School Bullies Don’t Know the New Transfer is a BRUTAL FIGHTER...

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DMITRYS Recap
A hot-headed teen with a tragic past steps into the brutal world of underground fighting! Never Back...
Video Transcript:
With under a minute left to play,  the Knights need a big stop. The ball snaps and Devore charges forward,  aiming for the tackle—but it’s Tyler Jake who lands a massive hit instead.  The Hornets’ coach looks desperate, knowing his team needs an intervention.
Jake’s already got 13 tackles tonight and takes a moment to soak it in,  much to the annoyance of player 32. Later, there’s a sling out wide to Moore. The  pass is a bit high, but Moore manages to catch it while running—only to be taken down immediately  by Jake.
That might be the Hornets’ last chance, and Moore doesn’t look happy about it. Since they can’t bring down the Knights on the field, Moore tries trash talk instead,  bringing up Jake’s dad. That’s all it takes.
Jake tackles player 32 again, but this time it’s  personal. He slams into Moore and doesn’t stop there—anyone who gets in his way feels  the impact. Chaos breaks out as players start fighting, leaving the referee powerless.
By the time Jake returns to the locker room, bruises tell their own story. One  teammate invites him to a party later, but Jake declines. He has to pack for the move out  of state.
The trouble magnet is headed to Orlando. Back home, his mom isn’t impressed by the  fight. Tension hangs between them until she has to leave, putting Jake in charge of  his younger but fairly independent brother.
Jake and Charlie start packing in the garage.  Jake makes it clear he’s not bothered that Charlie’s budding tennis career is the reason  for their move. As Charlie shifts a box, it tips over—stirring old memories.
Most  of their dad’s things went to Goodwill, thanks to their mom, but this box slipped  through. A different feeling washes over Jake as he picks it up and labels it useless junk. At his new high school, Jake keeps to himself, moving quietly across campus.
Partway through  his walk, he spots trouble—a guy throwing punches at another while three others watch. He steps in to play hero, but it backfires. The guy taking hits turns on him, landing a clean  shot just to prove he still belongs in the fight.
Jake stands stunned, watching  the boy dive back in unfazed. The message is clear—he’s not welcome here. Another chance to shine comes in class.
The teacher asks a question, but the room  stays silent. He turns to a pretty blonde, and Jake answers for her. After  class, the girl—Baja—thanks him.
They chat for a while, flirting as they learn  little things about each other right up until Baja’s friends show up and pull her away. Back at home, it’s supposed to be a chill family dinner, but Jake’s got something on his  mind. When his mom asks how school’s going, he hits her with some sarcasm.
She  fires back, playing off his tone, telling him he’s been causing too much  drama to stay in one place for long anyway. The guy Jake tried to help earlier is Max. At  lunch, Max comes acting friendly and tells Jake his last football brawl went viral online. 
That catches Jake’s attention. He explains the earlier fight wasn’t bullying—it was  agreed on, and even has a video to prove it. Max keeps pushing, painting the cool moves  and perks like it’s something everyone should want.
But Jake isn’t convinced nor does  he care. Still, Max wasn’t exaggerating. Jake’s reputation is on everyone’s phone,  and whispers follow him wherever he goes.
On his way home, Baja calls out from the back  seat of a car, teasing him before slipping him a piece of paper with a party address. She  hopes he shows up and Jake decides he will. The car pulls away as Jake walks on, a spring  in his step.
Still not talking to his mom, he ignores his family and heads straight to his  room to print a city map for easier wayfinding. Drssed in a clean shirt, he arrives at  a party in an impressive house—where he spots Max and they quickly fall into pal  mode, weaving through the crowd together. Max has his camcorder rolling, ready to catch the  action.
He snaps a moment the girls would rather skip, but he doesn’t care. Moving on, Jake  meets Ryan, who takes charge like the place is his own. For Ryan, a party with good drinks  and bikinis isn’t what makes Orlando special.
He leads Jake to the balcony to show  him something instead of just telling. It’s fight night, and anyone can join. Both  genders, all races, even exes looking to blow off steam.
