PFL’s David Michaud says heart condition has him out of Rory MacDonald fight – and likely into retirement

David Michaud was getting ready for what likely was going to be the biggest fight of his career. Now it appears his career might be over.

[autotag]David Michaud[/autotag] was getting ready for what likely was going to be the biggest fight of his career. Now it appears his career might be over.

Michaud (18-6) was set to fight former Bellator champion [autotag]Rory MacDonald[/autotag] (21-6-1) on April 29 in the main event of the PFL’s second show of the year as part of the start of welterweight regular season. But Thursday, Michaud posted on Twitter that a heart condition recently discovered has taken him out of the fight.

But not only that, the 32-year-old said the condition is likely to mean the end of his fighting career.

“So this is gonna be a tough post. After multiple tests on my heart including a Cardiac MRI and talking with multiple Cardiologists, I have been informed that I got a bad ticker,” Michaud posted on Twitter. “I have a Congenital bicuspid aortic valve with dilated aortic root. Unfortunately I was born with this

“because of the dilation of the aorta, fighting puts me at risk for an aortic dissection — a tear in the aorta. That would be fatal under almost all circumstances. For this reason I will not be able to fight Rory Macdonald on April 29th, and unless anything changes, ever again.”

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Michaud, from South Dakota, reached the 2019 PFL welterweight playoff final, but was stopped with a second-round TKO by $1 million winner Ray Cooper III. To reach that final, he won decisions against fellow UFC veterans John Howard and Glaico Franca on the same night in October 2019.

If it indeed is the end of the line for Michaud, he’ll exit the sport with 18 career wins, including 14 stoppages.

He turned pro in 2009, and by 2012 he was on Season 16 of “The Ultimate Fighter.” And while things didn’t work out for him on the show, he built back up and was in the UFC by 2014. He went 2-2 in the promotion, then found himself trying to work his way back to the big leagues with fights for RFA, Titan FC, LFA and Bellator before signing with PFL for the 2019 inaugural season.

PFL officials have not yet made a formal announcement about Michaud’s withdrawal, or who will step in to fight MacDonald in the welterweight main event.

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David Michaud doesn’t see Rory MacDonald’s decline the way some are saying

David Michaud hesitant to say that Rory MacDonald is no longer the same fighter he used to be.

[autotag]David Michaud[/autotag] doesn’t agree with some of the critics who say Rory MacDonald has regressed.

The PFL welterweight is preparing to take on one of the best fighters in his division and nothing less April 29. Michaud (18-6) meets MacDonald (21-6-1), a former Bellator welterweight champion and multiple-time UFC title challenger, at the Ocean Casino Resort in Atlantic City, N.J., as part of the first round of the PFL welterweight season.

Critics in the past have claimed that McDonald had taken a step back in his career. He went 3-2-1 in Bellator after leaving the UFC in 2016. The two defeats come to current Bellator welterweight champion Douglas Lima and current Bellator middleweight title holder Gegard Mousasi.

Michaud doesn’t put too much stock on those defeats and won’t take MacDonald lightly ahead of their April 29 date.

“He’s been through some wars and I think that’s why guys are expecting that chin to start going away eventually. But his last fight was for the Bellator championship and he was the Bellator world champ for a long time,” Michaud told MMA Junkie. “So it’s not like he was out there getting knocked out by bums. I think he’s only been finished by Robbie Lawler, which you know, that’s one of the best guys at 170.

“So he’s not out here taking bad loses and he’s not losing guys who aren’t top level. I mean. he lost to Douglas Lima, OK? Who’s going to ever sit there and say Douglas Lima is not one of the best in the world? So I don’t think he’s lost what people say he’s lost. I’m just excited to get back in there and try my hand with him.”

(MacDonald has been stopped three times vs. Carlos Condit, Lawler and Mousasi).

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Michaud thinks this is the highest profile fight of his career since MacDonald is the biggest name in the PFL’s 170-pound division. However, the MMA Lab product thinks many others may be at MacDonald’s level, skill wise.

