Darrion Caldwell

Darrion Caldwell
Born (1987-12-19) December 19, 1987
Rahway, New Jersey, United States
Other names The Wolf
Nationality American
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight 135 lb (61 kg; 9.6 st)
Division Bantamweight
Featherweight
Reach 74.0 in (188 cm)
Fighting out of Redlands, California, United States
Team Pinnacle Mixed Martial Arts
Rank Blue belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
Wrestling NCAA Division I wrestling [NC State]
Years active 2012–present
Mixed martial arts record
Total 11
Wins 10
By knockout 1
By submission 4
By decision 5
Losses 1
By submission 1
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Darrion Caldwell (born December 19, 1987) is an American mixed martial artist currently competing in the bantamweight division of Bellator MMA. A professional since 2012, he has also competed for Legacy FC. He was the 2009 NCAA national wrestling champion at 149 pounds.

Background

Born and raised in Rahway, New Jersey, Caldwell competed in wrestling, football, and baseball at Rahway High School. Caldwell was a two-time All-Region football player, but had his most success on the wrestling mats; he had a record of 146-4 in high school, and was a three-time state champion.[1]

Caldwell continued wrestling at North Carolina State University, and during his true freshman season his record was 20-6. Caldwell missed becoming an All-American by one match, and had one of the best freshman seasons in the history of the school. In 2007-2008, Caldwell went 36-5 and finished in fifth place in the nation, earning All-American status. In 2008-2009, Caldwell went 38-1, and became national champion by defeating 2008 national champion and Dan Hodge Trophy winner, Brent Metcalf, 11-6. Caldwell was named most outstanding wrestler of the national championship tournament, and his only defeat was by injury default. Off the back of this performance, Caldwell was invited to attempt to join the senior-level Freestyle Wrestling world team, despite having little experience in the different style of wrestling. Caldwell finished in third place at the world team trials, and defeated the reigning Olympian at the weight class along the way. In the offseason Caldwell suffered a series of devastating shoulder injuries, which required surgery and forced him to redshirt the 2009-2010 season. Caldwell returned to action midway through the 10-11 year, and was undefeated in 15 matches. Caldwell was the number one seed for the 2011 national championships, but unfortunately suffered yet another shoulder injury in the second round match, which ended his college career. Caldwell finished his collegiate career with a 109-13 record, with 58 victories coming by a pin. Caldwell attempted to qualify for the 2012 U.S. Olympic team, but the string of injuries left him outside of his top form. Caldwell was eliminated in round three of the final U.S. Olympic trials qualifier, and then decided to pursue a career in MMA.

Mixed martial arts career

Legacy Fighting Championship

In July 2012, it was revealed that Caldwell had signed with Texas-based promotion Legacy Fighting Championship.[2]

Caldwell made his MMA and promotional debut against David Armas at Legacy FC 14 on September 14, 2012. For the majority of the fight, Caldwell was able to control the fight on the ground, mounting and taking Armas' back several times. He won via unanimous decision.[3]

In his second professional fight, Caldwell met Quaint Kempf at Legacy FC 16 on December 14, 2012. He won the fight via TKO after dropping Kempf with a left hand and unloading with a series of punches on the ground.[4]

Caldwell next faced Gerzan Chaw at Legacy FC 21 on July 19, 2013. He won the fight via unanimous decision after three rounds.[5]

Bellator MMA

Caldwell signed with Bellator MMA in November 2013.[6]

Caldwell made his debut for the promotion against Lance Surma on March 14, 2014 at Bellator 112. He won via guillotine choke submission at 0:50 in the first round.[7]

In his second appearance for Bellator, Caldwell faced Joe Pingitore at Bellator 118 on May 2, 2014. He won via submission in the first round, improving his record to 5–0.[8]

In his third appearance for the promotion, Caldwell faced Anthony Dizi at Bellator 130 on October 24, 2014.[9] He won the fight via unanimous decision. He later stated in an interview that he plans to move down to the bantamweight division.[10]

Caldwell made his bantamweight debut against Rafael Silva on May 15, 2015 at Bellator 137.[11] He won the fight by unanimous decision.

Caldwell next faced Shawn Bunch at Bellator 143 on September 25, 2015. He won the fight via submission in the first round.

In his highest profile fight to date, Caldwell faced former two-time Bellator champion Joe Warren in the main event at Bellator 151 on March 4, 2016. Caldwell dominated the fight, winning via technical submission due to a rear-naked choke in the first round.

Caldwell then faced Joe Taimanglo at Bellator 159. He lost the bout via guillotine choke in the third round.

Due to Taimanglo missing weight in their first bout, Caldwell faced Taimanglo in a rematch in the main event at Bellator 167 on December 3, 2016. He won the bout via unanimous decision.

