On This Day in MMA History: The Godfather of North American MMA, ‘Judo’ Gene Lebell Was Born in 1932

(Video courtesy of YouTube/TheFightNerd)

If the first MMA fight you ever watched was Stephan Bonnar versus Forrest Griffin, chances are you have no clue who “Judo” Gene LeBell is, but pull up a chair because you’re about to learn about the man in the pink gi.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/TheFightNerd)

If the first MMA fight you ever watched was Stephan Bonnar versus Forrest Griffin, chances are you have no clue who “Judo” Gene LeBell is, but pull up a chair because you’re about to learn about the man in the pink gi.

Many people give credit to the Gracies for bringing MMA to North America since they were responsible for founding the UFC and it’s Brazilian predecessor, The Gracie Challenge, but credit should actually go to Lebell, who helped introduce the sport to the masses nearly 30 years before the Octagon was invented.

Although it was seen as a spectacle or a publicity stunt at the time, decorated judo black belt Judo Gene Lebell called the bluff of a writer from a low budget magazine by the name of “The Judo Bums” that had boldly stated that any boxer regardless of ranking could beat a judo practician because judo players were all frauds.

After Lebell publicly denounced the troll story, the magazine offered to set up a bout between Gene and the writer boxer. He quickly accepted.

The modified ruled, no-holds-barred bout went down in Salt Lake City, Utah in December, 1963, but the pundit subbed in a professional boxer in his stead at the last minute by the name of Milo Savage. Both men wore gi tops and the only agreed upon rule was that they weren’t allowed to kick. Before the fight, Savage was caught trying to conceal brass knuckles under his hand wraps. In spite of the fact that Savage covered himself from head to toe with grease, Lebell still managed to hold onto the slippery boxer long enough to choke him out in the fourth round to become the first winner of a televised MMA bout in North America.

He would go on to train the likes of Bruce Lee, Gokor Chivichyan, Karo Parisyan and Manny Gamburyan while doing double-duty as a coach and movie stuntman over the course of his career.

Perhaps his crowning achievement besides the historic fight with Savage was the time he (allegedly) made Steven Seagal lose control of his bodily functions in his trailer on the set of “Out for Justice.”

As the story goes, Seagal purportedly told Lebell, who was a stunt coordinator on the film, that his Aikido trumped judo in effectiveness and that he could escape any hold Gene could apply. After the 58-year-old choked out “The Glimmer Man,” he proceeded to make him piss his pants by manipulating an acupuncture point on his neck he said was attached to the bladder.

After waking up in a puddle of his own urine, Segal kicked all of the onlookers out of his trailer and called his lawyers, who proceeded to slap a gag order on the cast and crew, warning them that if anyone breathed a word about the event, he would sue their asses. Thankfully the story saw the light of day, or else people may actually think Seagal is a dangerous former CIA operative who could kill you with his pinky finger like he claims.

The Gracie clan tried to set up a bout between Gene and Rickson 20 years ago, but it never materialized since there was a 27-year age difference between the two. Instead, Judo Gene suggested that he fight Helio instead, which the Gracies accepted, only if he could lose 55 lbs for the bout as Helio weighed 145 at the time. What’s curious is the fact that Gracie supporters have maintained that by turning down both bouts, Lebell ducked the family, even though Helio fought men much bigger than he was for most of his career.

Happy birthday to Mr. Lebell, who was born 79 years ago today and thank you for helping make North American MMA what it is today.

On This Day in MMA History – September 8, 2008: Evan Tanner Found Dead in Southern California Desert

It really doesn’t seem like it’s been three years since the news of former UFC middleweight champion Evan Tanner’s sudden and tragic passing while out on a solo camping excursion to the desert west of Palo Verde, California sent shockwaves through the MMA community.

Tanner, who was open about his fights with alcohol abuse and his personal demons is said to have called his manager, John Hayner to let him know that his dirt bike had run out of gas a few miles from his camp and that his trip was going well besides the mishap. When he failed to answer calls from friends the next day, police were dispatched and after a brief aerial search, located Tanner’s camp and his remains a few miles away from his abandoned motorcycle.

Hayner told us at the time that the troubled 37-year-old had turned his life around thanks to a move to Oceanside and the rebirth of his career in the UFC where he recently re-signed. Tanner was hoping that the desert trip, which he planned for months and did hours of research for, would leave him feeling rejuvenated and ready to build on the mistakes he made in his last bout — a hard-fought split-decision loss to Kendall Grove at the TUF 7 finale that June.

