Professional Mixed Martial Arts in New York State: Gladius Fight Promotion Debut

On Saturday, September 22, a new chapter was launched in the long struggle to bring professional mixed martial arts competition to New York State, as the Gladius Fights promotion kicked off their inaugural show from the Cattaraugus Sports Arena in Irvi…

On Saturday, September 22, a new chapter was launched in the long struggle to bring professional mixed martial arts competition to New York State, as the Gladius Fights promotion kicked off their inaugural show from the Cattaraugus Sports Arena in Irving, NY. The event was sanctioned by the Seneca Nation Athletic Commission and was broadcast live by Go Fights Live.

It was an action-packed 12-fight card loaded with some of the best MMA talent living and training in central and Western New York. Many of these fighters had spent years building their careers on the road, continually playing the role of out-of-town spoiler versus hometown hero.

On Saturday night, it was finally their turn to feel the energy that comes from fighting in front of family and friends.

The night kicked off in storybook fashion. In his second amateur fight, flyweight Brandon Warne of Ovid, NY won by unanimous decision over Dustin Bertch and then capped off his night by successfully proposing to his girlfriend in the middle of the octagon.

In lightweight action, Kevin Johnston improved his amateur record to 5-2 via split decision victory over previously unbeaten Jake Bohn. The two fighters put on a solid display of technical grappling. 

“It was very important to us to make sure we had top-notch amateur fights,” promoter Ryan Ciotoli told me after the show. “If we were going to have amateur fights, we wanted to make sure they were going to be very good.”

The professional card kicked off with light heavyweight Jabril Patterson beating Dan Jennings by first-round TKO at 3:04. 

In flyweight action, Pete Cole of Cortland, NY hung tough in stand-up action against Gabe Sacchetti before securing the takedown and sinking a rear naked choke to win by submission at 3:35 of round one. 

In his professional debut at a 150-pound catch weight, Shane Manley bested Jeff Denz by unanimous decision. 

In one of the night’s most heated battles, Ahsan Abdulla showcased crisp striking on his feet and withstood Sabino Scarpone’s powerful wrestling attack to counter with a guillotine choke 1:47 into the second round. Abdulla, who was the victim of an atrociously bad split-decision loss in Rhode Island on August 3, improved his professional record to 1-1.

In featherweight action, “The Russian Sniper” Amaran Aliyev beat Antwerp, Belgium import Nico Verresen by guillotine choke at 3:08 of Round 1 after a thrilling, blood-filled stand up war that had the crowd on their feet and screaming. 

In featherweight action, fast-rising prospect Desmond “The Predator” Green improved to 5-0 when he dominated Matt Dimarcantonio en route to a unanimous decision victory. A Rochester native and former University of Buffalo wrestling standout, Green was fighting in his own backyard in front of an enthusiastic partisan crowd. 

MMA fans who play the prospect-watch game should place Green firmly on their radar. 

In a matchup of skilled grapplers, Tom Vanderhorst of Bedroc MMA in Rochester, NY employed an aggressive bottom game to catch an arm bar on James Frier at 2:33 of round two. 

In my own choice for Fight of the Night, bantamweight Andrew Cseh bested Zech Lange via unanimous decision 29-28 on all three cards. 

In the co-main event, welterweight Mike Winters improved to 7-2 by winning a unanimous decision against TJ Sumler

In the main event, Rochester native and Bellator and Strikeforce veteran Don Carlo-Clauss survived an early scare against Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt Eddie Fyvie to improve his record to 10-7.

Fyvie caught Carlo-Clauss with a hard shot early in the first round and closed aggressively. Carlo-Clauss dropped his level and secured an easy takedown, but Fyvie reacted aggressively, sinking a deep arm bar that nearly ended the night. Carlo-Clauss escaped by lifting Fyvie and slamming him headfirst into the mat. 

“That’s not normally my go-to (for escaping the arm bar), but I had to do something” Carlo-Claus told me in the locker room afterwards.

After escaping danger, Carlo-Clauss kept Fyvie trapped tight against the cage for the remainder of the round, which he still managed to win on all three cards. 

In the second and third, Carlo-Clauss imposed his will with a dominant clinch game, trapping Fyvie on the cage and working for a takedown

“I knew I could easily control the action in that position,” he said afterward. “But he was crafty. He wouldn’t give me any room to get off with a punch or an elbow.”

Although he was pleased to come away with the win, Carlo-Clauss expressed some disappointment in his inability to deliver a more exciting performance. “

You train to finish guys and dominate,” he said. “And I don’t usually get to fight in front of so many family and friends. I wanted to put on a show.”

