Following the sudden and tragic death of Canadian mixed martial arts trainer Shawn Tompkins on Saturday, it has been learned the famed trainer died of a heart attack. CagePotato.com reports that longtime friend and fighter Sam Stout shared his fee…
Following the sudden and tragic death of Canadian mixed martial arts trainer Shawn Tompkins on Saturday, it has been learned the famed trainer died of a heart attack.
“It’s not supposed to be happen to a healthy 37-year-old person. Who would think he had to get checked out for that?”
Tompkins passed away on Saturday night after he slept at a friend’s house following an MMA event in Hamilton, Ontario. Tompkins did not wake up the following morning.
The Ingersoll, Ontario, native had helped train some of the best talents in the sport, including Randy Couture, Vitor Belfort and Gray Maynard. Funeral arrangements are currently being made by Stout and Tompkins’ wife. A memorial is expected to take place in Las Vegas, where Tompkins lived for the past four years.
For those who wish to contribute to the Shawn Tompkins memorial fund, send an email to [email protected].
According to Shawn Tompkins’ brother-in-law and longtime friend and fighter Sam Stout, the revered Ingersoll, Ontario-born trainer died from a heart attack.
Stout revealed the tragic news to the London Free Press on Tuesday.
“I don’t know what to say,” Stout said. “It’s not supposed to be happen to a healthy 37-year-old person. Who would think he had to get checked out for that?”
According to Shawn Tompkins’ brother-in-law and longtime friend and fighter Sam Stout, the revered Ingersoll, Ontario-born trainer died from a heart attack.
Stout revealed the tragic news to the London Free Press on Tuesday.
“I don’t know what to say,” Stout said. “It’s not supposed to be happen to a healthy 37-year-old person. Who would think he had to get checked out for that?”
Tompkins went to bed at a friend’s house following an MMA event in Hamilton, Ontario Saturday night and did not wake up. News of the affable 37-year-old’s passing sent shockwaves through the close-knit MMA community and cast a cloud over Sunday night’s UFC Live on Versus 5 event after UFC commentator Mike Goldberg announced the tragedy during the broadcast.
Funeral arrangements are being made today. Stout’s sister and Tompkins’ widow, Emilie arrived in London last night and will be making funeral arrangements for her husband today with the help of her supportive family.
A memorial is being planned for Tompkins in his adopted hometown of Las Vega, Nevada where he lived for the past four years and trained and coached some of MMA’s best fighters including Randy Couture, Vitor Belfort, Wanderlei Silva, Mark Coleman, Gray Maynard, Jay Hieron and Karo Parisyan at Xtreme Couture and TapouT Training Center. A proud Canadian, Tompkins told me in an interview just over a week ago that he moved to the U.S. to help his core team of Stout, Mark Hominick and Chris Horodecki by expanding the depth of their pool of talented training partners and to spread the teachings he adopted from his mentor, Bas Rutten’s system.
A memorial guestbook has been established for fans and friends wishing to express their sympathies to Shawn’s Team Tompkins family.
Tompkins’ manager Gary Ibarra from AMR Group has set up The Shawn Tompkins Memorial Fund, which is currently accepting contributions to assist Emilie with funeral and burial costs.
“Shawn was more than a client,” Ibarra stated via press release. “His passion and vision for MMA was infectious, evident by how he could motivate his fighters to become better athletes and people.On behalf of AMR Group’s athletes and staff, we extend our deepest sympathies to Emilie, Sam and Shawn’s entire family. His spirit will live on in our hearts.”
To contribute to Tompkins’ memorial fund, send an email to [email protected]. Details of the memorial service will be announced in the coming days at AMRGroup.tv.
Filed under: UFC, NewsShawn Tompkins, the renowned mixed martial arts trainer that died on Sunday morning, passed away of a heart attack, according to his brother-in-law, UFC fighter Sam Stout.
Under Ontario law, privacy exemptions keep autopsy inform…
Shawn Tompkins, the renowned mixed martial arts trainer that died on Sunday morning, passed away of a heart attack, according to his brother-in-law, UFC fighter Sam Stout.
Under Ontario law, privacy exemptions keep autopsy information from public view, but Stout revealed the results of the Monday autopsy to The London Free Press, an Ontario newspaper.
“I don’t know what to say,” Stout told the paper. “It’s not supposed to be happen to a healthy 37-year-old person. Who would think he had to get checked out for that?”
Stout also told the newspaper that funeral arrangements would be made on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, Tompkins’ management team, AMR Group, is setting up a Shawn Tompkins Memorial Fund, which is accepting contributions to help Tompkins’ widow Emilie with burial costs.
Tompkins shot to fame in the MMA world with a core group of three fighters who were also from Ontario: Stout, Mark Hominick and Chris Horodecki.
At the time of his death, the 37-year-old Tompkins was in Ontario working with some of his younger fighters. According to those that were with him, he went to sleep after an event and never woke up.
I spoke with Shawn on the phone about a week and a half prior to his tragic and sudden passing this past weekend at age 37. During our conversation we spoke about the brotherhood he shares with Mark Hominick, Chris Horodecki and Sam Stout and the past present and future of Team Tompkins among other topics.
