After more than two years on ice, the Bellator MMA light heavyweight title took less than
two rounds to change hands.
At Bellator 244 on Friday, in his first appearance at 205 pounds since October 2018, Ryan Bader looked painfully slow and out of sorts against challenger Vadim Nemkov, dropping the first round before being overwhelmed in the second. While referee Kerry Hatley gave Bader every chance to recover, Nemkov was relentless, and Hatley had no option but to stop the beating at just over three minutes of Round 2. Bellator’s first simultaneous two-division champion, who had put the light heavyweight title on hold while he entered the heavyweight grand prix, is now back down to one belt.
With the dominant performance, Nemkov became the seventh man to
wear the Bellator light heavyweight belt. The 28-year-old protégé
of Fedor
Emelianenko is now riding a seven-fight winning streak, the
last four of which include the three previous lightweight
champions—Bader, Phil Davis
and Liam
McGeary—as well as former middleweight champ Rafael
Carvalho. Nemkov’s ascendancy may be a good sign for Bellator.
While the light heavyweight division worldwide is perceived to be
aging and lacking in depth, Nemkov is Bellator’s only champion
under 30, and unlike his two immediate predecessors, who were
already Top 10 contenders when they came to Bellator from the
Ultimate Fighting Championship, he is a largely
home-grown star.
Here is the nearly 10-year history of the Bellator light heavyweight title and the times it was won, lost or defended. It tells the story of a division breaking out of a long period of stagnation and—perhaps—entering a dynamic new age with a young champion at its head.
At Bellator 244 on Friday, in his first appearance at 205 pounds since October 2018, Ryan Bader looked painfully slow and out of sorts against challenger Vadim Nemkov, dropping the first round before being overwhelmed in the second. While referee Kerry Hatley gave Bader every chance to recover, Nemkov was relentless, and Hatley had no option but to stop the beating at just over three minutes of Round 2. Bellator’s first simultaneous two-division champion, who had put the light heavyweight title on hold while he entered the heavyweight grand prix, is now back down to one belt.
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Here is the nearly 10-year history of the Bellator light heavyweight title and the times it was won, lost or defended. It tells the story of a division breaking out of a long period of stagnation and—perhaps—entering a dynamic new age with a young champion at its head.
Ben
Duffy/Sherdog.com illustration
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