“If I didn’t get to fight him, it would’ve been a big fight either way,” Michaud said. “I think welterweight in PFL is the deepest division and there’s a lot of really good guys. There’s a couple of guys in here still that have wins over me. There’s Magomed Magomedkerimov, the returning champ – there’s plenty of tough fighters. Rory is definitely the biggest name and it was someone I wanted to fight for sure.”

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PFL 2021, Week 2: Rory MacDonald set for debut as welterweight, light heavyweight seasons begin

Former Bellator welterweight champion Rory MacDonald will make his PFL debut against 2019 season runner-up David Michaud on April 29.

Hot on the heels of the PFL’s announcement of this season’s curtain-raiser, the promotion has confirmed its lineup for its second round of bouts.

PFL 2021, Week 2 takes place on Thursday, April 29 and features a 10-fight card headlined by one of the promotion’s biggest new signings.

Former Bellator welterweight champion and UFC title challenger [autotag]Rory MacDonald[/autotag] will make his promotional debut in the night’s main event against 2019 welterweight season runner-up [autotag]David Michaud[/autotag].

MacDonald (21-6-1) won and twice defended the Bellator 170-pound title during a six-fight stint with the promotion, but he lost his belt in a rematch with Douglas Lima in his final bout with the organization at Bellator 232.

MacDonald subsequently explored free agency and signed a deal with PFL, and he will kick off the latest chapter in his career against Michaud (18-6), who has lost just twice since the summer of 2017.

His 2019 PFL campaign started with a 17-second body-kick knockout loss to Sadibou Sy, but he bounced back to register three successive wins over Handesson Ferreira, John Howard, and Glaico Franca to earn a spot in the welterweight season final. He lost out to [autotag]Ray Cooper III[/autotag] via second-round TKO and will be looking to bounce back with a statement win over MacDonald.

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The PFL’s 2019 welterweight and light heavyweight champions are both set for action on the card, with 170-pound champion Cooper (20-7-1) facing French contender [autotag]Jason Ponet[/autotag] (20-12-1) in the co-main event, while 205-pound champion [autotag]Emiliano Sordi[/autotag] (22-8) will kick off the defense of his crown against former UFC veteran [autotag]Chris Camozzi[/autotag] (25-14) in the main card opener.

The main card also features a light heavyweight battle between 2019 205-pound runner-up [autotag]Jordan Johnson[/autotag] (12-2-1) and promotional newcomer [autotag]Tom Lawlor[/autotag] (10-7), while 2018 welterweight champion [autotag]Magomed Magomedkerimov[/autotag] (27-5) will look to establish his championship credentials in 2021 after injury curtailed his title defense in the 2019 season. He will take on Brazil’s [autotag]Joao Zeferino[/autotag] (24-9) in the night’s featured preliminary card bout.

PFL 2 takes place at a venue to be confirmed. The event will air on ESPN2 following prelims on ESPN+. Further regular season events will follow on May 6, and June 10, 17, and 25.

The full PFL 2 lineup includes:

MAIN CARD (ESPN 2)

  • Rory MacDonald vs. David Michaud
  • Ray Cooper III vs. Jason Ponet
  • Jordan Johnson vs. Tom Lawlor
  • Chris Camozzi vs. Emiliano Sordi

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN+)

  • Magomed Magomedkerimov vs. Joao Zeferino
  • Smealinho Rama vs. Jordan Young
  • Cezar Ferreira vs. Nick Roehrick
  • Aleksei Kunchenko vs. Gleison Tibau
  • Nikolai Aleksakhin vs. Sadibou Sy
  • Marthin Hamlet vs. Daniel Spohn

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MMA Injury Report: Joanna Jedrzejczyk’s face, Alexander Volkanovski’s hand and more

The latest in notable MMA injuries, including updates on Joanna Jedrzejczyk, Alexander Volkanovski and Jessica Eye.

It’s no secret that MMA is a grueling sport. Injuries occur everywhere from the training room to the cage, and sometimes even beyond that.

Injuries can cause the best set plans to fall by the wayside, derail careers or worse. Still, though, the overwhelming majority of fighters overcome their physical setbacks and eventually find their way back to competition.

