THE PUNCHSPORT REPORT FOR NOVEMBER 2024
We're winding down the year, but not without a bunch of belts.
(I forgot to push this out of drafts on the 1st. I am ashamed. November starts on Election Day this year, I guess.)
Wipe the cobwebs from your head and enter November. We're in the last fully active month of the year, and big swings are being taken. In theory, Jones vs Miocic is finally happening whether we want it or not, ONE is finally holding an MMA title fight in Anatoly Malykhin vs Reug Reug, and the PFL is not only holding their championship event, they're putting it back on TV after finally accepting no one will buy a PFL pay-per-view. Lock in for a Heavyweight month.
THIS MONTH'S PUNCHSPORTS EVENTS
IS THERE ANY NEWS
This one's rough. The PFL-owned Bellator held an event in London on September 14 that was supposed to include the promotional debut of Daiane Silva, but the fight was scratched for unspecified reason and, as a prelim, no one really asked why. As it turns out, that's because she almost fucking died. Cutting weight from her typical 155 pounds to 145 caused her to get so ill that she had to be placed in an induced coma to deal with the kidney failure.
On its own, this is (thankfully) unusual but (unfortunately) not unheard of. Weight cutting has long been the scariest part of an already scary sport, and drastic situations happen. The story here isn't that it happened, though: It's that we didn't hear about it for an entire month, and then, only because Cris Cyborg's team posted about it online.
The stories flew fast in the immediate aftermath, and they were not kind to the PFL. After no-commenting for a couple days, Donn Davis eventually addressed it and claimed it was a benevolent attempt to respect the family's privacy, which is just true enough to make you briefly forget the PFL allegedly also instructed its employees to shut the fuck up about it and refuse all comment if asked. It may well be the one and only time they've been thankful for the lesser amount of attention they get compared to the UFC, because had it happened in the big show, it would've been a national sports scandal.
Silva, thank god, successfully came out of her coma towards the end of the month. I hope she recovers, I hope PFL covers her goddamn living expenses until she's fully back on her feet, and I hope we do not have to talk about weight cutting almost killing someone again for a long goddamn time.
After years of wrangling, the UFC has averted the potential catastrophe of the Le antitrust lawsuit. The newer, larger $375 million settlement offer was approved by Judge Boulware, which means one of the two antitrust suits is no longer an existential concern for the company, and all it cost them was one quarter of revenue. After legal fees take their bite, the fighters will be getting around $260 million, which means around $200,000 per fighter in the suit--though it will be distributed based on potential earnings lost, so some will get more and some less.
It's nice that the fighters are getting some money, it's nice that it's more money than they would've gotten this Summer, but boy, it's not enough, as though it ever could have been. Johnson vs Zuffa is still on the books and we'll be dealing with that in the future, but for now, we'll have to be content with the UFC losing a mild amount of money and the fighters getting a small chunk of what they deserved.
Hey, how's our regularly recurring look at the health of the B-leagues?
Well, stateside, Bellator abruptly cancelled both its October and November cards for no given reason and quietly promised refunds for the ten people who bought tickets. As of now there's only one Bellator event left on the docket, and it's the New Year's Eve cross-promotion with Rizin on December 31, which they still haven't actually announced any fights for, nor has Rizin even confirmed their own part in it. Also, Donn Davis gave an interview that included admitting the Bellator purchase hadn't worked out, that they knew the brand was in decline and unlikely to succeed, and that, while plans can change, they're likely to retire it in 2025 and fold it all into the PFL. Will that mean more events? Does that end all of Bellator's titles? Who knows! The PFL sure the fuck doesn't.
But don't worry, ONE is doing gangbusters, too. Over the course of October they laid off a bunch of staff (with roughly half the severance package they gave out during their 2020 layoffs), appear to be moving their operations entirely to Thailand, where wages are coincidentally about 90% lower, and--blaming vendors and partner obligations--ONE also cancelled their big splashy stateside appearance for ONE 169, moving it from the 20,000-person State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia to the 5,000-person Lumpinee Stadium in Bangkok, which is where they run, y'know, every show they do now.
So: It's great. Everything's going great. Nothing to worry about in the B-leagues.
Oh, and the same week the unified rules of MMA finally update to legalize semi-grounded knees and 12-6 elbows, the Nevada State Athletic Commission, who tend to set the tone everyone else in the country follows, announced they no longer give a fuck about weed. Coincidentally, Nick Diaz is fighting there in December. Congratulations, Diazes. You won.
WHAT HAPPENED IN OCTOBER
We opened with a double-header on October 5, and first up was ONE Fight Night 25: Nicolas vs Eersel 2, and I really don't know how long ONE is for these writeups. This was ONE's mainstream card for the month, and it only had eight fights on it, and only two of them were mixed martial arts bouts, and as much as I like Danial Williams (who beat Banma Duoji) and Mansur Malachiev (who outworked Bokang Masunyane), as I watch ONE use former champion and one of the best mixed martial artists in the world, John Lineker, as a Muay Thai fighter, I wonder what on Earth we are still doing here and if we'll still be talking about ONE a year from now or if they will collapse into a regional kickboxing brand. Either way, I am begging them to book some goddamn MMA fights before they die.
The first of two UFC pay-per-views was next, with UFC 307: Pereira vs Rountree Jr. It was, all in all, a weird fucking card. Down on your prelims, Court McGee neck cranked Tim Means into oblivion, Tecia Pennington retired Carla Esparza, Ryan Spann guillotined Ovince Saint Preux out of the UFC, César Almeida took a decision over Ihor Potieria despite poking him in the eye forty-three times, Alexander Hernandez scraped a split decision from Austin Hubbard thanks to an inexplicable 30-27 in the wrong direction, Iasmin Lucindo narrowly decisioned Marina Rodriguez, and Joaquin Buckley dropped two rounds to Stephen Thompson only to knock him dead in the third. Things did not get less weird on the main card, as Kayla Harrison had to grind out Ketlen Vieira, Roman Dolidze beat Kevin Holland after one of his ribs separated doing groundwork, and Mario Bautista got a controversial decision over José Aldo. But that was not nearly as controversial as the co-main event, where Julianna Peña regained the Women's Bantamweight Championship thanks to a split decision over defending champion Raquel Pennington, an opinion echoed by 1 out of 27 media scorecards. The main event was the one true highlight of the card, as Khalil Rountree Jr. put up a much better effort than most expected and even dropped Alex Pereira, but Pereira eventually caught his timing, took him apart, and ultimately broke his entire goddamn face in the fourth round.
The 12th brought us UFC Fight Night: Royval vs Taira. Down on your very lengthy prelims, Clayton Carpenter choked out Lucas Rocha, Cody Haddon got a successful debut against Dan Argueta, Julia Polastri narrowly beat Cory McKenna, Junior Tafa knocked out Sean Sharaf in the kind of fight that reminds you Heavyweight isn't real, Themba Gorimbo dominated Niko Price, Pat Sabatini choked out Jonathan Pearce, and Ramazan Temirov made a successful debut by just punching the shit out of CJ Vergara in three minutes. Up top, Daniel Rodriguez got a coinflip of a split over Alex Morono, Grant Dawson ground-and-pounded Rafa García in two rounds, Chidi Njokuani shut out Jared Gooden, and Jun-yong Park notched a decision over Brad Tavares that was a split even though it really didn't need to be. The main event was a fantastic chess match between Brandon Royval and Tatsuro Taira that saw both men coming dangerously close to victory on multiple occasions, but Royval ultimately took over and got the decision and, in all likelihood, his claim to the winner of Alexandre Pantoja vs Kai Asakura.
Another double-header weekend came on the 19th, and it started with UFC Fight Night: Hernandez vs Pereira. It was a beautifully decision-heavy event, with just two finishes in eleven fights, one on each side of the card. On the prelims, your finish was Joselyne Edwards submitting Tamires Vidal: Otherwise Austen Lane outwrestled Robelis Despaigne, Melissa Martinez dominated Alice Ardelean, Elise Reed narrowly beat Jessica Penne, Jean Matsumoto squeaked past Brad Katona, and Asu Almabayev outworked Matheus Nicolau. Up top, Darren Elkins did the Darren Elkins thing yet again to beat a retiring Daniel Pineda, Cameron Smotherman made a short-notice debut by beating Jake Hadley straight out of the company, Charles Johnson rallied after an early scared to be Sumudaerji, and Rob Font ruined another prospect by beating Kyler Phillips. The main event was one of the most uncomfortable beatings in UFC history, as Anthony Hernandez not only stopped Michel Pereira, he did so with four of the most prolongedly one-sided rounds in the sport. The first was vaguely competitive: Over seventeen and a half minutes, Hernandez outlanded Pereira 189 to 12. I wish corners stopped fights more often.
But the UFC got big-brothered in importance (if not in actual viewership) by PFL: Battle of the Giants. PFL's big swing at pay-per-view may not have accrued a lot of buys, but it was a big, fun event. The prelims weren't much to write home about--your highlight was Raufeon Stots choking out Marcos Breno--but everyone was there for the main card, and it delivered. Irish superprospect Paul Hughes survived a huge jump in competition by taking a split decision over A.J. McKee, Zafar Mohsen beat Husein Kadimagomaev, Johnny Eblen once again defended his Bellator championship against Fabian Edwards, and Cris Cyborg reaffirmed her place as a legend of the sport after dominating PFL champion Larissa Pacheco. But all eyes were on the main event, as Francis Ngannou, the lineal Heavyweight champion of the UFC (and, with it, basically every major MMA organization in history), returned to the sport for the first time since his 2022 release ,his two-year odyssey through the boxing world, and the tragic death of his son. He faced the best Heavyweight in the PFL, Renan Ferreira, and the world was more than a little worried about ring rust and Ferreira's power and range. Ngannou traded with him briefly, then shrugged, took him down, and absolutely terrifyingly punched him limp in three and a half minutes. The real world's champion is still going strong, although what he does next or if he even stays in the sport is anyone's guess. If this is the end, it was a hell of a note to go out on.
The month ended with UFC 308: Topuria vs Holloway on October 26. It was the UFC's return to Abu Dhabi, and aside from one completely insane robbery of a decision that saw Rinat Fakhretdinov winning what will easily contend for the worst judging call of 2024 against Carlos Leal, it was a real good card. On the rest of your very long prelims, Ismail Naurdiev outwrestled Bruno Silva, Farid Basharat beat Victor Hugo despite a ten-pound weight miss, Kennedy Nzechukwu successfully debuted at Heavyweight against Chris Barnett (who seemingly blew out his hamstring jumping up and down before the fight even started), Abus Magomedov choked out Bruno Ferreira, Mateusz Rębecki won an absolute war against Myktybek Orolbai, Geoff Neal dropped Rafael dos Anjos twice in ninety seconds and RDA called the fight thanks to a leg injury, and Ibo Aslan did a Punch-Out super combo on Raffael Cerqueira in under a minute. Up top, Shara Magomedov knocked out Armen Petrosyan with a double spinning backfist, which was admittedly cool as hell, Lerone Murphy narrowly beat Dan Ige, Magomed Ankalaev continued his long march to the title by outboxing Aleksandar Rakić, and Khamzat Chimaev seized the torch from Robert Whittaker after wrestling him easily, jumping on his back, and face-cranking him so hard it broke his goddamn teeth. But the real torch-passing came in the main event, where Ilia Topuria secured his claim on the Featherweight throne after becoming the only man in fourteen years of competition to ever knock out Max Holloway.
