Paddy Pimblett gets third new opponent for Cage Warriors 113 as Decky Dalton steps in

Coronavirus concerns in Italy meant Paddy Pimblett’s original (second) opponent, Davide Martinez, could not travel to London.

Former Cage Warriors featherweight champion [autotag]Paddy Pimblett[/autotag] now has a third new opponent for the promotion’s return to London.

Pimblett (14-3) was originally booked to face Belgian contender Donovan Desmae on the upcoming Cage Warriors 113 card on March 20, but injury to the Belgian contender forced the promotion’s matchmaker, Ian Dean, to find a replacement, with Italian Davide Martinez drafted in to face “The Baddy.”

However, with the ongoing coronavirus crisis hitting Italy particularly hard in recent weeks, travel restrictions meant Martinez was unable to fulfill his booking at the Indigo at The O2, as Dean hit the phones again to find a third opponent for Pimblett.

Now the promotion has confirmed its search was successful, with [autotag]Decky Dalton[/autotag] agreeing to step in on nine days’ notice for the matchup, which takes place the day before the UFC’s return to London in the main O2 Arena on March 21.

Dalton (10-4), a 10-year veteran fighting out of Belfast, Northern Ireland, picked up a victory and the Cage Conflict featherweight title with a first-round standing arm-triangle choke this past Saturday. Now “The Diamond” will make an instant turnaround to face Pimblett in London.

Confirmed fights for Cage Warriors 113 include:

MAIN CARD

  • Darko Banovic vs. Morgan Charriere – for interim featherweight title
  • Champ Samir Faiddine vs Luke Shanks – for flyweight title
  • Decky Dalton vs. Paddy Pimblett
  • Mason Jones vs TBC

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • Rafael Macedo vs. Joe McColgan
  • Steve Aimable vs. Perry Goodwin
  • Cory Tait vs TBC
  • David Bear vs. Nathan Jones
  • Emrah Sonmez vs. Aidan Stephen
  • Kingsley Crawford vs. Lewis Monarch
  • Kris Edwards vs. James Hendin
  • Matthew Bonner vs. Jamie Richardson
  • Coner Hignett vs. Darren O’Gorman
  • Adam Amarasinghe vs. Jake Bond
  • Jack Collins vs. Joshua Onwordi

Cage Warriors 112 results: Jack Cartwright calls for UFC Dublin shot after retaining title

Bantamweight champion Jack Cartwright defended his title at Cage Warriors 112, showing a different side to his skill set.

He might not have delivered the explosive finish some expected pre-fight, but Cage Warriors bantamweight champion [autotag]Jack Cartwright[/autotag] showed another side as he showcased his grit and determination to outpoint Croatian challenger [autotag]Manuel Bilic[/autotag] over the full five-round duration at Cage Warriors 112 in Manchester.

The pair met in the main event at BEC Arena, with Cartwright claiming the unanimous decision by scores of 48-47, 49-46, 50-45 after a grueling encounter that saw the Bolton man light up the challenger with his heavy-handed boxing early on, then showcase his patience and defensive smarts in the championship rounds.

Cartwright (8-0) looked in superb form early on as he repeatedly dropped Bilic (15-7) with solid punches. It also played into the Croatian’s gameplan as Bilic repeatedly looked to trap the champion in a triangle choke as the Brit followed the challenger to the mat. But Cartwright, whose heavy hands disguise a fighter whose base comes from the wrestling and grappling realms, exercised calmness and composure in tricky situations to ensure he was never fully trapped against his opponent, who came into the bout on the back of two consecutive submission finishes.

The pace began to drop as the bout entered the championship rounds, but while the pace may have slowed, Cartwright’s mind stayed sharp to avoid Bilic’s submission attacks as the bout went all the way to the judges’ scorecards. All three judges scored the fight for the reigning champion, who completed his first title defense with the first decision win of his career.

After the fight, Cartwright told Cage Warriors co-commentator Josh Palmer he was happy to show he had the fight IQ – and the gas tank – to go all five rounds.

“It feels very good,” he said. “Everyone was wondering if I could last more than one round, so I thought I’d give people their money’s worth and give them five!