Below MMA Junkie tracks the latest in notable MMA injuries, including updates on a current UFC champion, a former titleholder, a one-time challenger to the belt and more.

* * * *

  • UFC strawweight contender [autotag]Joanna Jedrzejczyk[/autotag] (16-4 MMA, 10-4 UFC) suffered no serious injuries in her UFC 248 title-fight loss to Zhang Weili, despite sustaining a massive hematoma on her forehead. It took some time, but the swelling and bruising have nearly completely subsided on the former longtime 115-pound titleholder.
  • UFC featherweight champion [autotag]Alexander Volkanovski[/autotag] (21-1 MMA, 8-0 UFC) has received clearance to resume training on a right hand injury that stemmed from his UFC 245 title win over Max Holloway in December. With the hand good to go, the path is clear for Volkanovski to headline June’s UFC 250 event in Perth, Australia. It will likely be a title rematch with Holloway in his first defense.
  • UFC welterweight [autotag]Dhiego Lima[/autotag] (15-7 MMA, 4-5 UFC) is nearly six weeks post-op on a neck injury that caused him to withdraw from UFC 247 in February. He said he was dealing with a crack in his C4 vertebrae for 14 years and finally did a fusion surgery that he hopes will eventually allow him to compete at 100 percent for the first time in his MMA career.
  • PFL 2019 finalist [autotag]David Michaud[/autotag] (18-6) is gearing up for the 2020 season after having the pins removed from his hand. He sustained a Bennett fracture in his TKO loss to Ray Cooper III in December, but intends to be healthy enough to return for the upcoming season, which is slated to begin in early June.
  • Former UFC flyweight title challenger [autotag]Jessica Eye[/autotag] (15-7 MMA, 5-6 UFC) is about ready to return to full training after undergoing left elbow surgery roughly six weeks ago. “Evil” did not detail the exact nature of her surgery, but said the issue has been lingering “for about three years.”
  • UFC welterweight [autotag]Santiago Ponzinibbio[/autotag] (27-3 MMA, 9-2 UFC) is nearly ready to return to the octagon after not having fought since November 2018. A plethora of different injuries and infections have kept the Argentinian out of action, but he’s keen to resume his career and build off his current seven-fight winning streak.

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2019 PFL Championship results: Kayla Harrison claims first PFL women’s $1 million title

The PFL’ crowned six $1M champions Tuesday night, including the first women’s titleholder and two repeat champs.

NEW YORK — [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] has still yet to taste defeat.

The two-time Olympic judo gold medalist defeated [autotag]Larissa Pacheco[/autotag] in the rematch to remain undefeated in her MMA career and win the 2019 PFL women’s lightweight championship and the $1 million prize that went with winning the season tournament.

Harrison’s performance against Pacheco (13-4 MMA, 2-2 PFL) was dominant. The former judoka player was able to take down and control the Brazilian there in all five rounds. Harrison won easily on the scorecard, outpointing Pacheco 50-43, 50-45, 50-45.

Despite looking dominant, Harrison (7-0 MMA, 7-0 PFL) did face some adversity in the fight.

Pacheco threatened with a knee to the head in the third round that seemed to connect clean on Harrison. She also came alive in the fifth, as she walked down Harrison for a good portion of the round while landing shots. Towards the end of the firth and final round Pacheco also threaten with standing ten-finger choke but Harrison eventually turned it into a takedown to finish the fight on top.

Harrison began her professional MMA career in mid-2018. Since she’s compiled seven wins, five via.

Ray Cooper III earns redemption, finishes David Michaud for welterweight crown

[autotag]Ray Cooper III[/autotag] once again got to a PFL championship final, but this time he didn’t leave home the loser.

The Hawaiian fighter stopped [autotag]David Michaud[/autotag] in the co-main event by using a nasty left hook to the body that shut down Michaud. The official stoppage came at 2:56 of round two.

