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SFL 13 | REDEMPTION
MMA GRAND ARENA

Xavier: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen! Welcome to the MMA Arena in Vegas!

Styles: Here we are back in America’s Playground, baby! Sin City! Nothing like it on the planet! I love this city!

Xavier: Yes, I could tell because you went straight to the casinos and the drive-thru strip clubs!

Styles: You’re damn right I did! After we finish, I’ll go right back to doing that, too!

Xavier: Best of luck to you! Let’s get down to business in the Top 5 fights!

 

WELTERWEIGHT DIVISION: MELDRICK TAYLOR (11-6-1; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)
VERSUS
MIKE “THE MILK MAN” DAIRY (8-4; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Xavier: Since these men locked horns previously, this rubber match, as it’s called, was intriguing because people wanted to see if Dairy could defeat Taylor by TKO against as he did when the squared off at UnderGround FC 115. That battle went into the third round so it was no surprise this fight lasted that long as well. Technically speaking, many assumed Dairy had the advantage because he’s shown more prowess in Muay Thai, plus he had the obvious victory that made him know he could defeat him. The crowd and fans got their money’s worth in this fight because it was a straight up toe-to-toe war! No clinches, takedowns, or anything else except two men who wanted to put it all on the line and see who could come out on top! Round 1 was explosive as both men are Golden Gloves boxers and showed all of us why. Footwork, speed, sharp punches and beautiful counterstrikes were all on display and the crowd ate it up! Round 2 was more of the same and there were a few times each man took a solid shot but was able to shake it off and keep going without losing their sense of balance or lose their grasp on what was happening in the cage! Taylor went with more leg kicks and was mostly effective but did eat some counterstrikes for missing. Of course, he gave Dairy some of the same as well.

Styles: Round 3 was all about will and thrill! Both men were exhausted and some of their strikes were getting sloppy, but they pushed through all of that and kept right on going at it like two men hell bent on defeating the other, and it was awesome to see! The fatigue was evident when Dairy tried to throw a combination and knocked himself off balance long enough for Taylor to land a clean straight right. Dairy tried to force the action a bit after that because he sensed he needed to step it up and probably get the knockout, but he obviously wasn’t able to get that knockout despite his valiant efforts! Taylor ate a clean jab and smiled so that showed how confident he was feeling despite eating that punch. The kicks that Taylor was landing began to really show their effectiveness as this round came to a close because he landed them more easily and he unbalanced Dairy a few times at least when he landed them! Some clean shots from Dairy gave Taylor a nice mouse under his right eye so he won’t soon forget this fight. When all was said and done, the judges saw rounds 1 and 2 being very close but Round 3 was all Taylor, and thus, he emerged victorious! I hope they fight again soon because that was one hell of a battle!

 

WINNER: MELDRICK TAYLOR BY UNANIMOUS DECISION

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION; JOSEPH STALINOVICH (7-1; CURRENT STREAK: 6 WINS)
VERSUS
DON VIGO (10-9; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Styles: Not to sound like a prick, but all of you know I don’t bullshit when I break down a fight. We all knew Stalinovich had the momentum heading into this fight and we also knew the struggles Vigo was enduring. In a nutshell, we expected that Stalinovich would win if he managed to stay on his feet while Vigo’s only true chance was to get this fight to the ground where he could possibly make Stalinovich tap! Stalinovich had a major Muay Thai skills advantage in this fight and he knew exactly how to use it. Vigo showed a hell of a heart in this fight, don’t get me wrong, and his excellent Golden Gloves boxing was definitely formidable, to say the least! It was surprising to see him try and land counter attacks with kicks because Stalinovich is too good with Muay Thai to fall victim to that. In fact, he locked Vigo into a clinch and landed some clean strikes while avoiding being tagged by a big knee strike from Vigo. Vigo managed to land some nice counterstrikes but Stalinovich was the busier, more effective man and scored the vital points on the scorecards. Round 2 was just as fervent and we continued to see excellent positioning, footwork and timing! Vigo began to find a nice home with counter punches, especially his right straight. Stalinovich returned the favor shortly after that before moving into another clinch. Vigo fared better this time but Stalinovich still landed the cleaner strikes as well as more of them, so Vigo managed to break the clinch and again landed some beautiful, clean strikes but ate too many clean shots himself, especially leg kicks, and that pushed Stalinovich ahead on the cards once again.

Xavier: Heading into the third round, Vigo knew he had to finish this fight by knockout and avoid the clinch! Stalinovich also knew he could do the most damage in the clinch plus it would help him avoid the educated hands that Vigo has. Stalinovich won the clinch battle and once he locked it in, he showed very good defense and grit as he prevented Vigo from breaking free while he landed body shots that opened up Vigo’s defenses! Once the shots to the head began to land, Stalinovich was a man possessed and he continued landing shots to Vigo’s head that definitely began to ring his bell. Vigo landed a body punch and tried to break free right after that but Stalinovich was too determined for that! He avoided knees to the body from Vigo then landed more strikes until he found his way between Vigo’s hands, landed an uppercut that dropped him, then finished with a flurry that caused the ref to end the onslaught!

 

WINNER: JOSEPH STALINOVICH VIA TKO – 2:37 OF ROUND 3

FEATHERWEIGHT DIVISION: KAIJI “RONIN” INOUE (12-3; CURRENT STREAK: 2 WINS)
VERSUS
REIJO HALLI (10-4-1; CURRENT STREAK: 2 LOSSES)

Xavier: This fight was highly anticipated due to both men being the same age, very skilled and favoring the grappling and submission aspect of battle, overall. Halli was touted to be a bit better in wrestling and Inoue better in Muay Thai. However, when it came down to brass tacks, it was all about intelligence, desire, and passion! Round 1 was definitely a feeling out each other situation because the pace, though basically as lightning quick as the previous fights, had a bit more measure to it but that doesn’t mean the intent to damage was diminished by any means. Halli found some solid opportunities using counterattacks against Inoue early and Inoue opted to counter that strategy with timely punches. Inoue locked Halli into a clinch but that didn’t last long as Halli’s strength may have caught Inoue off guard a bit but Inoue didn’t let up at all despite having his clinch plans thwarted a bit. Inoue broke the clinch because he felt it better for him to launch attacks from a distance and that was the smart move. To no one’s surprise, after displaying impressive striking defense and movement, Halli found the opportunity to go for the takedown and after dragging Inoue to the mat he attempted three submissions but was obviously unable to cinch them in! That finished out the round and it was on the judges to determine who got the better of who. Round 2 was even more of a chess game with each man landing clean strikes then Inoue took a chance by locking Halli into a clinch once again. He wanted to instigate the clinch because Halli tried to lock him in one literally the moment before! Inoue tried to land some knees and elbows but Halli defended against them very well and landed shots of his own. Inoue found a bit of a groove and began to land his own shots in the clinch but like he did in the previous round, Inoue broke the clinch to try his luck at a more distant range.

