Bold statements: The 6 standout Bellator performances of 2020 so far

MMA Junkie’s Simon Head picks out six big statements made by Bellator fighters during the promotion’s curtailed 2020 event schedule.

With big-name signings, an ongoing $1 million tournament and growing excitement around the future of the promotion, 2020 looked set to be a big year for Bellator MMA. But the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic placed the sporting world – including Bellator – on an enforced hiatus as social distancing and quarantine measures were introduced in nations across the world.

It meant that Bellator’s event schedule hit the brakes after just three shows in 2020. But in those three events, we witnessed six fighters deliver contrasting, yet decisive, statements as they looked to further their respective careers inside the Bellator cage.

We take a look back at six big statements made inside the Bellator cage so far in 2020…

****

Cris Cyborg ascends the throne

Bellator 238, Jan. 25, The Forum, Inglewood

Reports of [autotag]Cris Cyborg[/autotag]’s demise following her UFC title defeat to Amanda Nunes were grossly exaggerated, and the Brazilian women’s MMA icon emphatically proved that fact on her Bellator debut as she overpowered long-reigning champion Julia Budd to capture the promotion’s women’s featherweight title at Bellator 238.

Cyborg (22-2 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) put the pedal to the metal from the first round and kept her foot flat on the floor as she pushed a relentless pace on the Canadian before eventually breaking down the champion in the championship rounds for a fourth-round TKO finish.

The victory put Cyborg’s name into the history books as the first fighter to win titles in four major MMA organizations, having captured titles in Strikeforce, Invicta FC, UFC, and now Bellator.

Now, with the Brazilian back on top, but with a much deeper pool of 145-pound contenders to defend against, the challenges should come thick and fast once Bellator restarts its event schedule.

Next up: Bellator’s “super prospect” bounces back with big KO

Relive Bellator 240/Bellator Europe 7 on MMA Junkie (6 p.m. ET)

Need your Saturday night fight fix? Then check out the replay of February’s Bellator 240/Bellator Europe 7 card from Dublin.

Getting a little antsy now that another Saturday night is on the horizon and there are no live fights to watch?

Well, Bellator is stepping up to fill in the void — and totally from a safe social distance, too.

Starting at 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, Bellator will re-air the memorable Bellator 240/Bellator Europe 7 combo event, which went down at 3Arena in Dublin.

Bellator 240 was headlined by former lightweight champion [autotag]Brent Primus[/autotag]’ first-round submission of Chris Bungard; while Bellator Europe 7 saw [autotag]Leah McCourt[/autotag] take an impressive unanimous decision over Judith Ruis.

Whether you caught this exciting night of fights the first time around or you missed it and are ready to catch up, Bellator’s here to give you a solid Saturday night of fights. So watch the video above to relive a fun time on the Emerald Isle, starting with the prelims t 6 p.m. ET/3 p.m. PT.

[vertical-gallery id=493346]

[vertical-gallery id=493346]

MMA Junkie’s ‘Submission of the Month’ for February: The ‘black belt killer’

With another action-packed month of MMA in the books, MMA Junkie looks at the best submission from February 2020.

With another action-packed month of MMA in the books, MMA Junkie looks at the best submissions from February 2020: Here are the five nominees, listed in chronological order, and winner of MMA Junkie’s “Submission of the Month” award for February.

At the bottom of the post, let us know if we got it right by voting for your choice.

* * * *

The Nominees

Daniel Rodriguez def. Tim Means at UFC on ESPN+ 25

[autotag]Daniel Rodriguez[/autotag] (11-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) rose to the occasion in his UFC debut, taking out Tim Means (29-12-1 MMA, 11-9 UFC), a 21-fight veteran of the organization, in the second round of their welterweight bout.

After battering Means on the feet and putting him in serious danger of a knockout, Rodriguez changed his attack to a standing guillotine choke. It went in deep, and shortly thereafter Means tapped and the fight was over.

