Longtime Bellator fighter Brennan Ward enters 2024 PFL welterweight season

One of the longest tenured Bellator fighters ever, Brennan Ward has stepped into a vacancy in the 2024 PFL welterweight season.

The new era of PFL is here and [autotag]Brennan Ward[/autotag] will be a part of it.

One of the longest tenured members of the Bellator roster, Ward (17-7) enters the 2024 PFL welterweight regular season as a replacement for fellow import [autotag]Kyle Crutchmer[/autotag], promotion officials recently informed MMA Junkie.

Ward’s first regular season bout will take place April 19 at 2024 PFL 3 in Chicago as he faces former UFC fighter [autotag]Don Madge[/autotag] (10-4-1) in a three-round preliminary card bout at Wintrust Arena.

Ward, 35, joined Bellator in 2012. After 15 fights for the promotion including a title shot that he earned through a Bellator middleweight tournament, Ward retired from mixed martial arts. Behind the scenes, Ward struggled with severe drug addiction and other personal issues, which he revealed in a 2022 tell-all interview with MMA Junkie, shortly before he announced his sobriety and comeback.

Since his return to combat sports, Ward has gone 3-1 in MMA. After two warmup fights, Ward finished Sabah Homasi with strikes in the first Bellator fight on CBS. He then lost an August 2023 main event to Logan Storley by second-round TKO.

Madge, 33, has not competed since an April 2022 loss to Raush Manfio. The TKO defeat dropped him to 1-1 in his PFL tenure following a 2-0 UFC stint.

With the change, the current 2024 PFL 3 lineup includes:

MAIN CARD (ESPN/ESPN+, 10 p.m. ET)

  • Welterweight Regular Season Main Event: Andrey Koreshkov (27-4) vs. Magomed Umalatov (14-0)
  • Featherweight Regular Season Co-Main Event: Brendan Loughnane (27-5) vs. Pedro Carvalho (13-8)
  • Welterweight Regular Season Bout: Logan Storley (15-2) vs. Shamil Musaev (16-0-1)
  • Featherweight Regular Season Bout: Gabriel Braga (12-1) vs. Justin Gonzalez (14-3)
  • Welterweight Regular Season Bout: Goiti Yamauchi (28-6) vs. Neiman Gracie (12-4)
  • Featherweight Regular Season Bout: Bubba Jenkins (21-7) vs. Kai Kamaka (12-5-1)

PRELIMS (ESPN+, 6:30pm E.T.)

  • Featherweight Regular Season Bout: Adam Borics (18-2) vs. Enrique Barzola (20-7-2)
  • Featherweight Regular Season Bout: Timur Khizriev (14-0) vs. Brett Johns (20-3)
  • Welterweight Regular Season Bout: Laureano Staropoli (13-5) vs. Murad Ramazanov (11-0)
  • Welterweight Regular Season Bout: Don Madge (10-4-1) vs. Brennan Ward (17-7)

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for 2024 PFL 3.

Recovered and refocused: Former OSU wrestler Jacobe Smith and the leap of faith that could land him in UFC

Undefeated OSU wrestler-turned-MMA fighter Jacobe Smith thinks an adjustment upturned the trajectory of his career toward the UFC.

As [autotag]Jacobe Smith[/autotag] sat in a small apartment in Northern California, he reached a conclusion: He needed a change.

Banged up, homesick and slightly disappointed, Smith contemplated a full reset – but that’s easier said than done when your imperfect recipe works.

Despite all of nagging injuries and grueling training sessions he endured, Smith, for as long as he could remember, had been at the top of whatever athletic activity he partook in.

The son of an NFL player, Smith was fascinated by high-level athletes, their training sessions and their mentalities. But for the first decade-plus of his life, he was unable to partake in sports due to asthma.

When he finally received clearance to partake in middle school, Smith was overwhelmed by the options in front of him. There were so many he could sign up for. That’s when he saw wrestling listed as an option.

