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Template:Infobox MMA event UFC 27: Ultimate Bad Boyz was a mixed martial arts event held by the Ultimate Fighting Championship on September 22, 2000 at Lake Front Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana.
History
The event featured the return of UFC legend Dan Severn, who faced Pedro Rizzo in a heavyweight bout.
UFC 27 also featured the first UFC appearance of popular Pancrase fighter Yuki Kondo.
UFC veteran Frank Shamrock replaced Jeff Blatnick in the announcers booth for this event.
UFC 27 was the fifth straight UFC event to have not seen a home video or DVD release.
The UFC's parent company, SEG, was incurring financial difficulties and would sell the UFC just three months later to Zuffa LLC.
While UFC 23 through UFC 29 remained unreleased, Zuffa began releasing UFC home videos starting with UFC 30.
In 2007, FightDVD released these events in double DVD sets; UFC 29 was released in this fashion with UFC 30 due to the odd number of unreleased events.
Results
Preliminary Bout: Jeff Monson vs. Tim Lajcik Monson wins by unanimous decision at 10:00.
Preliminary Bout: Brad Gumm vs. CJ Fernandes
After 10:00, the bout was ruled a draw.
Heavyweight Bout: Ian Freeman vs. Tedd Williams
Freeman wins by unanimous decision at 15:00.
Middleweight Bout: Yuki Kondo vs. Alexandre Dantas
Kondo wins by TKO (referee stoppage due to strikes) at 2:28 of the third round.
Lightweight Bout: Fabiano Iha vs. Laverne Clark
Iha wins by submission (armbar) at 1:10 of the first round.
Middleweight Bout: Jeremy Horn vs. Eugene Jackson
Horn wins by submission (armbar) at 4:32 of the first round.
Heavyweight Bout: Maurice Smith vs. Bobby Hoffman Smith wins by split decision at 15:00.
Heavyweight Bout: Pedro Rizzo vs. Dan Severn
Rizzo wins by verbal submission due to leg kicks at 1:32 of the first round. External links
https://www.tapology.com/fightcenter/events/ufc-27-ultimate-bad-boyz
https://www.nutaofitmartialarts.com/mmas-early-years-ufc-27/ https://mma.pl/ufc-27/
https://www.sportskeeda.com/mma/ufc-27-what-happened-when-dan-severn-returned-to-ufc
https://www.myreviewer.com/DVD/91414/UFC-27-and-28-UK/91427/Review-by-Brian-Elliott
https://heavy.com/sports/ufc/2010/03/smark-rant-ufc-27-ultimate-bad-boyz/
UFC 27 was held on 22nd September 2000, from the Lake Front Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana. The main event of the evening saw champion Pedro Rizzo defend his title against a bona-fide UFC legend, Dan "The Beast" Severn.
UFC 27 was held on 22nd September 2000, from the Lake Front Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana. The main event of the evening saw champion Pedro Rizzo defend his title against a bona-fide UFC legend, Dan "The Beast" Severn.
UFC 28 was held on 17th November 2000, from the Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City, New Jersey. This was the first event to be regulated by the New Jersey State Athletic Control Board, giving the company more legitimacy than perhaps it had ever had, up to this point. The main event of the evening was a battle of the amateur wrestlers, as Kevin Randleman defended his Heavyweight Title against Randy "The Natural" Couture.
It was rather odd that a Sunderland boy kicked off UFC 27, but that is exactly what happened when our own Ian Freeman faced Tedd Williams in a Heavyweight contest. Not a great deal transpired in the bout, although there was some very solid striking from the eventual winner.
In what ended up as probably the best fight of the entire evening, Yuki Kondo then faced Alexandre Dantas in a long match, which had a superb third round. Some of the striking was brutal here, too.
In what was a short bout with a great finish, Fabiano Iha then squared off against LaVerne Clark, before the Jeremy Horn - famous for being one of the few people to have beaten Chuck Liddell - tackled Eugene Jackson in another brief contest, in which some great technique was employed. The semi-main event of Maurice Smith vs. Bobby Hoffman was then up, in a bout which unfortunately played host to a lot of clinching, though there were some good strikes in there as well.
The main event of Pedro Rizzo vs. Dan Severn was an incredibly odd match, for a number of different reasons. Firstly, because UFC matchmaker John Peretti appeared on camera before the match to basically state that Heavyweight Title challenger Dan Severn is a poor fighter (!), and secondly because of the unique - and that is putting it kindly - finish to the bout. Sadly, UFC 27 thus ended on a highly anti-climatic note.
