BKFC 57 results: Austin Trout sticks and moves on Luis Palomino to win welterweight title

Former WBA champion Austin Trout is now a bareknuckle champion after handing Luis Palomino his first loss in BKFC.

Former WBA boxing champion [autotag]Austin Trout[/autotag] has added another belt to his mantle by winning the BKFC welterweight title.

Trout stepped into the ring at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla. against the man who many labeled as the No. 1 pound-for-pound bareknuckle boxer, Luis Palomino. But after five rounds, Trout’s traditional boxing experience shined in a stick-and-move clinic to earn unanimous 49-46 scores to win the title, and give Palomino his first bareknuckle defeat.

Trout controlled the action early behind a snappy right jab that he sent to the body and head. Palomino searched for his openings, looking to duck under and come over the top with hooks – and he connected with a nice left. The opening feel-out round seemed to fly by.

Palomino turned up the intensity early in Round 2 by charging forward with punches and putting Trout into clinches against the ropes. Trout continued to work behind his jab, and snuck in a nice short uppercut as Palomino closed the distance.

A similar approach from both fighters began Round 3. Palomino continued to be aggressive, which allowed opportunities for Trout to land some well-timed counters.

Trout circled on the outside to start Round 4, reading Palomino’s movements. In a heated exchange, Trout clipped Palomino on the chin, and then appeared to push him to the canvas as he circled around. The referee ruled it as the first knockdown of the fight. Palomino returned to his feet, and the fight continued into the last round.

Controlling the center, Trout made Palomino come to him, and the champ was up for the task. Palomino began furiously chasing Trout around the ring, waving Trout in, which got the crowd excited. Trout evaded and taunted until the final bell sounded.

Strike totals shown on the broadcast favored Trout 99 to 40, which was reflected on the judges’ scorecards.

During his post-fight interview, Trout gave his props to Palomino, but also promised to hold the title for a long time.

“I am the champ of the BKFC and I’m going to be here for a long time, so get tired of me,” Trout said. “You can get tired of me, but I’m not going nowhere.”

Trout improves to 2-0 under the BKFC banner, while Palomino walks away with his first loss in bareknuckle competition with a record of 9-1.

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Watch BKFC 57: Luis Palomino vs. Austin Trout main card replay

Watch the full BKFC 57 main card featuring a welterweight title bout between Luis Palomino and Austin Trout.

BKFC returned to action in Florida and you can watch the main card live right here on MMA Junkie.

BKFC 57 took place at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla., and featured a welterweight title fight between champion [autotag]Luis Palomino[/autotag] and former boxing champ [autotag]Austin Trout[/autotag].

Palomino, a former Bellator and WSOF fighter, held two titles under the BKFC banner. The former lightweight and current welterweight champion entered undefeated in bareknuckle competition, and placed the latter title on the line against Trout, who competed in bareknuckle boxing for just the second time.

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You can watch a replay of main card in the video above.

The full BKFC 57 lineup includes:

  • Luis Palomino vs. Austin Trout – for welterweight title
  • Bryce Henry vs. Robbie Peralta
  • Bryan Duran vs. Louis Lopez
  • Jomi Escoboza vs. Issac Doolittle
  • Alberto Blas vs. Daniel Alvarez
  • Christine Vicens vs. Sydney Smith
  • Leonardo Perdomo vs. Bobby Brents
  • Justin Ibarrola vs. Landon Williams
  • Edgard Plazaola vs. Darrick Gates
  • Matt Russo vs. Justin Street
  • Chris Garcia vs. Albert Inclan
  • Ryan Reber vs. Derek Perez
  • Stephen Townsel vs. Leo Bercier

Luis Palomino: Austin Trout fight at BKFC 57 ‘definitely a good start’ toward marquee names

Luis Palomino is happy to be fighting Austin Trout at BKFC 57, but he’s still angling the marquee names.

[autotag]Luis Palomino[/autotag] is not entirely happy with the opportunities he’s been getting as of late in BKFC, but believes things are turning in the right direction.

The BKFC lightweight champion returns to the ring this Friday, as he’s set to headline BKFC 57, which goes down at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla.

