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OKTAGON 80 Results: Legierski Wins Lightweight Gold in Brutal Munich Title Fight

OKTAGON 80 Results: Legierski Wins Lightweight Gold in Brutal Munich Title Fight

OKTAGON 80 Results: Legierski Crowned Lightweight Champion in Munich

OKTAGON returned to Germany with a stacked card as OKTAGON 80 hit the Sap Garden in Munich. The vacant lightweight belt was on the line in a bloody main event between Mateusz Legierski and Attila Korkmaz, backed up by a classic “Kelt war” in Christian Jungwirth vs Niklas Stolze and a genuinely ridiculous standing reverse triangle from Henrique Madureira. It was one of those nights that reminded everyone why OKTAGON MMA has become Europe’s most reliable chaos factory.

Legierski Outpoints Korkmaz for Vacant Lightweight Title

The main event saw Mateusz Legierski finally wrap gold around his waist, taking a dominant decision over Attila Korkmaz in Legierski vs Korkmaz for the vacant OKTAGON lightweight championship. Legierski’s boxing and body work added up over five rounds, while his takedown defence stopped Korkmaz from turning it into a grind.

By the championship rounds Korkmaz’s face told the whole story – swollen, marked up and leaking from multiple cuts after eating clean counters and elbows along the fence.

All three judges went heavily in favour of the Pole, handing Legierski the vacant strap and setting up a fresh era at 155 lbs after Losene Keita’s move to the UFC.

Jungwirth vs Stolze Delivers a Wild War

If the main event was about dominance, the people’s main event was pure attrition. In Jungwirth vs Stolze, Christian “Kelt” Jungwirth and Niklas Stolze put on a classic OKTAGON brawl that escalated round by round. Stolze started sharper, picking Jungwirth off early, but the veteran’s trademark pressure and cardio began to take over from the third.

By the time the fourth round rolled around, Jungwirth was walking Stolze down, forcing exchanges on the fence and breaking him with volume until the referee finally waved it off for a TKO – just seconds before we got to see a fifth-round rally.

Between the pacing, the momentum swing and the damage on both sides, it was exactly the sort of fight fans expect at OKTAGON 80.

Madness on the Undercard: Standing Reverse Triangle Steals the Show

The Munich crowd also got one of the strangest submissions you’ll see all year. In Henrique Madureira vs Eriglen Prizreni, the Brazilian locked up a standing reverse triangle, clamped down and forced the tap in the first round – a genuine “did that really just happen?” moment.

Elsewhere on the card, Alexander Poppeck used his size, patience and power to break down David Hošek in Poppeck vs Hošek, while Ronald Paradeiser reminded everyone why he’s permanently hovering around the title picture with a sharp TKO of Geraldo Neto in Paradeiser vs Neto.

The finishing theme continued as Gökhan Aksu stopped Denis Frimpong in Aksu vs Frimpong, and Matouš Kohout edged a tight split decision over Hafeni Nafuka in Kohout vs Nafuka to keep himself relevant in the crowded lightweight mix.

Prospects and Veterans Deliver on the Prelims

The prelims were all about future depth for OKTAGON. Grappling ace Felix Klinkhammer snatched a late first-round kneebar on Máté Kertész in Klinkhammer vs Kertész, while Teo Saldana Smith blitzed Michael Deiga-Scheck with punches in Saldana Smith vs Deiga-Scheck.

Local favourite Ozan Aslaner squeaked past Marco Antonio Elpidio via split decision in Aslaner vs Antonio Elpidio, and earlier in the night Eugen Black-Dell vs Eemil Kurhela ended with Black-Dell pouring on strikes for a second-round TKO. Between that and the lightweight war in the main event, Munich got its money’s worth.

OKTAGON 80: Full Fight Card Results

Main Card – Sap Garden, Munich

Preliminary Card

OKTAGON 80 FAQ

Where did OKTAGON 80 take place?

OKTAGON 80 was held at the Sap Garden in Munich, Germany, under the OKTAGON banner.

Who won the lightweight title at OKTAGON 80?

Mateusz Legierski defeated Attila Korkmaz by unanimous decision in Legierski vs Korkmaz to claim the vacant OKTAGON lightweight championship.

What was the best fight of OKTAGON 80?

Most fans will circle Christian Jungwirth vs Niklas Stolze as the fight of the night – a four-round war where Jungwirth’s relentless cardio and pressure finally forced a late TKO.

Which finish went viral from OKTAGON 80?

The standout highlight was Henrique Madureira’s wild standing reverse triangle over Eriglen Prizreni in Madureira vs Prizreni, instantly thrown into the “Submission of the Year” conversation.

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