Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira

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Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira
Statistics
Nickname Minotauro
Height 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Weight 241 lb (109 kg/17.2 st)
Nationality Brazilian
Born June 2, 1976 (1976-06-02) (age 32)
Town of birth Vitoria da Conquista, Brazil
Team/Association Black House
Fighting style Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, boxing, judo
Mixed martial arts record
Wins 31
  By knockout 3
  By submission 19
  By decision 9
Losses 4
Draws 1
No contests 1

Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira (born June 2, 1976 in Vitória da Conquista, Brazil) is a Brazilian mixed martial artist known for his technical mastery of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. He competes in the heavyweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship, where he is the current UFC interim heavyweight champion.

Nogueira is also noted to be a proficient striker, training annually with the Cuban National Boxing Team.[citation needed] He rose to prominence in the Japanese PRIDE Fighting Championship promotion, where he was the PRIDE heavyweight champion from November 2001 to March 2003, as well as a PRIDE FC heavyweight grand prix finalist. Nogueira is currently ranked as the world number two heavyweight by MMAWeekly and Nokaut,[1][2] and holds notable victories over Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipović, Josh Barnett, Dan Henderson, Mark Coleman, Sergei Kharitonov, Fabricio Werdum, Semmy Schilt, Ricco Rodriguez, Heath Herring(three times), Bob Sapp, Gary Goodridge, Jeremy Horn and Tim Sylvia.

Nogueira has a twin brother, Antônio Rogério Nogueira, who is also a professional mixed martial artist. Antônio Rodrigo has a distinguishing large scar on the right side of his back from a truck accident as a youth.[3]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Born in the town of Vitória da Conquista, Brazil, Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira started training in judo at the age of five. He was run over by a truck when he was ten, and fell into a coma for four days. During this time he lost a rib and part of his liver and had to be hospitalized for eleven months. As a result of the accident he has a large scar, including a noticeable indentation, on his lower back.

A few years after his MMA debut he started to train at the Brazilian Top Team. In June 2007 Nogueira officially left Brazilian Top Team prior to his UFC debut and is currently associated with Black House.[4]

[edit] WEF and RINGS career

At the age of fourteen he was invited by a friend to train Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu under Ricardo de la Riva Goded. He had earlier started training some boxing. In 1999 he was awarded with the black belt in both judo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. That same year, he made his mixed martial arts debut against David Dodd in World Extreme Fighting 6, submitting Dodd via crucifix in the first round. After defeating Nate Schroeder via armbar in WEF 7, he fought in Japan for the RINGS promotion's King of Kings 1999 forty eight man tournament held over 3 events where he won three fights before losing by decision to Dan Henderson in the tournament semi-finals. In between the two RINGS events in which he competed he defeated Jeremy Horn by decision at WEF 8. Nogueira then entered the King of Kings 2000 forty man tournament held over three events, winning all of his five matches to become the tournament champion.

[edit] PRIDE career

Nogueira's notable victories in PRIDE include wins over Dan Henderson, Mark Coleman, Heath Herring, former UFC heavyweight champions Ricco Rodriguez and Josh Barnett, Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipović, and Bob Sapp.

Following the end of Akira Maeda's RINGS federation, Nogueira was signed by PRIDE. He debuted in July 2001 at PRIDE 15, quickly submitting Gary Goodridge by triangle choke. In PRIDE 16, he submitted UFC and PRIDE Grand Prix champion Mark Coleman by armbar. He was crowned as the inaugural PRIDE heavyweight champion after defeating fellow contender Heath Herring by decision.

Defeating Enson Inoue, he next fought for Antonio Inoki's UFO organisation, scoring his first MMA knockout against Sanae Kikuta.

He then represented PRIDE at a co-promotion with K-1, PRIDE Shockwave, against the super heavyweight former American footballer Bob Sapp. Sapp manhandled the much smaller Nogueira, spiking him onto the ring canvas and dominating the fight, until tiring and falling to an armbar submission. His battle with Sapp (who outweighed him by over 150 lb) made him a fan favorite for his seemingly inhuman ability to take punishment before recovering to win.

