Video: Which 2024 PFL matchup is most intriguing?

PFL has a few interesting matchups ahead in 2024, but which one are we looking forward to the most?

The PFL is going big early in 2024 with an event that will see its champions take on Bellator’s titleholders.

The champion vs. champion event is expected to take place in Q1 2024, with a date and venue to be determined soon. The premise is interesting because it does answer a question that often arises in conversation: Which promotion has the best champion?

We get to answer that question next year between PFL and Bellator, but which matchup is the most intriguing?

[autotag]Patricio Freire[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jesus Pinedo[/autotag], [autotag]Vadim Nemkov[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Impa Kasanganay[/autotag], and [autotag]Cris Cyborg[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Larissa Pacheco[/autotag] are all possibilities for the event. But the matchups don’t stop there. There’s more fights to be made between the two rosters, and other PFL bouts to be made, including [autotag]Francis Ngannou[/autotag]’s return.

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Our “Spinning Back Clique” of panelists Mike Bohn, Danny Segura and Brian Garcia and host George Garcia discuss which potential fight for 2024 excites them the most.

Watch the video above to see the discussion, or check out the entire episode of “Spinning Back Clique” below on YouTube or in podcast form.

Video: Cris Cyborg vs. Larissa Pacheco appears next, but what about Kayla Harrison?

PFL wants Cris Cyborg vs. Larissa Pacheco in a champ vs. champ fight, but who will Kayla Harrison fight next?

In one of the biggest decisions after the news of PFL’s acquisition of Bellator, the promotion wants [autotag]Cris Cyborg[/autotag] to face [autotag]Larissa Pacheco[/autotag] next.

The matchup would be a Bellator champion vs. PFL champion matchup, which is the theme of an upcoming event the promotion intends to create in early 2024. However, this would leave former two-time PFL champion [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] out of the mix for one of the biggest potential fights in women’s MMA.

Harrison and Cyborg have gone back and forth over recent years about making the fight happen. Those talks grew louder when Harrison was a free agent, but resigned with PFL. Now that they are both under the same promotional umbrella, the fight would appear easier to make, but the PFL seems to want Pacheco to get a piece of Cyborg next instead.

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Is that the right move? Should the PFL go straight into Harrison vs. Cyborg, skirting around the theme the current PFL champion vs. Bellator champion?

Our “Spinning Back Clique” of panelists Mike Bohn, Danny Segura and Brian Garcia discuss how this triangle should unfold along with host George Garcia.

Watch the video above to see the discussion, or check out the entire episode of “Spinning Back Clique” below on YouTube or in podcast form.

 

Video: Jesus Pinedo gets hero’s welcome in Peru after 2023 PFL Championship win

Now PFL champion, Jesus Pinedo got quite the reception in his arrival to Peru.

[autotag]Jesus Pinedo[/autotag] made history for his country, and it’s beginning to get recognized.

“El Mudo” won the 2023 PFL featherweight title this past Friday in Washington, D.C., and became the first Peruvian fighter to win a championship belt from a major promotion. Pinedo (23-6-1) stopped Gabriel Braga (12-1) in the third round of their rematch. With the win, Pinedo took home the 145-pound title and a $1 million prize.

After a few days in New York, Pinedo arrived home to Peru on Wednesday and was received by media and a big crowd of supporters.

Watch Pinedo’s arrival in Peru in the videos below.

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Braga beat Pinedo by split decision in their first regular season bout. Pinedo bounced back and stopped 2022 winner Brendan Loughnane in the first round to make the playoffs. And there, he finished 2022 PFL featherweight runner-up Bubba Jenkins before he beat Braga in their rematch in the final.

Now champion, the 27-year-old is expected to face Bellator legend Patricio Freire in a PFL vs. Bellator champion vs. champion superfight sometime in 2024.

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

Video: Which 2023 PFL Championship winner had the most impressive season?

The PFL crowned six new $1 million champions at its season finale event, but who amongst the group did it best?

Another PFL season is in the books after six $1 million winners were crowned this past Friday at 2023 PFL Championship.