Jake’s curious about who runs the show.  A smirk crosses his face as he suddenly sees it in a new way and it feels almost beautiful.  He learns there’s no single leader here.
Baja arrives fashionably late, catching Jake’s  attention, but Ryan quickly shifts the focus elsewhere as a crowd gathers, waiting for a  fight between him and Jake. Stripping off his shirt to reveal trained muscles and abs, Ryan  fires up the crowd and hints that Jake owes them a show—especially after his internet-famous  uppercut. Plus he’s curious if he can beat him.
Tension rises, but Jake isn’t interested in  fighting—not Ryan, not anyone. Still, when Jake glances at Baja, Ryan spots an opening and,  with a mischievous glint, walks over to kiss her. The look in Baja’s eyes says she’s not part  of the plan, but the stunt still gets under Jake’s skin enough to make him want to leave. 
At the exit, a guy playing bouncer blocks his way. Ryan is determined to get that fight and  isn’t above using dirty tactics. He brings up the tragic death of Jake’s father, knowing Jake  was in the car but wasn’t drunk like his dad.
Jake leaps to respond, but some guys hold him  back. He’s fired up and ready to go after Ryan, who’s just as eager. The crowd watches, caught  up in the tension, while no one notices Baja storming out.
Pushing off the guys holding  him, Jake closes the distance and shoves Ryan, who grins and says if they’re fighting, it’ll  be professional, with gloves on. Jake is ready. The hype man gets everyone to settle, raising  his voice just enough to lay down the quick rules—clean fight, knockout or tap out ends it.
No  sooner has he called it than Jake lunges forward, wasting no time. He throws the first punch,  missing once, then again, but on the third swing, he connects a clean shot to Ryan’s face. Jake keeps going hard while Ryan dodges calculatively.
Then, mid-swing, Ryan catches  Jake’s arm and twists it behind his back. That marks his switch from defense to offense. When  Jake charges like a bull, Ryan holds steady, uses his weight, and flips him over—driving  his opponent straight to the ground although it’s clear Jake is still resisting.
Ryan lands a solid punch and steps back to bask in the moment. Jake bumps  into a soda cup, flinging its contents into Ryan’s face. It works as Ryan flinches,  giving Jake a chance to land a clean hit.
Someone calls it a cheap shot, and Ryan echoes it. He shrugs it off, gives Jake some credit that he’s got cool moves, but still a long way to go.  He’s ready to teach, both in words and with pain.
He strikes his leg low, striking Jake in the  calf, right where it hurts. Another kick follows, aimed at the sweet spot, and Jake barely blocks  it in time. The third jab hits hard.
Jake’s curled on the floor, and Ryan’s not done yet. The sting of humiliation gets Jake back on his feet, but his hook misses. Ryan counters fast,  tossing him to the ground and landing blows to his face.
Jake scrambles onto all fours, but Ryan  isn’t waiting. He drives a kick into Jake’s jaw, knocking him flat. Jake hits the  floor hard, looking out cold.
Ryan soaks in the applause while Max keeps the  camcorder rolling, catching Jake as he stirs. He announces Jake’s getting up, signaling  the fight isn’t over yet. Jake, still woozy, manages to stand just as Ryan charges forward  with aggression.
Clumsy but lucky on defense, Jake struggles, his weakness giving Ryan  the upper hand to send him back down. Max advises Jake to let the match go, but he doesn’t  listen. He picks himself up, cradling the pain, looking like a standing comma with his face marked  with cuts and bruises.
Shivering but determined, Jake still has a line to deliver. Ryan spins and  swings his legs in time, delivering a powerful kick to Jake’s face that draws blood and possibly  teeth. The blow finally puts Jake in oblivion.
People snap pictures of the defeated  specimen, and Jake’s oddly aware of Max carrying him back to his apartment. When he wakes the next morning, his face is a mess with purple bruises and one swollen shut eye.  Charlie innocently walks in on him, surprised but not shocked.