View this post on Instagram

💜💛 #UFCRioRancho

A post shared by ufc (@ufc) on

Alex Polizzi def. Jamal Pogues at LFA 82

[autotag]Alex Polizzi[/autotag] (6-0) scored his ticket to a Bellator contract by claiming the LFA light heavyweight title with a submission finish of Jamal Pogues (7-3) in the championship rounds.

Although submissions decrease in likelihood later into fights, Polizzi snatched the leg of Pogues in the early stages of the fourth round and locked in a heel hook. Pogues tapped out, and Polizzi remained undefeated in his young career.

Georgi Karakhanyan def. Paul Redmond at Bellator Europe 7

In his return to the lightweight division, [autotag]Georgi Karakhanyan[/autotag] (29-10-1 MMA, 7-8 BMMA) picked up a much-needed win against Paul Redmond (15-9 MMA, 2-1 BMMA).

After going on a three-fight drought, Karakhanyan had an entertaining battle with Redmond before locking in a guillotine choke in the early stages of the round to finish the fight and get his hand raised for the first time in 21 months.

Jimmy Crute def. Michal Oleksiejczuk at UFC on ESPN+ 26

[autotag]Jimmy Crute[/autotag] (11-1 MMA, 3-1 UFC) rebounded from the first loss of his career with an impressive finish of Michal Oleksiejczuk (14-4 MMA, 2-2 UFC) in their light heavyweight matchup.

Crute put his sizable ground advantage to use when he put Oleksiejczuk on his back and synched in a Kimura to elicit the tap in just over three minutes.

Jordan Griffin def. TJ Brown via guillotine choke at UFC on ESPN+ 27

Just when it seemed he was not going to get the finish, [autotag]Jordan Griffin[/autotag] (18-7 MMA, 1-2 UFC) choked TJ Brown (14-7 MMA, 0-1 UFC) out cold.

Attempting to lock in a guillotine choke from bottom position, Griffin’s attempt to finish the fight appeared that it would be unfruitful. Seconds later, though, the fight was over and Griffin had his first UFC win.

* * * *

The Winner: Jordan Griffin

[vertical-gallery id=495276]

Griffin’s first UFC win was an impressive one.

After going 0-2 with two unanimous decision losses to kick off his octagon tenure, Griffin needed to get his hand raised in order to ensure his future with the organization.

He did just that, and in slick fashion, no less.

Griffin went for a usual guillotine choke while on bottom, which cageside commentator Michael Bisping wrote off as having any real chance of finishing the fight. He was wrong, however, because Griffin was able to finish the fight with a useful technique.

“I love that choke – that’s one of my go-to submissions,” Griffin said. “When you hook that in over the shoulder, it’s almost impossible to escape. People think they can circle around because their legs are free, but that actually makes it tighter. As soon as I locked it in, I knew it was over and that he was out. That’s my black belt killer right there.”

[opinary poll=”submission-of-the-month-for-february-202-8z8TU2″ customer=”mmajunkie”]

[jwplayer bvdrTXlv-RbnemIYZ]

USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings, Feb. 25: Dan Hooker climbs the charts

Dan Hooker beat Paul Felder with a thin split decision in the UFC Auckland main event – but how far did it catapult him in the rankings?

Dan Hooker beat Paul Felder with a razor-thin split decision in the UFC on ESPN+ 26 main event.

There were plenty of viewers who scored the fight for Felder, but it was Hooker who got his hand raised in front of his home fans in New Zealand. One thing that can’t be disputed is the fight was a great one.

Going into UFC Auckland, Felder sat at No. 10 in the USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie lightweight rankings. Hooker was just inside the numbers at 15. So after Hooker’s win, how far did he climb? And how far did Felder have to tumble with the loss?

[lawrence-related id=493963,493798,493178]

Take a look at all the moves in the latest USA TODAY Sports/MMA Junkie rankings. This week should provide some movement, too, when Joseph Benavidez and Deiveson Figueiredo fight for the UFC’s vacant flyweight title.