“It’s almost a mental game, isn’t it? Stay switched on the whole time, don’t make any silly mistakes. I know I’m more than capable of beating 99% of fighters in the world, so as long as I don’t rush and stay patient … I did that tonight, and I’m quite pleased with myself to not rush for the knockout the entire time, and just accept some positions and stay clever. It’s that self-belief and that grit that I know I’ve done this since I was 5 years old. If I’m feeling tired, they’re (expletive) exhausted.”

Cartwright then sent a message to UFC president Dana White, as he called for a chance to join the promotion and be a part of the upcoming fight card in Dublin.

“Dublin loves some fighters, don’t they? So, August 15, Dana White, give me a ring, and I’ll go and put on a show for those Irish fans (and) knock out some of your bantamweights, man,” he said. “Just give me a call!”

Proctor stays patient to secure decision win

Rising welterweight contender [autotag]Adam Proctor[/autotag] dominated proceedings throughout his co-main event bout with U.K.-based Latvian [autotag]Madars Fleminas[/autotag], but despite his efforts, “The Love Doctor” couldn’t quite secure the finish after 15 minutes of action.

Proctor (12-1) used his reach advantage well in the striking exchanges as he edged the first two rounds, but the main difference between the pair came when the South Shields man took Fleminas (7-1) to the canvas.

Proctor totally dominated on the mat, particularly during a lopsided third round, but found the previously-unbeaten Fleminas a tough nut to crack as the pair battled all the way to the scorecards, with the Englishman claiming 30-26 scores on all three scorecards to secure his seventh straight victory.

Smith secures slick submission

SBG Manchester’s [autotag]George Smith[/autotag] showcased his grappling acumen as he submitted England-based Pole [autotag]Lukasz Marcinkowski[/autotag] via armbar submission in the dying seconds of the opening round of their middleweight contest.

Smith (5-1) was caught by surprise when Marcinkowski (4-2) pulled guard and dragged the fight to the mat during the opening striking exchanges. But once the fight ended up on the mat, the Mancunian dominated proceedings and, after looking to lock up an omoplata, he swiftly transitioned to an armbar as Marcinkowski looked to roll his way to safety. The tap quickly followed as the 25-year-old stated his case as a dangerous contender in Cage Warriors’ 185-pound division.

Webb bounces back with dominant victory

Former middleweight champion [autotag]James Webb[/autotag] returned to action with a win as he dominated [autotag]Mick Stanton[/autotag] over three rounds to claim a dominant decision victory following his defeat to new champ Nathias Frederick at Cage Warriors 111.

Webb (7-2-1) hurt Stanton early with a knee to the liver, then proceeded to dominate the action on the mat throughout the three-round fight as he smothered “The Huyton Hammer” and scored with a host of ground strikes from mount, while also threatening with a host of submission attempts. Stanton (6-4) is not a man to be finished easily, however, and the gritty Liverpudlian showed his toughness as he took the fight all the way to the scorecards, and even threatened to turn the tables on the former champion with a couple of heel-hook attempts.

But the result was in little doubt when the scorecards were collated, as Webb earned scores of 30-26, 30-26, 30-27 to claim a shutout victory and put himself back on a path to his old belt.

Wilson claims landmark win

It was a night to remember for Liverpool’s [autotag]Adam Wilson[/autotag], who extended his unbeaten record with a rear-naked choke finish of former title challenger [autotag]Scott Malone[/autotag].

After a tricky opening round, Wilson (5-0) launched into attack mode at the start of Round 2. Almost immediately, he caught a kick from Malone (6-4), then launched into a flying back-take before locking up a tight rear-naked choke that eventually forced the tap 18 seconds after the restart.

Preliminary card

The star of the show on the preliminary card was undoubtedly [autotag]Paul Hughes[/autotag] (5-0). The undefeated Irish featherweight finished [autotag]Youri Panada[/autotag] (4-2) with a thumping head kick in the second round before serving notice on the top names in the Cage Warriors 145-pound division, including reigning champion and former UFC 145er Mads Burnell.

