Boxing champion Amanda Serrano signs with PFL, set to debut under pay-per-view superfight series

Boxing star Amanda Serrano is headed to PFL.

[autotag]Amanda Serrano[/autotag] is returning to MMA under a new organization.

The multiple-time boxing world champion has signed an exclusive MMA deal with the PFL, the promotion announced Wednesday, and is expected to compete under the promotion’s “superfight” pay-per-view series. No date or opponent was announced.

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Serrano is one of the biggest stars in women’s boxing. She currently holds the WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO, IBO and The Ring women’s featherweight titles and has a boxing record of 44-2-1.

In 2022, she took part in arguably the biggest match in women’s boxing history when she fought Irish star Katie Taylor for the lightweight titles at Madison Square Garden in New York, but lost a split decision. Since that setback, she’s picked up decision wins over Sarah Mahfoud and Erika Cruz and is expected to return Saturday against Heather Hardy at the Jake Paul vs. Nate Diaz event in Dallas.

Although Serrano is known for her boxing, she’s no stranger to MMA with a  2-0-1 record. Her most recent MMA fight was in 2021 when she submitted Valentina Garcia at iKON FF 7 in Mexico.

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For more on the matchup, visit MMA Junkie’s hub for Paul vs. Diaz.

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PFL’s Jesus Pinedo confident he can neutralize Bubba Jenkins’ wrestling: ‘It’s not going to be complicated’

Jesus Pinedo is confident he can neutralize Bubba Jenkins’ wrestling at Friday’s PFL’s 2023 PFL Playoffs 1 in San Antonio.

[autotag]Jesus Pinedo[/autotag] has been arguably the biggest surprise in this 2023 PFL season, and he has another chance to continue to further his underdog story.

The Peruvian fighter headlines 2023 PFL Playoffs 1 against No. 1 seed Bubba Jenkins Friday at Boeing Center at Tech Port in San Antonio. It’s a semifinal bout of the 2023 PFL featherweight season.

Once again, Pinedo (21-6-1) enters as an underdog against a fighter favored to win the entire season. In his previous bout against 2022 PFL champion Brendan Loughnane, Pinedo needed a first-round finish to qualify, and Loughnane just a win by any means.

Yet despite the odds, Pinedo got a first-round KO and punched himself a ticket to the playoffs, eliminating Lougnane. He plans on doing the same this Friday, as he fights for a spot in the final.

“This fight, I like this fight more,” Pinedo said in Spanish when asked to compare this bout with Jenkins with the previous one against Loughnane. “I think my style will be better shown. I think it sets me up to truly show my style in this fight. I know it’s going to be tough, but I know I can walk out the winner.”

Although both are well-rounded, Loughnane presented more of a striking threat, and Jenkins (21-6) wrestling. Pinedo believes Jenkins is a better matchup and is by no means intimidated by his high-level wrestling.

“They’re two completely different fighters, and the strategy changes a ton,” Pinedo said. “However, the base of my academy is wrestling, and I’ve been doing wrestling and training with wrestlers since the day I started.

“It’s not going to be complicated for me at all to fight Bubba Jenkins. It’s not that I’m underestimating him. I know it’s going to be a tough fight, but I’m totally confident in the work that I’ve been doing for many years. My academy has produced wrestlers like Claudio (Puelles), (Enrique) ‘El Fuerte’ Barzola. In all the sparring, there’s wrestling, wrestling and more wrestling. I’m used to that style.”

There’s no denying that Pinedo is going through one of the best moments in his career. He’s coming off a big upset KO win over Loughnane, and this Friday will mark his second consecutive headlining slot in PFL.

“It feels good,” Pinedo said regarding the newly added attention. “It feels good that your work is paying off. Here in Peru, this whole thing with the PFL tournament is hitting hard. We’re now in the semifinals and people are starting to recognize me in the street. Everything has changed since the Brendan fight, and even since the tournament started, things were changing.

“I know this is going to keep growing because I’m going to keep winning, and I’m going to bring back the world title to Peru. That’s what I’m in search of.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for 2023 PFL Playoffs 1.