To find out where your favorite fighters fall in the latest rankings, scroll to the top of the page and select a division from the drop-down menu.

[opinary poll=”what-are-the-chances-felder-vs-hooker-is-DvZSwM” customer=”mmajunkie”]

[vertical-gallery id=493117]

[vertical-gallery id=492905]

Spinning Back Clique: What’s the biggest fallout from Dan Hooker’s win over Paul Felder?

What’s the fallout from Dan Hooker’s narrow split decision win over Paul Felder in the UFC on ESPN+ 26 main event in Auckland?

Welcome to “Spinning Back Clique,” MMA Junkie’s weekly show that takes a spin through the biggest topics in mixed martial arts. In this week’s episode, “Gorgeous” George, “Goze” and John Morgan unpack what went down at UFC on ESPN+ 26, including the Dan Hooker vs. Paul Felder main event.

SHOW RUNDOWN:

  • Dan Hooker beat Paul Felder with a razor-thin split decision in the UFC on ESPN+ 26 main event. Did the judges get it right? And what should happen next for Hooker and Felder?
  • UFC women’s strawweight Angela Hill fought for the sixth time in 11 months, which is a new promotional record. Is she the female Donald Cerrone? Should she keep fighting with this frequency, or should she chill out and wait for some big fights to try to get into title contention?
  • UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya got a lot of heat for a comment that seemed to make light of 9/11. He apologized after the fact. Did he really screw up in an unforgivable way? And was his apology on the mark?
  • Bellator had back-to-back events this past weekend – one in Thackerville, Okla., and one in Dublin. Who were the fighters that stood out from the two shows?
  • This week, Joseph Benavidez goes after a flyweight title once again when he takes on Deiveson Figueiredo for the vacant belt in the UFC Norfolk main event. Does he have to have this belt to cement his legacy?

For answers to all of those questions, watch Episode 17 of “Spinning Back Clique.”

[vertical-gallery id=493117]

[vertical-gallery id=492905]

MMA Junkie Radio #3029: UFC Auckland and Bellator recaps, Fury-Wilder, Adesanya, more

Hosts “Gorgeous” George and “Goze” look back at the UFC and Bellator shows from Friday-Saturday and react to the latest MMA news and notes.

[protected-iframe id=”74cc1a3cba64641173972ba31c28c7c7-58289362-57329066″ info=”https://omny.fm/shows/mma-junkie-radio/ep-3-029-recap-of-ufc-new-zealand-bellator-cards-a/embed” width=”100%” height=”180″ frameborder=”0″]

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

On Episode No. 3,029 of the podcast, the guys look back at a busy combat sports weekend with UFC Auckland, Bellator 239, Bellator Dublin and Fury vs. Wilder, and they react to the latest MMA news and notes.

THE RUNDOWN

  • UFC on ESPN+ 26 went down in New Zealand with a killer main event between Dan Hooker and Paul Felder. We look back at the card.
  • Bellator had back-to-back events with Bellator 239 in Oklahoma and Bellator 240/Bellator Europe 7 in Dublin. We go through the most important results.
  • How did you score Hooker’s split decision win over Felder?
  • Should Hooker get Justin Gaethje next? That’s whom he called out.
  • Should Felder hang up the gloves after his loss? He said he was considering it, but his team says that was just in the moment.
  • Did Jimmy Crute have his coming-out party with a big TKO of Michal Oleksiejczuk in Auckland?
  • Should Karolina Kowalkiewicz call it quits after a fourth straight loss at UFC Auckland? We think she should.
  • Angela Hill set the new bar in Auckland with six UFC fights in less than a year. Should she take a rest and slow down?
  • UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya ruffled plenty of feathers with a 9/11 comment. He apologized after the fact and owned up to it. We break down the situation.
  • How was the Tyson Fury win over Deontay Wilder on Saturday night different from a big UFC event?
  • Submission Underground went down Sunday, and we recap the event.

