Ray J is set for one of the last fights on Brand Risk 14, taking the co-main event slot Friday night at the UFC’s Meta Apex in Las Vegas. He is scheduled to face Supah Hot Fire under the headliner Johnny Manziel vs. Bob Menery.
The full card goes live at 8 p.m. PT, 10 p.m. CT and 11 p.m. ET, and most previews put Ray J’s ring walks about 60 to 90 minutes into the broadcast. That puts the fight in a likely window of 9:30 to 10 p.m. PT, or 12:30 to 1 a.m. ET, making it one of the night’s later attractions for viewers following the free stream across Adin Ross’ main platforms.
The event is available on Kick through Adin’s channel and will be simulcast on YouTube, Twitch, X and TikTok, widening the audience for a card built around names more familiar to internet traffic than boxing records. Ray J has no recorded combat sports experience, although he has posted training footage that included a session with Quinton “Rampage” Jackson before the event.
Supah Hot Fire, the viral parody battle-rapper played by DeShawn Raw, brings more combat-sports history to the matchup. He reportedly holds a 2-3 record with one knockout and most recently lost a split-decision boxing match to Gypsy Crusader at a Brand Risk event in Miami. That makes the matchup unusual even by influencer-fight standards: one side is a novice with a recognizable name, while the other has at least some ring experience.
That imbalance is part of what gives the bout its pull. Brand Risk 14 is loaded with crossover names, including an undercard fight between Michael Beasley and Lance Stephenson, but Ray J against Supah Hot Fire sits near the top of the billing because it is one of the night’s most promotable pairings. For readers tracking the schedule, the fight is expected late, not early, and anyone waiting for it will have to sit through most of the card first.
What happens next is simple: the broadcast starts at 11 p.m. ET, and the co-main event should arrive roughly an hour or so later. For Ray J, that means a real fight under bright lights, against an opponent with actual prior rounds on his record, after a week of training clips and speculation have already turned the matchup into one of the night’s main draws. The only unanswered part now is how far a first-time combat entrant can go when the clock finally reaches the co-main slot.
For more on the matchup, see Ray J Fight set for Brand Risk 14 co-main event in Las Vegas.