Kenny Florian: Francis Ngannou leaving UFC for PFL ‘something that will change the sport’

Kenny Florian believes Francis Ngannou’s bold move to PFL will have other UFC fighters thinking twice about their career options.

[autotag]Francis Ngannou[/autotag] has transformed his career in 2023, but some within the MMA industry believe those changes will be felt throughout the sport.

Former three-time UFC title challenger [autotag]Kenny Florian[/autotag], now a PFL commentator, is one of those who believes Ngannou’s decision to leave the UFC and sign with PFL, which involved him giving up the UFC heavyweight title, will greatly impact MMA.

“It’s a big moment for the organization, and I think it’s something that will change the sport,” Florian told MMA Junkie in Spanish. “There’s other people fighting in the UFC who will ask themselves, ‘Hey, look. Francis Ngannou is fighting there and making good money. Perhaps I can go and do the same and make a million dollars in one year.’

“In the UFC, it can take up to seven years, and you might not even make $1 million. So I think it’s another option for fighters and another option for people watching this sport. I think options are always good, and let’s see what happens. But Francis Ngannou fighting for the PFL, it’s very big for the sport.”

What Ngannou did earlier this year was unprecedented. He fought out his UFC contract and became a free agent, all while still holding the UFC heavyweight title. Ngannou then signed a multifight deal with PFL in one of the most lucrative and least restrictive contracts in MMA history.

Ngannou is expected to debut for PFL in 2024 after he fights boxing champion Tyson Fury in a non-title bout Oct. 28 in Saudi Arabia.

Florian, who retired from MMA in 2011, is hoping to commentate Ngannou’s debut with PFL and be able to call this historic chapter of Ngannou’s career.

“Of course,” Florian said. “I’ve never had the opportunity to commentate a fight of Francis Ngannou, and I’m hoping to get that chance next year. I’m also eager to know who he’s fighting. It’s a very interesting moment.”

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Kenny Florian offers insight into why so many MMA retirements don’t last

Former UFC title challenger and PFL analyst Kenny Florian shares his thoughts on the fickle nature of MMA retirements.

#MMARetirements is a meme-worthy hashtag that’s long been part of the sport. The term resurfaces several times a year, usually not for a good reason.

Unlike most other sports, combat sports – specifically MMA – has a long history of its athletes returning to competition months, even years after an initial decision to retire, a trend that seemingly will remain as a permanent fixture. It’s tough to understand the mindset of a fighter, and certainly there are a wide range of reasons responsible for MMA comebacks.

Three-time UFC title challenger [autotag]Kenny Florian[/autotag] spoke to MMA Junkie to offer some insight.

“I think it varies on the fighter,” Florian said in Spanish. “Some fighters come back because they need money, others because they want to fight again and be champions. They feel they need to compete.

“As someone who did martial arts for many years, and other sports, I knew as a competitor I wanted to return. Part of me wanted to come back, but it’s different for everyone.”

Florian believes mismanaging money contributes to many comebacks but also the idea of not living up to full potential when in your prime.

“I think it’s important for fighters to save their money, but also they need to take advantage of the career and do everything possible when they’re fighting,” Florian said. “Sometimes I feel like fighters don’t think about the future, and they’re out spending money. It’s possible, too, that they’re not giving their 100 percent when they’re fighting, and then when they retire, they want to come back to do things differently. For me, that wasn’t the case, but I get why fighters want to come back and fight again. It’s tough when you’re 38, 39, 40. It’s tough.”

Florian retired from MMA in 2011 after coming up short in a title fight against then-UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo. At the time, Florian had a big name in the lower weight classes – mainly competing at lightweight and featherweight toward the end of his run – and was a staple in the UFC.

Yet, despite likely having more paydays in front of him, Florian never put the gloves back on professionally and stayed retired.

“I think there was a part of me that wanted to fight again, but I had a back injury that wouldn’t let me train like I used to. And for me, it was always very important to train hard,” Florian explained. “This sport is too difficult to just give 70 percent and go fight. It’s very dangerous. If you’re not going to do it 100 percent, I think it’s too dangerous to do it. So when I retired, I knew that I wasn’t coming back. The sport is also growing. The fighters are getting better, so for me, I knew at that moment I needed to finish.”

