Christine Ferea is undoubtedly among the most well-known female Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship (BKFC) stars and currently reigns over the division's women's flyweight division. The 41-year-old veteran has an impressive bare-knuckle boxing record of 8-1, with six of those wins coming via knockout.
Ferea is set to make her next BKFC outing against Jade Masson-Wong at BKFC 65 this weekend. The event will go down at the Maverik Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. Ahead of her upcoming fight, let's take a look at Ferea's dating history and personal relationships.
Who is Christine Ferea dating?
BKFC women's flyweight champion Christine Ferea is reportedly engaged to Jewlz Grey, a talent scout, women's division coordinator, and matchmaker for the world's premier bare-knuckle boxing promotion.
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Grey is widely referred to as the "Empress of Bare Knuckle" and has cemented her legacy in the BKFC by championing the cause for female fighters to have equal pay opportunities. Before joining the BKFC team, she worked with the Fight Mixer management team alongside Matt Seibel and Matthew Kohler.
Last Christmas, Ferea took to Instagram to share an adorable engagement video with Grey. The video showed Ferea's proposal with the two sporting matching Christmas-themed attire. She wrote in the caption:
"When a woman earns my respect and gives me loyalty, I’ll give her the [world]. She said, yes! @jewlzbareknuckle."
Ferea and her brother were born and raised in San Jose by a single mother who left their biological father due to his alcoholism. In an interview with Las Vegas PRIDE, the BKFC flyweight queen recalled growing up in rough neighborhoods and running into trouble with the law.
Given her circumstances, it was also difficult for her to come out about her sexuality. However, that changed after she moved to Las Vegas and is now an outspoken activist for women's equality, equal pay for fighters, and anti-bullying campaigns that inspire LGBTQ+ youth. She said:
"I want to use this platform to show people, especially in the LGBTQ community, that you can push through the struggle... I think it’s important for youth to hear that you can come from a dysfunctional home environment and still succeed and that there are resources available if you are being bullied." [H/t: Las Vegas PRIDE]