WHAT'S COMING IN NOVEMBER
It's a punctuated but heavy month, and it starts on November 2 with UFC Fight Night: Moreno vs Albazi. The UFC is in Canada, and as with everything, their biggest Canadian attractions are not, in fact, Canadian. Your prelims include highlights like Serhiy Sidey vs Garrett Armfield, Jack Shore vs Youssef Zalal, Charles Jourdain vs Victor Henry, Ariane da Silva vs Jasmine Jasudavicius and Aiemann Zahabi vs Pedro Munhoz; your main card is Mike Malott vs Trevin Giles, Marc-André Barriault vs Dustin Stoltzfus, Caio Machado vs Brendson Ribeiro, Derrick by god Lewis vs Jhonata Diniz, and Erin Blanchfield vs Rose Namajunas, and your main is a second-on-deck Flyweight matchup between Brandon Moreno and Amir Albazi, whose neck once again functions.
ONE kicks off our double-header on the 9th with ONE 169: Malykhin vs Reug Reug, the first defense of the Heavyweight championship in a year and a half. It's also the first MMA centric-card ONE has given a shit about in months, and it shows. Ayaka Miura vs Macarena Aragon, Kade Ruotolo vs Ahmed Mutjaba, Adriano Moraes vs Danny Kingad, Amir Aliakbari vs Marcus Buchecha and Christian Lee finally returning to defend his 170-pound championship against Alibeg Rasulov is, in fact, a solid night of mixed martial arts. (Update: Christian Lee has been rescheduled for December. Whoops.) But we've also got a fair amount of kickboxing, with the highlights including Anissa Meksen vs Jackie Buntan and a Flyweight Muay Thai title defense as Rodtang takes on Jacob Smith. Your main event sees triple-champ Anatoly Malykhin defending one of his many belts against Oumar "Reug Reug" Kane.
The UFC also hits the deck with UFC Fight Night: Magny vs Prates. It's not exactly a bad card, but it is sort of all over the place. Your prelims mayh have Cody Stamann vs Da'Mon Blackshear, but they've also got Mansur Abdul-Malik vs Nicolas Dalby; Elizeu Zaleski vs Nicolas Dalby, but in exchange, Gaston Bolaños vs Cortavious Romious. Your main card is six fights big and equally weird. Luana Pinheiro vs Gillian Robertson is a weird matchup of losing streak vs winning streak. Gerald Meerschaert is a fascinating entry test for former ONE double champ Reinier de Ridder. Ricky Turcios vs Bernado Sopaj, uh, exists. Karolina Kowalkiewicz vs Denise Gomes is a weird choice. Cody Garbrandt is on the final fight of his UFC contract and he's up against Miles Johns, for some reason. And your main event is yet another day at work for Neil Magny in the prospect testing mines, as he faces striking savant Carlos Prates.
November 16 brings us take two at UFC 309: Jones vs Miocic. It's Madison Square Garden, it's the UFC's attempt at a big Jon Jones fight, and they've put together a card that's, uh...a little anemic? Your early prelims: Veronica Hardy vs Eduarda Moura, Bassil Hafez vs Oban Elliot, and Mickey Gall vs Ramiz Brahimaj. Your regular prelims: Jim Miller vs Damon Jackson, Jonathan Martinez vs Marcus McGhee, and Nikita Krylov vs Azamat Murzakanov. Your main card: Chris Weidman vs Eryk Anders, Bo Nickal vs Paul Craig, Viviane Araújo vs Karine Silva, and because of the whole Conor mess the UFC is giving Michael Chandler a rematch with Charles Oliveira. And, of course, your main event is Jon Jones finally defending the Heavyweight title against Stipe Miocic. It's fine, I guess? I dunno, man.
Late that night (if you're not in Japan, anyway) on the 17th, it's Rizin Landmark 10. As tends to be the case with Rizin's developmental shows, the card is enormous and a lot of it consist of prospects--god bless Rizin for having a place where you can see, say, a Heavyweight bout between the 3-2 Masashi Inada and the 1-2 Stephane Coignon--but you've still got Tsuyoshi Sudario vs Hisaki Kato, and Ayaka Hamasaki vs Shim Yu-ri, and Vugar Karamov vs Kazumasa Majima, so y'know what, it's fine. This is fine.
Our last pre-Thanksgiving fight card comes on the 23rd and gives us UFC Fight Night: Yan vs Figueiredo. We're in Macau, and it shows, because damn near the entire preliminary card is a regional showcase, and it's anchored by the four Road to UFC 3 tournament finals: at Women's Strawweight, Shi Ming vs Feng Xiaocan, at Flyweight, Kiru Singh Sahota vs Choi Dong-hun, at Bantamweight, Baergent Jieleyisi vs You Su-young, and at Featherweight, Xie Bin vs Zhu Kangjie. Up top, the march continues with Zhang Mingyang vs Ozzy Diaz, Wang Cong vs Gabriella Fernandes, and Song Kenan vs Muslim Salikhov. Your top three are Volkan Oezdemir vs Carlos Ulberg, Yan Xiaonan vs Tabatha Ricci, and in the main, former champ Petr Yan vs Deiveson Figueiredo.
And we close the month, and the 2024 PFL season, out on PFL 10 on November 29. This being a Saudi Arabian card, the prelims are basically one big showcase for Middle Eastern talent--Mohammad Alaqraa vs Omar El Dafrawy, come on down--but the focus is on the main card and all six of PFL's tournament finals for the year. At Welterweight, it's Shamil Musaev vs Magomed Umalatov, at Light Heavyweight you've got Impa Kasanganay vs Dovletdzhan Yagshimuradov; Lightweight, Brent Primus vs Gadzhi Rabadanov. Your top three are Denis Goltsov vs Oleg Popov for the Heavyweight crown, Dakota Ditcheva vs Taila Santos at Women's Flyweight, and in the main event, Brendan Loughnane vs Timur Khizriev for the Featherweight trophy.
CURRENT UFC CHAMPIONS
Heavyweight Champion, 265 lbs
Jon Jones - 27-1 (1), 0 Defenses
Very few things in combat sports reach the crossroads of awe-inspiring and unfathomably frustrating as Jon Jones. In 2020, Jon Jones notched the third defense of his second light-heavyweight championship reign after an exceedingly contentious decision against Dominick Reyes, only to abdicate the title because the UFC wasn't paying him enough, and he was bored of 205 pounds and wanted to move up to heavyweight like he'd been planning to for nearly a decade, and he needed more time to cement his place as not just one of the sport's greatest pound-for-pound fighters, but one of its biggest pound-for-pound pains in the ass. On September 23, 2021, Jon Jones was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame; on September 24, 2021, he was arrested (for the fifth time!) after his daughter called the police on him for beating her mother, during which he antagonized the police and, inexplicably, headbutted a police car. Because this is Jon Jones, of course, the primary charges were dropped, he paid $750 for the hood of the police cruiser, and got a stern warning to stay out of trouble, young man, because there is a money-powered reality-distorting field around Jon Jones whereby nothing matters. After a year of rumors, and after the unconscionable firing of heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou, the UFC gleefully announced Jon Jones vs Ciryl Gane to fill the vacant heavyweight throne. Did it matter to the matchmaking that there were more deserving candidates? Of course not, because it's Jon Jones: He deserves the spot for his earlier success. Did it matter to his public appearances that when last we saw him he was arrested for beating his fiancee? Of course not, because it's Jon Jones: He was, if anything, more up his own ass with self-righteousness than ever before. Did it matter to the fight that he hadn't competed in more than three years and looked terrible at the time? Of course not, because it's Jon fucking Jones. Ciryl Gane looked too nervous to use footwork let alone throw anything, and he should have been, as Jones effortlessly threw him to the canvas and choked him out in two minutes. The longest-running, most dominant and yet most persistently annoying show in mixed martial arts is back. And in the most predictable thing possible, some bullshit happened, he got injured, he's going to be gone for at least eight months, and the UFC is not only not stripping him of the title like they've done to everyone else, they've already gotten out ahead of themselves and made clear that when he comes back, he will be fighting Stipe Miocic, not whoever the interim champion is at the time. The fight will, in theory, happen at UFC 309 on November 16th.
Interim Heavyweight Champion
Tom Aspinall - 15-3, 1 Defense
The UFC's Heavyweight division got itself into a weird spot in 2007. Randy Couture was the rightful, reigning, defending champion, but he and the UFC had a dispute that stretched out more than a year. The UFC couldn't strip him--it would have made it easier for him to get out of his contract--so they made an interim title. By the time Randy came back they had already made big plans for him and Brock Lesnar, but the interim title had gotten wrapped up in The Ultimate Fighter 8 (jesus christ) and it, too, had to be defended, meaning there were two championships being defended simultaneously: The Undisputed Championship, which was the 'real' belt despite being held by a guy trying to leave the company and contended for by someone with only two victories in the sport, and the Interim Championship, which was being fought over by the actual, legitimate top contenders. At UFC 295 on November 11th, 2023, Tom Aspinall, the rightful #4 contender, fought Sergei Pavlovich, the rightful #2 contender, for a new interim championship. And he won. On two weeks' notice! Aspinall's been one of the most promising heavyweight prospects in the world for years, his only loss in the UFC came from his knee tearing itself apart fifteen seconds into a fight, and he went toe-to-toe with one of the scariest punchers in the history of the sport and knocked him flat in just barely over a minute. He is, indisputably, the real deal. And now he gets to be the interim champion of a Heavyweight division in which the real champion, Jon Jones, is going to be out injured well into next year and, the UFC has made clear, will be returning to defend his title against Stipe Miocic, who by that time will have been on the shelf for 3+ years and will be going on 42. So congratulations, Tom. You're the real Heavyweight champion, and to prove it, you're defending your title before Jon Jones. Aspinall avenged his one UFC loss by blasting Curtis Blaydes out in a single round at UFC 304 on July 27. Now he waits to see what the hell happens with Jones and Stipe, I guess.