Florian’s back issues started in 2007. And for some fights, it would be worse than others, like when he fought Sean Sherk, B.J. Penn, and Joe Lauzon.

“It would make me very frustrated,” Florian said of his back injury. “In some fights, because I wanted to do more and fight better, but it’s one of those things where everything is affected. It’s not like it’s a knee or a shoulder, and you’re able to do other things. When you have a back injury, I couldn’t do anything, and that’s why it was very difficult.”

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PFL’s Bubba Jenkins explains why soccer star Lionel Messi inspires him

Bubba Jenkins takes inspiration from Lionel Messi’s success in sport.

[autotag]Bubba Jenkins[/autotag] takes inspiration from [autotag]Lionel Messi[/autotag]’s success in sport.

Messi is widely considered one of the greatest soccer players of all time – if not the greatest. Jenkins can relate to Messi’s small stature in competition, and how he was able to excel regardless of being undersized.

“My son is a Ronaldo fan so he’s not a Messi guy, he’s a Ronaldo fan,” Jenkins told MMA Junkie Radio. “He’s like, ‘Dad, why do you like Messi?’ and I was like because Messi is small, Messi is our size. Messi is a little guy, he’s smaller, and he gets the job done at the highest levels in his way, and I obviously know he’s in what you would consider the Arena League of soccer, killing everybody.

“So, it makes sense that he’s doing what he’s doing. But, it also highlights his greatness. He could have done it anywhere, doing it anywhere, but he decided to do it his way, how he wanted it. Pick up a smaller group of people, he likes to collaborate, and I love that.”

Jenkins (21-6) takes on Jesus Pinedo (21-6-1) in the 145-pound semifinal at 2023 PFL Playoffs 1, which takes place Aug. 4 at Boeing Center at Tech Port in San Antonio, Texas.

2023 PFL Playoffs 1 will mark the first event Jenkins headlines, and he can’t wait for the opportunity to shine.

“I’m very excited, I can’t be more excited, and I’m the main event,” Jenkins said. “So, when it comes to me feeling like PFL finally got it right or giving the people what they want, it’s this. It’s ‘Bad Man Things’ in the main event, in Texas, all things are big in Texas, they do it big there. So, I couldn’t be more excited, more pumped for the position, the platform, and the stage.”

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Kayla Harrison sad she won’t get to fight Amanda Nunes: ‘My timing in MMA is pretty brutal’

Kayla Harrison admits she sometimes wishes she hadn’t gone for a second Olympic gold medal so a fight with Amanda Nunes could’ve been more realistic.

The retirement of former UFC double champion [autotag]Amanda Nunes[/autotag] means [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] won’t get one of her long-desired fights.

Nunes, who held the UFC women’s bantamweight and featherweight titles, called it a career after defeating Irene Aldana at UFC 289 in June. Harrison has always wanted to test herself against the consensus greatest female fighter of all time, but she’s lost out on that opportunity.

Harrison, the two-time Olympic gold medalist judoka and two-time PFL women’s lightweight champion, said her eagerness to fight Nunes, who once was her teammate at American Top Team, was purely rooted in competition.

“I mean, I’m happy for her if she’s happy,” Harrison told ESPN. “I have no animosity towards Amanda. I feel slightly troubled by some of the things that she said about the gym and about the coaches. That, to me, didn’t sit well with me. And I know, however she took the things I said about her, her interpretation of them was not what my intention was.

“My intention always when speaking about Amanda was, ‘Hey, you’re the greatest. I respect that so much. I put so much value on who you are, what you’ve accomplished, what you’ve done, that like, I want that. I want to become that.’ My intention was always from a place of respect but also realness. I’m not going to pretend like I don’t want to fight (her). … I don’t play like that. I’m not like Merab (Dvalishvili), God bless his soul. I’d fight my grandma if she was the greatest.”

