

Kamaka got another takedown, leading to more grappling against the fence, which Brown had to be warned not to grab several times. Back on the feet, Brown maintained a high pace, rarely settling for throwing single strikes and varying his attacks to the head and body of Kamaka. Kamaka had an early Brown takedown attempt scouted and he ended up in top position again, but Brown’s grappling made him a threat on the bottom even as he defended against Kamaka’s short punches. Brown scored a late takedown, but didn’t do much with it. Brown continued to show excellent boxing with Kamaka standing right in the pocket with him. Brown was able to stand up during that sequence though. We got a nice kimura attempt from Brown, which Kamaka defended against perfectly. Kamaka dove into Brown’s guard for more ground-and-pound. Moments later, a counter right by Kamaka clearly hurt Brown and sent him to the canvas. Brown wobbled Kamaka with a straight right and caught him with another shortly after, but Kamaka stayed on his feet.
#Softberry kai screen replay cracked#
Kamaka cracked Brown with a head kick to start the second and it became apparent that he was making better use of his legs than Brown. Watching it again, one can see a narrative developing as the busier Brown attempted to navigate Kamaka’s counters. Kamaka sneaked in a few punches on the ground before Brown was able to get the fight back to the feet.

Kamaka made an adjustment to close the distance, at one point simply shoving Brown to the mat as Brown attempted a high kick. Midway through the round, Brown landed a right-hand uppercut and then a pretty straight right as he slipped a Kamaka left hook. There were few moments in the first round where Brown and Kamaka weren’t throwing something out there to score. Kamaka also made good use of leg kicks to offset the success Brown was having with his jab. However, Kamaka scored first blood with a right hand across the jaw that Brown just ate. How did the fight go?īrown came out showing great hands, pumping his jab in Kamaka’s face as he set up his attack. While it’s extraordinarily rare for decisions to be overturned in these situations, this fight is certainly worth discussing, so let’s get ahead of the conversation here and decide for ourselves whether Kamaka has a case for a robbery. On Sunday, Kamaka’s manager Brian Butler released a statement to MMA Fighting in which he revealed that his team is planning to file a formal appeal to the Nevada Athletic Commission in the hopes that Kamaka will at least receive an explanation as to how he lost the fight in the event that the result is not overturned. ♂️ #UFCVegas25 /uGNy8EZFmb- Eric Nicksick May 2, 2021 That’s half this kids paycheck, taken away because of incompetent judging.
