Gamebred Boxing 4 fighter pay: Anthony Pettis vs. Roy Jones Jr. card reaches almost $3 million combined

See the disclosed payouts for Anthony Pettis, Roy Jones. Jr., Vitor Belfort, Jose Aldo, and more, per the state of Wisconsin.

Gamebred Boxing 4 took place Saturday at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisc., where six fighters took home six-figure paydays as a result of their bouts.

Thursday, MMA Junkie acquired a list of the disclosed payouts from the Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services, which oversees the state’s athletic commission and regulation of combat sports events.

The amounts reflect the disclosed payouts only and do not include any off-contract bonuses, sponsor payments, or discretionary bonuses.

Of the 26 fighters to compete on the card, 20 were on flat purse contracts, while the remaining six fighters were on show-win deals. Headliners [autotag]Anthony Pettis[/autotag] and [autotag]Roy Jones Jr.[/autotag] took home the largest purses of the bunch, as they combined for $1,350,000.

The total payout for all fighters on the card was $2,827,700.

Scroll below to see what the 26 fighters on Gamebred Boxing 4 were paid – disclosed amounts only.

UFC veterans in MMA and boxing action March 30-April 1

Check out which UFC veterans are in MMA and boxing action across the globe this weekend.

The UFC idle this week after a trip to San Antonio for UFC on ESPN 43, where [autotag]Cory Sandhagen[/autotag] picked up a big bantamweight win over [autotag]Marlon Vera[/autotag].

Elsewhere, many other MMA events are taking place, including Bellator and PFL kicking off their 2023 regular season. Those events, and others feature a number of familiar names that have competed under the UFC banner.

This week, there are a total of 32 veterans of the global MMA leader competing in MMA and boxing this week from March 30-April 1.

Check out the names and details about their bouts below.

Upcoming event information from Tapology.

Full fight card announced for Jorge Masvidal’s Gamebred Boxing 4, includes 9 UFC alumni

The full fight card for Jorge Masvidal’s Gamebred Boxing 4 has been released with nine UFC alumni on the card.

The finalized lineup for [autotag]Jorge Masvidal[/autotag]’s Gamebred Boxing 4 is set, and it features nine former UFC fighters.

Monday, the promotion announced its fight card, which is headlined by boxing legend [autotag]Roy Jones Jr.[/autotag] against former UFC lightweight champion [autotag]Anthony Pettis[/autotag]. The event takes place Saturday at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee and streams on UFC Fight Pass pay-per-view for $49.99.

Also on the card, former UFC featherweight champion [autotag]Jose Aldo[/autotag] fights [autotag]Jeremy Stephens[/autotag], an opponent he defeated by TKO in MMA. Former UFC middleweight champion [autotag]Vitor Belfort[/autotag] takes on [autotag]Ronaldo Souza[/autotag].

Also familiar to UFC fans, promotional alumni [autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] and [autotag]Gina Mazany[/autotag] square off. A bout between former UFC fighters [autotag]Joe Riggs[/autotag] and [autotag]Markus Perez[/autotag] is also scheduled.

The full Gamebred Boxing 4 lineup includes:

  • Roy Jones Jr. vs. Anthony Pettis
  • Vitor Belfort vs. Ronaldo Souza
  • Jose Aldo vs. Jeremy Stephens
  • Clarence Booth vs. Luis Feliciano
  • Devin Cushing vs. Damian David Marciano
  • Pearl Gonzalez vs. Gina Mazany
  • Dillon Cleckler vs. Josh Burns
  • Markus Perez vs. Joe Riggs
  • Andy Nguyen vs. Bi Nguyen
  • Danielle Cohen vs. Danielle Wynn
  • Roberto Armas vs. Javier Zamarron
  • Cade Howell vs. TBA

Paul Daley off Gamebred Boxing 4 due to visa issues, says Jorge Masvidal

Joe Riggs will step in for Paul Daley, per Gamebred Boxing.

Gamebred Boxing 4 features numerous names notable to MMA fans, but [autotag]Paul Daley[/autotag] is no longer one of them.

Gamebred Boxing boss and UFC star [autotag]Jorge Masvidal[/autotag] recently revealed on MMA Junkie Radio that Daley’s boxing debut is off (or at least delayed) as work papers are figured out.

Daley was expected to fight fellow UFC alum [autotag]Markus Perez[/autotag] in a six-round bout at the April 1 event, which takes place at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee and streams on UFC Fight Pass pay-per-view.

Perez will now face former UFC and BKFC fighter [autotag]Joe Riggs[/autotag].

