Patricio “Pitbull” Freire successfully defended his crown with a fourth-round submission. | Photo: Dave Mandel
Freire retained the Bellator MMA featherweight championship with a fourth-round rear-naked choke submission on Daniel Straus in the Bellator 132 headliner on Friday at the Pechanga Resort and Casino in Temecula, Calif. Straus (22-6, 9-3 Bellator) conceded defeat 4:49 into round four, his bid to dethrone the gifted Brazilian denied.
An aggressive standup attack from the American Top Team rep appeared to catch Freire by surprise. Straus controlled a substantial portion of the match with his hands, though a one-point penalty for repeated low blows slowed his momentum in the second round. Still, Freire seemed gunshy at times. Straus tagged him over and over again with straight left hands, his work paying dividends in the form of a gnarly cut on the champion’s right eyelid.
Late in the fourth round, however, “Pitbull” executed a takedown and settled in top position. Straus fished for a kimura without the security of his guard, leaving his back open for the taking. The mistake proved costly. Freire (23-2, 11-2 Bellator) countered the ill-advised submission attempt, flattened out the American from behind and cinched the choke for the finish.
Karakhanyan (24-4-1, 3-2 Bellator) had a game plan, and he followed it to perfection. Jenkins left his neck exposed on a double-leg takedown and wandered right into the guillotine. Karakhanyan bit down on the maneuver, cut off escape routes and waited for the two-time NCAA All-American wrestler to go limp.
Afterward, the 29-year-old Karakhanyan was named Bellator’s No. 1 contender at 145 pounds. He has recorded 10 wins in his past 11 outings.
The two journeymen had fought to a majority draw in October after Alexander was penalized for an intentional head butt. Not much separated them in their rematch.
Alexander did his best work in the opening round, where he delivered a takedown inside the first minute, went to work with his ground-and-pound and later drew blood with a knee strike in the clinch. Zwicker got in gear in round two, as he drove into top position behind a sneaky uppercut and subsequent knee, controlling the 42-year-old on the ground and on the feet. In the third round, Zwicker gave a tiring Alexander pause with a three-punch combination, stuffed his attempted takedowns and staggered him with a volley of power punches in the closing seconds.
Zaromskis (20-9, 4-3 Bellator) played defense for much of the 15-minute fight, often beaten to the punch by the younger, busier Californian. Gonzalez drew him into tight spaces, masking occasional leg, body and head kicks with a steady stream of rights and lefts.
Zaromksis executed a spinning backfist in the second round and scored with a takedown late in the third but never put himself in position to be successful.
Gonzalez, 31, has rattled off three straight wins.