By Mike Russell
I spoke with Shawn on the phone about a week and a half prior to his tragic and sudden passing this past weekend at age 37. During our conversation we spoke about the brotherhood he shares with Mark Hominick, Chris Horodecki and Sam Stout and the past present and future of Team Tompkins among other topics.
Above are some of the highlights of the interview, which I’m told is his last.
I first met Shawn Tompkins six years ago while I was working for The Fight Network in Toronto, Canada. I’d been a fan of his work for a while, having watched Mark Hominick and Sam Stout climb the Canadian rankings under his tutelage, but didn’t get the opportunity to shake the hand of the London, Ontario coach, who was considered by many to be the top trainer in Canada until late 2005. He was one of the good guys in the sport, always eager to talk shop and would give you the shirt off of his back if you needed it.
I last spoke to “The Coach” a week ago for a story I was working on for Fighters Only Magazine about his brother-in-law and longtime protégée Sam Stout. In spite of the fact that he was on vacation (the first one he’d taken in years) and was in the midst of celebrating his wedding anniversary with his wife Emilie, Shawn promptly responded to the text I sent him asking if he had time to talk that week with a familiar reply: “I’ve always got time for you, Mike.”
It didn’t surprise me when he told me that day that he and Sam had never had a disagreement.
By Mike Russell
I first met Shawn Tompkins six years ago while I was working for The Fight Network in Toronto, Canada. I’d been a fan of his work for a while, having watched Mark Hominick and Sam Stout climb the Canadian rankings under his tutelage, but didn’t get the opportunity to shake the hand of the London, Ontario coach, who was considered by many to be the top trainer in Canada until late 2005. He was one of the good guys in the sport, always eager to talk shop and would give you the shirt off of his back if you needed it.
I last spoke to “The Coach” a week ago for a story I was working on for Fighters Only Magazine about his brother-in-law and longtime protégée Sam Stout. In spite of the fact that he was on vacation (the first one he’d taken in years) and was in the midst of celebrating his wedding anniversary with his wife Emilie, Shawn promptly responded to the text I sent him asking if he had time to talk that week with a familiar reply: “I’ve always got time for you, Mike.”
It didn’t surprise me when he told me that day that he and Sam had never had a disagreement.
Back in 2007 I talked to Shawn about how the transition to California was going since he had recently moved to Temecula to take over as head coach for Dan Henderson’s Team Quest gym. I asked him what he had on his plate the coming weeks and typical of Shawn, he answered for the team.
“We’ve got Dan Henderson fighting Wanderlei Silva in PRIDE and Matt Lindland is getting ready for Fedor in Bodog,” he explained.”
When I posted the story, Shawn called me to let me know that he never meant that he was training Lindland and asked me to correct the piece to reflect the truth, as he didn’t want to take credit for someone else’s work. That was him. He wasn’t mad, he just wanted the story done right the same way he wanted his team’s training and he wanted credit to go where it was due.
Last week, in the same humble way he told me that he’s only partially responsible for the success of the team that bears his name.
“I truly think that Mark, Sam and Chris and myself — the four of us are who built the Team Tompkins brand together by the way that we fight and the style we’re known for. It’s great that it’s my name, but I’ll always give them credit when credit is due. We’ve been together since the beginning, we’ve done this together and it’s something that just wouldn’t be right if it wasn’t the four of us doing it together. We’re the original four who built the foundation of Team Tompkins together,” he pointed out. “Now the new guys who come along and want to be part of it because they see the relationship we have; it’s a great thing. I think one of the biggest things of bringing on some of the newer fighters to the team is that it’s something they really want. People love the idea being of being mixed martial arts fighter, but they want more now. They want to be a part of what we have and it’s truly an awesome thing I wouldn’t trade for the world. It’s something I’ve been blessed with throughout my life and my career to be able to put together a team and family that’s as tight as it is. I don’t think I’ve seen him a team as close as we are. The ones who are like ours are the successful ones in mixed martial arts or any sport or business that they’re involved in.”
Team Tompkins to Shawn wasn’t just a group of fighters who trained in the same gym. They were and will continue to be a family who had each other’s backs through thick and thin, better or for worse. At the core of the brotherhood were Shawn’s original three students: Stout, Mark Hominick and Chris Horodecki. Each of them counted the others as his best friends. All three were in Tompkins’ wedding and Shawn was Hominick’s best man in his. “The Coach” prided himself in keeping his Team Tompkins family together by treating them like his family, because to him they were. They were the siblings he never had.
They had their own rooms in his house in Las Vegas and would often stay with Shawn and Emilie for a month or two at a time when training for upcoming bouts. Last month prior to Horodecki’s most recent bout at Bellator 47 in July in Ontario Shawn’s wallet and passport were stolen and being the optimist that he is, after being granted access back into Canada from the Canadian consulate and being put on the waiting list for new identification, he shrugged the misfortune off and chalked it up as an extended vacation at home. That was Shawn.