“Paul Daley is not on the card, and that’s because we had visa issues with the timing and stuff,” Masvidal said. “Paul Daley can have a visa to come here, but every time you’re working for a new company, like XYZ company. Now he’s going to fight for a new company, so we’d have to get him a visa. We weren’t able to quite figure that out, but that’s somebody we’re very, very interested in and will push hard to have on our cards. I’ve always liked Daley’s style. I actually got to compete against him myself, so it’d be fun.”

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Daley, 40, retired from MMA in May 2022 after he brutally knocked out Wendell Giacomo at Bellator 281 in front of a home country crowd in London.

Even with Daley’s absence, Gamebred Boxing 4 has a plethora of MMA notables. Former UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis faces boxing legend Roy Jones Jr. in the main event. Former UFC champions Jose Aldo and Vitor Belfort, as well as Ronaldo Souza, Jeremy Stephens, and Pearl Gonzalez are also on the card.

The up-to-date Gamebred Boxing 4 card includes:

  • Roy Jones Jr. vs. Anthony Pettis
  • Jose Aldo vs. Jeremy Stephens
  • Vitor Belfort vs. Ronaldo Souza
  • Pearl Gonzalez vs. Gina Mazany
  • Markus Perez vs. Joe Riggs
  • Dillon Cleckler vs. Josh Burns
  • Devin Cushing vs. Damian Marciano
  • Andy Nguyen vs. Bi Nguyen
  • Clarence Booth vs. Luis Feliciano
  • Danielle Cohen vs. Danielle Wynn
  • Roberto Armas vs. Javier Zamarron
  • Cade Howell vs. Devante Sewell

 

BKFC 29: Best photos from Montana

Check out these photos from the fights at BKFC 29 in Great Falls, Mont.

Check out these photos from the fights at BKFC 29 at Pacific Steel & Recycling Arena in Great Falls, Mont., which featured a strawweight title fight between Britain Hart Beltran and Charisa Sigala. (Photos courtesy of BKFC)

Photos: BKFC 29 weigh-ins and faceoffs

Check out these photos from the BKFC 29 weigh-ins in Montana.

Check out these photos from the weigh-ins and fighter faceoffs for BKFC 29, which features a strawweight championship bout between Britain Hart Beltran and Charisa Sigala at Pacific Steel & Recycling Arena in Great Falls, Mont. (Photos courtesy of BKFC)

These UFC veterans are in MMA and bareknuckle action Sept. 9-11

Check out which veterans of the UFC are competing in promotions across the globe this weekend.

The UFC returns to Las Vegas for a pay-per-view event at T-Mobile Arena.

[autotag]Nate Diaz[/autotag] will compete in possibly the final fight of his UFC career against [autotag]Khamzat Chimaev[/autotag] in the main event of UFC 279 on Sept. 10.

Outside of the UFC, there are a number of MMA and bareknuckle events taking place that feature many familiar names that have competed under the UFC banner.

This week, there are nine veterans of the global leader competing this weekend from Sept. 9-11.

Check out the names and details about their bouts below.

Upcoming event information from Tapology.

Video: Lorenzo Hunt bashes Joe Riggs in face with tomato at BKFC 24 ceremonial faceoffs

Joe Riggs was the victim of a weaponized, half-eaten tomato in Montana at BKFC ceremonial faceoffs.

Combat sports fans have often seen props, including food, at ceremonial faceoffs. The big fear by promotion operations staff and security usually is they’ll be turned into weapons, which they seldom, if ever, actually are.

At the BKFC 24 ceremonial faceoffs Thursday, however, that fear became a reality. A tomato prop weaponized as light heavyweight champion [autotag]Lorenzo Hunt[/autotag] bashed the half-eaten fruit into the grill of former UFC fighter and next title challenger [autotag]Joe Riggs[/autotag].

The two fighters were immediately separated before things escalated further. Unhappy as ever, Riggs got a verbal rebuttal in and called Hunt a “c*nt.” Meanwhile, Hunt found his stunt hilarious and cackled at Riggs from a separated distance before he played to the small crowd in attendance.

BKFC 24 takes place Friday at Pacific Steel and Recycling Four Seasons Arena in Great Falls, Mont. The main card streams on FITE pay-per-view after free prelims streamed to the official BKFC YouTube channel. Hunt vs. Riggs serves as the card’s main event.

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Fair or foul? Perspectives differ on ABC suspending 20 BKFC Montana fighters

Twenty BKFC fighters were suspended after their participation in what the ABC deemed an unsanctioned event, but perspectives differ on that.

The Association of Boxing Commissions recently suspended an entire fight card’s worth of athletes – 20 in total – who competed in a bare-knuckle boxing event that the ABC has said was “unsanctioned.” However, the promotion involved and an independent regulatory body disagree with that categorization and subsequent suspensions.

