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Shamil Musaev (fighter)
Russian mixed martial artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Shamil Musaev (Russian: Шамиль Мусаевич Мусаев; January 8, 1994) is a Russian mixed martial artist, who currently fights in the Welterweight division.[1] He is European MMA champion (2016) and world MMA champion (2017) while serving as a member of the Russian national team during these tournaments.[2] He is also the youngest-ever winner of season four of the series "Mix Fighters".[3][4]
Musaev also won the tournament "Battle of Champions - 14: School vs School", defeating Muay Thai World Champion Ali Aliev in the final under modified MMA rules.[5] In Wushu Sanda, he is a two-time Senior European champion and a one-time Junior World champion.[6][7]
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Background
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Musaev was born on January 8, 1994, in the fortress town of Kizlyar, in the Republic of Dagestan, Russia.[8][9] As a six years old, he began to dabble himself in the modern Chinese martial art of Wushu Sanda.[10][11] Musaev was mentored in this sports by coach Achalo Magomedovich Magomedaminov, who is "Honored Worker of Physical Culture and Sports of the Republic of Dagestan" & "Honored Trainer of the Russian Federation in Wushu Sanda".[12] Achalo Magomedaminov himself, trained ten World champions, twenty European champions and other medalist in the combat sports of Wushu Sanda in 2017.[13] Musaev was drafted into "Akhmatov Sports Club" (SC Akhmatov) which is part of "Sports School of the Olympic Reserve Kizlyar" in their Wushu Sanda program.[14] The "Akhmatov Sports Club" is named after the local businessman Ibragim Magomedovich Akhmatov, who is General Director of OJSC (Concern KEMZ), as he donated money for SC Akhmatov, and also sponsored students who participate in combat sports events (wrestling, ARB, Sambo, Muay Thai, Wushu Sanda, Taekwondo, Judo, Boxing and Kickboxing) at regional, national and international levels.[15] The "Sports School of the Olympic Reserve Kizlyar" current director is Achalo Magomedaminov, who succeeded previous director, Gusein Gadzhimuradovich Magomedov, after his retirement.[16][17]
Musaev studied in shkolu № 7 (School Number 7), which is part of Sports School of the Olympic Reserve, in his home town of Kizlyar, from which he graduated in 2008.[18]
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Wushu Sanda and amateur mixed martial arts career
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On September 9, 2012, Shamil Musaev became the champion of Russia in Wushu Sanda in Moscow, Russia at 70 kg category for SC Akhmatov. His teammate Shamil Ramazanov won gold at 75 kg. This qualified them for the Wushu Sanda World Championship in Macau, China, held from September 19 to 25. To prepare, they trained at a camp near Izberbash.[19]
A few weeks later, Musaev won the Junior World Championship in Macau in the 70 kg division. Russia won 4 gold, 5 silver, and 3 bronze medals overall.[20]
On March 27, 2014, Musaev won gold at 85 kg in the Russian Wushu Sanda Championship in Moscow. His SC Akhmatov teammates took several other golds. The Dagestan team dominated, winning 8 of 11 categories, finishing ahead of Central Federal District and Yakutia.[21][22]
In May 2015, Musaev (80 kg) and Ali Abdulkhalikov (75 kg) won gold in Vladimir, joining elite names like Muslim Salikhov. However, Salikhov replaced Musaev in the team sent to the World Championship in Jakarta.[23][24]
On February 7, 2016, Musaev (80 kg) won gold at the Dagestan Wushu Sanda Championship in Izberbash. His teammates Ali Abdulkhalikov, Magomed Abdulkhalikov, and Rasul Omarov also claimed top spots. Bozigit Ataev won at 90 kg+.[25]
On May 20, 2016, Musaev won gold at the European Wushu Sanda Championship in Moscow. Dagestan fighters secured 18 golds out of 27 categories.
