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Shane Burgos Breaks Three-Year Silence, Announces "One More Run" in MMA

Edited by Drew Zuhosky
1 hours ago3 min read
Shane Burgos Announces "One more run"
Shane Burgos Announces MMA Comeback After Nearly Three Years AwayPFL

Former UFC featherweight Shane Burgos announced on social media that he is ready to return to fighting after nearly three years away from competition.

Shane Burgos (14-4 MMA) has returned, or at least he claims he wants to. “Hurricane” took to social media over the weekend and announced that he’s ready for “one more run” after being completely off the grid since August 2023. No interviews or social media posts about fighting. He just vanished for almost three years and now he’s back saying he wants in.

"I needed that break," Burgos said. Three years is a long time to be gone. Especially for a guy who was once one of the most exciting fighters in the UFC.

Shane Burgos Was Never in a Boring Fight

That's not an exaggeration, it's a fact. Just check his record.

 Burgos made a name for himself in the UFC as the fighter you couldn't ignore. He went to battle with Josh Emmett in a fight where both men were practically unconscious. He exchanged blows with Edson Barboza and was knocked out by one of the most brutal body shots to end a fight. He fought with Calvin Kattar. He engaged in a three round war with Billy Quarantillo that earned Fight of the Night.
Shane Burgos had eight fights in the UFC and four Fight of the Night bonuses, being ranked as high as No. 8 at featherweight. The promotion literally never had to worry about whether a Shane Burgos fight would be entertaining because it always was.

Then he left. He disappeared from the PFL roster, but more than that, he disappeared from the entire PFL organization.

Shane Burgos' PFL Profile Mysteriously Vanishes

His profile is scrubbed from the PFL’s website and there’s not been a peep from Shane Burgos or any media member who knows him or about why he seems to be out of the sport, but Burgos carries undeniable promise as a fighter and his willingness to put himself in those lose-lose wars only made him more endearing in the eyes of fans. If he is looking for another promotion, it’s not his last fight.

Why Shane Burgos Disappeared

Shane Burgos hasn't said much about what specifically kept him away for three years. "I needed that break" is all he's given so far. No details on injuries, personal stuff, or contract issues. Just that he needed time and he took it.

At 35 years old and with no active contract (his PFL deal would have expired by now), Burgos is basically a free agent looking for a home. The question is where. UFC could bring him back. PFL is always an option. MVP is building its roster. Scott Coker's new promotion doesn't launch until 2027 but could be in play down the road. There are way more options now than when he left.

The featherweight landscape changed a lot while Burgos was gone though. Topuria moved up to lightweight and won the belt. Holloway lost the BMF title to Oliveira. New names came through. Three years in MMA is basically a lifetime.

Can He Still Compete at the Top?

That's the real question and nobody knows the answer yet. Burgos was 32 when he last fought, he's 35 now. He took almost no damage during his time away cause he wasn't fighting. But ring rust is real and three years without competition is a lot to shake off.

What works in his favor is that Burgos was always more of a dog than a technician. His style doesn't rely on speed or reflexes as much as it relies on toughness, pressure, and willingness to trade. That kind of fighting ages better than being the fast guy who can't get hit. He was never that guy anyway.

If a promotion gives him a solid but not elite opponent to shake the rust off, Shane Burgos could absolutely make noise again. The talent was always there. The fights were always entertaining to watch. The question is just whether three years on the couch changed anything for him.

"One more run." At 35 years old, with his style of fighting, that might mean three or four more wars before he walks away for good. That's probably enough to remind people why they watched him in the first place.

ABOUT THE AUTHORJohn BrookeStaff Writer

John Brooke is a combat sports journalist and Staff Writer at MMA Sucka.

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