Light-Heavyweight Champion, 205 lbs
Alex Pereira - 12-2, 3 Defenses
Conflicting things can be simultaneously true in this sport. It is true that Alex Pereira was brought into the UFC as a 3-1 rookie based on his history as a kickboxer rather than his accomplishments in the sport. It is true that he was fast-tracked to a title shot against the primary focus of that history, megastar Israel Adesanya, after beating just three fighters, none of whom had any hope of testing his grappling. It is also true that he rendered that discourse ultimately irrelevant by not just beating but stopping Adesanya in his title shot anyway, in the process becoming the fastest Middleweight to go from debut to champion since Anderson Silva. It was more or less an open secret that he wasn't going to stay there: Being bigger than most Heavyweights in the UFC, the weight cut to 185 was always a short-term thing. Luckily for the UFC, he got knocked out by Adesanya and gave him the title right back on his way up to 205. Once again, he got fast-tracked, this time by happenstance. A split decision victory over Jan Błachowicz made Pereira a top five contender, and when Jamahal Hill was forced to vacate his title thanks to an ankle injury--and the previous champion, Jiří Procházka, was back from his own title vacation and injury--Pereira was slotted right back into championship place. They met at UFC 295 on November 11th, and after two back-and-forth rounds, Pereira punished a Jiří who dared to grapple by elbowing his skull until he briefly stopped moving. The commentary and audience thought it was an early stoppage, but Jiří Procházka didn't, so fuck 'em. It is true that Alex Pereira has fought seven UFC fights without having to fight an actual grappler, and that was an intentional choice by matchmaking. It is true that getting the chance to win championships in two weight classes within just two years and seven fights in the UFC is not a thing that happens to most fighters. But it is unavoidably true that Alex Pereira is a two-division champion and no one can take it away from him. After none of the UFC's other ideas worked out, Alex Pereira vs Jamahal Hill became the main event of UFC 300, and after weeks of talking endless rafts of shit, Hill got knocked out in the first round. Pereira was scheduled to defend his title against Procházka for a second time in August, but after Conor McGregor pulled out of UFC 303 because his toe hurt, the rematch was moved up with fourteen days to prepare. There was no question about the stoppage this time: Alex dropped Jiří right at the end of the first round and finished the job thirteen seconds into the second. Pereira ironically reinjured his already-injured toe on Jiří's skull, but that didn't stop him from defending against Khalil Rountree Jr. on October 5. After a surprisingly competitive first two rounds, Pereira took over and stopped him in the fourth. Next up, in theory: Magomed Ankalaev.
Middleweight Champion, 185 lbs
Dricus du Plessis - 22-2, 1 Defense
Middleweight's fucking wild, man. Generally when a belt changes hands repeatedly in a short period of time you can blame injuries and strippings and title vacations, but recent history has simply been a case study in how goddamn weird things can get at 185 pounds. As of this writing (February 1, 2024) we've had five separate Middleweight champions in less than fifteen months. Divisional king Israel Adesanya dropped the belt to his nemesis Alex Pereira, Adesanya dropped Pereira himself in an immediate rematch, and in one of 2023's bigger upsets, Adesanya lost his belt to human exclusion zone Sean Strickland. But that shot, initially, didn't belong to him: It belonged to Dricus du Plessis. Dricus joined the UFC in 2020 as one of the international scene's best prospects--a two-division champion in his native South Africa's Extreme Fighting Championship, a Welterweight champion in Poland's Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki, and a finishing machine who'd never gone to a decision in his life. The spotlight of the UFC gave him two new reputations: For one, as an exceptionally awkward-looking fighter who could appear shaky and exhausted and still easily knock anyone out, and for two, as a guy with real uncomfortable feelings about his homeland. Shortly after his debut Dricus du Plessis began making comments about becoming the first "real" African champion in the UFC, citing the way fighters like Kamaru Usman, Israel Adesanya and Francis Ngannou had left the country, and, boy, there's just no way to get around the topic that isn't gross as hell. But du Plessis knocked #1 contender Robert Whittaker dead, so it didn't matter. He was in pole position. And then he lost it, because he wanted more than a month to prepare for a world championship fight and the UFC decided that just wouldn't fly. A fully-trained du Plessis stepped into the cage against his replacement and now-champion Sean Strickland on January 20 at UFC 297, and after a close fight and a split decision, du Plessis brought the belt back to South Africa just like he promised. The UFC decided to go right back to their original racially uncomfortable plan and book du Plessis vs Adesanya at UFC 305 on August 17, and after a good, back-and-forth battle, du Plessis emerged victorious with a fourth-round submission. He is the first man to defend the Middleweight title in two years and four reigns.
Welterweight Champion, 170 lbs
Belal Muhammad - 24-3 (1), 0 Defenses
It took everything for Belal Muhammad to finally get here. Being a lifelong wrestler and shooting as many doubles as you do big right hands does not make you a marketing darling, and when Belal made his UFC debut in 2016 as an undefeated wrestling stylist and immediately went 1-2 he was quickly lost in the background radiation of the sport. The first sparks of momentum were visible after toiling away in mostly preliminary fights en route to a four-fight winning streak, but then Geoff Neal beat him and everyone wrote him off altogether. Everyone except Belal Muhammad. Belal worked harder, trained better, doubled down on his style, and forced his way back into the rankings with another four victories. And then, for the first time, the UFC tried to use him. Their other problem child contender, Leon Edwards, was supposed to fight and be summarily derailed by Khamzat Chimaev, but for the third time, the fight was cancelled; Muhammad stepped in on short notice. The fight ended in a No Contest thanks to an eyepoke just eighteen seconds into the second round. Despite having decidedly not lost the fight, despite having done the UFC a favor by taking it in the first place, it would be five fights and almost three and a half years before he got the rematch he deserved. He hadn't beat anyone in contendership, so he dominated Stephen Thompson. He had an unavenged loss to Vicente Luque, so he beat him. He was too boring, so he knocked out the undefeated Sean Brady. He was pressed to take a fight against top contender Gilbert Burns with three weeks to prepare while nursing one barely-functional ankle. He did it and won. He hadn't been defeated in ten straight fights. And Colby Covington got his title shot. The UFC tried everything to keep Belal away from contention, to the point that Leon Edwards attests that he asked the UFC why they weren't offering him the Belal fight and the UFC replied that Belal just wasn't important enough. But, on a long enough timeframe, you run out of both options and excuses. On July 27, at the UFC's big British supershow on UFC 304, Belal finally got the shot he'd deserved for years, and he did not waste a second of it. After five grueling rounds, Belal took a wide, definitive decision, and with it, the recognition he's been chasing. He's the UFC Welterweight Champion of the World. And now he has to deal with a division that's suddenly looking very, very lively. Belal was scheduled to fight Shavkat Rakhmonov at UFC 310 on December 7, but a nasty bone infection in his toe has put him on the shelf, possibly until mid to late 2025 if treatment goes poorly. We'll see if the UFC puts together an interim fight.
Lightweight Champion, 155 lbs
Islam Makhachev - 26-1, 3 Defenses
Destiny has come. When Islam Makhachev made his UFC debut in 2015, Khabib Nurmagomedov, considered by most to be the #1 contender and soon to be the best in the world, swore up and down that Makhachev, not him, would be the best lightweight champion of all time. Coming from him, the praise made sense: Khabib and Islam have trained together since they were children growing up and learning to wrestle in Makhachkala. Islam learned under Khabib's father, trained with Khabib's team and even made the pilgrimage to America to join Khabib at the American Kickboxing Academy. And then, two matches into his UFC tenure, Islam got knocked the fuck out in the first round by the little-known Adriano Martins, who hasn't won a fight in the six years since. Even as Makhachev racked up wins, the memory of his loss and his wrestling-heavy approach to his fights let people cast doubts on him. Sure, he's good--but he lost, so he's not as good as Khabib. Islam Makhachev, as his trainer tells it, never wanted to be Khabib. He loves fighting, but he doesn't love the spectacle or the glory or the attention. So when, after ten straight wins, Makhachev was picked to challenge Charles Oliveira for the vacant title he never truly lost, a lot of folks just weren't quite sure what to think. Sure, he was an incredible wrestler, but Charles Oliveira is a submission wizard, and sure, he's on a ten-fight streak, but he hasn't fought a single person actually IN the top ten, and Oliveira represents a huge, dangerous step up as a man who's been destroying some of the most accomplished lightweights in the sport's history. Analyst opinion was split right down the middle; the fight, as it turned out, was nowhere near that competitive, and the only analyst who was entirely correct was Khabib. Islam demolished the former champion, outstriking him, taking him down at will, controlling him in the grappling, and ultimately dropping him with punches and choking him out in the second round. His first defense was a different story. Islam faced featherweight champion Alexander Volkanovski at UFC 284 on February 12th in a rare best-of-the-best, champion vs champion match, and this time, his team's prediction of domination was thoroughly incorrect: It was a pitched battle that ended with Makhachev visibly exhausted and Volkanovski pounding on his face. Islam took an extremely close decision and the divisions will remain separate, but his aura of invulnerability has been thoroughly punctured. Or, at least, it was. In one of those funny moments of sport deterioration, his title defense against Charles Oliveira got scratched thanks to Oliveira busting his eyebrow in training, and on less than two weeks' notice the UFC ran Makhachev/Volkanovski 2, and with no hype, no marketing and no time to prepare, a visibly depleted Volkanovski got dropped by a headkick in the first round. Islam defended his Lightweight title against a Lightweight for the first time against Dustin Poirier at UFC 302 on June 1, and unfortunately for the dreams of many, he dominated Dustin and choked him out in the fifth round.
Featherweight Champion, 145 lbs
Ilia Topuria - 16-0, 1 Defense
The king is dead, long live the king. Everyone paying attention knew Ilia Topuria was a special sort of prospect all the way back in 2020, but it wasn't until he destroyed Ryan Hall that the rest of the world noticed. A man who is equal parts German, Georgian and Spanish, Topuria established himself immediately as a force to be reckoned with: An undefeated wrecking machine with a strong wrestling game, a thoroughly solid grappling game, and the combination of terrifying knockout power and the sheer confidence to use it that can only come from having never lost a fight. Which was tested, thoroughly, when Topuria went up to Lightweight on short notice, fought a man in Jai Herbert who was half a foot taller than him, nearly got knocked out twice, and proceeded to recover, regroup, and fold Herbert in half with a punch in the second round. Suddenly, his prospect status was proven. Not only was he good, he was capable of dealing with adversity. Within the year he'd become the first (non-exhibition) fighter to ever beat Bryce Mitchell after ragdolling him and choking him out, and by the end of 2023 he'd dominated Josh Emmett, proving both his place at the top of the Featherweight contendership ladder and his ability to go five full rounds without falling over. His ascension couldn't have come at a better time. Alexander Volkanovski, one of the greatest champions in UFC history, was finally beginning to show signs of wear--somewhat unfairly, as those signs came from an incredibly inadvisable last-minute fill-in 155-pound fight against Islam Makhachev--but getting knocked out is getting knocked out, and when you've only been beaten once in a decade, getting knocked out in one round makes people ask difficult questions about your age, longevity, and durability. When Volk and Ilia met at UFC 298 on February 17, almost every question people had was, in fact, answered. Can Volk outwork Topuria? Absolutely; he won the first round handily and was dancing around him. Can Ilia keep himself in check? Completely; knowing just how good Volk was, Ilia was uncharacteristically patient and measured and didn't get himself in any real trouble in the first round while he figured out what he wanted to do. Can Alexander Volkanovski stand up to Ilia Topuria's punching power? Buddy: No one can. Three and a half minutes into the second round Topuria successfully trapped Volkanovski against the cage with his footwork, and one combination later, Volkanovski was on the floor. Ilia Topuria's destiny has come. He's the Featherweight champion, and he has written his name into the books with the blood of legends after knocking out Max Holloway in his first title defense. Dropping the two greatest Featherweights of this generation in back to back fights is really fucking impressive. From the sound of it, he'll try to put on a repeat performance in a rematch with Volkanovski in early 2025.
Bantamweight Champion, 135 lbs
Merab Dvalishvili - 18-4, 0 Defenses
2024 is the year of belated championship justice, and for Merab Dvalishvili, justice has been hard to find. Merab spent his childhood training to wrestle, grapple and fight in his native Georgia, but as a devout fan of mixed martial arts he knew he needed to sacrifice his homeland to secure a future in the sport. More than Georgia, he needed Matt Serra and Ray Longo yelling at him in New York English. Merab's MMA career officially began with a 1-2 record in 2014, and there's an argument to be made that said rookie year is the last time he legitimately lost a fight. By 2017 he was already heralded as an unsigned prospect, and then he made, and lost, his UFC debut--but it was a split decision to Frankie Saenz, and, unsurprisingly, almost all the media scorecards had it in Merab's favor. One fight later he met Ricky Simón, and this time he clearly won a decision--but he had been stuck in a guillotine choke at the end of the fight, and in one of the most batshit endings to a fight I have ever seen, the referee ruled that he was retroactively unconscious after the fight had already ended. Merab had made it to the big show, and Merab was 0-2, and Merab was, to most of the world, already an afterthought. So he started wrestling as hard as he fucking could. Between 2018 and the midpoint of 2024 Merab ran up an astonishing ten-fight winning streak in one of the most talent-rich divisions in the sport. He made himself undeniable as one of the best in the world, and in 2022 he retired one of the greatest in all time, José Aldo, and made himself undeniable as a top contender. There was a problem: He didn't want the contendership. Aljamain Sterling was his good friend, best training partner, and the reigning champion, and Merab had no interest in fighting him, and that made the UFC furious. So when Aljo lost the title in 2023, the UFC denied Merab the shot he had clearly earned and handed it off to Marlon Vera instead. Merab kept winning, and the UFC kept trying to put space between his contendership and promotional favorite Sean O'Malley, but the road ran out on September 14, 2024, when Merab wrestled O'Malley into dust in front of the very tired audience of the Sphere. He's the champion, he has avenged his best friend, and unexpected dissent has arisen about his next move. The UFC wants him defending against Umar Nurmagomedov, but Umar seems convinced Merab won't take the fight before Ramadan, and has been publicly seeking other bouts--which means we may get stuck with the O'Malley rematch.
Flyweight Champion, 125 lbs
Alexandre Pantoja - 28-5, 2 Defenses
Sometimes, you just have someone's number. Brandon Moreno spent years fighting through a quadrilogy with Deiveson Figueiredo, and unfortunately for him, he had another trilogy waiting for him the second it was over. Alexandre "The Cannibal" Pantoja was Moreno's personal bogeyman, a man who'd fought and beaten him twice. But one of those fights was an exhibition on The Ultimate Fighter, and the other was against a Moreno with five less years of evolution and growth. Surely, a third fight in 2023 would be different. And it was--unlike the previous, one-sided dominations it was a fight-of-the-year candidate that took both men to their limit and led to a split decision--but its ending was not. Alexander Pantoja scored a third victory over Moreno, and with it, after sixteen years of competition, he finally became the clear, unequivocal best in the god damned world. Which was made even more poignant when he used his post-fight interview to ask if his absentee father was proud of him--and was made even more irritating when he also revealed that despite having eleven fights in the UFC at the time, he was paid so little that he'd been part-timing as a Doordash driver just to make ends meet right up until 2022. The idea that one of the absolute best fighters on the planet, after years and nearly a dozen fights in the world's biggest, most profitable fighting organization, would need to take on a gig-economy job to make money is outright offensive, and in a better world, it would have launched a furor. In this one, all we can do is be happy he's got the belt and will, hopefully, make some actual fucking money. His first title defense came against Brandon "Raw Dawg" Royval as the co-main event to UFC 296 on December 16th, and it was a wild affair with a couple scary moments, but Pantoja emerged victorious and notched the first successful defense of the title in three years. His next contender is, in all likelihood, the winner of the Brandon Moreno/Amir Albazi fight this February--or it would have been, until Albazi got injured. The UFC promoted a Moreno/Royval 2 showdown in hopes of scoring a Moreno rematch, but Royval won, so the UFC decided to forget the whole goddamn thing and book Pantoja against the #10-ranked Steve Erceg on May 4. It was a spirited fight, but Pantoja's experience ultimately got him the decision. Pantoja's going to get the extremely rare debut-into-a-title-fight next, as he defends against former Rizin Bantamweight Champion Kai Asakura at UFC 310 on December 7.
Women's Bantamweight, 135 lbs
Julianna Peña - 12-5, 0 Defenses
The women's divisions are all returning to their 2021 norms, and we are being dragged to hell with them. Julianna Peña winning the title in 2021 was one of the biggest upset shocks in mixed martial arts history. She wasn't an enormously accomplished fighter--winning The Ultimate Fighter 18 was her biggest career highlight--and she'd already been tapped out by Valentina Shevchenko and, somehow, became the one and only woman to ever get submitted by noted kickboxer Germaine de Randamie. She was on a one-fight winning streak when she fought Amanda Nunes at UFC 269, and her second-round submission was an absolute stunner. But questions abounded about Nunes--the fight had been postponed from an earlier date after Nunes had COVID, people thought she seemed slow and exhausted and sloppy, the fans wanted to see them run it back. Peña, of course, called it all naysaying from people too afraid to admit she was the best in the world, and she welcomed a rematch to prove once and for all just how great she was. Nunes promptly threw her in a dumpster over and over for twenty-five minutes. It was the kind of one-sided domination you just don't see often in title fights, and it let Nunes retire one fight later with a clear conscience. Peña was supposed to have a trilogy, but her own injuries kept her on the shelf for more than two years instead, and when she returned, it was straight into a title fight with newly-minted champion Raquel Pennington. It was, to be gentle, not a great fight. Pennington had the volume, Peña had the wrestling, very few people enjoyed the fight, but the audience--and 93% of media scores--agreed Pennington had pretty clearly won. So, of course, Julianna Peña got the belt back thanks to a split decision. Wasting no time in reminding everyone just how tired they were of her in the first place, Peña celebrated her victory not by offering Pennington a rematch, or by accepting the challenge of #1 contender Kayla Harrison, but by calling out Amanda Nunes for retiring because she was too afraid to fight her again. God bless the smoldering crater that is Women's Bantamweight.
Women's Flyweight, 125 lbs
Valentina Shevchenko - 24-4-1, 0 Defenses
After almost two years of suffering, we have gone back to the start. At the end of 2022 Valentina Shevchenko was so thoroughly ensconced as The Greatest Women's Flyweight that a sizable segment of the fanbase had built an honest-to-god antipathy for her over it. Sure, she won, all the time, and sure, her only losses in almost a decade and a half came to the greatest of all time in Amanda Nunes, and sure, Shevchenko arguably won their second fight, but familiarity breeds contempt, and after watching the purported greatest struggle with a split decision to Taila Santos that could easily have gone the other way, too, a big chunk of the mixed martial world was ready to move on from Val. And then, unexpectedly, it did. Valentina was a -900 favorite when Alexa Grasso shocked the world, choked her out, and took her title away on March 4, 2023. An instant rematch was obligatory, given Val's long history on top, so half a year later they ran it back at Noche UFC in 2023, and, awkwardly, it ended in a draw. If the rematch had been obligatory, the threematch was mandatory, but a hand injury on Val's part and the UFC's desire to put an entire season of The Ultimate Fighter behind their promotion meant a full twelve months passed before they got back in the cage. That's a long goddamn time, and it left a lot of air, and that air was filled by doubt. Alexa won the first fight, after all--but she was on her way to losing a decision before Valentina made a costly mistake, threw one of her trademark nowhere-close-to-landing spinning back kicks, and got immediately jumped on and choked out for her troubles. Alexa didn't lose the second fight--but based on the scorecards, she should have, and would have, were it not for one judge handing her a completely indefensible 10-8 in the final round. When the third fight came on September 14, 2024, it was seen as Alexa's chance to cement her legacy: Either she was the superior fighter and the herald of a new generation for Women's Flyweight, or the whole thing was just a weird episode. Unfortunately for Alexa, it was the latter. Valentina dominated her. She outstruck her and outwrestled her with almost comical ease, the fight was a complete shutout, and despite their series being now tied at 1-1-1, no one has any doubts about the winner, nor any desire to see them fight again. Once again, much to the internet's chagrin, Valentina Shevchenko is a champion.
Women's Strawweight, 115 lbs
Zhang Weili - 25-3, 2 Defenses
Are you really surprised? There's a long tradition of underestimating unlikely champions in mixed martial arts, particularly when they're not the fan-friendliest in style or personality, from Michael Bisping to Frankie Edgar, only to have those demeaned champions remind the world that they didn't reach the peak of their divisions by mistake. Many of the wise, studied scribes of the sport warned the foolish masses against assuming the same about Women's Strawweight Champion Carla Esparza: She was no pushover, they said, and Zhang will have real trouble. And then, come fight day, we unwashed masses pulled them from their ivory towers and forced them to run in the streets amongst the mud and filth so they, too, could feel the unburdened joy of being, because Zhang Weili, as basically every fan had assumed, did, in fact, beat the absolute tar out of Carla. It wasn't particularly close: Carla got outlanded 37-6, hurt several times on the feet, and choked out just a minute into the second round. The inexplicable, season-long Cookie Monster subplot is over, Zhang Weili is now a two-time world champion, and things are back as they should be. What comes next, however, is tricky. Carla was blown out, so a rematch is out of the question. Rose Namajunas, the only person in the UFC to beat Weili, is a likely candidate--but after her disastrous performance against Carla, it remains to be seen how much faith the UFC has in her. Jéssica Andrade has a claim, but she's splitting time between 115 and 125, and probably needs to pick a weight class if she wants a shot. So the UFC solved the problem by picking Amanda Lemos. In a surprise to no one, Zhang absolutely dominated Lemos, outstriking her 296-29, smashing her to the tune of multiple 10-8 rounds, and winning a very, very wide decision. The next step was a China vs China championship showdown against Yan Xiaonan at UFC 300, and Yan did better than some expected--which is to say she won a round while also arguably getting choked out once and TKOed once, and ultimately, Zhang took a lopsided decision again.
