Bellator 294 post-event facts: Liz Carmouche crafting strong stats during title reign

Liz Carmouche is making her footprint on the Bellator record books after recording another title defense at Bellator 294.

The first half of Bellator’s doubleheader in Hawaii went down Friday with Bellator 294, which took place at Neal S. Blaisdell Center in Honolulu and saw a champion defend her title in the main event.

[autotag]Liz Carmouche[/autotag] (19-7 MMA, 6-0 BMMA) recorded a second consecutive defense of her women’s flyweight title when she rallied from a 3-0 deficit on the scorecards to submit [autotag]DeAnna Bennett[/autotag] (13-8-1 MMA, 3-2 BMMA) with an arm-triangle choke in the fourth frame of their rematch.

For more on the numbers behind Carmouche’s win, as well as the rest of the card, check below for MMA Junkie’s post-event facts form Bellator 294.

Bellator 294 results: Sara McMann’s relentless wrestling attack smothers Arlene Blencowe

Former UFC title challenger Sara McMann made her Bellator debut Friday in Honolulu and she won.

[autotag]Sara McMann[/autotag] stuck with what got her to the dance Saturday, as she smothered former Bellator title challenger [autotag]Arlene Blencowe[/autotag] for much of three rounds to win her Bellator debut.

In the Bellator 294 featured bout, McMann (14-6 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) defeated Blencowe (15-10 MMA, 8-6 BMMA) by unanimous decision (29-27, 30-27, 30-26) at Neal S. Blaisdell Center in Honolulu.

From the opening bell, McMann pushed the pace with a relentless wrestling attack. Whether double legs or single legs, McMann latched onto Blencowe however she could. In Round 2, McMann opened up with her striking in a vicious muay thai display of a tight plumb clinch and brutal knees. Blencowe survived.

After a dominant first two rounds, McMann nearly let the win slip away when Blencowe drilled her with a violent combination in the opening seconds of Round 3. McMann was visibly stunned as the two clashed heads, too. McMann survived and the wrestling attack started back up again.

McMann’s first Bellator fight was a successful one. After back-to-back cancellations in the UFC vs. Aspen Ladd, McMann parted ways with the promotion to test free agency. She entered Bellator with two wins in her most recent three fights with the loss in that stretch against Julianna Peña.

Blencowe, 40, has now lost back-to-back fights. Prior to Friday’s bout, Blencowe fought valiantly against in a title challenge against champion Cris Cyborg in April but lost a unanimous decision.

Up-to-the-minute Bellator 294 results include:

  • Sara McMann def. Arlene Blencowe via unanimous decision (29-27, 30-27, 30-26)
  • Danny Sabatello def. Marcos Breno via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 4:10
  • Levan Chokheli def. Michael Lombardo via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27, 30-27)
  • Killys Mota def. Kenneth Cross via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 2, 2:14
  • Tyrell Fortune def. Sergey Bilostenniy via disqualification (illegal strikes) – Round 1, 3:26
  • Cris Lencioni def. Blake Smith via submission (rear triangle) – Round 2, 3:39
  • Sharaf Davlatmurodov def. Anthony Adams via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for Bellator 294.

UFC veterans in MMA and boxing action April 21-23

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

This week, the UFC is back in Las Vegas at the UFC Apex for a heavyweight showdown. In the main event, [autotag]Sergei Pavlovich[/autotag] takes on [autotag]Curtis Blaydes[/autotag] in a fight scheduled for five rounds.

Elsewhere, many other MMA and boxing events are taking place that feature a number of familiar names that have competed under the UFC banner.

This weekend, there are a total of 18 veterans of the global MMA leader competing in MMA and boxing this week from April 21-23.

Check out the names and details about their bouts below.

Upcoming event information from Tapology.

Sara McMann hopes to win Bellator title, ideally against Cris Cyborg: ‘It’s a little more special’

Sara McMann wants to take the Bellator from Cris Cyborg.

HONOLULU – [autotag]Sara McMann[/autotag] is fully focused on her Bellator debut, but there is an end game to this new journey.

McMann (13-6 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) has set her sight on the Bellator women’s featherweight title now that she’s on the verge of starting a career with her new promotion after leaving the UFC in late 2022. The Olympic silver medalist in wrestling and former UFC title challenger is set to debut this Friday against Arlene Blencowe at Bellator 294 at Neal S. Blaisdell Arena.

The main card airs on Showtime following prelims on MMA Junkie.

Cris Cyborg was the last person to hold the Bellator women’s featherweight title. She fought out her Bellator contract in April of last year, but is expected to re-sign. McMann hopes that it’s Cyborg who’s champion when she gets to belt.

“I stay pretty narrowly focused because I don’t like to put the cart before the horse, so all of my concentration has really been on Arlene, but truthfully, I think that I would love to get it from Chris (Cyborg),” McMann told reporters at Wednesday’s Bellator 294 media day. “I just feel like if you’re gonna fight, and you want to do this, and you want to be a champion, such a long-standing champion, like it’s a little more special overcoming the toughest people. So for me, that’s what I would want in my heart, but I haven’t put a lot of thought into it.”

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McMann’s debut against Blencowe (15-9 MMA, 8-5 BMMA) will be contested at featherweight. Not only is did she switch promotions, but also weight classes, as she was previously competing at 135 pounds.

McMann expects to show an improved version on Friday night with the switch in divisions.

“So I never felt drained, and I never felt too tired (at 135 pounds), but I know that when I was commanding my body to execute, I don’t always feel like it was executing as well or as fast or as crisp as I wanted to,” McMann explained. “And I did worry, I’m like, ‘Ok, this has to be fixed by the time I have a 135-pound title fight because it goes in the deeper rounds. But now, being at 145, that weight is lifted off my shoulders and I feel like more excited about even going into the deeper rounds.”

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for Bellator 294.

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Sara McMann confident Cris Cyborg will be back in Bellator

One of the biggest reasons Sara McMann jumped ship from the UFC to Bellator was for a potential matchup with the champion.

SAN JOSE, Calif. – One of the biggest reasons [autotag]Sara McMann[/autotag] jumped ship from the UFC to Bellator was for a potential matchup with the champion.

[autotag]Cris Cyborg[/autotag] currently holds sway over Bellator’s women’s featherweight division and has been dominant since coming to the promotion from the UFC not long after a loss to UFC two-division champ Amanda Nunes.

Even though Nunes’ win over Cyborg vaulted her to the top of virtually every list of best women fighters of all time, plenty of people still have their sights set on Cyborg – including McMann.

In the UFC, McMann fought at bantamweight, including a shot at the title against former champion Ronda Rousey. But Bellator doesn’t have a women’s 135-pound division, which means McMann has an easier weight cut – and a target on Cyborg’s back.

“There were other offers, but it means something to me to be a world champion,” McMann told MMA Junkie at Bellator 292 this past Friday in San Jose, Calif. “I think that at 135, UFC has the premier division. And I think at 145, Bellator has the best fighters, the deepest roster – and they have Cyborg. So if I want to be a world champion, I felt like that was my avenue. If (Bellator) had a 135 division and they had good, set girls in there, I would’ve obviously liked that. But I’m not sad about not cutting weight.”

The tricky thing about Cyborg as Bellator’s 145-pound titleholder right now is she’s a free agent. Bellator president Scott Coker told MMA Junkie the promotion has rights to her until August – and it’s not a guarantee she’ll be back with Bellator, but hopes she is.

McMann thinks it won’t be an issue that she came here to fight Cyborg, and Cyborg might be gone before McMann ever could get a shot.

“I think she’ll be back to Bellator. Even if she does maybe do something with boxing or kickboxing, she’s done muay Thai fights … I don’t know. In my mind, I imagine her back here,” McMann said.

But before McMann can think about a title shot, she’ll have to go through at least one opponent. Her promotional debut will come at Bellator 294 in Honolulu next month. McMann (13-6 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) will take on Arlene Blencowe (15-9 MMA, 8-5 BMMA), who is coming off a decision loss to Cyborg in a title fight. It was Blencowe’s second loss to the champ.

The 42-year-old McMann said the challenge the 39-year-old Blencowe will bring is the kind that will have her in immediate title contention.

“Everything is good – it’s what I wanted,” McMann said. “One of my requests coming into Bellator was that they very much put me on the track that I was asking for in the UFC. They were right on board to do that. … (A win over Blencowe) puts me immediately in the mix, and that’s what I’ve wanted for years now. It’s been a long time coming.”

