Video: Triller Fight Club Triad Combat pre-fight press conference

Watch the pre-fight press conference for Saturday’s Triad Combat event.

On Saturday, Triller returns to combat sports action for Triad Combat, a boxing-focused combat sport with unique rules.

The event pits MMA fighters against boxers wearing hybrid gloves in a triangle-shaped ring. The event takes place at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas.

Former UFC heavyweight champion [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag] faces former boxing world championship challenger Kubrat Pulev in the main event.

In addition to the fights, the event will feature a concert by the legendary heavy metal band Metallica.

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Watch the video above to hear the combatants answer questions about the unique event.

A triangle ring and open-hand 8-ounce gloves: Triller’s Sean Wheelock details elements of Triad Combat

Triller’s Sean Wheelock details the elements of Triad Combat and the goal of evening the playing field between MMA fighters and boxers.

Triller’s upcoming Triad Combat hopes to level the playing field between MMA fighters and boxers when they compete against each other.

This new take on boxing will take place in a triangular ring, with the fighters wearing 8-ounce hybrid gloves. Aside from the usual punching techniques, fighters will be able to utilize spinning backfists and superman punches.

[autotag]Sean Wheelock[/autotag], Triller’s director of rules and regulations, helped mold this idea along with Triller co-founder Ryan Kavanagh, aiming to level the playing field between boxers and MMA fighters in this punching-only sport.

On Nov. 27 at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, former UFC heavyweight champion [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag] will take on former boxing world title challenger [autotag]Kubrat Pulev[/autotag] in the main event of the first Triad Combat event.

In recent years, there has been a rise in MMA fighters testing their standup skills against legendary boxers in the ring, such as Conor McGregor vs. Floyd Mayweather and Anderson Silva vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. According to Wheelock, the idea for Triad Combat was sparked by Kavanagh following Vitor Belfort vs. Evander Holyfield in September.

Wheelock’s experience in combat sports stretches beyond the commentary booth, where most fans are familiar with his work from the early days of Bellator to today’s BKFC events and other promotions across many fighting styles. With his experience as a boxing referee and unpaid work with the Kansas Athletic Commission, Wheelock has been carving a path towards rules and regulations, which came to fruition when Triller expanded his role beyond commentary.

“I love these environments where we say, ‘Let’s do something different, let’s take a chance,'” Wheelock told MMA Junkie. “Let’s ask, ‘Why not?’ Instead of, ‘Are we allowed to?’ …Ryan (Kavanagh) was asking me, ‘What could we do to make this more even between boxers and MMA fighters?’

“If you put someone who does that as their primary sport against someone who doesn’t do that as their primary sport, no matter how good the athletes are, the advantage obviously always goes to the person that’s in their primary sport.

“If you had a home run hitting contest and you put Roger Federer in there, he’s probably not going to hit as many home runs as Major League Baseball players,” Wheelock continued. “It just kind of makes sense that way, even though he has great swing mechanics.”

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Aside from the triangular ring which will provide unique angles for the fighters to navigate, the curved 8 oz. hybrid gloves, which have exposed fingers, are a key component to Triad Combat. While fighters of both fighting backgrounds can take advantage of these gloves, they potentially open the door to accidental eye pokes, which is a concern boxers have never had to worry about.

“I looked at four different glove companies,” Wheelock explained. “I found a glove, and we worked with the manufacturer to where the fingers are naturally curved in. “That was something I worried about a lot. …It looks like an 8-ounce boxing glove on the backhand and on the front part, it looks like an MMA glove.

“Because you’re not going in open hands, looking to shoot for a takedown, or snatch a single leg, or hit a blast double, I don’t think eye pokes are going to be a problem. There was a lot of effort and due diligence put in because I do not want to see eye pokes in any fight, let alone on a card of this importance and this magnitude.”

A lot of thought went into the creation of this event, including competing at two-minute rounds, which Wheelock anticipates will create a higher-paced fight.

Rounding out the unique environment that Triller provides for combat sports events, the heavy metal band Metallica will perform a few songs to open the show on Nov. 27, and after the seven scheduled bouts conclude, will return for a full concert.

Watch Wheelock explain the full ruleset of Triad Combat in the video above.

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Mike Perry, Frank Mir featured on Triller’s inaugural Triad Combat fighting event

Triller launches a new fighting sport that’s set to debut on Nov. 27 featuring ex-UFC fighters Mike Perry and Frank Mir.

