Nick Ring

Nick Ring
Born (1979-02-10) February 10, 1979
Cedar Falls, Iowa, United States
Other names The Promise
Nationality American
Canadian
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight 185 lb (84 kg; 13.2 st)
Division Middleweight
Reach 74.0 in (188 cm)
Fighting out of Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Team Champions Creed Martial Arts
Tristar Gym
Rank Black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu under Brian Bird
Black belt in Muay Thai under Mike Miles
Years active 2002–present
Professional boxing record
Total 6
Wins 5
By knockout 2
Losses 1
Mixed martial arts record
Total 18
Wins 14
By knockout 2
By submission 6
By decision 6
Losses 4
By decision 4
Other information
Boxing record from BoxRec
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Nick Ring (born February 10, 1979) is an American-Canadian mixed martial artist who is best known for competing in the middleweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. A professional MMA competitor since 2002, Ring fought in various promotions. Ring was a competitor on Spike TV's The Ultimate Fighter 11.

Mixed martial arts career

Early career

Ring's early background in fighting was as a kickboxer, where he compiled around 30 fights. His transition to MMA was quoted as being because "eventually what I liked about MMA versus kickboxing - and I love kickboxing - was just the whole ground aspect. I like the purity of an MMA fight."[1]

Ring was also a professional boxer (during his hiatus from MMA through injury) with a record of 4–1, with 2 victories coming by knockout.

Ring started his MMA career in 2002 in local promotions in his home region of Alberta, Canada against Bill Mahood. Ring was able to win via verbal submission just 22 seconds into the first round.

A year later, Ring made his second professional MMA appearance against Wyatt Lewis. Ring was again victorious, this time via decision after 2 rounds.

Just two weeks later, Ring fought again. Against Alex Gasson, Ring won another decision and followed this up with a submission (strikes) victory over Kevin Dolan.

Two years later, Ring made his return to mixed martial arts against Kimo Woelfel, winning via first round rear naked choke. Ring next fought Mike Malone and won via first round TKO; his first TKO of his career. Ring later won a unanimous decision over Ryuichi Murata.

Injury and return at Bellator

Ring suffered a knee injury which forced him out of competition for over three years. During this time, Ring took up a professional boxing career, compiling a record of 4–1, with three knockouts. He eventually made his return to MMA when he signed with Bellator.

At Bellator 9, Ring fought Isidro Gonzalez and was able to submit him in 39 seconds with a guillotine choke.[2] Ring then won his next two fights against Chester Post and Yannick Galipeau, both in the first round.

It was rumored that Ring was offered a place in Bellator at the same time as The Ultimate Fighter.[3]

The Ultimate Fighter

In March 2010, Ring was announced as part of the eleventh season of The Ultimate Fighter.[4]

In a dominant first performance, to gain entry into the TUF house, Ring defeated Woody Wetherby via TKO due to punches in round 1. Ring earned praise from Tito Ortiz, who expressed his interest in selecting Ring as the first member of Team Punishment. This was indeed to be the case as Ortiz selected him as his number one pick, making Ring the first overall pick of the competition.

For his second bout, Ring fought Court McGee, winning via majority decision (20–18, 19–19, 20–18).

Later on in the competition, McGee was reinstated and the two were set to have a rematch in the quarter-finals. However, after visiting the doctor, Ring discovered that he faced a third ACL reconstruction surgery and faced a choice; fight on injured and risk tearing his meniscus, or withdraw from competition and have surgery immediately. James Hammortree was named as Ring's replacement.