Dutch karate fighter Semmy Schilt was his next opponent. Again heavily outsized, he scored another victory by triangle choke. He then avenged his sole loss at this point by submitting Dan Henderson who had previously beaten him in RINGS.

[edit] Losing the title

Nogueira's next title defense was against Russian Sambo champion Fedor Emelianenko at PRIDE 25 where he suffered his second career loss, a judges' decision after Emelianenko dominated the fight with characteristic ground-and-pound through the guard.

Bouncing back from the loss, he won a decision against former UFC heavyweight champion Ricco Rodriguez. Rodriguez managed to score takedowns and maintain top position, but since PRIDE's scoring is determined primarily by "effort to finish the fight by KO or submission", Nogueira's multiple submission attempts won him the controversial decision victory. [5]

In November 2003, with heavyweight champion Emelianenko unable to fight due to injuries, PRIDE elected to crown an interim champion, so top contenders Nogueira and Mirko Filipović were matched up. Filipović managed to dominate the first round with his superior striking and landed his trademark left high kick, but in the second round, Nogueira managed to secure a takedown and roll into an armbar to submit Filipović.

On 25 April 2004 at PRIDE Total Elimination 2004, the first round of the 2004 Heavyweight Grand Prix, he faced the unbeaten professional wrestler and former judoka Hirotaka Yokoi, who he submitted with the debut of his anaconda choke. He then repeated this against Heath Herring in the next round to advance to the semi finals where he defeated Sergei Kharitonov with his superior boxing to again face Fedor Emelianenko in the finals. The fight was markedly different from their first, with Nogueira able to avoid the damage he suffered from ground-and-pound in their first meeting, but was stopped when Emelianenko suffered a cut after an accidental headbut and could not continue, resulting in a no contest. Another rematch was required to determine the tournament champion, and was scheduled for PRIDE Shockwave 2004 on 31 December 2004. Despite Nogueira's improved gameplan and striking technique, he suffered another unanimous decision loss to Emelianenko.

At PRIDE Critical Countdown 2005 he defeated Polish Olympic judoka Pawel Nastula by strikes and following this, at PRIDE 31 he beat professional wrestler and fighter Kiyoshi Tamura by armbar for the second time.

He then entered the 2006 PRIDE Open Weight Grand Prix, progressing to the semi final by defeating fellow Brazilians Zuluzinho and Fabricio Werdum. In the semi final, he faced the American catch wrestler Josh Barnett and lost to a split decision, as both had landed damaging blows and submission attempts without managing to secure a victory. Barnett went on to face Mirko Filipović in the finals, submitting to punches and kicks to the face.

Nogueira avenged the loss to Barnett with a unanimous decision win in their rematch at PRIDE Shockwave 2006.

[edit] UFC career

At UFC Fight Night 9 which took place on April 5, 2007 Nogueira was in attendance and was sitting cage side with UFC president Dana White. It was subsequently announced at UFC 69, by White, that Nogueira had joined the UFC, promoted initially as simply "Minotauro" Nogueira, much like the UFC's promotion of Mirko Filipović as Mirko Cro Cop.

His debut in the Octagon was a third fight with Heath Herring at UFC 73, promoted under various combinations of his name and nickname, but was officially introduced to the audience under his full name and nickname. Nogueira once again defeated Herring, via unanimous decision. During the first round Nogueira was hit with a high kick that sent him to the canvas, in which unofficial judge Eddie Bravo thought the fight could have been stopped. Herring tried to finish but Nogueira was able to hold on and come back with a decision win.

It was announced during the UFC 79 broadcast and subsequent press conference that Nogueira would be fighting Tim Sylvia at UFC 81 for the interim heavyweight championship.

At UFC 81 Nogueira defeated Tim Sylvia in the third round with a guillotine choke to become the interim heavyweight champion. Sylvia knocked Nogueira down in the first round with punches, and Nogueira was unable to get the fight to the ground for the first two rounds. After pulling Sylvia into his half guard in the third round, Nogueira quickly secured a sweep and attempted an armbar which he missed but immediately transitioned into a guillotine choke as Sylvia tried to regain his feet. He is the first fighter to hold both the UFC and PRIDE heavyweight championships.[6]

[edit] The Ultimate Fighter Season 8

Spike TV announced that Nogueira and former champion Frank Mir will be the coaches for the eighth season of The Ultimate Fighter, slated to premier on September 17, 2008. Production on season eight begins in late May, with the entire cast to be announced in September.

