Kayla Harrison May Prefer Upcoming PFL PPV Stage Over Grind of Season Format

Kayla
Harrison
has excelled within the grind of the Professional
Fighters League season format, but that doesn’t mean she wants to
keep doing it forever.

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Harrison is getting ready to pursue her third consecutive PFL
championship at 155 pounds with a clash against Martina
Jindrova
at PFL 9 on Aug. 20 at Copperbox Arena in London. The
two-time Olympic gold medalist has yet to taste defeat in her
professional career, and she’ll once again be an overwhelming
favorite in the upcoming lightweight bracket.

“It’s hard. It’s not for the faint of heart,” Harrison told the
MMA
Underground
. “And this is my third time doing it. On one hand
I’m grateful because it gives me so much experience so fast because
I have no choice but to evolve or lose. But on the other hand it’s
a grind. Even when I’m not competing, I’m still training
everyday.”

If Harrison is able to three-peat at lightweight, she’s ready to
consider other possibilities beyond the PFL season format.

“For sure, I think that going through this season especially,
there’s been some other stuff behind the scenes going on. Whatever,
life is life. There’s always something going on,” Harrison said.
“But I think that, 14 [fights], by the time I’ll be done with the
season it’ll be 16 fights in, it’ll be time to maybe start
[considering other possibilites]. I want the big fights. I’ve been
doing what you would call seasons – I’ve been training twice a day
since I was 12 years old. So it’s been 20 years now of putting my
body through the mill.

Harrison recently tested the waters of free agency but ultimately
elected to
sign a multi-year contract extension
with the PFL. Included
with the news of Harrison’s re-signing was the promotion’s plans to
launch a pay-per-view superfight division. Thus far, there has been
no further news regarding that division, but it could be more
fitting for Harrison’s vision.

“I want the big fights. And if that means I have to be patient and
wait and not compete in a season, then I’ll be patient and wait,”
she said.

“It’s not about money. It’s about legacy, and it’s about testing
myself against the best. So I think that this will probably be my
last season.”

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