American mixed martial artist, professional wrestler and actor
Bob Sapp
|
---|
Sapp in 2011
|
Born
| Robert Malcolm Sapp
(
1973-09-22
)
September 22, 1973
(age 50)
[1]
Colorado Springs, Colorado
, U.S.
|
---|
Other names
| The Beast
|
---|
Height
| 6 ft 5 in (196 cm)
[1]
|
---|
Weight
| 329 lb (149 kg; 23 st 7 lb)
[1]
|
---|
Division
| Super Heavyweight
|
---|
Reach
| 82 in (210 cm)
|
---|
Style
| Kickboxing
|
---|
Fighting out of
| Seattle
,
Washington
, U.S.
|
---|
Team
| Team Beast
BodyShop MMA & Fitness
|
---|
Teacher(s)
| Maurice Smith
Josh Barnett
Matt Hume
|
---|
Trainer
| Prince Amir
|
---|
Years active
| 2002?2014, 2016?present
|
---|
|
|
Total
| 31
|
---|
Wins
| 12
|
---|
By knockout
| 9
|
---|
Losses
| 19
|
---|
By knockout
| 12
|
---|
|
|
|
Total
| 32
|
---|
Wins
| 12
|
---|
By knockout
| 8
|
---|
By submission
| 3
|
---|
By decision
| 1
|
---|
Losses
| 20
|
---|
By knockout
| 15
|
---|
By submission
| 4
|
---|
By disqualification
| 1
|
---|
|
|
Mixed martial arts record
from
Sherdog
|
American football player
American football career
|
|
Position:
| Guard
|
---|
|
Height:
| 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
|
---|
Weight:
| 319 lb (145 kg)
|
---|
|
College:
| Washington
|
---|
NFL draft:
| 1997
/ Round: 3 / Pick: 69
|
---|
|
|
* Offseason and/or practice squad member only
|
|
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|
|
|
---|
|
|
|
|
Last updated on: November 17, 2013
|
Robert Malcolm Sapp
(born September 22, 1973)
[2]
[3]
is an American
mixed martial artist
,
kickboxer
,
professional wrestler
, actor, and former
American football
player. He is currently under contract with
Rizin Fighting Federation
.
[4]
Sapp has a combined fight record of 24?39?1, mostly fighting in Japan. He is well known in Japan, where he has appeared in numerous commercials, television programs, and various other media, and has released a music CD,
Sapp Time
. He is known there as a
gaijin tarento
(foreign-born talent).
[5]
He is currently working sporadically for various MMA promotions in the U.S., Japan, and Europe.
Sapp played college football as a
guard
for the
Washington Huskies
with whom he won the
Morris Trophy
. He was drafted in the third round of the
1997 NFL draft
by the
Chicago Bears
with whom he played for one season seeing no game action before playing with the
Minnesota Vikings
for another two seasons, only playing in one game. He later began a career in professional wrestling before branching out into mixed martial arts and kickboxing, where he initially enjoyed significant success and popularity before eventually developing a reputation as a
tomato can
.
Sapp began his athletic career in high school playing
football
at
Mitchell High School
in
Colorado Springs, Colorado
. He received a football scholarship to the
University of Washington
, where he won the
Morris Award
in 1996. He took part in "The Whammy in Miami", the
Washington Huskies
' upset win over the
Miami Hurricanes
that broke the latter's 58 game home winning streak.
[6]
Sapp was drafted by the
Chicago Bears
in the third round (69th overall) of the
1997 NFL Draft
.
[7]
He signed with the
Minnesota Vikings
after being released by the Bears. However, his career took a hit after he was suspended by the NFL in 1998 for
steroid abuse
. He spent two seasons with the Vikings and only played in one game.
[6]
He is considered to be one of the worst picks of the NFL drafts.
[8]
Afterwards, Sapp was left in poverty after being defrauded by his economic advisor,
[6]
and resorted to working at a
funeral home
moving coffins to make a living.
[9]
[10]
He eventually decided to pursue a career in
professional wrestling
on the advice of his friend
Mike Morris
, who saw a chance for Sapp on it.
[6]
Professional wrestling
[
edit
]
Early career (2000?2002)
[
edit
]
Bob Sapp's
professional wrestling
career started in
NWA Wildside
in 2000, before he was quickly contracted by
World Championship Wrestling
(WCW) as a
developmental wrestler
. There he started honing his "The Beast" persona, which at this stage was a villainous, feral
tarzan
-like
gimmick
, but his development was cut short when the company was bought out by the
World Wrestling Federation
(WWF).
[10]
He left professional wrestling for many years, attracted instead to a fighting career under the training of fellow WCW developmental wrestler
Sam Greco
.
