Jinh Yu Frey vs. Gloria de Paula added to UFC Fight Night on March 13

The UFC’s March 13 lineup just got one fight deeper.

A former Invicta FC champion and a Dana White’s Contender Series alum are set to square off on March 13.

Former Invicta FC atomweight champion [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag] will face UFC debutant [autotag]Gloria de Paula[/autotag] at the UFC Fight Night event which does not yet have a location or venue.

A person with knowledge of the situation confirmed the booking to MMA Junkie after de Paula posted about it on Instagram. The person asked to remain anonymous as the promotion has yet to make an announcement.

Frey (9-6 MMA, 0-2 UFC) will search for her first UFC victory in her third attempt. The Texas-based fighter signed a UFC deal in mid-2020 after stops in Invicta FC, Rizin FF, and Road FC. Frey was submitted by Kay Hansen in her promotional debut in June before losing a unanimous decision to Loma Lookboonmee in October.

De Paula (5-2 MMA, 0-0 UFC) punched her ticket into the UFC with a unanimous decision victory over Pita Macias on Dana White’s Contender Series in November. The 25-year-old Brazilian fighter has won four of her most recent five outings. De Paula is the girlfriend of UFC flyweight Mayra Bueno Silva.

With the addition, the March 13 lineup includes:

  • Irwin Rivera vs. Ray Rodriguez
  • Davey Grant vs. Jonathan Martinez
  • Matthew Semelsberger vs. Jason Witt
  • Gloria de Paula vs. Jinh Yu Frey

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Loma Lookboonmee vs. Jinh Yu Frey targeted for UFC’s Oct. 3 event

A strawweight matchup between Loma Lookboonmee and Jinh Yu Frey is in the works for the UFC’s Oct. 3 event.

A strawweight matchup is in the works for the UFC’s Oct. 3 event.

[autotag]Loma Lookboonmee[/autotag] (4-2 MMA, 1-1 UFC) will take on [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag] (9-5 MMA, 0-1 UFC) on an unannounced fight card at an undetermined location.

MMA Junkie confirmed the booking with multiple people with knowledge of the situation. The people requested anonymity because the promotion has yet to make an official announcement.

Lookboonmee, the first Thai-born UFC fighter in history, is coming off a unanimous decision loss to Angela Hill at UFC on ESPN+ 26 in February. Prior to that, she picked up a split decision win over Aleksandra Albu last October.

Former Invicta FC atomweight champion Frey moved up to strawweight for her UFC debut, but suffered a third-round submission loss to fellow newcomer Kay Hansen at UFC on ESPN 12 in June.

Lookboonmee vs. Frey is the first matchup to be reported for the UFC’s Oct. 3 event.

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UFC on ESPN 12 salaries: Dustin Poirier leads three fighters with six-figure paydays

Dustin Poirier was the biggest winner at UFC on ESPN 12, both figuratively and financially.

[autotag]Dustin Poirier[/autotag] was the biggest winner at UFC on ESPN 12, both figuratively and financially.

After gutting out a grueling unanimous decision win over [autotag]Dan Hooker[/autotag] in the main event Saturday, Poirier (26-6 MMA, 18-5 UFC) took home a $300,000 disclosed purse. Add on his “Fight of the Night” bonus, and Poirier pocketed $350,000 total for his efforts.

MMA Junkie on Monday obtained a list of fighter salaries from the Nevada Athletic Commission for UFC on ESPN 12, which took place at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.

Poirier, 31, was among three fighters to earn a six-figure paycheck. Joining him were Hooker, who earned $110,000, and [autotag]Mike Perry[/autotag], who pocketed $180,000 after defeating [autotag]Mickey Gall[/autotag], who made $50,000.

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The total disclosed pay for the 10-fight card was $1.14 million.

