Cage Warriors 200 Dublin Weigh-Ins | CW 200 World Title Doubleheader
CW 200 Dublin Weigh-Ins: A Milestone Cage Warriors Night Becomes Official
Cage Warriors does weigh-ins better when the card feels big, and CW 200 had that feeling before anyone even stepped into the cage. This was not just another Friday morning scale session. It was the official final checkpoint for the promotion’s historic 200th event, with two world title fights at the top of a stacked Dublin card.
The setting already gave it extra weight. CW 200 was built for Dublin, inside the RDS, on a night Cage Warriors openly framed as one of its biggest ever events on Irish soil. That matters because this promotion has always lived off its live crowd energy: the yellow gloves, the walkouts, the UK and Irish MMA pipeline, and the feeling that you might be watching someone before the wider MMA world catches up.
Simon vs Bagley: Featherweight Title Fight Locked In
The featherweight title fight was the first major headline from the scales. Solomon Simon and Nik Bagley both came in at 144.9 lbs, making Simon vs Bagley official without any late drama. That is exactly what you want from a championship weigh-in: two fighters on point, no excuses, no commission chaos, just the faceoff and the wait.
For Simon, the weigh-in carried the pressure of a newly crowned champion trying to look like the moment belonged to him. For Bagley, it was the challenger’s chance to show he was not just there for the walkout. Those little details matter in a title-fight faceoff. Who looks relaxed? Who looks too fired up? Who is trying to win the staredown a day early?
McCorry vs Bellandi Adds a Second World Title Fight
The co-main title fight gave CW 200 its real depth. Paddy McCorry and Dario Bellandi also matched each other on the scale, both coming in at 184.8 lbs for the middleweight title fight. That made McCorry vs Bellandi official and gave Dublin another championship storyline to hold onto.
Bellandi brought the champion’s position. McCorry brought the Irish crowd factor and the kind of pressure that can turn a co-main event into the loudest fight of the night. A middleweight title fight in Dublin, on Cage Warriors’ 200th show, is not a quiet assignment. It is exactly the kind of stage where one clean finish can change a career.
The Undercard Names Worth Watching
Beyond the two belts, CW 200 had several names that gave the weigh-ins real value for fans trying to map the full card. Leon Hill made weight for a welterweight matchup that had obvious action potential. Hill is the type of fighter who can turn a main-card slot into a highlight if the exchanges open up early.
Maximus Lally also belonged on the watch list. Featherweight prospects on Cage Warriors cards are always worth tracking because the promotion has a long history of moving fighters from regional buzz to international attention. A clean weigh-in and a sharp performance can quickly make the next booking bigger.
Then there was Adam Darby, who hit the mark for a 175 lb catchweight bout. Catchweights can sometimes look messy on paper, but they often produce aggressive fights because both athletes know they are under a little extra scrutiny.
Why This CW 200 Weigh-In Video Matters
A good weigh-in video is not just a list of numbers. It gives you the last read before fight night. At CW 200, both title fights were cleanly official, the main-card names were in place, and Dublin had the kind of event that makes Cage Warriors feel like more than a feeder promotion.
Watch this video for the scale results, but watch the faceoffs for the real story. CW 200 was a milestone night for Cage Warriors, and the weigh-ins made it feel real: Simon vs Bagley, McCorry vs Bellandi, and a Dublin crowd waiting to turn the volume up.