This is my testing page, pls do not change the content of submit for review. Thank you.
1.Info/URL
- 244 numbers - https://mmajunkie.usatoday.com/2019/10/ufc-244-pre-event-facts-jorge-masvidal-vs-nate-diaz-bmf-title-fight
2.New sections/sub sections which are not in the full article below - pls place it here first.
UFC 244: Masvidal vs. Diaz | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Promotion | Ultimate Fighting Championship | |||
Date | November 2, 2019 | |||
Venue | Madison Square Garden | |||
City | New York City, New York | |||
Attendance | 20,143[1] | |||
Total gate | $6,575,996.19[1] | |||
Event chronology | ||||
|
UFC 244: Masvidal vs. Diaz was a mixed martial arts pay-per-view event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship that took place on November 2, 2019 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York.[2] UFC 244 was the UFC's 500th live event.[3]
The main card was the first welterweight UFC 'BMF' Championship, a one-off symbolic title belt, over five rounds where actor and professional wrestler Dwayne Johnson, also known by his ring name, The Rock, crowed the winner.
match for the UFC 'BMF' Championship, a symbolic belt, along with the Fight of the Night and second Performance of the Night were awarded from two out of the four bouts.
In the main event, Nate Diaz and Jorge Masvidal fight for the first “BMF” title belt over five rounds at welterweight. The promotion created the title as a one-off with pro-wrestling icon Dwayne “The Rock” Jackson set to crown the winner. In the co-headliner, middleweights Kelvin Gastelum and Darren Till try to bounce back from recent losses. Gastelum returns after a failed bid for the interim middleweight title against current champ Israel Adesanya, while Till makes his debut at 185 pounds after a knockout loss to Masvidal.
Background
editworking in Progress
- UFC officials came out of left field when it named the headliner for its 500th event ever. Initially working toward a welterweight title defense with champion Kamaru Usman taking on challenger Colby Covington, UFC president Dana White surprised everyone when he named a titillating non-title showdown between fan favorites Nate Diaz and Jorge Masvidal as the UFC 244 headliner, which will take place on Nov. 2 at Madison Square Garden in New York. Though there isn’t a UFC championship on the line in the UFC 244 main event, Masvidal and Diaz will be squaring off for the fictitious “Baddest Motherf—er” belt that Diaz conjured out of thin air. With that designation immediately gaining traction, White has decided to create a BMF belt for the winner.}}[4]
call out
edithttps://www.bjpenn.com/mma-news/ufc/ufc-244-results-jorge-masvidal-defeats-nate-diaz-highlights/
Events lead-up
editA welterweight bout between Jorge Masvidal and former UFC Lightweight Championship challenger and The Ultimate Fighter 5 lightweight winner Nate Diaz headlined the event.[5] After his UFC 241 win against former lightweight champion Anthony Pettis, Diaz proclaimed himself the "baddest motherfucker in the game" and issued a challenge to Masvidal. When the fight was scheduled, Dana White announced that a celebratory "baddest motherfucker" (‘BMF’) belt would be awarded to the winner.[6] However, on October 24, Diaz tweeted a statement saying he would not be competing due to an adverse drug test finding, which put the bout in jeopardy.[7] On October 26, the UFC announced that Diaz had been cleared to compete, as his positive test had traces of LGD-4033, or Ligandrol, a selective androgen receptor modulator which was known to be linked to a tainted batch of organic, vegan multivitamins.[8]
Press conference in NY
In the lead-up to UFC 244, Darren Till, who was one of the fighter on the the co-main card had a atypical fight week. He faced a delayed visa issue to travel to United States, and arrived in New York two days prior to the event which attributed to his trouble with the Spain's authority where he was arrested on 18 April 2019 in Tenerife, Canary Islands for trashing a hotel room and stealing a taxi cab.[9]
Due to the his delay of arrival, the promotion placed Jared Cannonier on standby to fill in as the substitute fighter for the bout,[10] and Till missed out the open workouts and event media day engagement ,[11] Despite all the travel concern, Till managed to cut weight in time and hit the scale at the middleweight upper limit of 186 pounds of non-title fight at the weight-in. In turn, Gastelum's weigh-in video showed that he made contact with his coach, Rafael Cordeiro, while on the scale, a violation of the weigh in policy by the NYSAC. Till reacted to Gastelum's weigh-in ordeal retold by the ESPN's MMA editor Brett Okamoto "he (Till) doesn’t care if Kelvin was heavy. I (Okamoto) told him, you’d be owed that fine money. He said, he, let him (Gastelum) keep it or give it to Walt Harris to help find his daughter."[12]