Cooper (20-7-1 MMA, 7-2-1 PFL) came close to having a flawless performance. He controlled Michaud (18-6 MMA, 3-2 PFL) against cage early in the first, dropped him with a hook to the body and maintained top control for the rest of the round.

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In the second round, Cooper failed to get the fight to the ground so he engaged on the feet with Michaud, which got dicey for a bit. A couple minutes in, Michaud connected with some hard knees to the head and some solid hooks that appeared to hurt Cooper. Cooper responded with a takedown and while Michaud was working his way back to his feet, Cooper sat him down with a nasty shot to the liver followed up by punches.

Copper lost in the final of the 2018 PFL season. The win over Michaud marks his first PFL championship win.

Ali Isaev outwrestles Jared Rosholt, finishes for heavyweight crown

[autotag]Ali Isaev [/autotag]defeated [autotag]Jared Rosholt[/autotag] at his own game.

The Russian fighter outwrestled Rosholt (20-8 MMA, 6-4 PFL) over the course of four rounds to eventually get the finish and win the 2019 PFL heavyweight championship.

Rosholt landed good strikes throughout the fight and even threatened with a guillotine at the end of round one. However, Isaev’s pressure and takedowns proved to be the superior factor throughout the fight.

After three rounds of heavy grappling, Isaev (9-0 MMA, 5-0 PFL) was able to get Rosholt to the ground in round four and wear down the American. With less than a minute remaining, Isaev turned up the ground-and-pound and forced Rosholt to shell up. With Rosholt offering no answer to the strikes, the referee had no option but to stop the fight at the 4:09 mark.

Isaev is 36 years old and remains undefeated in his MMA career.

Natan Schulte bests Loik Radzhabov in thrilling throwdown

 

If there were “Fight of the Night” bonuses in PFL, [autotag]Natan Schulte[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Loik Radzhabov[/autotag] would’ve easily earned it.

Both Schulte (20-3-1 MMA, 9-0-1 PFL) and Radzhabov (13-2-1 MMA, 2-2-1 PFL) engaged in a non-stop action battle for 25 minutes. In the end, Schulte left with his hand raised, a $1 million in his pocket, and the 2019 PFL lightweight title. Schulte beat Radzhabov 49-44, 49-46, 48-47 on the scorecards.

Schulte started hot in the fight, wobbling and taking down Radzhabov to have the biggest impact of round one. Second round things took a turn. Radzhabov landed plenty of clean shots and at time seems to hurt Schulte.

From that point on, Rounds 3-5 were quite competitive. Both fighters had good moments on the feet and ground, but ultimately Schulte had the best highlights and control, mounting Radzhabov in rounds four and five. It was a grueling bout that had both fighters spent in the end.

Schulte remains unbeaten PFL, winning both the 2018 and 2019 lightweight championships.

Lance Palmer claims second straight featherweight title

[autotag]Lance Palmer[/autotag] has [autotag]Alex Gilpin[/autotag]’s number.

The 2018 PFL featherweight champion defeated Gilpin (14-4 MMA, 2-3 PFL) for a third time to win the 2019 PFL featherweight belt and his second $1 million dollar prize in the company. Palmer (22-3 MMA, 11-0 PFL) was favored 50-43, 50-44, 50-44 on the judge’s scorecards.

Palmer’s strong wrestling and dominant top control was the protagonist of the fight. Through out the entire five rounds of the 145-pound contest, Palmer took down Gilpin and controlled top position.

Palmer was able to avoid referee stand-ups with his constant advancement in position and ground-and-pound. Gilpin had some threatening moment in rounds one and two with some choked that seemed to catch Palmer’s attention. But despite the admirable efforts, Gilpin was out-grappled the entire fight.

Palmer had beaten Gilpin twice prior to the final, first in May and then again in October.

[autotag]Emiliano Sordi[/autotag] stops [autotag]Jordan Johnson[/autotag] to win light heavyweight championship

Emiliano Sordi’s quick stoppage claims light heavyweight gold

Argentina now has a champion in a major North American promotion.

[autotag]Emiliano Sordi[/autotag] used heavy ground-and-pound to stop [autotag]Jordan Johnson[/autotag] and earn himself $1 million plus the 2019 PFL light heavyweight title.