Bellator 294 takes place April 21 at Neal S. Blaisdell Center in Honolulu. It will be the first of back-to-back Bellator events in Hawaii’s state capital city.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for Bellator 294.

Sara McMann’s debut, Ilima-Lei Macfarlane’s return, more added to Bellator’s Hawaii doubleheader

Sara McMann will begin the next chapter of her career in Bellator when the promotion returns to Honolulu in April.

Former UFC title challenger [autotag]Sara McMann[/autotag] has a date and opponent for her Bellator debut.

McMann will take on veteran and former Bellator title challenger [autotag]Arlene Blencowe[/autotag] (15-9 MMA, 6-3 BMMA) in a women’s featherweight bout at Bellator 294. The event is part of a two-night series set to go down on April 21 and April 22, which marks Bellator’s return to Hawaii.

News of the matchup was announced Wednesday by the promotion.

Both Bellator 294 and Bellator 295 go down at Neal S. Blaisdell Center in Honolulu.

McMann (13-6 MMA, 0-0 BMMA) was last seen in action in March, when she defeated Karol Rosa by unanimous decision at UFC on ESPN 33. That was her only fight in 2022. McMann was scheduled to make a return in two other separate occasions in 2022, one in August and the other in September, against Aspen Ladd, but both bouts fell through due to Ladd’s weight-cutting issues. Following the cancelations, McMann was released from her final fight of her UFC contract, and she signed with Bellator shortly after.

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Additionally on that card, a heavyweight matchup between [autotag]Tim Johnson[/autotag] and [autotag]Said Sowma[/autotag] will serve as the co-main event. Johnson (15-9 MMA, 3-5 BMMA) looks to snap a three-fight losing streak. His last win came against Cheick Kongo back in 2020. Sowma (8-4 MMA, 2-3 BMMA) looks to snap a losing streak himself as he lost his two most recent bouts.

Bellator 295 also saw an addition to its lineup. Former women’s flyweight champion [autotag]Ilima-Lei Macfarlane[/autotag] returns against top contender [autotag]Kana Watanabe[/autotag].

Both fighters look to build momentum and turn it into streaks as Macfarlane (12-2 MMA, 11-1 BMMA) is coming off a decision win over Bruna Ellen last August, while Watanabe (11-1-1MMA, 3-1 BMMA) is on the heels of a submission finish over Denise Kielholtz last May.

Below are the updated lineups for both Bellator 294 and Bellator 295:

Bellator 294

  • Liz Carmouche vs. DeAnna Bennett
  • Tim Johnson vs. Said Sowma
  • Arlene Blencowe vs. Sara McMann

Bellator 295

  • Raufeon Stots vs. Patchy Mix
  • Adil Edwards vs. Kai Kamaka III
  • Charlie Leary vs. Yancy Medeiros
  • Keoni Diggs vs. Weber Almeida
  • Sumiko Inaba vs. Veta Arteaga
  • Bobby King vs. Aalon Cruz
  • Davion Franklin vs. Kasim Aras

Sara McMann wants to build toward Cris Cyborg fight in Bellator: ‘You beat her, you are the best featherweight’

Ex-UFC title challenger Sara McMann sees a Bellator fight with featherweight champion Cris Cyborg on the horizon, but she wants to earn it.

[autotag]Sara McMann[/autotag] sees a fight with [autotag]Cris Cyborg[/autotag] on the horizon, but she wants to earn it.

After an almost 10-year UFC tenure, McMann (13-6) signed a multifight deal with Bellator and will compete in the featherweight division.

The 42-year-old Olympic silver medalist in wrestling is targeting a March return, but would like to get her feet wet before eyeing 145-pound champion Cyborg (26-2 MMA, 5-0 BMMA).

“I think I’d like to fight 145 once or twice before a title fight just to get my bearings and adjust to anything that might be a little bit different,” McMann told MMA Junkie. “I don’t think it’s going to be that different, but I don’t want my first fight to be – if there are any surprises, I would rather it not happen in a title fight. But also, it’s really important to me to show that I deserve and earn what I have, and so I don’t want to come in and just skip the line. I very much believe that I will beat the people in line, so it makes sense to me to build that fight.”

