Bellator 283 results: Tofiq Musayev blitzes through Sidney Outlaw with 27-second knockout

Tofiq Musayev put the Bellator lightweight division on notice by quickly finishing Sidney Outlaw.

It didn’t take long for [autotag]Tofiq Musaev[/autotag] to make a statement in his Bellator debut.

In the co-main bout of Bellator 283, Musaev (20-4 MMA, 1-0 BMMA) met Sidney Outlaw, who entered the contest on a two-fight win streak with victories over Adam Piccolotti and Myles Jury.

Musaev, who stepped into the Bellator cage for the first time after his exit from Rizin FF, caused a halt to the win streak in rapid fashion.

After a few brief seconds of figuring out the movements of Outlaw (16-5 MMA, 3-2 BMMA), Musaev saw an opening and unleashed a hard two-punch combination. Outlaw was clearly wobbled and Musaev sensed a finish was possible. He quickly followed up with another combination ending with a right hand that sat Outlaw down, and referee Keith Peterson quickly called a stop to the contest.

The official stoppage time was 27 seconds, the fastest finish of Musayev’s professional career.

Musayev holds a win over current Bellator lightweight champion Patricky Freire from 2019, and hopes to run it back again, potentially for higher stakes in the near future.

The up-to-the-minute Bellator 283 results include:

  • Tofiq Musayev def. Sidney Outlaw via knockout (punches) – Round 1, 0:27
  • Usman Nurmagomedov def. Chris Gonzalez via submission (guillotine choke) – Round 1, 2:54
  • Mukhamed Berkhamov vs. Lorenz Larkin results in a no contest (unintentional illegal elbow) – Round 1, 2:52
  • Marcelo Golm def. Davion Franklin via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 3, 4:36
  • Dalton Rosta def. Romero Cotton via TKO (punches) – Round 3, 0:38
  • Veta Arteaga def. Vanessa Porto via submission (guillotine choke) – Round 2, 3:47
  • Gadzhi Rabadanov def. Bobby King via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
  • Akhmed Magomedov def. Kevin Boehm via submission (rear-naked choke) – Round 1, 1:16
  • Roman Faraldo def. Luis Iniguez via knockout (punch) – Round 1, 3:42
  • Jaylon Bates def. Mark Coates via split decision (30-27, 28-29, 29-28)
  • Archie Colgan def. Bryan Nuro via TKO (punches) – Round 3, 1:15

[vertical-gallery id=2564201]

Free Fight: Tofiq Musaev outbattles Patricky Freire to win lightweight grand prix at Rizin FF 20

Recap the action as Tofiq Musaev and Patricky “Pitbull” Freire faced off in the Rizin lightweight grand prix final at Rizin FF 20.

Rizin FF 20 saw the final rounds of the Japanese promotion’s lightweight grand prix, and the pre-tournament favorite fell at the final hurdle.

Bellator veteran and longtime lightweight contender [autotag]Patricky Freire[/autotag] was expected by many to go all the way in the Rizin lightweight tournament, and his devastating knockout performance in the semifinals only served to further whet the appetite ahead of the final later the same night.

But Freire’s opponent, Kazakhstan’s [autotag]Tofiq Musaev[/autotag], proved every bit “Pitbull’s” equal in a hard-fought final battle that went all the way to the scorecards.

After a cagey opening, Musaev let fly with his shots as the pair went toe to toe in a wild final minute of the first round. But Musaev didn’t just stand and bang for the entire fight. He smartly mixed up his strikes with takedown attempts that kept “Pitbull” on the back foot throughout the second round. At one point, he even sent the Brazilian through the ring ropes with one takedown attempt as Friere found himself crashing down onto the arena floor.

Once the bout resumed, Musaev went back to work and used his more well-rounded approach to hold the upper hand over Freire through the remainder of Round 2, then the majority of Round 3 to claim a unanimous decision victory, and the Rizin lightweight grand prix title.

Recap the back-and-forth matchup at Rizin FF 20 via the video above.

MMA Junkie’s ‘Fight of the Month’ for December: A slugfest between wrestlers

With another action-packed month of MMA in the books, MMA Junkie looks at the best fights from December 2019.

With another action-packed month of MMA in the books, MMA Junkie looks at the best fights from December 2019: Here are the five nominees, listed in chronological order, and winner of MMA Junkie’s “Fight of the Month” award for December.

At the bottom of the post, let us know if we got it right by voting on your choice.