Bantamweight [autotag]Nathan Fletcher[/autotag] (3-0) also produced an impressive display as he handed fellow undefeated prospect [autotag]Johan Segas[/autotag] (3-1) his first loss with a first-round TKO finish.

There were also notable inside-the-distance victories for [autotag]Steven Hooper[/autotag] (5-3) and [autotag]James Sheehan[/autotag] (2-2), who secured second-round submission finishes of [autotag]Tom Mearns[/autotag] (6-4) and [autotag]Kyran Sturrock[/autotag] (0-1) respectively, while in the featured prelim Danish debutant [autotag]Jonas Magard[/autotag] claimed a landslide unanimous decision win over [autotag]Liam Gittins[/autotag].

Full Cage Warriors 112 results include:

MAIN CARD

  • Champion Jack Cartwright def. Manuel Bilic via unanimous decision (48-47, 49-46, 50-45) – for bantamweight title
  • Adam Proctor def. Madars Fleminas via unanimous decision (30-26, 30-26, 30-26)
  • George Smith def. Lukasz Marcinkowski via submission (armbar) – Round 1, 4:47
  • James Webb def. Mick Stanton via unanimous decision (30-26, 30-26, 30-27)
  • Adam Wilson def. Scott Malone via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 0:18

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • Jonas Magard def. Liam Gittins via unanimous decision (30-26, 30-26, 30-25)
  • Nathan Fletcher def. Johan Segas via TKO (ground strikes) – Round 1, 2:36
  • Steven Hooper def. Tom Mearns via submission (triangle choke) – Round 2, 2:11
  • Paul Hughes def. Youri Panada via knockout (head kick) – Round 2, 2:33
  • James Sheehan def. Kyran Sturrock via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 4:27

Cage Warriors 112 live results

Check out live and official results from Cage Warriors 112 in Manchester, England.

European promotion Cage Warriors heads to Manchester for its latest show, Cage Warriors 112, with one of the city’s homegrown stars returning to defend his title.

Bantamweight champion [autotag]Jack Cartwright[/autotag] knocked out former title challengers Scott Malone and Marko Kovacevic on the same night to capture the vacant 135-pound title at Cage Warriors Unplugged 2 in September 2019. Now the SBG Manchester-trained fighter will look to cement his position at the top of the division when he takes on Croatia’s [autotag]Manuel Bilic[/autotag] at the BEC Arena on Mar. 7.

Rising welterweight prospect [autotag]Adam Proctor[/autotag] (11-1) gets the chance to showcase his skills in the co-main event, when he looks to extend his six-fight win streak with victory over undefeated U.K.-based Latvian [autotag]Madars Fleminas[/autotag] (7-0).

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Former middleweight champion [autotag]James Webb[/autotag] (6-2-1) makes a swift return to action after losing his title to Nathias Frederick in his last outing at Cage Warriors 111. Webb takes on Liverpool’s [autotag]Mick Stanton[/autotag] (6-3) in a bout that could propel the winner into a title shot later in the year.

Meanwhile, on the preliminary card, former Bellator lightweight [autotag]Tom Mearns[/autotag] (6-3) kicks off his exclusive Cage Warriors contract against SBG Manchester’s Steven Hooper (4-3), while undefeated Irish lightweight prospect [autotag]Paul Hughes[/autotag] (4-0) will bid to continue his good form with victory over Frenchman [autotag]Youri Panada[/autotag] (4-1) in a 150-pound catchweight bout in the first fight of the night.

The Cage Warriors 112 main card will be streamed live on UFC Fight Pass, with the preliminary card streamed live via Cagewarriors.com.