Styles: That was the right choice to make, X, because he landed a nice kick then blasted Halli with a horrendous overhand right! The crowd reacted big time to that but to his credit, Halli took it like a champion and kept right on going. Inoue felt it better to try and wear down Halli with strikes to the body and he landed two shots in a row that definitely phased Halli! Inoue then went back to the clinch to try his luck again but broke the clinch shortly afterwards after failing to do any real damage. Halli put in his own work on Inoue’s body but that didn’t prevent another clinch from Inoue. However, after landing a good body shot, Inoue broke the clinch again. Dude couldn’t make up his mind about the clinch! Despite that slight indecision, Inoue pushed ahead on the scorecards and that would obviously be very vital! Round 3 was a bit of a surprise in terms of Halli’s decision to lock Inoue into a clinch instead of trying to secure a takedown straight in from a single or double-leg takedown. Granted, he tagged Inoue in the clinch but he ate a clean shot as well. He eventually got the takedown and scored sporadically with ground-and-pound before attempting an armbar, but Inoue wasn’t having it! Halli’s control on the ground in this round won him the round but, unfortunately for him, the first two rounds went to Inoue who was declared the winner!

 

WINNER: KAIJI INOUE VIA SPLIT DECISION

HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION: HENRY “THE AFRICAN” AKINWANDE (12-4; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)
VERSUS
MIKE HAGGAR (12-7; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Styles: Heavyweight fights are my favorite because the outcome is absolutely unpredictable! All it takes is that one proverbial strike and that’s all she wrote. I understand that’s possible in any weight division but the big boys bring the brutal wood that can turn out the lights in the blink of an eye! This turned out to be one hell of a toe-to-toe battle, at least in the first round. After pummeling one another with clean shots while displaying very impressive agility and movement from both men of their size, Akinwande decided to try his luck in the clinch. He got in a body shot but at a hook for his troubles. It seems that hook changed his mind about the clinch because he let that go after landing another body shot. Both men threw hooks that tried to end the night right then and there and both of them were ducked, so Akinwande decided to try the clinch again. Smart move! He landed a clean strike then sliced Haggar open with a well-placed elbow that squeezed through Haggar’s hands! That inspired Akinwande and he kept the clinch the rest of the round, landing effective and damaging strikes while displaying solid defense and preventing more strikes from Haggar getting to him that had the potential to do so. Round 2 was a different approach for Haggar because he wanted to end this fight on the ground! After both men tagged each other with clean strikes, Haggar got the takedown and scored with some ground-and-pound but it wasn’t enough because the referee got frustrated and made the fight return to the standup. Once that happened, Akinwande began to find his range and he landed very nice strikes, much to the chagrin of Haggar!

Xavier: Round 3 was just a standup war and the crowd loved it! I was surprised Haggar wasn’t able to get the clinch into a takedown he attempted but Akinwande was one step ahead of him and that absolutely helped him close out the round on a high note. It looked like he felt he was going to win about halfway through this fight because he became much more precise with his strikes and displayed timely defenses! Haggar did what he could to knock Akinwande out by wearing him down with body strikes then trying to land that one chin-rocking shot but he wasn’t able to manage it! Haggar’s fatigue began to show because twice in a row he ducked right into an uppercut and he’s lucky that didn’t floor him both times. Despite his best efforts, he just couldn’t get to Akinwande and ate a nasty body kick for good measure as the final bell sounded!

 

WINNER: HENRY AKINWANDE BY UNANIMOUS DECISION

HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP BATTLE: “RELENTLESS” JAMES FUSI (16-9; CURRENT STREAK: 3 WINS)
VERSUS
ALEXEI “BRICK SHITHOUSE” BABINSKI (15-3; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Styles: The heavyweight title was on the line in this extremely hyped fight and it was worth every second of the 107 it lasted! Many assumed, myself included, that the 8-fight win streak Babinski – his nickname kills me by the way – brought into this battle would be stretched to nine, especially since he knocked out Fusi when they clashed at UnderGround FC 130. However, as the fight game reminds us all, anything can happen in any battle, especially in the big man division! It’s possible that Fusi watched the footage of his previous loss to Babinski and either saw a hole in his armor or just said eff it and went for it! Whatever prompted him to fight the way he did, it obviously worked very well for him because he shocked a hell of a lot of people! He brought his own 2-fight win streak into this fight but still, it’s easy to see why people didn’t expect him to overcome Babinski, yet, here we are! It seems the striking defense training Fusi did was enough although Babinski made him bleed after clockin’ him with a nice right hand to the jaw! That seemed to inspire Fusi, however, because he came right back and nailed Babinski with a clean shot. A few moments later, he made Babinski forcibly exhale before unloading a savage uppercut that knocked Babinski right to the mat!

Xavier: That knockdown surprised Babinski, as did the cut that opened up above his eye! Babinski got right back into the action and landed his own clean shot with a counterattack. However, Babinski let his hands separate just a bit too much and Fusi clocked him with yet another uppercut that he didn’t see coming! Babinski, though dazed, got right back up and showed his warrior spirit. However, that wasn’t enough on this night as Fusi decided to do his best Guile from Street Fighter impression and unleashed a spinning back fist with enough torque on it to cause a local tornado! Babinski was out on his feet and fell to the canvas like a tree that was just cut at the base! Fusi raised his hand in victory and the fans loved it!

 

WINNER: JAMES FUSI BY KO – 1:47 OF ROUND 1

Xavier: There you have it, ladies and gentlemen! Thank you as always for joining our show and we truly appreciate your time and attention.

Styles: We have to give the usual love to Conquer and their awesome merchandise! Thank you for listening to us and watching us as well. We do appreciate you and we look forward to the kick assery that the Stoner Fight League brings! Until next time, take care of yourselves, be safe, be well and we’ll see you at the fights!

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You outdo yourself time and time again. Good job and keep it at it.

 

I need to mass mail the org and let them know these reviews are being posted lol

 

Thank you, brotha Karter! Since you want it much shorter and sweeter, it seems it's easier for managers to read and that's my primary focus. I want managers to enjoy reading about their fighters without inundating them with verbiage.

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SFL 14 | JIN vs. RISHKINOV III
209 ARENA

Xavier: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen! Welcome to the 209 Arena in Amsterdam!

Styles: We’re back in the free-spirited city of Amsterdam and a huge smile is once again upon my face as I see all these beautiful women filling up the place!

Xavier: All right, easy now, Styles. Yes, there are very beautiful women here from all over the world but we’re here on business.

Styles: Oh, believe you me, I’m out here tryin’ to handle my business!

Xavier: Yes, I’m sure. Let’s get down to business before you say too much more and catch a case! Let’s review the Top 5 fights!

