Throughout the cycle of combat sports, a fighter can spend most of their career on home turf as a premier local fixture before even stepping foot beyond the state line and surrounding areas of attraction in the ultimate act of home hero appreciation. In today’s episode of Across The Pond, you will be introduced to a sun and surf stable horse ready to bolt and burn as a golden guardian at Flyweight for 559 Fights. A professional mixed martial artist since April 2015 and representing Millennia MMA, Corvan Allen owns an 8-3 record in 11 bouts consisting of six decisions, one submission and one knockout. Allen has fought for various organizations over the course of his career inside the professional ranks including Cage Warriors and Legacy Fighting Alliance. He is 1-0 under the 559 Fights banner. Allen has spent his entire journey in the United States in his home state of California.
In his professional MMA debut, he submitted Geovanni Araujo via rear-naked choke in the first round to score his only submission win as a professional. Allen defeated Lance Lee at Gladiator Challenge season’s beatings via unanimous decision. Then in his promotional debut under the Cage Warriors banner at Cage Warriors 165, he defeated Brandon Carrillo via TKO in the second round to notch his lone knockout victory as a professional. Allen defeated Xavier Vines via unanimous decision at Cage Warriors 166. He defeated Carlos Elizarraraz at LXF 17 via unanimous decision. Allen defeated Roger Severson via unanimous decision at LFA 192. He defeated Jorge Avalos on the main card of LFA 213 via unanimous decision.
In the co-main event of 559 Fights 120, Allen defeated Chance Ikei via unanimous decision. The victory earned Allen the sixth decision win of his professional career in addition to securing win number one under the 559 Fights banner to become the 559 Fights flyweight champion. He also picked up his eighth overall win as a professional MMA fighter in the process. Allen’s veteran savvy at 11 fights in shows he is calmly capable of keeping his crafty gaze on the Pacific prize, even when crunching situational odds show the smallest of gains at a minimal margin of profit!