The full list of UFC on ESPN 12 salaries includes:

  • Dustin Poirier: $300,000 (includes $150,000 win bonus) def. Dan Hooker: $110,000
  • Mike Perry: $180,000 (includes $90,000 win bonus) def. Mickey Gall: $50,000
  • [autotag]Maurice Greene[/autotag]: $60,000 (includes $30,000 win bonus) def. [autotag]Gian Villante[/autotag]: $75,000
  • [autotag]Brendan Allen[/autotag]: $28,000 (includes $14,000 win bonus) def. [autotag]Kyle Daukaus[/autotag]: $12,000
  • [autotag]Takashi Sato[/autotag]: $28,000 (includes $14,000 win bonus) def. [autotag]Jason Witt[/autotag]: $12,000
  • [autotag]Julian Erosa[/autotag]: $28,000 (includes $14,000 win bonus) def. Sean Woodson: $12,000
  • [autotag]Tanner Boser[/autotag]: $24,000 (includes $12,000 win bonus) def. [autotag]Philipe Lins[/autotag]: $80,000
  • [autotag]Kay Hansen[/autotag]: $28,000 (includes $14,000 win bonus) def. [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag]: $14,000
  • [autotag]Youssef Zalal[/autotag]: $24,000 (includes $12,000 win bonus) def. [autotag]Jordan Griffin[/autotag]: $20,000

The figures do not include deductions for items such as insurance, licenses and taxes. Additionally, the figures do not include money paid by sponsors, including the official UFC on ESPN 12 Promotional Guidelines Compliance pay. They also do not include any other “locker room” or special discretionary bonuses the UFC sometimes pays. They also do not include pay-per-view cuts that some top-level fighters receive.

For example, UFC officials also handed out a “Fight of the Night” bonus to Poirier and Hooker – and two $50,000 “Performance of the Night” bonuses to Hansen and Erosa.

In other words, the above figures are simply base salaries reported to the commission and do not reflect entire compensation packages for the event.

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UFC on ESPN 12 medical suspensions: Dustin Poirier, Dan Hooker get matching terms

Three fighters are facing 180-day suspensions as a result of UFC on ESPN 12.

Three fighters are facing 180-day suspensions as a result of UFC on ESPN 12 – but neither of the card’s headliners is among them.

On Tuesday, MMA Junkie acquired a full list of UFC on ESPN 12 medical suspensions from the Nevada Athletic Commission. Fighters can return sooner than the duration of their suspensions if cleared by a doctor.

Despite a back-and-forth battle for 25 minutes, [autotag]Dustin Poirier[/autotag] and [autotag]Dan Hooker[/autotag] walked away relatively unscathed. Both men received a 60-day suspension due to a “tough fight.”

The three fighters facing the longest suspensions are [autotag]Gian Villante[/autotag], [autotag]Brendan Allen[/autotag], and [autotag]Khama Worthy[/autotag]. All three combatants were handed potential six-month terms due to various injuries.

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Villante suffered a hand injury in his main card loss to [autotag]Maurice Greene[/autotag], right after Allen sustained injuries to his nose and eye against [autotag]Kyle Daukaus[/autotag]. Allen’s manager, Brian Butler, revealed the extent of his fighter’s injuries in a post on Sunday. As for Worthy, the promotional sophomore injured both his knee and hand in a win over [autotag]Luis Pena[/autotag], according to the medical report.

The full list of UFC on ESPN 12 medical suspensions include:

  • Dustin Poirier: Suspended 60 days with no contact for 45 days due to a “tough fight”
  • Dan Hooker: Suspended 60 days with no contact for 45 days due to a “tough fight”
  • [autotag]Mike Perry[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days or until left eyebrow lacerations are cleared by a doctor
  • [autotag]Mickey Gall[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days
  • Maurice Greene: Suspended 45 days with no contact for 30 days due to left cheek laceration
  • Gian Villante: Suspended 180 days or until left hand x-ray is cleared by a doctor; also suspended 45 days with no contact for 30 days
  • Brendan Allen: Suspended 180 days or until left orbital, nasal, and sinus fractures are cleared by an ear, nose, and throat doctor; also suspended 45 days with no contact for 30 days
  • Kyle Daukaus: Suspended 60 days with no contact for 45 days due to eyebrow laceration
  • [autotag]Takashi Sato[/autotag]: No suspension
  • [autotag]Jason Witt[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with no contact for 30 days
  • [autotag]Julian Erosa[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with no contact for 30 days due to left eye laceration
  • [autotag]Sean Woodson[/autotag]: Suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days
  • Khama Worthy: Suspended 180 days or until right ankle x-ray and left knee MRI are cleared by an orthopedic doctor.
  • Luis Pena: Suspended 30 days with no contact for 21 days
  • [autotag]Tanner Boser[/autotag]: No suspension
  • [autotag]Philipe Lins[/autotag]: Suspended 60 days with no contact for 45 days
  • [autotag]Kay Hansen[/autotag]: Suspended 45 days with no contact for 30 days, or until left eye laceration is cleared by a doctor
  • [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag]: No suspension
  • [autotag]Youssef Zalal[/autotag]: No suspension
  • [autotag]Jordan Griffin[/autotag]: No suspension

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How to watch UFC on ESPN 12: Poirier vs. Hooker, with full fight card betting odds

How to watch Poirier vs. Hooker, with betting odds for the full UFC on ESPN 12 fight card.

[jwplayer V5jyIoVm]

UFC on ESPN 12 is set for Saturday at UFC APEX in Las Vegas. The main card, highlighted by the main event between Dustin “The Diamond” Poirier and Dan “The Hangman” Hooker, will begin at 8 p.m. ET. The prelims start at 5 p.m. ET and the entire fight card is available on ESPN and ESPN+. Below, we look at BetMGM‘s betting odds for UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs. Hooker.

How to watch UFC on ESPN 12: Poirier vs. Hooker

Where can I watch UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs. Hooker

The main card is available on ESPN and ESPN+; sign up for ESPN+ here.

Prelim bouts are available on ESPN and ESPN+.

What time is UFC Fight Night?

The main card is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. ET.

Prelims are set for 5 p.m. ET.

When is UFC Fight Night?

Saturday, June 27.

Where is UFC Fight Night taking place?

UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs. Hooker will be held at UFC APEX in Las Vegas.

UFC on ESPN 12: Poirier vs. Hooker full main card

Betting odds courtesy of BetMGM. All lines last updated Friday at 7:45 a.m. ET.

Dustin Poirier (-228) vs. Dan Hooker (+185)

The No. 3 contender in the lightweight division, Poirier is being given a sizable edge against the fifth-ranked Hooker. Poirier is 25-6 heading into the fight against the 20-8 New Zealander.

Mike Perry (-313) vs. Mickey Gall (+250)

Perry (13-6) comes into this one with a considerable experience advantage over Gall (6-2). Both fighters are unranked in the welterweight division.

Brendan Allen (-304) vs. Kyle Daukaus (+240)

Allen is the No. 13 middleweight contender with a record of 14-3. Daukaus is unranked despite a perfect 9-0 MMA record. He beat Nolan Norwood by submission for the Cage Fury Fighting Championships title Jan. 31.

Gian Villante (+190) vs. Maurice Greene (-239)

The lone heavyweight bout on the main card features two unranked fighters. Villante (17-11) is giving up four inches of both height and reach, and 38 pounds to the 6-foot-7 Greene (8-5).

Sean Woodson (-435) vs. Julian Erosa (+330)

Woodson is the heaviest favorite on the entire UFC Fight Night card as he puts his 7-0 record on the line against the 22-9 Erosa in this catchweight fight. Erosa snapped a three-fight losing skid with a win over A.J. Bryant at CageSport 60 in February.


Want to place a bet on UFC on ESPN 12? Place bets at BetMGM online in CO, IN, NJ and WV! New customer offer: Risk-free first bet! Visit BetMGM for terms and conditions. Bet now!


UFC on ESPN 12 prelims card

The prelim card is scheduled to start at 5 p.m. ET.