Venue
edit
Triump attending the event
edit
Card changes
editKrzysztof Jotko was scheduled to face Edmen Shahbazyan at the event. However, Jotko was removed from the card in early October for undisclosed reasons and replaced by Brad Tavares.[13]
Weigh-in
editAt the weigh-ins, former Invicta FC Flyweight Champion Jennifer Maia weighed in at 127.2 pounds, 1.2 pounds over the flyweight non-title fight limit of 126. The bout proceeded at a catch-weight and Maia was fined 25% of her purse, which went to her opponent Katlyn Chookagian.[14]
Prior to the weigh-ins, the New York State Athletic Commission (NYSAC) issued a rare statement in which it was announced that they would be pursuing disciplinary action against The Ultimate Fighter: Team Jones vs. Team Sonnen middleweight winner and former interim title challenger Kelvin Gastelum. In the statement, the Athletic Commission stated that following a review of Gastelum's weigh-in video they "determined that Mr. Gastelum made contact with another person while on the scale, a violation of the weigh in policy. In light of this violation, the Commission will pursue disciplinary action. At this time, the official weight determination will not be disturbed, and Mr. Gastelum will not be disqualified from competing in UFC 244."[15]
Fines
editOn November 8, it was announced that Corey Anderson had been fined $10,000 by the NYSAC for "unsportsmanlike and disorderly conduct" for taunting and screaming at Johnny Walker and shoving the referee away during his post-fight celebration. Kelvin Gastelum was also fined $1,000 for making physical contact with his coach Rafael Cordeiro while on the scale at the weigh-ins.[16]
Event
editThe event consisted of 12 mixed-martial-arts bouts sanctioned by the New York State Athletic Commission and contested under the Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts. All bouts consisted of three five-minute rounds, except for the main-event championship match between Masvidal and Diaz (which was scheduled for five five-minute rounds). Five main card bouts were televised live on ESPN+ pay-per-view. Four preliminary bouts were televised live on ESPN2, and three was streamed live on UFC Fight Pass and ESPN+.[17] UFC 244 set the second best mixed-martial-arts gate record in New York. The event earned $6,575,996.19 in ticket sales, behind the previous record set at UFC 205. Attendance was 20,143. It sold an estimated 925,000 pay-per-view buys.[1]
Early preliminary card
editThe event's three early preliminary fights were streamed live on UFC Fight Pass and ESPN+.[17] with all bouts went the full three rounds, ending in decisions, except one ended in technical knockout. Hakeem Dawodu, a Canadian born in Calgary to a Nigerian mother and a Jamaican father, [18] outpointed Julio Arce, a former Ring of Combat featherweight champion[19] with a split decision to open the event in the featherweight bout.[20] The pair opened up exchanges in the early round with Dawodu threw an inside kick to Arce's leg and then pressed forward to a clinch while Arce landed a flush left punch to Dawodu after back in open space. Arce attempted briefly to take Dawondu's back for a rear-naked choke in round two, but the Canadian managed to spin it out and back to his feet. The last round saw Dawodu attacking with leg kicks again while both fighters landed shots but Dawodu edged out with two of the three judges scored the bout 29–28 for Dawodu while the remaining third judge saw it 28–29 for Arce, giving Dawodu the split-decision victory.[21]
The second match up saw Lyman Good defeat Chance Rencountre by technical knockout in the third round.[22] Good, a New Yorker, was the inaugural Bellator Welterweight Champion and the former Welthereight Cage Fury Fighting Champion[23] came into the fight with with a loss to the Brazilian jiu-jitsu specialist Demian Maia via a rear-naked choke,[24] while Rencountre, who was the first member of the Osage tribe to compete in the UFC,[25] entered the competition with a win over Ismail Naurdiev on July 2019 at UFC 239.[26] Good fired off the fight with legs kicks and several rounds of connected powerful punches and caught Rencountre off-balance, opting to shoot for an unsuccessful takedown. The remaining two rounds saw Rencountre moving in on his own attacks, landing a few but received multiple series of massive strikes from Good that connected each time. Good put Rencountre down in the third round with right hand that crumbled him. It was the eleventh knockout victories for Good.[27]