* * * *

Rob Font def. Ricky Simon at UFC on ESPN 7

[autotag]Rob Font[/autotag] (17-4 MMA, 7-3 UFC) had to battle through early adversity to get his 17th professional win, topping a game [autotag]Ricky Simon[/autotag] (15-3 MMA, 3-2 UFC).

Font came back from getting dropped in the first round to outpoint Simon in a unanimous decision. The judges’ scores were 29-28, 29-28 and 30-27, giving Font back-to-back wins for the first time in more than two years.

Kamaru Usman def. Colby Covington at UFC 245

The highly anticipated welterweight title fight between [autotag]Kamaru Usman[/autotag] (16-1 MMA, 11-0 UFC) and [autotag]Colby Covington[/autotag] (15-2 MMA, 10-2 UFC) surpassed all pre-fight expectations, but in the end it was the champion who came away with his title reign intact.

Usman and Covington went toe-to-toe for nearly five rounds, exchanging strikes on the feet and not once putting a wholehearted effort into a takedown attempt. Usman proved more dangerous on the feet in the matchup of wrestlers, breaking Covington’s jaw before dropping and stopping him in the fifth for the fight-ending TKO.

Charles Jourdain def. Dooho Choi at UFC on ESPN+ 23

After falling short in his UFC debut earlier this year, [autotag]Charles Jourdain[/autotag] (10-2 MMA, 1-1 UFC) showed what he was all about in his sophomore octagon appearance when he won a featherweight thriller against [autotag]Dooho Choi[/autotag] (14-4 MMA, 3-3 UFC).

Jourdain gave “The Korean Superboy” a rude welcome back to action from a long layoff when he fearlessly found a home for his strikes for nearly two full rounds. Eventually Choi couldn’t hold up, because Jourdain connected with a shot that set up a TKO to end the “Fight of the Night” affair.

A.J. McKee def. Derek Campos at Bellator 236

[autotag]Derek Campos[/autotag] (20-10 MMA, 9-8 BMMA) showed off his trademark toughness, but it wasn’t enough to stop [autotag]A.J. McKee[/autotag] (16-0 MMA, 16-0 BMMA) from picking up another impressive win to extend his record winning streak in Bellator.

McKee fought Campos from every area over the course of the bout, then suddenly in the third, from his back, he pulled off a slick armbar that forced Campos to tap out and made him the first man to advance to the semifinals of the Bellator featherweight grand prix.

Tofiq Musaev def. Patricky Freire at Rizin FF 20

[autotag]Tofiq Musaev[/autotag] (18-3 MMA, 5-0 Rizin) made light of his underdog status as he surged into the Rizin lightweight grand prix final and claimed a unanimous decision victory over pre-tournament favorite [autotag]Patricky Freire[/autotag] (23-9 MMA, 2-1 Rizin).

The two semifinal matchups in the lightweight grand prix tournament produced brutal, quick-fire finishes as Azerbaijan’s Musaev and Brazilian Bellator star Freire registered impressive stoppage wins. They went all three rounds in the final, though, each trying to overcome severe hand injuries. Musaev had the bigger moments, though, and was given the nod by the judges.

View this post on Instagram

🇦🇿AZERBAYCAN🇦🇿

A post shared by Tofiq Musayev (@tofiq__musayev) on

* * * *

The Winner: Usman vs. Covington

[vertical-gallery id=471456]

After a heated buildup and a compelling fight, Usman came out “and still” the UFC welterweight champion.

With the clock winding down in the UFC 245 main event, Usman finished former interim champ Covington at 4:10 of Round 5 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

As Covington walked out to Kurt Angle’s WWE theme song, he was met with boos and middle fingers from the crowd, although the controversial competitor also had a noticeable share of supporters. A calm, cool and collected Usman made the walk second, draped in the Nigerian flag.

When it came time to fight, the two combatants, who did not touch gloves at the outset, delivered. Known for their wrestling abilities, not one takedown attempt was tried. Covington set a frenetic pace in the first, while Usman was more calculated with his strikes.

After three rounds of back-and-forth face-punching, Covington informed his corner he thought he broke his jaw. Upon replay, a hard straight right was the culprit.

[lawrence-related id=474280,472439,472026]

Fighting through the pain in the fourth round, Covington showed tremendous heart. He stunned Usman on multiple occasions and dug deep to return to his first-round pacing.