Triller is exploring new ways to fight in the combat sports world.

The organization announced on Thursday the launch of a new style of fighting called Triad Combat that’s set to inaugurate on Nov. 27 at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas.

The event is set to feature former UFC champion [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag], fan favorite ex-UFC welterweight [autotag]Mike Perry[/autotag], and former boxing heavyweight title challenger [autotag]Kubrat Pulev[/autotag]. The three will compete on the event in their respective bouts and no opponents were announced.

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Triad Combat is a new style of fighting that incorporates boxing and MMA rules.

Fighters will compete in a triangular ring and under two-minute rounds. The idea is to set professional boxers against professional MMA fighters in an environment that’s “leveling the playing field.” Holding and clinching will be allowed. No specifics on the types of holds were revealed. The gloves in which fighters will compete in will also be different and it’s expected to be a mix between MMA and boxing.

The event is set to be featured on pay-per-view. A musical act is expected from Metallica along with other celebrity guests.

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Steven Cunningham outpoints former UFC champ Frank Mir

Steven Cunningham outpointed former UFC champ Frank Mir on the Jake Paul-Ben Askren card Saturday in Atlanta.

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted on MMAJunkie.com.

***

ATLANTA – Frank Mir’s venture into the boxing world proved unsuccessful Saturday.

Mir, a former UFC heavyweight champion and interim titleholder, transitioned into the ring as a sizable underdog to a far more experienced foe in Steve Cunningham. It showed in the bout, as Cunningham displayed his seasoning to get the win by unanimous decision with scores of 60-54, 60-54, 58-56.

The heavyweight bout was part of the Triller Fight Club main card at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The event aired on pay-per-view.

After weighing in 70 pounds heavier than Cunningham on Friday, Mir attempted to put his size to use early in the fight. Cunningham was mobile, though, staying at range and attacking the body of Mir, who whiffed on big early punches.

Mir showed more comfort as the fight wore on, happily fighting from range and inside the clinch when the referee allowed it. Cunningham was a little too smooth, though, and retained better control and worked the body in the early and mid rounds. There were a couple thudding shots, but nothing that took away the legs of either man.

As the fight went down the stretch, Cunningham controlled the pace with his jab and the shots that came behind it. Mir tried to pressure from the inside, but he was a little too plodding in his attacks an lacked accuracy.

In the end, Cunningham controlled the overwhelming majority of the fight and was rewarded with the unanimous decision win.

Up-to-date Triller Fight Club results included:

  • Steve Cunningham def. Frank Mir via unanimous decision (60-54, 60-54, 58-56)
  • Joe Fournier def. Reykon via TKO (did not answer bell) – Round 3, 3:00

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Steven Cunningham outpoints former UFC champ Frank Mir

Steven Cunningham outpointed former UFC champ Frank Mir on the Jake Paul-Ben Askren card Saturday in Atlanta.

Editor’s note: This article was originally posted on MMAJunkie.com.

***

ATLANTA – Frank Mir’s venture into the boxing world proved unsuccessful Saturday.

Mir, a former UFC heavyweight champion and interim titleholder, transitioned into the ring as a sizable underdog to a far more experienced foe in Steve Cunningham. It showed in the bout, as Cunningham displayed his seasoning to get the win by unanimous decision with scores of 60-54, 60-54, 58-56.

The heavyweight bout was part of the Triller Fight Club main card at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The event aired on pay-per-view.

After weighing in 70 pounds heavier than Cunningham on Friday, Mir attempted to put his size to use early in the fight. Cunningham was mobile, though, staying at range and attacking the body of Mir, who whiffed on big early punches.

Mir showed more comfort as the fight wore on, happily fighting from range and inside the clinch when the referee allowed it. Cunningham was a little too smooth, though, and retained better control and worked the body in the early and mid rounds. There were a couple thudding shots, but nothing that took away the legs of either man.

As the fight went down the stretch, Cunningham controlled the pace with his jab and the shots that came behind it. Mir tried to pressure from the inside, but he was a little too plodding in his attacks an lacked accuracy.

In the end, Cunningham controlled the overwhelming majority of the fight and was rewarded with the unanimous decision win.

Up-to-date Triller Fight Club results included:

  • Steve Cunningham def. Frank Mir via unanimous decision (60-54, 60-54, 58-56)
  • Joe Fournier def. Reykon via TKO (did not answer bell) – Round 3, 3:00

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Triller Fight Club results: Frank Mir drops decision to Steve Cunningham in pro boxing debut

Frank Mir’s venture into the boxing world proved unsuccessful.

