Outrage as bare knuckle fighter kisses opponent on stage
Former UFC stars Mariya Agapova and Jessica Eye took part in a tense final staredown on Saturday (AEST) at the BKFC 76 ceremonial weigh-ins.
Tensions between the former flyweight standouts were high before their faced off, The Sun reports.
And Kazakh killer Agapova upped the ante by kissing Eye on the lips after she got right in her face.
UFC 317 Topuria vs Oliveira | SUN 29 JUN 12PM AEST | One of the biggest fight cards of the year has arrived. Spain's Ilia Topuria looks to capture the vacant lightweight title against former champion, Charles Oliveira | Order Now with Main Event on Kayo Sports.
Eye, 38, didn't take kindly to Agapova's aggressive show of affection.
The former UFC flyweight title challenger pushed her away and said: 'That's so weird. So f***ing weird.'
Footage of the bizarre incident spread like wildfire on social media, with one fight fan commenting: 'That was weird.'
Another said: 'I guess Eye dealt with it well…. That's just cringe, though.'
And another said: ' It's gonna be an interesting match.'
One remarked: 'It's mad that these two were once in the UFC.'
Another chimed in: 'Looking forward to after the fight more.'
Agapova gave a short and sweet answer when asked why she decided to plant one on Eye's lips.
Agapova said of the incident: 'She just came too close.'
An annoyed Eye took to Instagram to further vent her frustration, he said: 'You disrespected a warrior.
'Now you're just the fuel for the fire that's about to burn your name.'
Both Agapova and Eye are in desperate need of a win having both lost their last SIX FIGHTS in a row, with the former's skid comprising of losses in boxing, grappling and MMA.
Meanwhile, UFC thug Conor McGregor has been filmed striking a club reveller to the ground with two brutal punches in a packed Ibiza nightclub.
Footage obtained by The Sun shows the ex-UFC star, 36, striking a man in the infamous Pacha nightclub on the Spanish party island while drinking on Tuesday morning.
Hashtags

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

Sydney Morning Herald
3 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘Purest form of fighting': Mundine launches bare knuckle boxing in Australia
'We've got their blessing. We've handed over all our paperwork, our constitution, our safety protocols,' said Joseski, a former boxing promoter. 'We've gone to the police, we've spoken to them. They've basically said, 'It's out of our jurisdiction' ' No stranger to controversy during a dual-sport career that lasted nearly 30 years, Mundine anticipates there will be resistance to the introduction of the raw and intense discipline, which has attracted large audiences in the US and UK. There was backlash to the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship, co-owned by UFC superstar Conor McGregor, coming to Australia. The Australian Medical Association's WA state president Michael Page called it the 'human equivalent of dog fighting' and warned against the proliferation of more sports that could cause head injuries. The state's sport minister said she saw no difference between bare knuckle boxing and UFC cage fighting, which has been held in arenas around Australia, but the WA Combat Sports Commission ultimately ruled that the McGregor-backed proposal did not meet its criteria. Mundine hopes a successful outing in Brisbane, where World Bare Knuckle Fighting is looking to draw a crowd of up to 4000, will help convince decision makers in other jurisdictions to give his bare knuckle organisation a chance. It will have a full medical team in place and has been endorsed by veteran ringside doctor Lou Lewis. He has told the Combat Sports Authority of NSW that, while there was a higher risk of hand injuries, cuts and more acute damage per punch in bare knuckle boxing, it posed less risk of brain trauma than fighting with gloves due to shorter blows and fewer repeated blows to the head. 'In my opinion, bare knuckle boxing stands as a legitimate combat sport practised globally, with established rules and regulations that prioritise the safety of its participants,' Lewis wrote in the Mundine team's application. Loading Mundine said:, 'Obviously, it's going to be bloodier because it's bare knuckle and the skin can split quite easily. It's going to look more scary, but it actually isn't. We're doing it at a professional level where the fighters train for this type of fight.' He added that wider weight divisions would also mean that fighters would not be left drained by having to lose body mass and would be better placed to absorb a blow to the head. There are plans for 10 bouts on the inaugural bare knuckle Australian card in Logan, in Brisbane's southern suburbs. Fighters are expected to include Ben Horn, the brother of former world boxing champion and Mundine opponent Jeff Horn, and NRL player turned boxer Curtis Scott. Never one not to talk a big game in his decades in the limelight, Mundine has ambitions well beyond that.

