Trio of new champions take charge at LXF 4

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Former CXF champion Mike Quintero made his championship dreams a reality a second time by sneaking past Brazilian brawler Jay Silva via split decision to win the Lights Out Xtreme Fighting heavyweight championship.

The Los Angeles City College kinesiology professor handed Silva a lesson he won’t soon forget when he rebounded after a slow start to build momentum in round two, going on to dominate round three to win 29-28 (x2), while one other judge had it 29-28 in favor of Silva.

At the age of 43, Quintero (6-2) made LXF history by becoming the oldest champion in league history as the main event in front of a sold out arena at the Burbank Marriott Events Center in Burbank, California on Nov. 15. LXF 4 will air on regional Fox Sports channels in the Los Angeles, San Diego, Texas, Florida, Arizona, Ohio, Las Vegas and Hawaii, and other markets. Check local listings for official dates.

Quintero, a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt, made paydirt by masterfully working Silva on the mat, who survived deep waters in the final two minutes of the match by fighting off arm bars and rear naked chokes. Before that, the southpaw Silva (12-13-1) bloodied and bruised Quintero in the first round with a crisp stand-up game but began to lose steam in the second round when he was bludgeoned to the body with vicious blows by Quintero.
Albert Morales (10-6-1) butchered the left eye of Ryan Lilley (10-6) for two consecutive rounds and the doctor called a halt to the action three seconds into round three, awarding Morales a TKO win and crowning the Belizean bantamweight as the division’s champion. Morales survived a brief scare in the first round when Lilley rattled the former six-fight UFC veteran and buckled his knees. Morales quickly got his wits back and went on to score flying knees and a diet of rocking right hands that eventually nearly shut Lilley’s eye.

Arut Pogosjan (7-3) scored the win of his life and secured LXF’s super lightweight championship when he knocked out Joshua Jones (9-5) with 30 seconds left in the first round. The Armenian fighter who trains in Colorado with Alistair Overeem scrambled the senses of Jones and landed a series of unanswered elbows on the mat, slicing the fighter’s head before referee James Beers stepped in to save Jones from any further damage.

Former NFL player Chris McCain (3-0), who scored five sacks for the Chargers in 2017, continued on his quest in a new career in MMA by scoring a guillotine choke with 13 seconds remaining in round two of Anthony Taufi (1-2) in an LXF D-League heavyweight affair. The fast-developing McCain showed a new side to his game through the ground after finishing mostly fighting his first two matches on his feet.

LXF co-founder and Chargers legend Shawne Merriman stepped into the cage to congratulate McCain’s win after the fight.

In other action, Hunter Carlyle (8-1) waltzed his way into the ring under disco music and 70s vibes and severely pumped the brakes on touted prospect Jean-Paul Bosnoyan (2-1) with a come-from behind TKO win at the 1:50 marker of the first round. The 20-year-old Bosnoyan, a former undefeated amateur, was having his way with the veteran Carlyle, cutting the upper right cheek less than two minutes into the affair. Bosnoyan, in full offense mode, got caught with a Carlyle counter right hook that connected on the button and dropped him. Carlyle spotted the wounded young lion on the mat thereafter and finished him with a series of hammer fists.

In an international affair with a contrast of styles, Armenian-Ukrainian bantamweight wrestler Liudvik Sholinian (7-1-1) defeated Japanese kickboxer Yuma Horiuchi (7-2) via split decision by scores of 29-28, 29-28, and 28-29.

Brian Del Rosario (5-3) made his third LXF appearance and got back into the win column by defeating Dean Hancock (4-4) via TKO at the 1:07 marker of round one. Del Rosario scored a thudding left hook that hurt and dropped Hancock. Referee James Beers stepped in to save Hancock from any further punishment.

The Bas Rutten-trained Zack Kraschinsky (1-0) made a successful pro debut by scoring a rear naked choke of Christian Bizarretty (2-9) at 2:58 of round one.

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LXF4 Nov. 15, 2019

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<b>LXF 22</b>, Feb 7, 2024

LXF 22, Feb 7, 2024

<b>LXF 21</b>, Dec 7, 2024

LXF 21, Dec 7, 2024

<b>LXF 20</b>, Oct 26, 2024

LXF 20, Oct 26, 2024

<b>LXF 19</b>, Sept 6, 2024

LXF 19, Sept 6, 2024

<b>LXF 18</b>, July 27, 2024

LXF 18, July 27, 2024

<b>LXF 17</b>, June 15, 2024

LXF 17, June 15, 2024

<b>LXF 16</b>, May 18, 2024

LXF 16, May 18, 2024

<b>LXF 15</b> April 6, 2024

LXF 15 April 6, 2024

<b>LXF 14</b> Feb 16, 2024

LXF 14 Feb 16, 2024

<b>LXF 13</b> January 7, 2024

LXF 13 January 7, 2024

<b>LXF 12</b> November 18, 2023

LXF 12 November 18, 2023

<b>LXF 11</b> October 7, 2023

LXF 11 October 7, 2023

<b>LXF 10</b>  Aug 26, 2023

LXF 10 Aug 26, 2023

<b>LXF 9</b> May 6th, 2023

LXF 9 May 6th, 2023

<b>LXF 8</b> Jan 14, 2023

LXF 8 Jan 14, 2023

<b>LXF 7</b> Dec 10, 2021

LXF 7 Dec 10, 2021

<b>LXF 6</b> Oct. 30, 2021

LXF 6 Oct. 30, 2021

<b>LXF5</b> Aug. 7, 2021

LXF5 Aug. 7, 2021

<b>LXF4</b> Nov. 15, 2019

LXF4 Nov. 15, 2019

<b>LXF3</b> Sept. 21, 2019

LXF3 Sept. 21, 2019

<b>LXF2</b> July 6, 2019

LXF2 July 6, 2019

<b>LXF1</b> May 11, 2019

LXF1 May 11, 2019