Stream or download this and all episodes of MMA Junkie Radio over at OmnyStudio, or check it out above. You can also catch it on Apple PodcastsSpotifyStitcher, and more. A new episode of the podcast is released every Monday and Thursday.

Bellator 240/Bellator Europe 7 post-event facts: Charlie Ward closes in on KO record

Check out all the facts and figures from Bellator 240/Bellator Europe 7, which took place Saturday in Dublin.

Bellator closed out a very busy weekend of fights on Saturday with the split-event showcase that was Bellator 240/Bellator Europe 7, which took place at 3Arena in Dublin.

There were a few noteworthy results to stem from the lineup, someone of which had historical significance. For more details, check below for 30 post-event facts to come out of Bellator 240/Bellator Europe 7.

* * * *

General

Betting favorites went 7-1 on the main card.

Betting favorites improved to 3-0 in Bellator main events this year.

Total fight time for the eight main card matchups was 1:26:54.

Bellator 240

[autotag]Brent Primus[/autotag] (10-1 MMA, 8-1 BMMA) has earned eight of his 10 career victories by stoppage.

Primus’ eight victories in Bellator lightweight competition are tied for third most in divisional history behind Michael Chandler (14) and Patricky Freire (14).

Primus’ six stoppage victories in Bellator lightweight competition are third most in divisional history behind Chandler (nine) and Freire (nine).

[autotag]Chris Bungard[/autotag] (15-6 MMA, 2-2 BMMA) has suffered all three of his career stoppage losses by submission.

[autotag]Kiefer Crosbie[/autotag] (8-1 MMA, 4-1 BMMA) has earned three of his four Bellator victories by decision.

[autotag]Iamik Furtado[/autotag] (6-3 MMA, 0-1 BMMA) suffered the first decision loss of his career.

[autotag]Bec Rawlings[/autotag] (8-9 MMA, 1-1 BMMA) snapped her five-fight losing skid for her first victory since March 2016.

Rawlings improved to 1-3 since she returned to the women’s flyweight division in November 2017.

[autotag]Elina Kallionidou[/autotag] (7-4 MMA, 0-4 BMMA) remained winless in four career Bellator appearances.

Kallionidou has suffered all four of her career losses by decision.

[autotag]Ricky Bandejas[/autotag] (13-3 MMA, 3-2 BMMA) has earned nine of his 13 career victories by stoppage. That includes all three of his Bellator wins.

[autotag]Lewis Long[/autotag] (17-6 MMA, 1-1 BMMA) has suffered all six of his career losses by stoppage.

Bellator Europe 7

[autotag]Leah McCourt[/autotag] (4-1 MMA, 3-0 BMMA) failed to finish her opponent for the first time in her Bellator career.

[autotag]Judith Ruis[/autotag] (6-5 MMA, 0-1 BMMA) has suffered four of her five career losses by decision.

[autotag]Charlie Ward[/autotag] (8-4 MMA, 5-1 BMMA) improved to 5-1 since he returned to the middleweight division in November 2017. He’s 7-1 overall in his career at the weight class.

Ward’s five stoppage victories in Bellator middleweight competition are third most in divisional history behind Alexander Shlemenko (eight) and John Salter (six).

Ward’s five knockout victories in Bellator middleweight competition are second most in divisional history behind Shlemenko (six).

[autotag]Kyle Kurtz[/autotag] (10-8 MMA, 1-1 UFC) has suffered seven of his eight career losses by stoppage. He’s been finished by knockout in six of those defeats.

[autotag]Austin Clem[/autotag] (4-1 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) earned the first decision victory of his career.

[autotag]Aaron Chalmers[/autotag] (5-2 MMA, 2-2 BMMA) suffered the first decision loss of his career.

[autotag]Richard Kiely[/autotag] (3-3 MMA, 1-2 BMMA) has suffered all three of his career losses by stoppage.

[autotag]Georgi Karakhanyan[/autotag] (29-10-1 MMA, 7-8 BMMA) was successful in his Bellator lightweight debut.

Karakhanyan improved to 1-2 since he returned to Bellator for a third stint in March 2019.

[autotag]Paul Redmond[/autotag] (15-9 MMA, 2-1 BMMA) fell to 5-3 since he was released from the UFC in July 2015.

Redmond has suffered seven of his nine career losses by stoppage.

Redmond suffered his first submission loss since Dec. 31, 2013 – a span of 2,244 days (more than six years) and 12 fights.

[autotag]Richie Smullen[/autotag] (5-2-1 MMA, 2-1 BMMA) suffered the first decision loss of his career.

[autotag]Justin Moore[/autotag] (9-5 MMA, 0-2 BMMA) has suffered all five of his career losses by stoppage.

Bellator Europe 7 results: Leah McCourt takes decision in Dublin headliner

Northern Ireland’s Leah McCourt battled all the way to the scorecards with Judith Ruis to score her third straight win in Dublin.

Northern Ireland’s [autotag]Leah McCourt[/autotag] had to work for it, but the Belfast native scored an emotional victory over Germany’s [autotag]Judith Ruis[/autotag] at Bellator Europe 7.

After three hard-fought rounds at Dublin’s 3Arena, McCourt (4-1 MMA, 3-0 BMMA) took a unanimous decision on scores of 29-28, 29-28, and 30-27.

Early on, McCourt  looked to find her range with leg kicks and push kicks to the body of the shorter Ruis (6-5 MMA, 0-1 BMMA), who tried in vain to step into punching range and head-hunt.

But when the pair locked up against the fence, it was McCourt whose size, strength and grappling advantage proved decisive, as she won the majority of the exchanges against the cage and bossed the action on the mat.

In all three rounds, McCourt utilized judo trips to take her opponent to the canvas, as she dominated from top position on the ground. If anything, her keenness to find a better situation cost her solid positioning at times, as she returned to her feet and reassessed before going back to the mat again.

Ruis doggedly battled off her back, and midway through the opening round looked close to locking up an armbar on the former IMMAF world amateur champion. But with the crowd anxiously reacting to the sight, McCourt stayed calm and maneuvered her way out of the hold to finish the round in mount.

The pair traded shots at the start of Round 2 before Ruis initiated the clinch against the fence once again, but another judo toss from McCourt sent her opponent to the mat. This time, the Belfast native landed in mount, then ended up on Ruis’ back, and she locked up a body triangle and looked to work a submission on Ruis, who doggedly managed to reverse position and finish in guard.

[lawrence-related id=492287,492671,492561]

Despite being on her back, McCourt threatened briefly with a triangle choke, then a Kimura as she stayed active from the bottom, while Ruis looked to land strikes from top position as the round came to a close.

McCourt landed a quick takedown at the start of Round 3 as she quickly established top position on Ruis. Twice she stood back up to find a better position before going back to the mat, where she maintained top position and connected with a succession of elbows and punches. Ruis gamely scrambled her way back to her feet, but McCourt dragged her straight back to the canvas once again as she finished the fight on top.

McCourt’s victory was her third as a Bellator fighter – as well as her third win inside the 3Arena.

“She was tough,” McCourt said after the fight. “Her grappling defense and reactions were good on the ground, she getting a wee bit ahead of me when I was trying to take her down.”

She also admitted that handling the motions of the main event spotlight was a tough task during a whirlwind fight week in Dublin.

“Honestly, it’s been intense,” she said. “Every emotion under the sun. Crying one minute, happy the next, but I’m ecstatic to get in here and get the job done.”