With the fight being relatively close, there was no consensus leader entering the fifth. It could have been anyone’s fight. Midway through the round, Usman showed championship mettle and began to land some of his hardest punches of the fight.

In a wild fifth-round sequence, Usman battered Covington, dropping him to the canvas. Covington survived, but only for so long. He was promptly met with more hard shots from the champion. As a bloody, battered, and swollen Covington clutched onto a single leg, Usman’s hammer fists finished the fight.

Upon the stoppage from referee Marc Goddard, the bloodied and battered Covington protested, but to no avail.

After the fight, Covington left the cage and ran to the back. He did not give a post-fight interview.

Conversely, Usman took the high road. The champion celebrated his win, but also turned attention to a tragedy his family had recently endured. Usman’s brother Mohammed, a pro MMA heavyweight, lost his son in a drowning accident earlier this year.

The victory means Usman has now won 15 straight outings. As for Covington, the loss was only the second of his career.

[opinary poll=”what-was-your-fight-of-the-month-for-dec-ZP15″ customer=”mmajunkie”]

[jwplayer LlgEEnq7-RbnemIYZ]

Rizin FF 20: Coach Eric Albarracin says Patricky Pitbull went into Tofiq Musaev fight with a broken hand

According to Patricky Freire’s coach, Eric Albarracin, said “Pitbull” had to mask a broken hand going into the Rizin FF 20 grand prix final.

According to [autotag]Patricky Freire[/autotag]’s coach, “Pitbull” had to mask a broken hand going into the lightweight grand prix final at Rizin FF 20.

A perfectly-placed soccer kick against Luiz Gustavo, landed Freire a spot in the grand prix final, but although it took him only 28 seconds to score the finish, Freire’s coach Eric Albarracin says “Pitbull” suffered a broken hand in the fight.

He took on [autotag]Tofiq Musaev[/autotag] in the final later in the night, but lost the fight via unanimous decision where, according to his coach, Freire had to battle for 15 minutes with a broken hand.

[lawrence-related id=476216]

“People don’t know… Patricky broke his hand in that first fight on the semis and went into the second fight with a broken hand,” Albarracin revealed via his Instagram story. “We made sure not to take the bandage off so it would swell up so we kept the bandages on, we kept his wraps on and he fought with a broken hand and put it all on the line. He put it all out there.”

It was an entertaining back-and-forth scrap, but ultimately Musaev got the nod, going on to win the lightweight grand prix.

Hoping to follow in his brother – and reigning two-division Bellator champ – Patricio’s footsteps, Patricky may have fallen short, but Albarracin is confident that one day the other “Pitbull” brother will be world champion, too.

“I thought we won, I thought we were going to get the nod but never leave it in the hands of the judges. Good job to Tofiq, he went out there and did what had to do to win but, you know, it’s not over. 2019 might be over but it ain’t over for our destiny. Patricky Pitbull will be a world champion one day.”

[vertical-gallery id=476472]

Rizin FF 20: Tofiq Musaev outbattles Patricky Pitbull to capture lightweight grand prix title

Azerbaijan’s Tofiq Musaev produced a superb performance to outpoint Patricky “Pitbull” Freire and capture the Rizin lightweight grand prix title in Saitama.

[autotag]Tofiq Musaev[/autotag] made light of his underdog status as he surged into the Rizin lightweight grand prix final and claimed a unanimous decision victory over pre-tournament favorite [autotag]Patricky Freire[/autotag] at Rizin FF 20 in Saitama.

The two semifinal matchups in the lightweight grand prix tournament produced brutal, quickfire finishes as Azerbaijan’s Musaev (18-3 MMA, 5-0 Rizin) and Brazilian Bellator star Freire (23-9 MMA, 2-1 Rizin) registered impressive stoppage wins.

Musaev’s power was too much for Johnny Case as he stopped the American with his heavy-handed punches in just under three minutes in the opening bout of the night, while Freire trumped that performance with a 28-second battering of fellow countryman Luiz Gustavo as he bludgeoned him with strikes, then finished with an exclamation point as he connected with a vicious soccer kick to the his man as the referee dived in to stop the contest after just 28 seconds.

[lawrence-related id=476216]

It set things up for the tournament final later in the night as the two fighters, both fresh from their swift victories at the start of the event, stepped through the ropes in prime condition for the final at the end of the preliminary card.