In the last fight on the early preliminary card and the only women's bout of the night was between the former Cage Fury Fighting Flyweight and Bantamweight Champion Katlyn Chookagian faced Jennifer Maia, the former three times Invicta FC Flyweight Champion[28] At the weigh-ins, Maia weighed in at 127.2 pounds, 1.2 pounds over the flyweight non-title fight limit of 126. The bout went ahead at catchweight and Maia was fined 25% of her purse and went to her opponent.[29] The bout saw Maia continually trying to engage in clinches by the cage, looking for a takedowns but the attempts yielded no avails. Chookagian attacked Maia with long straight jabs and some leg kicks with often connected. The huge volumn of mixed strikes, kicks and feints from Chookagian saw no answered from Maia. All three judges scored 29–28 in favor of Fitch, giving Chookagian the unanimous decision victory. she lost the fight via unanimous decision.[30]
Preliminary card
editThe prelims began at 8 p.m. Eastern Time Zone and four bouts were broadcast on ESPN2. All four bouts ended in round one via technical knockouts or knockouts except one finished in round three.[31] In the first fight on the preliminary card was between Jairzinho Rozenstruik from Suriname and the former UFC Heavyweight Champion Andrei Arlovski. Rozenstruik defeated Arlovski by knockout at 29 seconds of the first round.[32] Rozenstruik had Arlovski back to the fence at the first tradings and with a short left hook dropped Arlovski to the ground when Arlovski charged forward.[33]
The next fight was the first middleweight bout of the night where Edmen Shahbazyan defeated UFC veteran Brad Tavares, one of the participants of The Ultimate Fighter 11, with the first round head kick.[34] Shahbazyan, who earned his UFC contract with a 40-second knockout on episode 5 of the second season of Dana White's Tuesday Night Contender Series in July 2018,[35] dropped Tavares in with a massive right hand in the early exchanges, sending Tavares back to the cage. Shahbazyan continued to push forward and landed a heavy left head kick that dropped Brad to the canvas, ending the contest at the 2:27 mark of Round 1.[36]
On the penultimate preliminary featherweight bout, Shane Burgos, fighting in front of his home crowd, defeated Makwan Amirkhani, "Mr. Finland", by technical knockout due to punches in the third round .[37] Burgos secured the victory in less than 30 seconds left in the final round after swapping Amirkhani with heavy combinations of body shorts and strikes.[38]
In the preliminary card's final match, a light heavyweight contest between Corey Anderson and Johnny Walker saw Anderson beat Walker by technical knockout in round one.[39] Corey, the light heavyweight winner on the The Ultimate Fighter 19, ended Walker's three win streak, where Walker beat Khalil Rountree Jr., Justin Ledet and Misha Cirkunov via knockout under two minutes. One minute into the fight, Anderson landed a huge overhand right that knocked Walker down, following up with a series of shots that stopped Walker to find his footing, and referee Kevin MacDonald stepped in stopped the contest after Walker failed to defend the onslaught of attacks from Corey. After the fight, an emotional charged Anderson shoved referee McDonald, letting out a roar of rage, displayed an obscene gesture toward the audience, taunted and screamed at Walker.[40] The win earned Anderson the Performance of the Night award;[41] however, he was fined $10,000 from New York State Athletic Commission for "unsportsmanlike and disorderly conduct" of his post fight behavior.[42]
Main card
edit*Self reminder: summary on the main card in opening sentence
Five main card bouts were televised live on ESPN+ pay-per-view. The first bout on the pay-per-view portion of the event saw the former title challenger Kevin Lee taking on the undefeated Gregor Gillespie, a four-time NCAA Division I All-American and formal national champion in 2007,[43] in a lightweight contest where Lee defeated Gillespie by head kick knock out in the very first round.[44] Coming off with two fights losing streak, Lee switched camp and trained under Firas Zihabi at Tristar Gym in Montreal for this fight. The bout started with back-and-forth boxing for the first two minutes. At the mid of round one, Lee landed a counter right and knocked Gillespie out with a left kick to Gillespie's head, rendered Gillespie unconscious and his first professional MMA defeat. This win earned Lee the second Performance of the Night award of the event.[45]