“He was in a real positive state of mind, he wasn’t having any drinking problems or any of those types of problems. He was really feeling good about his life,” Hayner told CagePotato.com. Here was a famous UFC fighter who didn’t have enough food to eat at times. I’d call him just to make sure he had food in his fridge, but he never let it get him down. Starting over was kind of a theme in his life. He hardly ever lived in the same place more than six months,” Hayner said. “He moved out to Vegas and then found it too shallow for him, so he moved out to Oceanside and had a great place, he was learning to surf, and he was really enjoying his day-to-day life.”

It really doesn’t seem like it’s been three years since the news of former UFC middleweight champion Evan Tanner’s sudden and tragic passing while out on a solo camping excursion to the desert west of Palo Verde, California sent shockwaves through the MMA community.

Tanner, who was open about his fights with alcohol abuse and his personal demons is said to have called his manager, John Hayner to let him know that his dirt bike had run out of gas a few miles from his camp and that his trip was going well besides the mishap. When he failed to answer calls from friends the next day, police were dispatched and after a brief aerial search, located Tanner’s camp and his remains a few miles away from his abandoned motorcycle.

Hayner told us at the time that the troubled 37-year-old had turned his life around thanks to a move to Oceanside and the rebirth of his career in the UFC where he recently re-signed. Tanner was hoping that the desert trip, which he planned for months and did hours of research for, would leave him feeling rejuvenated and ready to build on the mistakes he made in his last bout — a hard-fought split-decision loss to Kendall Grove at the TUF 7 finale that June.

“He was in a real positive state of mind, he wasn’t having any drinking problems or any of those types of problems. He was really feeling good about his life,” Hayner told CagePotato.com. Here was a famous UFC fighter who didn’t have enough food to eat at times. I’d call him just to make sure he had food in his fridge, but he never let it get him down. Starting over was kind of a theme in his life. He hardly ever lived in the same place more than six months,” Hayner said. “He moved out to Vegas and then found it too shallow for him, so he moved out to Oceanside and had a great place, he was learning to surf, and he was really enjoying his day-to-day life.”

In an eerie bit of foreshadowing, Tanner spoke about the fact that he may not return from the trip in one SPIKE TV blog post before rebuking the opinions of reporters and fans who thought his planned expedition was reckless and dangerous in another.

“I’ve been gathering my gear for this adventure for over a month, not a long time by most standards, but far too long for my impatient nature. Being a minimalist by nature, wanting to carry only the essentials, and being extremely particular, it has been a little difficult to find just the right equipment,” he wrote. “I plan on going so deep into the desert, that any failure of my equipment, could cost me my life. I’ve been doing a great deal of research and study. I want to know all I can about where I’m going, and I want to make sure I have the best equipment.”


(Video courtesy of YouTube/onceiwasachampion)

“It seems some MMA websites have reported on the story, posting up that I might die out in the desert, or that it might be my greatest opponent yet, etc. Come on, guys. It’s really common down in Southern California to go out to the off-road recreation areas in the desert about an hour away from LA and San Diego,” Tanner later explained. “So my plan is to go out to the desert, do some camping, ride the motorcycle, and shoot some guns. Sounds like a lot of fun to me. A lot of people do it. This isn’t a version of ‘Into the Wild.’”

Unfortunately it turned out to be exactly that.

RIP Evan Tanner. Believe in the power of one.

If you get the chance to see the Tanner documentary Once I was a Champion, do yourself a favor and check it out.

On This Day in MMA: August 10 – A Star Takes His First Step Towards Greatness and “The Monster” is Born

(Video courtesy of YouTube/CP)

UFC featherweight champion José Aldo made his MMA debut seven years ago at EcoFight 1 in Amapá, Brazil.

Why it matters:

It’s not the fact that Aldo defeated Mario Bigola in just 18 seconds by soccer-kick KO at the event,  it’s that he did it at the age of 17, setting the tone for what would become a dominant career. Bigola retired following the bout and Aldo racked up an impressive 19-1 record, including an undefeated eight-fight tear through the WEC and successful defenses of his WEC and UFC belts.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/CP)

UFC featherweight champion José Aldo made his MMA debut seven years ago at EcoFight 1 in Amapá, Brazil.

