Evolvedfights 24 08 16 Lora Cross Vs Tony Sting... [2025]

Since “EvolvedFights” is a niche, often fan-driven conceptual or simulation-based fight promotion (commonly associated with mixed wrestling, femdom wrestling, or adult competitive roleplay), and there is no widely recorded mainstream MMA or boxing event by that exact name and date, the following article is written as a based on the typical style of that promotion.

Cross faked a level change. Sting dropped his hands to defend the takedown. She snapped her right arm around his neck—a standing guillotine while pressing him against the fence. Sting tried to pry the hands apart. He couldn't.

At exactly 1:43 of Round 3, Lora Cross dropped to guard, pulling Sting into a mounted guillotine. His eyes rolled. He tapped once, then frantically three times. EvolvedFights 24 08 16 Lora Cross Vs Tony Sting...

Sting, nursing his arm, survived the round only by clinging to the cage and stalling.

Sting obliged, coming out with a blitz of hooks. He caught Cross against the cage, landing three consecutive knees to the thigh. But Cross displayed unusual durability. She ducked under a wide right hand and took the back standing—a body lock that looked more like a dance than a fight. She snapped her right arm around his neck—a

Cross dragged Sting to the canvas at 3:00. From back control, she attempted a body triangle . Sting defended by grabbing her toes—a foul in most promotions. The ref paused action for two seconds. When they reset, Cross had switched to an armbar from mount .

Instead of sprawling, Cross performed a scissor sweep counter —a rare modified kani basami (scissor takedown)—wrapping her legs around Sting’s advancing knee and twisting mid-air. They hit the mat hard. Sting landed in side control, but Cross immediately locked a reverse triangle from bottom. For the next minute, Sting’s face turned from crimson to purple. He survived the bell by pure brute force, lifting Cross and slamming her into the canvas to break the grip. At exactly 1:43 of Round 3, Lora Cross

Lora Cross (5’6", 145 lbs), conversely, was the underdog. Known for her jiu-jitsu and unusual flexibility, she had struggled against larger opponents in stand-up exchanges. However, she promised a "new layer" to her game during the weigh-in stare-down. No one expected what came next. The referee signaled the start at 8:00 PM local time. Sting immediately took center, stalking Cross with a high guard. Cross, eschewing the traditional circling strategy, stood directly in the pocket—a dangerous move.