After the season concludes, Nogueira and Mir will meet in an as-of-yet unannounced pay-per-view event for the title.[7]

[edit] Awards

  • Judo black belt
  • Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt
  • RINGS: King of Kings 2000 Tournament Winner
  • First PRIDE FC heavyweight champion
  • PRIDE FC interim heavyweight champion
  • UFC interim heavyweight champion
  • First fighter to hold both the UFC and PRIDE heavyweight championships

[edit] Mixed martial arts record

Result Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Win Flag of the United States Tim Sylvia Submission (Guillotine Choke) UFC 81: Breaking Point 2 February 2008 3 1:28 Las Vegas, United States Won interim UFC Heavyweight Championship
Win Flag of the United States Heath Herring Decision (unanimous) UFC 73: Stacked 7 July 2007 3 5:00 Sacramento, United States
Win Flag of the United States Josh Barnett Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Shockwave 2006 31 December 2006 3 5:00 Saitama, Japan
Loss Flag of the United States Josh Barnett Decision (split) PRIDE Final Conflict Absolute 10 October 2006 3 5:00 Saitama, Japan
Win Flag of Brazil Fabricio Werdum Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Critical Countdown Absolute 1 July 2006 3 5:00 Saitama, Japan
Win Flag of Brazil Zuluzinho Submission (armbar) PRIDE Total Elimination Absolute 5 May 2006 1 2:17 Osaka, Japan
Win Flag of Japan Kiyoshi Tamura Submission (armbar) PRIDE 31 Dreamers 26 February 2006 1 2:24 Saitama, Japan
Win Flag of Poland Pawel Nastula TKO (strikes) PRIDE Critical Countdown 2005 26 June 2005 1 8:38 Saitama, Japan
Loss Flag of Russia Fedor Emelianenko Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Shockwave 2004 31 December 2004 3 5:00 Saitama, Japan Lost 2004 PRIDE Heavyweight Grand Prix Final
NC Flag of Russia Fedor Emelianenko No contest - accidental cut PRIDE Final Conflict 2004 15 August 2004 1 3:52 Saitama, Japan 2004 PRIDE Heavyweight Grand Prix Final. Final scheduled for PRIDE Shockwave 2004
Win Flag of Russia Sergei Kharitonov Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Final Conflict 2004 15 August 2004 2 5:00 Saitama, Japan
Win Flag of the United States Heath Herring Submission (anaconda choke) PRIDE Critical Countdown 2004 20 June 2004 2 0:30 Saitama, Japan
Win Flag of Japan Hirotaka Yokoi Submission (anaconda choke) PRIDE Total Elimination 2004 25 April 2004 2 1:25 Saitama, Japan
Win Flag of Croatia Mirko Filipović Submission (armbar) PRIDE Final Conflict 2003 9 November 2003 2 1:45 Tokyo, Japan Won interim PRIDE Heavyweight Championship
Win Flag of the United States Ricco Rodriguez Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Total Elimination 2003 10 August 2003 3 5:00 Saitama, Japan
Loss Flag of Russia Fedor Emelianenko Decision (unanimous) PRIDE 25 Body Blow 16 March 2003 3 5:00 Yokohama, Japan Lost PRIDE Heavyweight Championship
Win Flag of the United States Dan Henderson Submission (armbar) Pride 24 Cold Fury 3 23 December 2002 3 1:49 Fukuoka, Japan
Win Flag of the Netherlands Semmy Schilt Submission (triangle choke) Pride 23 Championship Chaos 2 24 November 2002 1 6:36 Tokyo, Japan
Win Flag of the United States Bob Sapp Submission (armbar) PRIDE Shockwave 28 August 2002 2 4:03 Tokyo, Japan
Win Flag of Japan Sanae Kikuta KO (punch) UFO-Legend 8 August 2002 2 0:29
Win Flag of Japan Enson Inoue TKO (triangle choke) Pride 19 Bad Blood 24 February 2002 1 6:17 Saitama, Japan Defended PRIDE Heavyweight Championship
Win Flag of the United States Heath Herring Decision (unanimous) Pride 17 Championship Chaos 3 November 2001 3 5:00 Tokyo, Japan Won PRIDE Heavyweight Championship (First PRIDE Heavyweight Champion)
Win Flag of the United States Mark Coleman Submission (triangle with armbar) Pride 16 Beasts From The East 24 September 2001 1 6:10 Osaka, Japan
Win Flag of Canada Gary Goodridge Submission (triangle choke) Pride 15 Raging Rumble 29 July 2001 1 2:37 Saitama, Japan
Win Flag of the Netherlands Valentijn Overeem Submission (arm triangle choke) RINGS - King of Kings 2000 Final 24 February 2001 1 1:20 Tokyo, Japan Won King of Kings 2000 Championship
Win Flag of Japan Hiromitsu Kanehara Submission (rear naked choke) RINGS - King of Kings 2000 Final 24 February 2001 2 0:20 Tokyo, Japan
Win Flag of Russia Volk Han Decision (unanimous) RINGS - King of Kings 2000 Final 24 February 2001 2 5:00 Tokyo, Japan
Win Flag of Japan Kiyoshi Tamura Submission (armbar) RINGS - King of Kings 2000 Block A 9 October 2000 2 2:29 Tokyo, Japan
Win Flag of Russia Achmed Labasanov Submission (armbar) RINGS - King of Kings 2000 Block A 9 October 2000 1 1:38 Tokyo, Japan
Draw Flag of Japan Tsuyoshi Kohsaka Draw RINGS - Millennium Combine 3 23 August 2000 2 5:00 Osaka, Japan
Loss Flag of the United States Dan Henderson Decision (split) RINGS - King of Kings 1999 Final 26 February 2000 3 5:00 Tokyo, Japan For King of Kings 1999 Championship
Win Flag of Russia Andrei Kopylov Decision (majority) RINGS - King of Kings 1999 Final 26 February 2000 2 5:00 Tokyo, Japan
Win Flag of the United States Jeremy Horn Decision (unanimous) WEF 8 - Goin' Platinum 15 January 2000 3 8:00 Rome, Georgia, United States
Win Flag of Russia Iouri Kotchkine Technical Submission (armbar) RINGS - King of Kings 1999 Block A 28 October 1999 1 0:40 Tokyo, Japan
Win Flag of the Netherlands Valentijn Overeem Technical Submission (keylock) RINGS - King of Kings 1999 Block A 28 October 1999 1 1:51 Tokyo, Japan
Win Flag of the United States Nate Schroeder Submission (armbar) WEF 7 - Stomp in the Swamp 9 October 1999 1 1:52 Kenner, United States
Win David Dodd Submission (crucifix) WEF 6 - World Extreme Fighting 6 12 June 1999 1 N/A DeLand, United States

