Inspired by brother Kevin’s success, Bellator 245’s Keith Lee promises to make his own name

Keith Lee hopes to be the next member of his family to establish his name among MMA stardom.

UNCASVILLE, Conn. – When your brother is a UFC star fighting for championships, and you’re a young buck on the rise just getting your feet under you, it’s natural you’ll be the lesser-known sibling.

Bellator bantamweight [autotag]Keith Lee[/autotag] knows brother [autotag]Kevin Lee[/autotag] is a UFC lightweight star – star status he hopes to hold on his own one day. Step by step, Keith aims to let his performances inside the cage build his name recognition while accepting any notoriety that comes solely from his surname.

“I think that time is coming soon,” Keith told MMA Junkie on Wednesday. “I don’t mind being ‘Kevin Lee’s brother’ but there’s definitely a style difference between us two. Even the way we talk, the way we move, everything is different – even though that is my brother and I look up to him a lot.”

Over the years, Kevin’s gift of gab has gotten the attention of MMA fans and media alike, as he climbed the UFC rankings to perennial contendership and an interim title shot.

Keith admits it: Kevin has always been the talker in the family – but that doesn’t mean Keith can’t successfully clap back when warranted.

“I leave the trash talking to him,” Keith said. “I’ve always been a doer. I’ve never been a talker. I’ve always been the quiet one. I’ve always been a goofy personality. But when it’s time to go, it’s always time to go.”

As the kids grew up, the Lee household was a lighthearted, trash talk-heavy battleground, Keith explained. With four Lee children in the house, a quick wit was necessary from a young age.

“We had huge sibling rivalries,” Keith said. “There’s actually three of us. I have a younger brother – and an older sister as well, but it was three boys in my house. We went at it like dogs every day to stamp our mark. Now we’re unleashing it on the world. Everybody is starting to see other than our own household.”

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Building his own notoriety is important, but the 23-year-old Keith has no problem being Kevin’s shadow of success. Keith doesn’t underestimate his brother’s impact on his career, especially considering how much Kevin has inspired him over the years.

When Keith first walked into an MMA gym, he wasn’t entered into the beginners’ class. He wasn’t rolling with the Average Joes. He was allowed to begin training with the professionals because of who his Kevin was and the respect that came with being related.

“It was a great inspiration to have in front of me,” Keith said. “If it wasn’t for him, all of those doors wouldn’t be open automatically. The doors are open. I just have to come down and bang them down and really just make my stamp. I’m thankful for everything he’s done for me.”

If he follows his plan, keeps his faith, and continues to put in the work, Keith thinks his name and place in MMA will expand. In the end, however, he can only control the controllable. He’d rather the notoriety be earned than given.

“You’ll see I’m my own person,” Keith said. “I don’t have to say that. I don’t have to tell people that. It’s just one of those things that’ll come naturally. I want you to be able to say it, rather than me telling you.”

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Keith, is riding a three-fight winning streak into his sophomore promotional appearance Friday at Bellator 245 against Vinicius Zani (11-6 MMA, 0-1 BMMA).

Bellator 245 takes place Friday at Mohegan Sun Arena. The main card simulcasts on Paramount Network and DAZN after prelims on MMA Junkie.

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Bellator 245 fills out, including Ed Ruth, Rafael Carvalho, Tyrell Fortune

The first half of Bellator’s back-to-back Connecticut shows in September has had its lineup filled out.

Bellator 245 fills out, including Ed Ruth, Rafael Carvalho, Tyrell Fortune

The first half of Bellator’s back-to-back Connecticut shows in September has had its lineup filled out.

Bellator 245, which will be headlined by a light heavyweight rematch between Phil Davis and Lyoto Machida with Cat Zingano vs. Gabrielle Holloway in the co-main event, has five new bouts ticketed for the lineup, the promotion announced Friday.

Bellator 245 takes place Friday, Sept. 11, at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. The main card airs on Paramount and streams on DAZN following prelims on MMA Junkie. The next night, the same venue hosts Bellator 246.

On the main card, [autotag]Ed Ruth[/autotag] (8-2 MMA, 8-2 BMMA) takes on [autotag]Taylor Johnson[/autotag] (5-1 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) at middleweight, and [autotag]Raymond Daniels[/autotag] (2-1 MMA, 2-0 BMMA) meets [autotag]Peter Stanonik[/autotag] (5-4 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) in a welterweight bout.

Additionally, the preliminary card gets a light heavyweight bout between former middleweight champion [autotag]Rafael Carvalho[/autotag] (16-4 MMA, 7-3 BMMA) and LFA light heavyweight champ [autotag]Alex Polizzi[/autotag] (6-0 MMA, 0-0 BMMA), [autotag]Tyrell Fortune[/autotag] (8-1 MMA, 8-1 BMMA) vs. [autotag]Jack May[/autotag] (11-6 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) at heavyweight, and [autotag]Keith Lee[/autotag] (6-3 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) vs. [autotag]Dominic Mazzotta[/autotag] (15-3 MMA, 2-2 BMMA) in a 140-pound contract-weight fight.

Ruth will be looking to rebound from a decision loss to Yaroslav Amosov in February, which snapped a two-fight winning streak. Johnson suffered the first loss of his pro career a little more than a year ago in a Dana White’s Contender Series fight against Andre Muniz. Prior to that, he had four straight first-round knockout wins under the LFA banner.

Kickboxing standout Daniels returned to MMA in 2019 after a lengthy layoff from the sport. He took out Wilker Barros in the first round in his Bellator MMA debut after years on the Bellator Kickboxing circuit. Then earlier this year, he stopped Jason King in the first round with a TKO. Stanonik has a kickboxing and muay Thai background, as well, but his most recent MMA fight was a June 2018 loss to Jake Heffernan at LFA 43.

