Paul Kelly triumphs in MMA comeback at Probellum 1 after six-year prison term

Paul Kelly was grateful to be back in the cage in his hometown of Liverpool, England.

Former UFC fighter [autotag]Paul Kelly[/autotag] made his long-awaited return to action at “Probellum 1: Liverpool” on Saturday night and scored a second-round stoppage win to complete a remarkable journey.

Kelly’s return came after serving a six-year prison sentence for heroin trafficking, which began when he was found guilty in 2013. Now a free man, the 35-year-old Brit affectionately known as “Tellys” returned to action in his hometown of Liverpool, England, and defeated [autotag]Simone Bottino[/autotag] with heavy ground-and-pound in the second round of the night’s main event.

Kelly (15-5) started out in typically aggressive fashion as he threw big punches at Bottino (4-7), then attempted to lock up a guillotine when the Italian tried to shoot his way out of danger. Kelly then took his man powerfully to the mat, moved to half-guard, and roughed him up with punches and elbows before moving into full mount and unloading more powerful ground strikes.

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Despite finding himself on the receiving end for much of the round, Bottino somehow escaped and briefly ended on top before Kelly took charge once more and unleashed another barrage of strikes from the top.

After a high-octane first round that unsurprisingly left him breathing hard, Kelly went back to work in Round 2 and was met by a powerful leg kick that echoed around the arena as Bottino looked to go on the offensive. The Italian then pulled guard and tried to grab a guillotine but ended up with Kelly on top once again.

This time, Bottino wouldn’t recover, as Kelly postured up and rained down a host of nasty-looking elbows before switching to punches and landing 24 unanswered shots before the referee finally stepped in to end the fight.

Officially the win came at 1:37 of Round 2. But perhaps more notable was the fact that it came seven years and six days after Kelly’s last victory – a win over Henrique Santana in U.K. promotion Ultimate Warrior Challenge.

Much has happened to Kelly since that 2013 win, but his comeback victory at Probellum marked a return to the sport he loves, in the city he loves, in front of the people he loves.

After the fight, an exhausted Kelly grabbed the mic and dropped to his knees in the center of the cage, telling the crowd how tired he was after his first professional fight in seven years.

“I’m (expletive), proper, proper (expletive),” he said, before pointing to his heart and stating, “That was that.” He then pointed to the crowd inside Liverpool’s Olympia and said, “That was all you lot being here.”

With raucous support in the stands, Kelly said there was no way he would lose his comeback fight.

“Not a (expletive) chance,” he said. “Bring a shotgun and three of your mates. I’ll beat any one of you!”

He then paid tribute to his head coach, Team Kaobon’s Colin Heron, for helping guide him back to the cage.

“What a legend that guy is,” Kelly said. “No one says it enough, and he doesn’t get the praise he deserves. I’m not going to go into the issues I had heading into this camp but, without him, there’s not a chance I would have been here.”

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Former UFC fighter Paul Kelly gets opponent for MMA return at Probellum 1

Former UFC fighter Paul Kelly finally has an opponent for his March 7 headliner at Probellum 1.

In mid-January, former UFC fighter [autotag]Paul Kelly[/autotag] announced his return to MMA after serving a seven-year sentence for heroin trafficking.

While the date and event he’d compete on, March 7 at Probellum 1, has been public for a while, Kelly (14-5) was opponent-less throughout much of his training camp.

However, that’s changed. In a social media post Tuesday, the promotion announced Kelly’s challenger: [autotag]Simone Bottino[/autotag]. Italy’s Bottino (4-6) has won three out of his most recent four outings.

The matchup will take place at welterweight and serve as the card’s main event.

Kelly competed in the UFC from 2008-2011. “Tellys” made his promotional debut at UFC 80 in January 2008. In his first UFC outing, Kelly defeated Paul Taylor by unanimous decision.

In October 2008 at UFC 89, Kelly was submitted by Marcus Davis. Following the defeat, Kelly picked up back-to-back wins over Troy Mandaloniz and Roli Delgado.

After being bowled over by an infamous Dennis Siver spinning back kick in November 2009 at UFC 105, Kelly went 2-1 in 2011. In his final UFC fight, he served as the first octagon opponent for Donald Cerrone. After a controversial punch during the opening glove touch, Kelly was submitted by rear-naked choke in the second round of their UFC 126 showdown in February 2011.

After his UFC release, Kelly went 2-1 in smaller organizations.

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The walk to the cage at Liverpool Olympia likely will be a raucous one. Deeply embedded in the English MMA community, Kelly’s domestic fanbase is still massive.

“I think it’s going to go off its nuts,” Kelly, 35, recently told MMA Junkie. “I am who I am. I got nicked for drugs, but everyone in the (expletive) city sells drugs. That’s what it’s known for. They need to air it live in this prison system. They’ve got so many channels in jail. The prison system will go off its rockers.

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