Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russian fan favorite takes beating in final bout

- GREG BEACHAM

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Fedor Emelianenk­o placed his gloves on the canvas and then cracked a warm smile while nearly a dozen mixed martial arts greats behind him led the crowd in one last ovation.

Although the Last Emperor says his career is over, his fans and fellow fighters won’t forget his greatness any time soon.

Ryan Bader stopped the storied Russian heavyweigh­t halfway through the first round Saturday night with a relentless ground-andpound finish at Bellator 290.

The 46-year-old Emelianenk­o says he is ending his 23-year MMA career with this bout, and he ceremonial­ly laid down his gloves after the defeat in the familiar combat sports gesture by a retiring fighter.

“On the one side, I’m sad I didn’t deliver on the fight as I wanted to,” Emelianenk­o said through a translator. “But on the other side, I’m so happy that all these fans and all these veteran fighters are here cheering for me.”

The much-loved Russian MMA pioneer is one of the most compelling competitor­s in the still-young sport’s history, and the crowd at the Forum was firmly behind a singularly talented fighter who became a perennial fan favorite.

That adoration didn’t help when Bader easily defended his heavyweigh­t title by becoming the only fighter ever to beat Emelianenk­o twice.

After staggering Emelianenk­o with an early uppercut, Bader knocked down Emelianenk­o with a punch that connected with the back of his head one minute into the opening round. Bader quickly pounced on Emelianenk­o and never let him up, steadily hammering his guard with dozens of punches until referee Herb Dean stopped the punishment 2:30 into the round.

“It was bitterswee­t,” Bader said. “I idolized him like every MMA fan and fighter coming up. He put the sport on his back. That is a legend right there.”

Emelianenk­o was sanguine after the loss, and the fighter long known for his emotionles­s virtuosity couldn’t hide his pleasure when he was joined in the cage by a large contingent of fellow MMA greats invited to the show by Bellator. Randy Couture, Chuck Liddell, Dan Henderson, Renzo Gracie, Frank Shamrock and former opponents Mark Coleman, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Chael Sonnen all gathered for the last ride.

“I’m so happy to see all of you, the fighters that are here to come and support me,” Emelianenk­o said. “All of these guys understand me. We’ve almost the same age, and we’ve been to the heights. I’m happy they’re here to support me.”

Emelianenk­o began his MMA career in 2000 after serving in the Russian Army, and he quickly acquired a reputation as a vaunted undergroun­d talent in a sport that still felt like a countercul­tural phenomenon at the time.

The slightly pudgy, slightly undersized heavyweigh­t improbably recorded a long series of spectacula­r knockouts and submission­s while fighting for the Pride promotion in Japan. He acquired mainstream attention when he began fighting stateside in 2008 while retaining the blank-faced earnestnes­s and violent talents that made him such a favorite.

“I’m very happy that some of the fighters who have been crowned as champions are telling me they grew up with my fights,” Emelianenk­o said. “Eight or 10 years ago, people were telling me that. This is when I started to think I was becoming old.”

Emelianenk­o famously refused to fight for the UFC, eschewing the world’s most powerful MMA company to maintain his independen­ce. He retired in 2012 before returning in 2015 to steady success.

His first fight with Bader was a notable exception: Four years ago last weekend at the Forum, Bader knocked out Emelianenk­o with a massive left hook just 35 seconds in. Emelianenk­o had fought only twice since then, and just once since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic — yet he still insisted on finishing his career against the 39-year-old Bader.

The bout turned out to be the mismatch that many feared, with Bader thoroughly dominating in his third title defense.

 ?? (AP/Greg Beacham) ?? Fedor Emelianenk­o (right) shakes hands with opponent Ryan Bader while Bellator MMA CEO Scott Coker looks on during a news conference Wednesday in Los Angeles. Emelianenk­o took a beating from Bader to close out his career Saturday.
(AP/Greg Beacham) Fedor Emelianenk­o (right) shakes hands with opponent Ryan Bader while Bellator MMA CEO Scott Coker looks on during a news conference Wednesday in Los Angeles. Emelianenk­o took a beating from Bader to close out his career Saturday.

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