Abdul-Aziz Abdulvakhabov

Abdul-Aziz Abdulvakhabov (born January 16, 1989) is a Russian mixed martial artist who competes in the Lightweight division of the Absolute Championship Akhmat (ACA), where he is the current ACA Lightweight Champion. Abdulvakhabov has reached #15 in World Lightweight rankings according to Fight Matrix.[1]

Abdul-Aziz Abdulvakhabov
BornАбдул-Азиз Абдулвахабов
(1989-01-16) January 16, 1989 (age 35)
Sernovodskoye, Chechnya, Russia
Other namesLion
NationalityRussian
Height5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Weight155 lb (70 kg; 11 st 1 lb)
DivisionLightweight
Reach71 in (180 cm)
Fighting out ofGrozny, Russia
TeamBerkut FC
Years active2011–present
Mixed martial arts record
Total22
Wins20
By knockout8
By submission6
By decision6
Losses2
By decision2
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Background

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The fighter was born in the village of Sernovodsky, the administrative center of the Sernovodsky district, located in the west of the Chechen Republic. From the age of 7 years, he began to get involved in sports. As a child, little Aziz was fond of football - like the rest of the rural boys, he played the ball with pleasure. The desire to become a wrestler appeared in Abdulvakhabov in his teens. An older brother played a big role in this, who taught the younger ones to play sports and box. At that time, hostilities were taking place in Chechnya, therefore, despite the desire of Abdul-Aziz to engage in wrestling, he did not have the opportunity for this.[2]

Abdul-Aziz decided to get an education in Moscow, where he moved at the age of 17. Abdulvakhabov entered the Faculty of Law and combined his studies with training in freestyle wrestling. A year later, Abdul-Aziz, following the advice of his brother, began to engage in hand-to-hand combat. A month later, the coach put the young athlete to the championship of the Moscow region, where the Chechen won. After spending 2 years on the mats, the fighter met Akhmed Musaev, from whom he received and accepted an offer to start practicing hand-to-hand combat and combat sambo.[3]

Mixed martial arts career

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Early career

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A year and a half after the start of training with a new coach, Abdul-Aziz began his journey in mixed martial arts with a one-day tournament from the ProFC organization, where he beat Salim Kaslukov, but in the second fight he was defeated by unanimous decision from Magomed Alkhasov, who was more experienced at that time. Upon his return to canvas, he began to actively close this defeat and, under the sign of various promotions, winning 3 victories in 2 months, after which he took a break for a year and a half. After 2 more victories, and then completely signed up for the ACB organization.[2]

Absolute Championship Akhmat

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April 6, 2014 was a special date for Abdulaziz. On this day, his first fight took place in the ACB promotion (since 2018 - ACA). The fighter refused to participate in the first round, as he was seriously injured the day before. But Abdulvakhabov was still destined to get there: a fighter dropped out of the second round of the tournament, and Aziz had recovered his health by that time and came on as a substitute. The rival was Islam Makoev at ACB 5, who did not have a single defeat on his account. The fight was difficult for both athletes, but the judges unanimously gave the victory to Aziz, who advanced to the semifinals. In the semi-finals at ACB 7, he would go on to defeat Rasul Ediev in the second round, submitting him with a guillotine.[1]

During this time, it became clear that the fighter's injury was severe and required surgery. Despite this, the athlete continued to participate in the competition. In the final duel Abdulvakhabov met with an experienced fighter Ali Bagov at ACB 9. In the third round, Aziz knocked out Bagov with a spinning back kick and received the ACB Lightweight Championship.[4] After that, Abdul-Aziz took a break for a year to improve his health and rehabilitate.

The return of the athlete was bright - a victory over Vadim Rasul at ACB 17.[5] The next to fall were Zulfikar Usmanov at ACB 22 and Julio Cesar De Almeida at ACB 27. These fights were not title fights, so Aziz still had the belt.

The first defense of the champion title in the lightweight category took place in Moscow at ACB 32. The rival of the Chechen was Eduard Vartanyan, who he defeated via TKO stoppage in the first round.[6][7]

In 2016, within the framework of ACB 48, Abdul-Aziz rematched Ali Bagov. From the first minutes of the fight, Ali was in the lead, but he did not go to the second round for health reasons.[8] During this fight, Aziz's old injury also made itself felt. The fighter's knee was operated on, and for a long time he was in rehabilitation.