After avenging his first loss, Caldwell was set to face champion Eduardo Dantas for the Bellator bantamweight championship at Bellator 177 on April 14, 2017.[12] An injury, however, forced Caldwell out of the bout. Thus, he was replaced with Bellator newcomer Leandro Higo.[13] Dantas would go on to defeat the latter via split decision in a non-title affair.[14]

The bantamweight title bout against Dantas has been rescheduled for Bellator 184 on October 6, 2017.[15]

Celebratory backflip incidents

In the last seconds of his 2009 NCAA championship match against Brent Metcalf, Caldwell attempted to celebrate early with a handspring and backflip. While in the middle of his backflip, Metcalf pushed him, making him fall hard on his back. The push occurred slightly after the whistle. Metcalf later apologized, citing a fight-to-the-end wrestler mentality and frustration.[16]

After defeating Shawn Bunch at Bellator 143 in 2015, Caldwell did a backflip off the cage and landed on a camerawoman, whose shot was live at the time. Though knocked down, she was uninjured, and Caldwell apologized.[17]

Mixed martial arts record

Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Win 10–1 Joe Taimanglo Decision (unanimous) Bellator 167 December 3, 2016 3 5:00 Thackerville, Oklahoma, United States
Loss 9–1 Joe Taimanglo Submission (guillotine choke) Bellator 159 July 22, 2016 3 0:09 Mulvane, Kansas, United States
Win 9–0 Joe Warren Technical Submission (rear-naked choke) Bellator 151 March 4, 2016 1 3:23 Thackerville, Oklahoma, United States
Win 8–0 Shawn Bunch Submission (rear-naked choke) Bellator 143 September 25, 2015 1 2:35 Hidalgo, Texas, United States
Win 7–0 Rafael Silva Decision (unanimous) Bellator 137 May 15, 2015 3 5:00 Temecula, California, United States Bantamweight debut.
Win 6–0 Anthony Dizy Decision (unanimous) Bellator 130 October 24, 2014 3 5:00 Mulvane, Kansas, United States
Win 5–0 Joe Pingitore Submission (rear-naked choke) Bellator 118 May 2, 2014 1 1:32 Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States
Win 4–0 Lance Surma Submission (guillotine choke) Bellator 112 March 14, 2014 1 0:50 Hammond, Indiana, United States
Win 3–0 Gerzan Chaw Decision (unanimous) Legacy FC 21 July 19, 2013 3 5:00 Houston, Texas, United States
Win 2–0 Quaint Kempf TKO (punches) Legacy FC 16 December 14, 2012 1 1:00 Dallas, Texas, United States
Win 1–0 David Armas Decision (unanimous) Legacy FC 14 September 14, 2012 3 3:00 Houston, Texas, United States

References

  1. Kania, Joe. "Wrestling: Rahway's Darrion Caldwell wins homecoming fight in Atlantic City", The Star-Ledger, May 3, 2014. Accessed May 30, 2016. "Caldwell, who won three New Jersey state wrestling title for Rahway just down the boardwalk at Boardwalk Hall, earned a submission in 1:38 over Joe Pingitore to improve to 5-0 on his career and 2-0 since entering the Bellator."
  2. Staff (July 2, 2012). "NCAA champ Darrion Caldwell signs with Legacy FC, targeted for November debut". mmajunkie.com.
  3. Shaun Al-Shatti (September 15, 2012). "Legacy 14 Results: 'Caged' Star Matt Schnell Earns Split Decision Win in Debut". mmafighting.com.
  4. "LFC 16 - Legacy Fighting Championship 16". sherdog.com.
  5. Staff (July 20, 2013). "Legacy FC 21 results: Hobar, Bush claim titles; Garcia, Holm earn knockouts". mmajunkie.com.
  6. "Bellator signs undefeated former NCAA champion Darrion Caldwell". mmamania.com. November 27, 2013.
  7. "Bellator 112 results: Pat Curran taps Straus to recapture featherweight title". mmajunkie.com. March 14, 2014.
  8. "Bellator 118 results: Joe Warren rallies to win interim title fight with Rafael Silva". mmajunkie.com. May 2, 2014.
  9. MMAjunkie Staff (September 30, 2014). "Emanuel Newton headlines Bellator 130 in title tilt with Linton Vassell". mmajunkie.com. Retrieved October 1, 2014.
  10. Jason Floyd (October 29, 2014). "Darrion Caldwell planning a move to bantamweight". themmareport.com.
  11. Tristen Critchfield (April 15, 2015). "Darrion Caldwell-Rafael Silva Matchup Added to Bellator 137 Main Card". sherdog.com.
  12. Danny Segura (February 8, 2017). "Eduardo Dantas vs. Darrion Caldwell set to headline Bellator 177 in Budapest". mmafighting.com.
  13. Mookie Alexander (March 15, 2017). "Eduardo Dantas vs. Leandro Higo set for Bellator 177 following Darrion Caldwell injury". bloodyelbow.com.
  14. Staff (April 14, 2017). "Bellator 177 results: Eduardo Dantas takes split from Leandro Higo in non-title fight". mmajunkie.com.
  15. Staff (July 14, 2017). "Bellator 184 set for Oct. 6 with champ Eduardo Dantas vs. Darrion Caldwell, Emmanuel Sanchez vs. Daniel Straus". mmajunkie.com.
  16. "Metcalf apologizes for NCAA wrestling push", from Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier
  17. "WATCH: MMA Fighter’s Backflip Off Cage Ends In Epic Fail", by Ross Kelly, CBS Local Sports
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