Vadim
Nemkov’s departure leaves
Corey
Anderson and
Karl Moore to
pick up the pieces in the
Bellator
MMA light heavyweight division.
The fate of the 205-pound championship vacated by Nemkov will hang
in the balance when Anderson and Moore do battle in the
Bellator 302 headliner on Friday at the SSE Arena in Belfast,
Northern Ireland. It marks Bellator’s first show since the
promotion was acquired by the
Professional Fighters League in 2023, scattering many of its
top competitors to and fro. Anderson looks to re-ingratiate himself
to the masses following a contentious split decision over
Phil Davis at
Bellator 297 on June 16. “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 19 winner
has compiled a 4-1 record with one no contest across his six
appearances in Bellator, his run highlighted by a 51-second
stoppage of
Ryan Bader in
October 2021. Moore, meanwhile, steps back into the spotlight with
the wind of a four-fight winning streak in his sails. The
SBG Ireland export and former
Cage Warriors Fighting Championship titleholder has secured
nearly half (five) of his 12 career victories by submission.
The Anderson-Moore main event and its resulting fallout for the
light heavyweight division is but one storyline to watch at
Bellator 302. Here are three more:
Promotional Pillar
No one has done more to further the Bellator brand than
Patricio
Freire, a three-time champion at 145 pounds and the company’s
all-time leader in appearances (27), wins (22) and various other
categories. “Pitbull” looks to put an end to the first two-fight
losing streak of his career in the co-headliner, where he defends
his featherweight crown against
Jeremy
Kennedy. Freire, 36, last competed under the
Rizin Fighting Federation flag on July 30, when
Chihiro
Suzuki put him away with a devastating right cross in the first
round of their cross-promotional confrontation. It was the first
legitimate knockout loss of the Brazilian’s remarkable 42-fight
career. On the other side of the equation, Kennedy heads into his
most significant opportunity to date on the heels of three straight
victories. The 31-year-old
Xtreme Couture rep has not suited up since he laid claim to a
three-round unanimous decision over
Pedro
Carvalho at Bellator 291 more than a year ago. Can Freire
bounce back one more time and push his latest title reign closer to
the 800-day mark?
Burden of Proof
James
Gallagher’s bite has not yet exceeded his considerable bark
whenever matchmakers up his degree of difficulty. The SBG Ireland
attempts to put that reputation to bed when he tackles former
Resurrection Fighting Alliance and
Legacy Fighting Alliance champion
Leandro
Higo in a three-round featherweight showcase. The
hubris-infused Gallagher has won five of his past six bouts, a
submission defeat to
Patrick Mix
in November 2021 his only misstep. He last fought at Bellator 298,
where he eked out a split decision over
James
Gonzalez on Aug. 11. Higo, meanwhile, owns 5-4 record in
Bellator, with victories over
Joe
Taimanglo,
Shawn
Bunch,
Ricky
Bandejas,
Darrion
Caldwell and
Nikita
Mikhailov. The longtime Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt has
delivered 13 of his 22 professional wins by submission, six of them
via rear-naked choke. Does Gallagher have the necessary will and
skill to take another step forward in the 145-pound weight
class?
No Trivial Pursuit
Manoel
Sousa seems like a decent bet to create some problems for much
of the lightweight division. The 26-year-old Academia Octogono
export puts his perfect 10-0 record on the line when he makes his
organizational debut against
Tim Wilde in a
three-round attraction at 155 pounds. Sousa has finished nine of
his first 10 opponents, four of them inside one round. “Manumito”
last appeared under the Professional Fighters League banner in
February, when he was awarded split scorecards against
Paulo
Henrique Laia. Wilde, 36, figures to be a difficult test for
the Brazilian prospect, as the Renegade MMA product has not tasted
defeat in almost five years. The onetime Full Contact Contender
champion last set foot in the cage on Nov. 17, when he cut down
Mike
Hamel with a head kick and follow-up punches in the third round
of their Bellator 301 clash. Exactly where does Sousa slot in the
lightweight pecking order?