[6]
New Japan Pro-Wrestling and All Japan Pro Wrestling (2002?2005)
[
edit
]
In 2002, riding his success in K-1, Sapp made his professional wrestling debut for
New Japan Pro-Wrestling
(NJPW). Introduced as a member of chairman
Antonio Inoki
's army of fighters, Sapp replaced an injured
Yoshihiro Takayama
in his October 14 match against
Manabu Nakanishi
. The two exchanged taunts and attacks on the weeks leading to the match, with Sapp ultimately winning after executing his finishing move, the
Beast Bomb
,
[11]
on the ringside, where he left Nakanishi to be counted out.
[12]
This victory led to many other wrestlers to suggest to take their chance against Sapp, among them
Yuji Nagata
and Takayama himself, but the American refrained from participating.
[12]
Sapp balanced his NJPW appearances with similar ventures in
All Japan Pro Wrestling
, where he intruded to challenge
Bill Goldberg
and
Keiji Mutoh
.
[13]
He first appeared in
Wrestle-1
, a copromotion between K-1 and AJPW, where he faced Mutoh's alter ego The Great Muta in November 2002. Sapp defeated him after pinning him with a
diving headbutt
.
[14]
He returned to the event in January 2003, where he wrestled his kickboxing rival
Ernesto Hoost
, yet this time Sapp lost after Hoost's cornerman Johann Vos intervened in the bout.
[14]
In October 2003, Sapp returned to NJPW, taking part again of Inoki's MMA army along with Takayama,
Kazuyuki Fujita
,
Shinsuke Nakamura
and Minoru Suzuki to face Nakanishi, Nagata,
Hiroshi Tanahashi
,
Hiroyoshi Tenzan
and
Seiji Sakaguchi
. He followed by some team matches along with Nakamura and AJPW's Keiji Mutoh, but his main push would come in his singles career. On March 28, 2004, Sapp defeated
Kensuke Sasaki
to win the
IWGP Heavyweight Championship
, becoming the first (and only, to date) African-American to hold the title. After successfully defending the title against
Shinsuke Nakamura
on May 3 at
Nexess
, Sapp forfeited the title due to having lost to
Kazuyuki Fujita
in a mixed martial arts fight.
[15]
In 2005, Sapp returned to Wrestle-1, taking part on its inaugural Grand Prix tournament and beating
Giant Bernard
and
Jun Akiyama
in road to the finals. However, Wrestle-1 was discontinued before the tournament could win.
Hustle (2007?2008)
[
edit
]
On October 16, 2007, Sapp made a surprise appearance at
Hustle
's
Korakuen Hall
event, attacking
Razor Ramon HG
and his partner
Wataru Sakata
. Sapp aligned himself with
Generalissimo Takada
's villainous Monster Army. After defeating
Razor Ramon RG
in his debut match for the company, it was announced that he would wrestle at the Hustlemania
Yokohama Arena
event.
[16]
His opponent was later confirmed to be Razor Ramon HG,
[17]
whom Sapp went on to defeat.
Sapp was later put into a tag team with fellow superheavyweight
Monster Bono
, but a falling out between the two due to miscommunications in the ring led Sapp to attack Bono with a chair. Sapp and Bono entered a short
feud
, which culminated with the American's victory and Bono's expulsion from the Monster Army. Sapp then started teaming up with
Commander An Jo
, eventually entering another feud with Hustle Army member
Wataru Sakata
. Sapp was defeated by him, breaking his winning streak in professional wrestling. He would try to bounce back by participating in the Hustle Grand Prix 2008, but he was shockingly eliminated by
Osaka Pro Wrestling
representative
Zeus
after having beaten
Tiger Jeet Singh
. After another short rivalry with
Genichiro Tenryu
, Sapp was defeated in a rematch against Bono as his last appearance for Hustle.
Independent circuit (2008-2012)
[
edit
]
In 2008, Sapp began to participate in WWA, a pro wrestling organization in South Korea. On October 26, 2009, Sapp captured the WWA Heavyweight title by defeating
Lee Wang-pyo
.
[18]
On July 24, 2011, Sapp made his debut for
Dramatic Dream Team
(DDT) at
Ry?goku Peter Pan 2011
, using a "Beast will fight for money"
gimmick
.
[19]
In a comedy match, he was defeated by
Danshoku Dino
, a wrestler with a homosexual
character
, being pinned after a kiss and a
Gaydo Clutch
.
[20]
[21]
Return to New Japan Pro-Wrestling (2012?2013)
[
edit
]
At a NJPW event on December 20, 2012,
Toru Yano
announced that Sapp would represent the
villainous
Chaos
stable
on January 4, 2013, at
Wrestle Kingdom 7 in Tokyo Dome
.
[22]
At the event, Sapp teamed with Yano,
Takashi Iizuka
and
Yujiro Takahashi
in an eight-man tag team match, where they were defeated by
Akebono
,
Manabu Nakanishi
,
MVP
and
Strong Man
.