Their mom isn’t around, but unless  his face magically heals before she gets back, she’ll definitely notice. Jake’s in no shape to  walk Charlie to the school bus, but thankfully his little brother understands and lets him be. At school, the fight’s still the main topic, kicking off conversations and no different at  Baja’s table.
She can’t take it, so she gets up and walks off, leaving her friends confused. The joke of the day is home, nursing bruises, when he spots the box he previously labeled  junk. It triggers a flash of memory: fishing, and has him hurling the box across the room  like blame wrapped in cardboard.
The jolt hits his ribs hard as they’re nowhere near healed. Max has his moment too, passing through the hall just in time to catch Ryan in full performance  mode, reenacting the fight and milking every move. Back home, Charlie returns from school and  warms a slice of pizza with his brother in mind.
Jake’s fast asleep when he peeks  in, so he quietly drops the plate and heads to his room to practice tennis. Later, a knock comes at Jake’s door. Max’s voice follows, claiming he’s with  Baja just to get Jake to let him in.
Max walks in, not with remorse but  with hope—the kind that assumes last night lit a fire in Jake. He’s come prepared,  holding out a CD packed with training clips of techniques inspired by his coach, Jean Roqua. It’s the second invitation as Max still believes Jake has something worth building on. 
But Jake isn’t biting. He shuts it down, making it clear Max can’t use last night or  the aftermath to guilt-trip him into anything. Frustrated, Max leaves but the tape stays  behind, something for Jake to fiddle with.
Jake finds the training grounds, much to Max’s  excitement. He greets his pal at the door with a grin and points out Roqua, who hardly needs  any introduction. At the center of attention, Roqua’s voice fills the room as he demonstrates  with a student the proper way to execute a seoi nage—flipping an opponent over the shoulder to  land them on the ground for a quick headlock.
Max introduces Roqua to Jake, speaking up  for his interest in taking a class. At first, Roqua spares a glance at Jake’s roughed-up face  and writes him off. But Jake’s determination wins him a spot in the beginner’s class alongside Max. 
Still, Jake’s eyes are on the advanced techniques, insisting he’s a quick learner. Roqua just smirks  and signals everyone to get in position, ready to show what the advanced class really looks like. At Roqua’s call, the students fall into Circuit One which is a fast-paced routine Jake has  to keep up with, just like he claimed.
It’s one-minute intervals, switching cardio exercises  on Roqua’s command. Max calls out and stays close, guiding Jake on what comes next as  the group moves through the workout. Rope climbing proves tough as Jake slips more  than once—but Roqua’s encouragement pushes him on.
He barely reaches the bar before time’s up,  already strained. No time to rest, though; Roqua calls for pairs and three-minute rounds next. Jake takes one look at Miles and assumes he’s got this.
The guy’s smaller and doesn’t look like  much competition. But as soon as they square up, Miles shifts and flips Jake over quick and  with no warning. Jake barely reacts before he’s on the ground, arm locked in tight.
Roqua watches and tells him to tap. Jake holds out for a second, trying to resist, but  there’s nowhere to go. He taps once and it’s done.
In the next round, Roqua notices Jake’s solid  defensive skills. His attacks still miss their mark as Miles smoothly evades, then traps Jake in  a rear naked choke. Max urges Jake to surrender this time, but Jake refuses, determined to  escape or lose consciousness trying.
Eventually, Jake blacks out, only to find Roqua’s concerned  face as he comes to. Roqua helps him up, impressed yet cautioning that his reckless  approach could’ve cost him. Jake insists he might have broken free if he’d stayed conscious,  which only earns further respect from Roqua.
Training will resume early the next day, but  Roqua lays down a strict rule: no matter what, his students are forbidden from brawling outside  the gym. If word gets out that this golden rule was broken, then the fighter is out. Class wraps up, and Max is already bubbling with excitement, raving about how  Jake left an impression on Roqua.
As far as Max is concerned, Jake’s earned a spot in  the passenger seat. No more riding the bus. Later that evening, Charlie gets the door and  is stunned to see a gorgeous blonde standing outside—it’s Baja, there to talk things through  with Jake.