Luis Pena (-250) vs. Khama Worthy (+200)

Pena is the heaviest favorite on the prelims card in his lightweight bout against Worthy. Pena is 8-2 and has a four-inch height advantage against his 15-6 opponent.

Mara Romero Borella (NA) vs. Miranda Maverick (NA)

Romero Borella (12-8) is three inches taller with a four-inch reach advantage over Maverick (7-2) in a women’s flyweight bout. Borella has lost her last three UFC Fight Night tilts, most recently being submitted by Cortney Casey in Round 1 of a May 16 fight.

Philipe Lins (-115) vs. Tanner Boser (-106)

Lins (14-4) has a slight edge over Boser (17-6-1) in another heavyweight contest. The Canadian Boser is 10 pounds heavier, but both fighters stand at 6-foot-2.

Takashi Sato (-134) vs. Ramiz Brahimaj (+110)

Sato (15-3) is favored over Brahimaj (8-2) in a welterweight bout. Both contestants stand at 5-foot-10, weigh 170 pounds and have 73 inches of reach.

Jordan Griffin (+100) vs. Youssef Zalal (-121)

Griffin (18-7) is a slight underdog despite being considerably more experienced than Zalal (8-2). Both fighters are coming off wins in February.

Kay Hansen (-173) vs. Jinh Yu Frey (+145)

Hansen (6-3) and Frey (9-4) will open UFC Fight Night with a women’s strawweight bout and the edge goes to Hansen.

To watch the full card, sign up for ESPN+ now.

If you want some betting action on any of these MMA bouts, place your wagers at BetMGM now. For more sports betting picks and analysis, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and Facebook.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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Invicta FC contenders Jinh Yu Frey, Kay Hansen to square off at UFC on ESPN 12

Jinh Yu Frey and Kay Hansen can now call themselves UFC fighters.

[autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag] and [autotag]Kay Hansen[/autotag] are now members of the UFC roster.

The Invicta FC staples have signed with the promotion and are expected to face off against one another Saturday at UFC on ESPN 12. Oren Hodak of KO Reps management, which represents Frey, confirmed the booking to MMA Junkie on Sunday.

Frey (9-4 MMA, 0-0 UFC), a former Invicta champion, alluded to her signing in an Instagram post Sunday. Hansen (6-3 MMA, 0-0 UFC) announced her signing outright.

A professional since 2013, Frey has competed largely under the Invicta banner, with stops in RIZIN and Road FC along the way. In February, Frey defeated Ashley Cummins by unanimous decision. However, she was stripped of her title upon missing weight prior to the fight.

At 20, Hansen becomes the second youngest fighter on the UFC’s roster – one year the elder of Chase Hooper. Entering her UFC debut, Hansen won back-to-back fights against Nicolle Caliari and Liana Pirosin.

UFC on ESPN 12 takes place Saturday at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. The event will simulcast on ESPN and ESPN+.

With the addition, the UFC on ESPN 12 lineup now includes:

  • Dustin Poirier vs. Dan Hooker
  • Mickey Gall vs. Mike Perry
  • Brendan Allen vs. Kyle Daukaus
  • Maurice Greene vs. Gian Villante
  • Luis Pena vs. Khama Worthy
  • Tanner Boser vs. Philipe Lins
  • Viviane Araujo vs. Jennifer Maia
  • Kyle Nelson vs. Sean Woodson
  • Ramiz Brahimaj vs. Takashi Sato
  • Jinh Yu Frey vs. Kay Hansen

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Invicta FC 39 results: Jinh Yu Frey edges Ashley Cummins, so belt stays vacant

A mishap with her weight meant Jinh Yu Frey no longer had a title to defend Friday night, and that made her win a little anticlimactic.

A mishap with her weight meant [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag] no longer had a title to defend Friday night, and that made her win a little anticlimactic.

When Frey (9-4) was announced the unanimous decision winner over [autotag]Ashley Cummins[/autotag] (7-5) with a trio of 48-47 scores in the five-round main event, many in the crowd booed their disapproval. And it did seem like Cummins may have been just a little quicker than Frey most of the night.