“But sometimes, you have to do what you can do to win.”

In truth, the fight was a satisfying technical matchup. Fyvie displayed an extremely fluid jui-jitsu game from his back and managed to score with flashy, if not overly effective, up-kicks when trailing late in the fight. 

For his own part, Carlo-Clauss showed an impressive ability to adjust during the fight. He credited his opponent for the effective strike in the first.

“That might be the hardest I’ve been hit,” he admitted. “I was worried about it the rest of the fight and couldn’t get my rhythm.”

Nevertheless, he managed to score throughout the fight with punishing leg kicks. It was a testament to intelligent reading of a dangerous opponent: “He kept stepping and circling with his jab, stepping right into the leg kick.”

Carlo-Clauss showcased some smart adjustments in the grappling game, too. After surviving a legitimate scare in the first, he was never in serious danger the rest of the way. “In the second and third round I started to get a feel for what he does.”

“I roll with good guys all the time,” said Carlo-Clauss, mentioning his Bombsquad teammate and four-time Mundial world champion Rene Nazere. “But everybody does things a little bit differently.”

For Gladius Fights and the Seneca Nation, it was clearly a night to build upon for the future. Ciotoli, who has been active in the northeast and national MMA scene for a decade, was happy with his promotion’s initial offering. 

“We looked to match up guys who would make exciting fights. I feel like we got it tonight and that we might have some matchups we can build on in the future based on what happened tonight.”

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Gladius Fights: Professional MMA Coming to New York September 22

Over the past several years, one of the biggest fights in the mixed martial arts universe has been waged outside of the cage: the effort to finally get the sport legalized in the state of New York.Despite already passing the New York Senate with wide s…

Over the past several years, one of the biggest fights in the mixed martial arts universe has been waged outside of the cage: the effort to finally get the sport legalized in the state of New York.

Despite already passing the New York Senate with wide spread popular support, in May of this year, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver announced that the bill would once again be prevented from reaching the Assembly floor for vote. For the second straight year, the bill to legalize mixed martial arts in New York was killed in committee.  

The ongoing ban in New York has prevented thousands of fans in the state from having the opportunity to watch their favorite sport live. It has robbed venues from Madison Square Garden to countless smaller arenas from the revenue-generating bonanza that would come from hosting a professional MMA card.

But without a doubt, the biggest burden has been felt by New York state fighters and trainers. For professional fighters trying to establish a career while living in New York has meant long overnight drives, hostile crowds and records marred by judges’ decisions that smell suspiciously like “home cooking.”

But later this month, an exciting new venue will open up for fighters in upstate New York, as the Gladius Fights Promotion hosts its inaugural card at the Cattaragus Sports Arena in Irving, NY, sanctioned by the Seneca Nation’s Athletic Commission.  

Gladius Fights was started by long time MMA trainer and owner of Bombsquad Management, Ryan Ciotoli. Ciotoli once estimated to me that he travels 30-35 weekends a year with his fighters, getting them the fights they need to stay active and build their up their resumes. 

 

 

By donning a promoter’s hat, the former Ithaca College All-American wrestler will get the chance to bring the sport he has been involved in for more than a decade closer to home.

For the Seneca tribe, sanctioning and promoting mixed martial arts is not a new venture. The tribe previously worked with the Raging Wolf Promotion, hosting the cards at their Seneca Niagara Casino, in Niagara Falls, NY. 

The experience makes them an ideal partner for Ciotoli, regardless of the ban that prevents him from promoting cards anywhere else in the state. “The Seneca Commission is very easy to deal with,” he told me. “Very structured and organized. They bring in good refs and judges and a good doctor.”

The Seneca Nation’s new Cattaragus Arena provides a state-of-the-art venue for the show. “The locker room area is great,” Ciotoli said, noting that in his road warrior travels shepherding his team around the Northeast, accommodations for fighters are not always ideal.

“It’s great to have a place for each team to relax and get ready. And having a place to shower, that’s nice.” 

As would be expected, the card is loaded with New York state fighters, including main event combatants, lightweights Don Carlo-Clauss, 9-7, of Rochester and Eddie Fyvie, 9-5, of Schenectady.

A Bellator and Strike Force veteran, Carlo-Clauss could be the poster boy for fighters getting a raw deal on the road. Last December he dropped a split decision in New Jersey to hometown fighter Chris Liguori. NortheastMMA.net correspondent Old School reported he had been sitting next to Liguori‘s own family, who all thought their boy had lost the fight.

