Dale Cook

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Dale Cook
Born (1956-11-24) November 24, 1956
Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Other names Apollo
Nationality United States American
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight 73 kg (161 lb; 11.5 st)
Division Middleweight
Super Middleweight
Light Heavyweight
Cruiserweight
Style Karate, Kickboxing, Taekwondo
Stance Orthodox
Fighting out of Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Team Apollo's Martial Arts
Rank      black belt in Karate
     7th degree black belt in Taekwondo
Years active 1977-1996
Professional boxing record
Total 22
Wins 19
By knockout 10
Losses 2
Draws 1
Kickboxing record
Total 99
Wins 94
By knockout 54
Losses 4
Draws 1
Other information
Notable students Randy Blake
Todd Hays
George Randolph
Ralph White

Dale Cook (born November 24, 1958) is an American former kickboxer who competed in the middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight and cruiserweight divisions. With a background in karate and taekwondo, Cook debuted professionally in 1977 and spent the early part of his career as a full contact rules fighter, winning the PKA World Middleweight Championship. In the 1980s, he began fighting under Oriental and Muay Thai rules and took two world titles under the WKA banner. A short stint in shoot boxing towards the end of his career in the mid-1990s resulted in another world title in that discipline.

An occasional actor, Cook also starred in several action-oriented B-movies in the early 1990s.

Career

Nicknamed Apollo, Dale Cook began practicing martial arts with taekwondo at the age of fifteen and eventually earned the rank of seventh degree black belt.[1] After taking up kickboxing, he turned professional in 1977 and rose to prominence when he won the PKA World Middleweight Championship. Having fought exclusively under the full contact rule set in the beginning of his career, he later ventured into Oriental rules in the 1980s.[2]

He won his second world title and the first with low kicks on June 12, 1987 when he knocked out Donald Tucker in the first round to claim the WKA world middleweight (-72.5 kg/159.8 lb) title.[3][4] Following this, he added the WKA super middleweight (-76 kg/167.6 lb) strap to his mantle.

During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Cook challenged six Muay Thai stylists from Thailand, defating five of them and losing once, a second round KO at the hands of Changpuek Kiatsongrit on June 30, 1990 in Tokyo, Japan. On July 30, 1992, he fought Toshiyuki Atokawa at the Kakutogi Olympics II in Tokyo in a kickboxing/full contact karate hybrid match. Rounds one and three were fought with boxing gloves, and rounds two and four bare-knuckle with punching to the face disallowed. Cook won on points, and the pair rematched under Seido karate rules on October 4, 1992 in the opening round of the '92 Karate World Cup in Osaka, Japan. The first round was ruled a draw and went to an extension round after which Atokawa won on all five judges' scorecards.

He continued to fight in Japan where he won the shoot boxing world title before retiring in 1996.

After his retirement, Cook opened Apollo's Martial Arts karate and kickboxing gym in his hometown of Tulsa. Among his students are K-1 heavyweights Randy Blake, Todd Hays, George Randolph and Ralph White, as well as the Oklahoma Destroyers World Combat League team. He also runs the Xtreme Fighting League, an Oklahoma-based promotion which features both kickboxing and mixed martial arts matches.[5]

Championships and awards

Kickboxing

  • World Shoot Boxing Association
    • WSBA World Championship
  • World Kickboxing Association
    • WKA World Middleweight (-72.5 kg/159.8 lb) Championship
    • WKA World Super Middleweight (-76 kg/167.6 lb) Championship

Boxing record

Boxing record

Legend:       Win       Loss       Draw/No contest       Notes

Karate record

Karate record

Legend:       Win       Loss       Draw/No contest       Notes

Kickboxing record

Kickboxing record

Legend:       Win       Loss       Draw/No contest       Notes

Filmography

Film
Year Title Role Notes
1991 Fist of Glory Jake Reynolds
Blood Ring Max Rivers
1992 Eternal Fist Amp
Deadend Besiegers Gaijin who beats Wuwech
Triple Impact Dave Masters Direct-to-video
1993 American Kickboxer 2 Mike Clark
1994 Double Blast Greg Direct-to-video
1995 Raw Target Johnny Rider
Blood Ring 2 Max Rivers

References

  1. IKF profile
  2. WKA Magazin Hall of Fame
  3. Maslak, Paul (November 1987). "The STAR System World Kickboxing Ratings as of August 1987", American Karate magazine, Condor Books, Inc., New York City, NY, USA, pp. 54,66-67.
  4. Maslak, Paul (November 1987). "AK's Kickboxing Report", American Karate magazine, Condor Books, Inc., New York City, NY, pp. 52-54.
  5. John Klein: For 'Apollo' Cook, local Boys & Girls Club helped build storied fight career

External links

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