Jake isn’t ready to be so forgiving, still convinced she played a role in the stunt  meant to humiliate him. Baja appears remorseful and tearful, insisting things weren’t supposed  to go that far, though she does try to justify it by saying Jake’s still cut from the same  cloth as the others. He’s a fighter, she says, and he just happened to be pushed too far.
She tries to draw a parallel between them, saying she’s moved around a lot too and only clung  to her current role because, for once, she finally fit in—even if it meant playing the part of  the popular girl dating the popular guy. But Jake stays unmoved and eventually, with nothing  else left to say, Baja turns and walks away. Jake arrives at the gym a full hour before  class starts and Roqua, seeing the effort, allows him in.
Without hesitation, Jake  hands over payment—two months upfront, and more than what Roqua usually charges.  Maybe he hopes the extra cash might open the door to a more friendly conversation, but  Roqua isn’t taking the bait and quickly sends him off to the gym, no small talk necessary. Jake figures he’ll just do his own thing until class begins, but his attempts fall  flat.
Roqua steps in, pointing out Jake’s stubbornness and a serious breathing problem  that keeps tripping him up. No wonder Jake can’t land that three-punch combo followed by  a round kick to shift a bean bag heavier than it looks. Roqua demonstrates, each strike timed  with steady breath, effortlessly sliding the bag from one end of the rack to the other.
The ease of it catches him off guard, but stubbornness keeps him mocking as he  struggles to coordinate breathing with each strike. Roqua reminds him that every fighter  has their own rhythm so he better not undermine. The early hour slips away and other students  filter into the class.
Meanwhile, Ryan basks in the glow of his pretty, quietly distant  girlfriend, surrounded by the popular crowd that hangs on his every move. Back at home, Jake’s mom  returns to her familiar routine, tidying up after the kids and keeping the house in order. At the gym, Jake grows more fluid in his movements, no longer just mimicking but actually  training.
His effort doesn’t go unnoticed—his classmates begin to warm up to him, and even Roqua  offers an approving smile from across the room. Now that Mom’s around again, silence doesn’t stand  a chance. She’s already clocked the missing money, and the bag in Jake’s hand only sharpens her  suspicion.
He doesn’t argue, just sets it down, resigned, while she pulls the zipper and  finds exactly what she feared. The gloves say enough—he’s been fighting. She doesn’t raise her  voice, just tells him sternly that it has to stop.
Jake had asked before, casually, and  Roqua had brushed it off—but it turns out, he really does live in the gym. No mystery  about how he trains the second his eyes open. Later in class, Baja and Jake end up in the same  group, and whatever ice was meant to have thawed hasn’t even cracked.
Jake still carries  the heat from before, and Baja, convinced her apology should’ve settled things, doesn’t  appreciate the cold shoulder. His patience thins, and he storms out, leaving her to seek out Ryan  instead. She wants to talk somewhere quiet, but Ryan’s fine holding court with his crew.
She  says the fight with Jake was anything but fair. Baja’s growing disdain for Ryan’s cocky,  self-important attitude starts to get under his skin. He snaps, goes full beast mode,  tearing into her and spelling out just how much of her shine he claims credit for.
He  doesn’t hold back—every word meant to put her back in check. But it only confirms what  she’s been feeling all along. The fact that he still gets off on being a bully is enough.
It  gives her all the reason she needs to walk out on him and out of whatever they used to be. Jake takes his bottled-up fury to the gym, and it bleeds into every hit. Roqua  senses it immediately—the power’s there, but it’s all edge and no control.
He steps  in to spar, trying to steady the rhythm, but Jake’s on something else today, sharp with  both his hands and his attitude. Roqua tries to reel him in, calm his storm, but when it’s  clear Jake isn’t willing to come down, he tells him to pack it up. Jake storms off, throwing a  final jab—not with fists, but his mouth.
Still, Roqua keeps his cool. Max steps in, offering to  trail behind and make sure Jake doesn’t spiral. Jake zones out, lost in flashbacks, barely  hearing Max’s voice.
