After 2-Year Absence, Opponent Sought for Prospect Frodo Khasbulaev’s WSOF Debut

It has been called one of the saddest stories in mixed martial arts.
That may be a bit of an overstatement, but not by a huge margin. Now, after two years in contractual and bureaucratic purgatory, Dagestani Russian featherweight Magomedrasul “Fro…

It has been called one of the saddest stories in mixed martial arts.

That may be a bit of an overstatement, but not by a huge margin. Now, after two years in contractual and bureaucratic purgatory, Dagestani Russian featherweight Magomedrasul “Frodo” Khasbulaev finally has a chance to crawl up from between the cracks and resume his promising fighting career.

World Series of Fighting officials have confirmed (via MMAJunkie.com) that Khasbulaev has signed a multi-fight deal with the promotion. They are now seeking an opponent for Khasbulaev‘s WSOF debut at WSOF 21 on June 5 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

In 2013, Khasbulaev, who hails from the same region of the North Caucasus that spawned hot names like Khabib Nurmagomedov and Rustam Khabilov, defeated Mike Richman to win Bellator’s featherweight tournament in the promotion’s eighth season. Then 26 years old, Khasbulaev was 21-5 as a pro and in position to challenge then-champion Pat Curran for the featherweight title.

It was all looking good until Khasbulaev‘s visa was revoked under mysterious circumstances. The resulting complications were messy and murky and took two years to resolve.

As Khasbulaev and his camp attempted to re-secure his traveling privileges, Bellator—then under the leadership of Bjorn Rebney, who has since parted ways with the organization—evidently refused to let Khasbulaev out of his contract, a move that would have allowed him to stay busy competing for promotions in Russia while he waited for the United States to restore his visa.

In January, Bellator, under the new leadership of Scott Coker, finally released Khasbulaev, at which time details emerged that seemed to point to Bellator as the party responsible for discontinuing his visa, potentially because Khasbulaev refused to sign a big contract to stay with the promotion.

“They said his original petition was revoked by the petitioner, by Bellator,” said Khasbulaev‘s current manager, Rizvan Magomedov in a January interview with MMAFighting.com. “That’s what he was told by the consulate.”

Bellator officials have denied the claim. 

It is, if nothing else, a strange situation. But with Khasbulaev now apparently cleared to fight under the WSOF banner, hopefully any problems are behind him and an innocent person can return to making an honest living as a fighter.

Rick Glenn was briefly named as Khasbulaev‘s first WSOF opponent, but an injury has sidelined the former WSOF featherweight champ. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

WSOF 20: Main Card Preview and Predictions

There is a busy MMA weekend afoot, with the Big Three all holding show this weekend. One of those big three is World Series of Fighting, which comes to us with its 20th show on NBC Sports on Friday.
Middleweight champion Dave Branch headlines the card,…

There is a busy MMA weekend afoot, with the Big Three all holding show this weekend. One of those big three is World Series of Fighting, which comes to us with its 20th show on NBC Sports on Friday.

Middleweight champion Dave Branch headlines the card, moving up to 205 pounds in search of his second title with the company. He fights Ronny Markes in the semifinals of a 205-pound tournament, with the winner taking on Teddy Holder at an event to be announced for the inaugural light heavyweight championship.

Decorated amateur wrestler Steve Mocco, one-armed phenom Nick Newell and superhero Ben “Phoenix Jones” Fodor also grace the card.

With that, let’s take a look at WSOF 20 and make some predictions.

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WSOF 20’s Nick Newell: I Lost, but I’m Not Done

This Friday night at Foxwoods Casino in Ledyard, CT, Nick Newell will look to rebound from his first professional loss and work his way back up the lightweight ladder when he takes on Joe Condon in the co-main event of World Series of Fighting 20. Newe…

This Friday night at Foxwoods Casino in Ledyard, CT, Nick Newell will look to rebound from his first professional loss and work his way back up the lightweight ladder when he takes on Joe Condon in the co-main event of World Series of Fighting 20. Newell hasn’t fought since his third-round TKO loss to Justin Gaethje last July in the promotions network television debut on NBC.  