But it was Frey who took the win in the atomweight title fight – even though she no longer had a 105-pound title to defend. Only Cummins could win the belt after Frey missed weight by 0.8 pounds at Thursday’s weigh-in, and she fell short in a rematch from a 2017 fight that Frey also won.

“It feels good to get a win, but it still can’t erase the fact I missed weight,” Frey said afterward. “We’re going to go home and reevaluate things and see if 105 is the place to be, or if it’s time to go up.”

A Cummins win would have given her the atomweight title. But since Frey missed weight and was stripped, the belt becomes vacant – with Frey now at the top of the heap to try to win it back.

Invicta FC 39 took place Friday at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kan. The event streamed on UFC Fight Pass.

When Cummins and Frey first fought, the bout was largely contested on the canvas and Frey walked away with a unanimous decision. But that wasn’t the case this time around.

The fight stayed standing in the first round, and each fighter worked kicks to the body and straight punches. But despite some big swings from each, neither landed anything truly definitive – though Cummins seemed to come on stronger than Frey late in the round.

In the second, Frey ducked under a punch and looked for a takedown. Cummins defended, and Frey was forced to clinch up. She looked for a trip takedown, but Cummins turned things around and broke away. Cummins landed a solid combination two minutes in, but then ate a big left a few seconds later. Cummins landed hard in return, and it forced Frey to tie her up again. Cummins was cut over her right eye from the Frey left hand, but she pushed forward without a care. A Frey punch briefly put Cummins on the canvas, but she quickly bounced back up.

After a close third, with a couple minutes left in the fourth round, Frey put a nice combination together. But Cummins kept pushing forward with jabs, hooks and kick attempts. Frey stayed busy late in the round, but couldn’t put anything definitive on Cummins.

Cummins thought about a takedown a couple minutes into the final round, but it wasn’t there. Instead, the fight stayed where it had been the first 22 minutes, and stayed mostly even. With neither fighter taking an obvious advantage, it went to the judges with a fair amount of uncertainty over which fighter would get the nod.

Miranda Maverick dominates Pearl Gonzalez

[autotag]Miranda Maverick[/autotag] stayed after a finish throughout the co-main event. It never came, but Maverick (7-2) settled for a fairly dominant win, and arguably the biggest of her career against former UFC fighter [autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] (10-5). Maverick swept the scorecards with a pair of 30-27s and a 30-26.

Thirty seconds in, Gonzalez landed a pair of body kicks. But 30 seconds later, Maverick drove in and took Gonzalez to the canvas. She worked around and passed to side control 30 seconds later and tried to go to work with ground-and-pound while Gonzalez defended. When Gonzalez tried to scramble her way out, Maverick took her back with more than half the round left. Maverick landed a series of punches to try to soften Gonzalez up, then with 90 seconds left worked for a rear-naked choke. But up against the fence, Gonzalez reversed with a minute left and got on top. She was in danger of a triangle choke from Maverick, but cleared it and tried to land big ground-and-pound of her own before Maverick reversed again near the horn.

Just 20 seconds into the second round, Gonzalez took Maverick to the canvas and grinded down the clock there until Maverick eventually got back to her feet. There, she spun Gonzalez around and landed some short knees and then scooped her legs up and delivered her own takedown with a minute left in the frame. With 30 seconds left, Maverick jumped to full mount and landed heavy punches and elbows, but couldn’t get enough done for a stoppage.

The two traded kicks early in the third, and a spinning back fist from Gonzalez landed hard. But her momentum allowed Maverick to clinch her up, then take her down a minute in. From her back, Gonzalez briefly worked for a triangle choke, but couldn’t get close enough while Maverick postured up and landed knees to the body. With two minutes left, Gonzalez got back to her feet, but Maverick immediately went back to a takedown attempt. She got it, then eventually took Gonzalez’s back again.