With the additions, the Bellator 245 lineup now includes:

MAIN CARD (Paramount, DAZN, 10 p.m. ET)

  • Phil Davis vs. Lyoto Machida
  • Gabrielle Holloway vs. Cat Zingano
  • Taylor Johnson vs. Ed Ruth
  • Raymond Daniels vs. Peter Stanonik

PRELIMINARY CARD (MMA Junkie)

  • Rafael Carvalho vs. Alex Polizzi
  • Tyrell Fortune vs. Jack May
  • Keith Lee vs. Dominic Mazzotta – 140-pound contract weight

Keith Lee, brother of Kevin Lee, wins debut at Bellator 239

Keith Lee, the younger brother of UFC lightweight contender Kevin Lee, won his promotional debut at Bellator 239.

[autotag]Keith Lee[/autotag] had a strong start to his Bellator career on Friday when he earned a notable victory in his promotional debut at Bellator 239.

Lee (6-3 MMA, 1-0 BMMA), who is the younger brother of UFC lightweight contender Kevin Lee, earned a unanimous decision win over a game Shawn Bunch (9-5 MMA, 6-3 BMMA) in their bantamweight matchup.

Kevin was in Keith’s corner for the fight, rooting on his 23-year-old sibling through a largely dominant performance in which he was one step ahead of Bunch in the striking and grappling department.

The end result was the decision by scores of 30-26, 29-28 and 29-27, giving Lee his third consecutive win in the matchup at WinStar World Casino and Resort in Thackerville, Okla.

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Although Bunch had his moments, Lee was never seriously threatened. He turned the fight permanently in his favor in the second round when he rocked Bunch with a big knee that connected on the jaw as Bunch attempted to shoot for a takedown.

It was the second career decision win for Lee, while Bunch, for his part, dropped his second straight fight.

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Keith Lee, Kevin Lee’s brother, signs multi-fight Bellator deal, debut set

The younger brother of the UFC lightweight standout has signed with Bellator and will meet Shawn Bunch in his company debut.

Kevin Lee’s brother will soon get a taste of the bright lights.

The younger brother of the UFC lightweight contender, [autotag]Keith Lee[/autotag], has signed a multi-fight Bellator contract and is set to debut on Feb. 21 at Bellator 239 in Thackerville, Okla.

Lee will take on Bellator veteran [autotag]Shawn Bunch[/autotag] in a bantamweight contest.

Lee (5-3 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) has been fighting professionally since 2017 after going 4-0 as an amateur. The 23-year-old is currently on a two-fight win streak, which followed a two-fight skid of split decision losses. Lee last fought in December where he submitted Leonardo Carvalho.

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Welcoming Lee to Bellator will be Bunch (9-4 MMA, 6-3 BMMA), who looks to bounce back from a submission loss to Leandro Higo in September. Prior to the loss, the NCAA Division I All-American and U.S. Olympic alternate wrestler was on a five-fight winning streak, which included a victory over former Bellator champ Joe Warren.

The Bellator 239 main card airs on Paramount and streams on DAZN following prelims on MMA Junkie. With the addition, the updated Bellator 239 card includes:

  • Yaroslav Amosov vs. Ed Ruth
  • Brandon Girtz vs. Myles Jury
  • Tyrell Fortune vs. Timothy Johnson
  • Cris Lencioni vs. Salim Mukhidinov
  • Denise Kielholtz vs. Kristina Williams
  • Keith Lee vs. Shawn Bunch

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Off Guard: Keith Lee eager to fight, says training with Firas Zahabi made a huge impact

Keith Lee can’t wait to show off what he’s learned.

[autotag]Keith Lee[/autotag] has been anxious to get a fight. In the meantime, he’s been making the most out of learning and growing in the gym.

Lee recently made the trip to Tristar in Montreal, along with older brother and lightweight contender Kevin Lee, to get some training in with legendary trainer Firas Zahabi.

And Lee says that training in Montreal had the same impact on him as it did on his brother Kevin, who scored a first-round knockout over formerly undefeated Gregor Gillespie at UFC 244, in a “Performance of the Night”-winning effort.

“Coming from Firas’ camp, I honestly think that it made a huge impact in me, and him,” Lee told MMA Junkie. “You could see it with him, but when I get the opportunity, I will show it.”

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“Firas is a genius, he had so many different game plans and so many different ways of thinking, that I’ve never seen before, and for a young guy, I’m only 23, I have a lot of experience in this game and I’ve never seen anybody that thinks like him, or that can process information how he does and you can see the difference that it made just in one fight with Kevin. I think I’m going to do the rest of my camps out there.”

To say Lee (4-3 MMA) has struggled to get a fight is an understatement. He hasn’t competed since his unanimous decision win over Chris Johnson at Final Fight Championship 38 in June, and is hoping to get the opportunity to show the work he’s put in before the end of the year.

“I actually just talked to my manager this morning, and we were supposed to fight Nov. 20, and the guy pulled out again,” Lee said. “So this is maybe like 12 contracts I’ve went through, Tapology don’t even tell you half the story. I’ve went through 12 contracts and 14 like verbal contracts, not even including the ones we already signed and nobody’s fighting.”

“Am I working for no reason? But at this point, it’s like I just got to stay dedicated,” Lee added. “I got to stay in my own head just trying to stay as motivated as I can, because like I said, it’s so many fights I could have had this year. I’ve only had one, so hopefully we get one before the end of this year, but I just stay prayed up, and I know God has a reason for me.”

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