[edit] References

  1. ^ MMA Top 10. MMAWeekly (August 8, 2007).
  2. ^ Nokaut's TOP 10 Fighter Rankings. Nokaut (August 18, 2007).
  3. ^ Thomas Gerbasi (06/28/2007). "Minotauro" Nogueira's Championship Heart. Retrieved on 2007-10-27.
  4. ^ Kris Karkoski (June 29, 2007). [1] Nogueira Officially Severs Ties with BTT]. Retrieved on 2007-11-06.
  5. ^ http://www.pridefc.com/pride2005/index.php?mainpage=news&news_id=382
  6. ^ Meltzer, Dave (February 2, 2008). UFC 81 round-by-round coverage. Wrestling Observer.com. Retrieved on 2008-02-04.
  7. ^ Mir as a coach for TUF 8. Retrieved on 2008-05-12.

[edit] External links

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IhwWn1MmRk

Preceded by
First champion
PRIDE Heavyweight Champion
November 3, 2001 - March 16, 2003
Succeeded by
Fedor Emelianenko
Preceded by
n/a
UFC Heavyweight Champion (Interim)
February 2, 2008 – present
Incumbent
Persondata
NAME Nogueira, Antonio Rodrigo
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Minotauro
SHORT DESCRIPTION Mixed martial artist
DATE OF BIRTH June 2, 1976
PLACE OF BIRTH Vitoria da Conquista, Brazil
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH