight felt slighted when he was called out by unbeaten No. 8 contender Sean Brady, so he felt especially eager to take his frustration out on his ambitious Philadelphia-based foe Saturday.

      The first round of the preliminary card's final bout was perhaps more competitive than the 34-year-old wanted, leaving him with abrasions and a cut on his right cheekbone thanks to Brady's precise strikes, but it became academic in Round 2 when an unfettered, violent barrage of punches led to a TKO stoppage at 4:47.

      "I felt disrespected that I had to fight down," Muhammad said.

      He held a slim 26-25 edge in strikes through the first round, but between-rounds exhortation from training team member Khabib Nurmagomedov got the 16-fight UFC veteran in the mood to create a spectacular ending.

      "He told me he had nothing for me. He told me I had to knock him out," Muhammad said. "He won the fight for me. He's the one who made me want to get the finish."

      It was the first loss in 16 pro fights and came after five straight UFC wins for Brady, who'd called Muhammad's name following a decision over Michael Chiesa on a Fight Night show last November. Muhammad, meanwhile, had a streak of seven straight victories interrupted only by a bout with now-champ Leon Edwards that ended in a no-contest in March 2021.

      "I'm going to be a champion in 2023. I can promise that," Muhammad said. "Go ahead and put that on my name."

Winner: Being a Star

    6 OF 9

      ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: (L-R) Caio Borralho of Brazil punches Makhmud Muradov of Tajikistan in a middleweight fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
      Caio Borralho passed a difficult test in defeating middleweight foe Makhmud Muradov on Saturday (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

      Caio Borralho looks and acts the part of a UFC star.

      And given the "Natural" nickname he's hung on himself since turning pro in 2014, it's clear he's got the self-confidence that's typical of a star as well.

      So when the 29-year-old Brazilian drew Uzbekistan middleweight Makhmud Muradov as an opponent in Saturday's penultimate preliminary bout, he had a chance to prove it.

      Mission accomplished.

      Though he was again unable to secure his first octagonal finish, Borralho nevertheless controlled matters on both the feet and on the ground on the way to winning a unanimous decision in an entertaining three-rounder.

      Two judges scored it 30-27 and a third had it 29-28 for the training partner of Khamzat Chimaev among others, who'd scored a pair of wins on Dana White's Contender Series in 2021 before debuting in the promotion and defeating two others on Saturday's card, Gadzhi Omargadzhiev and Armen Petrosyan, on Fight Night shows in April and July.

      Borralho connected on better than 50 percent of his significant-strike attempts, landed exactly half his takedown tries, racked up nearly six minutes of control time and attempted a pair of submissions in a victory that stretched his win streak to 10 and his record to 13-1.

      Muradov, who's worked with Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s "Money Team" to hone his boxing skills, has dropped two straight after he won his first three UFC fights. He is 25-8 as a pro.

Loser: Unbeaten Impressiveness

    7 OF 9

      ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: Muhammad Mokaev of Russia reacts after his victory over Malcolm Gordon of Canada in a flyweight fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
      Muhammad Mokaev maintained his unbeaten record against Malcolm Gordon, but it wasn't always easy (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

      It was hard to make a definitive call on Muhammad Mokaev.

      The brash 22-year-old arrived for a preliminary card bout with fellow flyweight Malcolm Gordon while telling anyone who'd listen that he was ready for a top-15 contender and destined to become the youngest champion in the promotion's history.

      So the bar was set high, and though Mokaev did end the bout with a sought-after finish, it was hardly the dominant performance the pre-fight words had suggested it would be.

      "To be honest, I underestimated this guy," he said. "I can't do that anymore."

      Whether he backs up that promise is unclear, but he did maintain his unbeaten record—3-0 in the UFC and 9-0 overall—and he quickly got back into tough-talking character when discussing how he'd secured a fight-ending, third-round armbar.

      Mokaev controlled the majority of the first two rounds with repeated takedowns and position control but was reversed late in the second and nearly taken into submission territory as Gordon tried to lock in a rear-naked choke.

      The third round was largely spent on the ground and in clinches as well, until Mokaev seized his right arm and ended things at 4:26.

      "This guy's a black belt (in Brazilian jiu-jitsu). I just got my purple belt," he said. "I don't give a s--t about his belt."

      Mokaev turned 22 in July and has plenty of time to win a title and eclipse the mark Jon Jones set when he became light heavyweight champion at 23 years, eight months in March 2011.

      "While he has dominated at times, it's certainly not the fight he expected as a near -1200 favorite," Cormier said. "We're judging him harshly, but when you say the things this kid has said, the expectations are high."

Winner: Championship Pedigree

    8 OF 9

      ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES - OCTOBER 22: Abubakar Nurmagomedov of Russia prepares to fight Gadzhi Omargadzhiev of Russia in a welterweight fight during the UFC 280 event at Etihad Arena on October 22, 2022 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
      Abubakar Nurmagomedov showed the familiar family style while grinding down welterweight foe Gadzhi Omargadzhiev (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

      He may never be a champion or a UFC Hall of Famer.

      But the familial ties that bind Abubakar Nurmagomedov and his celebrated cousin and training partner are evident when he's in the Octagon.

      The gritty 32-year-old Dagestani pursued takedowns, established control time and essentially ground fellow Russian opponent Gadzhi Omargadzhiev into mulch while securing a unanimous decision in bout four of seven on Saturday's undercard.

      Statistically, Nurmagomedov held a slim 40-38 advantage in significant strikes and converted just 25 percent of his takedown tries, but the gasping, bloody mess that Omargadzhiev was turned into over 15 minutes justified the 29-28, 29-28 and 30-27 scorecards.

      B/R agreed with the dissenting numbers and gave Nurmagomedov all three rounds.

      It was the second straight win for Nurmagomedov after a submission loss in his UFC debut in 2019. He'd spent time in multiple promotions before reaching the Octagon and was notoriously involved and was subsequently suspended for his role in a melee that erupted after cousin Khabib defeated Conor McGregor at UFC 229 in 2018.

      Another member of Team Nurmagomedov, featherweight Zubaira Tukhugov, missed a chance at his own preliminary card appearance when a bout with Lucas Almeida was pulled due to “weight management issues.”

      Tukhugov is 5-2-1 in the UFC since 2014.


Find more