Cage Fury Fighting Championships Thriving After Some Early Hits
Cage Fury Fighting Championships thriving after some early hits DAVID WEINBERG Staff Writer | Posted: Tuesday, August 4, 2015 10:30 am ATLANTIC CITY Lightweight fighter Stephen Regman pressed his forearm against Jordan Stiner's windpipe last month at Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa and squeezed as if he were trying to empty a bottle of suntan lotion. Stiner, from Hatfield, Pennsylvania, struggled to break the hold, but eventually tapped his hand against his thigh, prompting referee Liam Kerrigan to halt the scheduled threeround fight. Cage Fury thriving after some early hits Regman, of Watchung, climbed to the top of the 6 foothigh cage and flexed his biceps while a capacity Cage Fury Fighting Championships CEO crowd of 2,400 at Borgata's Events Center cheered. Rob Haydak watches the monitor at a fight last year at Borgata. Last month, Cage Fury A few feet away, Cage Fury Fighting Championships put on its 50th fight card. "Everything boils president and CEO Rob Haydak surveyed the scene down to the fighters, and I think we've done and smiled. a great job of finding the best talent and The fight was part of a special card for Vinelandbased guys who have good followings," Haydak CFFC, the area's only professional mixed martial arts said. organization. The show was CFFC's 50th, marking another milestone in what has been a remarkable comeback from disaster. "What they've been able to do is very impressive," New Jersey Athletic Control Board official Nick Lembo said Saturday. "Along with (New Yorkbased) Ring of Combat (which stages fights at Tropicana Casino and Resort), Cage Fury is the best regional promotion in North America." Up until a few years ago, it appeared as if CFFC would fall 45 shows short of 50.
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