Nurmagomedov’s father denied US visa ahead of UFC 209

Muslim MMA fighter takes on Tony Ferguson for interim lightweight championship in Las Vegas

Khabib Nurmagomedov in action during   UFC 205 at Madison Square Garden last November. Photograph:  Michael Reaves/Getty Images
Khabib Nurmagomedov in action during UFC 205 at Madison Square Garden last November. Photograph: Michael Reaves/Getty Images

The father of one of MMA's most talented fighters, Khabib Nurmagomedov, has been denied a visa to the US ahead of this weekend's UFC 209 in Las Vegas.

Khabib's manager, Ali Abdel-Azi, confirmed to the Guardian that Abdulmanap Nurmagomedov had intended to be in his son's corner for Saturday's co-main event, the UFC interim lightweight championship against Tony Ferguson.

Nurmagomedov is a devout Muslim from the Russian republic of Dagestan, where 83 per cent of the population practice Islam. Earlier this year, Donald Trump issued a now-suspended executive order banning citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the US.

Nurmagomedov has a 24-0 record in his MMA career, and was coached by his father – an army veteran – from a young age. One infamous video that emerged in recent years, showed a young Nurmagomedov wrestling a bear under his father’s supervision. Abdulmanap referenced his unusual training methods in an interview with Russian media. “Firstly, a child always wants his father to see what his son is capable of,” Abdulmanap told ToFight.Ru. “It is a pity that there was nothing more interesting when he was younger. In the end, this was a test of character more than exercise.”

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This is not the first time an MMA fighter has been caught up in visa issues. Lightweight fighter Mairbek Taisumov, a Chechen-Russian, has also been denied a visa to the US, as has Nurmagomedov’s cousin Magomedrasul ‘Frodo’ Khasbulaev.

Nurmagomedov has been touted as a potential opponent for Conor McGregor although the Irishman has shown little inclination to set up a fight.

“Don’t chicken out please,” Nurmagomedov wrote in a message to McGregor last year. “I know I’m a bad matchup for you but you the champion and you need to fight the best. It’s OK. Die like an Irish warrior don’t run like a chicken.”

(Guardian service)