Palomino has been angling for fights against the marquee names of BKFC such as Mike Perry, Eddie Alvarez and Chad Mendes. Although he didn’t get any of those for his return, he did draw former WBA champion [autotag]Austin Trout[/autotag], who he finds as a good introduction for the bigger names.

“This is definitely a high-profile name,” Palomino told MMA Junkie Radio. “I like this name. I was supposed to fight him a while back, but it didn’t happen, and now we brought the fight back. This is a two-time former WBA champion. He brings all the eyes of the boxing community. (Mike) Perry and Eddie Alvarez they bring the eyes of the MMA community. Both communities are huge. Boxing is older than MMA. Over here, in Florida, the boxing community is huge. They all have all these old-school Cuban boxers and whatnot, and everybody is tuned in. This event is sold out.

“Everyone’s eyes are on this fight because this is a very high-profile boxer, very accomplished. He fought the likes of Canelo Alvarez – gave him a run for his money, the Charlo brothers. He even knocked out Miguel Cotto. The guy has done his job in glove boxing, so this is a high-profile fight that I have been asking. It might not be the one I’ve been asking for, but it’s definitely a good start.”

Palomino previously told MMA Junkie that he’s willing to retire after Saturday if he doesn’t get the bigger names he was asking for.

“You’re bringing them in with the eyes behind them, but I think we’ve done that enough to build on your champions that were built in your house, and that’s me, that’s the Juggernaut, that Christine Ferea,” Palomino said. “I have six world title defenses. I’m the only undefeated, two-division undefeated champion. I’m out here raising my hand asking to fight all these high-profile names and willing to go three weight classes above. … I’m like, ‘Hey, man. Throw me a bone. I’m not just asking, I’ve earned it. I’m 9-0, undefeated, two-division champion. I’ve earned it and that’s what I’m fighting for.”

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Luis Palomino frustrated with BKFC, threatens to retire unless he gets Mike Perry fight

BKFC champ-champ Luis Palomino is fed up with not getting the big names and didn’t hold back in airing grievances.

[autotag]Luis Palomino[/autotag] is not happy with where he stands in BKFC, specifically when it comes down to getting opportunities for marquee fights.

The two-division BKFC champion is frustrated, calling for fights against [autotag]Mike Perry[/autotag] and fighters of such stature, though he hasn’t received anything of the sort in return. Palomino, who’s regarded by many as the best pound-for-pound bareknuckle boxer today, is fed up with his situation.

“You talk about frustration. Frustration is not even a word that can describe this situation,” Palomino told MMA Junkie in Spanish. “I don’t get this situation, to be honest.

“I understand that David Feldman, a man who created this sport, is trying to bring in the public using names like Eddie Alvarez, Luke Rockhold, Mike Perry, and these UFC names that have followings and are known. I get that, but I think that phase is over.

“Now we have the eyes on us, and it’s time to give your own champions, the in-house guys, these opportunities. It’s been extremely frustrating chasing Chad Mendes for an entire year just for him to disappear and then come back out of nowhere to fight Eddie Alvarez.”

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Palomino, who holds titles at both lightweight and featherweight, has publicly called out notable names in his divisions including Perry, Alvarez, Chad Mendes, and Thiago Alves. He’s yet to fight any of those guys.

Palomino was appalled to see Perry call out Anthony Pettis and say he’s only interested in fighting fighters with large followings after he won the “King of Violence” BKFC title in win over Eddie Alvarez in December.

“After the fight at the press conference, they asked Perry what his thoughts were on fighting Luis Palomino. His answer after winning a title of ‘King of Violence’ wasn’t a very violent answer,” Palomino said. “That answer was something like, ‘Well, if the organization is going to put someone against me, that person needs to have Instagram followers, and many comments and likes.’

“I was dumbfounded. I don’t get his line of thinking. I’m going to give him the benefit of the doubt. That might’ve been the words of his manager because I know he doesn’t like me, and he doesn’t want that fight. So I think that answer came more from that side. I put the video on my social media and everyone was like, ‘What kind of answer is that? The bigger guy running from the smaller one.'”

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Palomino returns to the ring Feb. 2, as he’s set to headline BKFC 57 in Hollywood, Fla. He takes on former WBA champion-turned-bareknuckle-boxer Austin Trout.