Sordi (22-8 MMA, 6-1 PFL) and Johnson (12-2-1 MMA, 2-2-1 PFL) traded heavy shots early, but it was Sordi landed the better shots. About halfway through the round, Sordi dropped Johnson with a big straight right hand. Johnson tried to takedown Sordi with a low single once on the ground, but the Argentinian followed up with ground-and-pound to force the referee to waive off the fight.

The official stoppage came at 2:01 mark of the first round.

[autotag]Brendan Loughnane [/autotag] cruises to a decision, outpoints [autotag]David Alex Valente [/autotag]

Brendan Loughnane decisions David Valente

[autotag]Brendan Loughnane [/autotag] remains unbeaten inside the PFL cage.

The Englishman had a seamless decision win over Brazil’s [autotag]David Valente[/autotag] to kick off the PFL championship finals. Loughnane (19-3 MMA, 2-0 PFL) controlled most of the fight using his range and leg kicks.

In the first round, Loughnane took control of the center of the cage and picked apart Valente (11-5 MMA, 0-1 PFL) with leg kicks. Round two was a similar story, as Loughnane used distance and avoided many of the strikes Valente threw. Valente was bit trigger shy and was switching stances to alleviate the leg kicks being absorbed.

Third round Loughnane took down Valente early. Valente got up not long after the takedown. With a sense of urgency, Valente walked down Loughnane but didn’t land anything flush. Loughnane would score another takedown where he landed good ground-and-pound until the final bell rang.

Loughnane defeated Valente 30-27 on all three judge’s scorecards.

The 2019 PFL championships went down on Dec. 31 from the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Graden in New York. The entire main card, which hosted six championship bouts, aired live on ESPN 2. Harrison vs. Pacheco headlined the event.

Full PFL 2019 championship results:

Full 2019 PFL Championship results:

2019 PFL Championship live and official results (6 p.m. ET)

Follow along as the PFL concludes its 2019 season with six $1 million title fights in New York.

NEW YORK – The 2019 PFL Championship finale takes place Tuesday night, and MMA Junkie is on the scene with live results.

The PFL Championship takes place at the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden. The main card airs on ESPN2 at 7 p.m. ET following an ESPN+ prelim at 6 p.m.

In the women’s lightweight main event, Kayla Harrison takes on Larissa Pacheco in one of six division finals with $1 million on the line. Lance Palmer (featherweight) and Natan Schulte (lightweight) both look to repeat as champions, while Ray Cooper III (welterweight) looks for redemption after losing last season’s final.

2019 PFL Championship results include:

  • [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Larissa Pacheco[/autotag] – women’s lightweight championship
  • [autotag]David Michaud[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Ray Cooper III[/autotag] – welterweight championship
  • [autotag]Ali Isaev[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jared Rosholt[/autotag] – heavyweight championship
  • [autotag]Natan Schulte[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Loik Radzhabov[/autotag] – lightweight championship
  • [autotag]Lance Palmer[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Alex Gilpin[/autotag] – featherweight championship
  • [autotag]Emiliano Sordi[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Jordan Johnson[/autotag] – light heavyweight championship
  • [autotag]Brendan Loughnane[/autotag] vs. [autotag]David Alex Valente[/autotag]

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PFL Championship ceremonial weigh-ins faceoff video

Check out the final faceoffs for all six title fights at the PFL Championship finale in New York.

NEW YORK – The PFL 2019 Championship finale ceremonial weigh-ins are in the books, and MMA Junkie was on the scene for the festivities.

All fighters competing on Tuesday night successfully made weight earlier Monday morning before stepping on the scale for ceremonial weigh-ins in the evening.

Fighters competing in the six championship bouts on the main card will look to take home $1 million.

The PFL 2019 Championship finals takes place at the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden. The lone preliminary bout will stream on ESPN+, while the main card airs on ESPN2.

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You can watch highlights of the final faceoffs in the video above.