Although Carlo-Clauss fought on a Raging Wolf cards in 2009 and 2010, like most New York state fighters, his career has mainly been played out away from home. In a press release on the Gladius Fight’s Facebook page, he stated: 

“I’ve had 16 fights and some of my closest friends and family have never seen me fight before. I want this fight to start a new chapter in my career, and I want to keep looking ahead.”

The card will be streamed live by Go Fights Live. Comcast Regional Sports network will broadcast a highlight version of the card within two-three weeks of the show date. 

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Caged Fury Fighting Championship 16: Team Bombsquad’s Young Gunz Invade the AC

Over the past several years Team Bombsquad has established itself as one of the top professional mixed martial arts camps in the entire northeast. Most famous as the original launching pad for current UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones, the Bombs…

Over the past several years Team Bombsquad has established itself as one of the top professional mixed martial arts camps in the entire northeast. Most famous as the original launching pad for current UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones, the Bombsquad roster has been consistently placing fighters on UFC, Bellator, Strikeforce, WEC and top-level regional cards for over half a decade.

All of this has been accomplished while based in the sleepy college town of Ithaca, N.Y., in the heart of a state that has still yet to sanction professional mixed martial arts. Fighting for the Bombsquad by definition means being a road warrior.

Head trainer Ryan Ciotoli once estimated to me that he travels 30-35 weekends a year with his fighters.

The Ithaca team will be on the road once more this Friday, August 24, when Bombsquad members and highly ranked prospects Evan Velez and Aljamain Sterling head to Atlantic City, N.J., to fight for the Caged Fury Fighting Championship flyweight and bantamweight titles, respectively.   

For Sterling (6-0), it will be the second defense of a belt he won last October when he beat New Jersey native Sean Santella by unanimous decision.

Santella (10-3-1) promptly dropped to flyweight and captured the CFFC title at 125. In a funny twist of fate, his challenger this Friday will be Sterling’s teammate, Velez (5-1, 1 NC).

Further thickening the plot is the fact that Santella holds a victory over Sterling’s opponent on Friday, Brazilian native and Pennsylvania resident Sedico Honorio (8-2).

 

But in the tough Northeastern regional circuit, familiarity breeds respect, rather than contempt.  

“I actually saw them fight each other at my pro debut,” Sterling told me. “They’re both tough. Very good on the ground.”

Sterling turned pro in April 2011, following a standout wrestling career at SUNY Cortland, where he twice earned All-American honors. Success has come quickly in the professional ranks. The 2012 Bloody Elbow world bantamweight scouting report ranked Sterling as their No. 2 prospect.

Sterling’s mental intensity and focus is exemplified in the slogan emblazoned on his t-shirts: “When I dream, I work. Reality.” When asked to elaborate on this idea he commented:

I really believe, anything you want, you can achieve. So when you say it, you start to channel yourself towards it. Because you’ve focused your awareness on it, you start to do things in your life to make it happen. I see myself in the UFC, eventually becoming the champion.

It’s a mental outlook characteristic of the team. In a similar manner, Velez told me: “With the UFC adding the flyweight division, I really see things opening up for me.” 

A Bronx native, Velez wrestled at Hunter College in the city. His journey into martial arts has been a lifetime commitment. At four years of age, his father and Shihan Ervin Velez started him in World Oyama Karate.

“It’s a full contact Japanese style,” Velez explained. “So the big thing it helped me with for MMA is that I’ve been used to seeing punches and kicks coming at me since a very young age.”

Velez made his professional debut just a month before Sterling. “That’s about when we started up with the Young Gunz,” he said. “We just had a bunch of young guys breaking into the sport, hungry for opportunities.” 

Indeed, I work out at the Bombsquad’s home gym of Ultimate Athletics in Ithaca, and it can be tough to even begin to keep track of the amount of talent continually coming through the doors. Sterling and Velez will be joined in Atlantic City by lightweight teammate Desmond Green, another blue-chip prospect and a former star wrestler for the University of Buffalo. 

The steady influx of talented, hungry athletes ensures that team practices are always intense and competitive. 

“That’s the Bombsquad culture,” Velez says. “Always training. We always want to be ready to take a fight on short notice, whenever the big break comes along.” 

For a rising prospect like Velez, this is an essential attitude, as he learned firsthand recently, when UFC matchmakers contacted the camp about using him as a possible last second replacement for a recent FX card. 

