Brett OkamotoFeb 7, 2026, 03:53 PM ET

CloseBrett Okamoto has reported on mixed martial arts and boxing at ESPN since 2010. He has covered all of the biggest events in combat sports during that time, including in-depth interviews and features with names such as Dana White, Khabib Nurmagomedov, Conor McGregor, Nate Diaz, Floyd Mayweather, Manny Pacquiao and Georges St-Pierre. He was also a producer on the 30 for 30 film: “Chuck and Tito,” which looked back at the careers and rivalry of Chuck Liddell and Tito Ortiz. He lives in Las Vegas, and is an avid, below-average golfer in his spare time.

Multiple Authors

Usman Nurmagomedov made the first official defense of his PFL lightweight championship on Saturday, in a one-sided, third-round submission over England’s Alfie Davis.

Nurmagomedov (21-0) is arguably the best fighter in the world outside the UFC, and he once again looked the part. He dominated Davis on the feet, before taking him down and choking him unconscious with an arm triangle at 4:41 of the third round. The 155-pound title fight headlined PFL’s first event of 2026 at Coca-Cola Arena in Dubai.

“It was a simple game plan,” said Nurmagomedov, who is the cousin of retired MMA legend Khabib Nurmagomedov. “Make him tired, make him work, make him wrestle and the finish is going to come.”

Davis (20-6-1) earned the opportunity to challenge Nurmagomedov by winning the PFL’s World Tournament in 2025, but he looked out of his league from the opening bell. Nurmagomedov went to work on his lower body with kicks and expertly slipped nearly every strike Davis attempted. Davis smiled at Nurmagomedov throughout, but never looked comfortable with Nurmagomedov’s kickboxing range.

Nurmagomedov, who trains alongside UFC lightweight champion Islam Makhachev, is also a former Bellator MMA lightweight champion. He defended that title three times until 2025, when the PFL folded Bellator and consolidated the two rosters.

In the co-main event, former Bellator MMA welterweight champion Ramazan Kuramagomedov (14-0) won the PFL’s vacant welterweight title with a decision victory over Shamil Musaev (20-1-1) — and then announced his shocking retirement from the sport. Kuramagomedov hadn’t fought in nearly two years going into Saturday’s contest, but said he’d decided during fight preparations to retire if he was successful in claiming the PFL championship. The 29-year-old said he suffered a broken arm at some point in the bout, but still managed unanimous 48-46 judges’ scores.