Middletown’s Harrison dominant in MMA fight debut

Two-time Olympic gold-medal winner wins match in Chicago
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL - AUGUST 11: Silver medalist Audrey Tcheumeo of France, gold medalist Kayla Harrison of the United States and bronze medalists Mayra Aguiar of Brazil and Anamari Velensek of Slovenia celebrate on the podium after the women’s -78kg judo contest on Day 6 of the 2016 Rio Olympics at Carioca Arena 2 on August 11, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL - AUGUST 11: Silver medalist Audrey Tcheumeo of France, gold medalist Kayla Harrison of the United States and bronze medalists Mayra Aguiar of Brazil and Anamari Velensek of Slovenia celebrate on the podium after the women’s -78kg judo contest on Day 6 of the 2016 Rio Olympics at Carioca Arena 2 on August 11, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)

Middletown native Kayla Harrison won her professional mixed-martial arts debut Thursday night against Brittney Elkin, of Denver, in a Professional Fighters League 155-pound lightweight bout in Chicago.

Harrison, a two-time Olympic gold medalists in judo, got Elkin on the ground early and dominated the fight, finishing it off three minutes, 18 seconds into round one.

“Kayla Harrison golden in her debut,” the NBC Sports announcer said.

“She won every moment of that bout,” another announcer said.

MORE HARRISON: Kayla Harrison shares inspiring message with Middletown crowd | Middletown cheers Harrison to another Olympic gold

The Professional Fighters League is a new MMA promotion that held its first event earlier this month. The Harrison-Elkin fight was one of five on the main card.

Harrison is following in the footsteps of former training partner Ronda Rousey, who was also a well-known judoka before she became an MMA superstar in the UFC. 

"Ronda is always going to be, I think, that little 'rabbit' in front of me," Harrison said via MMAJunkie.com. "When I was 16 and I moved to (coach Jimmy) Pedro's, she was the superstar. She was the golden girl. She was the one everyone was watching. Every day, I said to myself, 'I'm going to be her some day. I'm going to be better than her. Anything she can do, I can do better.' It helped take me to the highest levels of my sport.

“So I don’t see this being any different. It’s positive motivation for me. It’s healthy. I think it’s always healthy to have something to chase, something to look forward to.”

Earlier this month, Harrison told reporters she battled depression after wrapping up her second successful Olympic run two years ago but has fallen in love with the competition provided by MMA.

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