Ultimately, the opportunity didn’t materialize. But just getting that close left Velez hungrier than ever and further convinced that the “Bombsquad culture” is the way to go.

“When the UFC calls, you have to take the fight, whether you’re ready or not. So you had better make sure you are ready all the time.”

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Groundswell Building for Mark Hunt to Replace Alistair Overeem at UFC 146

When Alistair Overeem failed his surprise drug test last week, it threw yet another UFC card into disarray. Overeem was scheduled to challenge UFC heavyweight champion Junior Dos Santos in the main event at UFC 146 on May 26. Overeem, who had a te…

When Alistair Overeem failed his surprise drug test last week, it threw yet another UFC card into disarray. Overeem was scheduled to challenge UFC heavyweight champion Junior Dos Santos in the main event at UFC 146 on May 26. 

Overeem, who had a testosterone-to-epitestosterone ratio of 14:1, has requested that his “B” sample be tested too, and is scheduled to appear before a Nevada State Athletic Committee hearing later this month. But it would be a very big surprise if they decided to grant him a license to fight in the state at this point.

Former heavyweight champions Frank Mir and Cain Velasquez, set to meet on the under card, were both mentioned early on as potential substitute opponents by Internet speculators. However, Dana White tweeted that “Mir-Velasquez will happen”  on Friday, so that would seem to remove both former champions from the equation.

Meanwhile, on the Internet, support continues to grow for New Zealand native and former K1 kickboxing standout Mark Hunt. On the Mixed Martial Arts Underground, one of the most popular sites on the web with serious MMA fans, a recent thread supporting him as a replacement has exploded.  

Yahoo cage writer Maggie Hendricks reported that a Twitter campaign using the hashtag RallyforMarkHunt has flooded UFC executives Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta with requests to name Hunt as a replacement opponent.  

This weekend, UFC color commentator Joe Rogan even weighed in, starting his own thread on the MMA Underground to express support for Hunt getting the title shot:

There are some wise people on this board, and I support this movement.
Style wise that might be the most exciting match up. Either way, even if Hunt doesn’t replace the reem I would still love to see this matchup down the road, especially considering how good Hunt looked against Kongo.
Has anyone started a twitter bomb campaign for this?

There will be objections from some quarters that Hunt is a less-than-deserving candidate, given his 8-7 MMA record.

But a lot of very knowledgeable fighters and fans seem convinced that he would make the most exciting possible fight for Dos Santos, providing a real-life “Rocky Balboa” story in the bargain. At the very least, he might force the young champion to show other facets of his game than we have seen in his fights so far, when he has been able to rely on superior striking to steamroll everybody in his path. 

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Driving All Night for a Fight: Life for MMA Fighters Under the NY State Ban

It’s about 3 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 10, in the Shipyard Lounge of The Colisee, in Lewiston, Maine. The room is full of gaunt, hard-looking young men— professional mixed martial arts fighters and their training partners and coaches, here for th…

It’s about 3 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 10, in the Shipyard Lounge of The Colisee, in Lewiston, Maine. The room is full of gaunt, hard-looking young men— professional mixed martial arts fighters and their training partners and coaches, here for the weigh-ins for tomorrow night’s New England Fight Night I card. Waiting to re-hydrate after drying themselves out to make weight. 

Team Bombsquad from Ithaca, New York, shows up right on time. Back in Ithaca, I work out at their home gym, Ultimate Athletics. On a typical day they are probably the most energetic group of people I see, bouncing around on the mat or joking along the sides as they get ready for another grueling practice.

But this afternoon they look like, well, pretty much what you would expect people to look like after they’ve driven seven hours over night and then spent the day sweating off large amounts of weight.

“That drive was horrible,” says Bombsquad Muy Thai instructor Primo Bellarosa. “We left last night at 11:30, drove straight, crashed in the parking lot outside the gym for an hour, waiting for it to open and we’ve been cutting weight ever since.”

“That was a pretty tough cut,” flyweight Evan Velez tells me. I ask him if the long drive made it harder. He shrugs, “I don’t want to put it on that. I came in a little heavy at the start of camp.” As with most fighters it’s a cultivated habit of thought for him to frame a situation in a manner that puts as much responsibility as possible on himself.

Still, he concedes, “The drive doesn’t help. It would be nice to do it from home.”

But for a professional mixed martial artist who lives in the state of New York, fighting near home is an unavailable option. The sport remains banned in the Empire State, as the most recent attempt to legalize it died in the Assembly Ways and Means Committee last June.