Due to his knee injury and surgery, Ring was not able to compete at the TUF 11 Finale. Ring's surgery took place on April 8, 2010 and afterwards, Ring faced a long period of recovery time, getting cleared to train in September.[5] After his recovery, Ring trained for his debut at UFC 127 at his home club, BDB Martial Arts in Calgary AB, and at Tristar Gym in Montreal QC, with the likes of Georges St-Pierre and Rory MacDonald.[6]

Ultimate Fighting Championship

Ring beat promotional newcomer and DEEP middleweight champion, Riki Fukuda on February 27, 2011 at UFC 127 via controversial unanimous decision.[7][8] All three judges gave Ring the first two rounds despite Fukuda controlling all three rounds with takedowns. Literally all major MMA media news organizations scored the fight as a decision win for Fukuda.[9][10][11][12] Regardless of Ring's win on the scorecards, UFC president Dana White, as well as many spectators, felt Fukuda won the bout. Dana stated on his Twitter account that Fukuda would be paid his win bonus.[13]

For his sophomore UFC bout, Ring faced promotional newcomer James Head on June 11, 2011 at UFC 131.[14] He won the fight via submission in the third round.

In his third UFC fight, Ring faced Tim Boetsch on September 24, 2011 at UFC 135. He lost the fight via unanimous decision, the first loss of his professional MMA career.[15]

Ring then fought Court McGee in a rematch from their time on The Ultimate Fighter on July 21, 2012 at UFC 149. Ring won via unanimous decision. For the second time in a bout against McGee, the win was regarded as controversial by many media sources. Stats after the fight showed that McGee outstruck Ring 32-25 in the second round and 53-16 in the final round.[16] After the fight, McGee said "I felt like I had cage control, was more aggressive, out-struck him and attempted a submission in the third round. I should not have left it in the hands of the judges and finished the fight."[17]

Ring was expected to face Costas Philippou on November 17, 2012 at UFC 154[18] but the fight was cancelled due to Ring's illness on the day of the weigh ins.[19]

Ring faced Chris Camozzi on March 16, 2013 at UFC 158.[20] He lost the fight via split decision.

Ring was expected to meet Uriah Hall at UFC Fight Night 26.[21] However, Ring was pulled from the bout and initially replaced by Josh Samman, who was ultimately pulled and replaced by UFC returnee John Howard.

Ring faced Caio Magalhães on December 7, 2013 at UFC Fight Night 33.[22] He lost the fight via unanimous decision.

Post UFC Career

Nick was released from the UFC. In his first post-UFC bout, he defeated Jason Zentgraf via Unanimous decision at Hard Knocks Fighting Championship 43 on May 22, 2015, in Calgary, Alberta. He is scheduled to face Alfonso at Havoc FC 9 on June 19 in Red Deer, Alberta.[23]

Personal life

On June 6, 2012, Ring was leaving a Starbucks at Macleod Trail and 94th Avenue in Calgary when he saw a group of about 6-10 people across the street beating up a couple to steal a young woman's backpack. One girl had another girl by her hair and was kneeing her in the face while her boyfriend was trying to protect her but was being held down. Ring got out of his car, checked on the victims, and along with another bystander who saw the fight in progress started to chase what he called the "wannabe gangsters" who ran when they saw them. As he chased the suspects, who appeared to be about 17 or 18 years old, Ring called police on his cellphone and the pair were able to catch one suspect. Ring says police caught another five or six suspects.[24]

Mixed martial arts record

Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 14–4 Cory Devela Decision (unanimous) Hard Knocks 44 June 26, 2015 3 5:00 Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Win 14–3 Jason Zentgraf Decision (unanimous) Hard Knocks 43 May 22, 2015 3 5:00 Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Loss 13–3 Caio Magalhães Decision (unanimous) UFC Fight Night: Hunt vs. Bigfoot December 7, 2013 3 5:00 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Loss 13–2 Chris Camozzi Decision (split) UFC 158 March 16, 2013 3 5:00 Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Win 13–1 Court McGee Decision (unanimous) UFC 149 July 21, 2012 3 5:00 Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Loss 12–1 Tim Boetsch Decision (unanimous) UFC 135 September 24, 2011 3 5:00 Denver, Colorado, United States
Win 12–0 James Head Submission (rear-naked choke) UFC 131 June 11, 2011 3 3:33 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Win 11–0 Riki Fukuda Decision (unanimous) UFC 127 February 27, 2011 3 5:00 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Win 10–0 Yannick Galipeau Submission (armbar) AMMA 1: First Blood October 24, 2009 1 2:30 Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Win 9–0 Chester Post TKO (punches) Rumble in the Cage 36 September 12, 2009 1 2:24 Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Win 8–0 Isidro Gonzalez Submission (guillotine choke) Bellator 9 May 29, 2009 1 0:39 Monroe, Louisiana, United States
Win 7–0 Ryuichi Murata Decision (unanimous) Deep: 23 Impact February 5, 2006 2 5:00 Tokyo, Japan
Win 6–0 Mike Malone TKO (punches) Icon Sport – Opposites Attract October 28, 2005 1 3:04 Hawaii, United States
Win 5–0 Kimo Woelfel Submission (rear-naked choke) Superbrawl – Icon July 23, 2005 1 2:06 Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Win 4–0 Kevin Dolan Submission (punches) WFF 4 – Civil War April 4, 2003 1 1:20 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Win 3–0 Alex Gasson Decision (unanimous) Calgary Max February 22, 2003 3 5:00 Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Win 2–0 Wyatt Lewis Decision (unanimous) Roadhouse Rumble 7 February 8, 2003 2 5:00 Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Win 1–0 Bill Mahood Submission (verbal) Roadhouse Rumble 5 February 23, 2002 1 0:22 Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada

References

  1. Morgan, John (2010-04-05). "Meet "The Ultimate Fighter 11" cast: "Lazy" landowner Nick Ring". MMAjunkie.com. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  2. someguy says:. "Bellator 9 Results - Canadian Nick Ring Victorious | Top MMA News at". Topmmanews.com. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  3. "Nick Ring Joins The Ultimate Fighter 11 Cast | Top MMA News at". Topmmanews.com. 2010-02-15. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  4. "The Ultimate Fighter 11 cast unveiled with 28 middleweight fighters". MMAJunkie.com. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  5. "Catch-up with Nick Ring". ultimatefighter.com. August 9, 2010.
  6. "Nick Ring vs. Riki Fukuda Inked for UFC 127 February 27 in Australia". cagepotato.com. December 7, 2010.
  7. "Ring wins inexplicable UFC 127 decision over Fukuda". yahoo.com. February 26, 2011.
  8. "Nick Ring Defends Controversial Decision Win". mmafighting.com. February 27, 2011.
  9. "UFC 127 Results & Live Play-by-Play". sherdog.com. February 26, 2011.
  10. "UFC 127 play by play and live results". mmajunkie.com. February 26, 2011.
  11. "UFC 127 Play-by-Play: Riki Fukuda vs. Nick Ring". mmaweekly.com. February 26, 2011.
  12. "UFC 127: Penn vs. Fitch - Live Results". bloodyelbow.com. February 26, 2011.
  13. "Dana White @ Twitter". twitter.com. February 27, 2011.
  14. "Nick Ring vs. James Head added to UFC 131 in Vancouver". mmajunkie.com. 2011-04-11.
  15. Stupp, Dann. "UFC 135 preliminary-card results: Ferguson breaks Riley's jaw, Boetsch cruises". MMAJunkie.com. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
  16. "By the Numbers: UFC 149". sherdog.com. July 12, 2012.
  17. "Court McGee puts controversial UFC 149 loss to Nick Ring in rearview mirror". sherdog.com. August 27, 2012.
  18. "Nick Ring vs. Costa Philippou added to UFC 154 in Montreal". mmajunkie.com. September 17, 2012.
  19. http://www.ufc.com/news/Nick-Ring-Out-of-154
  20. "Chris Camozzi vs. Nick Ring joins UFC 158 lineup". mmajunkie.com. January 5, 2013.
  21. "Nick Ring vs. Uriah Hall booked for UFC on FS1 in Boston". themmareport.com. May 31, 2013.
  22. Andrew Potter (2011-09-22). "Nick Ring vs. Caio Magalhaes Added to UFC Fight Night 33 Card in Brisbane". mmaweekly.com. Retrieved 2011-09-22.
  23. Cody Rempel (2015-01-29). "Nick Ring Returns At Havoc FC 9". mmaweekly.com. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  24. "Report: Nick Ring helps save Calgary couple from attack ahead of UFC 149". sherdog.com.
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