Alexa Conners

 (born February 15, 1991) is an American mixed martial artist and competes in Bantamweight division. She formerly competed for Invicta Fighting Championships.

Background
Alexa was born in Winchester, Virginia, United States. she worked in engineering industry as a sales person prior fully committed to MMA professionally.

Invicta Fighting Championships
Conners made her promotional debut on May 7, 2016 at Invicta FC 17: Evinger vs. Schneider against Laura Howarth. She lost the fight via a split decision with the score card of (29-28, 28-29, 29-28).

Her next fight was on November 18, 2016 at Invicta FC 20: Evinger vs. Kunitskaya against Stephanie Egger   and she won the fight via a split decision.

Beatdown and LFA
On March 18, 2017, Spencer faced Mariah Prussia at Beatdown 20. She won the fight via technical knock out on round one.

Conner faced Calie Cutleron April 7, 2017 at LFA 8. She won the fight via unanimous decision.

Return to Invicta Fighting Championships
Conners returned to Invicta and faced Katharina Lehner on August 31, 2017 at Invicta FC 25: Kunitskaya vs. Pa'aluhi. She lost the fight via a technical knock out.

Conners faced Julia Avila on November 16, 2018 at Invicta FC 32: Spencer vs. Sorenson. She lost the fight via technical knockout in round two.

Conners faced Mariya Agapova on September 6, 2019 at Invicta FC: Phoenix Series 2. She won the fight via a submission in round one.

Personal life
Conners' father, who suffered from mental illness killed his girl friend and took his own life. The event effected Conners deeply and she uses fighting as the platform to spread mental illness awareness and provide support for those who need help.

“My father — this September [2018], it's been two years — he battled a mental-health illness his whole life and never got help for it,” Conners told Combat Press. “He never got counseling, and eventually it got the best of him. He killed his own girlfriend and then took his own life. That, obviously, was a life-changing event for my whole family. So, one of my things is ‘fight the stigma.’ I want to help spread mental-health awareness and try to help people or at least get our government to start talking about it [and] actually put money out there for people to get help, because it's ridiculous. Our mental-health system sucks.”