The Peruvian fighter told MMA Junkie the fight against Trout might be his last, as he will only fight again if it’s against Mike Perry or someone of similar profile.

“After this fight, I’ll be the only champion in BKFC history that’s gone 10-0. I would also be the only fighter who’s defended his belt seven times,” Palomino said. “Before me, it was Joey Beltran who had three. I now doubled that, and I will have the seventh one on Feb. 2.

“I will put my feet on the ground, and I’m not going to accept any other fight that’s not Mike Perry. You’re not going to make up a title and present that title as more important than the undisputed world title and not give me the opportunity to fight for something like that? My deal is, ‘Ok, cool. You want to make them a title because of the history of Eddie Alvarez and Mike Perry, cool. But if you want to legitimize that, that guy needs to fight a real champion. Me, being the No. 1 pound-for-pound guy, I deserve that fight.'”

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Prizefighting as an undocumented immigrant: Why BKFC champ Luis Palomino never got UFC chance

This is the story of how BKFC champion Luis Palomino spent his entire 43-fight MMA career as an undocumented immigrant in the U.S.

Being a professional fighter is hard, but it was especially difficult for [autotag]Luis Palomino[/autotag].

Getting beat up, injuries, hard training, low pay, the politics of the fight game, criticism from fans and media, grueling weight cuts, hunger, pain – these are just some of the things fighters have to endure. And yet, paying these dues doesn’t guarantee glory, much less money. It just gets you an entry ticket into the pool where only a selected few will get the chance to call themselves champions before it’s all said and done.

For 42-year-old Palomino, now standing as a two-division champion in the top bareknuckle fighting promotion today, BKFC, success came late. But it did come. And looking back, it’s incredible it even came at all.

The gritty veteran fought his entire 43-fight MMA career as an undocumented immigrant in the U.S..

Yes, Palomino headlined three events on NBCSN and also fought on ESPN Deportes and MTV2. He competed for Bellator six times, defeated Jorge Masvidal, gave Justin Gaethje two of his toughest fights, and became, for many years, one of the best fighters outside of the UFC, all while living illegally in the U.S. Hell, if it wasn’t for his undocumented status, Palomino would’ve fought for the UFC and likely would’ve kicked ass.

His story is a testament to a true passion for fighting. It’s also one full or short comings and disappointments.

MMA Junkie caught up with Palomino to discuss his wild journey in combat sports ahead of his BKFC lightweight title defense vs. James Lilley in the BKFC 45 main event Friday night at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla.

The begining

Palomino was born in 1980 in Lima, the capital of Peru. At the age of 11, his family moved to the U.S. in hopes of a better future, an unfortunate but typical story for many Latin Americans. Like many, the Palomino family entered the U.S. illegally. But unlike many, they didn’t cross the border on a train or by foot. They flew in with fake passports.

“My name was Miguel something,” Palomino said laughing. “I was Mexican-American. That was crazy. I entered with a photo-switched passport. It was a passport with a different photo. Regardless, it’s an illegal way to enter, but who knew that illegal passport was going to be my salvation here in the U.S?”

Palomino and his family settled in California where he began to box, but about three years later they would relocate to Miami. Training in combat sports and getting into street fights naturally pushed him into professional fighting many years later in his adult life.

At 25, he made his pro debut, punching Louis Pilato into submission in the first round. From then, Palomino’s fighting career took off.

Fighting as an undocumented immigrant

Fighting was tricky. No, it’s not your regular 9-5 job, and you don’t have to clock in hours. But as unstructured as it might feel, especially in the early 2000s and 2010s, MMA is not immune to U.S. law. Fighters still need to pay taxes and show proof of citizenship or work permit in order to compete and get paid.

“What helped me in the other promotions were the work permits that, at times, I would be able to get – that’s why I was able to sign with Bellator, World Series of Fighting, CFA, and all the other smaller promotions,” Palomino explained. “The work permit allowed me. It was limited. It would be for a year or two. It would expire, but then I would already be on the inside.”