 

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION: JAMIE JAMES (6-2; CURRENT STREAK: 3 WINS)
VERSUS
JACKS “GOT” SOLE (5-2; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Xavier: Kicking off the night of action was two young warriors who were both on winning streaks. That always prove to be intriguing because there’s a little extra motivation for both of them to pull out the victory and continue their momentum and hard work! James stepped into this fight with a 2-fight winning streak while Sole had a 5-fight winning streak. Many people expected Sole to win merely due to the amount of momentum he carried into this fight, but on that night, it was not meant to be! The expectations were James would win if this fight stayed vertical and Sole would win if this fight went to the ground. Sole began to bleed early in this fight after being tagged by a clean counterpunch but he didn’t allow that to deter his efforts. After some excellent exchanges, Sole locked James into a clinch and James took advantage by landing some elbow and knee strikes that, in my opinion, were the difference maker on the scorecards in the opening round. Sole jumped guard eventually and tried to lock in a submission but James was having none of that narrative. Round 2 began with a great deal of action but it appeared Sole was too aggressive too early in the round and that may have slowed him down too much because he couldn’t avoid a brutal right hand from James and he was knocked down and definitely rocked!

Styles: To his credit, Sole shook it off quite quickly and continued to try and make his own tattoo on James’ legs with an ugly welt he created with all of his kicks! By the way, did anyone tell this dude that his nickname would make more sense if his last name was spelled “Soul”? Just sayin’! After continuous strikes and beautiful exchanges, Sole tried his luck in the clinch yet again. This time around, Sole was much more successful and concise in the clinch and he scored vital points before he broke the clinch and took his chances at distance. He finished strong though he did eat some clean strikes from James before the bell sounded for the conclusion of round 2. Round 3 saw both men dig very deep into their reserves and battle with all they had despite being hurt and fatigued! The crowd loved the pace and passion of these men. Sole went back into the clinch and both men struggled to make the most of it. Sole scored the takedown to try his luck there and after failing to lock in a Triangle, James managed to get back to his feet and finished with a clean counterpunch that may have been the deciding factor in that round. The judges deliberated for a little bit before submitting their scores and Jamie James was declared the winner by majority decision!

 

WINNER: JAMIE JAMES BY MAJORITY DECISION

WELTERWEIGHT DIVISION: LEON “VIRTUOSO” LOUIS (12-4; CURRENT STREAK: 2 WINS)
VERSUS
TOBI “TERROR” TERRORELLI (10-5; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Styles: Here’s another fight where both fighters stepped into the cage with momentum from a previous win. In Terrorelli’s case, or TTT, he had a 2-fight win streak and Louis had turned his fortunes around after a tough loss to Toussaint Bissainthe! I still think Louis had a slightly unfair advantage because he has those weird colored lights blinking around him all the time. It’s like watching a bunch of psychedelic fireflies swarm around him. He made his game plan known right from the jump as he launched into a clinch immediately after the bell rang. I wonder if Terrorelli was caught off guard or if he thought getting into a clinch war was a good idea. Terrorelli missed a punch then found himself on the ground in guard position. Louis tagged Terrorelli with a nice ground-and-pound combination and Terrorelli wanted none of that! He tried to cinch in a submission but that only allowed Louis to gain side control.

Xavier: Once Louis had side control, it was all downhill for Terrorelli! To his credit, Terrorelli tried to defende the ground-and-pound attacks but Louis was relentless and didn’t allow his side control to be altered by Terrorelli’s efforts. Louis landed a couple of clean strikes and rocked Terrorelli, who was unable to defend himself after that. Louis saw immediately that his one big shot did a lot of damage so he poured it on until the referee decided enough was enough! Louis took this one home in the opening round!

 

WINNER: LEON LOUIS BY TKO – 1:59 OF ROUND 1

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION: TONY STARK (6-1; CURRENT STREAK: 3 WINS)
VERSUS
MARK DONCASTER (7-6; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Xavier: No disrespect to Doncaster intended but this outcome wasn’t really a surprise despite the 2-fight winning streak Doncaster brought into this fight. Yes, both men have a black belt in BJJ and that’s very commendable. However, Stark is the better wrestler plus he just looked a lot more pissed off than Doncaster did! He stared Doncaster down like the man insulted Iron Man by saying he could destroy Iron Man with a big magnet hooked onto his ballsack!

Styles: Ha! No doubt, X! I mean, 40 seconds!? Granted, that’s about as long as you last in the sack but damn, that’s definitely quick! As soon as Stark saw his opening, he launched in, got the takedown, moved to half guard as easily as you get embarrassed about your lack of bedroom skills, avoided the sub attempt from Doncaster then put this one away with an Arm Triangle! Doncaster tried to fight it but his effort was futile! Doncaster had no choice but to tap out, giving the victory to Stark!

 

WINNER: TONY STARK BY SUBMISSION - :40 SECONDS OF ROUND 1

LIGHT HEAVYEWIGHT DIVISION: “THE SHADOW” ARMAND CHRISTOPHE (10-3; CURRENT STREAK: 7 WINS)
VERSUS
“EXQUISITE” ANTHONY ROMEO (20-9; CURRENT STREAK: 2 LOSSES)

Styles: No disrespect to Romeo, but the only thing that was exquisite about his performance was that he battled hard and with heart until the third round! He bled exquisitely, that’s for damn sure! Christophe has had one of the most impressive turnarounds I’ve seen in some time. He had dropped two fights in a row and his previous management team amicably went in another direction. His current management team signed him, refocused him and dude has been rollin’ like a fat kid to bakery! Romeo knew he’d have to fight one hell of an opponent and dig very deep to try and overcome the momentum. Unfortunately for him, his ability to hold in his life mud, or blood, didn’t match his warrior spirit in this encounter! The tone was set early in the first round when Christophe nailed Romeo with a straight left hand counterstrike that cut him open a little bit. After more damaging exchanges between these two, Christophe got a bit lucky when he landed a pretty ugly looking right hand that Romeo didn’t manage to avoid and it landed right on that cut! The blood began to flow more freely and Christophe locked Romeo into a clinch to try and work on that cut from close range, but Romeo managed to defend himself and break the clinch. On the scorecards, it seemed the judges went with Romeo so props to him, but the damage from Christophe couldn’t be ignored. Round 2 showed some nice techniques as well as determination because Romeo managed to avoid major damage before breaking the clinch. In fact, Romeo began to feel it because he blasted Christophe with an outstanding counter jab-cross combination that floored Christophe! The surprise was very obvious but Romeo stepped back and waved Christophe to his feet. That definitely was costly because shortly after that, Christophe landed a very precise counter jab right on Romeo’s cut! That opened it up enough to where the blood began to be an issue. Romeo would wipe at the cut sporadically when he wasn’t throwing strikes and that turned out to be costly!