NOTABLE CHAMPIONS ACROSS THE WORLD
ONE Heavyweight Champion, 265 lbs
Anatoly Malykhin - 14-0, 0 Defenses
ONE Light Heavyweight Champion, 225 lbs
Anatoly Malykhin - 14-0, 0 Defenses
ONE Middleweight Champion, 205 lbs
Anatoly Malykhin - 14-0, 0 Defenses
Nothing is real, and we are all a part of the great dream. Anatoly Malykhin, a Master of Sport and international champion wrestler, took to MMA in 2016. Five years later, at the tender professional age of 8-0, he was in ONE. Two fights later, he was the interim Heavyweight champion. ONE's mixed martial arts divisions have always been slim at best and ephemeral at worst, but above 185 pounds, the air got real, real thin. Arjan Bhullar, the actual 265-pound champion, was having contractual issues with ONE and didn't want to fight. In another universe, Malykhin fought other Heavyweights and carried the torch for ONE's big boys. In this one, he dropped to 225 pounds in 2022 and just beat the absolute shit out of double-champ Reinier de Ridder, taking his title in the process. But he was still the 265-pound champion, and he still wanted to unify the belts, and thus, in June of 2023, he mauled a finally-present Bhullar to become the undisputed Heavyweight champion. In another universe, he defended either of these titles, lending credibility to ONE's divisional depth. In this universe, ONE didn't have any divisional depth, and thus, on March 1, 2024, Anatoly dropped to 205 pounds to, once again, beat the shit out of now single-champ Reinier de Ridder. ONE immediately began astroturfing as much marketing as they could behind the idea of having the first major triple champion in mixed martial arts history, and like all good marketing, that is, technically, true. But he got there by beating the same guy twice, once at a weight class recognized by no other major organization on Earth, and now rules over three divisions with almost no one in them. On November 8, more than seven hundred days after his first undisputed championship win, Malykhin will finally defend a belt when he puts the Heavyweight title on the line against Oumar "Reug Reug" Kane.
ONE Welterweight Champion, 185 lbs
Christian Lee - 17-4, 0 Defenses
ONE Lightweight Champion, 170 lbs
Christian Lee - 17-4, 0 Defenses
It took three tries, but by god, Chatri gets what Chatri wants. Christian Lee, the male half of the first family of ONE Championship and its homegrown golden boy, was very mad about losing his lightweight championship in a controversial decision to Ok Rae Yoon last year. He demanded the decision be reviewed and overturned and his championship reinstated. Unsurprisingly: This did not happen. After months of complaining and just shy of a year of waiting, the two had their long-awaited rematch and Lee left nothing to chance, knocking Yoon out in six minutes to reclaim his belt. Having finally retrieved his title, Lee, being a responsible champion, proceeded to immediately challenge ONE'S 185-pound champion, Kiamrian Abbasov, for his title, a move that was definitely in no way influenced by ONE's repeated attempts to get his sister Angela Lee double-champion status. Fortunately for Christian, Abbasov horribly botched his weight cut: He came in overweight, lost his title on the scale, and was visibly depleted in the fight. Which is particularly lucky, because Abbasov beat Lee senseless in the first round to the point that a standing TKO would not have been an unreasonable stoppage. But whether from his failed weight cut or simply from punching himself out, Abbasov was exhausted by the second round, and Lee mounted a gutsy comeback and ultimately stopped him with ground-and-pound in the fourth round. After three attempts, ONE has succeeded in getting two belts on a Lee. Unfortunately, it was followed by tragedy. After the passing of his younger sister Victoria, Christian took the whole of the year to, understandably, grieve. ONE planned his comeback for February of 2024, but, y'know, that clearly did not happen. ONE held an interim title fight between Alibeg Rasulov and Ok Rae Yoon to welcome him back--but that didn't exactly happen either, as Rasulov failed hydration tests, became ineligible to win the title, then won the fight anyway. Lee vs Rasulov was scheduled for October. And then November. And now December. I hope it sticks this time, but I hope Christian is actually ready.
ONE Featherweight Champion, 155 lbs
Tang Kai - 16-2, 1 Defense
Tang Kai has been flying under the radar for some time, and in hindsight, that was clearly a mistake. He made his professional debut as a 20 year-old collegiate wrestler and won a rookie featherweight tournament in China's WBK (after investigating, we THINK it's World Battle Kings), but his stylistic limitations became apparent when he moved up to Kunlun Fight--and stopped fighting rookies. Dominant decision losses to ACA standout Bekhruz "Ong Bak" Zukurov and Road to UFC runner-up Asikeerbai Jinensibieke made Kai's weaknesses too apparent to ignore, and he made the tough call to commit to his dream, pack up his life, and move away from home to start training with real fight camps, most notably Shanghai's Dragon Gym and Phuket's legendary Tiger Muay Thai. It's worked out quite well: He hasn't lost a fight in five years. Three knockout wins in China's Rebel FC got ONE's attention, and since debuting with the organization in 2019, Kai has soundly defeated everyone in his path. He claims his wrestling base makes him impossible to take down and he proves it by using it almost entirely defensively, vastly preferring to bludgeon his opponents on his feet. His fight against Thanh Le, while blistering and difficult, was proof: He evaded every takedown attempt, widely outstruck him, dropped him with punches and leg kicks alike, and took the belt he's held for two years. And then, absolutely nothing else happened. It took ONE almost a full year to book another match for Tang Kai, and it was just an instant rematch with Thanh Le with no fanfare, and it was delayed by eight full months thanks to an injury. So after more than a year and a half without a fight, Tang Kai finally fought Thanh Le again, and this time, he knocked him out in three rounds. Congratulations, Tang Kai: You are back at square one.
ONE Bantamweight Champion, 145 lbs
Fabricio Andrade - 9-2 (1), 0 Defenses
The second time was the charm. When Fabricio "Wonder Boy" Andrade joined ONE Championship back in 2020 he was a virtual unknown in the mixed martial arts world, a 20-3 kickboxer but only a 3-2 mixed martial artist who'd been fighting out in the regional circuit of China. His association with Tiger Muay Thai put him on ONE's radar, and his visible striking skills despite being just 21 at the time made him interesting enough for a developmental contract. Said contract proceeded to develop into Andrade going on a five-fight winning streak that only got more dominant as he met tougher competition, and three straight first-round knockouts punched his ticket to the championship picture. His first appearance in the spotlight, unfortunately, went a touch awry. First, bantamweight champion John Lineker lost his title on the scale after missing weight, meaning only Andrade was eligible to become champion, and he was well on his way to doing so before hitting Lineker with an errant strike to the groin so hard it shattered his cup, and with the fight not yet halfway complete, it had to be rendered a No Contest. It took four months to get to the rematch, and it was much more closely contested, but after four rounds Lineker threw in the towel, his face having been punched too swollen to continue. Fabricio Andrade is 25 and a world goddamn champion. He promptly skipped away from MMA completely and faced Jonathan Haggerty for ONE's Featherweight Kickboxing Championship on November 3rd, where he was immediately destroyed. Haggerty wants an MMA fight next.
ONE Flyweight Champion, 135 lbs
VACANT - The stain where a person once was
One of the greatest legacies in mixed martial arts ended in September of 2024, as ONE Flyweight Champion and unquestionably the greatest Flyweight fighter in history, Demetrious "Mighty Mouse" Johnson, announced his retirement. We thank him for his service, we pray he does not pop up in BKFC, and we turn our eyes to ONE for the future. On one hand, ONE has not at all subtly been getting out of the MMA business, and losing one of their most internationally popular fighters isn't going to motivate them to change. On the other: It's an empty belt, and Chatri has never missed a chance to put a giant belt on someone's shoulder. We'll probably see a new Flyweight champion one day, it's just a question of how long it takes.
ONE Strawweight Champion, 125 lbs
Joshua Pacio - 22-4, 0 Defenses
It's been a difficult couple of years for Joshua Pacio. "The Passion" stands as a true veteran of ONE Championship, having made his debut--and his first, unsuccessful attempt at winning the Strawweight title--all the way back in 2016. Pacio established himself as both a fan favorite and a solid promotional favorite for the company, and when he lost his second bid for the title against Yosuke Saruta in 2019, ONE, in a trick they'd become very friendly with over the years, gave him an instant rematch anyway. Pacio knocked Saruta out in the rematch and became easily the greatest 125-pound champion in ONE history, ultimately defending the title three times--including a trilogy match against Saruta. By 2022, Pacio was a crown jewel for ONE's lineup. Which is when he promptly got wrestled into paste by UFC cast-off Jarred Brooks. Rather than having him defend the title, ONE booked Brooks into grappling matches, and in the meantime Pacio fought and defeated undefeated prospect Mansur Malachiev to earn himself a rematch. Multiple delays ensued, but on March 1, the Brooks/Pacio rematch finally came. Fifty-six seconds in, Pacio attempted a standing kimura on Brooks, who hoisted him off the ground, suplexed him, and knocked him out. Unfortunately, this was a problem. Under ONE's ruleset, slams that land headfirst are illegal. ONE has been regularly criticized for this--less for the rule itself as for ONE's tendency to selectively enforce the rule, using it to benefit fighters they would like to succeed. ONE, of course, denies this vehemently. However you draw your own conclusions, at the end of the day Jarred Brooks was disqualified, and thus, by DQ, Joshua Pacio is now a three-time Strawweight champion. He almost immediately announced he has torn his ACL and is out for the next year. Because he's out, Jarred Brooks instead fought Gustavo Balart at ONE 25 in August for an interim Strawweight championship.
ONE Interim Strawweight Champion, 125 lbs
Jarred Brooks - 21-3 (1), 0 Defenses
When the competitors are 'the guy who arguably should still be champion' and 'the 4-3 guy who lost to his last challenger,' the results are not particularly in doubt. Jarred "The Monkey God" Brooks feels like a singular symbol of ONE having lost the plot on mixed martial arts. In 2021 he was a huge free-agent pickup, in 2022 he became a popular world champion, and somehow, two years later, nothing has functionally changed, but all of the value of his presence has been squandered. He beat Joshua Pacio, and over the fifteen months of his title reign he didn't have a single fight--just a grappling match with Mikey Musumeci. When he did finally get a fight? It was a rematch. ONE's response? Another rematch. When Pacio was hurt? Yet another belt thanks to an interim title. Now that Brooks is the interim champion, what's next? You guessed it: A Pacio rematch after he's healed up. ONE Championship Does Not Care About Mixed Martial Arts.