Palomino married a U.S. citizen, which put him in a pending status for residency. This allowed him to apply for work permits while in the process of legalizing his stay in the U.S.. He eventually got divorced and was unfortunately not able to solve his immigration status – either way, through those years, he was able to persue his dream of being a fighter.

“People have no idea,” Palomino said of the struggles he went through in his career while being an undocumented immigrant. “There are people that have been following me for a long time, especially my Peruvians and my people from South America, and they always asked, ‘When are you fighting in the UFC? When? When? When?’ This would happen all the time after I would beat people and they would get signed to the UFC.

“Well, the reason was because I was illegal for 31 years. It was 31 years where at times I would get a work permit for a year or two and then not have one again for four or five years. Sometimes I would get lucky, sometimes I wouldn’t. I was in a very difficult position. I had to fight locally. I had my ups and downs.”

Close, but yet so far from the UFC dream

Despite his immigration status, Palomino had plenty of success in MMA, and likely came as close as you can possibly get to sign with the UFC.

He made plenty of noise outside the octagon and positioned himself as one of the better fighters in the world. Yet, he was always hesitant to explicitly call for a UFC opportunity.

Most undocumented immigrants live in fear of overexposing themselves or putting themselves in positions where documentation is required out of fear of getting deported.

“That’s an incredible level of pressure,” Palomino said regarding fighting professionally while being an undocumented immigrant. “It’s so tough, so tough. The good thing about Latin Americans is that we want to work and move forward in life. I know many people with papers legally, and they don’t want to work and then they complain about how they live. The Latin American blood makes you put in the effort. But, yes, it was very difficult.”

Throughout his career, Palomino always had a winning record and would go on streaks that had his fans clamoring for a UFC shot. However, there were two particular moments during his better days that proved to him he was UFC ready.

In 2010, Palomino pulled off a big upset and defeated now retired UFC star Jorge Masvidal, putting him at a 19-5 record. Less than a year later, Masvidal re-signed with Strikeforce and then merged into the UFC roster after the UFC’s aquisition of the company. It was tough for Palomino to stand by and watch.

But perhaps his most frustrating moment came the following year in 2011. Once again, the difficulty of being undocumented presented itself, not only by discouraging him for making a push for the UFC but also because the circumstances alone reminded him of what he was battling outside of the cage.

“There were many fights that I couldn’t travel to,” Palomino said. “When I won my second championship belt in MMA, I had to fight in Michigan, and I couldn’t make the trip because I had no license. It was expired, and I didn’t have the work permit (so couldn’t renew it). So what did I have to do? I had to pay a friend to rent a car on his name and drive me to Michigan. And that entire trip was a risk. If you get stopped by the cops and you get a racist one, oh man.”

On that trip, Palomino knocked out Daron Cruickshank with a head kick in the first round. It was in Cruickshank’s hometown, too. The following year in 2012, Cruickshank joined “The Ultimate Fighter” and earned himself a spot on the UFC roster where he stayed for six years before leaving to Rizin FF in Japan.

Better days would eventually come for Palomino, at least days where he received more recognition in the industry for his skills.

In 2014 and with a respectable record of 21-9, Palomino signed with World Series of Fighting, now known as PFL. It wasn’t the UFC stage, but it was broadcast on NBC Sports Network and without a doubt was above the obscurity of the regional MMA scene.

Palomino would go on to have two ridiculous wars against Gaethje for the World Series of Fighting lightweight title in 2015. They made all kinds of headlines and had a Fight of the Year candidate.

“Throughout the years, I had opportunities to fight in the UFC,” Palomino said. “But during the times that I had a work permit I was with Bellator or WSOF, promotions who wouldn’t let you go to the big league. Or the fear of if the UFC were to call and I couldn’t go there.”

Palomino says there were plenty of times he could’ve stepped up on short notice or at least it was on his radar. However, one time he actually got the call to fight on one of the early UFC cards in Mexico, but he turned it down since he couldn’t leave the country.

“They called me to go to the UFC,” Palomino said. “They wanted me to drop to 145 and I was fighting at 155, and I didn’t even know how to cut weight. I thought to myself, ‘How am I going to go if they want me to fight in Mexico? I don’t have papers.’ So it was impossible for me to go to the UFC, and I put those mental blocks, too.”

WSOF was maybe not Palomino’s career apex, but it was likely his most celebrated given the size of the platform at the time. Eventually, Father Time caught up and after his exciting run in PFL, more defeats than wins came his way.

As his career in MMA dwindled, Palomino had a tough time coming to terms with the fact that the UFC dream was over, especially because he felt that, at his best, he belonged.

“I’ve cried, I’ve been through depression,” Palomino said. “Man, I’ve had some terrible moments because of all of this. Imagine dedicating your entire life to fighting, beating someone and watching them get to the UFC.”

Redemption through bare-knuckle boxing

“The love for fighting never left, but the hopes of getting to the UFC and fighting in the octagon did. That withered,” Palomino added. “So when that died, I entered a period of deep depression. And during that moment, I saw Jim Alers, a colleague, do well in bare-knuckle.”

Bing.

Palomino began to watch the rise of BKFC and liked what he saw. Given his style, the Peruvian saw an opportunity that no longer was present in MMA given his age and knee injuries.

“OK, so it’s only boxing. No takedowns or grappling, two-minute rounds. “OK, I think I can do this,” Palomino said. “… So when BKFC came to prominence, it gave me that hunger again to fight and also it inspired me to want to be a champion. And, well, now I’m champion.”

Palomino is aware of what he was up against when fighting in MMA, but he firmly believes his mentality toward his undocumented status limited his mind.

“So people know why I never made it to the UFC and why I would beat many who would then join the UFC, it’s because I was illegal,” Palomino said. “I didn’t have the papers. Now that I’m fighting in bareknuckle, the first thing I did, knowing what I know now, was tell myself, ‘I’m going to be an undefeated world champion. I’m going to be the champion of this organization, and I’m going to retire undefeated.’ I still say that to this day. What you say is what you become.”

Palomino is now married again and has been a U.S. citizen for over a year. He’s 42 but hungry to create the type of legacy he hasn’t been able to build in MMA. The focus is Friday’s title defense against Lilley at BKFC 45, but he wants the biggest names available after that.

And by anyone, he means anyone.

“In BKFC, Austin Trout, Eddie Alvarez, superfight against Mike Perry. Outside of BKFC and in boxing, ‘Showtime’ Pettis, Jose Aldo, Jeremy Stephens,” Palomino said. “I want a name that, when I mention them, you know exactly who I’m talking about. That’s what interests me.

“Whatever I didn’t get to do in the octagon, in the UFC, I’m going to do it here. I came with that mentality. I came ready for this. And here I am.”

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BKFC double champion Luis Palomino gets next assignment

The man many regard as the best pound-for-pound bareknuckle fighter in the sport today, Luis Palomino has his next BKFC assignment.

BKFC welterweight and lightweight champion [autotag]Luis Palomino[/autotag] has his next fight set for June 23 when he’ll defend the lighter of his two titles.

Palomino, 42, will return to headline BKFC 45 against No. 1 promotion-ranked contender [autotag]James Lilley[/autotag]. The event takes place at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla. and streams on FITE.

Regarded by many as the best pound-for-pound bareknuckle fighter in the sport at the moment, Palomino enters the fight with an undefeated 8-0 record in bareknuckle since he made the jump from MMA in 2019.

Palomino most recently competed in December when he stopped Tom Shoaff in Round 4. Other key promotional wins include Dat Nguyen, Tyler Goodjohn, and Jim Alers.

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Lilley, 36, is also undefeated in bareknuckle boxing with a record of 7-0-1. He’s 3-0 under the BKFC banner after five fights for leading UK promotion BKB. Lilley most recently competed in February when he stopped Bobby Taylor in between Round 3 and Round 4.

No other fights have been announced for the event at this time.

BKFC champ Luis Palomino looking to cash a few big checks against Mike Perry or Austin Trout

Luis Palomino already holds two BKFC titles, but he wants to collect on the biggest checks possible before walking away from fighting.

[autotag]Luis Palomino[/autotag] is undefeated in bareknuckle boxing after closing the door on his MMA career, and believes it’s time to cash in on the biggest fights possible.