Newell recently spoke with Bleacher Report Columnist Mike Wellman on his podcast, The MMA Word. Newell opened up about coming back from defeat, the opportunity to fight in Connecticut and signing a new contract with WSOF.

Even though he’s been out of the cage since last July, Newell says he’s been getting better. His time away from the cage has allowed injuries to heal and his body to recover from his last few fights.  

Newell recently re-signed with World Series of Fighting, after a lengthy negotiation with the promotion. Newell wanted to immediately get back into fights with the promotion’s top lightweights, while matchmaker Ali Abdel-Aziz told MMAFighting.com at the time he wanted to bring Newell back up the ranks more slowly.  

It kind of sucks, because I want to go in there and fight the best but they’re in control of my contract, really. I do make decent money, but I’m also a pretty big draw, so I think that’s fair. I want to fight the best guys, but this is the guy they want me to fight. I’m not in a position to call anyone out because I lost my last fight. I say I do this fight, and we see how it goes, and just go from there.

Newell would have liked to get back in the cage much sooner. He was ready to fight in December, but his contract negotiations kept him out of the mix until he re-signed in February. Though his layoff was contract-related, Newell isn’t the first WSOF fighter to complain about not getting a fight. He said with his new contract, inactivity won’t be an issue.

They signed a big roster, and they didn’t have enough events, and I think that was the problem. They’re tuning down with the number of signings now and making an attempt to keep the guys more active. I’ve worked something into my contract that will keep me more active. I can’t complain about that now. Obviously this long layoff was not ideal, I was ready to go in December. But it is what it is. I get a hometown fight. I probably could have used a paycheck around Christmas time, but it is what it is, I don’t waste my money, I’m pretty good with it.

Newell’s home base is Fighting Arts Academy in Springfield, MA. He travels there from Connecticut to train during the week, and heads home on the weekends. His 13th professional fight will be his first in his home state. Newell noted the crowd will be filled with friends, family and fans, saying:

This is my first fight ever in Connecticut, not as an amateur, not as a pro, I’ve never fought in Connecticut. Everyone I train with has fought in Connecticut…The closest I’ve fought to Connecticut as a pro is Boston, which is about three hours away from where I live. So I guess that is a local high, but not really, you know. This is in my home state. It’s about an hour from where I grew up, but it’s at the casino and everybody loves going to the casino. I’ve already sold a bunch of tickets, and my teammate Leon Davis is also on the card, and he sold a bunch of tickets, so combined the place is going to go insane.

Newell’s climb back up the lightweight ladder starts with Joe Condon. Condon made his WSOF debut at WSOF 17 in January, stepping up on weigh-in day from a prelim fight to the co-main event. He made the most of the opportunity and defeated Jonathan Nunez with a third-round guillotine choke.

Newell knows he’s going in there against a veteran and fellow submission artist, but feels his mat skills are superior. He also feels he’ll be the better athlete in the cage, saying:

My coaches watched a lot of footage on him, and came up with some stuff I need to work on. I know he’s very relaxed, this will be his 20th pro fight, so he’s definitely a veteran. He’s fought a lot of good guys, and he’s fought a lot of fights at 170, so he’s big for the weight class. But I feel like I’m really strong for the weight class. I don’t think many people are much stronger than me. My explosion and my athleticism are through the roof now. I’ve been working at Ramos Athletic Conditioning Center on my strength and conditioning.

You know, [Condon is] good wherever the fight goes, he has good Jiu-Jitsu. He’s got a lot of submission wins. But I’m a black belt in Jiu-Jitsu, and if he wants to go to the ground with me, that’s his mistake.

Even though Newell still feels an illegal knee from Gaethje impacted the fight, he isn’t holding hard feelings towards the champion. Newell is over the loss and focused on getting back on the track to the title, whether it’s held by Gaethje.

I don’t really care [about avenging the Gaethje loss]…I’d obviously like to win the belt a little more than I would like to avenge that loss. I just don’t dwell on the past. If they offered me another fight with Justin I would take it, no problem. But it’s not like I’m sitting in my room with a candle lit, staring at a picture of Justin, hating my life. He beat me. Sometimes you lose.

