Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady hopes to fulfill big dream of fighting at UFC 294 in Abu Dhabi

Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady already made one dream a reality by earning a UFC contract. Now he wants to realize another.

[autotag]Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady[/autotag] already made one dream a reality. Now he wants to realize another.

A big underdog against Cage Warriors champion George Hardwick at Dana White’s Contender Series 58 last Tuesday, Al-Selwady (15-3 MMA, 0-0 UFC) impressed when he defeated the highly touted Brit by unanimous decision to earn a UFC contract.

It’s been a longtime coming for the 28-year-old Fortis MMA fighter, who never gave up on his UFC hope. Now, Palestine’s Al-Selwady would love to make his octagon debut in front of his home fans in the Middle East by competing at UFC 294 on Oct. 21 in Abu Dhabi.

“If the UFC calls me any day now or any week now for Abu Dhabi, I will take that call,” Al-Selwady told MMA Junkie. “I will accept it because UFC Abu Dhabi is the biggest event of the year. It’s my dream. My dream is to get into the UFC, win my first fight in the UFC, eventually fight at UFC Abu Dhabi. So, if I could get all of those dreams right away, why not? Why would I have to wait until October next year if I could just do it now?”

Al-Selwady, a former BRAVE CF lightweight champion, has competed in various countries in the Middle East such as Jordan, Abu Dhabi, and Bahrain.

If he was to get the opportunity to fight in Abu Dhabi for the UFC, “The Pride of Palestine” expects plenty of support.

“I fought in Abu Dhabi before, and I’ve fought in the Middle East in other shows, so just imagine if I fought for the UFC in Abu Dhabi,” Al-Selwady said. “I forgot to mention this to Dana, but I have people that bought their tickets to Abu Dhabi from June. Literally, like they were telling me, ‘Hey, Abdul, no pressure, but I bought my tickets to UFC Abu Dhabi because you’re going to be on that card after you win on the Contender Series and they sign you to the UFC.’

“I was like, ‘Yo, leave me alone, I’m not focused on that right now. I just have to focus on the next fight.’ So, it’s not just one or two friends. I have multiple people that already bought their tickets to Abu Dhabi for those dates. Not that that’s my priority for them, but there’s already a lot of people that believe in me to book their tickets before I even got in. So just imagine now with me being in, what them booking me a fight in Abu Dhabi, if that’s going to happen. I just can’t imagine what kind of support there would be, and I’d love to do that.”

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 294.

DWCS 58 winner Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady reflects on long ride to the UFC: ‘I deserved to be here since forever’

After watching numerous teammates get the UFC call, Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady finally got his time to shine.

LAS VEGAS – After watching numerous teammates receive the UFC call, [autotag]Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady[/autotag] finally got his time to shine.

A big underdog against highly touted Cage Warriors champion George Hardwick, Fury FC champ Al-Selwady (15-3) upset the oddsmakers Tuesday with an impressive unanimous decision win to win a UFC contract in the featured bout of Dana White’s Contender Series 58.

The Fortis MMA fighter has helped his teammates prep and even cornered him during their UFC fights, as he patiently waited for his turn. He finally got it, and was handed no layup when he drew Hardwick – but Al-Selwady had other plans.

“It feels great,” Al-Selwady told MMA Junkie and other reporters post-fight at DWCS 58. “It feels great and as crazy as it sounds, from what I’ve been hearing, all the media hype that I’ve been seeing, that this is the biggest Contender fight, like non-UFC, how could these two be fighting on the Contenders? Right now, I’m just listening to coach’s (Sayif Saud) words, man it’s been such a long ride to get in here. I believed that I deserved to be in here since forever.

“But that doesn’t matter because we’re here today, we’re here now, and I believe that God put me through everything, through the trials, through the losses, through the wins, through the injuries. Everything I went through, the good and the bad, to make this moment count as my moment. The hype, everything. I’m just blessed right now to be a UFC fighter, and I just can’t wait to bring this performance on the biggest stage in the world because now I’m motivated more than ever to get even better and better.”

UFC 294 on Oct. 21 in Abu Dhabi would be nice for Al-Selwady to make his promotional debut, but “The Pride of Palestine” is just ready to continue riding the momentum he built from an impressive showing at DWCS 58.

“I’ll just be excited to fight and build my way up,” Al-Selwady said. “I want to build a nice name for myself, I want to collect performance bonuses each event because my style I believe is very exciting, and I just want to win in nice, dominant fashion.”

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For more on the card, check out MMA Junkie’s event hub for Dana White’s Contender Series 58.

Dana White’s Contender Series 58 results: 5-for-5 on contracts for second week in a row

Season 7 of Dana White’s Contender Series continues Tuesday, and MMA Junkie will have live results from on-site at the UFC Apex.

LAS VEGAS – MMA Junkie was on scene and reported live from Tuesday’s Dana White’s Contender Series 58 event.

Dana White’s Contender Series cards see prospects fighting for the opportunity to sign a UFC deal, with UFC president Dana White on hand to make the decisions.

The second episode of Season 7 saw 10 fighters compete for their shot at a UFC contract. A lightweight contest between George Hardwick (12-1) and Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady (14-3) served as the featured bout of the five-bout lineup.

Although there were two decisions, all five winners received UFC contracts from White for the second week in a row.

Full results of Dana White’s Contender Series 58 below:

  • Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady def. George Hardwick via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
  • Ibo Aslan def. Paulo Renato Jr. via knockout (punches) –  Round 1, 2:22
  • Hyder Amil def. Emrah Sonmez via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Eduarda Moura def. Janaina Silva via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 1, 4:00
  • Charalampos Grigoriou def. Cameron Smotherman via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 1:00

Continue reading below for more details about each fight.