Palomino, 42, has found his niche in BKFC, where he holds titles in the 155-pound and 170-pound divisions, and has yet to taste defeat through eight fights. While he looks like one of the best competitors in gloveless competition, Palomino admits he has had conversations with his family about when he will call an end to his fighting career.

However, before that time comes, he wants to cash a few big checks, and is willing to take on a certain UFC veteran known for his hard-nosed brawling style.

“I don’t care if we’re fighting at 155, if we’re fighting 165, if we’re doing a superfight at 170, because I’ll do a superfight against Mike Perry at 170,” Palomino told MMA Junkie radio. “All I care about is the number that goes next to the name. Whatever more numbers are with this name than that name, then I want the one that has more numbers. That’s what I care about.”

Perry, like Palomino, has found immediate success in bareknuckle competition after his UFC exit in 2021. After defeating Julian Lane in February, Perry won a drag-out war against Michael Page in August that required a sudden death round to determine the victor.

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But Perry isn’t the only one on Palomino’s radar.

BKFC recently signed former boxing junior middleweight champion Austin Trout, who plans to compete in both arenas. The 37-year-old Trout carries a 36-5-1 pro boxing record, which looks like dollar signs to Palomino.

“If anything, this looks like my money fight,” Palomino said. “That’s what I’m looking for. All I care about is the numbers, man.”

The champ would like to see Trout take one fight in bareknuckle competition before he gets thorn into a title fight, but once he proves he can hang without gloves, Palomino is all in on the matchup.

“I think it will be a little hard on the guys in the rankings,” Palomino said. “You know, you just bring this guy because he was a champion in boxing, and give him a direct title shot without even proving himself to be able to do the job without gloves? So, I think as a respect to the rest of the fighters in the lineup and to the champ, do a fight, show us what you got.”

Palomino won three bareknuckle fights in 2022. He defeated Martin Brown and Elvin Leon Brito by unanimous decision, and then finished off his year with a fourth-round stoppage of Tom Shoaff.

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Photos: BKFC 34 weigh-ins and faceoffs

Check out these photos from the BKFC 34 weigh-ins ahead of the event in Hollywood, Fla.

Check out these photos from the BKFC 34 weigh-ins and fighter faceoffs at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla. (Photos courtesy of BKFC)

BKFC 34 set for Florida with Luis Palomino headliner, more

Luis Palomino will return at BKFC 34 when he defends his lightweight title against challenger Tom Shoaff, the promotion announced.

One of, if not the standalone, pound-for-pound best bareknuckle boxer has his next bout.

Former World Series of Fighting (WSOF) title challenger [autotag]Luis Palomino[/autotag] (7-0) will defend his BKFC lightweight title against [autotag]Tom Shoaff[/autotag] (4-3) at BKFC 34, an event scheduled for Dec. 3 at Hard Rock Live in Hollywood, Fla., the promotion officially announced recently.

Palomino, 42, has proven unbeatable thus far since he joined BKFC in early 2020. In July 2020, won the promotion’s lightweight title in 45 seconds against Isaac Vallie-Flagg in what was his second BKFC appearance. After four successful title defenses, Palomino moved to 170 pounds in June and he defeated Elvin Brito by unanimous decision to become a double champion.

Shoaff, 33, went 11-4 as an MMA fighter prior to his bareknuckle pivot. After an inconsistent 1-3 start, Shoaff rattled off stoppages of Nathan Mitchell, Josh Wright, and Bruce Lutchmedial to earn a title shot.

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Also on the card, [autotag]Francisco Ricchi[/autotag] (5-0) will battle [autotag]David Mundell[/autotag] (5-1) for the BKFC middleweight title in a co-headlining bout.

The current BKFC 34 lineup includes:

  • Champion Luis Palomino vs. Tom Shoaff
  • David Mundell vs. Francisco Ricchi

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Luis Palomino def. Elvin Brito at BKFC 26: Best photos

Check out the best photos from Luis Palomino’s unanimous decision win over Elvin Brito at BKFC 26.

Check out the best photos from [autotag]Luis Palomino[/autotag]’s unanimous decision win over [autotag]Elvin Brito[/autotag] at BKFC 26 on Friday at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla. (Photos by Phil Lambert and Nick Vespe, BKFC)