PFL World Championships: Live results and analysis

MMA

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — After a full season of PFL fights in six divisions, and a playoff win for each fighter remaining, 12 fighters will walk into the cage Wednesday at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Florida with a chance to be a champion. Only six will end the night with a PFL gold title belt and a $1 million first-place payout.

Three fighters on the PFL World Championship (Live on ESPN+; 8 p.m. ET on ESPN2/ESPN+) card have been there before. Kayla Harrison has swept through the majority of two consecutive PFL seasons in the women’s lightweight division, and she has a chance to cap her second straight campaign as a PFL champion. The only person standing in her way is Taylor Guardado.

Magomed Magomedkerimov won the inaugural PFL welterweight champion in 2018, defeating Ray Cooper III in the finals. In 2019, with Magomedkerimov forced out midway through the playoffs, Cooper won that title. The long-awaited rematch will determine the PFL’s welterweight king in 2021.

Four other $1 million champions will be crowned. At heavyweight, Bruno Cappelozza has breezed through his first three fights with three TKO victories — two in the first round, and one in the second. The first of those wins came against Ante Delija, who gets a chance at revenge as Cappelozza’s finals opponent.

Featherweight Chris Wade twice fought his way into the PFL semifinals in previous seasons at lightweight, but fell just a hair short of a championship bout both times. With a move down to featherweight, Wade finally broke through in 2021. He faces a tough challenge against undefeated Movlid Khaybulaev.

In 2019, Loik Radzhabov beat Wade to make the lightweight finals, where he lost to Natan Schulte. In what will be the first of six title fights into the cage, he’ll take on Raush Manfio. That fight will be followed by a light heavyweight title fight between longtime UFC veteran Antonio Carlos Junior and Marthin Hamlet.

In non-title action, ESPN’s No. 2 women’s pound-for-pound boxer Claressa Shields fights for the second time in the world of MMA, taking on Abigail Montes in a 155-pound showcase fight.

Mike Coppinger is in attendance, and he and Jeff Wagenheim will cover the action live. Follow along throughout the night for instant updates and analysis.


Fight in progress

Middleweight showcase: Omari Akhmedov vs. Jordan Young


Women’s lightweight showcase: Julia Budd def. Kaitlin Young by unanimous decision

The buildup to Budd’s PFL debut had little to do with the former Bellator champion’s PFL debut. It was more focused on a hypothetical Budd matchup against the PFL’s biggest star, Kayla Harrison.

First things first, Budd did not exactly buzz through Young like she was an unchallenging steppingstone. Young got the better of the striking early on, in fact, but once Budd took the fight to the canvas late in the first round, it was her fight from that point on.

Budd, who is 38 and from British Columbia, spent the better part of the second and third rounds in control from top position on the mat, although she did not threaten a finish until the final seconds. Budd cruised to victory, sweeping all three rounds on all three judges’ scorecards (30-27, 30-27, 30-27) for her third win in a row.

Young, a 36-year-old from Shoreview, Minnesota, has lost two straight.

Men’s lightweight showcase: Don Madge def. Nate Williams by second-round submission (rear-naked choke)

Madge is a former Muay Thai world champion, so obviously the way to beat a striking specialist like him is to take him to the canvas and … oh, wait.

Williams succeeded in getting Madge to the mat in Round 2, after the two had spent most of the first round on their feet. Williams was on top, starting to go to work, when Madge reversed position and efficiently put his opponent in a rear-naked choke to get the tapout at 2:15.

Both men were making their PFL debuts. Madge, a 30-year-old South African who came over from the UFC but had not competed in over two years, has won seven in a row. Williams, who is 34 and from Stone Mountain, Georgia, has lost two of his last three.


Still to come:

8 p.m. ET, ESPN2 and ESPN+

PFL women’s lightweight championship: Kayla Harrison vs. Taylor Guardado

PFL welterweight championship: Ray Cooper III vs. Magomed Magomedkerimov

Women’s lightweight showcase: Claressa Shields vs. Abigail Montes

PFL heavyweight championship: Bruno Cappelozza vs. Ante Delija

PFL featherweight championship: Movlid Khaybulaev vs. Chris Wade

Live on ESPN+

PFL light heavyweight championship: Antonio Carlos Junior vs. Marthin Hamlet

PFL lightweight championship: Loik Radzhabov vs. Raush Manfio

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