A year later, the main event of ACB 77 was the fight between Abdulvakhabov and Eduard Vartanyan. For the first time in Aziz's career, an exhausting duel lasted all the prescribed five rounds. The victory was awarded to the defending champion, and he retained the title.[9][5]

In 2018, the third meeting of Abdul-Aziz and Ali Bagov took place as part of the ACB 89 competition. In the title fight, the champion lost to his opponent in a close bout via majority decision, and the belt went to Bagov.[10]

The following year, Abdul-Azis was booked to face Marcin Held at ACA 92, but he was replaced by Brian Foster, who was submitted via arm-trainle choke in the first round,[11] and then Imanali Gamzatkhanov at ACA 99, who followed in the footsteps of the American, being submitted via rear-naked choke in the second round.[12]

In 2020, Abdulvakhabov got a chance to reclaim the title against Alexander Sarnavsky at the ACA 111, which the Chechen won via unanimous decision to win the bout and regain the belt.[13]

Abdulvakhabov defended his title against former UFC veteran Hacran Dias on November 5, 2021, at ACA 131: Abdulvakhabov vs. Dias.[14] He won the close bout via split decision.[15]

An ACA Lightweight Championship unification bout between Abdulvakhabov and interim champion Mukhamed Kokov at ACA 162.[16] However, for health reasons the bout was postponed to ACA 164 on October 4.[17]

The bout against Kokov was rescheduled for ACA 164: Abdulvakhabov vs. Kokov on October 4, 2023 as part of the 2023 ACA Lightweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal. Abdulvakhabov unified the title and advanced to the semi-finals, stopping Kokov in the second round after dropping Kokov with an elbow against the fence and then winning by ground and pound TKO.[18]

Championships and accomplishments

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Mixed martial arts

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Mixed martial arts record

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Professional record breakdown
22 matches 20 wins 2 losses
By knockout 8 0
By submission 6 0
By decision 6 2
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Win 20–2 Mukhamed Kokov TKO (punches) ACA 164 October 4, 2023 2 1:55 Grozny, Russia 2023 ACA Lightweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal. Defended and unified the ACA Lightweight Championship. Performance of the Night.
Win 19–2 Hacran Dias Decision (split) ACA 131 November 5, 2021 5 5:00 Moscow, Russia Defended the ACA Lightweight Championship.
Win 18–2 Alexander Sarnavskiy Decision (unanimous) ACA 111 September 19, 2020 5 5:00 Moscow, Russia Won the vacant ACA Lightweight Championship.
Win 17–2 Imanali Gamzatkhanov Submission (rear-naked choke) ACA 99 September 27, 2019 2 4:21 Moscow, Russia
Win 16–2 Brian Foster Submission (arm-triangle choke) ACA 92 February 16, 2019 1 1:36 Warsaw, Poland
Loss 15–2 Ali Bagov Decision (majority) ACB 89 September 8, 2018 3 5:00 Krasnodar, Russia Lost the ACA Lightweight Championship.
Win 15–1 Eduard Vartanyan Decision (split) ACB 77 December 23, 2017 5 5:00 Moscow, Russia Defended and unified the ACB Lightweight Championship.
Win 14–1 Ali Bagov TKO (retirement) ACB 48 October 22, 2016 1 5:00 Moscow, Russia Defended the ACA Lightweight Championship.
Win 13–1 Eduard Vartanyan TKO (punches) ACB 32 March 26, 2016 1 2:53 Moscow, Russia Defended the ACB Lightweight Championship.
Win 12–1 Julio Cesar de Almeida KO (punch) ACB 27 December 20, 2015 2 1:57 Dushanbe, Tajikistan
Win 11–1 Zulfikar Usmanov TKO (doctor stoppage) ACB 22 September 12, 2015 1 4:47 Saint Petersburg, Russia
Win 10–1 Vadim Russul Submission (rear-naked choke) ACB 17 May 2, 2015 1 4:59 Tolstoy-Yurt, Russia
Win 9–1 Ali Bagov KO (spinning back kick) ACB 9 June 22, 2014 3 3:36 Grozny, Russia Won the 2014 ACB Lightweight Grand Prix and the inaugural ACB Lightweight Championship.
Win 8–1 Rasul Ediev Submission (guillotine choke) ACB 7 May 18, 2014 2 0:45 Grozny, Russia 2014 ACB Lightweight Grand Prix Semifinal.
Win 7–1 Islam Makoev Decision (unanimous) ACB 5 April 6, 2014 2 5:00 Grozny, Russia
Win 6–1 Aktilek Zhumabek Decision (unanimous) Alash Pride: Great Battle 2 December 19, 2013 3 5:00 Almaty, Kazakhstan
Win 5–1 Garik Aivazyan Submission (anaconda choke) Fight Nights Global 18 October 4, 2013 1 4:24 Grozny, Russia Catchweight (165 lb) bout.
Win 4–1 Sergei Bal Submission (arm-triangle choke) Deadly Bet 2012 April 27, 2012 2 3:20 Moscow, Russia
Win 3–1 Andrey Markovich Decision (unanimous) S-70: Russian Grand Prix 2011 (Stage 3) April 6, 2012 3 5:00 Moscow, Russia
Win 2–1 Ilya Gomelyuk TKO (punches) Corona Cup 22 March 2, 2012 3 N/A Moscow, Russia Featherweight bout.
Loss 1–1 Magomed Alkhasov Decision (unanimous) ProFC 33: Global Grand Prix (Stage 2) September 26, 2011 2 5:00 Derbent, Russia
Win 1–0 Salim Kaskulov TKO (punches) 1 4:24 Lightweight debut.

