Art Jimmerson Recalls Royce Gracie at UFC 1: “I’m Going to Kill This Guy”

Art Jimmerson shared he was genuinely concerned for Royce Gracie’s health prior to their fight at UFC 1. In a new podcast documentary on Gracie by MMA TRUFAN, Jimmerson explained why he was worried about what might happen against the UFC Hall of Famer. “What scared me more than anything was the fact that they […]

Art Jimmerson shared he was genuinely concerned for Royce Gracie’s health prior to their fight at UFC 1. In a new podcast documentary on Gracie by MMA TRUFAN, Jimmerson explained why he was worried about what might happen against the UFC Hall of Famer.

“What scared me more than anything was the fact that they say there’s no rules and then they say there’s no gloves. I’m in the ring sparring at home and I’m going around the country sparring. I’m knocking cats out with six ounce gloves on. I’m going to kill this guy with no gloves on at all so I felt bad for him.”

Jimmerson’s first impression of Royce upon seeing him did little to quell his concerns.

“The first thing I thought about with Royce was childish. He looked like a child. He did. I mean, he was so young in the face.”

Unfamiliar With Gracie

One of the reasons Jimmerson didn’t take Royce seriously at first was because he couldn’t find information on him at the time.

“It was just funny. It was like a joke because back then there was no Google. There was no Internet. There was no Yahoo. So, basically I couldn’t really like look up who Royce Gracie was or what he (was) involved with.”

Jimmerson’s confidence grew more when he finally came face-to-face with Royce.

“He wouldn’t look at me at first. I’m a boxer. I’ve been in fights all my life. I’ve been in hundreds of fights. So, I know when I look in a guy’s eyes I can see their heart. Royce didn’t really look at me when we were getting ready to fight. He kind of shied away from me. Not saying he was scared of me. It’s just I like to look a guy in the eyes to see the guy’s soul.”

However, Jimmerson said all of that changed when they met again for the actual fight.

“On the night of the fight he just like turned into a tiger. He had to win. His dad was there. His family was there. So, when he came out he was going to do whatever he had to do to win.”

Jimmerson’s One Glove

This fight is probably most remembered for the visual of Jimmerson wearing one boxing glove against Royce. Jimmerson

“It was more to protect him (and) also of course my hand. I had a big fight coming up. So, I wanted to make sure I didn’t break my hand on this guy’s face because (I was) having this fight for a lot of money in the near future. So, this was like easy money. I was like, ‘Man, this is the easiest time I’ll have in the world.’”

The “big fight” Jimmerson referred to was actually a fight against boxing legend Tommy Hearns. Jimmerson had worked as Hearns’ sparring partner in the past and was scheduled to fight him shortly after UFC 1.

Jimmerson shared that Royce immediately threw him off his game once the fight began.

“Royce came out (fighting) southpaw and then he started kicking at me. That’s what threw me off. I was kind of expecting some things they were trying to show me before the fight. I was expecting takedowns (and) a choke and a mount. I never knew what a mount meant or what a choke out meant.”

Royce submitted Jimmerson about two minutes into the fight. Ironically, Jimmerson said it was Gracie who felt bad for him afterward.

“After the fight, we hugged each other and he said something really weird. He thanked me for being a part of it knowing that I had no idea what I was doing or getting into. He felt kind of bad knowing that I had a big disadvantage getting in there.”

At UFC Gym, Art ‘One Glove’ Jimmerson Finds an Unexpected Home

Filed under: UFC, FanHouse ExclusiveIf you ask Art Jimmerson now, he’ll admit that he never thought the UFC would still be around nearly two decades from the night he stepped into the Octagon for the first and last time. He certainly never thought that…

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If you ask Art Jimmerson now, he’ll admit that he never thought the UFC would still be around nearly two decades from the night he stepped into the Octagon for the first and last time. He certainly never thought that, seventeen years after his short, but memorable bout with Royce Gracie at UFC 1, he’d be teaching boxing at a UFC gym in Rosemead, Calif.

And yet here he is, now 47 years old and retired from boxing, sitting on some heavy bags next to a cage not so unlike the one he saw for the first time, along with the American public, in November of 1993.

“I remember my manager told me, ‘Man this thing ain’t going anywhere. It’s too far out there.’ That’s how it seemed at the time, but now look at it,” he says and gestures at the expansive gym around him. “Who knew, right?”

Not Jimmerson. Not back then. He was a former Golden Gloves champion riding a 15-fight win streak. He’d had nearly 30 fights as a pro, and his career seemed like it was finally on the verge of taking off. Fighting a bunch of karate teachers and toughmen in front of a couple thousand people in Denver sounded like a relatively easy night of work.