Full Cage Warriors 112 results include:

MAIN CARD (4 P.M. ET, UFC Fight Pass)

  • Champion Jack Cartwright vs. Manuel Bilic – for bantamweight title
  • Madars Fleminas vs. Adam Proctor
  • [autotag]Lukasz Marcinkowski[/autotag] vs. [autotag]George Smith[/autotag]
  • Mick Stanton vs. James Webb
  • [autotag]Scott Malone[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Adam Wilson[/autotag]

PRELIMINARY CARD (1:30 P.M. ET, Cagewarriors.com)

  • [autotag]Liam Gittins[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jonas Magard[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Nathan Fletcher[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Johan Segas[/autotag]
  • Steven Hooper vs. Tom Mearns
  • Paul Hughes vs. Youri Panada
  • [autotag]James Sheehan[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Kyran Sturrock[/autotag]

Cage Warriors 112: Manchester’s Jack Cartwright promises to put on a show in hometown return

Cage Warriors bantamweight champion Jack Cartwright is ready to return to his home town of Manchester to defend his newly-won title.

The city of Manchester has produced some big-name fighters who have gone all the way to the top. Ricky Hatton, Tyson Fury and Michael Bisping have all been embraced by the city as they have reached the pinnacle of their respective sports and captured major titles for themselves, for the U.K., and for Manchester, itself. Now the city has another gritty warrior to throw its weight behind.

Cage Warriors bantamweight champion [autotag]Jack Cartwright[/autotag] trains under the railway arches at the city’s SBG Manchester gym and has developed into one of the most dangerous bantamweights in Europe. Now he’s all set to take center stage in his hometown when Europe’s leading regional promotion heads to Manchester for Cage Warriors 112.

Cartwright takes on Manuel Bilic in the main event at the BEC Arena on March 7, when he puts his newly-won bantamweight title on the line, and the home-grown Mancunian says he’s ready to deliver on home soil.

That status was cemented when he exploded into the one-night Cage Warriors bantamweight title tournament, as he starched two former title challengers en route to the title at Cage Warriors Unplugged 2 in September 2019.

But while his knockout power was on show in London that night, his ability to submit his opponents is equally strong, with his overall record showing four submissions and three knockouts. The Brit said that his wrestling base has proved crucial in his rise but says he now prefers to use that skillset to set up his hands, as he did to such impressive effect in the tournament

“I’m a wrestler, first and foremost,” he said. “I grew up wrestling, so I kind of lean on that to not really be bothered by my opponent’s wrestling and rely on my own strength. So I just believe in my wrestling and let my hands go from there.

“Like you saw in my last fight, if somebody gets on my hips, I’m more than capable of getting them off my hips, get back up, and put someone out standing up. That’s what everyone likes the most, isn’t it? Everyone likes a striker, so I’d rather be a fan favorite than a boring little crotch hugger.”

That desire to be an entertaining fighter comes from his respect from the aforementioned trio of Mancunian stars. Hatton, Bisping and Fury each had their own style, but their grounded personalities, combined with their love for a good old-fashioned tear-up, made them heroes in Manchester. Now Cartwright wants to follow in their footsteps.

“Growing up, I was a big Ricky Hatton fan,” he remembered. “I can remember staying up and watching him when he fought Kostya Tszyu, and when he came back and fought Juan Lazcano at the Etihad, I went and watched that. Obviously I like Bisping, but I’ve never gone to see him live. I’ve never been to a UFC event yet, so I’m still waiting for that one.”

A self-described “martial arts lifer,” Cartwright started kickboxing at 5, wrestling at 8, boxing at 13 and MMA at 18. He was never interested in any other sports, and that focus has helped him build his skillset, turn pro and win his way to the Cage Warriors bantamweight championship, when he defeated two former title challengers in one night to capture the vacant title in London.

Now he puts his title on the line for the first time, and he does so in his backyard. It’s a dream come true for the modest Mancunian, but one that he always believed would come true.

“Yeah, I’m buzzing that I get to fight in Manchester,” he said. “If you’d have asked me a year ago that it would have happened this soon, well, I would have believed you, because I always believe in myself. But I thought I was going to take a lot longer than it has done.

“But there’s no extra pressure with it being in Manchester. It could be in Manchester, in London, in Vegas. It can be anywhere. I’ll always turn up and I’ll always put a show on.”

Paddy Pimblett gets new opponent for Cage Warriors 113 as Davide Martinez steps in

Former Cage Warriors featherweight champion Paddy Pimblett has a new opponent for Cage Warriors 113 in London.

