BKFC 22 results: Britain Hart outpaces Pearl Gonzalez in intense five-round battle

Britain Hart and Pearl Gonzalez left it all inside the BKFC cage on Friday evening at BKFC 22.

Just before two titles were defended at BKFC 22, flyweights [autotag]Britain Hart[/autotag] and [autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] threw down in an exciting battle.

Hart (4-2 BKFC) sought to keep her winning ways alive against Gonzalez, who was entering her second bareknuckle fight. After an exciting five rounds of action, the judges would ultimately see the bout in Hart’s favor with scores of 48-47, 48-47, and 49-46.

BKFC 22, a bareknuckle event filled with MMA veterans, took place at the James L. Knight Center in Miami, Fla., and aired on BKFC TV and FITE TV.

The first round started fast and continued to be hotly contested as both fighters landed punches often. Hart was first to the punch, however, and outpaced her opponent in the opening round.

Hart continued to be the aggressor in the second round, getting Gonzalez in a headlock and landing a series of punches before the referee broke up the position. Gonzalez tried to land strikes of her own, but Hart got the better of the moment and the second round as a whole.

Undeterred, Gonzalez bounced back and began to find her range in the third round. The round was filled with heated exchanges, but Gonzalez was slightly more calculated in her offense, resulting in cleaner punches and a nasty cut under Hart’s left eye.

The pace slowed slightly in the fourth round, but Hart continued to fire first more often and regained control of the action in the final rounds.

The closing moments of the fight was wild, as both women stood their ground and traded punches until the horn sounded and the referee stepped in between them to stop the action. Hart thought she scored a knockdown at the final second as Gonzalez’s hands touched the canvas, but it was not scored as such by the referee.

The judges were unanimous in scoring the contest in Hart’s favor, who entered Friday’s bout on a hot streak of three straight bareknuckle victories. In her previous outing, she finished Jenny Clausius in the third round via TKO at BKFC 19.

Gonzalez, a former UFC and Invicta fighter, won her BKFC debut in June, defeating Charisa Sigala via unanimous decision at BKFC 18, but now falls to 1-1 in bareknuckle competition.

Up-to-the moment results of BKFC 22 include:

  • Britain Hart def. Pearl Gonzalez via unanimous decision (48-47, 48-47, 49-46)
  • Gustavo Trujillo def. Mike Kyle via knockout – Round 1, 0:34
  • Marcus Brimage vs. Will Shutt declared a split draw (49-45, 46-48, 47-47)
  • Howard Davis def. Rusty Crowder via unanimous decision (50-45, 50-45, 49-46)
  • Arthur Walcott-Ceesay def. Joshua Alvarez via unanimous decision (48-45, 48-45, 50-44)
  • Montaser Aboughaly def. Cage Noah via knockout – Round 2, 0:46
  • James Rodriguez def. Brian Maxwell via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 1:28
  • Peter Peraza def. Manuel Moreira via unanimous decision (48-45, 48-45, 49-45)
  • Tyler Randall def. Darwin Bonilla via unanimous decision (48-45, 48-45, 48-45)

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BKFC 18 results: Pearl Gonzalez dominates Charis Sigala in debut decision victory

Pearl Gonzalez made her bareknuckle debut at BKFC 18 against Charisa Sigala on Saturday evening.

UFC and Invicta veteran [autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] made her bareknuckle debut on Saturday evening against [autotag]Charisa Sigala[/autotag], and looked fantastic.

BKFC 18 took place at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla., airing on FITE TV.

Gonzalez (1-0 BKFC) took control of the action from the onset by letting her hands fly early and often. Working behind a left jab, she put together frequent combinations throughout the opening round, all but shutting down any effective offense from Sigala (0-2 BKFC).

The second round was similar to the first, with Gonzalez throwing and landing frequent punches as Sigala tried to find a way to close the distance. Outside of a few single punches landed, Sigala struggled to find answers for her opponent’s pressure.

The fight continued to play out in a similar fashion over the next three rounds, as Gonzalez’s distance management proved too difficult for Sigala to overcome to put together consistent combinations to change the course of the fight.

The judges scored the fight unanimously in favor of Gonzalez, with identical scores of 50-45, impressing in her bareknuckle boxing debut.

“I’m not a brawler, I’m a mixed martial artist,” Gonzalez said during her post-fight interview.

“I’m learning to be a boxer and I’m gonna come in here and show technique and skill, and every f*cking day, I’m getting better. Watch the f*ck out!”

Up-to-the-minute results of BKFC 18:

  • Pearl Gonzalez def. Charisa Sigala via unanimous decision (50-45, 50-45, 50-45)
  • Julian Lane def. Jake Bostwick via unanimous decision (50-44, 50-43, 48-45)
  • Jarod Grant def. Travis Thompson via TKO (doctor stoppage) – Round 4, 0:35
  • Eddie Hoch def. Bruce Lutchmedial via unanimous decision (48-47, 48-47, 49-46)
  • Steve Herelius def. Juan Torres via split decision (48-47, 47-48, 49-46)
  • Francisco Ricchi def. Brian Maxwell via TKO – Round 2, 1:25
  • Montaser Aboughaly def. Luke Parson via knockout – Round 1, 0:34
  • Famez def. Paul Teague via knockout – Round 1, 0:17
  • Yosdenis Cedeno def. Alan Arzeno via split decision (49-46, 46-49, 49-46)
  • Eduardo Conception def. Gabriel Brown via knockout – Round 1, 0:05

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BKFC 18 live and official results (9 p.m. ET)

Check out the official results of Saturday’s BKFC 18 beginning at 9 p.m. ET

Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship returns on Saturday evening with an exciting lineup of fights featuring a host of former MMA competitors.

The event begins at 9 p.m. ET on FITE TV.

The main event of the evening features BKFC heavyweight champion Joey Beltran (4-1-1 BKFC) looking to record his second title defense as he faces squares up against Sam Shewmaker (4-1-1 BKFC).

The main card is filled with names familiar to MMA fans. Hector Lombard (2-0 BKFC), Joe Riggs (2-0-1 BKFC), Luis Palomino (3-0 BKFC), Thiago Alves (1-0 BKFC), Pearl Gonzalez (0-0 BKFC), and Charisa Sigala (0-1 BKFC) will all put their fists to the test with the gloves off.

Official BKFC 18 results include:

MAIN CARD (FITE TV, 9 p.m. ET)

  • Joey Beltran vs. Sam Shewmaker
  • Hector Lombard vs. Joe Riggs
  • Luis Palomino vs. Tyler Goodjohn
  • Thiago Alves vs. Ulysses Diaz
  • Pearl Gonzalez vs. Charisa Sigala

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Pearl Gonzalez books bareknuckle debut, meets Charisa Sigala at BKFC 18

After stints in the UFC and Invicta, Pearl Gonzalez is taking off the gloves. Her debut opponent and date are set.

[autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] enters her BKFC debut as part of a new promotion – and an unfamiliar combat sport.

A former UFC strawweight and Invicta FC flyweight, Gonzalez signed with BKFC in April. She’ll fight [autotag]Charisa Sigala[/autotag] at BKFC 18, which takes place June 26 at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Fla. The event streams on the BKTV app.

The promotion announced the booking Tuesday on social media.

Gonzalez exits MMA, at least temporarily, having lost two of her most recent three fights. She was scheduled to fight Erin Blanchfield in November but withdrew after she contracted COVID-19.

As for Sigala, she made her BKFC debut at “Knuckle Mania” in February when she lost a unanimous decision to Taylor Jenkins, in what was one of the most exciting fights of the evening.

With the addition, the BKFC 18 lineup includes:

  • Joey Beltran vs. Sam Shewmaker – for the heavyweight title
  • Hector Lombard vs. Joe Riggs – for the light heavyweight title
  • Tyler Goodjohn vs. Luis Palomino – for the lightweight title
  • Thiago Alves vs. Ulysses Diaz – for middleweight title
  • Pearl Gonzalez vs. Charisa Sigala

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Former UFC, Invicta FC fighter Pearl Gonzalez signs multi-fight deal with BKFC

MMA veteran Pearl Gonzalez has signed a multi-fight deal with Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship.

[autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] is the latest MMA fighter to cross over into the bareknuckle boxing world.

The former UFC fighter and Invicta FC title challenger has signed a multi-fight deal with Bare Knuckle FC. The promotion announced the news Thursday. Details on Gonzalez’s debut with the promotion were not revealed.

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“Pearl is a tremendous addition to our growing list of female fighters,” BKFC president Dave Feldman stated. “Her best skill set is striking, which makes this the perfect transition for her career. She’s very popular in the combat sports world, both for her fighting ability in addition to commentating on different platforms, and we can’t wait to start working with her.”

Gonzalez (10-5 MMA) has more than 10 years of MMA experience. The 34-year-old joined the UFC in 2017 as a former XFC women’s strawweight champion. Her run in the UFC didn’t go as planned. She went 0-2 with losses to Cynthia Calvillo and Poliana Botelho.

Following her UFC release, Gonzalez went to Invicta FC, where she went 4-2 and challenged for the flyweight title against Vanessa Porto. Gonzalez was scheduled to return to Invicta this past November for the vacant flyweight title, but was forced to withdraw after getting COVID-19.

“I made the biggest sacrifice of my life, packed up everything and moved to Brooklyn, N.Y., permanently to train with the greatest female boxer in the world, Amanda Serrano,” Gonzalez stated. “I promise to dedicate my life to becoming the next BKFC world champ and couldn’t be happier to start this new chapter in my life.”

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Wednesday’s SUG 20 lineup includes Ryan Bader, C.B. Dollaway, Pearl Gonzalez vs. Gillian Robertson, more

Chael Sonnen’s Submission Underground returns to UFC Fight Pass on Wednesday, and once again the card features a number of MMA notables.

Chael Sonnen’s Submission Underground returns to UFC Fight Pass on Wednesday, and once again the card features a number of MMA notables.

The closed-door submission grappling event takes place in Portland and features Bellator heavyweight champion [autotag]Ryan Bader[/autotag] in the main event, taking on SUG absolute champion [autotag]Mason Fowler[/autotag]. The full card streams live on UFC Fight Pass beginning at 6 p.m. ET (3 p.m. PT local time).

Bader competed earlier this month at Submission Underground 19, scoring an overtime victory over recent Bellator signee Anthony Johnson, while Fowler also competed on the same card, submitting [autotag]Satoshi Ishii[/autotag] in overtime to defend his belt.

In the co-main event of Submission Underground 20, Japanese Olympic gold medalist judoka and longtime MMA veteran Ishii faces Australian grappling superstar [autotag]Craig Jones[/autotag].

Additional featured contests include 20-time UFC veteran [autotag]C.B. Dollaway[/autotag] against 10th Planet black belt [autotag]Richie Martinez[/autotag], as well as Invicta FC flyweight [autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] taking on UFC women’s flyweight [autotag]Gillian Robertson[/autotag].

The complete Submission Underground 20 lineup includes:

MAIN CARD

  • Champ Mason Fowler vs. Ryan Bader – for absolute championship
  • Satoshi Ishii vs. Craig Jones
  • C.B. Dollaway vs. Richie Martinez
  • Pearl Gonzalez vs. Gillian Robertson
  • Hunter Colvin vs. Gabriel Gonzaga

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • Ben Egli vs. Andy Varela
  • Micah Brakefield vs. Benji Silva
  • Rita Gribben vs. Kristin Mikkelson
  • Juan Bernardo vs. Alex Larmey
  • Charlie Gilpin vs. John Simon

Pearl Gonzalez withdraws from Invicta FC 43 while battling COVID-19

Pearl Gonzalez has pulled out of her fight against Erin Blanchfield.

Invicta FC 43’s main event has lost one of its participants.

[autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag] has withdrawn from the Nov. 20 headliner against [autotag]Erin Blanchfield[/autotag] due to COVID-19 complications.

Gonzalez (10-5) announced her withdrawal from the vacant flyweight title fight in an emotional Instagram video Monday.

“Hey guys, I hope you guys are doing well,” Gonzalez said. “I just wanted to come out here … and tell you guys I’m really sorry, but I’m not fighting on Nov. 20. I’ve got COVID, and I’ve been really sick these last couple of days. My camp, Shannon (Knapp), and (I) just decided it would be best if I hold out.”

Gonzalez said that she is heartbroken and that her decision to withdraw from the fight was two-fold. First off, she may not be cleared to compete when it comes time to take her COVID-19 test. Secondly, she reiterated, she feels very ill at the moment.

“This (expletive) is brutal and spiking, so just take care of yourself,” Gonzalez said. “Make sure you’re taking your supplements, washing your hands, and wearing your masks. I’ll talk to you guys soon when I’m back feeling better and let you know an update of how I’m doing. I love you guys. Thank you for your support.”

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

Gonzalez indicated the fight with Blanchfield (6-1) has been postponed to a later date. On Instagram, Blanchfield confirmed the fight is off but did not reveal if she will seek another opponent in the meantime.

Invicta FC 43 streams live on UFC Fight Pass on Friday, Nov. 20 at Police Athletic League in Kansas City, Kan.

With the change, the Invicta FC 43 lineup includes:

  • Erin Blanchfield vs. TBA
  • Emily Ducote vs. Montserrat Ruiz
  • Courtney King vs. TBA
  • Trisha Cicero vs. Stephanie Geltmacher
  • Kendal Holowell vs. Juliana Miller

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Curtis Blaydes takes aim at MMA’s glamorous female fighters – and Pearl Gonzalez fires back

UFC heavyweight contender Curtis Blaydes offered his take on some of MMA’s female fighters and one of them, fellow Chicagoan Pearl Gonzalez, fired back.

MMA is full of fighter beefs that pop up almost out of nowhere, and the COVID-19 lockdown doesn’t seem to have halted that trend.

The latest Twitter clash involves UFC heavyweight contender [autotag]Curtis Blaydes[/autotag] and Invicta FC flyweight [autotag]Pearl Gonzalez[/autotag]. Despite both hailing from the Chicago area, they ended up in a spiky social media exchange following comments made by Blaydes regarding Gonzalez’s looks and fighting ability.

Over the course of a host of social media posts, screen-shotted by Blaydes himself and shared on his Facebook and Twitter accounts, Blaydes put forward an argument that there are a number of female fighters who, he said, are receiving preferential treatment due to how they look, rather than how they fight.

https://www.facebook.com/curtis.blaydes.90/posts/229982438279260

Blaydes named Paige VanZant and Rachael Ostovich as examples when he chatted with fans online about the topic.

“So you telling me Paige Vanzant and Rachel Osto-whatever actually deserve time remain on the UFC’s roster for their ‘athletic achievements’ and their not just on cards for their sex appeal? Cause if I’m wrong about that then I guess the whole premise of my original statement is wrong and I apologize but if you’re a legit fan of MMA you couldn’t possibly believe the two females I mentioned are on the roster for anything other than the fact the look good in bikinis.”

When one fan asked about former UFC fighter Pearl Gonzalez, Blaydes weighed in again.

“Yeah I know of Pearl she’s another one who’s not a very good fighter but stays relevant cause she’s constantly posting bikini training pics, her skills are exactly what they were 5 years ago a brawler with terrible footwork and decent grappling. Too many females in the athletic industry are getting by on being sexy not actually being good at their craft.”

Gonzalez, a fellow Chicago resident, was far from impressed with Blaydes’ comments, and made sure he knew about it when she fired back on Twitter.

“A fighter complaining how my looks keep me relevant and that my skills haven’t improved. The fact you are today years old and still can’t speak a full sentence blows my mind.”

Blaydes then replied, accusing Gonzalez of mocking his speech impediment, but Gonzalez denied getting personal.

“To be 100% honest I wasn’t talking about his speech impediment.. I was talking about the stupid topics he chooses to speak on. We have such a huge platform & to choose to tear down women is so sad.”

“We’re both from Chicago… a city full of violence.. somewhere we need to uplift.. I used to shout this man out for being from the same city as me. I used to be a fan. Why not reach out & try to help women instead of criticizing?”

The back-and-forth continued, with Gonzalez signing off her part in the discussion with a damning assessment of Blaydes’ take.

“You didn’t just shame me.. you shamed all women.”

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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)

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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