A week later, on May 27, Musaev won bronze at the Russian Amateur MMA Championship, qualifying for the WMMAA European Championship.[26][27]
On October 21, 2016, Musaev won gold at the WMMAA European Championship in Saint Petersburg, defeating Michael Ovsjannikov in the final.[28] He was later awarded the title "International Master of Sports in Amateur MMA".[29]
On May 11, 2017, Musaev earned bronze at the Russian Amateur MMA Championship in Rostov-on-Don. Magomed Magomedkerimov won the category.[30][31]
In October, Musaev replaced Magomedkerimov and won gold at the WMMAA World Championship in Astana.[32][33]
In March 2021, Musaev won his sixth Russian Wushu Sanda Championship in Moscow.[34]
On December 2, 2022, Musaev competed in the "Battle of Champions 14: School vs. School" at Luzhniki Palace of Sports, Moscow, organized by the Russian Union of Martial Arts (RSBI).[35] Eight fighters from eight martial arts schools (wushu sanda, sambo, Muay Thai, kudo, grappling, etc.) competed under modified MMA rules.[36] Rules included three rounds of three minutes each, strikes to all MMA-sanctioned zones, throws, 20-second ground time, chokes and leg locks allowed, but no ground-and-pound. Participants included David Hasanyan (ARB), Vladimir Ivanov (Karate), Shamidkhan Magomedov (Grappling), Victor Samarkin (Kudo), Movsar Baimakhanov (Hand-to-Hand), Ivan Lozhkin (Sambo), Ali Aliev (Muay Thai), and Musaev (Wushu Sanda).[37] In the final, Musaev fought Ali Aliev (both 80 kg). Musaev used wrestling to control the match, despite suffering a broken nose. Judges awarded him a unanimous decision win.[38] He received a championship belt, certificate, and 3 million rubles.[39] Musaev was greeted by teammates and fans at Makhachkala airport.[40]
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Mixed martial arts career
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Early career
Musaev made his professional MMA debut in 2013, defeating Muslim Mubarakshoev via TKO (doctor stoppage) in the first round at a regional event in Russia.[41][42] After three straight wins, he joined M-1 Global in 2014.[43][44]
That same year, Musaev entered the fourth season of “Mix Fighter,” an MMA reality show modeled after “The Ultimate Fighter,” featuring fighters from 14 countries.[45] After qualifying bouts, he joined “Team Mix Fighter,” mentored by Kenny Garner, while “Team World” was led by Alexey Kudin.[46][47]
The finals were held in Minsk-Arena before 16,000 spectators and broadcast on the Boyets TV network. Musaev went undefeated, winning 4 fights and becoming the youngest champion in the show’s history.[48][49] He thanked his coach Achalo Magomedaminov, former school director Gusein Magomedov, and SC Akhmatov founder Ibragim Akhmatov in his post-fight speech.[50]
After winning Mix Fighter, Musaev continued to compete in various Russian promotions, gaining a reputation for his striking and wrestling prowess.[51]
Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki (KSW)
In 2019, Musaev signed with European promotion KSW.[52] He debuted at KSW 48 on April 27, defeating former TFL lightweight champion Hubert Szymajda via TKO from a crucifix position.[53]
On December 7, 2019, at KSW 52, he knocked out Grzegorz Szulakowski with a spinning backfist.[54]
In 2020, Musaev was set to face champion Mateusz Gamrot for the KSW lightweight belt at KSW 54, but pulled out due to a knee injury.[55]
He returned at KSW 58 in January 2021, defeating undefeated Slovenian Uroš Juricic via unanimous decision.[56] A brawl broke out post-fight, leading to fines—Musaev lost 50% of his purse, later donated to children’s medical causes.[57]
In October 2021 at KSW 64, Musaev fought to a majority draw with Michał Pietrzak.[58] A rematch was scheduled for KSW 68, but cancelled after the promotion terminated contracts with Russian fighters due to the invasion of Ukraine.[59]
Russian Cagefighting Championship (RCC)
Following a two-year layoff due to KSW contract cancellation, Musaev returned to action at RCC 16 on July 28, 2023, facing former M-1 Global champion Alexey Kunchenko in Tyumen, Russia.[60] Musaev won by TKO in under 90 seconds via spinning back kick and punches.[61]
After the bout, Kunchenko announced his retirement. Musaev expressed regret, stating he wished Kunchenko had won a final fight before retiring.[62]
Professional Fighters League (PFL)
On March 11, 2024, Musaev joined the PFL’s $1 million welterweight tournament.[63] In his debut at PFL 3 on April 19 in Chicago, he knocked out Logan Storley in the second round.[64]
On June 28 at PFL 6 in Sioux Falls, Musaev fought Murad Ramazanov, whom he had lost to in a 2016 amateur bout. This time, Musaev won via TKO in the second round.[65]
In the semifinals at PFL 9 on August 23, Musaev faced Ramazanov in a rematch, winning via unanimous decision.[66]
On November 29, 2024, Musaev defeated Magomed Umalatov via third-round TKO in the finals at PFL 10 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, claiming the PFL Welterweight Championship and the $1 million prize.[67]
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Personal life
Musaev is an Avar born in Kizlyar, Dagestan.[68] Some sources incorrectly list his birthplace as Mytishchi, due to his later residence and training there.[69]
He earned the nickname "Cichy Zabójca" ("Silent Assassin") from Polish fans after his KSW debut and is similarly known as "Besshumnyy Ubiytsa" in Russia due to his calm demeanor.[70]
Musaev is represented by Ivan Dijaković of Germany's UFD Gym.[71] He is close with UFC fighter Abus Magomedov, who also corners him during fights.[72]
Musaev trains at Golden Team in Mytishchi, alongside fighters like Magomed Ismailov and Anatoly Malykhin.[73][74] The gym was founded by Vladimir Hosiya, a former national team coach and Honored Coach of Russia.[75]
He holds the titles of "International Master of Sports" in both Wushu Sanda and Amateur MMA.[76][77] He is also a "Candidate for Master of Sports" in freestyle wrestling and combat sambo.[78]
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Championships and accomplishments
Wushu sanda
1x Junior World Championship of Wushu Sanda[79]
2x European Championship of Wushu Sanda[80]
6x All-Russian Championship of Wushu Sanda[81]
Amateur mixed martial arts
1X WMMAA European Championship[82]
1X WMMAA World Championship[83]
Professional mixed martial arts
1X Mix Fighter: Welterweight Tournament[84]
- MMA Fighting
- 2024 Third Team MMA All-Star[85]
The Russian Union of Martial Arts (RSBI)
1X Battle of Champions 14; School Vs School[86]
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Mixed martial arts record
19 matches | 18 wins | 0 losses |
By knockout | 12 | 0 |
By submission | 2 | 0 |
By decision | 4 | 0 |
Draws | 1 |
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References
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