Xavier: Quite frankly, I was shocked that Romeo didn’t start bleeding much more heavily after he felt the devastation of Christophe’s counter right hand straight down the pipe! Christophe did the same thing Romeo did to him, stepping back and waving him to his feet. Romeo was definitely rocked but he managed to survive the round, and props to him for that! Round 3 was just nasty because Christophe leveled Romeo’s temple and cut with a ruthless right hook that peeled some skin back and Romeo began to bleed like one of Jason Vorhees’ victims! The ringside doctor said that was enough and the fight was called a TKO victory for Christophe!

 

WINNER: ARMAND CHRISTOPHE BY TKO - :46 SECONDS OF ROUND 3

WELTERWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP BATTLE: “BEAST FROM THE EAST” SERHEY RISHKINOV (18-5; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)
VERSUS
KOBAYASHI JIN (14-5; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Xavier: Obviously, these two warriors have crossed paths previously and put on one hell of show each and every time! The first time they locked horns, Jin was made to tap out to Rishkinov by Triangle during their fight at UnderGround FC 105! In the rematch, Rishkinov had his 6-fight win streak snapped as Jin gave him a taste of his own medicine and made him tap out to a Triangle at SFL 07! Needless to say, this third time around was very highly anticipated by everyone in attendance, let alone these two outstanding competitors! Neither man was going to surprise the other with some unexpected approach or sudden change in strategy because they both know what the other is capable of doing, so this boiled down to desire, passion, will and the more sound technique with the right mix of aggression and defense! Round 1 was a display of grappling skill and ability of the highest level, as well as patience and intelligence. The crowd was very anxious and on edge to see if either of these men could pull off the near impossible and make one or the other tap out in the first round. That obviously didn’t happen but Rishkinov established the pace and the scoring on the cards. In round 2, both men said to hell with grappling and decided to try and beat the crap out of one another in the standup! Jin was more than happy to oblige Rishkinov in this approach and made it very difficult on the judges to outright give Rishkinov the nod in terms of scoring, plus he began to find his range a bit more. Still, Rishkinov landed the more timely strikes to take the round and the frustration began to show on Jin’s face. In round 3, Rishkinov opted to take his chances in a grappling battle once again after trading some excellent strikes and movement with Jin that the crowd got a little restless over. Jin tried to sneak in a good number of submissions but Rishkinov was too slippery and defended the attempts very well.

Styles: Moving into the round 4, Jin’s cornermen were very animated and told him that he needed to finish this damn fight because he couldn’t afford to try and outscore Rishkinov anymore! In Rishkinov’s corner, they told him that they feel comfortable enough with him taking this fight to the ground and using his outstanding skills to keep control of the pace and space while avoiding Jin’s submission attempts. They were absolutely correct in that assessment because Rishkinov scored the takedown and avoided multiple submission attempts. Jin’s face was an unadulterated picture of frustration and anguish because he knew he’d probably need a knockout to win because the submission attempts just weren’t the business! Round 5 definitely showed Jin’s frustrations because he opted to bypass his corner’s instructions to try and score the knockout and instead, he landed a takedown and soon after that, Rishkinov reversed the positioning and that absolutely infuriated Jin! Jin tried to score one more submission but it was futile and once the bell rang, the disappointment set in on him. He was respectful in the loss but definitely wasn’t happy. He thanked the fans for their support and hoped that support would continue.

 

WINNER: SERHEY RISHKINOV BY UNANIMOUS DECISION

Styles: There you have it good people! Xavier and I as always, thank you sincerely and wholeheartedly for joining us for this review and we hope all of you enjoyed it!

Xavier: Thank you very much to Conquer for their incredible contributions and merchandise, and again, thank all of you for joining us. We truly appreciate you and we look forward to seeing more exciting events that only SFL can put together! On behalf of Styles, I’m Esiah Xavier, and we’re signing off. We’ll see you at the next review!

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SFL 15 | LOMAX RED PANTY NIGHT
209 ARENA

Xavier: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen! Welcome to the 209 Arena in Amsterdam!

Styles: I’ve got to tell you, X. The name of this event is just frickin awesome! Who doesn’t like red panties!?

Xavier: I have to admit I was intrigued and concerned because I wasn’t sure if that title would stir any negativity or offending allegations. Obviously, the title was given permission to proceed so that was taken care of.

Styles: Of course it was taken care of! You know Commissioner Karter’s on the job! He hooks up the right people with a little somethin’ somethin’, especially here in Amsterdam, and it’s all good!

Xavier: A little somethin’ somethin’? I’m not even going to ask!

Styles: Come on, X! I know you’re pretty straight laced and don’t delve in some things but you can’t honestly sit there and act like you don’t know what that means!

Xavier: No comment. Let’s get down to the Top 5 fights of this event!

FEATHERWEIGHT DIVISION: ATTICUS “HANDS OF JUSTICE” FINCH (9-5; CURRENT STREAK: 2 WINS)
VERSUS
DARREN DIXON (9-6; CURRENT STREAK: 2 LOSSES)

Xavier: Kicking off the night of action were two fighters who have had similar ups and downs in their careers. This was an opportunity to get back on track for the both of them, especially Dixon, as he stepped into this fight having suffered a loss to Skillz Kneeland. The premise of this fight was pretty straightforward: Finch keeps this fight vertical and he has a great chance of winning. Dixon drags the fight to the ground and he has a great chance of winning. Technically speaking, Dixon was the man with the better technique and many thought his edge would provide him a victory, but on this night, it was not so! Both men have proven to be able to withstand powerful strikes so desire and will definitely factored heavily into this fight. In the opening round, Dixon was the aggressor and after locking Finch into a clinch, he dragged the fight to the ground and went for a crapload of submissions, quite frankly! He obviously didn’t get the tapout but keeping the fight horizontal paid off as he moved ahead on the scorecards. Round 2 was a toe-to-toe exhibition and Finch obviously welcomed that with open arms!

Styles: Let’s be honest here, X! Any man who has “Ghetto Bird” as his entrance music is going to win the awesomeness points! Anyway, in round 2, Finch began to find a mark with his fists as well as sporadic counterstrikes, but not without paying a price. Dixon landed some pretty nasty shots himself and even took the time to tell Dixon he was gonna get knocked out! Dixon’s taunt pissed off Finch but he didn’t land any strikes to finish that round so maybe the tactic was effective…until the third round, of course! Finch looked possessed when the bell rang and though Dixon was more aggressive, he missed his strikes and left himself open for a devastating counter hook to the head! That clearly rung Dixon’s bell and he walked right into another crushing hook that turned out his lights! He face planted and Finch glared at him momentarily before having his hand raised! Nasty!