And while “Pitbull” was considered the favorite heading into the tournament finale, Musaev was anything but intimidated as, after a cagey opening, he stood and traded toe-to-toe with the heavy-handed Brazilian in a wild final 60 seconds of the first round.

Despite his apparent willingness to trust his chin, the key difference-maker for Musaev was his ability change levels and use his wrestling to keep Freire on the back foot throughout the second stanza. That wrestling also led to the scariest moment of the matchup, when one takedown attempt on a retreating Freire saw the Brazilian fall backwards through the ring ropes and onto the arena floor. In the brief chaos that followed, Musaev’s cornerman was penalized with a yellow card for supposed “interference”, despite trying to help the Brazilian as he fell through the ropes.

But the break in proceedings didn’t affect Musaev, who continued to mix up his stand-up with smartly-timed takedowns as he took control of the bout. And that pattern continued in the third as Musaev and Freire went to the scorecards, where the underdog claimed a unanimous decision victory to capture the lightweight grand prix crown.

[vertical-gallery id=476472]

Up-to-date results at Rizin FF 20 include:

  • Tofiq Musaev def. Patricky Freire via unanimous decision – for lightweight title
  • Jiri Prochazka def. C.B. Dollaway via KO (punch) – Round 1, 1:55 – for light heavyweight title
  • Simon Biyong def. Vitaly Shemetov via TKO (tap due to strikes) – Round 2, 0:58
  • Hiromasa Ogikubo def. Shintaro Ishiwatari via split decision
  • Jake Heun def. Satoshi Ishii via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 1:12
  • Patrick Mix def. Yuki Motoya via submission (guillotine choke) – Round 1, 1:36
  • Miyuu Yamamoto def. Suwanan Boonsorn via unanimous decision
  • Patricky Freire def. Luiz Gustavo via TKO (punches and soccer kick) – Round 1, 0:28
  • Tofiq Musaev def. Johnny Case via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 2:46

Rizin Shine: Kai Asakura gets his shot at superstardom in Saitama at Rizin FF 20

MMA Junkie’s Simon Head looks ahead to Rizin FF’s end-of-year spectacular at the Saitama Super Arena on New Year’s Eve.

Things didn’t work out as originally planned for Rizin FF, but the Japanese promotion’s New Year’s Eve spectacular at the Saitama Super Arena will still finish with a wild scrap for their bantamweight title.

Rizin FF 20 was all set to feature the hotly-anticipated rematch between Kyoji Horiguchi and the man who shocked the MMA world when he finished the two-promotion bantamweight champion in their non-title meeting at Rizin FF 18 in October, [autotag]Kai Asakura[/autotag].

Asakura’s 68-second demolition of Horiguchi in Nagoya stunned the Japanese MMA community, and when Asakura (14-1, 6-0 Rizin FF) repeated the trick with a 54-second knockout of Ulka Sasaki at Rizin 19 that left the former UFC fighter with a broken jaw, it was clear that the 26-year-old was the undeniable number-one contender for Horiguchi’s title.

Everything seemed set for an end-of-year showdown in Saitama, but disaster struck in November when news emerged that Horiguchi had sustained a knee injury that would require surgery and an estimated layoff of around 10 months. But, in an honorable move from the American Top Team man, Horiguchi decided to relinquish his Rizin and Bellator bantamweight titles to free up the belts and allow Rizin to book an alternative title fight for New Year’s Eve.

Now the vacant bantamweight strap will be up for grabs in the night’s main event, with Asakura taking on the explosive [autotag]Manel Kape[/autotag] (, whose second-round knockouts of Seiichiro Ito and Takeya Mizugaki at Rizin FF 15 and 18 respectively made him a compelling replacement opponent for Dec. 31. And with Asakura taking the spoils when the pair battled to a split decision back in May 2018, there’s fighting pride, as well as a championship belt, at stake.

Hamasaki and Seo set for super-atomweight showdown

A second title fight will also feature at the top end of the main card, with reigning Rizin women’s super atomweight champion [autotag]Ayaka Hamasaki[/autotag] returning to action to face the challenge of South Korea’s [autotag]Seo Hee Ham[/autotag] in a title fight between fighters with a combined 51 fights to their name.

Hamasaki (19-2, 5-0 Rizin FF) captured the vacant title at Rizin FF 14 last December via second-round armbar finish of Kanna Asakura, then defended her title with a unanimous decision against Jihn Yu Frey in June. Most recently, she armbarred Suwanan Boonsorn in a non-title showcase at Rizin FF 18. Now she takes on former UFC strawweight Seo (22-8, 2-0 Rizin FF) Hee Ham, who hasn’t lost since departing the UFC at the end of 2016.