The final traditional event of the year for the company before it enters a new era following its acquisition of went down in Washington, D.C., and it saw Renan Ferreira (heavyweight), Impa Kasanganay (light heavyweight), Magomed Magomedkerimov (welterweight), Olivier Aubin-Mercier (lightweight), Jesus Pinedo (featherweight) and Larissa Pacheco (women’s featherweight) come away with belts and seven-figure checks.

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Who had the most impressive run through the gruelling season format to reach the end? That was a topic of debate on the latest episode of “Spinning Back Clique,” with host George Garcia and panelists Mike Bohn, Danny Segura and Brian Garcia.

Watch the video above to see the discussion, or check out the entire episode of “Spinning Back Clique” below on YouTube or in podcast form.

USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, Nov. 28: The impact of 2023 PFL Championship on multiple divisions

The 2023 PFL Championship was the lone notable MMA event this past week, but it offered some relevant results across multiple divisions.

The combat sports slate was relatively thin over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, which allowed the 2023 PFL Championship event to become the centerpiece of the MMA world.

After a season’s worth of build to the card in Washington, D.C., six new $1 million champions were crowned at heavyweight, light heavyweight, welterweight, lightweight, featherweight and women’s featherweight. How did those ultimately impact the global standings in those particular weight classes?

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

MMA Junkie Radio #3416: 2023 PFL Championship recap, Sean Strickland may be in trouble, more

Check out the latest episode of MMA Junkie Radio with “Gorgeous” George and “Goze.”

Monday’s edition of MMA Junkie Radio with “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” is here.

On Episode 3,416, the fellas recap 2023 PFL Championship event from Washington D.C., and discuss the futures of the six new millionaires. They also discuss the incident involving Sean Strickland, who drew a gun on a man in his driveway. Tune in!

Kayla Harrison tired of regular free agency but hopeful for Cyborg fight, finally, in growing PFL

The PFL is where Kayla Harrison got her MMA start, and it sounds like loyalty is a value she puts a high price tag on.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The PFL is where [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] got her MMA start, and it sounds like loyalty is a value she puts a high price tag on.

Perhaps ironically (or coincidentally, instead of ironically?; let’s ask Alanis), Harrison says that loyalty isn’t financially motivated, but her loyalty to herself and her family takes top priority. If putting herself and her family first matches up with loyalty to the PFL, bonus.

“At this point, it’s not about money, so I’m going to do what I think is best for Kayla,” Harrison told MMA Junkie backstage at The Anthem in Washington, D.C., this past Friday after she beat ex-UFC fighter Aspen Ladd in a 150-pound contract weight fight that was part of the PFL’s 2023 Championship pay-per-view.

Harrison (16-1) said typically, her fight contracts have been short ones. She’s been part of three PFL seasons and won her first two women’s lightweight titles and $1 million each time. But in 2022, she was upset in the final by Larissa Pacheco (23-4).

Pacheco on Friday won back-to-back titles – and became the first fighter in PFL history to win titles in two weight classes, since the promotion ditched women’s lightweight and went with women’s featherweight for 2023.

After the announcement a week ago that the PFL had purchased Bellator, and champion-vs.-champion fights are on the horizon in 2024, Harrison hoped she’d get a big one with Bellator women’s 145-pound titleholder and all-time legend [autotag]Cris Cyborg[/autotag] (27-2 MMA, 6-0 BMMA). But instead, it sounds like Cyborg will fight Pacheco first – even though the talk for years has been about getting a fight put together between Cyborg and two-time Olympic judo gold medalist Harrison.

That could leave Harrison itching to get back in there while she waits for Cyborg – or less exciting to her, a potential fourth fight with Pacheco. She’s 2-1 against her, but that 1 was when Pacheco pulled off the big upset for the $1 million a year ago.