The Age
3 minutes ago
- The Age
‘Purest form of fighting': Mundine launches bare knuckle boxing in Australia
'We've got their blessing. We've handed over all our paperwork, our constitution, our safety protocols,' said Joseski, a former boxing promoter. 'We've gone to the police, we've spoken to them. They've basically said, 'It's out of our jurisdiction' ' No stranger to controversy during a dual-sport career that lasted nearly 30 years, Mundine anticipates there will be resistance to the introduction of the raw and intense discipline, which has attracted large audiences in the US and UK. There was backlash to the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship, co-owned by UFC superstar Conor McGregor, coming to Australia. The Australian Medical Association's WA state president Michael Page called it the 'human equivalent of dog fighting' and warned against the proliferation of more sports that could cause head injuries. The state's sport minister said she saw no difference between bare knuckle boxing and UFC cage fighting, which has been held in arenas around Australia, but the WA Combat Sports Commission ultimately ruled that the McGregor-backed proposal did not meet its criteria. Mundine hopes a successful outing in Brisbane, where World Bare Knuckle Fighting is looking to draw a crowd of up to 4000, will help convince decision makers in other jurisdictions to give his bare knuckle organisation a chance. It will have a full medical team in place and has been endorsed by veteran ringside doctor Lou Lewis. He has told the Combat Sports Authority of NSW that, while there was a higher risk of hand injuries, cuts and more acute damage per punch in bare knuckle boxing, it posed less risk of brain trauma than fighting with gloves due to shorter blows and fewer repeated blows to the head. 'In my opinion, bare knuckle boxing stands as a legitimate combat sport practised globally, with established rules and regulations that prioritise the safety of its participants,' Lewis wrote in the Mundine team's application. Loading Mundine said:, 'Obviously, it's going to be bloodier because it's bare knuckle and the skin can split quite easily. It's going to look more scary, but it actually isn't. We're doing it at a professional level where the fighters train for this type of fight.' He added that wider weight divisions would also mean that fighters would not be left drained by having to lose body mass and would be better placed to absorb a blow to the head. There are plans for 10 bouts on the inaugural bare knuckle Australian card in Logan, in Brisbane's southern suburbs. Fighters are expected to include Ben Horn, the brother of former world boxing champion and Mundine opponent Jeff Horn, and NRL player turned boxer Curtis Scott. Never one not to talk a big game in his decades in the limelight, Mundine has ambitions well beyond that.

ABC News
3 minutes ago
- ABC News
Stephen Colbert tells Trump 'the gloves are off' as giants of late-night hosts rally around cancelled host
Some of the biggest names in late-night television have united to show support for cancelled Stephen Colbert, as The Late Show host used his first show back to declare to the US president that the "gloves are off". Last Week Tonight's John Oliver, The Tonight Show's Jimmy Fallon, The Daily Show's Jon Stewart and Late Night's Seth Meyers were among the celebrities to appear in the audience during a parody sketch on the show on Monday, local time. Last week, Colbert announced that his top-rated American late-night show had been cancelled by CBS and will end in May after the upcoming broadcast season. And while his axing may bring The Late Show franchise to an end after 33 years, it means for the next 10 months "the gloves are off", Colbert declared in his opening monologue, which he directed at Donald Trump. "Over the weekend, it sunk in that they're killing off our show. But, they made one mistake: they left me alive. He added that he "didn't care for him" and thought he "doesn't have the skill set to be president". Colbert also joked about show's demise, stating that "cancel culture has gone too far" and suggested the show's theatre would become a self-storage building. Colbert's late-night rivals were also joined on Monday night's episode by Anderson Cooper, Bravo's Andy Cohen, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Weird Al Yankovic, Adam Sandler and Christopher McDonald. The celebrities and hosts, which the show's Instagram called "supportive kings" appeared in a kiss cam parody sketch poking fun at the viral Coldplay CEO affair saga. Fallon and NBC colleague Meyers were "spotted" on the kiss cam sharing beers together, while Colbert's former colleagues on The Daily Show Oliver and Stewart were (enthusiastically) seated together. US media is reporting that CBS's parent company, Paramount, is seeking approval from the US Federal Communications Commission for a merger with Skydance Media, in a deal worth $US8.4 billion ($12.9 billion). This month, Paramount also agreed to pay Mr Trump $US16 million over an interview with former vice-president Kamala Harris on CBS's 60 Minutes program broadcast in October. Before his cancellation, Colbert joked on the show the deal was a "big fat bribe" — and said the company settled primarily to clear a hurdle to the Skydance sale. In the wake of the cancellation, CBS executives clarified it was "purely a financial decision" before an anonymous CBS source leaked that they pulled the show because of losses pegged between $US40 to $US50million. Colbert on Monday was quick to point out the irony in the top-rating show operating at a loss. "I could see us losing $24 million, but where would Paramount have possibly spent the other $16 million — Oh, yeah!" he said to a round of applause. Stewart used his monologue on The Daily Show, which runs on Paramount-owned Comedy Central, to blame Colbert's cancellation on "fear and pre-compliance" in the current US climate. "If you're trying to figure out why Stephen's show is ending, I don't think the answer can be found in some smoking gun email or phone call from Trump to CBS executives or in CBS QuickBooks spreadsheets on the financial health of late night," he said. "I think the answer is in the fear and pre-compliance that is gripping all of America's institutions at this very moment, institutions that have chosen not to fight the vengeful and vindictive actions of our … commander in chief." Mr Trump wrote on his own TruthSocial said that "absolutely love that Colbert got fired" and that the host's talent was "even less than his ratings". Colbert's response? "How dare you, sir. Would an untalented man be able to compose the following satirical witticism? Go f*** yourself." ABC