Newell isn’t a stranger to losing. Even though his MMA career got off to a stellar start, he came up short in his first 17 high school wrestling matches. He used the feeling of defeat as fuel to continue winning, and even though he may no longer be undefeated in mixed martial arts, he says he isn’t letting the loss ruin all the hard work he has put in to get here, saying:

You only really lose when you give up. I never had any concrete goals in this sport, to be honest with you. I really just made a promise to myself to give it my all, train as hard as I could, and always fight to the best of my ability or give it everything I have, and then whatever happen, happens. And it’s taken me pretty far in this sport. I lost. It sucks. Did I want to lose? No. Do I feel a sense of relief? Hell no. I’d rather be undefeated, but it happens.

If I let something like one loss ruin me, then all my hard work that I’ve put in since I started wrestling when I was 14 years old, it means nothing if I just give up after getting sidetracked one time. That’s why I am where I am, because I didn’t give up. I lost my first 17 wrestling matches. I was getting killed and everyone in my high school was watching it. It was embarrassing. So I know what it’s like to be a loser, it sucks. And I think that’s why I win so much, because it keeps me humble, and keeps me hungry. I never want to go back to that, and no one is perfect.  

So I lost, but I’m not done. Hell no. I’m better than what I showed. I had a bad night, and I know that isn’t the real me. I’m going to pick up the pieces and put them back together and come back stronger.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Pro Fighter Matt Hamill Stops Erratic Driver, Rescues Young Child

Oh, Matt Hamill. There’s no way we can quit you.
Hamill, famed in the MMA community and well beyond for his success as a hearing-impaired UFC fighter, was a different sort of hero recently when he helped defuse a potential calamity on a busy New York i…

Oh, Matt Hamill. There’s no way we can quit you.

Hamill, famed in the MMA community and well beyond for his success as a hearing-impaired UFC fighter, was a different sort of hero recently when he helped defuse a potential calamity on a busy New York interstate.

Hamill was on his way to visit relatives in Ohio when he noticed a car driving the wrong way down I-90, near Rochester, New York. He also noticed that the driver appeared not to be fully cognizant of the dangerous situation being created.

“She was going on the wrong side of the street, and you could see her face, she was kind of drooling,” Hamill told Shaun Al-Shatti of MMAFighting.com. “There was obviously something going on with her that just wasn’t right. She was breathing fine, but you could just tell there was something, some issues.”

Hamill turned his vehicle around and pursued the car, which eventually wound up on a grassy median. Hamill got out of his own vehicle and approached the car. That was when he noticed the child in the back seat.

“He had a seatbelt on and he was in his car seat, but I’m sure it was a scary situation and he was worried what was going on. The mother was just weaving all over the road,” Hamill said. “He was fine and everything, just a little bit upset, but if she hadn’t been stopped I definitely feel like someone would’ve ran into something. The mother was on drugs and had been drinking apparently.”

Hamill punched through the window of the car and turned the vehicle off.

 

 

The driver was subsequently identified as 27-year-old Nicole Amendola and arrested for felony DWI and second-degree reckless endangerment, according to a report from the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Her six-year-old son was reportedly turned over to another family member.

No one was injured during the incident. Hamill said in the interview with MMAFighting that police thanked him for assistance.

Hamill (11-5) is now 38 years old and competing under the World Series of Fighting banner. He was scheduled to fight Thiago Silva March 28 at WSOF 19, but an illness forced him to withdraw the day before the event. Without a victory since 2012 and a loser in three of his last four, Hamill is undoubtedly on the downside of his career. He has already retired from pro MMA twice, only to return each time to live competition.

He said in the interview that he is on the mend and looking to fight again.

“It’s definitely slow going, but I’m getting there,” Hamill said. “I’m getting back to the gym soon and I’ll be training.”

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Must-Watch Video: Justin Gaethje’s Barnburner With Luis Palomino at WSOF 19

If you thought it would be damn near impossible to see a better fight this weekend than Hideo Tokoro vs. LC Davis at Bellator 135, think again, dum-dum.

At WSOF 19 on Saturday, featherweight champion Justin Gate-gee (I’m spelling it how it’s pronounced from now on. You hear me, Joanna Unj8chick?!) took on AFC and Bellator veteran Luis “Baboon” Palomino. The young phenom was being listed as high as a 5-to-1 favorite over his journeyman opponent, but instead of a quick and easy squash match, what transpired at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Phoenix, Arizona might just have been the greatest title fight in WSOF history.