Perfect. He could be just like … John Cena?

“I signed up for wrestling, thinking it was going to be WWE wrestling and I’d be getting paid,” Smith recently told MMA Junkie. “It turned out to be what it was. I’m kind of blessed, but I’m still waiting for that big payday.”

The “accidental” decision refined Smith’s life. A standout high school wrestling stint later, the teen from Muskogee, Okla., didn’t need to think twice about accepting an offer to wrestle at Oklahoma State University.

“I didn’t plan on going to college at all,” Smith said. “I was planning on fighting or going to the NFL. In college, I saw a video of Jordan Oliver on YouTube and it was that rock song, ‘Let the city burn.’ It was a highlight of him wrestling and just tearing everybody up. Right then and there I just told myself I’m wrestling for that school in those colors. It ended up happening years later.”

Rutger’s Willie Scott vs Oklahoma’s Jacobe Smith in their 184 lbs. bout. Rutgers Wrestling vs Oklahoma State in Piscataway, NJ on January 13, 2019.

While it was a dream come true, the OSU stint wasn’t all smooth sailing. Smith injured himself significantly, but chose to evade surgeries that would knock him out of action until after he graduated. He pushed through the pain and still he broke through.

“I tore everything in my knee my junior year at Oklahoma State,” Smith said. “I didn’t get it repaired until I graduated, because they told me I wouldn’t have been able to wrestling again, my senior year. My career would’ve been over, pretty much, because of the recovery time. I tried to wrestle on a torn knee for a year-and-a-half. I actually All-American’d on a torn knee.”

Eventually, the curtains closed. Smith’s wrestling career was over. Though a desire to wrestle in the Olympics persisted, circumstances pushed Smith toward fighting – something that’s always been part of his plans, even before wrestling.

“My dad would do tough-man tournaments around the Tulsa area, the Muskogee area,” Smith said. “He would win golden jackets and make $20,000 just fighting around where we were. I didn’t know it was as big as it was. I didn’t know about the UFC or Bellator or anything like that. I just knew I could find around where I live and make $20,000 just to fight one fight. That kind of stuck with me and I kind of wanted to do that.”

“… I didn’t really get to do my full rehab after the surgery. I had to do it all on my own and it wasn’t as fast of a recovery as it should’ve been. I should’ve been back wrestling way sooner than then, but I had to make money so I just started taking fights. I couldn’t even do a pushup, but I was taking fights just to make money because I didn’t want to get a job.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/Ckbu88RS5aN/

Fast forward back to Smith in his apartment pondering change – and he wasn’t alone. Smith’s long time friends and wrestling teammates [autotag]Kyle Crutchmer[/autotag] and [autotag]Nick Piccininni[/autotag] took the trip to live in San Jose, Calif., and train at American Kickboxing Academy (AKA).

They were invited by Cowboys alum Daniel Cormier, of course. There training was intense, as the room was filled with Dagestani representatives including Khabib Nurmagomedov.  The gym slowly lost its fit for the trio of fighters.

“DC got so busy with that commentating stuff in the UFC that it took time away from me and him,” Smith said. “I was living at his gym at the wrestling academy and I’d only ever see him once or twice a week. It got to that point where we weren’t getting in the work we should’ve been getting in. I was getting dished off to other coaches that I wasn’t really connecting with. I wasn’t really feeling it.”

Smith, Crutchmer and Piccininni are in this together. So as their yearning for a change grew, they put their heads together. What about Fortis MMA under coach Sayif Saud?

“One night, we were all talking and Kyle was like, ‘I miss my daughter. It’s getting bad,'” Smith said. “I’m like, ‘Yeah, I’m getting depressed, thinking about my wife.’ He’s like, ‘Man, I’m going to type up a message to Sayif and see if we can go down there and see what it’s like, see if that training could benefit us at all.'”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CtE5WOSLXB1/

Crutchmer typed out a text message, but didn’t send it. The draft sat there, an uncertain send. There was hesitation and the what-ifs existed, but Smith made an executive decision. When Crutchmer left the room for a moment without his phone, Smith hit the send arrow.