Max halts the car in the middle of the road, trying to snap him out of  it. Behind them, a horn blares—some driver in a rush. That’s all it takes.
Jake unravels. He steps out, fists flying before anyone knows what’s happening. Max records  and others do too.
It’s ugly, fast, and soon all over the internet—thousands  of views, and Jake right at the center. There’s a lakeside party and Jake shows up, though  he’s not the only familiar face in the crowd. Ryan’s there too, floating through with his usual  smug energy, and so is Baja, though the two of them are clearly not a thing anymore.
Jake draws  whispers—people have seen the video—and Baja makes her way toward him, probably hoping to soften  whatever’s left between them. But Jake keeps his distance, his tone flat, giving her nothing. Ryan watches, reading the tension like a scoreboard.
He waits, then trails Jake  toward the restroom less for a chat, more to remind him who still thinks he’s in charge. Fed up and limping, Jake’s ready to drag himself home, alone. But Max keeps poking, won’t let  it go, so Jake finally gives in and asks about Beatdown.
Ryan had thrown the name around earlier,  and now it’s starting to stick. Max takes him back to his place and pulls it up on his computer. What Jake sees is something else entirely—raw footage, underground hype, crowd-packed showdowns. 
Beatdown isn’t just a fight. It’s the fight. A brutal, no-frills tournament with the kind of  following that makes it feel like the Super Bowl of the street circuit.
Only the best get  invited, and the clock’s ticking. It’s just a month to go, and the invites come in by text. Roqua sees the bruises and the shake in Jake’s stance and doesn’t say much—just throws him  out.
The rule was clear. Once Jake’s gone, Roqua lets his own anger slip, driving  a heavy fist into the bag, once. At home, Charlie’s black eye raises alarms. 
Their mom is furious. Jake’s supposed to lead, not make things worse. She’s tired  of always fixing what breaks.
Charlie confesses it was a tennis accident, but the point  stands—Jake’s still the example he looks up to. Jake’s return to the gym is met with a  slammed door—Roqua isn’t ready to forgive. But Jake doesn’t back down.
He waits outside  with Max, looking for a chance. When he sees Roqua at the grocery store, Jake opens up,  blaming the anger inside him that’s caused problems with his family. The gym is the  only place where that anger quiets down.
Roqua listens, then lets Jake back in. The training isn’t easy. Roqua pushes Jake hard—long pushups, tough cardio, non stop  boxing, wrestling that tests his strength.
What would normally take a year gets packed  into a few days. Even Jake’s diet changes, eating raw foods to match the training. A spark of friendship flickers between Jake and Roqua as they race along the beach, exchanging  playful jabs.
Jake presses Roqua to share why he’s so devoted to the gym, and finally Roqua opens  up. His commitment stems from a painful past—the loss of his father’s favorite son, Joseph. Though  younger, Joseph outshone him in many ways and was daddy’s favorite.
After Joseph was shot at  a club, Roqua and his father drifted apart. Training continues, with lessons that  reach beyond fighting—lessons for life. Jake takes them to heart and even shows  up at Charlie’s tennis game, lifting his brother’s spirits.
Their mom, surprised  by Jake’s presence, tries to mend fences, but Jake feels they’re already on better ground. In the spirit of making things right, Jake finds Baja at the café and asks to speak. He owns up,  apologizing for how he’s acted and clearing her of any blame.
Baja, drawn to men who can take  responsibility, softens. Without another word, they lean in and share a kiss—easy, warm,  and full of that long-overdue understanding. Later that evening, Jake’s mom stops by  the gym.
Roqua’s alone, and they talk about Jake—how different he’s become. She’s grateful  for Roqua’s steady presence and wishes Jake would stop punishing himself over his father’s death.  Roqua’s sure the boy’s on the right path.
She leaves next month’s payment and quietly steps out. At the café, Max is buzzing with excitement over Jake’s upcoming match at Beatdown. But Jake’s  got other plans.
