DONALD WONCH
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Heavyweight
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After three back to back canceled amateur bouts from 2012-’13, Don ‘The Diamond’ Wonch must have said, “to hell with this,” and moved up to the Canadian regional pro scene in 2015. The idea proved to be a good one after back to back round one knockouts in his first two pro bouts.
The Muay Thai striker likes to push a pace on the feet and avoid the ground so he’s a perfect fit for our sport. In 2024, Wonch makes his debut on the first ever card in his home country of Canada where he will look to establish himself in the dangerous heavyweight division.
Before entering the BKFC, Wonch faced the hard-hitting Bobby Brents and lost via doctor stoppage in round two. He looks to avenge that loss, seeing himself in the highest level bare-knuckle league on planet Earth along with Brents now. It could be a great rematch down the road!
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The Denver fighter is now 5-1 with 3 straight wins after his Co-Main Event victoryRamiro Figueroa is riding high after earning the biggest win of his career at BKFC 88. In the Co-Main Event at the sold-out National Western Center in Figueroa’s hometown of Denver, he notched his third straight victory at the expense of former BKFC World Champion Elvin “El Bandido” Brito. Figueroa is now 5-1 under the BKFC banner. “(Brito) is a legend. Everybody speaks highly of his accomplishments in bare knuckle fighting, so this was the next step up that I had to rise to,” the 24-year-old Figueroa says. Mission accomplished. In his last three trips to the Squared Circle, Figueroa has taken out the former BKFC World Champion Brito, the previously undefeated Dalvin “Hippy Disciple” Blair and former BKFC World Championship challenger Howard “HD” Davis. What’s next? Figueroa hopes his next fight will be for the BKFC World Lightweight Championship, or he’d also be more than happy to fight for an interim belt, if necessary. Regardless of what’s on the immediate horizon, Figueroa agrees that he’s at the forefront of the hard-charging next wave of BKFC superstars. “I’m 24, and I believe my best is still years away, when I’m in my prime. If I can secure the belt now, I still believe that I’ll be dominant for as long as I want,” he says. “I don’t understand the full game of bare knuckle yet, but I’m learning more and more with every single fight. I believe that the sooner I win the Championship, it’s going to be even better for me, and I’ll hold the belt for many years.”