While staying with Sam and Emilie’s parents in London, Shawn woke up at four in the morning to discover a drunken intruder had entered the house and passed out in the basement. Instead of dragging him out of the house, he calmly woke the man up asked him his name and whether or not he may be in the wrong residence. When he determined the guy was in the wrong place, he led him outside and pointed him in the right direction of his house. That was Shawn.
Having honed his craft as a marquee trainer under the guidance of Bas Rutten and his fighting system, Shawn’s heart was always in developing fighters from the ground up. That’s where his roots were and that’s where he knew he had to go back to. In spite of having worked with a who’s who of the MMA world from Dan Henderson to Randy Couture to Vitor Belfort, Tompkins decided to leave Xtreme Couture two-and-a-half years ago to take the helm of the recently opened TapouT Training Center where he could do what he loved doing – training young inexperienced fighters to one day become champions.
“All the success in the world and the Vitor Belforts and the Randy Coutures and the Dan Hendersons were awesome to train, but I wouldn’t trade what I have with Team Tompkins any day,” Tompkins admitted.”
At the end of our conversation last week, Shawn asked me what I had been up to since the last time we spoke and I told him that besides working in MMA full-time — something he knew was an aspiration of mine as long as we’d known each other — I had been editing a book written by a mutual friend about his recently deceased father who was an Olympic wrestler and a coach and mentor like him named Harry Geris from Shawn’s hometown.
“We actually run the Harry Geris wrestling club out of the Adrenaline Training Centre/Team Tompkins gym in London. He was a great man. I never got to train with him, but I did get to meet him a few times,” he said. “There isn’t a wrestler from London who Harry didn’t help in some way. I hope I can touch as many lives as he did.”
Judging by the tremendous outpouring of support his family has received since the news broke last night, I think it’s safe to say he did.
Knowing many of the back stories of the team and its members having spoken to the guys almost every week for a weekly Canadian MMA column I penned for TFN, I asked Shawn if he had ever thought about doing a book on Team Tompkins, even though such a bio is usually reserved for the twilight of fighters’ careers.
“I did some instructional stuff a little while ago and I’ve been asked about doing a book, but like you said, there’s so much more to add to the story I think it’s something that will be done way down the road. I think we’re at about chapter three now and we’ll have fifty more chapters to add,” he said. “Maybe when it comes time you can write the Team Tompkins story, Mike. You know as much about us as anybody. “
Unfortunately for those of us who like myself counted Tompkins as a friend and a member of our close-knit MMA family, Shawn’s story ended without reaching the climax he was destined to reach. He passed away overnight Saturday after watching some of his up-and-coming Team Tompkins fighters compete in Hamilton, Ontario. He was 37.
Unfortunately many in the MMA media did not respect his family enough to allow them to grieve, and instead flocked to their phones and computers to try to squeeze a quote from them. Sadly, when reached for comment, some had yet to hear the news and were taken aback by the breathless, devastating disclosure that their mentor was gone.
To Sam, Chris, Mark, Emile, Mr. and Mrs. Stout and Mr. and Mrs. Tompkins:
I am sorry for your loss. Shawn was always a stand-up guy. You should all be proud of him. He will be missed.
Canadian and world-renowned mixed martial arts trainer Shawn Tompkins died in his sleep on Sunday according to this report by MMAJunkie.com. The report has also been confirmed by several sources close to the MMA icon. Tompkins was the original head tra…
Canadian and world-renowned mixed martial arts trainer Shawn Tompkins died in his sleep on Sunday according to this report by MMAJunkie.com. The report has also been confirmed by several sources close to the MMA icon.
Tompkins was the original head trainer at Adrenaline Training and Fitness Center in London, Ontario were he taught and guided the careers of UFC veterans Sam Stout and Mark Hominick, as well as young up-and-comer Chris Horodecki.
Tompkins then emerged on the national MMA scene as an assistant coach in the now defunct IFL (International Fight League) under Bas Rutten. Tompkins later took over as head coach from Rutten as he stepped down to do commentary.
Tompkins then migrated to Xtreme Couture in Las Vegas where he was a coach before he split with that gym and joining the Tapout Training Facility. He had moved to Las Vegas with his wife Emilie, but was home in Canada helping Horodecki train for his next fight on Sept 10.
Tompkins was 37 years old and a father figure to many of the fighters he guided and trained.
I was at a UFC function yesterday, golfing all day with Tompkins’ prized pupil and UFC fighter Mark Hominick. He golfed and spoke to fans and golfers all day and then was sitting across from me at dinner. He was gracious and cordial and no one knew anything about his coach and mentor.
As the evening rolled on, you could tell something was going on as he had to keep getting up to talk on his cell phone. Everyone at the event was set to watch the UFC Live fights with him when he suddenly had to leave the event. It is at that time, around 9 p.m. ET that we began to hear the news.
In a shocking twist, and absolute testament to Tompkins and the way he taught his fighters, I heard the news this morning that Hominick knew from early afternoon that his coach and mentor had passed, yet he didn’t tell a soul and he completed his appearance.
That is unbelievable to me and a true show of Tompkins’ fighters’ toughness that we all must admire and respect.
R.I.P. Shawn Tompkins.
Dwight Wakabayashi is a Feature Columnist for Bleacher Report MMA (also a correspondent for MMACanada.net).