Ward’s ‘Relentless’ attack brings late finish

In the night’s co-main event, [autotag]Charlie Ward[/autotag] used his physical strength to bully America’s [autotag]Kyle Kurtz[/autotag] before eventually bludgeoning his way to a TKO victory at 4:24 of the third round.

After taking his time to eye up his opponent, Ward (8-4 MMA, 5-1 BMMA) stepped across the cage and shoved Kurtz (10-8 MMA, 2-1 BMMA) against the fence. The barrel-chested Dubliner weighed heavy on the American and connected with some solid punches from the clinch, then dragged his man to the mat and landed in guard. With his opponent’s shoulders pinned to the mat, Ward postured up and landed a succession of piston-like left hands.

It was a case of rinse and repeat in Round 2 as Ward once again closed distance on his opponent, then dragged him down to the mat and connected with ground strikes. Kurtz managed to battle his way back to his feet, but Ward stayed stuck to him like glue and soon had “The Hurtz” back down on the mat once again, where he administered another dose of heavy-handed ground and pound.

Kurtz went for broke at the start of the third round. First he swung for the fences, then launched a flying knee in Ward’s direction. But the SBG fighter easily evaded it and wrapped up the American against the fence before taking him down the canvas once more.

“Relentless” served up another portion of ground and pound. Then, after Kurtz fought his way back to his feet, he continued his attack with a plethora of left hands from the clinch as he maintained control and bloodied his opponent’s face with repeated left hands that eventually forced referee Leon Roberts to pause the action to allow the doctor to check the American’s wounds.

The physician gave Kurtz the thumbs-up to continue, but it was only a temporary reprieve, as Ward resumed his barrage from the clinch as he kept his main pinned to the fence and hammered him with heavy lefts until Roberts mercifully waved off the fight with 36 seconds remaining.

Clem’s ground game proves too strong for Chalmers

[autotag]Aaron Chalmers[/autotag]’ MMA education continued under the bright lights of the Bellator cage as he suffered a lopsided decision defeat to debuting American grappler [autotag]Austin Clem[/autotag].

Chalmers (5-2 MMA, 2-2 BMMA) had success with his strikes, particularly his leg kicks, early on. But in each of the three rounds Clem (4-1 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) was able to close the distance and drag the Englishman to the mat.

Once Clem had his man down on the canvas, Chalmers was unable to fight his way back to his feet as “The King” maintained top position with relative ease, including two long spells in full mount in Rounds 2 and 3. The Missouri native looked comfortable in top position, but never seriously threatened with a submission attempt or a concerted effort to finish the fight with strikes.

Clem’s conservative approach from the top, coupled with Chalmers’ inability to work his way back to his feet, meant the bout descended into a slow-paced matchup that left the Dublin crowd frustrated as Clem rode out the three rounds to earn a landslide decision win with scores of 30-27, 30-27, 30-26.

Official Bellator Dublin results include:

BELLATOR EUROPE 7 MAIN CARD

  • Leah McCourt def. Judith Ruis via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-27)
  • Charlie Ward def. Kyle Kurtz via TKO (punches) – Round 3, 4:24
  • Austin Clem def. Aaron Chalmers via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-26)

BELLATOR EUROPE 7 PRELIMINARY CARD

  • George Hardwick def. Richard Kiely via submission (mounted guillotine) – Round 2, 3:40
  • Georgi Karakhanyan def. Paul Redmond via submission (guillotine choke) – Round 2, 0:42
  • Danni Neilan def. Chiara Penco via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)
  • Alberth Dias def. Richie Smullen via split decision (28-29, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Will Fleury def. Justin Moore via submission (arm triangle choke) – Round 1, 4:14
  • Chris Duncan def. Mateusz Piskorz via TKO (punches) – Round 2, 2:43
  • Calum Murrie def. Dylan Logan via submission (rear-naked choke) –  Round 1, 4:02
  • Blaine O’Driscoll def. Ezzoubair Bouarsa via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 4:12
  • Ciaran Clarke def. Jamie Faulding via unanimous decision (30-26, 30-26, 29-27)
  • Constantin Blanita def. Asael Adjoudj via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)