With featherweight champion Cris Cyborg opting to re-sign with Bellator, Harrison lost out on another big fight for the time being –unless, of course, Bellator and the PFL merge as has been discussed. She wonders had she transitioned to MMA earlier, if that would have increased her chances of landing these mega fights.

“My timing in MMA is pretty brutal,” Harrison said. “Sometimes I’m like, ‘Did I really need a second gold medal? I should have just gone to MMA when I was 22.’ Then I could’ve just been this monster,” Harrison said. “If she’s happy, she’s satisfied, she’s accomplished everything she’s wanted to accomplish, I’m sad for me and I’m happy for her. That’s it.”

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USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, July 25: Big wins in London, but any big moves?

UFC heavyweight Tom Aspinall made a successful main event return from injury, but did it shake up the rankings?

The UFC’s return to The O2 in London saw a few big wins throughout the card.

From [autotag]Ketlen Vieira[/autotag]’s unanimous decision win over Pannie Kianzad early on the prelims, to [autotag]Tom Aspinall[/autotag]’s main event first-round finish of Marcin Tybura, there were a number of key wins for fighters already in, or hovering around the top 15 of their divisions.

Vieira entered the week at No. 3 in the USA TODAY SPORTS/MMA Junkie women’s bantamweight rankings, while Kianzad was No. 9. Considering who is above and between both fighters, they maintain their positions in this week’s update.

A similar story played out in the heavyweight division. Aspinall entered at No. 8, and keeps the same spot despite a spectacular finish. Tybura keeps his place at No. 10 as well, but there are a few big fights at heavyweight on the horizon that could shake up the division.

Check out all the latest pound-for-pound and divisional USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings above.

USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, July 18: Mayra Bueno Silva leaps forward

Mayra Bueno Silva tapped former UFC women’s bantamweight champ Holly Holm, causing big moves in the division in this week’s rankings update.

The UFC women’s bantamweight division has a new contender.

[autotag]Mayra Bueno Silva[/autotag] pulled off the biggest win of her career at UFC on ESPN 49, and made it look relatively easy. Considering her opponent was former bantamweight champion Holly Holm, many were shocked to see Bueno Silva tap the former champ in the second round.

Entering the week at No. 11 in the USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie women’s bantamweight rankings, Bueno Silva takes a huge leap forward, landing at No. 4. Holm previously held the spot, but she takes a step backward, along with the rest of the division as Bueno Silva establishes herself as the new name to watch out for in the title picture.

Check out all the latest pound-for-pound and divisional USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings above.

KSW boss pitches PFL co-promotion for Francis Ngannou vs. champ Phil De Fries

KSW hopes the PFL is willing to put together a cross-promotion bout putting Francis Ngannou vs. its best heavyweight

The rest of [autotag]Francis Ngannou[/autotag]’s year will be focused on his anticipated boxing match with Tyson Fury. Once that’s complete, though, he is expected to return to MMA and debut in the PFL.

After concluding his UFC contract and splitting from the promotion earlier this year, Ngannou (17-3) signed with PFL for an expected debut in early 2024. There’s no clear-cut opponent for him, however, and KSW co-owner Martin Lewandowski has a pitch involving his current heavyweight champion, [autotag]Phil De Fries[/autotag].

“For me, Phil De Fries is one of the best heavyweights on the planet today. He is a different animal than when he was in the UFC last, and he would give anyone in the whole division trouble,” Lewandowski told MMA Junkie. “Outside the UFC, there are not many heavyweights who can offer a legit test to Ngannou. Of course, it needs to makes sense for both KSW and PFL. But I am in good contact with Ray Sefo and the PFL, and would be willing to do what I can to get it done.”

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Multiple scenarios must play out before a KSW and PFL cross-promotion could materialize. First and foremost, De Fries (23-6) must successfully achieve his ninth consecutive title defense Saturday when he meets Szymon Bajor (24-9) in the main event of KSW 84, which takes place at Gdynia Arena in Poland and streams on pay-per-view via KSW’s official website.

