MMA System: I Will Be Pound For Pound Goat

Chapter 659: Nankatapper



Damon reversed direction, reached over the back, and used a judo whizzer counter to whip Nankalayev off-balance. Both men hit the mat in a scramble.

"High-level stuff right here!"

Damon got a hook in, then the second. He flattened Nankalayev's base, arms under the armpits now, controlling the back. He started to punch again. short shots to the temple.

Thirty seconds left in the round.

Victor shouted, "Go now! Take it!"

Damon slid one arm under the chin. Nankalayev tucked. Damon adjusted. Instead of forcing it, he switched to the seatbelt grip again, riding the back while throwing a right hook to the ribs.

Nankalayev twisted. He nearly shook him. But Damon stayed glued to him like a vice.

With twenty seconds left, Damon faked the choke, then posted and began raining short hammerfists. Nankalayev covered, twisted, then used the opening to explode and turn inside the hook.

They reversed again. Nankalayev ended on top, inside Damon's closed guard, but it wasn't clean.

Ten seconds.

Damon postured, grabbed the wrist, and flared his hips out, angling for an armbar. Nankalayev yanked free.

Five seconds.

They both scrambled, one trying to submit, the other trying to hammer down enough punches to make a point.

The horn sounded.

Both men held their positions for a heartbeat before slowly getting up.

Damon stood first. He didn't look tired. His chest rose and fell with control. Nankalayev stood a second later, his mouth slightly open, his brow bleeding, but his hands still sharp.

They nodded at each other before walking to their corners.

"Elite work," the commentator said. "That's two minutes of pure wrestling and grappling intensity, and neither man gave an inch."

"Damon nearly got the finish there, but Nankalayev isn't going out easy."

Victor met Damon at the stool, already toweling his face and speaking low.

But Damon was calm. Focused. And ready for the next round.

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The bell rang for Round 3. Damon didn't hesitate.

He stepped forward immediately, hands high, body loose but dangerous. He wasn't waiting. He'd felt Nankalayev's rhythm now, every inch of it, and he was done testing. Now came the finish.

He feinted a jab and shot.

It wasn't subtle. It wasn't sneaky. It was power and commitment. Damon dropped levels and launched in under Nankalayev's hips like a bullet.

Nankalayev reacted well, he sprawled, dug for the underhook, and threw his hips back, trying to stall it out.

But Damon didn't stop. His legs drove. His hands locked tight behind the thigh. His shoulder stayed under the ribs. Nankalayev's sprawl started to break.

"He's powering through it!" one commentator shouted.

Damon turned the corner and yanked with everything he had. Nankalayev's base finally gave. They hit the ground hard, Damon on top.

But Nankalayev wasn't done. He rolled to the side, turning into a half guard and trying to frame with his forearms.

Damon responded instantly. He shoved the frame down, pressured forward, and started climbing into mount again.

Nankalayev bumped.

Damon based wide. He didn't overcommit.

He stepped back into side control and locked it down tight, pinning the near arm with his knee. From there, he started working the far side, prying the wrist loose, pushing it down slowly.

"He's setting up something," the second commentator said. "That's that shoulder pressure again, classic top control."

Nankalayev tried to bridge again. Damon floated and adjusted, transitioning to north-south for a second to keep him guessing. Then he slid back to side control and tightened his grip on the far arm.

Suddenly, he stepped over.

It was fast. Nankalayev realized too late, Damon had the arm isolated and was already sitting into position for a straight armlock.

"He's going for the finish!"

Nankalayev rolled. Damon stayed attached.

He lost the full armbar angle for a second, but used the scramble to transition.

He re-hooked the arm, turned his hips, and locked the far leg over the face.

Now it was deep.

Nankalayev kicked his legs. Twisted. Grunted. His left hand pulled at Damon's locked wrists, but Damon squeezed down harder, his legs clamping over the shoulder and jaw. The elbow was extended.

Damon's legs tightened. He felt the tension in Nankalayev's shoulder begin to give.

But right before full extension snapped the joint, Nankalayev rolled again, desperation giving him just enough space to relieve the pressure.

Damon let it go.

But he didn't reset. He flowed.

Still holding the arm, he tucked it tight under his chest and slid over the top of Nankalayev's back, re-hooking the near leg with his own.

The transition was seamless his body folded around Nankalayev's like a chain tightening link by link.

"What is this?" one of the commentators said, leaning forward. "That's not a standard transition, he's moving to something unorthodox."

Damon reached across, controlling the far wrist now. He shifted his hips again, this time turning into a modified crucifix, but not from side control.

He was angled slightly behind and above, legs laced deep and tight.

Then he dropped his weight.

"He's got the shoulder locked and the head trapped!" the second commentator said. "He's going for a mounted reverse triangle variation, but with arm isolation!"

Victor stood from the corner, yelling, "Yes! Finish it now!"

Damon's right thigh slid under the chin, his left leg angled across Nankalayev's back.

His calf pressed down over the shoulder and trapped the near arm.

The torque created a vice-like bind. Nankalayev's body arched, but he was pinned, completely.

The forearm Damon still controlled was pulled across the neck. It wasn't just a triangle, it was a shoulder choke hybrid, suffocating both airflow and blood.

"He can't move!"

Nankalayev's legs kicked. His fingers scraped for space. Damon squeezed harder, turning his hips, dragging the angle sharper.

Nankalayev let out a muffled sound. His arm slapped the mat.

Tap.

The referee dove in.

It was over.

The horn hadn't sounded. The round hadn't ended.

The fight was finished because Damon Cross had submitted one of the toughest, most durable light heavyweights in the world with a submission no one had ever seen pulled off at this level.

The crowd was on their feet, stunned. For a moment, the commentary team didn't speak. Then—

"Are you kidding me?"

"That… that's not even in most BJJ textbooks. That's pressure, technique, and pure problem-solving all wrapped into one. That was world-class."

Damon stood, chest rising and falling with control.

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