[23]
Sapp made another appearance for New Japan on April 7, 2013, at
Invasion Attack
, where he and Chaos stablemates Takashi Iizuka,
Tomohiro Ishii
and
Yoshi-Hashi
were defeated by Akebono,
Hiroyoshi Tenzan
, Manabu Nakanishi and
Super Strong Machine
in another eight-man tag team match.
[24]
Wrestle-1 (2013)
[
edit
]
On September 8, Sapp took part in the
Wrestle-1
promotion's
inaugural event
, teaming with
Keiji Mutoh
in a main event tag team match, where they defeated
Rene Dupree
and
Zodiac
.
[25]
Inoki Genome Federation (2014)
[
edit
]
In 2014, he would compete in the
Inoki Genome Federation
(IGF) and would lose to Aztecaser in his debut match.
Kickboxing and mixed martial arts career
[
edit
]
In 2000, after Sapp was released from WCW, he was picked up by
FX
for its
amateur boxing
show
The Toughman Competition
. Sapp was pitted against
William "The Refrigerator" Perry
as a pro wrestling representative and, despite not having any prior boxing experience, won by knocking out Perry in round 2.
[10]
Then Sapp's friend and trainer
Sam Greco
showed his match to
Kazuyoshi Ishii
, chairman of Japanese
kickboxing
promotion
K-1
. Ishii then invited Sapp to Japan in order to start a career in the ring, seeing a combination of great potential and great marketability in him.
[26]
After training for six months in United States in the
AMC Pankration
and
Team Quest
gyms,
[6]
he would be sent to
mixed martial arts
company
Pride Fighting Championship
, which had expressed interest on him too, in order to make his professional debut first under such rules.
[27]
Sapp competed under both rulesets indistinctly for the rest of his career, usually for the promotion K-1.
K-1 and Japanese promotions
[
edit
]
2002
[
edit
]
After arriving to Japan, Sapp debuted in Pride as a K-1 representative against former professional wrestler and longtime
Fighting Network RINGS
competitor
Yoshihisa Yamamoto
, who he finished by TKO at 2:44 of the first round by way of wild hooks.
[28]
The bout, which attracted 10 million viewers, quickly turned Sapp into a fan favorite due to his size, charisma and aggression, and prepared him for his kickboxing debut against
Tsuyoshi Nakasako
a month later.
[27]
Sapp lost by disqualification in 1:30 when he pushed Nakasako to the corner, threw him to the ground and rained illegal strikes on him until being restrained by ring crew. The act caused a brawl on the ring when the
cornermen
jumped in, but Sapp was surprisingly received with cheers from the crowd. He became an overnight sensation in Japan afterwards, appearing on numerous television shows and advertisements and becoming K-1's most popular fighter.
[27]
Sapp contributed by creating an outrageous public persona, nicknamed "The Beast", under which he played an unhinged, loudmouthed, yet also humorous version of himself.
[10]
Sapp's second Pride match was against two-time RINGS Openweight Champion
Kiyoshi Tamura
. Though Tamura was a highly respected fighter who held wins over the likes of
Pat Miletich
,
Jeremy Horn
and
Renzo Gracie
, he was giving up 150 lbs to his foe and was quickly overwhelmed by the much larger American, succumbing to strikes just 11 seconds into the bout.
[29]
In a show held by both Pride and K-1 called "Dynamite", Sapp faced then Pride champion
Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
. The latter had originally been slated for a kickboxing bout against K-1 fighter
Mark Hunt
, but negotiations fell out, as Nogueira had proposed to fight two separate bouts under mixed martial arts and kickboxing rules respectively, which was rejected by Hunt. The Pride champion then accepted to fight Sapp as a replacement, noting that "nobody wanted to fight Sapp, and some other Pride fighters already had their fights matched."
[6]
Due to the usual size disparity, this time amounting to 127 pounds,
[30]
Nogueira accepted a special rule to ban knee strikes on the ground, making it a more even affair.
[13]
Despite this, the match would quickly become a memorable battle of strength against technique.
[30]
[13]
Sapp opened the match almost finishing Nogueira in mere seconds, as the latter charged with a takedown only to be lifted and slammed onto his head. Sapp looked to repeat the technique, but Nogueira managed to avoid it and momentarily ready Sapp for an unsuccessful
armbar
. Taking his turn, Sapp started punishing him with
ground and pound
through the Brazilian's
guard
, nullifying his
armlocks
by sheer strength and landing
powerbombs
every time Nogueira tried his trademark
triangle choke
.
[30]
The bout continued this way, with Nogueira trying fruitless submissions from the bottom while Sapp grinded him with heavy blows, until action finally slowed down into the second round, as Sapp was unaccustomed to such a long time of fighting.