“I pressed send on the message he typed out and wasn’t going to even send,” Smith said. “I ended up sending it because I knew I wanted to see something different. We all decide we were going to do something together.”

The impulsive decision proved to be a good one. Smith found the striking and jiu-jitsu instruction he felt was missing previously. Surprisingly, the biggest impact Smith felt (besides now training only 20 minutes away from his family) was the focus on recovery. Sure, Smith still partakes in a grueling training regiment, but he’s integrated an active focus on healing and preserving as well.

“(My wife) got in my ear and Coach Sayif got in my ear about me putting more effort into my rehab like I do trying to get better at fighting,” Smith said. “Once I did that, the first two weeks I was here, I noticed a difference. I’ve been here since, what, February? Now I’m fully recovered. It took me to attack that with my full effort, as I do with fighting. Now I realize I should’ve done that a long time ago.”

Smith, 27, has a 5-0 pro MMA record. He returns Sunday at Fury FC 81 against Austin Jones (13-9) in San Antonio. The event streams on UFC Fight Pass. If he wins, Smith has his UFC roadmap figured out – and there isn’t much journey left before he gets there.

“From right now, I have myself mapped out,” Smith said. “I’ll fight July 16 … I’ll take one more fight with Fury, and then my contract with them will be done. Then I’ll go to the Dana White’s Contender Series. So two more fights, and then I’ll be done with the small shows. I’ll be going to the UFC pretty soon.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/Ctwb923Opui/

As it stands, Smith thinks he’s already UFC-caliber. He’s able to gauge his skill level by training with UFC-ranked welterweight [autotag]Geoff Neal[/autotag], who has become one of his main partners to work with.

“We exchange rounds and I’m getting to the point where I don’t need to use my wrestling,” Smith said. “I can win rounds against him with my striking pedigree and just baiting him with my wrestling. I’ll steal rounds away from him every now and then. If I’m competing with Geoff, I know I can compete with any of the top fighters. I’ve seen him f*ck up some good fighters. I know I’m ready. I just don’t want to rush it.”

“… We’re trying to execute and make it easy. That’s what I want to do. I want to be able to go out with my wife after my fights and not worry about being cut up or having to go see a doctor. That’s where I feel like we’re getting at, to the point we’re getting so far ahead that once we are thrown out there, we’re going to be so far ahead of the field. We’re going to make these nights easier than they have to be.”

Bellator 297 winner Kyle Crutchmer ready to turn corner to next level after TKO win

Kyle Crutchmer is right where he wants to be and ready to make his next move up in the Bellator welterweight division.

CHICAGO – [autotag]Kyle Crutchmer[/autotag] defeated Bobby Nash by TKO this past Friday at Bellator 297, winning with punches in the first round of their fight at WinStar Arena.

Afterward, Crutchmer (10-2 MMA, 6-2 BMMA) discussed his performance, his recent switch from American Kickboxing Academy to Fortis MMA, what it means for his career moving forward, and more.

You can watch his post-fight news conference in the video above.

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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for Bellator 297.

Bellator 297’s Kyle Crutchmer explains recent move from AKA to Fortis MMA

When you’re one of the most highly touted wrestlers in MMA, a move from one elite training camp to another is going to raise a few eyebrows.

DALLAS – When you’re one of the most highly touted up-and-coming wrestlers in MMA, a move from one elite training camp to another is going to raise a few eyebrows.

But when Bellator welterweight standout [autotag]Kyle Crutchmer[/autotag] made the shift from American Kickboxing Academy in San Jose, Calif., to Fortis MMA in Dallas, he said it was only so he could put his family first, ahead of what had become his gym family.