Former Cage Warriors featherweight champion [autotag]Paddy Pimblett[/autotag] has a new opponent for Cage Warriors 113.

“The Baddy” was all set to face fellow lightweight contender Donovan Desmae on Mar. 20 at the Indigo at The O2 in London. Now he will take on in-form Italian prospect [autotag]Davide Martinez[/autotag], who has stepped in on just over a month’s notice to face the Liverpudlian fan-favorite. The event will be streamed live on UFC Fight Pass.

Pimblett (14-3) has seen his last two scheduled bouts fall through, with Joe Giannetti failing to make weight at Cage Warriors 111 and Desmae withdrawing from the upcoming Cage Warriors 113 event due to personal reasons.

But Pimblett will remain on the card and face promotional debutant Martinez (8-2) at the showcase event, which is set to take place the night before UFC on ESPN+ 27 in London. Martinez heads to England riding a six-fight win streak, and “Ispanico” is looking to score a big-name scalp on his Cage Warriors debut.

Pimblett, who hasn’t fought since September 2018, said he’s grateful to his new opponent for stepping in to keep his fight on the card.

“I hope he’s ready for a scrap come fight night, because I’m coming to make a statement,” he said.

“I’m happy to have a new opponent to focus on, and want to thank Davide for taking the fight as he’s the only person to actually want to fight me. Everyone else talks the talk but doesn’t walk the walk.”

The event will feature a fight for the interim featherweight title, with rising French star Morgan Charriere set to face an opponent to be named in due course, while his fellow countryman, Samir Faiddine, will put his flyweight title on the line for the first time against Englishman Luke Shanks.

Cage Warriors 113 confirmed fights include:

MAIN CARD

  • Morgan Charriere vs. TBC – for interim featherweight title
  • Champion Samir Faiddine vs. Luke Shanks – for flyweight title
  • Davide Martinez vs. Paddy PimbletDanilo Belluardo vs. Mason Jones
  • Ian Garry vs. TBC

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • Rafael Macedo vs. Joe McColgan
  • Steve Aimable vs. Perry Goodwin
  • Davide Baneschi vs. Cory Tait
  • Nathan Jones vs. TBC
  • Emrah Sonmez vs. Aidan Stephen
  • Kingsley Crawford vs. Lewis Monarch
  • Kris Edwards vs. James Hendin
  • Matthew Bonner vs. Jamie Richardson
  • Coner Hignett vs. Darren O’Gorman
  • Adam Amarasinghe vs. Jake Bond
  • Jack Collins vs. Joshua Onwordi

Tom Mearns signs multi-fight Cage Warriors contract after Bellator Dublin fight canceled

After being removed from the Bellator Dublin fight card, English prospect Tom Mearns has secured his fighting future.

Former Bellator prospect [autotag]Tom Mearns[/autotag] has wasted no time in securing his immediate fighting future after being pulled from the Bellator Europe 7 card in Dublin.

MMA Junkie on Tuesday confirmed with Cage Warriors officials that Mearns (6-3), who was pulled from his scheduled fight with Dylan Logan on February 22 over a medical paperwork issue, has now signed an exclusive multi-fight deal with the promotion. The Englishman, who previously competed at featherweight, says he plans on fighting his way to the Cage Warriors lightweight title within two years.

The Northampton-based fighter will take on SBG Manchester prospect [autotag]Steven Hooper[/autotag] (4-3) at Cage Warriors 112 on March 7 in Manchester, and the Mearns said he is happy to have resolved his situation and landed a fight so quickly after his Dublin disappointment.

“For the love of the sport, I’m glad to be signing with Cage Warriors,” Mearns said. “I’ll be under the bright lights in big fights wearing the iconic yellow gloves, sharing the same ring as some of the greatest fighters in MMA history. My dream is to have the Cage Warriors world title within two years from today by being the best I can be and putting on the greatest fights.

“Me and Hooper will be representing two of the most prestigious MMA teams in the country, BST (Blood Sweat and Tears) vs. SBG Manchester, South vs. North. I will beat Hooper in all areas to start my run towards the Cage Warriors title. I will be victorious in Manchester.”

