
MMA champion 'shot five times' by masked thugs in brutal attack
PFL champion Timur Khizriev was rushed to hospital after he was shot five times by two masked thugs during a horrific ambush.
According to a report and video posted by VestnikMMA on social media, the undefeated MMA star was shot after he exited his vehicle and was eventually rushed to hospital and required surgery following the brutal attack.
The incident is believed to have taken place in Dagestan, Russia on Tuesday evening. Video footage of the alleged attack appears to show Khizriev leaving his car when two masked men sprint towards him and quickly open fire. The two thugs can be seen approaching the Russian before one of the crooks fired their gun, appearing to hit the MMA star.
Despite being shot, the 29-year-old was able to react and take down one of the masked individuals, while the other continued to fire several more shots. The PFL star took the opportunity to flee, sprinting away and hurdling over parked cars before he sustained any more physical harm.
According to an MMA outlet in Russia, Khizriev is still alive. "In Makhachkala, PFL champion Timur Khizriev was shot," the post claimed. "Two masked men ambushed Timur in the courtyard of a residential building on Daniyalov Street. When he got out of the [vehicle], the attackers opened fire. The athlete was hit by 5 bullets from a traumatic pistol. Khizriev is in surgery, alive."
MMA Junkie later reported that the Russian's management has informed the outlet that he is currently in hospital, but is fine and that his 'life is not in danger.' At the time of writing, no arrests have been made. Other reports in Russia claim that the pistol used was a 'non-lethal weapon designed to fire rubber bullets.' Authorities have not confirmed whether the attack was related to Khizriev's public profile or personal affairs.
At 29, the Makhachkala has enjoyed a glittering career inside the cage so far. After impressing on the regional scene in Russia, Khizriev was eventually snapped up by Bellator in 2022. He enjoyed his greatest success last year, when he went 4-0 under the PFL banner en route to becoming the organisation's featherweight champion, defeating Brett Johns, Enrique Barzola and Gabriel Alves Braga before scoring a dominant win over England's Brendan Loughnane in the final.
"He is a former champion. A tough fighter. Yes he took a lot of damage, I was honestly surprised. We have to give love to him, hats off. He is a tough dude," said Khizriev after the win. "That was a very tough and a long road. My family took a lot from me in this fight. I was very nervous. Now I have to give back when I go back home."
When is Timur Khizriev's next fight?
Khizriev was linked with a move over to the UFC before agreeing to a deal with the PFL - where he has since gone on to thrive. The 29-year-old was not put into the 2025 Featherweight tournament for unknown reasons. As of yet he has not got a fight booked.
While reports claim that his injuries are not life-threatening, the Russian may need an extended period away from the SmartCage. Even though traumatic pistols do not use live ammunition, they can still cause some serious deep tissues damage and require severe medical intervention. The extent of his injuries has not yet been disclosed publicly. Given the recent incident, Khizriev may need a few months to recover and may not be seen in action again until 2026.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
18 minutes ago
- BBC News
Russia hits Ukrainian training unit, killing and wounding servicemen
Ukraine's armed forces have confirmed a Russian missile strike hit a military training unit, causing a number of ground forces said late on Tuesday that three service personnel were known to have been killed and 18 had been military did not say where the training ground was located, although one Ukrainian war reporter, Andrei Taplienko, said it was in the Chernihiv region north of Kyiv which borders both Russia and ministry of defence released video of what it claimed was a strike by an Iskander ballistic missile in a wooded area that involved more than 20 cluster-type explosions. The video could not be immediately verified but the Russian MOD claimed that the number of Ukrainian casualties was far higher than Ukraine's military had said. There has been no further word from the military since late on Tuesday."Despite the security measures taken, unfortunately it was not possible to completely avoid losses among the personnel," Ukraine's ground forces said in a statement on social is the third Russian attack on a Ukrainian training unit in little more than two months. An Iskander missile attack on a camp in the norther border region of Sumy killed six servicemen in May and another strike killed 12 people and wounded another 60 last Ukrainian troops on exercises is particularly sensitive for the military, which said it would investigate whether the "actions or inaction of officials" had led to deaths or injuries in Tuesday evening's missile commander of ground forces Mykhailo Drapatyi resigned after last month's deadly attack, saying that the victims had been "young guys from a training battalion" and that most of them had been in shelters at the time.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