ATLANTA – [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag]’s venture into the boxing world proved unsuccessful Saturday.

Mir, a former UFC heavyweight champion and interim titleholder, transitioned into the ring as a sizable underdog to a far more experienced foe in [autotag]Steve Cunningham[/autotag]. It showed in the bout, as Cunningham displayed his seasoning to get the win by unanimous decision with scores of 60-54, 60-54, 58-56.

The heavyweight bout was part of the Triller Fight Club main card at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The event aired on pay-per-view.

After weighing in 70 pounds heavier than Cunningham on Friday, Mir attempted to put his size to use early in the fight. Cunningham was mobile, though, staying at range and attacking the body of Mir, who whiffed on big early punches.

Mir showed more comfort as the fight wore on, happily fighting from range and inside the clinch when the referee allowed it. Cunningham was a little too smooth, though, and retained better control and worked the body in the early and mid rounds. There were a couple thudding shots, but nothing that took away the legs of either man.

As the fight went down the stretch, Cunningham controlled the pace with his jab and the shots that came behind it. Mir tried to pressure from the inside, but he was a little too plodding in his attacks an lacked accuracy.

In the end, Cunningham controlled the overwhelming majority of the fight and was rewarded with the unanimous decision win.

Up-to-date Triller Fight Club results included:

  • Steve Cunningham def. Frank Mir via unanimous decision (60-54, 60-54, 58-56)
  • Joe Fournier def. Reykon via TKO (did not answer bell) – Round 3, 3:00

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Jake Paul vs. Ben Askren: Live blog, results for Triller Fight Club event

Follow along with results and live updates from Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, where Jake Paul and Ben Askren headline a boxing card.

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ATLANTA – MMA Junkie is on the scene and reporting live from tonight’s Triller Fight Club event.

The big attraction of the evening is the highly anticipated boxing match between YouTube star [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] and former MMA champion [autotag]Ben Askren[/autotag], who is making his boxing debut. Also on the pay-per-view main card (9 p.m. ET, FITE.TV) will be former UFC heavyweight champion [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag] stepping into the squared circle for the first time against [autotag]Steve Cunningham[/autotag].

In addition to the night of fights, there will be musical performances by Justin Bieber, The Black Keys, Snoop Dog, Ice Cube, Too $hort, E-40, Doja Cat, Saweetie, Diplo, and Major Lazer.

Keep it locked here for fight results as they happen, as well as live behind-the-scenes updates from Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Frank Mir dreams of sharing card with daughter, Bella, before MMA retirement

Frank Mir’s big “bucket list” item before MMA retirement is to share a card with his daughter, Bella.

ATLANTA – [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag] hasn’t turned his back on MMA now that he’s set to enter his first professional boxing match.

Mir, a former UFC champion, is set to make his in-ring debut Saturday when he meets Steve Cunningham under the Triller Fight Club banner. The heavyweight fight airs on pay-per-view at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Depending on how the fight goes, Mir’s venture into traditional boxing could be one and done. He is signed to Bare Knuckle FC and said he will compete in that organization likely this year, but afterward still has designs on fighting MMA. The motivation is Mir’s daughter, [autotag]Bella Mir[/autotag], who’s gotten off to a strong start to her own MMA career, and it’s her father’s wish to eventually fight alongside her.

“I’m not done with MMA,” Mir told MMA Junkie on Wednesday. “Actually before I retire, my dream is to fight on the same card with my daughter. She’s 2-0 now as a pro. She just won nationals. Her wrestling has kind of taken the front seat right now, but as soon as she has a break from that for a little bit, but before I go – luckily I’m a young father and she’s going to be 18 here soon – it looks good in the next three, four years she’ll be fighting in her early 20s and be a champion, and I’ll open for her.”

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Mir said he’s been taken aback by his daughter’s early career success. She won her debut by unanimous decision in October then turned around six weeks later and picked up a first-round submission. She’s currently taking a break to focus on wrestling but will be back soon.

The traction Bella has gained so early on has Mir unsurprisingly enthusiastic.

