6 August 17-23, 2023 miaminewtimes.com | browardpalmbeach.com New Times | music | cafe | culture | Night+Day | news | letters | coNteNts | THE GLOVES COME OFF Born in South Florida, BYB Extreme’s bare-knuckle boxing hits the mainstream. BY JESS SWANSON D hafir “Dada 5000” Har- ris’ bloody brand of bare-knuckle fisticuffs returned to South Flor- ida August 10 — and this time the showdown was sanctioned. It had been more than 17 years since the mohawked fighter started orga- nizing illicit backyard fights at his mother’s notorious green house in Perrine, and during BYB Ex- treme’s “Brawl in the Pines” at the Charles F. Dodge City Center in Pembroke Pines, Harris cele- brated just how far this combat sport — which was illegal in the U.S. until 2018 — has grown lo- cally, nationally, and abroad. “We were doing bare-knuckle fighting be- fore it was even popular. The critics were all telling me that I was bringing boxing and MMA back ten years,” recalls Harris, who co- founded bare-knuckle fighting organization BYB Extreme with former NASCAR team owner Mike Vazquez in 2015. “But guess what? I’ve got memory. I remembered what everyone said, and that was the fuel I used to push forward to where we are today.” “Brawl in the Pines” delivered a stacked card with nearly twenty fighters throwing relentless blows that left faces bludgeoned and spotted with hematomas. At the top of the ticket was the unifying bout featuring scrapper Sam “The Caveman” Liera, who claimed the BYB Super Middleweight title in a dominant performance capped off by a third-round technical knockout against interim champ and Miami native Jose Fernandez. Brazilian Carlos Alexandre prevailed against former UFC star Andre Ewell to claim the vacant welterweight title, while the first- ever BYB featherweight championship went to Brandon Birr, who threw down against Harold McQueen. Long before bare-knuckle boxing was ac- cepted in mainstream sport, Harris, who has been called the P.T. Barnum of Perrine, or- chestrated more than a hundred fights from that lawn in south Miami-Dade County. By pitting two local amateur fighters against each another, Harris says, he sought to not only keep young men off the streets in the throes and aftermath of the 2008 recession but also provide evocative entertainment for the community. Those bloodied and bruised faces and fists were first chronicled by New Times in 2008 and have since been featured on ESPN, Vice, Rolling Stone, and Rakontur’s 2015 documentary Dawg Fight. “This stuff goes back to the Roman Colos- seum. Before the gloves were on, they were off,” Harris says. “We have revolutionized how individuals look at extreme reality combat in modern times. So anybody doing this right now has been influenced by them dudes down here in South Florida, out of Miami-Dade County. They’ve taken it out of our books and watched our DVDs until it all got scratched up.” Harris was mostly unbothered by law en- forcement for nearly a decade, even as crowds ballooned to catch the unsanctioned fights. In 2014, the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation delivered a cease- and-desist letter, prompting Harris to “take his talents to the ocean,” where he began host- ing fights on a cruise ship off the coast of Mi- ami in international waters. “It came to the point where it became a witch hunt,” Harris says. “But creative minds never take a day off.” When Harris and Vazquez founded BYB Extreme in 2015, they sought to legalize the underground sport in all 50 states. At that time, Florida had a statute on the books that required gloves weighing at least 8 ounces in boxing matches. The Florida State Boxing Commission, as recently as 2016, maintained bare-knuckle matches were illegal in the state, but promoters were later able to host matches through a loophole in the law: While the statute required gloves, it didn’t exactly say they had to cover the knuckles. Florida formally removed its glove requirement through a law passed in 2021. Today bare-knuckle fighting is legal in some form in at least 20 states. The sport continues to grow as pro boxers and MMA fighters like Shannon Briggs and Luke Rockhold transition into it. BYB Extreme CEO Greg Bloom contends that, despite its bloody reputation, bare-knuckle fighting leads to fewer long-term injuries than boxing or MMA. “The glove was invented to protect the hand, not the face. So the glove enables a fighter to not only punch with a lot more power, but a lot more often,” Bloom says. “Bare-knuckle fight- ing looks a lot more dangerous because 85 percent of the injuries are cuts and lacera- tions. So there is a lot more blood than you would see in a standard MMA fight or boxing match. But those get sutured up and within a couple of weeks and the fighters are back to business.” Long-term studies comparing chronic in- juries of bare-knuckle boxing with those of gloved boxing are lacking partly because the bare-knuckle version is relatively new in a sanctioned setting. The available research in- dicates, however, that broken facial bones and tooth loss are more common when a fighter is clocked in the face by bare knuckles. One of Harris’ greatest innovations for the sport is the “mighty trigon,” a triangular ring design that started when he started roping off fights with three prongs in the lawn. The or- ganization patented the equilateral triangle ring in 2017, and it is considered the smallest fighting surface in combat sports. (When Triller Fight Club used a triangular ring de- sign to promote a November 2021 event, BYB Extreme filed a lawsuit seeking injunctive and monetary relief for “design patent in- fringement, unfair competition, copyright in- fringement, and related claims.”) “In a square ring or octagon, you can sort of move in a circle and laterally. But in a trian- gle, you’re in a corner, and the way out is to go forward,” Bloom says. “By its nature, the tri- gon pushes the action to the center of the ring, and as a result, 85 percent of our matches end in a knockout or technical knockout — it’s very action-packed.” Although BYB Extreme has hosted matches in Wyoming, Mississippi, South Car- olina, London, and Dubai, Harris says he’ll al- ways honor his local roots. “We’re not just going to the upscale restau- rants and sports bars to hand out flyers. I’m shaking hands inside liquor stores from Pem- broke Pines straight back through Perrine to Florida City and back up to Doral promoting,” he says. “I like to deal with my people direct — no middleman — connecting hand to hand.” [email protected] Top: L.T. Nelson suffers facial injuries and severe swelling during his bout against James Connelly. Bottom: Jessika Smith (left) secures her first bare-knuckle win in a fight against Casie Dees. Photos by Gerardo Ramos/BYB Extreme Fighting Gerardo Ramos/BYB Extreme Fighting | METRO | “THIS STUFF GOES BACK TO THE ROMAN COLOSSEUM. BEFORE THE GLOVES WERE ON, THEY WERE OFF.” Chad Kelly