WINNER: ATTICUS FINCH BY KNOCKOUT – 16 SECONDS OF ROUND 3

LIGHT HEAVYEWEIGHT DIVISION: JACKSON “BLIZZARD” STORM (7-4; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)
VERSUS
JOHN “F-16” MAKRES (10-5; CURRENT STREAK: 2 LOSSES)

Styles: Technically speaking, these men were very similar in level of skill and ability, so the biggest factor was heart and desire. Due to both men being nearly identical in ability, it was very difficult to ascertain what strategies each of them would utilize for this matchup. Round 1 was a beautiful toe-to-toe battle where both men showed their excellent boxing ability and footwork. However, once Storm was able to figure out how to avoid some of Makres’ excellent counterstrikes and well-timed kicks, he was able to string together enough strikes and add his own kicks to move ahead on the scorecards! Round 2 was more of the same as both men opted to test one another’s toughness by standing in front of one another, basically, and beat the hell out of each other.

Xavier: It seems Makres doesn’t perform too well when he faces fighters named Jackson. His last two losses have been to Jackson Storm and Jackson Trigger. His management team may want to take a note of that for future’s sake. It also seems Makres felt like he fell too far behind in the fight because a look of desperation was in his eyes about halfway through the fight and he began to throw everything he had at Storm! That definitely cost him endurance and potential points on the scorecard due to his lack of landing those big shots. Granted, he tagged Storm with nice kicks but overall, Storm outdistanced him yet again and heading into the third round, he knew he needed a finish! Storm began the round with a very nice three-punch combo and that pretty much told the story of how the round would progress! Storm accidentally kicked Makres in the family jewels and the crowd moaned in empathy. Makres got himself together, touched gloves and got right back to work. Makres got in his own three-punch combo off a fantastic counterattack! That made Storm take a step back and give Makres his kudos. Storm finished the round strong and took this fight home!

WINNER: JACKSON STORM BY UNANIMOUS DECISION

MIDDLEWEIGHT DIVISION: SERGEY “THE VELSK CHIKATILO” SHIPILOV (9-2-1; CURRENT STREAK: 4 WINS)
VERSUS
“OG” SPANKY LOCO (10-6; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Xavier: The outline of this fight basically boiled down to who could keep the fight in their realm, so to speak. For Shipilov, keeping the fight vertical was the key to victory while trying to get this fight grounded was Loco’s best chance at victory. Loco was the man on an aggression mission from the get go! After landing some tremendously technical strikes and displaying excellent footwork, Shipilov settled down a bit and began to land his own clean strikes. Both men lit one another up with counterattacks and that made them both be more wary of the other but not so much that it slowed them down at all! Loco tried to impose his will in a clinch but had it broken by Shipilov shortly afterwards. Loco nailed clean strikes but they didn’t have the impact he was looking for. Near the end of the round after both men traded more strikes, Loco tried again to clinch but it was broken even faster. He went back to it yet again and the round came to an end soon afterwards. Round 2 was more of the same with neither man truly distancing himself a great deal with damage or volume of strikes.

Styles: Both of them got looser and it was evident because they began trying more kicks and moving in closer to one another to try and land more damaging blows! It was tough to be a judge in the first two rounds but that’s why I’m in the booth and not an official outside of the cage. Round 3 was more of the same quite frankly until roughly a minute left in the fight. A snappy head kick from Shipilov nearly clocked Loco but he managed to duck just enough for it to not crack his skull! He did catch the tail end of the kick, however, and he got cut. However, no further damage was caused to the cut but the final decision was for Shipilov!

WINNER: SERGEY SHIPILOV BY UNANIMOUS DECISION

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION: KAIDO GRAINDO (11-4; CURRENT STREAK: 2 WINS)
VERSUS
DOM SEVERINI (14-7; CURRENT STREAK: 2 LOSSES)

Styles: The fight layout was simple: Graindo keeps this vertical and he has a great chance of winning. If it goes horizontal, Severini has the best chance. Graindo stepped into this fight with a substantial Muay Thai advantage from what we’ve seen of him in SFL, and there’s no doubt that skill advantage allowed him to secure this fight! Severini damn near got blasted right after the bell rang because he walked straight into an uppercut but Graindo’s aim was just a little off. If it weren’t for that, this fight may have ended before either man had a chance to truly fight! Graindo tried to use his Muay Thai advantage and lock in a clinch but Severini was wise to that plan and avoided the early clinch attempt. Graindo unloaded a horrendous overhand right that made the crowd gasp but Severini took it like a champ and kept right on going! Surprisingly, Graindo tried to take Severini to the mat but Severini stuffed the attempt. This happened a few more times and Severini got frustrated and decided to show Graindo how a takedown was done! Both men struggled on the ground and Graindo’s two attempts to make Severini tap were not happening. The round ended and neither man truly established himself as the clear winning of that round. Round 2 began as a clinch battle that Graindo initiated twice but he wasn’t able to unleash the type of damage he wanted to. When the fight went back to distance striking, Graindo was the slightly more effective fighter.

Xavier: Agreed. Graindo landed the more timely strikes and despite his takedown and clinch attempts being primarily stopped, he was able to impose his will and landed clean strikes to the head and body with a good amount of consistency. Graindo seemed to find his striking range, however, and that would ring true in the final round. Round 3 was all about aggression and Graindo brought plenty of that! After landing various strikes, he unleashed a brutal combination that dropped and rocked Severini! Severini stood up and got knocked back down with a vicious overhand right! Graindo was on him before he knew it and unloaded repeated strikes until the referee pushed him off.

WINNER: KAIDO GRAINDO BY TKO - 1:06 OF ROUND 3

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP BATTLE: VINCENT “THE GOLDEN ONE” LOMAX (17-2; CURRENT STREAK: 3 WINS)
VERSUS
JOE DERRICK (14-8; CURRENT STREAK: NONE)

Xavier: Derrick stepped into this fight with an 8-fight win streak so the timing was perfect for him in that regard. Staying out of Lomax’s clinch while also avoiding being taken to the mat was the battle plan, I assume, for Derrick. Naturally, having a battle plan is one thing. Executing it is another story, especially against a champion of Lomax’s caliber! Well, right after the bell rang, Derrick locked Lomax into a clinch. Not the place he wanted to be, or at least, that’s what I thought! However, risks have to be taken, especially when a title is on the line, so kudos to Derrick for having that much gumption! Derrick really tried to aggressively use elbows and knees in the clinch but against a warrior with superior Muay Thai ability, that was questionable to say the least. Derrick landed some of his elbow and knee strikes but overall, Lomax got the better of him and landed effective body punches in the process. As the fight progressed, Lomax broke out of yet another clinch from Derrick and tagged him with a very nasty body kick that sucked the wind right out of Derrick!