[19]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Abdul-Aziz Abdulvakhabov Fighter Profile". Fight Matrix. Retrieved 2023-07-03.
  2. ^ a b "Абдул-Азиз Абдулвахабов: все бои, видео, статистика, биография бойца ACA - MMAExpress". mma.express. Retrieved 2023-07-03.
  3. ^ "Азиз Абдулвахабов". 24CNM.
  4. ^ "Али Багов (Ali Bagov): все бои, видео и биография российского Халка - MMAExpress". mma.express. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  5. ^ a b "Победа Абдул-Азиза Абдулвахабова на турнире АСВ 17". Sports.ru. 2015-05-26. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  6. ^ "Результаты ACB 32". AllBoxing.ru - все новости бокса, ММА (MMA), UFC (ЮФС), Bellator, ACA, бои без правил. Видео и фото, прямые трансляции (in Russian). 2016-03-27. Retrieved 2023-07-03.
  7. ^ "Боец MMA Абдулвахабов защитил титул чемпиона ACB в легком весе, победив Вартаняна". РИА Новости Спорт (in Russian). 2016-03-27. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  8. ^ "История успеха бойца ММА Али Багова (Gif)". Дзен | Блогерская платформа. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  9. ^ "Турнир – бомба! Но судьи напортачили с результатом главного боя ACB 77". Советский спорт (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-07-03.
  10. ^ Carroll, Peter (2018-09-08). "ACB 89 results: Albert Tumenov crowned welterweight champion". MMA Fighting. Archived from the original on 2022-08-15. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  11. ^ Howard, DC (2019-02-17). "ACA 92 Results and Highlights: Yagshimuradov claims the ACA belt, Johnson Jr. rolls". thebodylockmma.com. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  12. ^ "ACA 99: Али Багов vs. Хусейн Халиев. ИТОГИ - Karate.ru | Новости". karate.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  13. ^ "Российский боец Сарнавский сломал руку в поединке на турнире ACA - ТАСС". TASS. Retrieved 2022-05-22.
  14. ^ "Двама шампиони на ACA ще бранят титлите си през ноември". mma.bg. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
  15. ^ "Брутальный нокаут от "Уральского Халка"! Итоги ACA 131 в Москве". www.sportsdaily.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-11-06.
  16. ^ "Титульный бой между Абдулвахабовым и Коковым состоится 2 сентября на турнире ACA 162". mma.metaratings.ru (in Russian). June 21, 2023.
  17. ^ "Бой Биберт Туменов – Лэнс Палмер возглавит турнир ÃCA 162". mma.metaratings.ru (in Russian). August 16, 2023.
  18. ^ Romanchuk, Vladyslav (2023-10-08). "Абдул-Азиз Абдулвахабов остановил Мухаммеда Кокова в главном бою ACA 164". Championat.
  19. ^ Sherdog.com. "Abdul-Aziz Abdulvakhabov". Sherdog.
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