Mearns’ first crack at the big stage came when he was signed by Bellator for its London event, Bellator 200, in May 2018. But his big-show debut ended in disaster when he suffered a horrific arm injury in his loss to Mike Ekundayo.

Mearns’ subsequent rehabilitation and recovery forced him out of action for the following 16 months and, after picking up a victory in Cage Warriors on his comeback, returned to the Bellator cage in a losing effort against Jeremy Petley at Bellator Europe 6 in November 2019.

Mearns was all set to face Logan in Dublin on Feb. 22, but after a mixup over medical paperwork he was removed from the card. Now he’s a Cage Warriors fighter and looking to kick off the latest chapter of his career with a statement victory in enemy territory.

Cage Warriors 112 confirmed fights include:

MAIN CARD

  • Champion Jack Cartwright vs. Manuel Bilic – for bantamweight title
  • Madars Fleminas vs. Adam Proctor
  • Yassine Belhadj vs. Martin Stapleton
  • Mick Stanton vs. James Webb
  • Liam Gittins vs. Jonas Magard

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • Steven Hooper vs. Tom Mearns
  • Scott Malone vs. Adam Wilson
  • Paul Hughes vs. Youri Panada
  • Nathan Fletcher vs. Johan Segas
  • Lukasz Marcinkowski vs. George Smith
  • Arann Maguire vs. Jabeed Rahman
  • James Sheehan vs. Kyran Sturrock

Cage Warriors 114: Nathias Frederick defends 185 title vs. Andreas Michailidis

The middleweight title will be on the line when Cage Warriors returns to Birmingham, England, in April.

The middleweight title will be on the line when Cage Warriors returns to Birmingham, England, in April.

[autotag]Nathias Frederick[/autotag] (8-2-1) will put his 185-pound title on the line for the first time when he meets challenger [autotag]Andreas Michailidis[/autotag] (12-3) at Cage Warriors 114, the promotion announced Monday.

Cage Warriors 114 takes place April 18 at Arena Birmingham in England. The event streams on UFC Fight Pass.

Frederick challenged James Webb for the title in June 2019 in his debut with the promotion, but had to settle for a majority draw and Webb retained the belt. But they rematched in November at Cage Warriors 111, and Frederick put Webb away with a TKO with one second left in the fourth round to win the title. The victory put Frederick’s unbeaten streak at nine fights.

Michailidis, from Greece, will be making his Cage Warriors debut. He has three straight wins and victories in seven of his past eight fights. In 2019, the 31-year-old had first-round knockout wins over Marcel Fortuna at Titan FC 54 and Arymarcel Santos at a Global Legion FC event. He has 11 of his 12 career wins by finish.

The Cage Warriors 114 lineup includes:

  • Champ Nathias Frederick vs. Andreas Michailidis – for middleweight title
  • Jack Grant vs. Mehdi Ben Lakhdar
  • Alexander Jacobsen vs. Dean Trueman
  • Jake Hadley vs. Shaj Haque
  • Aaron Khalid vs. John Robinson

Rhys McKee lands shot at vacant welterweight title at Cage Warriors 115

Former two-time BAMMA lightweight champion Rhys McKee will fight for the newly vacated Cage Warriors welterweight title.

It’s all change at the top of the Cage Warriors welterweight division as another champion says goodbye to the organization and an in-form contender steps up to fight for the vacant belt.

Hot on the heels of lightweight champion Jai Herbert’s departure to join the UFC, it was announced that welterweight champ Ross Houston also fought his last fight for the promotion.

But Cage Warriors is wasting no time in its quest to ensure the 170-pound title isn’t left on the shelf, however, and one half of the promotion’s next welterweight title fight already has been booked.

The promotion confirmed to MMA Junkie that two-time former BAMMA lightweight champion [autotag]Rhys McKee[/autotag] will form one half of the battle for the newly vacated belt at Cage Warriors 115 on May 16 from the SSE Arena in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

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McKee (10-2-1) twice held lightweight gold for rival British promotion BAMMA before signing with Cage Warriors in late 2018. Since joining the organization, “Skeletor” has won three straight, with the third win seeing him move up from lightweight to his more natural weight of welterweight.