Why it matters:

It’s not the fact that Aldo defeated Mario Bigola in just 18 seconds by soccer-kick KO at the event,  it’s that he did it at the age of 17, setting the tone for what would become a dominant career. Bigola retired following the bout and Aldo racked up an impressive 19-1 record, including an undefeated eight-fight tear through the WEC and successful defenses of his WEC and UFC belts.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/ThiagoSilva187)

Aldo has been mentioned in the same breath as MMA greats like Anderson Silva, George St-Pierre and Fedor Emelianenko when discussing the best pound-for-pound fighters in the sport. Having run through the best fighters the WEC had to offer and getting close to doing the same in the UFC, a jump up to 155 may be in “Scarface’s” near future.

Kevin “The Monster Randleman was born 40 years ago in Sandusky, Ohio.

Why he matters:


(Video courtesy of YouTube/hayes9000)

A two time Division I NCAA Champion for Ohio State, in his prime, Randleman was one of the most dangerous fighters in MMA. He holds wins over Murilo “Ninja” Rua, Renato “Babalu” Sobral, Maurice Smith and Mirko “CroCop” Filipovic, but is perhaps best known for the back-and-forth wars he came up short in. His gruelling 21-minute split decision loss to Bas Rutten at UFC 20, last minute TKO loss to Randy Couture at UFC 28 and Pride 2004 Heavyweight Grand Prix quarterfinal loss to Fedor Emelianenko did little to tarnish Randleman’s impressive career as he seemed close to finishing each opponent at various times in those bouts. Unfortunately his highlight-reel suplex slam of Emelianenko that nearly knocked out the Russian ended with him tapping out to a kimura moments later.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/nsjanssen)

On This Day In MMA History: August 9

(Video courtesy of YouTube/IronChefKenichiSakai)

UFC 87: Seek and Destroy went down three years ago at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Why it Matters:

(Video courtesy of YouTube/SemtexRumble617)

Jon Jones made his UFC debut on the card, defeating fellow undefeated fighter Andre Gusmao by unanimous decision. Jones would go on to win five of his next six fights in dominating fashion against some of the promotion’s best fighters including Vladimir Matyushenko, Brandon Vera and Mauricio “Shogun” Rua at UFC 128 to win the UFC light heavyweight strap in a little more than two-and-a-half years since he first competed in the Octagon. Analysts predict that he will go down as one of the sport’s best fighters. Time will tell.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/IronChefKenichiSakai)

UFC 87: Seek and Destroy went down three years ago at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Why it Matters:


(Video courtesy of YouTube/SemtexRumble617)

Jon Jones made his UFC debut on the card, defeating fellow undefeated fighter Andre Gusmao by unanimous decision. Jones would go on to win five of his next six fights in dominating fashion against some of the promotion’s best fighters including Vladimir Matyushenko, Brandon Vera and Mauricio “Shogun” Rua at UFC 128 to win the UFC light heavyweight strap in a little more than two-and-a-half years since he first competed in the Octagon. Analysts predict that he will go down as one of the sport’s best fighters. Time will tell.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/SAWrestlingEire)

Brock Lesnar got his first UFC win by decisively beating PRIDE veteran Heath Herring via unanimous decision (30-26 all) after getting submitted in his first bout by Frank Mir. In his next bout, which was only his fourth in MMA, he defeated Randy Couture to win the UFC heavyweight championship.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/zeno35)

Jon Fitch faced Georges St-Pierre for the UFC welterweight strap and was dominated by the French Canadian champion for five rounds. In spite of a seven-fight undefeated streak since the bout, including a draw in a so-called title eliminator with BJ Penn at UFC 127 in February, Fitch has been passed over more than once for another shot at St-Pierre.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/Sherdog)

Kenny Florian defeated Roger Huerta, effectively knocking “El Matador” off of his trajectory towards an inevitable title shot. Florian would defeat Joe Stevenson in his next bout at UFC 91 to earn a second shot at the lightweight strap against BJ Penn at UFC 101.

On This Day in MMA History…June 24


(PRIDE never die…)

PRIDE 3 went down 13 years ago.

Why it matters:

• Mark Kerr was still in his prime, which was how we want to remember “The Smashing Machine.” He easily handled IVC and IVF champ Pedro Otavio.

Gary Goodridge picked up his eighth MMA win.

Kazushi Sakuraba continued to assert his dominance over top competition by dispatching of Canadian rising star Carlos Newton, who would eventualy win the UFC welterweight strap.


(PRIDE never die…)

PRIDE 3 went down 13 years ago.

Why it matters:

• Mark Kerr was still in his prime, which was how we want to remember “The Smashing Machine.” He easily handled IVC and IVF champ Pedro Otavio.

Gary Goodridge picked up his eighth MMA win.