The second heavyweight bout of the night featured former Legacy Fighting heavyweight champion Derrick Lewis meeting former World Series of Fighting and Professional Fighters League champion,[46] Blagoy Ivanov, a Bulgarian Sambo practitioner who notably defeated four-time World Combat Sambo Champion and mixed-martial arts fighter Fedor Emelianenko in the semi-finals of the 2008 World Sambo Championships on November 16, 2008,[47] Lewis defeated Blagoy Ivanov by via split decision with 30-27, 29-28 on the judges' scorecards.[48] The first two rounds was an action-packed 10 minutes back-and-forth with Ivanov had a slight advantage in the scoreboard by landed a take-down in site control. The last round saw both fighters slow down a bit and both parties traded heavy shots but unable to knockout their opponent. Lewis did enough to get the nodes from the two of the three judges for a split decision win and returned to the win column after two straight losses.[49]
*Self reminder: add an extra sentence on the fight itself
In the third bout, Stephen Thompson rebound from two straight losses in a row with a unanimous decision victory over Vicente Luque. Thompson, a undefeated kickboxer, afifth-degree black belt in Kempo Karate, a black belt in American Kickboxing[50] and a former two-time title welterweight title challenger,[51] outstriked and picked apart Luque, a former The Ultimate Fighter 21, entered the event on a six-fight win streak, in a three round bout. The judges’ scores were 30-26, 30-26, and 29-27 in favor of Thompson.[52] This fight earned both Thompson and Luque the Fight of the Night award.[53]
In the co-headliner, former UFC welterweight title challenger Darren Till opted moved up to middleweight after suffering two knockout losses to the former five times UFC Welterweight Champion Tyron Woodley and Jorge Masvidal, defeated Kelvin Gastelum, who returned after a failed bid for the interim middleweight title against UFC Welterweight Champion Israel Adesanya, by a split decision.[54]
It was hard, it was really hard. To tell you the utmost truth I didn’t even want to go out there tonight. I was thinking of ways to fake an injury. I’m getting a bit worked up saying it, sorry. It was hard, going out there tonight I was so terrified, I was scared. Not scared of fighting, I like getting hit, I enjoy it. I was just scared, I don’t know.
--Darren Till.[55]
Till, the Liverpudlian, entered the octagon with his usual walk-in song Sweet Caroline by Neil Diamond while Gustelum chose “El Palenque” by Vicente Fernández.[56] The fight was a battle of southpaws between a kickboxer and a boxer. Gastlelum struggled to get much offence actions early in of the fight and settled with leg kicks. Throughout the fight, Till connected with more significant head strikes and leg kicks when there were openings since Till had the height and reach advantages over Gastelum of four and three inches respectively, and Gastelum managed to landed one-two combinations with kicks but failed to take Till down in several attempts but a brief moment in round three. After three round of fighting, Till edged out a split decision over Gastelum in middleweight debut.[57][58] In his post fight interview, Till sent an expletive-filled message to all of those who doubted him[59] and admitted he was scared to fight prior the event.[55]
Jorge Masvidal vs Nate Diaz
editThe final bout of the main card was welterweight match for the UFC 'BMF' Championship, a symbolic belt, between Diaz, and Masvidal.[60] Masvidal won the fight after ringside doctor stopped the fight between round three and round four due to a cut on Diaz eyebrow.[61]
Round one of main event began with Masvidal faking a flying knee and Diaz followed immediate pressure with a jab. Masvidal responded with a kick and Diaz grabbed the clinch where "Gamebred" had double underhooks and landed a big elbow and a knee while the crowd in MSG chanted of “Diaz” aloud. The pair separated and Masvidal connected with a head kick and followed by an elbow sending Diaz to the ground. Masdival continued with some body shots and Diaz fired back with a front kick. Masvidal decided to walk away and the referee stood Diaz up. The round ended with Diaz landed a few hard punches before end of the round.[62][63]