At home, in school and in hospital: how hundreds of Ukrainian children are dying in Russian attacks
On the night of 18 May, four-year-old Mark Ifiemenko was at home with his parents in Vasylkiv, a small town near the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv. As the sounds of explosions reverberated close to their two-storey home, Mark's mother rushed him downstairs, along with his grandparents. Later it would emerge that overnight, Russia had launched one of the largest attacks on Ukraine since the start of the full-scale invasion, with reports of more than 270 drones and missiles entering the country's airspace. Mark and his family hid in a room they believed was the safest, removed by at least two walls from the exterior of the house – a rule Ukrainians have learned to stay alive. Meanwhile, his father, Sergey, rushed to the kitchen to turn off the gas main. As he did so a Shahed drone – the size of a small car – hit their house. 'There was smoke and dust everywhere, I couldn't even breathe. I started calling out to them [his family] and ran to the room they were in,' says Sergey, 31, who had returned from service on the frontline the previous week. 'I first saw my father and mother, they were injured. I asked my mother where Anna [his wife] and Mark were to which she replied Anna was no longer with us. I was holding a flashlight and when I pointed it down, I saw I was standing over my wife's body … a fragment of the drone had pierced her head. Still, even in death, she was curled protectively around Mark, who was crying,' he says. Soon after rescuing him from his mother's dying embrace, Sergey rushed Mark, amid ongoing attacks, to the house of a nearby relative and returned to help his parents. The next morning Mark was transported to Ohmatdyt children's hospital in Kyiv where he spent 10 days in the intensive care unit, most of it in a coma. Mark survived the attack, says Sergey, thanks to his mother's quick thinking and protection, but he has endured injuries and a trauma that will take many years to heal. He suffered from fractures to his skull, a crushed nose and injuries that have left him blind in one eye. There has been a significant rise in child casualties in Ukraine in recent months as Russia indiscriminately targets heavily populated civilian areas, with 222 children killed or injured between March and May this year and 2,889 in total since the start of the invasion. Given the delay in verifying deaths, the UN says the true number is likely to be much higher. Ukrainian rights group say Russia's attacks are not accidental and should be more strongly condemned by international leaders. 'Under international humanitarian law, deliberately targeting civilian infrastructure – especially schools, hospitals, and places where children gather – is considered a war crime,' says Daria Kasyanova, chair of the Ukrainian Child Rights Network. Amnesty says it has documented 'numerous instances of Russian forces conducting indiscriminate attacks in Ukraine, resulting in thousands of civilian casualties' and that 'indiscriminate strikes that kill or injure civilians constitute war crimes'. Even if the conflict ends, Ukraine now has one of the highest prevalence of explosive remnants of war and landmines globally, says the UN, which are likely to cause continuing casualties among children in particular far into the future. For children such as Mark who have survived, the injuries – physical and emotional – that have been inflicted are life-changing. A Unicef survey earlier this year, estimated at least one in five children in Ukraine have experienced a personal loss to the war, whether a sibling, parent or friend. Sergey says: 'He asks about Mamusya [a Ukrainian term of endearment for mother] and misses her very much. I told him the truth about what happened to her. How much she loved him and how she did everything for him to be happy. I say that she has become his guardian angel.' As well as regular visits to the hospital to treat his injuries, and more recently to fit a prosthetic eye, Sergey says his son has trouble sleeping, and with his learning and development. 