Kazushi Sakuraba continued to assert his dominance over top competition by dispatching of Canadian rising star Carlos Newton, who would eventualy win the UFC welterweight strap.

• Prior to the Saku-Newton bout, Sebastiaan “Bas” Rutten made a special appearance in the ring to talk about his upcoming UFC 18 title bout with Randy Couture and to announce that after that fight his intention to fight Rickson Gracie under the PRIDE banner. Neither bout ever happened. Couture forfeited his UFC HW strap because of a contract dispute, so Rutten instead fought and defeated Tsuyoshi Kohsaka at UFC 18 in May 1999 by TKO at the 14:15 mark (there were no rounds or time limits at that time). After defeating Kevin Randleman four months later at UFC 20 to win the vacant heavyweight title, Rutten promptly retired because of ongoing issues with his knees, so the fight with Gracie never materialized.

PRIDE 3
June 24, 1998
Nippon Budokan,
Tokyo, Japan

Akira Shoji and Daijiro Matsui fought to a draw after four rounds.
Daiju Takase Emmanuel def. Yarborough by submission (punches)  3:22 R2.
Kazushi Sakuraba def. Carlos Newton by submission (kneebar) 5:19 R2.
Gary Goodridge def. Amir Rahnavardi KO (punches) – 7:22 R1
Mark Kerr def. Pedro Otavio by technical submission (kimura) – 2:13 R1
Nobuhiko Takada def. Kyle Sturgeon by submission (heel hook) – 2:18 R1

MMA’s version of Rocky, Randy Couture was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame 5 years ago.

Why it matters:
*See below*


(Videos courtesy of YouTube/ItownBob47)

The Ultimate Fighter 3 Finale went down five years ago.


Why it matters:

• Michael Bisping, who was actualy a fan favorite on the show, won the light heavyweight side of the bracket, while Kendall Grove took home the glass trophy for winning the middleweight side of the competition. Both fighters were from Tito Ortiz’s team, which bolstered the opinion that Ken Shamrock was one of the worst coaches in the show’s history.

• The show participants were Mike Stine, Kendall Grove, Rory Singer, Danny Abbadi, Kalib Starnes, Solomon Hutcherson, Ed Herman, Ross Pointon, Michael Bisping, Noah Inhofer, Josh Haynes, Matt Hamill, Jesse Forbes, Kristian Rothaermel, Tait Fletcher and Mike Nickels.

• Of the 16 contestants, only three remain under UFC contract (Hamill, Bisping and Herman)

• Bisping went on to coach opposite Dan Henderson on TUF 9 and was knocked out by the former PRIDE champion at UFC 100. He is slated to appear on the next season of the SPIKE TV reality series opposite Jason “Mayhem” Miller.

On This Day in MMA History…June 23


(Listen, Dana…Do you think you can say I was with you the night the heist went down?)

Lee Murray was released from a Morroccan jail 2 years ago.

Why it matters:

Although his freedom was short-lived (as in two days), it may be the only time the former UFC middleweight, who was sentenced to an additional 10-25 years for his part in the publicized Securitas heist in the UK, may taste freedom in the next two decades.

 

Ivan Salaverry retired from MMA three years ago…sort of.

Why it matters:

Salaverry announced that he was done fighting on this day in 2008, but later revealed (as illustrated in the interview above from Matt Lindland’s ‘Fighting Politics’ documentary) that his decision was brought on by the way he felt he and other fighters were mistreated by UFC president Dana White. Since there was a loophole in his UFC contract that stated that retirement nullified his agreement after a specified amount of time, after sitting out for nearly three years from his last bout at UFC 84, Salaverry pulled a Randy Couture and returned to action May 21 of this year to face Matt Ewin at Bamma 6. Unfortunately for the 40-year-old whose version of the mounted crucifix holds a special place in the heart of UFC commentator Joe Rogan, the long layoff and his age did him no favors as he lost the bout by unanimous decision.


(“Listen, Dana…Do you think you can say I was with you the night the heist went down?”)

Lee Murray was released from a Morroccan jail 2 years ago.

Why it matters:

Although his freedom was short-lived (as in two days), it may be the only time the former UFC middleweight, who was sentenced to an additional 10-25 years for his part in the publicized Securitas heist in the UK, may taste freedom in the next two decades.

 

Ivan Salaverry retired from MMA three years ago…sort of.