His 63-second TKO of Norway’s Hakon Foss immediately put him within range of a shot at the 170-pound title, and following Houston’s departure, the Northern Irishman will get his shot at the gold against an opponent still to be determined.

Undefeated Ross Houston eyes U.S., Asia following Cage Warriors departure

Undefeated former Cage Warriors welterweight champion Ross Houston has a clear vision for what he wants in his future.

One of Europe’s top prospects is officially a free agent and fielding offers ahead of the biggest move of his career.

Now former Cage Warriors welterweight champion [autotag]Ross Houston[/autotag] announced Tuesday that he has agreed to terms of his release from the European promotion. Houston (8-0) is now negotiating with promotions on opposite sides of the globe before putting pen to paper on a new contract.

Houston’s management initially confirmed his departure from Cage Warriors with MMA Fighting and released a statement to MMA Junkie explaining the situation.

“Ross has been released. The negotiation was between the solicitors and very amicable,” the initial statement read. “The terms of the agreement are covered by a non-disclosure agreement, but both parties have wished each other well.

“Ross is negotiating with three companies at present for an April fight. We are looking for fights outside the U.K. to grow his viral fan base. At present, he isn’t looking at signing with any company that is based in the U.K. or Ireland solely.”

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Houston’s team is currently in discussions with a number of promotions, and his manager, Kedu Uchegbu, confirmed to MMA Junkie on Wednesday that they are focusing on taking him overseas in a bid to expose him to a broader audience. They are targeting promotions in the U.S. and Asia as potential landing places.

“Our current preference is to fight in either the USA or in Asia on a main card,” Uchegbu said. “This is key to any negotiations we are undertaking. We want to be fighting for a title within the next three fights. We believe Ross is the No. 1 free agent in the world at the minute, and a clear path with any company has to be defined.”

Discussions are ongoing, and Uchegbu said he expects a deal for Houston to be signed within the next two weeks.

Cage Warriors 115: Local heroes set for action in European promotion’s Belfast debut

Cage Warriors will host its first show in Belfast, Northern Ireland on May 16, with a host of local stars set for action at the SSE Arena.

Cage Warriors will head to Belfast for the first time for Cage Warriors 115, and the promotion has already confirmed a host of local favorites will feature on the card.

The event, which will take place at the SSE Arena on May 16 and streamed live on UFC Fight Pass, will be headlined by [autotag]Rhys McKee[/autotag], who heads into his latest bout riding a three-fight win streak after a hugely successful year in 2019. Now the Ballymena native will look to position himself for a shot at championship gold at 170 pounds with a big win on home soil.

Former BAMMA lightweight champion McKee (10-2-1) defeated Jefferson George and Perry Goodwin at 155 pounds in his first two bouts under the Cage Warriors banner, but moved up to welterweight and scored a 63-second knockout of Hakon Foss in his last outing at Cage Warriors 110 last November.

McKee will be joined by fellow countrymen [autotag]Joe McColgan[/autotag], [autotag]Decky McAleenan[/autotag] and unbeaten prospect [autotag]Paul Hughes[/autotag], with each man heading into Belfast with momentum on their side.

McColgan (6-2-1) followed up his spectacular draw with Mehdi Ben Lakhtar in September 2019 with a first-round submission of Robbie Scott at Cage Warriors 110, while McAleenan (6-3) snapped his two-fight losing skid with a hard-earned decision victory over Antanas Jazbutis on the same night. Hughes (4-0), meanwhile, will look to continue his unbeaten run as he looks to build on his first-round submission finish at Cage Warriors Unplugged 2 last September.

The show also marks the second appearance of the year for Dublin’s Ian Garry, with the undefeated Irishman set to kick off his year with back-to-back fights. Garry (3-0) will make his first appearance of 2020 at Cage Warriors 113 in London on Mar. 20, and is scheduled make a swift turnaround to compete in Belfast on May 16.

Their respective opponents are set to be announced in due course.