“I feel like every two years I’m single – I’m going to stay single in my personal life, but every two years professionally, I become single,” Harrison said. “I don’t know how I feel about it anymore. I’m tired of my contracts running out. Look, life is good – I’m back in the ‘W’ column. I’ve been training hard. I feel like I’m finally getting into my prime, into my peak, where anything is possible. I’m starting to feel comfortable – I’m not just a judo player inside of a cage. I’m a fighter, and I feel comfortable anywhere the fight goes. I have lots of room for improvement, which I think is a great thing. I have so much I can go back to the gym and work on come Monday. So everybody watch out, because I’m still hungry. I still have a desire to prove myself and get better and better and better and better. And who knows where that ceiling is.”

Harrison has been hoping against hope that the ceiling includes a chance to topple the women’s MMA giant that is Cyborg. But given Cyborg’s been in the UFC and Bellator at the same times Harrison has been in the PFL (and WSOF before that), and co-promotion isn’t common in MMA, the talk has been mere speculation about what might happen in a fight.

Harrison even implied the fight may have happened already had Harrison’s side been willing to do a crossover bout. And in Harrison’s own free agency a year ago, she had conversations about going to Bellator before she ultimately stuck with the PFL. If the Cyborg fight is on the table or within reach in the near-term future thanks to the PFL purchase of Bellator and the direction the company is heading with the recent partnerships with ex-UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou and boxing megastar Jake Paul, it sounds like Harrison is in.

“I’ve never once doubted the PFL’s desire and ambition to bring the best fights inside the Smart Cage,” Harrison said. “I’ve never once thought PFL’s messing with me or playing me wrong or anything like that. They’ve always tried to the best of their ability to put on great fights and to get me great fighters. It really has to do with, do I think Cyborg is going to fight me or not? Is she going to? That’s what it has to do with. I’m hopeful now that we’re under the same banner that it’s possible. But never once have I doubted the PFL’s ambition – it’s about she who must not be named.

“I love the PFL. I started my career here. I’ve been here from Day One. I’ve been here longer than all of the employees – I was signed when it was World Series of Fighting. To see what it’s become, to see the leaps that they’ve made, to see Francis and Jake and now acquiring Bellator and the tournament growing into what it’s grown into, them adding women’s divisions, the PFLW initiative – all of these things are so awesome to see.

“But no matter what, I have to do what’s best for me, and I don’t know what that is. I would love for it to be the PFL. I would love for it to be. This is my home, but I want to go where I’m going to make the biggest mark. They know that and I know that, and I love them regardless. It’s not like I’m unhappy here and I yearn for more, like the big fights. So if they can do that, then let’s do it.”

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

Bellator champ Patricio ‘Pitbull’ Freire encouraged about potential from PFL purchase

Arguably the best fighter in Bellator history, Patricio Freire has seen it all in the promotion.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Arguably the best fighter in Bellator history, [autotag]Patricio Freire[/autotag] has seen it all in the promotion.

“Pitbull” Freire debuted for Bellator in 2010 when the promotion was in its infancy running a season format. He was the first simultaneous two-division champion in Bellator history (featherweight, lightweight) and is the current 145-pound champion.

But along with the rest of Bellator’s robust roster, he’s been enduring some uncertainty about the promotion’s future. This past week, it was announced the PFL purchased Bellator, and champion-vs.-champion fights have been promised for 2024.

Freire was cageside to see Jesus Pinedo pick up a TKO win over Gabriel Braga on Friday to win the PFL’s 2023 featherweight season and $1 million. Now, presumably, he’ll fight “Pitbull” next. Freire was brought into the cage to for a faceoff with Pinedo after the win.

“(His performance) was great,” Freire told MMA Junkie backstage at The Anthem in Washington, D.C., moments after Pinedo’s win. “… I’m going to face a new opponent, and he’s good. It will be a great (fight for) me. … He was trying to bark louder than me (in the faceoff), but he’s not going to be able to do that (in the fight).”

Freire said he had mixed emotions about the PFL’s purchase of Bellator. After all, it’s the end of one era in the sport’s short history, and he was on board for the vast majority of it.

At 35, Freire likely still has plenty of time left in the sport, and now he’s setting his sights on a PFL belt.

“(I was) a little bit sad, a little bit happy – everything,” Freire said. “Let’s see what’s going to happen. I’m here. I believe the good point is we’re going to make history. We’re going to make a lot of crossover (MMA history), that I was asking for all the time. I fought against the Rizin champion and I beat him. Now I have the chance to fight against the PFL champ, so it’s a good thing.”