PFL 10 weigh-in results:

MAIN CARD (ESPN2):

  • [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] (154.8) vs. [autotag]Larissa Pacheco[/autotag] (153.6) – women’s lightweight championship
  • [autotag]David Michaud[/autotag] (169.6) vs. [autotag]Ray Cooper III[/autotag] (168.6) – welterweight championship
  • [autotag]Ali Isaev[/autotag] (258.8) vs. [autotag]Jared Rosholt[/autotag] (250.6) – heavyweight championship
  • [autotag]Natan Schulte[/autotag] (153.6) vs. [autotag]Loik Radzhabov[/autotag] (154.8) – lightweight championship
  • [autotag]Lance Palmer[/autotag] (144.6) vs. [autotag]Alex Gilpin[/autotag] (144.4) – featherweight championship
  • [autotag]Emiliano Sordi[/autotag] (204.4) vs. [autotag]Jordan Johnson[/autotag] (202.2) – light heavyweight championship

PRELIMS (ESPN+)

  • [autotag]Brendan Loughnane[/autotag] (146) vs. [autotag]David Alex Valente[/autotag] (145.8)

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PFL Championship predictions: Who takes home $1 million each?

Check out our staff members’ picks for the six 2019 PFL playoff finals, where $1 million is up for grabs in each division.

No. 2 Harrison
vs.
No. 4 Pacheco
No. 4 Michaud
vs.
No. 6 Cooper
No. 5 Isaev
vs.
No. 7 Rosholt
No. 1 Schulte
vs.
No. 7 Radzhabov
No. 1 Palmer
vs.
No. 4 Gilpin
No. 1 Sordi
vs.
No. 7 Johnson
MMA Junkie readers’
consensus picks
2019: 227-130 (64%)
harrison2019
Harrison
(92%)
cooper2019
Cooper
(64%)
isaev2019
Isaev
(63%)
schulte2019
Schulte
(75%)
palmer2019
Palmer
(90%)
sordi2019
Sordi
(59%)
Simon Head
@simonhead
2019: 143-72 (66.52%)
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
sordi2019
Sordi
Nolan King
@mma_kings
2019: 136-74 (64.76%)
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
johnson2019
Johnson
Ken Hathaway
@kenshathaway
2019: 230-127 (64.43%)
trophy copy 2018 Champion
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
sordi2019
Sordi
Dan Tom
@DanTomMMA
2019: 230-127 (64.43%)
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
johnson2019
Johnson
John Morgan
@MMAjunkieJohn
2019: 228-129 (63.87%)
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
sordi2019
Sordi
Brian Garcia
@thegoze
2019: 228-129 (63.87%)
trophy copy 2017 Champion
harrison2019
Harrison
michaud2019
Michaud
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
sordi2019
Sordi
Simon Samano
@SJSamano
2019: 224-133 (63%)
harrison2019
Harrison
michaud2019
Michaud
isaev2019
Isaev
radzhabov2019
Radzhabov
palmer2019
Palmer
johnson2019
Johnson
Mike Bohn
@MikeBohnMMA
2019: 223-134 (62.46%)
trophy copy 2014 Champion
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
johnson2019
Johnson
Farah Hannoun
@Farah_Hannoun
2019: 127-77 (62.25%)
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
johnson2019
Johnson
George Garcia
@MMAjunkieGeorge
2019: 221-136 (61.9%)
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
rosholt2019
Rosholt
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
johnson2019
Johnson
Abbey Subhan
@kammakaze
2019: 217-140 (61%)
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
sordi2019
Sordi
Dave Doyle
@davedoylemma
2019: 142-113 (57%)
harrison2019
Harrison
cooper2019
Cooper
isaev2019
Isaev
schulte2019
Schulte
palmer2019
Palmer
johnson2019
Johnson
Matt Erickson
@MMAjunkieMatt
2019: 186-171 (52%)
pacheco2019
Pacheco
michaud2019
Michaud
rosholt2019
Rosholt
radzhabov2019
Radzhabov
gilpin2019
Gilpin
johnson2019
Johnson

After debuting its season points and playoff format in 2018, the PFL is back for its second set of playoff finals this week.