Styles: Absolutely! After that body kick, it was obvious that Derrick couldn’t quite get himself back together and his effectiveness was diminished! Derrick wanted to clinch badly so he could try and lean against Lomax and catch his breath, but Lomax wasn’t having it. Derrick gave that up and landed a clean jab then went for a leg kick. Lomax was waiting on the leg kick and after it sailed by, he leveled Derrick with a stinging right hand and knocked him down! To his credit, Derrick kept his facilities about him and got to his feet but Lomax became galvanized. Derrick again tried to clinch and after failing, he tagged Lomax with a jab then a beautiful cross but Lomax just took it in stride and kept going! Lomax scored with a couple of more strikes before Derrick again locked him in a clinch, but Lomax broke out of that clinch quickly and it was obvious he was tired of the clinching! Derrick blasted Lomax with a very nice hook and that was the final straw! Lomax unloaded a head kick from hell and that was pretty much all she wrote! Derrick landed with a thud and Lomax lit him up until the ref stepped in! Cruel and brutal finish but that’s what it takes to be a champ! There's a reason this was the KO of the Night!

 

WINNER: VINCENT LOMAX BY TKO – 4:41 OF ROUND 1

Styles: All right good folks, that’s our time for this round of knowledge. Thank you as always for joining us and we hope we’ve provided entertainment and potential insight.

Xavier: As usual, we thank Conquest for their support and awesome gear! Make sure to check them out! On behalf of Furious Styles, I’m Esiah Xavier, thanking you for your time and energy. We look forward to the next round of fights in SFL and we’ll see you soon!

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135 Bantamweight Rankings
http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Juan Kemonito (14-6-0, 2-0 SFL)
#1. Sakmongkol Sitsongrit (11-0-1, 2-0 SFL)

#2. Robert Grandis (13-4-1, 1-0 SFL)
#3. Yajson Rram (8-2-0, 2-0 SFL)

#4. Andres Bonifacio (17-5-0, 1-2 SFL)
#5. Niko Alzate (5-2-0, 1-0 SFL)
#6. Bernhard River (5-3-0, 1-0 SFL)
#7. Oganeditse Gaolathe (9-3-0, 1-1 SFL)
#8. Yamaoka Yukinobu (6-2-0, 1-1 SFL)
#9. Anthony Shima (12-10-0, 0-1 SFL)
#10. Jo Chewy (3-3-0, 0-2 SFL)


145 Featherweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Sakmongkol Sitsongrit (11-0-1, 2-0 SFL)

#1. Tree Fortay (14-4-0, 1-1 SFL)

#2. Kaiji Inoue (12-3-0, 1-0 SFL)
#3. Azacca Trounvouche (10-3-0, 1-1 SFL)

#4. Reijo Hali (10-4-1, 1-2 SFL)
#5. Lynton Miller (10-4-1, 2-0 SFL)
#6. Al Ghouti (7-2-0, 2-0 SFL)
#7. Zaid al Balushi (4-0-0, 2-0 SFL)
#8. Atticus Finch (9-5-0, 3-1 SFL)
#9. Skills Kneeland (12-7-0, 2-2 SFL)

#10. Bruce Chang (10-6-0, 1-0 SFL)

 

 

155 Lightweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Jay Simon (15-1-0, 2-0 SFL)
#1. Anthony Cirelli (13-5-0, 2-1 SFL)

#2. Akaro Horiguchi (10-3-0, 1-1 SFL)
#3 Tacticus Kilgore (8-2-0, 3-0 SFL)

#4. Koalla River (8-3-0, 4-1 SFL)
#5. Israel Hands (8-4-0, 0-1 SFL)

#6. Riley Ferguson (9-5-0, 2-0 SFL)
#7. Axel Foley (11-3-1, 1-0 SFL)
#8. Shen Po (6-2-0, 2-0 SFL)
#9. Bryant Smith (13-7-0, 1-1 SFL)

#10. Tim Sanchez (6-4-0, 1-1 SFL)

 

 

170 Welterweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Serhey Rishkinov (18-5-1, 2-1 SFL)
#1. Leon Louis (12-4-0, 2-0 SFL)

#2. Jackson Polluck (9-3-0, 2-0 SFL)

#3. Kobayashi Jin (14-5-0, 2-1 SFL)
#4. Seymour Hughes (16-4-0, 1-0 SFL)
#5. Wally Kruschev (12-5-0, 1-1 SFL)
#6. John Titor (15-6-0, 2-0 SFL)
#7. Ife Edwards (13-5-0, 1-1 SFL)
#8. Derek Erwin (10-3, 3-1 SFL)
#9. Jason Rocks (11-6-0, 2-0 SFL)
#10. Meldrick Taylor (11-6-1, 1-1 SFL)

 

 

185 Middleweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Edison Atunes (17-0-0, 1-0 SFL)
#1. Jake Bird (11-4-0, 3-0 SFL)

#2. Sergey Shipilov (9-2-1, 1-0 SFL)
#3. Barry Jones (17-6-0, 1-0 SFL)
#4. Bill Brown (9-5-0, 2-1 SFL)
#5. Silent Bob (6-1-0, 2-1 SFL)
#6. Spanky Loco (10-6-0, 1-1 SFL)
#7. Colin Kaepernick (13-5-0, 1-2 SFL)
#8. Ned Kelly (6-4-0, 1-1 SFL)
#9. Sterling Archer (5-2-0, 1-0 SFL)
#10. Gurizuri Nakamura (7-5-0, 1-0 SFL)

205 Light Heavyweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Manny Johnson (14-1-0, 2-0 SFL)
#1. Vincent Lomax (17-2-0, 3-0 SFL)

#2. Jackson Trigger (16-5-0, 2-1 SFL)

#3. Valentin Taneyev (13-4-0, 2-1 SFL)

#4. Jamie James (7-2-0, 3-0 SFL)

#5. Giuseppe Hopkins (13-2-1, 1-2 SFL)

#6. Krsto Vujic (9-4-0, 2-0 SFL)

#7. Jani Koskinen (12-1-0, 1-1 SFL)

#8. Armand Christophe (10-3-0, 2-0 SFL)

#9. Kaido Graindo (11-4-0, 2-0 SFL)

#10. Lenny Kowalski (12-4-0, 0-3 SFL)

 

 

265 Heavyweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Henry Akinwande (13-4-0, 2-1 SFL)
#1. James Fusi (16-10-0, 2-1 SFL)

#2. Alexei Babinksi (15-3-0, 1-1 SFL)

#3. Bleeding Spanner (15-3-0, 0-1 SFL)

#4. Cedric Simard (9-4-0, 1-0 SFL)

#5. Kevin McGuire (5-2-0, 1-1 SFL)

#6. Bobby Chunks (6-2-0, 2-0 SFL)

#7. Pauke Murhapuro (11-8-0, 0-0 SFL)

#8. LaTroy Johnson (10-5-0, 1-1 SFL)

#9. Mike Haggar (12-7-0, 0-1 SFL)
#10. Jeronimo Puno (6-1-0, 2-0 SFL)

 

 

265+ Super Heavyweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Connor The Barbarian (15-2-0, 1-0 SFL)
#1. Techno Viking (13-2-0, 1-1 SFL)

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LW CHAMP CROWNED; WIN STREAK EXTENDED TO 15

Jay "Dog" Simon (15-1-0, 2-0 SFL) continues his improbable streak as he extends it to 15 in a row capturing the first title of his career with his submission victory over Team Alpha Midget contender Anthony Cirelli (13-5-0, 2-1 SFL). It isn't confirmed, but rumors speculate that Ticitus Kilgore (8-2-0, 3-0 SFL) vs Riley Ferguson (9-5-0, 2-0 SFL).

