Halfway through 2026 and MMA has seen no shortage of memorable manglings.
MMA
Global Fighters’ Association announces a round table series
Published
1 year agoon
Liverpool, Great Britain -after almost a year of industry research and preparation behind the scenes, Global Fighters’ Association (GFA) Today he announced the first in a 12-month program of round tables in the nationwide “selection committee”, marking the formal movement of the organization to the public domain as a representative body for fighters, employees and fans in combat sport.
Designed in cooperation with older political and sports strategies, these expert forums will gather votes from the entire industry to examine some of the most urgent and long problems in sport-assessment and functioning, to prosperity, security, integration, education and responsibility.
The first round table that takes place PowerHe will focus on one of the most smoking fears in sport: Refereeing professional duels. After widespread social fear and athlete related to transparency and consistency of scoring, GFA will order a full independent review in order to examine how decisions are made to assess how they are examined and how the standards can be improved.
Round tables will be conducted and reported by independent lawyers With experience in the well -being of athletes, management and sports regulations. Participants will cover There were fighters at all levels and disciplines, judges, judges, trainers, promoters, broadcasters, gym owners, doctors, financial and legal experts.
Co -founder of GFA Paul Smith Jr. he said: “It’s about opening the door to a real dialogue. Fighters were too often ignored when sporting is being conducted. These round tables are a chance to gather the right people with the right experience, asking the most arduous, most critical questions. We believe that these reports will aid provide greater protection for fighters, greater transparency for fans and aid you achieve sport.”
The sender and co -founder of GFA Nick Peet added: “Boxing and combat sport have huge global potential – but the foundations must be right. It is not about pointing to the fingers; it is about creating a place for the right reform, rooted in experience and expert knowledge.”
While GFA will publish the arrangements and recommendations from each round table, No results or rules are predetermined.
Topics for discussions on the inaugural round tables will include:
- Transparency and consistency in professional scoring
- Qualifications, responsibility and training for judges
- Standards of review procedures after combat
- Potential models of structured reviews of scoring
GFA round tables are First in a series of public activities The organization will undertake before formal launch this year.
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MMA
Jordan Burroughs faces Sean Brady in RAF 12 main event next month
Published
11 hours agoon
July 4, 2026
Wrestling legend Jordan Burroughs finally has an opponent for his RAF debut, and it's someone MMA fans know well.
On Friday, Real American Freestyle announced that Burroughs, who signed with the promotion last month, will face UFC welterweight Sean Brady in the main event of RAF 12 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland on Aug. 22.
Widely considered one of the greatest American wrestlers of all time, Burroughs was a two-time national champion in college for Nebraska before transitioning to the senior circuit, where he dominated the 74-kg weight class, winning the World Championships in 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2017. The highlight of Burroughs' wrestling career is his gold medal at the 2012 Olympic Games. After setbacks in 2016 and 2020, Burroughs moved up to 79 kgs, where he won the World Championship in 2021 and 2022.
Burroughs, 37, last competed at the 2024 World Championships, losing to multiple-time world medalist Mohammad Nokhodi.
Brady is one of the top welterweights competing in MMA right now. Though he doesn't hail from a traditional wrestling background, Brady has proven himself to be a strong wrestler in his MMA and grappling career. Most recently, he defeated Joaquin Buckley at UFC 328 in May. This is his RAF debut.
MMA
Jordan Burroughs faces Sean Brady in RAF 12 main event next month
Published
11 hours agoon
July 4, 2026
Wrestling legend Jordan Burroughs finally has an opponent for his RAF debut, and it's someone MMA fans know well.
On Friday, Real American Freestyle announced that Burroughs, who signed with the promotion last month, will face UFC welterweight Sean Brady in the main event of RAF 12 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland on Aug. 22.
Widely considered one of the greatest American wrestlers of all time, Burroughs was a two-time national champion in college for Nebraska before transitioning to the senior circuit, where he dominated the 74-kg weight class, winning the World Championships in 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2017. The highlight of Burroughs' wrestling career is his gold medal at the 2012 Olympic Games. After setbacks in 2016 and 2020, Burroughs moved up to 79 kgs, where he won the World Championship in 2021 and 2022.
Burroughs, 37, last competed at the 2024 World Championships, losing to multiple-time world medalist Mohammad Nokhodi.
Brady is one of the top welterweights competing in MMA right now. Though he doesn't hail from a traditional wrestling background, Brady has proven himself to be a strong wrestler in his MMA and grappling career. Most recently, he defeated Joaquin Buckley at UFC 328 in May. This is his RAF debut.