I remember reading a Facebook update at the time from Bombsquad head trainer Ryan Ciotoli, regretting the fact that he would face another year of driving. If riding long distances and cutting weight is a regular ordeal for New York state MMA fighters like the Bombsquad, shepherding them through it is Ciotoli’s routine grind.

When I ask him how many weekends a year he travels out of state with his fighters he estimates 30-35. “But this is four in a row right now.”

Road trips and hotel rooms are not unfamiliar to any professional athletes and long drives are par for the course at the minor league level in any sport. But the New York state ban is unquestionably an extra burden for guys like Ciotoli.

“Not counting the big shows, where you fly wherever they want you, how many weekends a year would you be traveling like this to get guys fights if it was legal back home?” I ask Ciotoli.

“We’d never travel,” he says.

I know he’s not exaggerating. There are at least a half dozen venues that could host good, high level professional cards within about a two hour drive of Ithaca. And there is no lack of popular interest, to judge from the enrollment in classes like the ones offered at Ciotoli’s Ultimate Athletics and the crowds packing into the local Buffalo Wild Wings for UFC pay-per-view cards.  

The UFC has commissioned its own studies on this, estimating that legalized MMA in New York would benefit the state to the tune of $23 million a year, with $16 million coming from the UFC and the rest from an estimated 70 non-UFC shows. 

I covered the Miguel Cotto-Antonio Margarito fight from Madison Square Garden last December, when 23,000 fans packed the place. The bartender I talked to in the Irish Times Pub, located across the street from the Garden, told me they were having a pretty nice weekend. A Frankie Edgar or Jon Jones headlined show with a bunch of New York city and New York state fighters featured on the under card would do similar gate.  

Lewiston is the second largest city in Maine, but that doesn’t mean it’s very big. The population was less that 42,000 in the 2010 census. It’s a mill town where almost all the mills are gone. 

And it’s a fight town. Well, with a primarily French-Canadian population, it is a hockey town most of all. But it’s a fight town, too.

In 1965, Lewiston was the site for the notorious Ali-Liston rematch, when Ali’s “phantom punch” stopped Liston in the first round. The greatest sport’s hero to ever come out of Lewiston is former world jr. lightweight and lightweight boxing champion Joey Gamache.

And on Saturday night, February 11, 2012, a large local crowd is packed into the Colisee, wildly cheering on a steady stream of local amateur and pro fighters. It’s a big event for a community this size. When I stopped at Gritty McDuff’s brew pub at lunchtime, across the Androscoggin River in Aubrun, people I talked to knew about the show and were excited that it was happening in the community.  

Lewiston is not much different than a lot of cities in New York’s Southern Tier: Utica, Binghamton or Elmira. Last month I covered a pro boxing card at Turning Stone Casino, in Verona, New York, where fighters from nearby towns like Canastota and Utica fought for enthusiastic hometown crowds, excited to get on board early with a prospect.

Local fighters sell tickets, which means MMA in New York state is a big deal just waiting to happen.

All together, Team Bombsquad has seven fighters on the Lewiston card, ranging from promising amateurs like Dez Green to experienced WEC and Strike Force veterans like Anthony Leone. Ciotoli and Bellarosa train a lot of fighters and it’s a Bombsquad tradition to represent heavy at regional shows.  

Still in his early 30’s, Ciotoli is a longtime veteran of the Northeastern MMA scene. He started fighting in 2000, following a stand-out wrestling career at Ithaca College. “The Barn” located behind his old house in McGraw, NY, was a legendary institution in central New York mixed martial arts crowds, a bare-bones proving ground for regional champions and UFC, Strike Force and Bellator veterans.

Check out the linked Youtube videos by Mac’s MMA for an interesting documentary look at the Bombsquad camp. 

Ciotoli was UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones’ first trainer, but like most fight trainers, the biggest part of his job is keeping his prospect fighters active and ready to step up in competition. Sometimes this means a lot of running around to get everybody’s paperwork in line, a task made especially arduous when he tries to stack a card with fighters, to get his guys work.

“Getting physicals done is a real glamour part of the sport,” he deadpans when I am talking to him during the weigh-ins, informing me that it took him parts of three days to get all his fighters completely cleared.

Simply preparing a large number of fighters on fight night is a big task. After the card, Ciotoli tells me it took him and Bellarosa two-and-a-half hours just to wrap everybody’s hands.