'It is very hard sometimes for him because he's just a child. He reacts to loud sounds, even flinching at anything that might sound like a drone.' Kasyanova, who also works with a shelter for children without parental care or a guardian, says the war is having a multidimensional impact on children in Ukraine. 'Beyond the tragic increase in casualties, children are being deprived of safety, stability and a sense of normalcy. Their childhoods are marked by fear, separation and instability,' she says. Both home and school life have been severely disrupted for millions of children in the country. For those aged three and younger, their entire lives have been marked by bombardments, violence and displacement. 'Ukrainian children have been learning online for the third or even fourth year in a row because schools are either destroyed, damaged, or simply unsafe due to the constant threat of shelling. This is a deeply traumatising reality,' says Kasyanova. For some children, the war in Ukraine has been going on even longer – it is more than 11 years since Russia's first invasion into the eastern regions of Ukraine. 'There are children and teenagers who have never known a peaceful life – who were born into conflict or have lived most of their lives in war. Their understanding of childhood is shaped by loss, displacement, deportation, fear, and instability,' says Kasyanova. 'If this trauma is not addressed properly, it can have long-term consequences on their ability to learn, build relationships, trust others. In some cases, this trauma can even be passed on to future generations,' she says. Sergey, now permanently back from the frontline to take care of his son, says he just wants to do everything he can to make Mark's life a happy one, despite his injuries and trauma. 'I don't want another Ukrainian child raised to experience war. They have done nothing wrong to be killed or hurt like this. They didn't deserve this,' he says.


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
2000 Meters to Andriivka review – war in Ukraine as an eerie, pin-sharp waking nightmare
Two years ago, the Ukrainian photojournalist and film-maker Mstyslav Chernov stunned us with his eyewitness documentary 20 Days in Mariupol, about Russia's brutal assault on the southern Ukrainian port city. His new film is if anything more visceral, with waking-nightmare images captured in pin-sharp 4K digital clarity. It is a moment-by-moment account of his experience embedded with Ukraine's 3rd Assault Brigade in 2023 (one of them appears to be a Brit) during Zelenskyy's highly anticipated counteroffensive, making a gruelling journey along what amounts to a two-kilometre corridor of 'forest'. In fact, it is scrubland offering no real cover – but it is free of Russian mines, unlike the areas of farmland either side. The forces brutally fight every metre of the way, heading for the symbolic liberation of the largely ruined village of Andriivka in north-eastern Ukraine. They are carrying a precious Ukrainian flag, and it is their mission to fix this to any broken bit of wall they can find, to proclaim their national spirit is not dead. They are in a wasteland, as one says: 'It's like landing on a planet where everyone is trying to kill you. But it's the middle of Europe.' Chernov is armed only with a camera, to the astonishment of many soldiers he encounters, and the film was constructed by editing his footage together with that of solders' helmet cameras and drone material. Chernov shows us how drones are now utterly ubiquitous in war, delivering both the pictures and the assaults. That is the ultra-modern, even postmodern aspect of this film, but it coexists with an eerie resemblance to the eastern front of the first world war. Chernov, in one of his murmuringly subdued voiceovers, comments: 'The smell of death, explosives and freshly cut trees.' The wrecked landscape does indeed look like 1916, and Chernov does not scruple to show us real dead bodies (but spares us the ultimate horror of the corpses' faces). When the intertitles flash up the grim advances – 1,000 meters to go, 300 metres to go – it is like the cricket-style scoreboard for the Battle of the Somme in Richard Attenborough's film of Oh! What a Lovely War: 'Ground gained: nil.' The most heart-wrenching moments come when Chernov interviews soldiers in a quiet moment, their twentysomething faces alive with intelligence – and in a sombre voiceover tells us how they were killed four or five months later. It is a (repeated) flourish that might be considered on the verge of bad taste, but Chernov manages it with such unflinching conviction. Since the events of this film, Russia has counter-counterattacked and retaken Andriivka; though now we hear Trump has soured on Putin. A Ukrainian soldier surveys the wreck of Andriivka and says: 'Everything will grow back.' 2000 Meters to Andriivka is in UK and Irish cinemas from 1 August.