“She had one of the highest debuts of any MMA fighter I’ve ever seen, especially not coming from any other background,” Mir said. “Brock Lesnar obviously had a huge one, CM Punk, but they were already superstars in the MMA world. But as far as someone who wasn’t an actor or a pro wrestler or somebody coming over from any entertainment world, her debut, it was very strong. It was a pleasant surprise. I couldn’t believe the popularity. At first it made me nervous, the attention she was getting, because I was like, ‘Wow, this a lot to ask somebody to overtake.’ Her mind is extremely solid and martial arts has done well for her.”

Mir doesn’t know when and where the stars will align for him to fight on the same night as his daughter. Father and son Antonio and A.J. McKee have done something similar under the Bellator banner, and both won their fights. Before all is said and done, Mir wants to put his family name in the history books.

“That would probably be it (for my MMA career),” Mir said. “I don’t know if specifically that would be the last fight, but definitely before I retire that’s on the bucket list.”

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Frank Mir: Steve Cunningham ‘tougher’ boxing debut than Antonio Tarver

Frank Mir calls Steve Cunningham “an even tougher fight” than Antonio Tarver for his professional boxing debut.

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LAS VEGAS – [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag] calls Steve Cunningham “an even tougher fight” than Antonio Tarver for his professional boxing debut next month.

Mir, a former UFC heavyweight champion, will venture into the boxing world when he takes on Cunningham under the Triller Fight Club banner on April 17 in Atlanta. The card airs on pay-per-view from Mercedes Benz Stadium.

The matchup with Cunningham came together just recently after Mir’s originally scheduled opponent Tarver was forced to withdraw. Mir said he thought he was going to have his hands full initially, and although the new opponent brings a different style, he doesn’t think it’s any more beneficial.

“The one thing that hasn’t changed, it was always going to be a challenge,” Mir said at Friday’s Triller Fight Club press conference. “It was going to be something I knew was going to bring the best out of me. Tarver, and I’m not taking away from Cunningham’s boxing skills, Tarver relies more on being cunning, trying to get points for the judges, tying up, landing from distance. Their fight together Cunningham was trying to make it a fight and Tarver slowed it down and made it very close to eek out the split decision, or the draw. Cunningham is a much tougher guy.

“I’m not going to have that advantage in age that I thought I was going to have over Tarver. I knew Tarver probably wasn’t going to come in the best shape. As far as boxing IQ, Cunningham is better than I, but Tarver has even more.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFFxaVtCD-Y

The opponent might be different, but Mir said his mentality toward his boxing debut hasn’t changed. He is excited about seeing how his fighting skills translate into the ring, and his main priority is to offer a good account of himself and the sport he most represents.

“I’m making my debut in the boxing discipline and I’m facing someone who is a former champ,” Mir said. “As far as debuts go for guys going into boxing, this is probably one of the most difficult ones. Obviously I was a professional in MMA I have experience, but this is a new animal all together, so going out there and obviously being victorious is phenomenal, but going out there and being proficient and having a good showing and a good representation of what mixed martial arts are able to do in boxing, is also a victory.”

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Antonio Tarver denied to box Frank Mir by Georgia commission; Triller proposes replacement

The Jake Paul vs. Ben Askren pay-per-view is facing a change near the top of the card.

[autotag]Antonio Tarver[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Frank Mir[/autotag] is no longer the supporting act to Triller’s Jake Paul vs. Ben Askren main event.

The boxing match between former heavyweight boxing champion Tarver and former UFC heavyweight champion Mir will not happen at the pay-per-view event next month.

The Georgia Athletic & Entertainment Commission has deemed Tarver unfit to compete due to a local bylaw, which states that any combat sports athlete over age 50 must have 10 fights in the preceding 10 years. Tarver, 52, has five fights dating back to 2011.

ESPN first reported the news Tuesday, citing commission executive director Matt Woodruff.

Subsequently, Triller has pegged former IBF cruiserweight champion Steve Cunningham as the replacement opponent for Mir.

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Tarver, 52, is a former WBA, WBC, IBF and IBO champion. He most recently saw action in 2015 when he fought to a split draw with Cunningham.

Mir most recently competed in MMA in October 2019 and picked up a decision win over Roy Nelson at Bellator 231. Known as a submission specialist throughout his 20-year career, Mir is signed to BKFC but hasn’t made his debut yet.

Cunningham, 44, has not competed since an August 2017 loss to Andrew Tabiti.

The Paul vs. Askren pay-per-view event is scheduled to take place April 17 at Mercedes Benz Arena in Atlanta and stream on pay-per-view.

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