Round two saw Diaz charging out with a couple hard straight shots at the beginning of the bout where Masdival slipped out the pocket and landed a low kick. Masdival followed by a jab and in return he absorb a left cross from Diaz. Both fighters traded body kicks before Masdival hit Diaz with a a massive overhand right and sent Diaz to the mat again.[64] This time Masvidal refused to follow Diaz, who is a Brazilian Jui-Jitsu black belt,[65] and he let Diaz stood back up where once again the chant of "Diaz" filled the MSG. The fight continued where Diaz took the clinch after Masvidal fired with a heavy right. The Stockton native landed a few hammer fists to the Masvidal' thigh in the clinch and Masvidal responded with a series of combination of body shots and a pair of knees on the break of the clinch. Massive punches from Masvidal followed and took back Diaz'back, slaming Diaz to the mat one minute to the round. Masvidal worked on ground and pound where Diaz attempted a heel hook. Round two horn was heard before Masvidal scrambled out and landed a right hand.[66]
Diaz came forward with pressure and opened the round three with a right hook and body shot to gain points on the scorecards. Masvidal responded with a big right and then a hard kick to the body. Both fighters tied up again against the cage where Diaz fired with a right hand and a knee from the clinch. Masvidal swithced the position and landed a knee. Diaz was ended up on the ground after a failed attempt to trip Masvidal. Diaz immediately pulled guard and Masdival took the opportunity to struck with a serious of punches before the horn of round sounded.[62][63] Between the thrid and fourth rounds, a ringside physician for the New York State Athletic Commission decided to wave it off the fight because of a cut over Diaz's right eye,[61] much to the displease of crowd.[67] With this win, Masvidal had a total 18 career stoppage win in the record and Diaz lost two of his past three fights.[68] Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson placed the ‘BMF’ belt around Masvidal’s waist, as the crowd continued chanting “bullsh*t” after the stoppage.[69][70]
Post fight aftermath
editBoth Masvidal (35-13) and Diaz (20-12) expressed interest in an immediate rematch. "For a fact, I told Nate right now, let's run it back," Masvidal said in his postfight interview in the Octagon. "UFC, make it happen. Let's run it back. I don't like to leave the ring like this with my opponent conscious. There's only one way to do it, and that's to baptize them, and I didn't get to baptize Nate, so we're going to run it back."[71]
Diaz also claimed that is the fight wasn't stopped by the doctors, that he would come into his own in the later round, as he sensed that Masvidal was gassing out, a claim to which Masvidal responded by denying this fact and saying that Diaz was bluffing. Diaz also claimed that he had suffered a knee injury before the fight. [72]
Subsequent events
editResults
editMain Card | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Weight class | Method | Round | Time | Notes | |||
Welterweight | Jorge Masvidal | def. | Nate Diaz | TKO (doctor stoppage) | 3 | 5:00 | [a] |
Middleweight | Darren Till | def. | Kelvin Gastelum | Decision (split) (27–30, 29–28, 30–27) | 3 | 5:00 | |
Welterweight | Stephen Thompson | def. | Vicente Luque | Decision (unanimous) (30–26, 30–26, 29–27) | 3 | 5:00 | |
Heavyweight | Derrick Lewis | def. | Blagoy Ivanov | Decision (split) (30–27, 28–29, 29–28) | 3 | 5:00 | |
Lightweight | Kevin Lee | def. | Gregor Gillespie | KO (head kick) | 1 | 2:47 | |
Preliminary card (ESPN2) | |||||||
Light Heavyweight | Corey Anderson | def. | Johnny Walker | TKO (punches) | 1 | 2:07 | |
Featherweight | Shane Burgos | def. | Makwan Amirkhani | TKO (punches) | 3 | 4:32 | |
Middleweight | Edmen Shahbazyan | def. | Brad Tavares | KO (head kick) | 1 | 2:27 | |
Heavyweight | Jairzinho Rozenstruik | def. | Andrei Arlovski | KO (punch) | 1 | 0:29 | |
Early Preliminary card (UFC Fight Pass) | |||||||
Catchweight (127.2 lbs) | Katlyn Chookagian | def. | Jennifer Maia | Decision (unanimous) (29–28, 29–28, 29–28) | 3 | 5:00 | |
Welterweight | Lyman Good | def. | Chance Rencountre | TKO (punches) | 3 | 2:03 | |
Featherweight | Hakeem Dawodu | def. | Julio Arce | Decision (split) (29–28, 28–29, 29–28) | 3 | 5:00 |
- ^ For the inaugural UFC BMF Championship.