He said his longtime wrestling coach at AKA, Daniel Cormier, who is Crutchmer’s mentor and a former two-division UFC champ, helped facilitate the move from California to Fortis under head coach Sayif Saud. Cormier, like Crutchmer, is an Oklahoma State wrestling alum.

“I have a daughter that lives in Dallas, and that was the main reason,” Crutchmer recently told MMA Junkie. “(It was) nothing against AKA or anything, but I heard about Coach Sayif. I talked to DC and they got us here, and we were here for about a month, just trying it out, checking everything out. We just kind of fit in with these guys. I’m a Midwest guy, myself, so it was an easy transition.”

Crutchmer started his MMA career hot at 5-0 before he dropped a decision to Kemran Lachinov at Bellator 294. After three straight decision wins, Crutchmer was upset by Jaleel Willis this past December.

Next month, Crutchmer (9-2 MMA, 5-2 BMMA) will try to get back in the win column when he takes on Bobby Nash (12-4 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) at Bellator 297 in Chicago. Nash fill be making his Bellator debut, but he has three UFC fights on his resume in 2017 – all three knockout setbacks to Li Jingliang, Danny Roberts and Song Kenan.

But because Nash is a Michigan State wrestling product and there’s a built-in Big 10 (MSU) vs. Big 12 (Oklahoma State) rivalry, this one has some extra intrigue.

“He wrestled at Michigan State,” Crutchmer said. “He’s a Big 10 wrestler vs. Big 12. There’s a rivalry there a little bit with that. But I respect all the wrestlers. I’m just ready to go out and perform and then put a different show on than maybe what I’ve put on before.

“Coming from AKA, everybody knows that style. So I’m just kind of blending the Fortis style of Coach Sayif, learning from these guys, and trying to blend everything. I’m about five years into this. A lot of these guys have been fighting a long time. I’m still blending these things. I’m still learning and I’m still excited. That’s the best thing about me right now is I still get excited about coming and learning these things.”

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for Bellator 297.

Bellator 289 post-event facts: Underdogs shine on final card of 2022

Check out all the facts and figures from Bellator 289, which took place Friday and saw a number of significant betting upsets.

Bellator put on its 17th and final event of the year on Friday with Bellator 289, which took place at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn.

Two champions defended their titles at the top of the card. In the main event, [autotag]Raufeon Stots[/autotag] (19-1 MMA, 7-0 BMMA) edged [autotag]Danny Sabatello[/autotag] (13-2 MMA, 3-1 BMMA) by split decision in their grudge match to defend interim bantamweight gold and advance to the finals of the promotion’s grand prix.

The co-headliner saw [autotag]Liz Carmouche[/autotag] (18-7 MMA, 5-0 BMMA) earn a second consecutive win over [autotag]Juliana Velasquez[/autotag] (12-2 MMA, 7-2 BMMA), this time without controversy as she scored a second-round submission to defend women’s flyweight gold.

For more on the numbers behind the card, check below for MMA Junkie’s post-event facts from Bellator 289.

Bellator 289: Best photos from Connecticut

Check out these photos from the fights at Bellator 289 in Uncasville, Conn.

Check out these photos from the fights at Bellator 289, headlined by an interim bantamweight title and grand prix semifinal bout between Raufeon Stots and Danny Sabatello. (Photos courtesy of Lucas Noonan, Bellator MMA)

Matchup Roundup: New UFC and Bellator fights announced in the past week (Nov. 21-27)

All the UFC and Bellator fight announcements that were first reported or confirmed by MMA Junkie in the past week.

MMA fight announcements are hard to follow. With so many outlets and channels available, it’s nearly impossible to organize.

But here at MMA Junkie, we’ve got your back.

Each week, we’ll compile all the newly surfaced fights in one spot. Every Monday, expect a feature listing everything you might have missed from the UFC or Bellator.

Here are the fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie from Nov. 21-27.

