Quinton Jackson

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Quinton Jackson
Statistics
Nickname Rampage
Height 6 ft 1 in (185 cm)
Weight 205 lb (93 kg)
Born June 20, 1978
Fighting out of Irvine, California
Town of birth Memphis, Tennessee
Fighting style Submission Wrestling
Mixed martial arts record
Wins 25
  By knockout 11
  By submission 7
Losses 6
Draws 0

Quinton "Rampage" Jackson (June 20, 1978-) is an American professional mixed martial arts fighter. He rose to prominence with Japan's PRIDE Fighting Championships. He currently competes as a light heavyweight. He has a professional record of 25 wins with 6 losses.

Contents

[edit] Career

[edit] Amateur and early professional career

Jackson had his first taste of combat sport as a wrestler for Raleigh Egypt High School where his successful career was punctuated by All-State honors, as Jackson finished 5th at the Tennessee State tournament at 189 lbs as a High School Senior. Originally, Jackson had intended on pursuing a career in professional wrestling upon finishing high school, but ultimately ended up extending his amateur career in junior college before discovering mixed martial arts. Impressed by the success of other wrestlers in MMA, Jackson decided to try his own hand at the budding sport. Jackson built up a record of 11 wins and 1 loss fighting for a variety of smaller scale American promotions, including King of the Cage, Gladiator Challenge and Dangerzone.

[edit] PRIDE Fighting Championships

It was not upon native soil but rather in Japan's PRIDE Fighting Championships that he ultimately rose to fame in the mixed martial arts world. Coming into the Japanese promotion as a hitherto unknown quantity fighting against their flagship athlete - Japanese sensation and fellow wrestler - Kazushi Sakuraba at PRIDE 15, Jackson astounded audiences by taking the fight to Sakuraba in what is widely recognized as one of the sports' most exciting contests. Though taken down repeatedly by the smaller Sakuraba's expertly applied low single-leg, Jackson, once on the canvas, refused to be controlled. Using his wrestling ability and raw strength to fight off numerous fluidly applied joint-lock and choke attempts from Sakuraba, Jackson brought the fight back to standing where he mauled Sakuraba with a number of high elevation slams. Though in the end Jackson succumbed to a rear naked choke from Sakuraba, his exhilarating performance opened up the eyes of both the PRIDE's fan base and its executive office.

After besting pro-wrestler Alexander Otsuka in a fight for the Battlarts promotion, he was invited back for PRIDE 17, where Jackson scored a KO over Otsuka’s stable mate, Yuki Ishikawa. Jackson was disqualified for an accidental low blow in his next PRIDE appearance against Daijiro Matsui, but with a win in PRIDE 20 over Masaaki Satake he initiated a five-fight winning streak in high profile PRIDE contests which took him all the way to the finals of the 2003 PRIDE Middleweight Grand Prix at PRIDE Final Conflict 2003. In the semi finals, he defeated UFC representative Chuck Liddell by TKO due to strikes at 3:10 of the second round. He is one of three people to defeat Liddell, after Jeremy Horn and Randy Couture, and remains Liddell's only unavenged loss. Jackson fell to Wanderlei Silva in the final.

Jackson lost to Brazilian Fighter Mauricio Rua in the opening round of the 2005 PRIDE Middleweight Grand Prix. The loss followed a victory over Ricardo Arona (becoming only the second fighter to defeat Arona, after Fedor Emelianenko), a second defeat to Wanderlei Silva, and a decision victory over Murilo Rua.

October 23, 2005, marked Quinton's last fight in PRIDE with a technical knockout victory over Hirotaka Yokoi. Jackson won his next bout at PRIDE 31 in a unanimous decision victory over Judo specialist Dong Sik Yoon.

[edit] After PRIDE

After his last fight with PRIDE, his contract lapsed and he expressed interest in fighting in other organizations. On May 16, 2006, the World Fighting Alliance announced it had signed Jackson to a multi-fight deal. He defeated Matt Lindland by split decision at WFA: King of the Streets on July 22, 2006. "He is a good fighter," Rampage said. "I trained hard. He is an Olympic silver medalist. So much respect to him. I knew I had to bring it." The match turned out to be a tough one for the Memphis, Tenn., native who got caught in a choke hold twice. Rampage managed to get out both times and slammed Lindland a few times before cutting the bridge of his nose with a ground and pound on his way to the win.

On December 11, 2006, Zuffa, the parent company of the UFC, announced it had acquired select assets from the World Fighting Alliance, which will cease operations as a part of their sale agreement. UFC President Dana White has told The Fight Network that Jackson's contract is one of the assets they have acquired.[1] While no announcement of when Jackson may appear for the UFC has been made, a rematch with Chuck Liddell, who has since become the UFC Light Heavyweight Champion, has been greatly anticipated.

[edit] Personal life

Outside of the ring, Quinton Jackson enjoys playing video games and listening to music; Quinton recorded some rap songs before his conversion to Christianity (see below), but he has since expressed interest in redoing the tracks before releasing them, as the original recordings have explicit language that Jackson no longer wishes to be associated with.

Also well known is Quinton's change to born-again Christianity. This apparently occurred sometime after his successful fight with Ricardo Arona (September, 2004). An article written by Sherdog's Josh Gross describes Jackson's experience: "In the middle of a late-summer night Jackson and his kindergarten-age son D’Angelo woke up to separate, though eerily similar dreams. Both were shaken, so much so that at 4 a.m. they had to get out of their apartment. To Jackson, it was a sign. 'You know how girls cry when they’re happy?' he said. 'That’s how I was. I think I felt Jesus' love. I don’t know. I automatically knew everything after I was born again.'"

Jackson resides in Irvine, CA with his wife Yuki and two children.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hunt, Loretta. "UFC ON A “RAMPAGE,” ACQUIRES WFA CONTRACTS, TRADEMARK ASSETS", TheFightNetwork.com, 2006-12-11. Retrieved on 2006-12-11.

[edit] External links

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