McMann suffered setbacks to UFC dual-champion Amanda Nunes and former bantamweight champs Ronda Rousey, Miesha Tate and Julianna Peña. But if she can notch a win over Cyborg, she sees it as a big feather in her cap.

“If you beat her, you are the best featherweight,” McMann said. “I know her and Amanda fought, but I view that fight as – standing in front of each other and just going blow for blow, that could have gone either way. Cyborg stood toe-to-toe with tons of people and gone blow-for-blow and it worked out her way. So, I think you fight her and Amanda ten times, and five times it’s going to go Cyborg’s way, five times it’s going to go Nunes’ way. It’s not that she was so dominant. It’s kind of a foolish way to fight, but people do.”

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Sara McMann ‘not bashing the UFC’ but says Bellator offered ‘really great money’ to sign

Sara McMann wanted to know if there was truth behind non-UFC promotions paying big money, and said her deal with Bellator proved that true.

[autotag]Sara McMann[/autotag] has no ill will toward the UFC. In fact, she said the promotion that served as her home for nearly nine years took “really good care of me.”

All chapters must come to an end, however, and for McMann (13-6), it was time to move on from the UFC, where she amassed a 7-6 recent inside the octagon while fighting the likes of Ronda Rousey, Amanda Nunes, Miesha Tate and more. She recently signed a contract to join Bellator, and said it was important to find out her worth on the open market before putting pen to paper.

“Just being at a different point in my career I want to know what’s out there,” McMann told MMA Junkie. “I want to know if the fighters who are saying, ‘Oh, I make more money. I’m making killer sponsorship.’ I wanted to know if those things are real and true and if you can fight for another high quality promotion and do really, really well. And I’m really, really happy to say that that’s the case.”

McMann’s departure from the UFC was not a contentious one, she said, despite the awkward ending. She was supposed to fight Aspen Ladd in August, but then Ladd pulled out of the fight on short notice. It was then rescheduled for September, and Ladd missed weight.

Instead of fighting an overweight opponent, McMann exercised her right to decline the matchup. She said the UFC paid out both her show and win money, despite her belief it “legally didn’t have to pay me anything.”

That payout essentially served as the final fight on her contract, which allowed McMann to enter free agency and survey her options. And as it turns out, there’s a lot of positive upside.

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The biggest of those upsides, in McMann’s mind, is the ability to seek out her own sponsors. The UFC forces uniforms and other branding upon its athletes, but Bellator operates differently.

“I think that one of the hardest things for most fighters, and I’m not bashing the UFC – I understand why they did what they did for a business decision – but there were so many fighters who were making comparable or sometimes more from sponsorships than they were off of their fight purse,” McMann said. “That sponsorship deal with Reebok and then with Crypto – at least Reebok and Venum actually paid the fighters. Right now they’re promoting Crypto and the fighters see none of that money. It was really sad for me. I was really sad for me for the fighters, because we have to make a living, too. I think other promotions keeping it the way that they have, it’s pro fighters. It shows the organization, what they care about.

“I don’t think it’s a big secret that they have a lot of control over fighters. With their dominance in some of the markets it’s a take-it or leave-it kind of thing. That’s sometimes the way the business is. I think the more promotions that become stronger contenders and the more promotions that offer really great money and really great exposure – things like that – they won’t be able to do that to fighters any more, because fighters will have other options.”

With her new home secured, and in a position of comfort with her financial situation, McMann, 42, is excited to deliver inside the Bellator cage. The former UFC women’s bantamweight title challenger will move up to featherweight, which is a division currently ruled by Cris Cyborg.

It’s McMann’s ultimate goal to fight for and win the Bellator title, but she said she wants to get her feet wet with a debut fight. When and where that will happen, she said she’s not sure, but it’s her hope to make her first Bellator appearance in the opening quarter of 2023.

“I definitely want to fight soon but I also respect that before I signed with this promotion they already had their cards set out,” McMann said. “I would love to fight in March, but if they’re full, I just have to accept that.”

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Former UFC title challenger Sara McMann signs with Bellator

Sara McMann is now a Bellator fighter.

[autotag]Sara McMann[/autotag] has a new home.

The former UFC title challenger and Olympic silver medalist has signed a multi-fight deal with Bellator, leaving behind almost a 10-year career with the UFC. McMann (13-6) is expected to move up a division and compete as a featherweight. Her debut under the Bellator banner is yet to be determined.

