Arman Tsarukyan versus Muhammad Mokaev headlining Hype Fighting in Rio de Janeiro on March 11 is one of those crossover grappling bookings that feels like it came out of nowhere and still makes instant sense once you look at where both men are right now.
Arman Tsarukyan vs. Muhammad Mokaev in Hype FC
The matchup tops the Hype FC Brazil card at Farmasi Arena in Rio, with Tsarukyan and Mokaev meeting in a 10‑minute, submission‑only grappling main event under rules that allow victory only by choke or joint lock. If neither man finds a finish inside the time limit, the bout is ruled a draw, which raises the stakes for two fighters whose reputations were built on control and pressure as much as on finishes in MMA.
The event streams on Triller TV and sits on a card that features several current or former UFC names, including Jean Silva, Sharabutdin “Shara Bullet” Magomedov, Edson Barboza and Bryce Mitchell, giving the show a clear hook for fans who follow the UFC calendar week to week.
Tsarukyan arrives in Rio as a top lightweight contender who has been keeping himself busy on the mat while his title picture in the UFC remains stuck in traffic at 155. He has leaned into grappling and wrestling events over the past few months, including a stormy freestyle bout with social media standout Georgio Poullas at RAF 6 that erupted into chaos after the final whistle when Tsarukyan struck his opponent in the aftermath of a foul‑filled contest.
That rivalry was supposed to spill straight into a submission‑only rematch at this same Hype FC Brazil card, but Poullas withdrew to stay with RAF, and their second meeting has been pushed to RAF 7 on March 28 under freestyle rules instead. With that slot suddenly open, Tsarukyan stayed on the Rio date and the promotion moved fast to slot in Mokaev as an opponent with his own current storyline and fanbase.
For Mokaev, this is another high‑visibility step in a rebuilding phase that started after his unexpected UFC exit in 2024 despite an unbeaten 7‑0 run that included wins over ranked flyweights like Alex Perez, Tim Elliott and Manel Kape. UFC president Dana White hinted at factors beyond performance when the promotion declined to renew his deal, and Mokaev later said he had been pushed to adjust a grappling‑heavy style that sometimes led to tepid fights, even as he piled up wins.
Since then, he has kept his name in circulation through appearances in Karate Combat and a knockout run to the inaugural Brave CF flyweight title in November 2025, when he stopped Gerard Burns with a head kick at Brave CF 100 in Bahrain. He has also spoken publicly about improving his relationship with the UFC and targeting a return in 2026, framing these side ventures as part of that path back.
All of that history makes this Rio main event feel like a meeting of two men in limbo, both staying active, both using grappling as a bridge to whatever comes next. Tsarukyan is juggling a busy schedule that still includes a freestyle wrestling date with Poullas later in March.
Mokaev, fresh off a major regional title win and ongoing talks about possible BJJ or grappling appearances tied to the UFC banner, now walks into a main event opposite a bigger, established UFC lightweight in a rule set that plays to both men’s strengths.