MMA
MMA Fighting’s 2026 Submission of the Midyear: Murtazali Magomedov’s mind-blowing Scottish twister
Published
12 hours agoon
July 4, 2026
Sure, we've yet to see a major title fight decided by a submission yet, but what's great about the mixing of the martial arts is that sometimes you see some of the most amazing finishes happen when you least expect it, and that's doubly true when it comes to fighters forcing their opponents to tap out.
Six months into the year, we've seen all kinds of submissions from airtight chokes to body-bending holds to classic armbars, so we had plenty of options to choose from when deciding which was the best for our Midyear awards. In the end, we landed on a Dana White Contender Series signing making a debut that will be tough to top, a talented flyweight contender putting an exclamation point on an impressive performance against one of his division's most dangerous spoilers, and never-before-seen-in-the-UFC leg lock courtesy of a streaking strawweight who's proving she's more than just a meme machine.
So let's look at MMA Fighting's top-3 submissions of 2026 so far.
No. 1: Murtazali Magomedov vs. Melsik Baghdasaryan (UFC Vegas 119)
You could be forgiven for mistaking Murtazali Magomedov for a striker.
For many fans, their first introduction to Magomedov came on the Contender Series, where he showed slick hands to put away Brahyam Zurcher and earn a UFC contract. Even his last Octagon League featherweight championship defense came courtesy of a hellacious knockout knee up the middle. Magomedov might be a wrestler, but he certainly doesn't shy away from throwing hammers on the feet.
However, his UFC debut reminded everyone he has a dangerous submission game. Once Magomedov put Melsik Baghdasaryan on the mat, he didn't settle for a pedestrian rear-naked choke or hunt for a joint lock; no, that wouldn't be satisfying enough. Instead, he waited for Baghdasaryan to turn into his body lock, trapping him halfway through, and then twisting him in such a way that his upper half threatened to separate from his lower half.
The official call was Scottish twister and the official result was Magomedov putting the 145-pound division on notice that he is not to be messed with when it comes to grappling.
No. 2: Asu Almabayev vs. Charles Johnson (UFC Baku)
Asu Almabayev is so close to breaking into that elite tier of flyweights and he moved one step closer to cementing a spot with his latest win.
Kazakhstan's Almabayev has been a healthy favorite in his past couple of fights, but it's one thing to look good on paper and another to look good inside the octagon. For two rounds, against flyweight kingmaker Charles Johnson, Almabayev showed off a complete game, especially his superior wrestling.
Up on the cards heading into Round 3, Almabayev could have cruised to a decision win. Why risk giving Johnson even the slightest window for a comeback considering his history of upsets (UFC champion Joshua Van and Lone'er Kavanagh know all too well how dangerous Johnson is) when you're in control of the cards? With less than two minutes left in the fight, Almabayev took advantage of Johnson attempting to stand up out of back control, snatched Johnson's leg to break his base, and then utilized a classic Suloev stretch to yank his foot way over his head. Tap or say goodbye to your hamstring.
With just one loss in eight UFC appearances, don't be surprised if this is the performance that pushes Almabayev towards an eventual title shot.
No. 3: Alice Ardelean vs. Polyana Viana (UFC Vegas 117)
Is Alice Ardelean… good?
Even the most positive-minded fight fan (me!) had a difficult time reconciling Ardelean being signed to the UFC in 2024. Her two claims to fame were her considerable social media following (millions are subscribed to Ardelean's socials for her viral reaction face) and having previously lost to Zhang Weili. Her pro record was 9-5. And then she lost to Shauna Bannon and Melissa Martinez. Like, what are we doing?
Then something weird happened. Ardelean stuck to it. She could have settled for using a brief UFC run to further boost her profile, but she actually started winning fights. A Fight of the Night-winning performance against Rayanne dos Santos. Another decision nod over Montserrat Conejo. And then a matchup with Polyana Viana, a struggling veteran, but a woman that knows a thing or too about internet notoriety.
Ardelean made sure both of them went viral again. With Ardelean in top position, Viana countered with a body lock from bottom position, aiming to control Ardelean's posture. However, what she didn't know was that Ardelean is terminally online and guess what? That's a pretty dangerous base for MMA in 2026.
With Viana's foot tucked between her legs, Ardelean turned body lock defense into leg lock offense and soon it was Viana being forced to signal her submission.
I don't know if Ardelean ever becomes a serious contender. I don't know if she even comes close to cracking the top 15. But she's already made her mark, becoming the first fighter ever to say that they successfully scored a Capsule Lock submission in a UFC fight.
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