MMA Junkie verified the news with multiple sources following an initial report from Ariel Helwani on Tuesday.

Shortly after the news broke, McMann issued a statement on social media explaining her decision (via Instagram):

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

After a lot of consideration and negotiation, I’ve decided to fight for Bellator in the featherweight division. Before my fight with Karol Rosa, Jennifer Goldstein (my amazing manager) asked if I wanted to test free agency or remain with the UFC no matter what. I told her that while I have enjoyed my career fighting for the UFC, I am at a different point in life than when I initially signed with them.

I’m at a very fortunate time in Women’s MMA where other promotions will offer very enticing contracts if you are a top ranked fighter. It’s not easy to leave some of the great people I’ve met or the excellent bantamweight fighters I’ve faced. Bellator made an offer that I simply couldn’t refuse. I hope to keep all of my friends in the UFC while making new friends in Bellator. The fighting world is a tight knit community and I respect all of the athletes who put it on the line. My desire to be the world champion at featherweight is very strong because I truly believe Bellator has the premier fighters in the world at that weight class. Thank you to every one of my fans, you all are legit fight fans (or wrestlers 😂) and I can’t wait to showcase my skills without a tough weight cut 😅

Some fans have asked about retirement. The honest answer is that I just really like fighting and don’t want to stop yet 🤷🏻‍♀️🤣 I have a Masters in Mental Health Counseling and I really look forward to the day I can do counseling full time. But not yet…

McMann was last seen in action in March, when she defeated Karol Rosa by unanimous decision at UFC on ESPN 33.. That’s was her only fight in 2022.

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McMann was scheduled to make a return in two separate occasions this year, one in August and the other in September, against Aspen Ladd, but both bouts fell through due to Ladd’s weight issues. Following the cancelations, McMann was released from her final fight of her UFC contract.

The 42-year-old leaves the UFC with a record of 7-6. She holds notable wins over Alexis Davis, Jessica Eye, and Lauren Murphy. McMann’s most notable moment came when she challenged Ronda Rousey for the women’s bantamweight title in 2014. She lost the bout by first-round TKO.

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Sara McMann reacts to Aspen Ladd’s UFC Fight Night 210 weight miss: ‘Missing weight is the equivalent of cheating’

Sara McMann’s UFC Fight Night 210 bout was canceled after Aspen Ladd missed weight – something she doesn’t even think the system should allow as a possibility.

[autotag]Sara McMann[/autotag] will not fight at UFC Fight Night 210 – and it’s not her fault.

At Friday’s official weigh-ins at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas, her opponent [autotag]Aspen Ladd[/autotag] missed weight once again, a foul that ultimately led to the cancellation of the bout.

McMann, 41, made weight for what was supposed to be only her second bout since January 2021. Although her return is now further delayed, McMann revealed in an Instagram post the UFC took “very good” care of her. She also advocated for a system in which Ladd’s failed weight cut wouldn’t even be possible.

“What to even say… I’m really disappointed that things went the way they did,” McMann wrote. “I’ve never once missed weight in my career in wrestling or fighting. Missing weight is the equivalent of cheating. You gain such an advantage for every pound that you don’t have to cut. I wish that the promotions and commissions would change the policies so this isn’t even an option at this professional level. That being said, the @ufc took very good care of me for coming in and doing my job like always. I wish I had been able to compete and show the hard work and growth I’ve made since the last fight. I’ll keep sharpening the ax and do some BJJ tournaments in the meantime until my next fight is scheduled. Thanks for everyone who has reached out, you’re the best!!”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CiljsJup9xm/

Ladd has a well-documented history of poor weight cuts. In September 2018, Ladd missed weight and had a fight with Leslie Smith canceled after Smith declined to fight an overweight opponent. She had a frightening scene of trembling on the scale ahead of a July 2019 bout with Germaine de Randamie, which she ultimately hit the mark for, but suffered a quick TKO loss.

More recently, Ladd missed weight for a October 2021 fight with Macy Chiasson, which was canceled. She then competed at women’s featherweight for one fight – which she lost to Norma Dumont – before moving back down. She made bantamweight for an April fight with Raquel Pennington before this latest incident.

For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC Fight Night 210.

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