Invicta FC 39 results:

  • Jinh Yu Frey vs. Ashley Cummins via unanimous decision (48-47, 48-47, 48-47)
  • Miranda Maverick def. Pearl Gonzalez via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-26)
  • [autotag]Alesha Zappitella[/autotag] def. [autotag]Kelly D’Angelo[/autotag] via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)
  • [autotag]Erin Blanchfield[/autotag] def. [autotag]Victoria Leonardo[/autotag] via knockout (head kick, punches) – Round 2, 2:06
  • [autotag]Jillian DeCoursey[/autotag] def. [autotag]Linda Mihalec[/autotag] via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 29-28)
  • [autotag]Monica Franco[/autotag] def. [autotag]Tina Pettigrew[/autotag] via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-26)

Jinh Yu Frey misses weight for Invicta FC 39, vacates atomweight title

Jinh Yu Frey will still fight at Invicta FC 39, but she won’t defend the atomweight title.

[autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag] will still fight Friday, but she won’t defend the Invicta FC atomweight championship.

Why? It’s not her’s anymore. Frey (8-4) missed weight by 0.8 pounds at Thursday’s Invicta FC 39 official weigh-ins. As a result, Frey vacated the 105-pound strap ahead of her fight with challenger [autotag]Ashley Cummins[/autotag] (7-4).

Cummins can still win the title with a victory, but the belt would remain vacant if Frey wins.

Shortly after the weight miss, Frey, who was fined 25 percent of her fight purse, issued a statement on her Instagram page. The former champ said she was humiliated by the miss, deeming it a failure at professionalism.

“To my absolute humiliation, this morning I missed the atomweight championship limit by 0.8 lbs. I have plenty of reasons, but they don’t matter.

I failed in my professionalism. The fight will proceed, but it is now vacant and I will not be fighting for the belt. If I win, I will receive the next title shot. After the event, my husband and I will revisit this and discuss where we go from here and where my future lies. I still have a 5 round fight on the horizon, so for now that will have to await my attention. My apologies to my opponent, her camp, Invicta, and the fans for failing in my duties. But, for now my mind and focus is on tomorrow.”

Invicta FC 39 takes place Friday at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kan. The card streams on UFC Fight Pass.

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Check out complete weigh-ins results below, per Invicta FC.

  • Jinh Yu Frey (105.8) vs. Ashley Cummins (104.5)
  • Pearl Gonzalez (124.7) vs. Miranda Maverick (125.1)
  • Shanna Young (N/A) vs. Daiana Torquato (125.1) – fight cancelled due to Young medical concerns
  • Alesha Zappitella (105.5) vs. Kelly D’Angelo (105.8)
  • Erin Blanchfield (125.1) vs. Victoria Leonardo (124.6)
  • Jillian DeCoursey (105.7) vs. Linda Mihalec (105.2)
  • Tina Pettigrew (135.3) vs. Monica Franco (134.8)

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Invicta FC 39 headliners Jinh Yu Frey, Ashley Cummins want UFC to add atomweight division

“Hopefully 2020 will be the year (the UFC) finally starts the atomweight division.”

Invicta FC 39 won’t be the first time [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag] and [autotag]Ashley Cummins[/autotag] face off.

Two of the world’s top atomweights, Frey (8-4) and Cummins (7-4) fought two and a half years ago at Invicta FC 24 in July 2017. Unlike Friday night’s rematch, their initial meeting wasn’t for championship gold. After three rounds of fighting, Frey was named the victor by unanimous decision.

Though they spent 15 minutes familiarizing themselves with one another, neither fighter thinks there’s much knowledge they can bring into their second fight in 2020.

“I haven’t gone back and watched it,” Frey told MMA Junkie. “She’s switched camps since then. I’ve changed coaches since then. That was almost two and a half years ago. A lot has changed since then, so I’m not going to base my training too heavily on how the previous fight went.”

Both fighters agree there isn’t much to be learned from rewatching the first fight. That’s not to say Frey and Cummins haven’t been preparing specifically for one another since July 2017.