The event in question, “BKFC Fight Night: Montana” took place Oct. 9 at First Interstate Arena in Billings, Mont., and it featured MMA notables of yesteryear [autotag]Joe Riggs[/autotag] and [autotag]Melvin Guillard[/autotag] in the main event.

According to ABC president Mike Mazzulli, the event was unlicensed and held without the oversight of a state commission, nor did it receive proper clearance from state government.

“The fights in Montana were not regulated by the State of Montana,” Mazzulli recently told MMA Junkie.

For this reason, the ABC suspended each combatant 60 days. The suspensions were first publicized by management agency Fight Mixer Management.

ABC’s assertion

The State of Montana has an athletic commission, but it doesn’t function to regulate combat sports. The Montana Department of Labor & Industry includes athletic oversight, but only for amateur and collegiate events.

Given that there was no state commission available, BKFC hired the International Sport Karate Association to serve as regulator. ISKA is a longtime international sanctioning body for combat sports, which works closely with the ABC in various capacities, including at Bellator events.

Per Mazzulli, ISKA can function as a standalone commission, as it often does in numerous national and international territories that do not have governmental combat sports oversight. However, ISKA needed permission from the state government to do so, which Mazzulli asserts ISKA did not receive.

“ISKA is in good standing with the ABC,” Mazzulli said. “They regulate a lot of amateur MMA throughout the country. What happens is the state commission authorizes them to regulate for them. For example, in New York, ISKA is a regulatory body for MMA up there. They’re so busy that the State of New York has invested in ISKA with Cory Schafer, the president, and decided to give them the ability to regulate amateurs for them. But in Montana that was not the case.”

Mazzulli said the Kansas Athletic Commission on multiple occasions volunteered to serve as the regulatory body in Montana, but BKFC and president David Feldman declined that offer.

“There was an ABC commission that contacted (BKFC) numerous times to say that they would go up there and regulate the event,” Mazzulli said. “That was the State of Kansas. (BKFC) did not take them up on it. They decided to ride with ISKA. ISKA was not granted the ability to regulate that by the State of Montana, so therefore all of these fighters fought in an unsanctioned fight.”

BKFC’s explanation

BKFC president Dave Feldman

BKFC president David Feldman and matchmaker Nate Shook offered a starkly different perspective when contacted by MMA Junkie. While Feldman admitted that Kansas offered to oversee the BKFC Montana event, he believed that point was moot since ISKA had proper governmental permission, thus an ABC regulator wasn’t needed. According to Feldman, BKFC and ISKA were granted permission by the state.

“I know Mike made a statement that the ISKA wasn’t legal there or licensed there, but ISKA did receive approval from the department of licensing in Montana to be able to sanction that fight, so we sanctioned that fight through ISKA,” Feldman told MMA Junkie. “It’s going to he said, she said, right? But at the end of the day, we didn’t have to have any sanctioning there, kind of like what the UFC does when they go overseas and they don’t have sanctioning bodies, and they kind of self-regulate. That’s what we could’ve done. Instead, we went one step further and had the ISKA regulate the event.”

What perhaps puzzled Feldman most about the suspensions was what he perceives to be inconsistencies between the sanctions handed to his fighters and those of other combat sports events in Montana, a state which, according to combat sports database Tapology, has hosted 19 other fight cards in 2021 to date.

“I don’t want to overstep and say anything bad,” Feldman said. “I want a great working relationship with Mike Mazzulli. That’s what I’m pushing for. But at the end of the day, I don’t even know if he had the authority to suspend these guys. Maybe he did. Maybe he didn’t. But what I’m trying to say is that there were other professional combat sporting events in the State of Montana from mixed martial arts to two bare-knuckle fights that happened in the State of Montana where the fighters did not get suspended. But they did get suspended for our event. That’s a big question mark in my mind.”

ISKA weighs in

ISKA president Cory Schafer works closely with the ABC on numerous matters and told MMA Junkie he respects the unified governing body and Mazzulli and finds their function important. However, Schafer thinks ISKA and BKFC went above and beyond to ensure a safely and professionally regulated event took place with permission from the state government.

“(ISKA director) Tom Sconzo called the department of state for Montana,” Schafer said. “That’s where he got the information that, although they have an athletic division, it’s for the supervision of the NCAA, amateur sports and collegiate sports. They have no combat sports division. He explained to them who the ISKA is, what we do, where we’re from, showed them our website – boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.

“They said, ‘Wow. Great. We look forward to the event. We hope it’s successful. We hope everything is great. Good luck.’ That came from a representative of the department of state. Again, the promotion was under no obligation. But we tried to go above and beyond and make sure there was no issue with the government.”