 

 

AKINWANDE CAPTURES HW TITLE; SURVIVES 4TH RD SCARE

Henry "The African" Akinwande (13-4-0, 2-1 SFL) defeats "Relentless" James Fusi (16-10, 2-1 SFL) in a fight that went the distance to take the HW crown from his rival. Akinwande outclassed Fusi for the duration of the fight but "Relentless" came on strong in the 4th round and knocked Akinwande down, which had to have his cornermen reeling - Akinwande was knocked down 5 times earlier this year before suffering a KO loss to the Fusi. Unlike their SFL debut Henry regained his composure and survived the onslaught to take the 5th round and earn a unanimous decision. Akinwande mocked Babinksi in his post-fight presser.

 

 

TRULY STUMPED

Lenny "The Stump" Kowalski (12-4-0, 0-3 SFL) suffered his 3rd consecutive knockout loss under the SFL banner this weekend when he was knocked out by massive underdog Krsto Vujic (9-4-0, 2-0 SFL) in the 2nd round. Lenny was the aggressor but Vujic was consistently able to find his chin, dropping him at the end of the opening frame. Lenny came back and tried to implement his gameplan in round 2 but ate a hard jab and ducked into an uppercut that knocked him out cold. Vujic is set to face Guiseppe Hopkins (13-2-1, 1-2 SFL) at SFL 25 and Lenny is still recovering from his injuries. Kowalski's most recent slump has us truly stumped.

 

 

GOLD RUSH

SFL Featherweight Champion Sakmongkol Sitsongrit (11-0-1, 2-0 SFL) drops down to 135 to take on Juan Kemonito (14-6-0, 2-0 SFL) for the vacant Bantamweight championship this weekend at SFL 21. Sitsongrit values nothing more than gold, glory, and championships, and he didn't hesitate for the opportunity to place another belt around his waist and bring it back home to Thailand. Kemonito has other plans, as he is infamous for his deadly atomic butt drop and flying luchador moves, often razzle dazzling the fans with his theatrics. The Tiny Tormentor has never been finished to strikes, and has stopped 10 his opponents with TKO's, but he's never faced a MMA fighter as decorated as Sitsongrit.

 

 

SFL 23 - ATUNES VS BIRD II

Edison Atunes (18-0-0, 1-0 SFL) vs Jake Bird (11-4-0, 3-0 SFL) is booked for SFL 23. The Middleweight champion is familiar with his opponent as the two had met back in RFC when Atunes handed Bird the only knockout loss of his career by way of brutal head kick in the 4th round. Bird wants his revenge however, as his camp apparently called for this rematch and declined a number one contender fight. "We're just happy to see a Finn has the cojones to step in there with him." Marcus tells us with a sly smile on his face. "The Finns, a boring bunch, but they used to be many. Not anymore. Atunes has lowered their numbers one kick at a time." Surely referring to his stunning axe kick knockout over previously undefeated Pate Parret.

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http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/company/logo/1595095388zQaOEBn.gif

Las Vegas, USA - This weekend officially marks the SFL's twentieth event headlined by SFL's world welterweight champion "The Beast From The East" Serhey Rishkinov (18-5, 2-1 SFL) vs Leon "Virtuoso" Louis (12-4, 2-0 SFL) to settle their trilogy once and for all. These fighters both share a victory over one another, under a different organizational banner, they fought at RFC with Leon defeating Serhey by decision in their first fight to capture the RFC Welterweight title. Rishkinov would earn his rematch and make the most of it, putting Louis away in the 4th round via TKO with a flurry of GnP.

 

tenor.gif

 

Today also marked the first time Chris Karter stepped out into public since corona aka China flu season, and he went on a drug infused rally. It's obvious he hasn't been to a barber in ages and he doesn't give a damn, he flaunts his toxic masculinity out in public with little remorse. He later told reporters via secret discord channel that he's growing a mullet in honor of Syn' Middleweight Champion Pekka Toivanen, also known as Punchmaster General, Finnish Honey Badger, and Camara's War daddy.

 

"Did we let the china virus stop us? No! We kicked it's ass! Because we're in America - the greatest god damn country on the planet!"

 

When he shouted into the mic, chest pubes blowing in the breeze, the crowd roared back with applause felt by the heartland of America. He closed his eyes and like many of his fighters before him, tweaked his nipples - his own nipples that is - and embraced the vibration of the thunderous applause.

 

:us:

 

Karter opens his eyes and starts chanting into the mic, pumping his fist with every word.

 

"Free, dumb! Free, dumb! Free, dumb!""

 

The crowd feeding off his energy chanted back.

 

"Free-dom! Free-dom! Free-dom!"

 

Karter lowered his head, pressed his fingers to his lips, silencing the crowd.

 

"America!" Karter shouts before spiking the mic on the ground like Gronkowski and the crowd goes ape shit.

 

:thankyou:

 

Gunfire echoes in the distance.

 

Fireworks go off in the sky.

 

Toby Keith's were made.

 

Loud tractor music blares inside saloons.

 

9gyf.gif

 

Karter snatched a highly intelligent blonde out the frenzied mob and loads her into his private helicopter. As the chopper rides off into the distance, the crowd cheered his epic departure. He didn't go down like Kobe either, his pilot was a consummate professional. His entrance, rhetoric, and exit had absolutely nothing to do with SFL but it got the local crowd amped up and added 10 points to the orgs hype meter.

