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Edition of 20:00 CETSaturday, June 27, 2026
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SportSaturday, June 27, 2026

Fiziev’s Wheel Kick Stuns Baku as Magomedov Escapes Controversy and Boxing’s Heavyweights Align

A night of explosive UFC finishes in Azerbaijan was shadowed by officiating disputes, while Russian boxing set the stage for a major Moscow card and Usyk mapped his American farewell.

Rafael Fiziev needed only fifteen seconds of the second round to detonate a spinning wheel kick on Manuel Torres and send the National Gymnastics Arena into delirium. The knockout, which capped a UFC Fight Night in Baku that delivered nine finishes across thirteen bouts, was a career-reviving moment for the Azerbaijani lightweight, who later revealed he had been fighting through double vision after absorbing an early jab. Fiziev immediately called for a shot at the BMF title, a demand that, viewed from the Caucasus, signalled his intent to vault back into the lightweight elite after a 1-4 slide.

The co-main event, however, left a more complicated residue. Russia’s Sharabutdin Magomedov outpointed Brazil’s Michel Pereira by unanimous decision, but the contest was defined less by the 29-28 scorecards than by what referee Herb Dean did not do. Magomedov was warned repeatedly for grabbing Pereira’s hair and, in the third round, for an eye poke that forced a two-minute stoppage, yet no point was ever deducted. Brazilian observers noted a grim symmetry: the two most recent Pereira victims of Dean’s non-intervention—Alex Pereira at UFC Freedom 250 and now Michel—share a surname and a sense of grievance. The backlash, amplified by respected media voices, has shifted the conversation from the cage to the commission, with questions mounting over whether Dean should continue to be assigned high-stakes bouts.

Elsewhere on the card, Brazil found consolation through Matheus Camilo, who needed only ninety-one seconds to stop Nazim Sadykhov, while Kazakhstan’s Asu Almabayev submitted Charles Johnson with a rare Suloev stretch and Russia’s Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev recorded an eight-second knockout. The promotion handed out four $100,000 performance bonuses and five $25,000 finish awards, a disbursement that reflected the depth of highlight-reel moments on a night when no Fight of the Night was named.

As the UFC departed Azerbaijan, the heavyweight boxing world was calibrating its own coordinates. In Moscow, the IBA.PRO 19 card on 11 July will be headlined by Russia’s Murat Gassiev against France’s Tony Yoka, a meeting of a former cruiserweight champion and an Olympic gold medallist. The co-main event pits undefeated Russian Artem Suslenkov against Britain’s Joe Joyce, with Suslenkov vowing to win by knockout. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s Oleksandr Usyk, having relinquished his IBF, WBA and WBC belts in late June, is planning a series of final fights in the United States to cement his legacy before retirement, according to his sporting director.

The calendar now pivots to 11 July, when the UFC stages its own blockbuster—UFC 329, headlined by Conor McGregor versus Max Holloway—on the same day that Moscow hosts its heavyweight showcase. For Fiziev, Magomedov and the boxers preparing in Russian gyms, the next chapter is already being written.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

28%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Russian & CIS pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Russian & CIS press/ State
TriumphPragmatism

Russian fighter Shara Bullet secured a clear win in Baku, while boxer Suslenkov vows to knock out Joe Joyce. The Russian boxing scene is already focused on July, with Gassiev seen as the favorite against Tony Yoka.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press
OutrageAlarm

Referee Herb Dean is under fire again after another controversial performance in Baku, just weeks after a similar incident. The event still delivered highlight-reel knockouts, including a wheel kick by Fiziev.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 12:39 AM3 languages · 4 outlets
4 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Saturday, June 27, 2026

Fiziev’s Wheel Kick Stuns Baku as Magomedov Escapes Controversy and Boxing’s Heavyweights Align

A night of explosive UFC finishes in Azerbaijan was shadowed by officiating disputes, while Russian boxing set the stage for a major Moscow card and Usyk mapped his American farewell.

Rafael Fiziev needed only fifteen seconds of the second round to detonate a spinning wheel kick on Manuel Torres and send the National Gymnastics Arena into delirium. The knockout, which capped a UFC Fight Night in Baku that delivered nine finishes across thirteen bouts, was a career-reviving moment for the Azerbaijani lightweight, who later revealed he had been fighting through double vision after absorbing an early jab. Fiziev immediately called for a shot at the BMF title, a demand that, viewed from the Caucasus, signalled his intent to vault back into the lightweight elite after a 1-4 slide.

The co-main event, however, left a more complicated residue. Russia’s Sharabutdin Magomedov outpointed Brazil’s Michel Pereira by unanimous decision, but the contest was defined less by the 29-28 scorecards than by what referee Herb Dean did not do. Magomedov was warned repeatedly for grabbing Pereira’s hair and, in the third round, for an eye poke that forced a two-minute stoppage, yet no point was ever deducted. Brazilian observers noted a grim symmetry: the two most recent Pereira victims of Dean’s non-intervention—Alex Pereira at UFC Freedom 250 and now Michel—share a surname and a sense of grievance. The backlash, amplified by respected media voices, has shifted the conversation from the cage to the commission, with questions mounting over whether Dean should continue to be assigned high-stakes bouts.

Elsewhere on the card, Brazil found consolation through Matheus Camilo, who needed only ninety-one seconds to stop Nazim Sadykhov, while Kazakhstan’s Asu Almabayev submitted Charles Johnson with a rare Suloev stretch and Russia’s Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev recorded an eight-second knockout. The promotion handed out four $100,000 performance bonuses and five $25,000 finish awards, a disbursement that reflected the depth of highlight-reel moments on a night when no Fight of the Night was named.

As the UFC departed Azerbaijan, the heavyweight boxing world was calibrating its own coordinates. In Moscow, the IBA.PRO 19 card on 11 July will be headlined by Russia’s Murat Gassiev against France’s Tony Yoka, a meeting of a former cruiserweight champion and an Olympic gold medallist. The co-main event pits undefeated Russian Artem Suslenkov against Britain’s Joe Joyce, with Suslenkov vowing to win by knockout. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s Oleksandr Usyk, having relinquished his IBF, WBA and WBC belts in late June, is planning a series of final fights in the United States to cement his legacy before retirement, according to his sporting director.

The calendar now pivots to 11 July, when the UFC stages its own blockbuster—UFC 329, headlined by Conor McGregor versus Max Holloway—on the same day that Moscow hosts its heavyweight showcase. For Fiziev, Magomedov and the boxers preparing in Russian gyms, the next chapter is already being written.

Source divergence

Sport · 4 outlets · 3 languages

28%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable83%
Critical17%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Russian & CIS pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Russian & CIS press/ State
TriumphPragmatism

Russian fighter Shara Bullet secured a clear win in Baku, while boxer Suslenkov vows to knock out Joe Joyce. The Russian boxing scene is already focused on July, with Gassiev seen as the favorite against Tony Yoka.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press
OutrageAlarm

Referee Herb Dean is under fire again after another controversial performance in Baku, just weeks after a similar incident. The event still delivered highlight-reel knockouts, including a wheel kick by Fiziev.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 3 languages

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