Home » Sports
November 17. 2012 11:48PM
Hooksett's Filkins wins national MMA debut
Another few seconds and Perry Filkins probably would've had a knockout. Instead the Hooksett brawler will have to settle for a unanimous decision in his national television debut.
Filkins had Jonas Billstein mounted and was landing numerous punches to the German's head as time expired in the third round. The fight went to the judges, two of whom had Filkins winning 29-28 and one of whom scored it 30-27 at Bellator 81 at the University of Rhode Island's Ryan Center on Friday.
"Like another two seconds and I think the ref was going to step in," said Filkins of the fight, which was aired live on MTV2.
It was a close fight until midway through the third round when Billstein (10-3) landed a kick to the chin of Filkins (7-1). That set Filkins off and he unloaded on Billstein after that, eventually getting him on the mat for a ground and pound.
"Right after the kick to the face Perry got in that kid's mind," said Ed Carr, Filkins's trainer.
The kick almost seemed to wake Filkins up. He became energized and very animated, exchanged some words with Billstein and then went to work with his punches.
"Once people hit me I get riled up," Filkins said. "Once I get riled up it's like nothing can hurt me."
Filkins controlled almost the entire fight by counter punching with his left hook. He landed several of those to the head of Billstein, who showed he has a good chin. Billstein would lead with a jab and Filkins would respond with a hook.
"I was trying to make him come to me," Filkins said. "I noticed he kept putting his right hand down after he threw a punch."
In the second round, Filkins went for a takedown to keep Billstein on his toes. He said he never intended on taking Billstein down with it, but wanted him to guard against it.
In the end it was the superior striking skills of Filkins that was the difference. He had Billstein wobbled with a bloody eye in the decisive third round, then the final ground and pound sealed the deal.
It was the first fight Filkins won by decision. All six of his previous wins were via knockout.
"I'm pretty surprised (it went the distance), he's a pretty tough guy," Filkins said. "I tried to finish, that's what I try to do every fight. Some guys are just tough."
Filkins had Jonas Billstein mounted and was landing numerous punches to the German's head as time expired in the third round. The fight went to the judges, two of whom had Filkins winning 29-28 and one of whom scored it 30-27 at Bellator 81 at the University of Rhode Island's Ryan Center on Friday.
"Like another two seconds and I think the ref was going to step in," said Filkins of the fight, which was aired live on MTV2.
It was a close fight until midway through the third round when Billstein (10-3) landed a kick to the chin of Filkins (7-1). That set Filkins off and he unloaded on Billstein after that, eventually getting him on the mat for a ground and pound.
"Right after the kick to the face Perry got in that kid's mind," said Ed Carr, Filkins's trainer.
The kick almost seemed to wake Filkins up. He became energized and very animated, exchanged some words with Billstein and then went to work with his punches.
"Once people hit me I get riled up," Filkins said. "Once I get riled up it's like nothing can hurt me."
Filkins controlled almost the entire fight by counter punching with his left hook. He landed several of those to the head of Billstein, who showed he has a good chin. Billstein would lead with a jab and Filkins would respond with a hook.
"I was trying to make him come to me," Filkins said. "I noticed he kept putting his right hand down after he threw a punch."
In the second round, Filkins went for a takedown to keep Billstein on his toes. He said he never intended on taking Billstein down with it, but wanted him to guard against it.
In the end it was the superior striking skills of Filkins that was the difference. He had Billstein wobbled with a bloody eye in the decisive third round, then the final ground and pound sealed the deal.
It was the first fight Filkins won by decision. All six of his previous wins were via knockout.
"I'm pretty surprised (it went the distance), he's a pretty tough guy," Filkins said. "I tried to finish, that's what I try to do every fight. Some guys are just tough."
- NHIAA boxscores, summaries for May 14, 2013 - 0
- Manchester's Gill Stadium nearing centenial rededication, still going strong - 0
- Red Sox lose to Rangers - 0
- Glenn, Nolan power Fisher Cats to win - 0
- All done: Monarchs elminated from AHL playoffs three games to one - 0
- NH College Roundup: Evans in Pats' rookie camp - 0
- Derryfield defeats Central girls in lacrosse - 0
- High school action - 0
- College Notebook: Eventful week for Northeastern's Lyons brothers from Bedford - 0
Former NASCAR driver Trickle dead in apparent suicide
READER COMMENTS: 0- UNH commencement speaker tells graduates: Don't worry about mistakes, learn from them - 1
- Ayotte tells NEC graduates to be passionate about their work - 0
- Antioch University awards 145 degrees - 0
- Message to Nashua Community College grads: find strength - 0
- 160 students graduate from White Mountains Community College - 0
- Portsmouth driver distracted by Facebook hits utility pole - 0
- Robber escapes with drugs from Keene CVS - 0
- Teen hurt in Amherst boating crash - 0
- Portsmouth police DWI roadblock stops 179 motorists yielding 4 arrests - 0
Former FBI head tells St. Anselm graduates it is important to give back
READER COMMENTS: 0- Which of the following prospective candidates do you think the Red Sox should hire to replace Bobby Valentine as the team's manager?
- Sandy Alomar Jr.
- 2%
- Brad Ausmus
- 2%
- John Farrell
- 15%
- DeMarlo Hale
- 2%
- Torey Lovullo
- 1%
- Dave Martinez
- 2%
- Tony Pena
- 5%
- Ryne Sandberg
- 4%
- Joe Torre
- 25%
- Jason Varitek
- 35%
- Other
- 8%
- Total Votes: 1840



