Chicago MMA fighter dies after Illinois boxing competition

A mixed martial arts fighter died Friday after collapsing during a competition in Cicero, a town just outside Chicago.
Isaac T. Johnson, 31, collapsed toward the end of the third round of his fight in the Matador Fighter Challenge, according to event promoter Joe Goytia. An ambulance was called at 8:38 p.m. CT to transport Johnson to a local hospital, where he was later pronounced dead. A state oversight employee called Goytia to inform him of Johnson’s death around 1:30 a.m. CT.
Goytia said Johnson passed a legally required pre-fight physical. Johnson’s cause of death has not been announced, and the Cicero Police Department is investigating, according to NBC 5 Chicago.
“I’m still processing this. I just don’t know,” Goytia told The Athletic on Saturday. “I never in a thousand years (thought) this would have happened.”
Friday was Johnson’s first boxing match, Goytia said. He faced Corey Newell, who was in his second fight, in a heavyweight Thai boxing match. Thai boxing restricts competitors to fight standing, and Johnson and Newell wore 12-ounce boxing gloves, shin guards and mouth pieces, Goytia said.
Goytia described the match as a “slugfest.” Both threw several forceful punches, but failed to connect on a majority of them. The two fighters looked exhausted at times, Goytia said, as both simultaneously fell earlier in the fight. Otherwise, nothing seemed unusual to the promoter.
“I really didn’t see them land anything that would have been like ‘Wow, that’s what did it,’” Goytia said.
After Johnson collapsed in the third round, doctors jumped into the cage and began tending to him. He was alive when paramedics took him away, Goytia said. The rest of the fights were delayed for 30 minutes, but the show proceeded after Johnson departed.
“In the back of your mind, you know this is a tough sport, you know injuries do happen in sports. But you never think this would happen,” Goytia said. “I know all the protocols were followed correctly, but in this case, it didn’t work.”