ONE Women's Strawweight Champion, 125 lbs
Xiong Jing Nan - 18-2, 7 Defenses
Xiong Jing Nan dreamed of lifting weights. She'd enjoyed sports as a child, and when China started its national push for Olympic supremacy she began training heavily in hope of joining the national weightlifting team. But then she met aspirants for its boxing team and fell in love with the idea of living out a martial arts movie and getting to hit people for fun and profit and she never looked back. She turned pro in 2014 and immediately became a standout, going 9-1 in China's Kunlun Fight promotion with wins across three separate weight classes. What made her truly dangerous wasn't one-punch power, but the ability to break her opponents with constant pressure striking, scoring TKOs with combinations stretched out across dozens of consecutive, unending strikes. The story was no different when she moved to ONE in 2017, and she was strawweight champion within two fights. ONE's women's MMA divisions have been its most stable, each having had exactly one champion, and they were so dominant that they inevitably had to fight each other--and, hilariously, traded wins back and forth in the process. 115 lbs champion Angela Lee went up to 125 to challenge for Xiong Jing Nan's belt but Nan stopped her with body kicks in the fifth round, and half a year later Nan dropped down to 115 to challenge for Lee's belt only for Lee to choke her out with twelve seconds left in the fight. Xiong has notched three successful title defenses since, which set her up for her greatest challenger yet: Angela Lee, again, apparently. Despite ONE's best attempts, Xiong successfully defended her title against Lee again, nearly finishing her in the first round and ultimately winning a decision. An entire 364 days later, she had her next fight: A special rules match, with MMA gloves but only punches and no takedowns or clinching allowed, against Muay Thai champion Nat "Wondergirl" Jaroonsak. Half a year later her next fight was finally announced, and it was, once, defending her title against ONE's new postergirl in Stamp Fairtex as the company attempts, once again, to make a double champ at Xiong Jing Nan's expense, and with Stamp out injured ONE is, once again, completely silent about Xiong's future.
ONE Women's Atomweight Champion, 115 lbs
Stamp Fairtex - 10-2, 0 Defenses
It was slightly awkward when Seo Hee Ham and Stamp Fairtex were booked to meet at ONE Fight Night 14 in an interim atomweight title match, given the longstanding rumors of Angela Lee's retirement, and boy, it didn't get any less weird when ONE, which clearly knew what was going on, had Angela Lee announce that retirement just minutes before said match, which was promptly changed to an undisputed championship bout. But that's just part of how ONE rolls, as is their blatant attempts at favoritism, and boy, Stamp Fairtex is their most successful case study thus far. ONE signed her back in 2017 as a Muay Thai stadium champion, and within one fight in ONE she was their Atomweight Kickboxing Champion, and within two fights she was their Atomweight Muay Thai champion. Is this a statement about how quickly they push people they want or how thin their divisions can be? The answer, as always, is Yes. But none of that stopped Stamp from being really fucking good at fighting, and as she transitioned to mixed martial arts she ran up a great record--with the sole exception of a two-fight series with Alyona Rassohyna, where she tapped out in the first and attempted to deny it, then won a real close split decision in an immediate rematch. ONE did not feel the need to book a rubber match, for some odd reason. Stamp won the 2021 Atomweight Grand Prix, got her shot at Angela Lee, and got choked out for her troubles, but a year and two wins later, she was good to go for another championship showdown. It wasn't easy--Seo Hee Ham dropped Stamp in the second round and, for some mysterious reason, when recapping the round, ONE chose to highlight Stamp's offense and not show it--but she stopped Ham with body shots in the third round, and in doing so became not just the undisputed champion, but the first person to ever actually knock Ham out in a fight. (Before you say it: No, Ayaka Hamasaki doesn't count, that was a corner stoppage.) ONE has their new star, and she's a hell of a striker. They immediately booked the rest of their championship year around her, setting up fights with Denise Zamboanga and Xiong Jing Nan regardless of what happened in the first, and as always before a fall, Stamp immediately got injured and will miss the rest of the year. Fuck off, ONE.
Rizin Lightweight Champion, 156 lbs
Roberto de Souza - 17-3, 3 Defenses
Roberto "Satoshi" de Souza is trying to become the new Gegard Mousasi. On April 17 he had the chance to avenge the only loss of his career, a half-knockout half-injury against "Hollywood" Johnny Case back in 2019, and he succeeded in emphatic fashion, climbing Case's back, locking him in an inverted triangle choke and eventually forcing an armbar. He's now 14-1 and inarguably one of the best lightweights outside of the UFC, but unlike most of the other fighters to bear that title, he has made it clear he has no interest in changing that. Where the A.J. McKees and Michael Chandlers of the world want to test free agency and notoriety, Roberto de Souza is happy in Japan, both because his Rizin pay is fairly lucrative and his entire family jiu-jitsu business is based in the country. This is admirable, but it's also a little unfortunate: Rizin really only has around a dozen lightweights under contract, and "Satoshi" has already beaten a third of them. It was thus of particular interest when the main event for the New Year's Eve Bellator x Rizin card was announced as Roberto de Souza vs AJ McKee--a test of where Souza ranks with the rest of the world's competition. Unfortunately for him and Rizin, the answer was "under them." He positionally threatened McKee and was able to land some solid strikes in the final round, but was otherwise controlled and lost a decision. On May 6th, Satoshi beat Spike Carlyle in a fantastic fight--but it was a non-title fight, because Japanese promoters are still real scared of their own belts. Satoshi fought Patricky Pitbull at Bellator x Rizin 2 on July 29th--in another non-title fight, naturally--and took the first definitive beating of his career, getting utterly outclassed and ultimately stopped on leg kicks in three rounds. He fought Keita Nakamura at Rizin Landmark 9 on March 23 and put in one of the best performances of his career, battering K-Taro to a TKO in just 1:43--but because this is Japanese MMA it was, of course, a non-title fight, so it doesn't count as a title defense. His next title defense--his first in two and a half years--came against Luiz Gustavo at Rizin 48 on September 29, and it saw him drop Gustavo in fifteen seconds and pound him out to a maybe slightly premature TKO.
Rizin Featherweight Champion, 145 lbs
Chihiro Suzuki - 13-3 (1), 1 Defense
Chihiro Suzuki has had a very fortunate year. Suzuki rose to Rizin's notice not through MMA, but after winning Japan's KNOCK OUT Super Lightweight Kickboxing championship. He made his Rizin debut six months later--and got knocked out in twenty seconds. He spent the next two and a half years simultaneously rounding out his MMA game and annually defending his kickboxing gold, and by 2023, he was one of Rizin's top Featherweight contenders, more than ready for his shot at Kleber Koike Erbst's Rizin championship. And--he got armbarred in three minutes. However, hilariously enough, Erbst lost his belt on the scale after missing weight, meaning the title was vacant and the fight, by Rizin rules, was a No Contest, so Suzuki didn't even technically lose. He then proceeded to get the biggest break of his career. At Bellator x Rizin 2 on July 30th, 2023, despite having just lost a five-round fight to Sergio Pettis a month prior, Patrício Pitbull was thrown onto the card against Suzuki on four days' notice--and Suzuki not only beat him, he became the first person to ever knock out Bellator's GOAT. Rizin immediately booked Suzuki in against new champion Vugar Keramov for their debut in Keramov's home country of Azerbaijan, and Keramov looked poised and powerful and was in the process of ragdolling Suzuki like he does everyone else--and Suzuki caught him with an upkick on the jaw and punched him the rest of the way out from his goddamn back. Chihiro Suzuki, you are Rizin's new star. Hold onto it as long as you can and pray they don't book a Kleber rematch. He defended his title for the first time at Rizin 46 on April 29 by stopping Masanori Kanehara in one round.
Rizin Bantamweight Champion, 135 lbs
Naoki Inoue - 20-4, 0 Defenses
Rizin is one step closer to an all-Japanese championship roster. Naoki Inoue's route to championship gold has been oddly circuitous, and as is so often the case, a big part of that comes down to UFC management. In mid-2017, Naoki was one of Japan's star rookies, an undefeated 10-0 mixed martial artist and an amateur kickboxing champion despite being just 20 years old by a matter of days. The UFC signed him and had him debut on 2017's Asian-focused Singapore card, where he beat Carls John de Tomas despite Tomas missing weight by half a weight class, and in response to his efforts, the UFC iced him out for an entire year. They brought him back 53 weeks later--once again, for a Singapore card--and this time he lost a close coinflip of a split decision to future top ten Flyweight Matt Schnell. In response to his 1-1 record, the UFC immediately released Inoue. A year later Inoue was in Rizin and immediately became one of their best Bantamweights, but try as he might, he couldn't quite get to the top. In 2021 he was eliminated from the semifinal round of the Bantamweight Grand Prix by eventual champion Hiromasa Ougikubo; in 2023, he fell to Juan Archuleta, who would become Rizin's Bantamweight champion one fight later. But Archuleta missed weight and Kai Asakura won the belt, and six months later Asakura promptly vacated the title to sign with the UFC, leaving Rizin struggling to fill the void. They ultimately settled on a bout between Inoue and top contender Soo Chul Kim for Rizin 48 on September 29. It was not an upset that Inoue won; he, too, was very well-regarded. It was an upset that Inoue, who had scored only one knockout in twenty-three fights, punched out Kim, who had never been stopped by strikes after fourteen years of competition. Naoki's finally got his gold: Now we see how long he can keep it.
Rizin Flyweight Champion, 125 lbs
Kyoji Horiguchi - 32-5 (1), 0 Defenses
Well, this was a long time coming. Before Rizin even existed, Kyoji Horiguchi was the consensus #2 Flyweight fighter on the planet. He'd won Shooto's 125-pound title, he'd come to America half to face the best in the world and half because Japan's MMA scene was in a real, real bad place at the time, and by mid-2015, he was 15-1 and ready to fight for a world championship. Unfortunately, said championship was held by Demetrious "Mighty Mouse" Johnson, the best Flyweight of all time. Johnson dealt Kyoji his second-ever loss and first-ever stoppage, and it stopped Horiguchi's dream of being the best, but it also opened him up to becoming a star. A year later he was out of the UFC, back home in Japan, and, immediately, one of Rizin's top attractions. But Rizin didn't have a 125-pound division--so he settled for just winning is 135-pound belt instead. When Rizin began cross-promoting with Bellator, he went and took their belt, too, just for good measure. But his strength of schedule and his own injuries caught up with him: He ultimately vacated both belts without ever recording a title defense. By the time he came back in 2021, things had changed. He'd been knocked out for the first time in Kai Asakura back in 2019, but he was fighting hurt and on short notice, so that was excused. When Sergio Pettis knocked him out in his 2021 return fight, it was a warning; when Patchy Mix dominated him in his first match in the Bellator Grand Prix of 2022, it was a sign. Horiguchi needed to be back at 125. Bellator opened a Flyweight division more or less just for him, and at Bellator x Rizin 2 in the summer of 2023, Horiguchi faced Rizin star Makoto "Shinryu" Takahashi to crown the company's inaugural champion--and the fight ended in a No Contest after Horiguchi poked Shinryu in the eye twenty-five seconds into the first round. And then Bellator got sold and stopped operating as an independent entity. Whoops! Rizin decided to just make the goddamn belt themselves, and on New Year's Eve of 2023, Horiguchi and Takahashi had their rematch, and this time, Horiguchi choked him out. Eight years after his first attempt, Kyoji Horiguchi has a Flyweight world championship. His first act as a 125-pound champion? Taking a June 9 fight against Sergio Pettis at 135 pounds, which he won by unanimous decision, but which, of course, was not a title defense.