Why it matters:

Salaverry announced that he was done fighting on this day in 2008, but later revealed (as illustrated in the interview above from Matt Lindland’s ‘Fighting Politics’ documentary) that his decision was brought on by the way he felt he and other fighters were mistreated by UFC president Dana White. Since there was a loophole in his UFC contract that stated that retirement nullified his agreement after a specified amount of time, after sitting out for nearly three years from his last bout at UFC 84, Salaverry pulled a Randy Couture and returned to action May 21 of this year to face Matt Ewin at Bamma 6. Unfortunately for the 40-year-old whose version of the mounted crucifix holds a special place in the heart of UFC commentator Joe Rogan, the long layoff and his age did him no favors as he lost the bout by unanimous decision.

Alistair Overeem made his heavyweight MMA debut 4 years ago.



(Video courtesy of YouTube/StillW1ll)

Why it matters:

“The Reem” made his successful heavyweight MMA debut at the K-1 World Grand Prix in Amsterdam in 2008 by defeating Michael Knaap by guillotine. Although Knaap was by no means a world beater, a draw with Cheick Kongo and a win over Roman Zentsov proved he was no pushover. In spite of criticisms that the only truly competitive opponent he has faced since moving up in weight was Fabricio Werdum and that, sure he beat him, but he didn’t win convincingly (seriously, some people will complain about anything), Overeem has only lost once since becoming “Ubereem.”

“The Demolition Man” has finished all but two of his opponents (Sergei Kharitonov, who he lost to by KO and Mirko Filipovic, who he notched a no-contest against after several knees to the groin left “CroCop” unable to continue) in that span. His heavyweight victims list includes Todd Duffee, Brett Rogers, Kazuyuki Fujita, James Thompson, Gary Goodridge, Mark Hunt, and Paul Buentello.

Kimbo Slice made his MMA debut 4 years ago.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/Kimbosliceschannel)

Why it matters:

Had he lost against Ray Mercer at Cage Fury Fighting Championship 5, we may never have seen the former backyard brawler crash and burn as an MMA fighter when pitted against apt opponents. In spite of being a 4-2 can-crusher, Slice, AKA Kevin Ferguson was one of MMA biggest draws. Still, infamy couldn’t help him keep a job with the UFC.

After tallying a 1-1 official and 1-0 exhibition record in the Octagon with a debatable win over Houston Alexander, a TUF 10 prelim loss to Roy Nelson and a UFC 113 routing by Matt Mitrione, Slice was given his walking papers by the UFC. The 37-year-old hasn’t fought since and is said to be waffling over starting a pro boxing career.

The Ultimate Fighter 5 Finale went down 4 years ago.


Why it matters:

• The event marked Jens Pulver’s last UFC fight in which he lost by rear-naked choke to longtime nemesis BJ Penn. Penn was criticized for holding on to the sub longer than necessary.

• Nate Diaz (who handed Gray Maynard his only loss of his career, albeit an unofficial one, via guillotine in the semi-finals)  became the season’t Ultimate Fighter with a win over Manny Gamburyan in the final. Gamburyan injured his shoulder and was unable to continue the bout.

• Of the 16 contestants on this season of the show, only six are UFC fighters. They are Gray Maynard, Matt Wiman, Joe Lauzon, Nate Diaz, Manny Gamburyan and Cole Miller.

 

PRIDE 21 went down 9 years ago.


Why it matters:

• Although the match-ups were nothing to write home about, the card that took place in 2002 in Saitama, Japan featured a list of notables including Anderson Silva, Fedor Emelianenko, Don Frye, Gary Goodridge, Semmy Schilt, Jeremy Horn, Renzo Gracie and Gilbert Yvel.

• Emelianenko defeated Schilt at the event, but was unable to finish the big Dutchman.

• Frye’s win over Yoshihiro Takayama claimed the number one slot Fox Sports Network’s “Best Damn 50 Beatdowns” and was named “2002 Shoot Match of the Year” by Dave Meltzer’s The Wrestling Observer newsletter.


(Video courtesy of YouTube/jaruswiatekmma)


Nick Thompson was born 29 years ago.

Why he matters:

Although he isn’t to be mistaken with The G.O.A.T, The Goat had some respectable wins in his eight-year 53-fight MMA career over the likes of Brian Gassaway, Josh Neer, Eddie Alvarez, Mark Weir and Paul Daley. Although he came up short against fighters like Yushin Okami, Jake Shields, Tim Kennedy and Karo Parisyan, the former BodogFight welterweight champion was a gamer who was known for taking whatever fights were offered to him. Thompson retired earlier this year to focus on managing fighters and his career as a licensed attorney.