Secondly, Ngannou, who takes on Fury in a 10-round bout on Oct. 28 in Saudi Arabia, must be keen to return to competition after securing what’s expected to be a massive payday from the Fury fight.

De Fries hasn’t lost since May 2017, and Lewandowski sees him as a more significant threat to Ngannou than anyone currently on PFL’s roster.

“I would be open to having a crossover fight with PFL for Phil to fight Francis Ngannou,” Lewandowski said. “If he passes this test, it will be his 12th straight victory, his 10th straight win in KSW, and his ninth title defense. He has already made history by being the longest reigning champion ever in KSW and the heavyweight with the most title defenses in any of the major MMA promotions.

“After Francis is finished with Tyson Fury, how about an actual MMA fight with the KSW heavyweight champion?”

Kenny Florian explains why ‘PFL did the right thing’ in replacing Natan Schulte for Shane Burgos in 2023 playoffs

Kenny Florian believes that PFL ultimately did the right thing in removing Natan Schulte from the 2023 playoffs.

LAS VEGAS – [autotag]Kenny Florian[/autotag] doesn’t like the situation that presented itself in the playoffs for PFL’s 2023 lightweight season, but ultimately, he does think it was handled the best way possible.

Last month, [autotag]Natan Schulte[/autotag] beat his friend and teammate [autotag]Raush Manfio[/autotag] at 2023 PFL 6 in a lackluster decision to advance to the lightweight playoffs going down on Aug. 23. However, shortly after, the PFL removed Schulte from the playoffs despite qualifying based on the point system and replaced him with former UFC fighter [autotag]Shane Burgos[/autotag], who didn’t earn enough points to advance.

The promotion justified the move by citing that Schulte and Manfio did not perform to their contractually-obligated level of effort. This caused plenty of controversy in the MMA community.

Florian, who’s a commentator for the PFL, understands the nature of the situation, but disagrees with the criticism that’s been thrown the promotion’s way.

“It’s tough because I can certainly side with the fighters, and by the fighters I mean Natan Schulte and Raush Manfio, in that they were put in a difficult spot,” Florian told MMA Junkie Radio at the UFC X event. “These guys are literally best friends, they’re godfather’s to each other’s kids, so I can definitely sympathize with their situation, but it’s very explicit and very clear in the contract that you actually have to fight 100 percent.

“To me, while watching the fight, I tried to be as honest as possible, but when I was watching the fight I was like, ‘This is basically a sparring session.’ It might’ve even been less than a sparring session. They weren’t throwing full out. Now, some people are saying, ‘Well, this isn’t a fighter’s first thing. The PFL put these guys in this situation, and you can’t just put Shane Burgos in that situation and put him to advance to playoffs.’ What I would argue and say is, they actually are because for someone who did fight their butt off, and they tried to make it to the other side of the bracket and see two other guys that didn’t really take any punches, didn’t really take any kicks, it was basically a grappling match, you could argue, ‘Hey, I have to fight my way and risk my health to make it to the other side and make it to the playoffs.’ These guys really didn’t.”

Although Florian understands why people would be mad, he does think PFL handled it the best they could. The other alternatives could’ve set an ugly precedent, according to Florian.

“I see both sides, but in the end PFL did the right thing because as an organization, and I’m not really big on, ‘Put these fighters down. They have to learn their lesson,’ but at the same time, how do you as an organization have something like that happen and not penalize the fighter?” Florian said. “If you do that, you open up a big Pandora’s box and people go, ‘Well, they did it. Why can’t we do it?’ I think moving on to the future, it would be in the interest of all organizations to go, ‘Hey, listen. We’re not going to have two guys that are best friends, that fight in the same team, that have that kind of relationship fight each other because you risk this thing actually happening, especially when you’re talking about two guys who are trying to make it to the playoffs.’

“So that’s my take on it. It’s unfortunate all the way around. I feel bad for all parties. If Shane Burgos was outpointed by someone else, that person would’ve been put in that situation. They would’ve advanced instead of Shane Burgos in my opinion. So I don’t think it was about Shane Burgos and them trying to put him into the playoffs. I don’t think it was a foul play on the PFL.”

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