Rizin FF women’s atomweight champion: Ayaka Hamasaki (L) with Seo Hee Ham

Seo has won five in a row, with her last two victories coming via stoppage inside the Rizin ring. Tomo Maesawa was dispatched inside a round, then Seo finished Japanese amateur wrestling icon Miyuu Yamamoto via second-round TKO at Rizin FF 19 in October. Now the 32-year-old from Busan will bid to capture her second title since leaving the UFC as she aims to add the Rizin title to the Road FC atomweight title she won in December 2017.

Dolloway aims for redemption – and a championship belt

A USADA anti-doping suspension may have left [autotag]C.B. Dolloway[/autotag] unable to compete Stateside, but the MMA free-agent has been handed not just a lifeline, but the opportunity of a lifetime, as he takes on reigning champion [autotag]Jiri Prochazka[/autotag] for the Rizin light heavyweight title.

Dolloway (17-9, 0-0 Rizin FF) was handed a two-year ban by USADA after a pair out-of-competition tests came back positive, while an IV infusion was also adjudged to be over the allowable limit.

It resulted in Dolloway’s eventual release from the UFC, with the American seemingly banned from competition until mid-December 2020. But with Rizin not recognizing USADA’s suspensions, Dolloway is free to fight for the Japanese promotion, and will challenge the dominant champ Prochazka (25-3-1, 10-1 Rizin FF), who is riding a 10-fight, four-year win streak. The big Czech has finished nine of those 10 victories, with eight of those coming inside the opening round.

Lightweight grand prix reaches its climax

In addition to the three title fights on the card, Rizin FF 20 will also feature the two semifinals, then the final, of the promotion’s lightweight grand prix tournament.

The semis will see America’s [autotag]Johnny Case[/autotag] face off with dangerous Azerbaijani contender [autotag]Tofiq Musaev[/autotag], while the other half of the draw features Bellator star [autotag]Patricky Freire[/autotag], who will take on fellow countryman [autotag]Luiz Gustavo[/autotag].

The four men will contest their semifinal matchups early on the preliminary card, with the two winners facing off in the tournament final in the final bout before the intermission.

And finally…

Look out for Bellator bantamweight contender [autotag]Patrick Mix[/autotag], who will be representing his promotion with pride as he takes on former DEEP bantamweight champion [autotag]Yuki Motoya[/autotag].

Former King of the Cage bantamweight champ Mix has been one of the big success stories of Bellator’s lower weight classes after joining the promotion midway through the year and producing a pair of highlight-reel first-round submissions.

After his Suloev stretch finish of Isiah Chapman at Bellator 232, Mix told MMA Junkie he was only just scratching the surface of his capabilities, and now he gets the chance to showcase his grappling prowess inside the Rizin ring.

And perhaps the biggest reception of the night could come early on the card, as [autotag]Miyuu Yamamoto[/autotag] returns to action against [autotag]Suwanan Boonsorn[/autotag] (4-2, 0-1 Rizin FF). Yamamoto (5-4, 5-4 Rizin FF) is still competing in MMA and grappling tournaments at the age of 45, and the former amateur wrestling phenom and sister of the late, great Norifumi “Kid” Yamamoto remains a firm favorite with the Japanese fight fans wherever she competes.

Full Rizin FF 20 MMA fight card includes:

MAIN CARD

  • Kai Asakura vs. Manel Kape – for vacant bantamweight title
  • Champion Ayaka Hamasaki vs. Seo Hee Ham – for super atomweight title
  • Mikuru Asakura vs. John Teixeira
  • Rena Kubota vs. Lindsey VanZandt

PRELIMINARY CARD

  • Rizin FF Lightweight Grand Prix Final
  • Champion Jiri Prochazka vs. C.B. Dolloway – for light heavyweight title
  • Simon Biyong vs. Vitaly Shemetov
  • Shintaro Ishiwatari vs. Hiromasa Ogikubo
  • Jake Heun vs. Satoshi Ishii
  • Patrick Mix vs. Yuki Motoya
  • Suwanan Boonsorn vs. Miyuu Yamamoto
  • Patricky Freire vs. Luiz Gustavo – lightweight grand prix semifinal
  • Johnny Case vs. Tofiq Musaev – lightweight grand prix semifinal