Schafer estimates that approximately 90 percent of boxing events listed in the ABC’s official online record keeper, BoxRec, are not sanctioned. Schafer said he’s a supporter of the ABC, but he too, like the BKFC brass, is confused by the suspensions.

“I’d like to see the ABC have stronger power and authority,” Schafer said. “I think that would be a good thing, but in this case it was a little odd. The athletes that fought on what Mr. Mazzulli is calling an unsanctioned fight, well, they joined the 90 percent of other boxers that boxed that same weekend in Italy, France, and Turkey and whatever, who also boxed on what I guess they would have to consider an unsanctioned event. I would like some clarity on that.”

‘We run toward regulation’

Joe Riggs checks on Melvin Guillard after knocking him out at BKFC Montana.

While BKFC and ISKA officials are puzzled by the ABC’s decision, Mazzulli reiterated to MMA Junkie that neither he nor the sanctioning body he runs have a bias toward bare-knuckle fighting, rather he simply wants proper regulation and oversight. This is the same sentiment Mazzulli shared in a ABC statement following the death of seasoned combat sports veteran Justin Thornton in October. Thornton died after he sustained injuries during 19-second faceplant knockout at BKFC 19 in August.

Feldman, however, doesn’t think his promotion strays from the procedures and protocols of a normal event overseen by the ABC. Safety is a top priority, according to the BKFC president – and this instance he said did not deviate from that approach.

“We’re in a stage right now where we’re considered the fastest-growing combat sports promotion in the world,” Feldman said. “We’re trying to open up regulation everywhere in the country. We’re not going to cut corners. We ran toward regulations for 10 years. I ran toward it. I would never run away from regulation. We want to be regulated. We want to get approval. We want other states to regulate it and approve it. We run toward regulation. There was no way we were trying to negate regulation.”

BKFC holds its next event Dec. 9 in Tampa, Fla., which will have the oversight of the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, a sanctioning body that is part of the ABC. Fighters who fought on the Montana show will be eligible to return to competition Dec. 8.

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BKFC Fight Night Montana results: Joe Riggs knocks out Melvin Guillard in 59 seconds

Joe Riggs made quick work of fellow MMA veteran Melvin Guillard in the main event of BKFC Fight Night Montana.

Two grizzled mixed martial arts veterans met to cap off BKFC’s event in Billings, Mont., on Saturday evening.

Former UFC competitors [autotag]Joe Riggs[/autotag] and [autotag]Melvin Guillard[/autotag] took off the gloves to bare knuckle box at 185 pounds in the main event of Saturday’s BKFC Fight Night Montana.

The event took place at the MetraPark Arena in Billings, Mont., and aired on the FITE and the BKTV app.

The main event didn’t last very long.

Guillard got the action started by offering a few punches, but Riggs decided to just defend the first few strikes instead of returning fire. Perhaps just getting a read on his opponent in the opening seconds, Riggs let the action come to him, until he decided it was time to strike.

When Riggs threw, he landed flush and dropped Guillard. Riggs gave a little push to Guillard on the way down, resulting in Guillard slumping over the bottom rope. Guillard did not return to his feet, and the fight was over by knockout just 59 seconds into the contest.

“I just want the belt,” Riggs said during his post fight interview. “I don’t care what weight, I want that f*cking belt.”

This was the fifth BKFC fight for Riggs, who improves to 3-1-1 with the promotion, with his eyes set on a title shot. On the other end, Guillard falls to 0-4 under the BKFC banner.

In the co-main event, Invicta veteran and former BKFC champ [autotag]Christine Ferea[/autotag] competed against Calista Silgado.

Ferea beat her opponent to the punch all night long, eventually finding the knockout punch in the third round to notch her second stoppage in a row. At the conclusion of the bout, Ferera called out Bec Rawlings during her post-fight interview.

The full results of the event are as follows:

  • Joe Riggs def. Melvin Guillard knockout (punch) – Round 1, 0:59
  • Christine Ferea def. Calista Silgado via knockout (punches) – Round 3, 1:34
  • Lloyd Mix def. Brett Fields via knockout (punch) – Round 1, 0:14
  • Leo Bercier def. Luis Villasenor via knockout (punches) – Round 2, 1:26
  • Tom Shoaff def. Josh Wright via TKO (punches) – Round 2, 1:25
  • Bryant Acheson def. Josh Watson via knockout (punch) – Round 1, 0:30
  • Jade Masson-Wong def. Crystal Pittman via TKO (doctor’s stoppage) – Round 3, 0:21
  • Dallas Davison def. JorDan Christensen via TKO (doctor’s stoppage) – Round 2, 2:00
  • James Dennis Sawyer Depee def. James Dennis via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 1:01
  • Kai Stewart def. Darrick Gates via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 1:24

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