Bonus awards
editThe following fighters received $50,000 bonuses.[41]
- Fight of the Night: Stephen Thompson vs. Vicente Luque
- Performance of the Night: Kevin Lee and Corey Anderson
Reported payout
editFighters salaries
editThe following are the reported payouts to the fighters, as reported to the New York State Athletic Commission. The amounts are figures which the UFC disclosed to the state athletic commission; fight bonuses, sponsorship fees and other unofficial bonuses were not disclosed.[74]
- Jorge Masvidal $500,000 def. Nate Diaz: $500,000
- Darren Till $240,000 (includes $120,000 win bonus) def. Kelvin Gastelum: $165,000
- Stephen Thompson $290,000 (includes $120,000 win bonus and $50,000 ‘Fight of the Night’ bonus) def. Vicente Luque: $97,000 (includes $50,000 ‘Fight of the Night’ bonus)
- Derrick Lewis $280,000 (includes $140,000 win bonus) def. Blagoy Ivanov: $60,000
- Kevin Lee $218,000 (includes $84,000 win bonus and $50,000 ‘Performance of the Night’ bonus) def: Gregor Gillespie: $22,000
- Corey Anderson $184,000 (includes $67,000 win bonus and $50,000 ‘Performance of the Night’ bonus) def. Johnny Walker: $47,000
- Shane Burgos $52,000 ($26,000 win bonus) def. Makhwan Amirkhani: $20,000
- Edmen Shahbazyan $36,000 (includes $18,000 win bonus) def. Brad Tavares: $56,000
- Jairzinho Rozenstruik $28,000 (includes $14,000 win bonus) def. Andrei Arlovski: $300,000
- Katlyn Chookagian $44,000 (includes $20,000 win bonus and $4,000 from Maia for missing weight) def. Jennifer Maia: $16,000
- Lyman Good $28,000 (includes $14,000) def. Chance Rencountre: $16,000
- Hakeem Dawodu $32,000 (includes $16,000 win bonus) def. Julio Arce: $16,000
UFC promotional compliance pays
editThe following are the reported payouts to the fighters for UFC promotional guidelines compliance pay, includes outfitting, media obligations and other items under the fighter code of conduct, for this event with the totaling of $210,500. The pay out was sponsored by Reebok where the fighters' pays are based on their total number of Endeavor bouts (total of UFC, Strikeforce and World Extreme Cagefighting (WEC) bouts). Fighters with 1-3 bouts receive $3,500 per appearance; 4-5 bouts get $4,000; 6-10 bouts get $5,000; 11-15 bouts earn $10,000; 16-20 bouts pocket $15,000; and 21 bouts and more get $20,000. For championship bout, champions earn $40,000 and title challengers get $30,000.[75]
- Jorge Masvidal $20,000 def. Nate Diaz: $20,000
- Darren Till $5,000 def. Kelvin Gastelum: $15,000
- Stephen Thompson $10,000 def. Vicente Luque: $10,000
- Derrick Lewis $15,000 def. Blagoy Ivanov: $4,000
- Kevin Lee $15,000 def. Gregor Gillespie: $5,000
- Corey Anderson $10,000 def. Johnny Walker: $4,000
- Shane Burgos $5,000 def. Makwan Amirkhani: $5,000
- Edmen Shahbazyan $4,000 def. Brad Tavares: $15,000
- Jair Rozenstruik $3,500 def. Andrei Arlovski: $20,000
- Katlyn Chookagian $5,000 def. Jennifer Maia: $4,000
- Lyman Good $4,000 def. Chance Rencountre: $4,000
- Hakeem Dawodu $4,000 def. Julio Arce: $4,000
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c Trent Reinsmith. "UFC 244 Delivers Second-Best Gate And Attendance For UFC Event In New York". forbes. Retrieved 2020-02-20.
- ^ Guilherme Cruz (2019-07-08). "UFC announces fourth quarter schedule for 2019". mmafighting.com. Retrieved 2019-07-08.
- ^ Staff (2019-09-07). "UFC will hold its 500th event at Madison Square Garden headlined by Jorge Masvidal vs Nate Diaz". fightbookmma.com. Retrieved 2019-10-26.
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{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|name=
ignored (help) - ^ Lennard Surrao (2019-11-03). "UFC 244 Results: Fans boo after Nate Diaz vs. Jorge Masvidal ends in controversy, undefeated fighter gets knocked out". sportskeeda.com. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
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- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Round1 BJ
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ "UFC 244 results: Jorge Masvidal stops Nate Diaz in 'BMF' fight on controversial doctor stoppage". MMA Junkie. 2019-11-03. Retrieved 2020-03-05.
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