 

:cowboy: :mf_popcorn1: :guitar:

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  • [ 170 ] Rishkinov def. Louis when he chokes him out in the 3rd round of their trilogy with a guillotine to defend his Welterweight title. Somehow applying the logic of Dave he is facing Meldrick Taylor in his upcoming title defense.
  • [ 135 ] Sitsongrit def. Kemonito via TKO strikes in the 4th round to add the SFL Bantamweight World Championship to his collection and become the first double champ of the organization.
  • [ 185 ] Jones def. Shipilov in a closely contested decision. Sergey Shipilov couldn't overcome the experience of Barry Jones and was ultimately outworked enroute to his split decision loss. With the victory Jones earned a title fight vs the undefeated world Middleweight Champion Edison Atunes.
  • [ 205 ] Taneyev def. Trigger via 1st round KO in a rematch that rolled the other way this time out. In a battle of former champions, their first fight was an epic barnburner that started off with fireworks right out the gate as the Russian known as the Hand Grenade landed a big head kick that sent Trigger to the canvas. He dropped him with another combo later in the round only to get clipped by a recovering Trigger who went "Bang! Bang!" on Taneyev's head to get the ref stoppage. This time Taneyev would have his revenge. After getting beat up in the clinch in their first battle, Taneyev decided to pull some ninja shit when the fight went there this time around, doing his best Ryan Hall impression before springing to his feet like a wild chimpanzee. He pounced for the kill and KO'd the former champ with a vicious left hook.
  • [ 185 ] Atunes def. Bird via KO in the 2nd round. Bird spent the better half of the first round on top of Atunes working for a submission but the champion was poise on the ground and taunted the black belt with his impenetrable purple belt defense. The 2nd round saw Atunes turn into sprawling tiger hidden samurai as he stuffed every takedown attempt from his foe before sleeping Bird with the left hook of doom. Atunes did exactly what Taneyev did in the Co-Main Event, but even better and with more style. Another Finn bites the dust. Will the thunder punch of Atunes lure Papi Tantor to the SFL?
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135 Bantamweight Rankings
http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Sakmongkol Sitsongrit (12-0-1, 3-0 SFL)
#1. Yajson Rram (9-2-0, 3-0 SFL)

#2. Juan Kemonito (14-7-0, 2-1 SFL)

#3. Robert Grandis (13-4-1, 1-0 SFL)

#4. Bernhard River (6-3-0, 2-0 SFL)

#5. Yamaoka Yukinobu (7-2-0, 2-1 SFL)

#6. Andres Bonifacio (17-6-0, 1-3 SFL)
#7. Niko Alzate (5-3-0, 1-1 SFL)
#7. Oganeditse Gaolathe (9-3-0, 1-1 SFL)
#9. Anthony Shima (12-10-0, 0-1 SFL)

#10. Zhang Jun (6-11-0, 0-2 SFL)

145 Featherweight Rankings
http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Sakmongkol Sitsongrit (12-0-1, 3-0 SFL)

#1. Tree Fortay (15-4-0, 2-1 SFL)

#2. Azacca Trounvouche (11-3-0, 2-1 SFL)

#3. Kaiji Inoue (12-4-0, 1-1 SFL)

#4. Reginald Budgiehandler (15-6-0, 1-2 SFL)

#5. Lynton Miller (10-4-2, 2-0-1 SFL)

#6. Al Ghouti (7-2-1, 2-0-1 SFL)

#7. Bruce Chang (11-6-0, 2-0 SFL)

#8. Reijo Hali (10-5-1, 1-3 SFL)

#9. Skills Kneeland (12-8-0, 2-3 SFL)

#10. Atticus Finch (9-6-0, 3-2 SFL)

 

 

155 Lightweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Jay Simon (15-1-0, 2-0 SFL)
#1. Anthony Cirelli (13-5-0, 2-1 SFL)

#2. Akaro Horiguchi (10-3-0, 1-1 SFL)
#3 Tacticus Kilgore (8-2-0, 3-0 SFL)

#4. Riley Ferguson (9-5-0, 2-0 SFL)
#5. Axel Foley (11-3-1, 1-0 SFL)

#6. Israel Hands (9-4-0, 1-1 SFL)
#7. Shen Po (7-2-0, 3-0 SFL)

#8. Zaid al Balushi (5-0-0, 3-0 SFL)

#9. Koalla River (8-3-0, 4-1 SFL)

#10. Bryant Smith (13-8-0, 1-2 SFL)

 

 

170 Welterweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Serhey Rishkinov (19-5-1, 3-1 SFL)

#1. Jackson Polluck (9-3-0, 2-0 SFL)

#2. John Titor (16-6-0, 3-0 SFL)

#3. Kobayashi Jin (15-5-0, 3-1 SFL)

#4. Derek Erwin (11-3, 4-1 SFL)

#5. Meldrick Taylor (12-6-1, 2-1 SFL)

#6. Leon Louis (12-5-0, 2-1 SFL)

#7. Seymour Hughes (16-5-0, 1-1 SFL)
#8. Wally Kruschev (12-6-0, 1-2 SFL)
#9. Twisty Kneereaper (11-7-0, 2-1 SFL)

#10. Ife Edwards (13-6-0, 1-2 SFL)

 

 

185 Middleweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Edison Atunes (18-0-0, 2-0 SFL)
#2. Barry Jones (18-6-0, 2-0 SFL)

#3. Jake Bird (11-5-0, 3-1 SFL)

#4. Sergey Shipilov (9-3-1, 1-1 SFL)
#5. Bill Brown (9-5-0, 2-1 SFL)
#6. Silent Bob (6-1-0, 2-1 SFL)
#7. Spanky Loco (10-6-0, 1-1 SFL)
#8. Gurizuri Nakamura (8-5-0, 2-0 SFL)

#9. Ned Kelly (6-4-0, 1-1 SFL)

#10. Slugger Dunes (4-0-0, 3-0 SFL)

205 Light Heavyweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. #1. Vincent Lomax (18-2-0, 4-0 SFL)
#2. Valentin Taneyev (14-4-0, 3-1 SFL)

#3. Manny Johnson (14-2-0, 2-1 SFL)

#4. Armand Christophe (11-3-0, 3-0 SFL)

#5. Jackson Trigger (16-6-0, 2-2 SFL)

#6. Jamie James (7-2-0, 3-0 SFL)

#7. Sammy Beach (12-7-0, 2-1 SFL)

#8. Krsto Vujic (9-4-0, 2-0 SFL)

#9. Giuseppe Hopkins (13-2-1, 1-2 SFL)

#10. Jani Koskinen (12-2-0, 1-2 SFL)

 

 

265 Heavyweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Henry Akinwande (13-4-0, 2-1 SFL)
#1. James Fusi (16-10-0, 2-1 SFL)

#2. Alexei Babinksi (15-3-0, 1-1 SFL)

#3. Bleeding Spanner (16-3-0, 0-1 SFL)

#4. Pauke Murhapuro (12-8-0, 1-0 SFL)

#5. Cedric Simard (9-4-0, 1-0 SFL)

#6. Kevin McGuire (6-2-0, 1-1 SFL)

#7. LaTroy Johnson (10-5-0, 1-1 SFL)

#8. Mike Haggar (13-8-0, 0-2 SFL)

#9. Aleksander Balkin (5-3-0, 1-0 SFL)

#10. Jeronimo Puno (6-1-0, 2-0 SFL)

 

 

265+ Super Heavyweight Rankings

http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/tinybelt.gif. Connor The Barbarian (15-2-0, 1-0 SFL)
#1. Techno Viking (13-2-0, 1-1 SFL)

 

 

**** disclaimer: due to org owners copious amounts of drug use rankings and records could be skewed and inaccurate. said org owner is not responsible for dissatisfaction or ranking misunderstanding. blame the book of dave for any flaws in the algorithm ****

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