LFA 125 results: Jaqueline Amorim snatches leg, strawweight championship gold with slick kneebar

A former IBJJF champ, Jaqueline Amorim looked the part Friday at LFA 125.

[autotag]Jaqueline Amorim[/autotag] was an IBJFF champion before she entered the world of MMA, and she showed glimpses of that Friday when she clinched an LFA title.

In the LFA 125 headliner, Amorim (5-0) defeated [autotag]Loveth Young[/autotag] (3-2-1) via with an 86-second kneebar submission to pocket the vacant LFA women’s strawweight championship.

The win was not without some madness and adversity. In the opening minute, Young blatantly grabbed the cage with both hands on a takedown attempt and swiftly received a point deduction from referee John England for the foul.

Upon the reset, Young pushed Amorim to the canvas and hurled bombs downward. After a shot clunked off her face, Amorim scrambled and grabbed hold of Young’s leg. A few small adjustments and the torque was unbearable. Amorim tapped Young to win her first MMA title and extend her finishing streak to five.

“I want to be (UFC) champion one day,” Amorim told MMA Junkie in January. “I know I have a lot of work to do. I always put in my head that I’m not just going to go into this sport and be like one more fighter. I really want to be the champion one day. That’s what I’m putting the work in for now.”

The full LFA 125 main card results include:

  • Jaqueline Amorim (5-0) def. Loveth Young (3-2-1) via submission (kneebar) – Round 1, 1:26
  • Adam Fugitt (8-2) def. Solomon Renfro (8-3) via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 0:43
  • Michael Stack (7-1) def. Caio Gregorio (7-4) via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
  • Ashley Nichols def. Hilarie Rose via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 30-27)
  • Guilherme Faria (18-9) def. Zach Zane (15-11) via TKO (leg kicks and punches) – Round 2, 3:27

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Meet Jaqueline Amorim, the IBJJF world champion challenging for an LFA title

After a successful career in the world of grappling, Jaqueline Amorim could be the next strawweight star.

[autotag]Jaqueline Amorim[/autotag] doesn’t think the pandemic caused her switch to MMA, but it certainly sped up the process.

From a young age, Amorim was fixated on grappling. Inspired by watching tapes of Royce Gracie and PRIDE with her father, Amorim began on a combat sports path at a young age. By 22, Amorim won IBJJF, UAEJJF and CBJJ championships.

It always was part of her plan to pivot to MMA at some point. But when the well of jiu-jitsu events ran dry due to COVID-19 postponements and cancellations, Amorim expedited her timeline.

“I always knew I wanted to do MMA,” Amorim recently told MMA Junkie. “When I was young, watching the fights with my dad, I always thought, ‘Oh, this is pretty cool.’ I was just waiting for the right time to go to the transition. I won World’s, Pans – I had my goals. I said, ‘When I reach these goals, I’m going to try MMA.’ I always knew it was what I wanted to do. I always thought it was pretty cool, like I was watching the UFC together with (my dad). I just wanted to pick the right time to do the transition.”

Born in Brazil, Amorim moved to Charlotte, N.C., in 2013 for training purposes – and to teach classes, too. Since then, Amorim dabbled in training at American Top Team in Coconut Creek, Fla. In preparation for her upcoming fight Friday at LFA 125, Amorim made ATT her permanent home.

“I felt like I need the best training I can get right now because this is a really important fight for me,” Amorim said. “I’m actually doing my whole fight camp here. After this fight camp, I’m going to be a full part of the gym.”

All of her opponents know her background and the success she reached in the grappling world. Few want to go to the ground with her, which means, unsurprisingly, Amorim’s main focus has been her standup.

Although it was a more difficult pick-up than she expected, Amorim is happy with the strides she’s made in the standup. At LFA 110 in July, Amorim won by strikes for the first time – with a 10-second knockout of Megan Owen.