Cage Warriors champ George Hardwick to face Fury FC champ Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady on Dana White’s Contender Series

The second week of Dana White’s Contender Series, Season 7 will feature a Cage Warriors champ vs. Fury FC champ showdown.

The second week of Dana White’s Contender Series, Season 7 will feature a champion vs. champion battle.

Cage Warriors lightweight champ [autotag]George Hardwick[/autotag] (12-1) meets Fury FC lightweight champ [autotag]Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady[/autotag] (14-3) at Dana White’s Contender Series 58 on Aug. 15. A person with knowledge of the situation confirmed the booking to MMA Junkie after an initial report by MMA Mania.

Winner of his past eight, Hardwick has defended his lightweight title twice, most recently scoring a first-round TKO of Yann Liasse at Cage Warriors 152 in April. The 26-year-old has stopped his past six opponents.

Al-Selwady, a former BRAVE FC lightweight champ, captured the Fury FC 155-pound title in his past outing when he defeated Michael Murphy by unanimous decision in February. The Fortis MMA fighter has won four straight.

With the addition, the DWCS 58 lineup includes:

  • Charalampos Grigoriou vs. Cameron Smotherman
  • Paulo Renato Jr. vs. TBA
  • Hyder Amil vs. Emrah Sonmez
  • Eduarda Moura vs. Janaina Silva
  • Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady vs. George Hardwick

Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady ready for UFC call: ‘I feel I’m at that level. I just need the chance to prove it’

One of the MMA pioneers in the Middle East, Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady says he’s ready to take his career to the next level with the UFC.

One of the pioneers of MMA in the Middle East, [autotag]Abdul-Kareem Al-Selwady[/autotag] is ready to take his career to the next level.

Al-Selwady (11-3), a former Brave CF lightweight champion, made quite the impression on his LFA debut when he pounded out Jake Sebastian in the first round this past weekend at LFA 103.

It was a big moment for the “Pride of Palestine,” who snapped a two-fight skid to kick off the latest chapter of his career with an impressive victory. After winning six straight en route to capturing the Brave CF lightweight title, Al-Selwady suffered back-to-back stoppage losses, which put a halt to his momentum.

With the coronavirus outbreak forcing the cancellation of numerous MMA events, Al-Selwady was forced to sit on those losses and be patient. The Texas-based fighter, who trains out of Fortis MMA, decided it was best to remain in the United States due to the global travel restrictions until an opportunity to compete for LFA arose. It’s been a rough two years for the 25-year-old, but his debut victory made things all worthwhile, as he explained.

“After coming off back-to-back losses and you know you worked very hard and you weren’t finding easier ways around them in the past camps and you know how good you are when you spar and you go against high-level people, but when it came to your record and actual fighting, they’ve been two losses back-to-back,” he told MMA Junkie. “Then COVID came, so I haven’t just lost two fights, I haven’t won a fight since my world championship at the end of 2018, and it’s been really bothering me, and I’ve been training day-in and day-out since that day, but I haven’t been able to showcase the hard work I’ve been putting in.

“Every single time I’m about to make it happen, something happens. Either a positive COVID test on the day of weigh-ins back in August, (then) I had an injury that took me out of my fight for the rescheduled fight in October. So it was just very unfortunate. But in that time, I was able to work (on) my craft, continue training hard, and make sure whenever the chance does come, and I’m able to actually fight and get back in the cage, that I’ll be ready more than ever. Not only for that fight, but for anything to come after. As I spoke with you before years before that, I said I wasn’t rushing the UFC or anything until I was ready so I would keep winning fights until then. Well, now I feel I’m actually really ready for the UFC with all the training I’ve been doing.”

The decision to compete for LFA was an easy one for Al-Selwady. He’s seen teammates such as Ramiz Brahimaj, Geoff Neal, Alonzo Menifield and Ryan Spann work their way onto the UFC roster via the LFA and he’s ready to follow suit.

“Especially if my ultimate goal is to fight and win a championship belt in the UFC, I want the UFC to see me fight,” Al-Selwady said. “I noticed the UFC wasn’t really looking at Brave or they didn’t really know about Brave fighters, but they definitely know about LFA fighters and they watch the LFA events. So for me at this point, I just wanted Sean Shelby, Dana White, Mick Maynard to see me fight and that’s why I also wanted to fight for LFA.”

He continued, “My plan is to get a short-notice or a month at least to fight for the UFC. I’d love to have a month just to be really prepared for my UFC debut. I don’t really want to fight on a one-week notice just because it’s gonna be my first fight there. I want to make a statement, I want it to be perfect, I want it to be the best. But really, I’m looking right away for a UFC contract because I feel I deserve it with the type of opponents I’ve fought in my career, and I feel I’m at that level. I just need the chance to prove it, and I’ll show Dana White and the world what the next Palestinian in the UFC has to offer.”

Al-Selwady has fought high-level competition throughout his career, holding wins over the likes of ex-UFC fighter Lucas Martins and Bellator’s Charlie Leary. He takes inspiration from his Fortis MMA teammates as well as current UFC welterweight Belal Muhammad, the lone Palestinian on the UFC roster.

“I’m really proud of Belal Muhammad how he’s been representing and coming up,” Al-Selwady said. “I’ve watched him from the beginning since his first UFC fight and seeing him grow is amazing, but the UFC has space for more Palestinians. Me and Belal, I want us to be the ones that pave that way for future generations of Palestinian MMA fighters in the UFC to come.

“So I definitely feel the UFC needs another Palestinian and it needs to be me. I’m crazy, and I’m vocal about it. I fight my heart out, which represents exactly my nation. We fight our hearts out every day just to live, so the UFC being a platform for me would really help me and push me to do my best as a fighter and a person.”