The two were supposed to fight in October at Invicta FC 37, but Jinh pulled out late with an injury. According to Cummins, the fight was also previously booked a third time, but never came to fruition.

“This is the third time the fight has been scheduled,” Cummins told MMA Junkie. “We were supposed to fight in October. I did an entire camp. A little more than a week out, it got canceled. Before that, it was scheduled again. (Invicta FC president) Shannon (Knapp) called my coach and said we were fighting for the belt. I was just waiting on a contract. I was in camp for about two weeks and I found out Jinh was fighting for a belt in Asia, instead.”

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For Cummins, the motivation to take this fight was simple. She wants to erase the loss on her record – and win a belt in the process.

“My only loss at 105 pounds is to Jinh, so I’m looking to avenge my only loss at this weight class and become a world champion,” Cummins said. “Becoming a world champion has been my goal since day one when I started training 13 years ago.”

On the other and, Frey’s incentive to take a fight against someone she already beat was a little more complex. Regardless of who’s in the on-deck circle, Frey wants to face the toughest challenges out there. At atomweight right now, that’s Cummins.

“Anybody who is willing to challenge me for my spot, I’m willing to take them on whether I’ve fought them before or not,” Frey said. “I’m defending my territory.”

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Both fighters are happy representing Invicta, but neither would deny their interest in joining the UFC should that opportunity come about – especially Cummins. Frey is a little less optimistic, but didn’t rule out the possibility.

“I’ve heard a lot of rumors that say maybe the UFC is starting to look into the atomweight division,” Frey said. “I’m going to be 35 this year and I’m hanging in there as long as I can. We’ll see. I’m not basing my hopes at the start they’ll start a division. … I’m just taking it one fight at a time.”

“Every day I say a little prayer the UFC is finally going to start the atomweight division,” Cummins said. “That’s been the goal – to be a UFC fighter. I want to be a world champ and I want to be a UFC fighter. Hopefully 2020 will be the year (the UFC) finally starts the atomweight division.”

Invicta FC 39 takes place Friday at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kan. The card streams on UFC Fight Pass.

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Invicta FC 39 features Jinh Yu Frey-Ashley Cummins 2, Pearl Gonzalez-Miranda Maverick

Seven fights have been announced for the first Invicta FC card of 2020, including two intriguing fights at the top of the bill.

Invicta FC has a date, location, and lineup for its first event of 2020.

Friday, Feb. 7, Invicta FC 39 takes place at Memorial Hall in Kansas Ciry, Kan, the promotion announced in a press release Thursday. In addition, the promotion announced seven bookings are set for the event.

In the main event, the atomweight title will be on the line. Champion [autotag]Jinh Yu Frey[/autotag] (8-4 MMA) will defend her strap against [autotag]Ashley Cummins[/autotag] (7-4 MMA).

Invicta FC 39 marks the second time the two fighters have squared off. At Invicta FC 24 in July 2017, the two women competed in a three-round fight. After the two combatants utilized the full 15 minutes, the judges unanimously declared Frey the victor.

Also featured on the card, former Invicta FC title challenger [autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] takes on [autotag]Miranda Maverick[/autotag]. Gonzalez (10-4 MMA) has won four out of five outings since being released from the UFC in late 2017. As for Maverick (6-2 MMA), the 22-year-old flyweight defeated three opponents in one night at Phoenix Series 2 in September.

Invicta FC 39 streams live on UFC Fight Pass (8 p.m. ET).

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Check out the current lineup below:

  • Jinh Yu Frey vs. Ashley Cummins
  • Pearl Gonzalez vs. Miranda Maverick
  • [autotag]Mariya Agapova[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Daiana Torquato[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Kelly D’Angelo[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Alesha Zappitella[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Erin Blanchfield[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Victoria Leonardo[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Jillian DeCoursey[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Linda Mihalec[/autotag]
  • [autotag]Tina Pettigrew[/autotag] vs. TBA

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