“I know I have good grappling, but it’s different to think you have good jiu-jitsu vs. when you actually have to do it MMA,” Amorim said. “It’s different. You need all kinds of different things. I always knew I’m a good grappler, but you need to have good striking and the right distance. I never thought it was going to be easy, but it’s way more hard than I thought. In MMA, you need everything. I’m improving the things I’m not (the best) at, like my striking, my wrestling. I think I’m doing better every day. I’m not perfect, but I’m working at what I’m not great at.”

MMA has grown to be such an international sport. Aspiring fighters no longer are confined to home country idols. While the likes of Brazil’s Demian Maia and Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza inspired her on the come-up, so too did Russia’s Khabib Nurmagomedov.

Although she takes it step-by-step, Amorim wants her name eventually to join her role models in the ranks of those who graced the UFC cage. Friday, Amorim (4-0) has the opportunity to move to 5-0 against Loveth Young (3-1-1) and win the LFA women’s strawweight title in the process.

An unofficial feeder league for the UFC, LFA could provide Amorim the stepping stone she needs to get the call from a major promotion. That’ll be the next step as she moves toward her ultimate goal of UFC gold.

“Right now, I just want to be the best fighter I can be and improve every area of my game,” Amorim said. “But of course, I want to be the champion one day. I know I have a lot of work to do. I always put in my head that I’m not just going to go into this sport and be like one more fighter. I really want to be the champion one day. That’s what I’m putting the work in for now.”

LFA 125 takes place Friday at Seneca Niagara Resort and Casino in Niagara, N.Y. and streams on UFC Fight Pass.

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On the Doorstep: 5 fighters who could make UFC, Bellator, PFL with February wins

For those who make it to the highest stage, the journey starts long before they strap on UFC or Bellator gloves.

Every champion in MMA history started out somewhere.

For those who make it to the highest stage, the journey begins long before they strap on UFC, Bellator, or PFL gloves. Modern-era fighters progress through the regional ranks with hopes of accomplishing the highest accolades. Many will try, few will succeed.

This month, five fighters on the verge of achieving major promotion notoriety – one for the second time – return to the cage for what could be their stepping stone fight. There are dozens of fighters close to making the jump in the coming weeks, but these five are particularly exemplary.

This month:

  • One of Factory X’s most beastly fighters is chomping at the bit to fight in front of Dana White for the first time.
  • A former Bellator fighter on a three-fight winning streak is ready to prove his worth in front of the UFC boss – and earn a sponsorship. from the Nelk Boys.
  • A bright up-and-comer is only 4-0, but his fifth win, should he capture it, could be his ticket to the UFC.
  • After years of domination and excitement in Combate Global, an experienced featherweight hopes adding another Fury FC win to his resume will catch the eyes of UFC matchmakers.
  • After she dominated the world of grappling, this Brazilian fighter is eager to continue marching toward the top by capturing LFA title gold.

LFA 110 video: Jaqueline Amorim KOs Megan Owen in 10 seconds

Jaqueline Amorim was the biggest favorite at LFA 110, and she showed why with a blistering knockout of Megan Owen.

[autotag]Jaqueline Amorim[/autotag] was the biggest favorite on Friday’s LFA 110 card, and she showed why with a blistering knockout of Megan Owen.

Amorim (4-0) came out of the gate on fire in the strawweight bout, which took place at Grand Casino Hotel & Resort in Shawnee, Okla., and streamed on UFC Fight Pass. She loaded up against Owen (1-1) in the first exchange, and it paid off.

After Owen threw the first punch, Amorim scored a brilliant counter right hand that instantly dropped Owen. She followed up with a few ground shots to seal the deal, and the second fastest knockout in LFA history was in the books.

Check out the replay of the stoppage below (via Twitter):

Coming into the fight, the 26-year-old Amorim had earned all of her career victories by submission. She put the first knockout on her record against Owen, and it couldn’t have come in more spectacular fashion.

“It feels great,” Amorim said in her post-fight interview with Alan Jouban. “I always knew I had power, I was just waiting for the right moment to show I’m not just a grappler. I can throw hands, too.”