BELLATOR 240 (Paramount, DAZN, 10 p.m. ET via tape delay)

  • Brent Primus def. Chris Bungard via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 1, 1:55
  • Kiefer Crosbie def. Iamik Furtado via split decision (29-28, 29-28, 28-29)
  • Bec Rawlings def. Elina Kallionidou via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)
  • Ricky Bandejas def. Frans Mlambo via knockout (punches) – Round 2, 1:25
  • Oliver Enkamp def. Lewis Long via knockout (spinning backfist) – Round 1, 4:10

[vertical-gallery id=492336]

Bellator Dublin live and official results (11:30 a.m. ET)

Bellator 240 and Bellator Europe 7 take place Saturday. Join us for a live video stream and official results beginning at 11:30 a.m. ET.

Bellator 240 and Bellator Europe 7 take place Saturday, and you can join us for a live video stream and official results beginning at 11:30 a.m. ET (8:30 a.m. PT).

The event takes place at 3Arena in Dublin. The Bellator Europe 7 card streams on MMA Junkie. The Bellator 240 portion airs on Paramount and streams on DAZN via tape delay.

In the Bellator Europe 7 main event, Leah McCourt (3-1 MMA, 2-0 BMMA) takes on Judith Ruis (6-4 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) in a women’s featherweight fight. On the Bellator 240 portion of the card, former lightweight champ Brent Primus (9-1 MMA, 7-1 BMMA) meets Chris Bungard (15-5 MMA, 2-1 BMMA).

Official Bellator Dublin results include:

BELLATOR EUROPE 7 MAIN CARD (MMA Junkie, 5 p.m. ET)

  • Leah McCourt vs. Judith Ruis
  • Kyle Kurtz vs. Charlie Ward
  • Aaron Chalmers vs. Austin Clem

BELLATOR EUROPE 7 PRELIMINARY CARD (MMA Junkie, 11:30 a.m. ET)

  • Ilias Bulaid vs. Diego Freitas
  • Richard Kiely vs. George Hardwick
  • Paul Redmond vs. Georgi Karakhanyan
  • Daniel Crawford vs. Philip Mulpeter
  • Constantin Blanita vs. Asael Adjoudj
  • Alberth Dias vs. Richie Smullen
  • Will Fleury vs. Justin Moore
  • Chris Duncan vs. Ryan Roddy
  • Dylan Logan vs. Callum Murrie
  • Ezzoubair Bouarsa vs. Blaine O’Driscoll
  • Ciaran Clarke vs. Jamie Faulding
  • Danni Neilan vs. Chiara Penco

BELLATOR 240 (Paramount, DAZN, 10 p.m. ET via tape delay)

  • Brent Primus vs. Chris Bungard
  • Kiefer Crosbie vs. Iamik Furtado
  • Elina Kallionidou vs. Bec Rawlings
  • Ricky Bandejas vs. Frans Mlambo
  • Oliver Enkamp vs. Lewis Long

Bellator Dublin discussion thread

Bellator Dublin takes place Saturday in Ireland, and you can discuss the event here.

Bellator Dublin takes place Saturday in Ireland, and you can discuss the event here. The show takes place at 3Arena in Dublin and kicks off at 11:30 a.m. ET (8:30 a.m. PT). You can discuss the event here.

The Bellator Europe 7 card streams on MMA Junkie. The Bellator 240 portion airs on Paramount and streams on DAZN via tape delay.

Be sure to follow along with the latest card updates in our Bellator Dublin live results post, and then discuss the event in the comments section below.

Round-by-round updates and official results begin at approximately 11:30 a.m. ET for the Bellator Europe 7 preliminary card, 5 p.m. ET for the Bellator Europe 7 main card and 10 p.m. ET for Bellator 240.