Scratch that, it was *easily* the greatest fight in WSOF history. Period. Exclamation Point. Smiley face. #YOLO

But Gaethje vs. Palomino wasn’t the only highlight of the night. No, another came in the form of noted dirtbag Thiago Silva getting pounded out, prison-style, by late replacement opponent Teddy Holder. A gif of that finish and the full WSOF 19 results are after the jump.

The post Must-Watch Video: Justin Gaethje’s Barnburner With Luis Palomino at WSOF 19 appeared first on Cagepotato.

If you thought it would be damn near impossible to see a better fight than Hideo Tokoro vs. LC Davis at Bellator 135 last weekend, think again.

At WSOF 19 on Saturday, featherweight champion Justin Gate-gee (I’m spelling it how it’s pronounced from now on. You hear me, Joanna Unj8chick?!) took on AFC and Bellator veteran Luis “Baboon” Palomino. The young phenom was being listed as high as a 5-to-1 favorite over his journeyman opponent, but instead of a quick and easy squash match, what transpired at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Phoenix, Arizona might just have been the greatest title fight in WSOF history.

Scratch that, it was *easily* the greatest fight in WSOF history. Period. Exclamation Point. Smiley face. #YOLO

But Gaethje vs. Palomino wasn’t the only highlight of the night. No, another came in the form of noted dirtbag Thiago Silva getting pounded out, prison-style, by late replacement opponent Teddy Holder. A gif of that finish and the full WSOF 19 results are after the jump.

You guys are never going to believe this, but after retiring and unretiring about a half dozen times in the past couple of years due to nagging injuries, Matt Hamill was once again forced out of making his WSOF debut (this one scheduled against Thiago Silva) due to injury. It was probably for the best considering how their first fight went down, but late replacement opponent Teddy Holder made the most of his big shot, finishing Silva with a flurry of ground-n-pound after being dropped early. Silva was less-than-thrilled with the stoppage in his post-fight interview:

I kid. Silva probably did have a gun on him, though.

WSOF 19 Full Results 

Main card (NBC Sports at 9 p.m. ET)
Justin Gaethje def. Luis Palomino via TKO (strikes) at 3:57 of round 3
Teddy Holder def. Thiago Silva via TKO (punches) at 2:00 of round 1
Timur Valiev def. Ed West via TKO (strikes) at 1:39 of round 1
Clifford Starks def. Jake Heun via submission (arm triangle choke) at 4:11 of round 2

Undercard (MMA Fighting at 6:15 p.m. ET)
Jimmy Spicuzza def. Benny Madrid via split decision (30-27, 28-29, 30-27)
Joseph Giglioti def. Brendan Tierney via TKO (strikes) at 4:45 of round 3
Andres Ponce def. Juan Archuleta via submission (triangle choke) at :53 of round 2
Dan Huber def. Israel Aquino via TKO (punches) at 3:03 of round 1
Matthew Frincu def. Eric Regan via knockout (head kick) at :14 of round 2
Erik Villalobos def. Joe Madrid via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

The post Must-Watch Video: Justin Gaethje’s Barnburner With Luis Palomino at WSOF 19 appeared first on Cagepotato.

WSOF 19: Main Card Preview and Predictions

At WSOF 19, Justin Gaethje will look to defend his belt for the third appearance in a row.
Undefeated in 13 MMA bouts, Gaethje has become recognized as one of the best lightweights not on the UFC roster. In his most recent outing, Gaethje was tested by…

At WSOF 19, Justin Gaethje will look to defend his belt for the third appearance in a row.

Undefeated in 13 MMA bouts, Gaethje has become recognized as one of the best lightweights not on the UFC roster. In his most recent outing, Gaethje was tested by UFC veteran Melvin Guillard and passed with a decision victory.

Standing opposite Gaethje on Saturday will be Luis Palomino. A Bellator MMA veteran with wins over Jorge Masvidal, Daron Cruickshank and others, Palomino is a solid veteran, but he will be a significant underdog heading into WSOF 19.

In addition to the 155-pound main event, here are previews and predictions for all the WSOF 19 main card matchups.

 

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