The 2019 PFL playoff finals in six weight classes take place Tuesday at Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York. The card airs on ESPN2.

(Click here to open a PDF of the staff picks grid in a separate window.)

At the top of the card, No. 2 women’s lightweight seed [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] (6-0) takes on No. 4 [autotag]Larissa Pacheco[/autotag] (13-3). Harrison, a two-time Olympic judo gold medalist, is a massive 14-1 favorite from the oddsmakers, and only one (gee, guess who?) of our 13 MMA Junkie editors, writers, radio hosts and videographers is picking an upset.

In the welterweight final, No. 4 [autotag]David Michaud[/autotag] (18-5) meets No. 6 [autotag]Ray Cooper III[/autotag] (19-7-1), who will try to do what he couldn’t pull off in the 2018 final. Cooper is a slight favorite around -150, and he’s got a big 10-3 lead in the picks.

At heavyweight, No. 5 [autotag]Ali Isaev[/autotag] (8-0) is more than a 5-1 favorite against No. 7 [autotag]Jared Rosholt[/autotag] (20-7), and he’s got a big 11-2 advantage in the picks.

Three No. 1 seeds made their divisions’ finals, and two of them have big picks leads. No. 1 lightweight [autotag]Natan Schulte[/autotag] (19-3-1) goes after a second straight title when he takes on No. 7 [autotag]Loik Radzhabov[/autotag] (13-1-1). Only two of our pickers are taking Radzhabov to pull the upset.

And No. 1 featherweight [autotag]Lance Palmer[/autotag] (21-3) tries for his second straight crown, as well, when he meets No. 4 [autotag]Alex Gilpin[/autotag] (14-3). Palmer is a 10-1 favorite, and only one of our pickers is going against him.

The only truly contentious fight among our pickers is the light heavyweight final between No. 1 [autotag]Emiliano Sordi[/autotag] (21-8) vs. No. 7 [autotag]Jordan Johnson[/autotag] (12-1-1). It’s a pick’em fight with the oddsmakers, but it’s Johnson with just a slight 8-5 edge in the picks.

In the MMA Junkie reader consensus picks, Harrison (92%), Cooper (64 percent), Isaev (63 percent), Schulte (75 percent), Palmer (90 percent) and Sordi (59 percent) are the choices.

Check out all the picks above.

PFL Championship weigh-in results: All six title fights good to go

Check out the weigh-in results for PFL’s 2019 season finale, which goes down Tuesday in New York.

NEW YORK – The PFL Championship finals are good to go.

All fighters competing on Tuesday night successfully made weight for their title fights Monday morning. PFL officials provided the weigh-in results to MMA Junkie.

The PFL 2019 championship finals takes place at the Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden. The lone preliminary bout will stream on ESPN+, while the main card airs on ESPN2.

Fighters competing in the six championship bouts on the main card will look to take home $1 million.

Below are the PFL 10 weigh-in results:

MAIN CARD (ESPN2):

  • [autotag]Kayla Harrison[/autotag] (154.8) vs. [autotag]Larissa Pacheco[/autotag] (153.6) – women’s lightweight championship
  • [autotag]David Michaud[/autotag] (169.6) vs. [autotag]Ray Cooper III[/autotag] (168.6) – welterweight championship
  • [autotag]Ali Isaev[/autotag] (258.8) vs. [autotag]Jared Rosholt[/autotag] (250.6) – heavyweight championship
  • [autotag]Natan Schulte[/autotag] (153.6) vs. [autotag]Loik Radzhabov[/autotag] (154.8) – lightweight championship
  • [autotag]Lance Palmer[/autotag] (144.6) vs. [autotag]Alex Gilpin[/autotag] (144.4) – featherweight championship
  • [autotag]Emiliano Sordi[/autotag] (204.4) vs. [autotag]Jordan Johnson[/autotag] (202.2) – light heavyweight championship

PRELIMS (ESPN+)

  • [autotag]Brendan Loughnane[/autotag] (146) vs. [autotag]David Alex Valente[/autotag] (145.8)

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