Rizin Women's Super Atomweight Championship, 108 lbs
Seika Izawa - 14-0, 1 Defense
All hail the new queen. After years of reigning as Japan's best atomweight, the legendary Ayaka Hamasaki fell not once but twice to the rookie Seika Izawa. A 24 year-old who was pushed into judo as a child by a frustrated mother who was tired of her constant fighting with her brothers, Izawa discovered a love for grappling that led her to win junior championships in judo, wrestling and sumo alike. She would still be pursuing judo had the pandemic not shut down much of its competitive scene, but fortunately, mixed martial arts is a terrible sport run by monsters who don't care about things like deadly diseases, which made it a tempting professional prospect. Four months after her formal MMA training began Izawa was winning fights in DEEP, less than a year after that she was DEEP's strawweight champion, and one year later she was dominating one of the best women's fighters in history on Rizin's New Year's Eve special. As Japanese organizations tend to do, frustratingly, the fight was a non-title affair, meaning Izawa had to come back and do it again on April 17. After a scary moment where Hamasaki almost stole an armbar, Izawa resumed her wrestling domination and formally took Rizin's atomweight championship. As entirely fresh blood, the world of Rizin's talent is open to her--but that also means she's got a real, real big target on her back. Rizin's Superatomweight Grand Prix was both a big coming-out party for Izawa and a series of opportunities to look shockingly mortal: She had a fair bit of trouble with Anastasiya Svetkivska in the semifinals before ultimately submitting her, but her berth in the finals against former rival Si Woo Park proved the toughest fight of her career, ending in a split decision victory she easily could have lost. Seika was supposed to face Miyuu Yamamoto at Rizin 42, but after Yamamoto had to pull out with an injury, Izawa was instead scheduled to face...the last person Yamamoto beat, the 5-3 Suwanan Boonsorn, at DEEP Jewels 41 on July 28. Izawa choked her out, shockingly. It took more than an entire year, but Izawa finally had a title defense against the 8-4 grappler Claire Lopez, and Izawa scored the fastest championship victory in Rizin history, choking her out in just barely one minute. Seika scored one more win on New Year's Eve, choking out Miyuu Yamamoto in her retirement bout, and while it was an honor, it does sort of emphasize the problem with Seika's position. She's unquestionably the best Atomweight in the world, but the last real top fighter she faced was more than a year ago. Will Rizin bring her real competition, or are they trying to simply build a star? And what IS real competition at Atomweight? She choked out Si Yoon Park at DEEP JEWELS 44 to add yet another win and belt to her credit, but the Rizin title wasn't on the line, so she's still only got the one defense. She was booked for Rizin 48 on September 29th, and once again instead of a top contender it was Kanna Asakura, and once again, it was a non-title match. Unsurprisingly: Seika won.
Invicta Bantamweight Championship, 135 lbs
Talita Bernardo - 11-4, 1 Defense
Sometimes you bounce off the top to get where you need to be. Unlike a lot of her peers, Talita Bernardo wasn't a childhood martial artist--she didn't even start training Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu until 2009, when she was already 22, as part of a dare. Five years later she was a brown belt and by the sixth she was 5-1, trained with UFC fighters, and had just won her first international fight after a successful trip to Poland. This put her on the UFC's radar, and in 2017 Germaine de Randamie pulled out of a fight with Marion Reneau, the UFC needed a late replacement, and Bernardo was ready. Except, as it turned out, she wasn't. Over the next year and a half Bernardo went 1-3 in the company, and after getting flattened by Viviane Araujo, she was cut. Talita, undeterred, sat out a couple COVID years before picking up where she left off and just aggressively grappling the shit out of people, and one victory later she was in Invicta, and two victories after that she was its top contender. On January 18, 2023, Talita outworked one-time Contender Series competitor Taneisha Tennant to become the seventh Invicta Bantamweight Champion. After a long wait, half from scheduling problems and half from Invicta itself seeking a new broadcast partner, Bernardo made her first successful defense of the title on June 28, choking out Bellator vet Olga Rubin in two rounds.
Invicta Atomweight Championship, 105 lbs
Elisandra Ferreira - 8-2, 0 Defenses
The only major Atomweight division in America is back, and as happens so often, it belongs to Brazil. Elisandra "Lili" Ferreira started competing as an amateur at 19, lost all of her amateur fights, and proceeded to turn pro anyway, because giving up sucks. She spent the first third of her professional career fighting at Strawweight simply because Atomweight opportunities are few and farbetween, but she made the turn to the lower weight class in 2021 and never looked back, and boy, it's worked out for her. With one exception--a loss to Anastasia Nikolakakos, maybe the best Atomweight on this side of the globe--Ferreira's cleaned house on the division. She made the jump to Invicta in 2023, and a year and a half later she's 4-0 and the new bannerwoman for its most unique weight class, thanks to a hard-fought decision over Andressa Romero on September 20, 2024. Invicta's 2024 comeback has reclaimed its first lost title; now we just have to see who they line up to test Ferreira over the next year of its renaissance.
THE BELLATOR CHAMPIONSHIP GRAVEYARD
Bellator Heavyweight Champion, 265 lbs
Ryan Bader - 31-8 (1), 3 Defenses
Ryan Bader is the greatest Bellator Heavyweight Champion of all time, and on a dairy farm somewhere in Wisconsin, Cole Konrad feels a pang of regret. Bader made his name as the winner of The Ultimate Fighter: Nogueira vs Mir all the way back in 2008, but his UFC career proved to be one of Sisyphean torment and humiliation that included, somehow, impossibly, being the only man to lose a UFC fight to Tito Ortiz during his last six years in the company. Bader left for free agency and Bellator in 2016 and became its light-heavyweight champion on his first night with the organization, and just two years later he became its first-ever simultaneous double-champion after knocking out the legendary Fedor Emelianenko and taking the heavyweight title. Bader would go on to lose his 205-pound crown, but Fedor never forgot his 35-second drubbing at the American wrestler's hands, and for his retirement fight, he demanded a rematch. Thus it was that the entire mixed martial arts community watched with bated breath as on February 4th, 2023, Fedor Emelianenko walked into the cage one last time and promptly got the absolute crap beaten out of him again. Ryan Bader remains undefeated at heavyweight. He was to defend his title against Linton Vassell at Bellator's series finale-sounding Bellator 300, but Vassell got injured and, as Bader himself put it in a reddit post, Viacom is done with Bellator and didn't want to pay for a replacement. Ryan Bader is the best heavyweight champion outside of the UFC, and it's anyone's guess if he'll still be champion of anything by January. He also, unfortunately, got his shit completely wrecked by Renan Ferreira in thirty seconds, making him the one and only Bellator fighter to lose at PFL vs Bellator.
Bellator Light-Heavyweight Champion, 205 lbs
Corey Anderson - 18-6 (1), 0 Defenses
Corey Anderson has been passed over by the sport so many times, but now, finally, his day has come. His success as a college wrestler led him to Ben Askren, and Ben Askren actually tricked him into trying mixed martial arts, and getting outsmarted by Ben Askren might still be the worst loss of his career. Anderson burst into the UFC as the champion of The Ultimate Fighter 19 back in 2014, and as a big, strong, undefeated 5-0 wrestler, he looked like a genuine championship threat. He was, of course, immediately knocked out by Gian Villante, and if you do not know or remnember who that is: That's the point. This sort of derailing became the story of Anderson's career, and by 2017 he had been knocked out twice in a row and was considering retirement. Instead, he launched into a fantastic, four-fight winning streak that included effortlessly destroying the UFC's big hype project Johnny Walker, giving Anderson a #5 ranking and a title eliminator against Jan Błachowicz, whom he'd beaten back in 2015. Unfortunately, this time Jan knocked him out--and despite being 4 for his last 5 and unequivocally one of the best 205-pound fighters in the world, the UFC released him because they didn't want to market a wrestler. Anderson went to Bellator, joined the 2021 Light Heavyweight Grand Prix, knocked out Ryan Bader in less than a minute and made it to the tournament final against reignning, Bellator-undefeated champion Vadim Nemkov--and he almost won. But at 4:55 of the third round, an inadvertent headbutt busted Nemkov's eye, and a doctor ruled him unable to continue. If the fight had lasted five more seconds it would have gone to a technical decision, and Anderson would have won the $1 million tournament purse and his first world championship. Instead, he got nothing, and Nemkov beat him in a rematch seven months later. It took a year and a half and Nemkov's own move up to Heavyweight for Anderson to get another chance, but at the first-ever PFL-owned Bellator Champions Series event on March 22, 2024, Corey Anderson wrestled Karl Moore for five excruciating rounds and won that god damned belt. His future as a titleholder will depend on PFL's commitment to the Bellator brand.
Bellator Middleweight Champion, 185 lbs
Johnny Eblen - 15-0, 2 Defenses
There's an old combat sports tradition whereby a champion isn't really a champion until they defend their title. Gegard Mousasi has been established as the best middleweight outside the UFC that, despite the one-sided nature of their fight, Johnny Eblen's victory over him was treated as an aberration rather than the passing of a torch. It didn't matter that Eblen was undefeated, widely considered one of the absolute best by his cohort at American Top Team or that he'd dropped Mousasi on his face with his bare hands, the world needed verification. On February 4th at Bellator 290, they got it. Fedor Emelianenko's team was intending to pull one big, beautiful night of success out of the ether for their leader's retirement fight, but it was not to be: Vadim Nemkov had to pull out of the card thanks to an injury, Fedor himself was crushed for the second time by heavyweight champion Ryan Bader, and middleweight hopeful Anatoly Tokov was competitive for the first couple of rounds but was subsequently washed out by Eblen's overwhelming assault. Johnny Eblen is a defending champion now, and as things always seem to go, the conversation changed overnight from his being overrated to his being better than everyone in the UFC. This mindset only grew again after Bellator 299 on September 23rd, as Eblen faced Fabian Edwards, knocked him out in the third round, and nearly got into a post-fight brawl with his brother, UFC champion Leon Edwards. Eblen admits he has no idea what his future is or if Bellator will still be around, but he's considering a move to light-heavyweight with Vadim Nemkov leaving the division wide open. Eblen had a scare against Impa Kasanganay but ultimately won his PFL vs Bellator bout, and in a sign that they may already be running out of ideas, he'll be fighting Fabian Edwards for the second time in a year when they rematch at the PFL Super Fights pay-per-view on October 19th.
