Luis Villasenor is living his dream with BKFC.
For as long as Villasenor can remember, the proud Mexican-born San Diego, CA product has dreamt of being a fighter.
“It was something that I always wanted to do, but we never had the money for it. When we came to America, it was just my mom supporting my sister and I,” Villasenor says.
Villasenor got his fair share of street fighting experience before he turned his life around and enlisted in the United States Navy after high school.
“Wherever I was deployed, there was always a group of friends that I could train boxing with. Somebody always had the gloves and headgear, and in a big group of friends like that in the military, there’s always at least one guy who trained and competed in a structured environment,” Villasenor says.
“When you’re deployed, you’re always looking for something to do. For me, that was boxing.”
Villasenor’s dreams of fighting persisted over the course of his two decades of military experience. When he retired in 2018 at age 38, he was ready to embark on a new career in professional fighting.
The pandemic threw a temporary wrench in his plans, but he eventually made his combat sports debut against Leo Bercier in the BKFC Squared Circle in 2021.
Villasenor’s debut didn’t go as planned, but he rebounded with a 71-second stoppage victory over Brett Fields in July. He’s prepared to bring home his second straight victory against Jeremy Sauceda in middleweight action on Jan. 18 at the legendary Pechanga Resort Casino in Temecula, CA, LIVE worldwide on The BKFC App.
Villasenor has big goals with BKFC, but he’s taking his second career one fight at a time. One thing is clear — he’s living his lifelong dream under the bright lights in the Squared Circle.
“To have this opportunity with BKFC — to get up on the big stage and be seen around the world — is absolutely wild,” he says with a smile.
“This is more than what I dreamed about.”
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