He tells Max he’s backing out, causing his friend’s excitement to drain  instantly. Jake doesn’t flinch—he won’t feed Ryan’s ego. If Ryan wants  to fight, he can fight himself.
Away from the café, Jake walks Baja home. She  throws a few playful jabs at him, and he answers with a gentle sweep that sends her laughing to  the ground. There’s an ease between them now, the kind that grows from healing old  wounds.
With flirtation in the air, Jake taps her behind and earns a kiss in return,  the moment swelling into something deeper. But just as it’s getting warm, Charlie barges  in with a phone pressed to his palm—it’s Mom, and she’s calling. The mood  drops, as quick as it built.
Elsewhere, Ryan is lounging with his friends when  a minor clash with his father sparks. The exchange is short and sharp. His dad, cut from the same  arrogant cloth, asserts dominance without raising his voice.
His friends watch, stunned then news  breaks: Jake’s out of the fight. Ryan’s blood boils. He isn’t done yet, not by a long shot.
That same night, Ryan pulls up outside the gym, needing to hear the news for himself. Jake’s not  around, but Max is and he confirms it. Ryan nods, already plotting, and invites Max over to  hang out.
Max, assuming it’s peace, agrees. He couldn’t be more wrong. The night ends with Max  bloodied and slumped on the floor, Ryan towering over him.
There’s no reason or warning, just a  calculated beatdown. Even his friends hesitate, unsure what line Ryan’s just crossed. Later, Jake hears a knock and opens the door to see a car speeding off.
On the  ground is Max who is barely conscious. Jake’s fury is instant and Baja  pleads with him not to take the bait, but Jake’s not hearing any of it. As he storms  out, Roqua intercepts him.
Jake’s burning to go, but Roqua lays it flat: break the rule again,  and he’s done. This stops Jake in his tracks. Their talk turns honest with Roqua  finally admitting if he could go back, he’d change everything about what happened to  his brother.
That admission softens the edge. He doesn’t stop Jake but leaves him with  one truth: he has to control the outcome. Jake rushes home, bags his gear, and crosses  paths with his mom.
She doesn’t try to stop him either as it’s his fight to finish. Jake arrives at the Beatdown venue, adrenaline pumping, ready to make a statement.  The event kicks off with a knockout in the opening match, and the crowd is buzzing.
As  Jake steps into the ring, he’s met with boos, while Ryan enters to deafening cheers But plans shift. The announcer corrects a scheduling error—Jake and Ryan won’t face  off immediately; it’s now a tournament, and each fighter has to earn their way. The matches begin.
Ryan cruises through his opponents with calculated aggression,  while Jake holds his own with calm precision. Things stay smooth until the quarterfinals,  when Jake takes a vicious kick to the ribs. Ryan sees it and files the weakness away.
Backstage, Jake’s hurting, clutching his side and needing more than ice. Baja finds him and  lifts his spirits with a few quiet words and a kiss that does more than painkillers ever could. Meanwhile, Ryan crosses a line in his match, jabbing an opponent in the eye.
The  ref doesn’t hesitate—he’s disqualified despite loud protests from his crew. Jake, now prepped for his semifinal, hears the news and immediately steps down.  If it’s not Ryan, the fight means nothing.
As he walks out, Ryan is waiting.  Without a word, he challenges Jake, and soon the crowd follows, pouring into the  parking lot where the real showdown begins. Ryan comes in strong, targeting Jake’s ribs with  brutal precision.
The pain is sharp, but Jake holds steady, refusing to break. Even when Ryan  locks his neck, squeezing tight, Jake doesn’t tap, despite the cries from the crowd and Baja’s panic. Then Jake shifts.
He draws from everything—his grief, his guilt, Roqua’s lessons—and channels  it into raw strength. He breaks free, lands a flurry of punches, then finishes with a clean,  devastating kick that sends Ryan crashing down. The fight ends not with noise,  but with a look.
Ryan nods in respect and Jake returns it, calm and composed. Later, Roqua takes a step back from the gym to reconnect with his roots, and Ryan, finally, lets  go of the anger he’s carried for far too long.
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