Once the card is underway, Ciotoli and Bellarosa are back and forth to the cage all night, cornering fighters in nearly every other fight. Fighting as an amateur, former University of Buffalo wrestler Dez Green starts the night off on a positive note for the Bombsquad, winning by second round TKO due to ground-and-pound.

Bombsquad amateur Shane Manley continues the strong showing for New York state wrestlers, winning his match by unanimous decision. The Bombsquad ends the amateur portion of the card with a 2-1 record.

The Ithacans continue their roll-in during the pro fights. Flyweight prospect Evan Velez and featherweight Bellator Fighting Championship veteran Brian Kelleher both win their matches by rear naked choke.

In the co-main event, WEC and Strike Force bantamweight veteran Anthony Leone overcomes a first round broken nose to beat fellow WEC veteran and BJJ black belt Paul Gorman by arm bar submission. 

The night ends with an impressive 5-2 record for the Bombsquad. The mood outside the locker room after the card is upbeat, the celebratory atmosphere muted somewhat by the awareness of the long ride home still waiting to be made. 

There is optimism that 2012 will finally be the year the ban gets lifted. Ciotoli, who has been watching the process from the start, is confident. In 2011, the legalization bill passed the New York Senate and two of three required Assembly Committees. The only thing that seems to have prevented its passage this time was the long, convoluted New York state legislative process.

Fans and fighters alike, across the Empire State, are hoping that process can be negotiated once and for all in 2012. In the meantime, the athletes and their trainers will continue to do what they need to do to advance in this tough and competitive sport.  

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New England Fight Night I: MMA Action from Lewiston, Maine

On Saturday, February 11, the historic Colisee in Lewiston, Maine was the spot for an exciting professional and amateur mixed martial arts card as Nick Disalvo Promotions hosted a show in the same location as the notorious Ali-Liston II “Phantom Punch”…

On Saturday, February 11, the historic Colisee in Lewiston, Maine was the spot for an exciting professional and amateur mixed martial arts card as Nick Disalvo Promotions hosted a show in the same location as the notorious Ali-Liston II “Phantom Punch” fight from 1965.

The card featured a strong mix of local Maine talent matched with highly regarded regional prospects. Team Bombsquad of Ithaca, New York, one of the northeast’s top professional camps, provided three amateur fighters and four pros, garnering a 5-2 record for the road trip. 

The amateur fights featured strong wrestling by Bombsquad members Shane Manley (unanimous decision) and Dez Green (TKO 2, by ground and pound) and by Ray Wood of Young’s MMA, who came back from an early takedown to win by first-round TKO. 

In professional action, lightweight Anthony Woodman (TKO, strikes) and bantamweight Adam Toussaint (rear naked choke) of Team Havoc came away winners. Jamie Hanson of First Coast Full Contact won on TKO by strikes in a welterweight bout. 

Bellator Fighting Championship veteran and Team Bombsquad member Brian Kelleher won by rear naked choke at featherweight. Popular local fighter Ryan Sanders of Young’s MMA weathered an aggressive ground-and-pound attack by Dan Keefe to pull off a first-round arm bar submission at welterweight.

In a catchweight clash of WEC veterans, Paul Gorman of the Academy and Anthony Leonne of Bombsquad fought a spirited first round, exchanging flurries on their feet and dominant positions on the ground, with Leonne suffering a possible broken nose for his troubles.

Leonne came out in the second round looking aggressively for the takedown. His doggedness paid off, as he brought Gorman to the mat and took his back. Gorman defended the rear naked choke, but Leonne hit a slick transition into a very deep, tight arm bar that forced Gorman to tap.

The UFC’s recent announcement of the addition of a flyweight division made the 125-pound matchup between Ernesto Ornelas (Choi’s/MMAthletix) and Evan Velez (Bombsquad) was particularly interesting. Ornelas showed a great deal of poise and skill in the striking department but was simply over-matched when the fight hit the floor, succumbing to a rear naked choke at 3:45 of the first.

Velez, a talented athlete with a strong amateur wrestling background, has so far struggled to get enough fights in his young career but should see more opportunities open up for him, now that the UFC has decided to add flyweight to their roster.

“It changes everything, even for smaller shows,” Bombsquad head trainer Ryan Ciotoli told me during Friday’s weigh-in.  

Velez was optimistic about his future after the card. “The flyweight division in UFC and legalizing MMA in New York, those are the two things I’ve been excited for,” said the Bronx native, referring to his home state’s current ban on mixed martial arts. “Now we got the first one, we’ve got to get the other this year.” 

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