Bellator 277 salaries: A.J. McKee, Patricio Freire lead the pack of guaranteed purses

At Bellator 277, A.J. McKee, Patricio Freire, Vadim Nemkov, and Corey Anderson are set to lead disclosed fighter payouts.

SAN JOSE, Calif – Bellator 277 takes place Friday at SAP Center where three fighters are scheduled to take home six-figure paydays regardless of outcome.

At the 14-fight event, MMA Junkie acquired a list of disclosed salaries from California State Athletic Commission executive director Andy Foster.

In the main event, champion [autotag]A.J. McKee[/autotag] and former champion [autotag]Patricio Freire[/autotag] square off in a title rematch. Both fighters had a disclosed payday of $250,000 flat. The co-main event is a grand prix final. Light heavyweight champion Vadim Nemkov (on an $80,000 to show/$80,000 to win basis) and Corey Anderson ($250,000 flat) will collide with the winner making an additional $1 million.

The total payout or show money is $1.378 million. Check out the full list of payouts below. The story will be updated with exact disclosed payouts at the conclusion of the event.

How Johny Hendricks inspired Bellator 277’s Kyle Crutchmer to transition to MMA

Being a key part of one of Johny Hendricks’ most important training camps made Kyle Crutchmer want to transition to MMA.

Being a key part of one of [autotag]Johny Hendricks[/autotag]’ most important training camps made [autotag]Kyle Crutchmer[/autotag] want to transition to MMA.

Hendricks sought out Oklahoma State University wrestling standout Crutchmer to help him prepare for his welterweight title fight against Georges St-Pierre at UFC 167 in November 2013. Hendricks lost the bout by split decision in one of the most controversial results in UFC history.

But it was hitting the mats with such a high-level fighter ahead of a pivotal title fight that inspired Crutchmer to try his hand at MMA.

“When he was training for ‘GSP,’ he did most of his camp at Oklahoma State, so we were wrestling and doing a bunch of different things with him,” Crutchmer told MMA Junkie Radio. “I didn’t do very much MMA stuff, but I just kind of did stuff on the wall with him and helped him out with some of that. And after that I kind of was like, ‘Man, I want to do that.’ So that’s kind of what got me started in the right direction with this MMA stuff.”

Like Crutchmer, Hendricks wrestled at Oklahoma State and was one of the athletes Crutchmer looked up to. Crutchmer helped Hendricks prepare for St-Pierre’s wrestling style.

“I was actually the main guy,” Crutchmer said. “So I would come in at 2 o’clock. Practice normally started at 3, so I would do an hour before I actually started my practice just to help and give him what I could give him. I didn’t know much about MMA. I didn’t really have any jiu-jitsu or anything, but we did a lot of wall work because my go-to takedown in college was a double leg, and that’s what ‘GSP’ was kind of known for. So I gave him that feel as much as I can, and we wrestled a lot of live (sessions) together.

“He’s such an amazing person, and I got to see and be around a guy who was training for a world title fight before I even knew what I was going to do with my life. So he brought me under his wing that whole time, and it was amazing getting to train with someone like that, especially just from the wrestling standpoint of looking up to a guy like that when I was even growing up. So it was a lot of fun. But we were on his head. We came after him for sure.”

No. 9 ranked Bellator welterweight Crutchmer (8-1 MMA, 4-1 BMMA) will look to make it three straight when he takes on Michael Lombardo (12-2 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) at Bellator 277, which takes place April 15 in San Jose, Calif.

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Matchup Roundup: New UFC and Bellator fights announced in the past week (Nov. 1-7)

All the UFC and Bellator fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie in the past week.

MMA fight announcements are hard to follow. With so many outlets and channels available, it’s nearly impossible to organize.

But here at MMA Junkie, we’ve got your back.

Each week, we’ll compile all the newly surfaced fights in one spot. Every Monday, expect a feature listing everything you might have missed from the UFC or Bellator.

Here are the fight announcements that were broken or confirmed by MMA Junkie from Nov. 1-7.