Freie currently is without a victory since New Year’s Eve 2022 in Japan in that aforementioned Rizin win over Kleber Koike Erbst. In June, he dropped to bantamweight to challenge Sergio Pettis for the title, but lost a split decision. Six weeks later, he was knocked out by Chihiro Suzuki in a Rizin crossover fight in Japan, which gave him the first skid of his career.

He’s on the mend from an arm injury, but said he’s got the go-ahead to get back to work and anticipates a fight against Pinedo in the first few months of 2024.

“I talked to (PFL owner) Donn Davis, and he was very happy,” Freire said. “Me too. I was very happy (with our conversation). His words made me feel good and comfortable, and I believe it’s going to be a great relationship.

“I have three months of recovery so far. I still don’t have the full strength in my left arm, but I’m getting better every day, so from here to the day I’m going to be fighting, I’m going to be 100 percent. The doctor said, ‘Hey, you are 100 percent recovered. Go ahead – go do your job.'”

2023 PFL champion Jesus Pinedo confident he can stop Bellator’s Patricio ‘Pitbull’

Jesus Pinedo thinks he can put away Patricio ‘Pitbull’ in a champ vs. champ fight.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – [autotag]Jesus Pinedo[/autotag]’s Friday night was one to remember.

The Peruvian fighter crowned himself 2023 PFL featherweight champion, collected the $1 million prize that comes with the title, all while avenging his loss to Gabriel Braga at 2023 PFL Championship. If that wasn’t enough, Pinedo (23-6-1) secured a champion vs. champion fight against Bellator titleholder Patricio Freire, which is expected to happen in early 2024.

It was a giant night in the career of Pinedo.

“I feel very happy to have been able to achieve this dream because this all was a dream,” Pinedo told MMA Junkie through an interpreter. “I’m world champion, and I knew that this was going to be reality at some point. We did it. We did it thanks to my team. Thanks to my family who never abandoned me. It was a tough process, but it was all worth it.”

As far as the fight against ‘Pitbull’, who would be the biggest name he’s faced so far, Pinedo is not putting much stock in it.

“He’s a tough rival, just like everyone I’ve been fighting,” Pinedo said. “It’s just another fight for me, and I’m ready. I know that I will finish that fight. It won’t reach a decision, just like all the other fights I’ve been doing.”

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

PFL founder Donn Davis: Patchy Mix ‘doesn’t have the hair, but he’s got better fighting’ than Sean O’Malley

PFL founder Donn Davis says Patchy Mix has the tools to beat UFC’s Sean O’Malley.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Bellator’s bantamweight division is considered by many the promotion’s strongest weight class, which has led people to compare it to the UFC’s.

PFL founder [autotag]Donn Davis[/autotag] is a strong believer in the roster his company acquired, having officially announced the purchase of Bellator on Monday. So much so that Davis believes that Bellator’s bantamweight champion [autotag]Patchy Mix[/autotag] is outright better than UFC’s 135-pound champion [autotag]Sean O’Malley[/autotag].

“Patchy Mix could beat ‘Suga,'” Davis told reporters after the 2023 PFL Championship on Friday night. “He doesn’t have the hair, but he’s got better fighting. I think that most people think that that’s a good fight or that Patchy is a slight favorite, but it’s a damn good fight.

Davis revealed that there’s no plan of developing a PFL bantamweight season in 2024. For now, Mix (19-1) will defend his title against challengers yet to be determined in the eight expected Bellator events for 2024.

Mix recently unified the Bellator bantamweight title, when he defeated Sergio Pettis at Bellator 301 earlier this month. Mix entered the bout as interim champion. The 30-year-old is currently on a six-fight winning streak and only has one career, which came against Juan Archuleta in 2020.

On the other hand, O’Malley (17-1) returns to the octagon in March to defend his title against Marlon Vera, the only man to have a win over him. O’Malley became UFC champion in August, stopping Aljamain Sterling at UFC 292 in Boston.

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