Bellator Welterweight Champion, 170 lbs
Ramazan Kuramagomedov - 13-0, 0 Defenses
On a long enough timeline, the Russian grapplers come for us all. Jason Jackson made multiple marks on history in 2023: He became the first man to ever defeat Yaroslav Amosov, the first new champion of the PFL era, and the winner of the last main event in Bellator-branded history. It was a long road for a man who'd been plugging away in the company since 2018. Ramazan Kuramagomedov, by contrast, came in right as the door was closing. He'd won a Contender Series fight back in 2019, but he did it through grappling and Dana White was disinterested. Ramazan kept racking up victories in regional organizations instead, and he ultimately became the last major talent signed by Bellator, making his debut in June of 2023 and running up a 2-0 record before the year was out thanks to unsurprisingly great wrestling and the freedom to throw winging hooks and kicks that comes from possessing no fear of the ground game. Bellator's new reality as a PFL-owned operation meant a number of adjustments to the way they booked talent, and with a number of their more popular Welterweights booked into the 2024 PFL tournament instead, Kuramagomedov was tapped to fight Jason Jackson at Bellator Champions Series 3 on June 22. It was a much harder fight than Ramazan was accustomed to, but ultimately, he came away with both the decision and the Welterweight championship. Where he goes from here is up to the PFL.
Bellator Lightweight Champion, 155 lbs
Usman Nurmagomedov - 18-0 (1), 3 Defenses
If there's a single, developing throughline of mixed martial arts in 2022, it's the growing power of the Dagestani wrestling brigade. Abdulmanap Nurmagomedov built an army of ultra-grapplers, and after his passing the American Kickboxing Academy's Javier Mendez and Adulmanap's son and protege, the now-retired Khabib Nurmagomedov, unleashed them on the world. Usman, Khabib's cousin (as well as the younger brother of Umar Nurmagomedov, undefeated and ranked UFC bantamweight), took to Bellator in April of 2021 and proceeded to burn an undefeated path through the Manny Muros and Patrik Pietiläe of the world. His style was a little more eclectic--lots of spinning kicks, lots of stick-and-move jabs and stomps to the leg--but the resemblance became uncanny once he inevitably, and easily, ragdolled his opponents to the canvas and generally choked them out in short order thereafter. When he was announced as the #1 contender to Bellator's lightweight title, I was somewhat miffed: He hadn't beaten any top contenders, Bellator had already held a title eliminator and it was won in a crushing thirty-second knockout by Tofiq Musayev, the whole thing smacked of a pathetic attempt to glom onto some of Khabib's mainstream attention. I at no point said that he wouldn't very, very easily win. At Bellator 288 on November 18th, Usman very, very easily won, defeating Patricky "Pitbull" Freire at every aspect of the game and leaving him sans both his championship and one eyebrow. Usman's first fight as champion was both a defense and an entry into the first round of Bellator's Lightweight Grand Prix on March 3rd at Bellator 292, where he met, crushed, and retired former UFC champion Benson Henderson, handing him just the third submission loss of a 17-year, 42-fight career. He faced fellow tournament semifinalist Brent Primus at Bellator 300 on October 7th, and it was as one-sided and yet uneventful as you can imagine. Until Usman failed his drug test. Bellator says it was for medication rather than PEDs and thus he won't be stripped, but the fight's a No Contest and they need a rematch, which seems awfully selective. And then the company got bought, so it was all forgotten anyway. He was supposed to face Alexander Shabily on May 17, but an injury scratched the fight; it instead took place at Bellator Champions Series 4 on September 7, where Usman once again cruised to a well-controlled victory.
Bellator Featherweight Champion, 145 lbs
Patrício Pitbull - 36-7, 2 Defenses
Patrício Pitbull had a weird goddamn 2023. Pitbull has long been the GOAT of Bellator, sometimes to the company's open chagrin--there were definitely times they would have vastly preferred a Pat Curran or a Michael Chandler to carry their banner, and Patrício had this unfortunate habit of not just beating them but making them look like shit. By mid-2021, he was Bellator's dual featherweight and lightweight champion, he was on a seven-fight win streak, and he was a finalist in their Featherweight Grand Prix. And then undefeated rising star A.J. McKee dropped him and choked him out in two minutes. Bellator, clearly, felt they had hit the jackpot and were going to be riding the McKee train for some time, as by their rematch ten months later, McKee was the centerpiece of all of their advertising. It was somewhat awkward when, as he had done to so many before, Patrício took him to a victorious decision that made McKee kind of look like shit, neutralizing his offense in the clinch, jabbing under his range, and grinding away the clock. Bellator pushed for a trilogy, but McKee, pissed off, tired of cutting weight and worried about having it happen all over again, declined and moved up to lightweight. Instead of a big-money rematch, Patrício was left to face top contender Ádám Borics, and the match, while hard-fought, was not particularly entertaining or memorable. Pitbull's next fight was the rare cross-promotional bout, facing Rizin's featherweight champion Kleber Koike Erbst on the New Year's Eve Bellator x Rizin special. It was the only fight on the card that wasn't particularly competitive: He shut Kleber down completely and won a wide decision. There is only one featherweight king outside the UFC--and it's one who had a two-fight losing streak, with one of those fights being a bantamweight loss to Sergio Pettis and the other a lightweight knockout to Chihiro Suzuki that he took on four days' notice, because MMA is silly. Pitbull did, however, become the first Bellator champion to canonically defend a title under their new PFL ownership: He fought Jeremy Kennedy at Bellator Champions Series 1 on March 22 and mauled him in three rounds.
Bellator Bantamweight Champion, 135 lbs
Patchy Mix - 20-1, 1 Defense
It took a long goddamn time, but Patchy Mix is finally getting the credit he deserves. Fans had already singled out Patchy as a uniquely talented fighter by 2019, when he signed to Bellator as the 10-0 King of the Cage Bantamweight Champion who'd submitted almost everyone he faced, but it wasn't really until he choked out Yuki Motoya at Bellator's first co-promotion with Rizin that people really paid attention. Which was unfortunate, because his next fight was a shot at Juan Archuleta for the vacant Bellator Bantamweight Championship and Archuleta schooled him on their feet, ending both Mix's title hopes and his undefeated streak. It didn't help matters when, two fights later, he blew his weight cut for a big Dublin match against James Gallagher. But Mix kept winning, and when he entered the Bantamweight Grand Prix and promptly stormed the bracket by beating Kyoji Horiguchi and choking out Magomed Magomedov, suddenly, people paid attention again. When he fought interim champion Raufeon Stots and knocked him out cold with a knee in less than a minute and a half, people began wondering if maybe he was the real champion and Sergio Pettis, who'd been out for a year and a half and returned to a vanity fight with Patrício Pitbull, wasn't the fake. The two met at Bellator 301 on November 17th, and Mix left no doubt: He outwrestled Pettis and choked him out in the second round. Patchy Mix is, finally, the undisputed Bellator Bantamweight Champion. He technically defended his title against Magomed Magomedov at Bellator Champions Series 2 on May 17, but as much as I love Patchy, the decision probably should've gone the other way.
Bellator Women's Featherweight Champion, 145 lbs
Cris Cyborg - 27-2 (1), 5 Defenses
Yup. It's 2024 and Cris Cyborg is still out there. For those who don't know, Cris Cyborg was the canonical women's featherweight fighter, a Muay Thai wrecking machine who didn't just beat but brutalized essentially all of her opponents, including ex-Star Wars Gina Carano, and her popularity as a destroyer of humans is the only real reason women's featherweight even exists as a division, to the point that the UFC added it when she was the only actual fighter at the weight class they employed. She was 20-1 (1) when she passed the torch to Amanda Nunes, who slew her in just fifty-one seconds. She took one more fight in the UFC to complete her contract, but left for Bellator almost immediately afterward with uncharacteristic cooperation from the UFC itself--after all, they'd gotten what they wanted out of her. Her first Bellator fight was a one-sided destruction of their featherweight champion, and she's defended it three times since. At this point in Cyborg's career the problem isn't her or her fighting or her age, but simply that there's no one in Bellator for her to fight--after just five fights she's already hitting rematches, having just recorded her second one-sided bludgeoning of a very game but outmatched Arlene Blencowe. Cyborg decided her next fight would be a boxing match, and on September 25 she faced Simone da Silva, a jobber to the stars coming off twelve straight losses who had been knocked out just one month prior. Undeterred, she had her second boxing match on the undercard of December 10th’s Crawford/Avanesyan card, taking a unanimous decision over Gabrielle “Gabanator” Holloway, who is 6-6 in MMA and 0-3 in boxing. After a year and a half of inactivity, Cris Cyborg returned to MMA to defend her title against Cat Zingano at Bellator 300 on October 7th. It lasted four minutes. It took an entire year of negotiations, but she finally met Larissa Pacheco in a champion vs champion superfight at PFL Super Fights: Battle of the Giants on October 19th, and yet again, Cyborg won.
Bellator Women's Flyweight Champion, 125 lbs
Liz Carmouche - 22-8, 3 Defenses
It took more than a decade and some controversy, but Liz Carmouche got her flowers. "Girl-Rilla" was just as present a figure in establishing women's MMA in the mainstream, but she's the most consistently forgotten because she was the losing fighter in all of those establishing moments. She was a challenger for the early, pre-fame Strikeforce Women's Bantamweight Championship, and was winning on the scorecards before Marloes Coenen choked her out. She was a central part of the inaugural Invicta FC card, and was planned as a title contender before the big show came calling. She became one half of the first women's fight in UFC history, and at one point had Ronda Rousey in a nearly destiny-defying neck crank, but was ultimately submitted in the first round. She's one of two women to ever defeat Valentina Shevchenko, but when given a second chance at the now-UFC champion Shevchenko, she fell short. Despite her powerful wrestling and submission skills, she was eternally denied the top of the mountain. So it was both particularly appropriate and particularly cruel when she finally won a championship on April 22, 2022--in a way that displeased everybody. Standing champion Juliana Velasquez was winning on every scorecard, but Liz Carmouche got her in the crucifix position and landed a number of, respectfully, small elbows, but referee Mike Beltran called a TKO to the immediate chagrin of the entirely safe ex-champion. The controversy made a rematch all but mandatory, and it took Bellator most of the year to do it, but the two met in the cage to run it back at Bellator 289 on December 9, and this time there was no controversy, as Velasquez submitted to an armbar two rounds in. The weirdness didn't stop there: Liz's next title defense against Deanna Bennett also hit the skids, as Bennett missed weight and was thus ineligible to win the championship. Carmouche put it on the line anyway, and fortunately, she choked Bennett out in the fourth round. She defended her title against Ilima-Lei Macfarlane at Bellator 300 on October 7th, and it was one of those fights where friends don't really want to hurt each other--until Ilima got kicked enough that her leg collapsed in the fifth round. Her status as champion is questionable, though--of all Bellator's titleholders, Liz is the only one taking part in this year's PFL season. At PFL 1 on April 4 she beat Juliana Velasquez for the third time, and at PFL 4 on June 13 she got into real trouble with Kana Watanabe only to get an amazing comeback armbar submission with just seconds left in the fight. She was eliminated from the 2024 PFL playoffs after a decision loss to Taila Santos. What that means for her Bellator future, who knows.