[30]
[31]
Nogueira, who had endured the beating through impressive will and looked "only half-conscious" according to reviewers,
[30]
finally pulled a tired Sapp down and
mounted
him. The Brazilian seized an armbar and, although Sapp blocked it, he had no left energy to resist and had to concede the hold and the match.
[30]
The fight received critical acclaim by reviewers, with website Ichiban Puroresu calling it "an awesome fight"
[13]
and "better drama than any fight this year,"
[32]
Keith Vargo commenting that "victory and defeat were changing sides so fast that either man could have won any moment,"
[30]
and Scott Newman opining it was "probably the best heavyweight fight [he had] ever seen in fact."
[31]
Mirko Cro Cop
, who would defeat Sapp in K-1, was quoted as, "It was the craziest fight I've ever seen. I couldn't believe that 'Minotauro' was able to survive all the things that happened to him. He almost broke his spine. Unbelievable."
[33]
Sapp himself was praised by his performance, to the extent Pride commentators
Stephen Quadros
and
Bas Rutten
speculating he could become a major fighter with only more training.
[31]
[33]
He actually expressed desire for a rematch, but Nogueira, who came from the fight with both
cheekbones
broken,
[31]
actively rejected it.
[34]
Sapp stated interest in fighting
Fedor Emelianenko
after he won the Pride Heavyweight Championship from Nogueira, which Emelianenko accepted, though joking he would have to gain 70 kg to face Sapp in even terms.
[34]
Nothing of this materialized, and Sapp would never again compete in Pride, instead focusing his attention on K-1. When Sapp returned to the kickboxing ring the next month, this time against
Cyril Abidi
and with K-1 chairman
Kazuyoshi Ishii
as a special referee, he scored his first kickboxing victory, cornering his opponent and unloading punches and hammerfists on him for the KO.
His greatest in-ring success, though, would come in his match over K-1 legend
Ernesto Hoost
. They first met at the
K-1 World Grand Prix 2002 Final Elimination
on October 5, 2002, where Sapp replaced an injured Cro Cop in his bout against Hoost.
[35]
The latter was expected to win thanks to his experience and technical superiority despite being outweighed by over 100 pounds, but Sapp claimed he would not need more than the first round to defeat Hoost, thus setting up an anticipated matchup.
[12]
Once the fight came around, all while under a television viewership of 19.8%,
[12]
Sapp surprised the crowd when he started dominating Hoost effectively through his already known charging strategy. By pushing Hoost against the ring's corners and unloading punches there with all of his strength, Sapp controlled the entire the first round, and still landed controversially three more punches after the bell sounded.
[36]
After the round, the ring doctor declared Hoost was unable to continue due to cuts, and Sapp was ultimately deemed winner while Hoost collapsed visibly in his corner, fulfilling his previous prediction.
[37]
His solid victory over Hoost, much like his dominant effort with Nogueira, proved that the trust put on Sapp by K-1 executives had not been in vain. Sapp would compare his situation to "taking someone off the streets and throwing him into the ring with
Mike Tyson
and then watching that person win," given how much he had accomplished with so little experience and training.
[10]
According to future adversary Mirko Cro Cop, Sapp's reputation caused that many potential opponents were scared to fight him, both in Pride and K-1.
[33]
However, Hoost was reportedly discontent with the match's refereeing, citing the illegalities committed by Sapp, and expressed desire for a rematch.
[38]
Two months later, Sapp was slated to fight
Semmy Schilt
at
K-1 World Grand Prix 2002 Final
quarter-finals, but an injury suffered by the latter granted Hoost his second chance as a replacement.
[37]
Sapp declared he would finish him in one round again.
[12]
The bout would be a more even affair, however, as although Sapp looked to use his familiar strategy, this time Hoost scored a knockdown through two well placed body blows and survived the first round. Hoost followed on this tactic at the second, but Sapp eventually stunned him and knocked him down in return via repeated arm clubs to the head. The fighters went back and forth for the rest of the assault, until a drained Sapp finally managed to corner Hoost and overwhelm him with unanswered haymakers.
[37]
At this point, referee
Nobuaki Kakuda
stopped the fight and gave Sapp the win.
[32]
Those last seconds were a new source of controversy, as while Hoost was receiving continuous punishment,
[32]
the stoppage still happened before he fell down.
[32]
[39]
A worn Sapp forfeited his place in the tournament due to exhaustion and an injured hand,
[26]
being ironically replaced by Hoost himself, who went to win the cup.
[37]
At the ending of 2002, Sapp fought professional wrestler
Yoshihiro Takayama
at the Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye event. After rushing Takayama to the ground as usual, Sapp proved he had his own way with basic submissions by transitioning to an armbar from mount, making the wrestler tap out. Their fight reached a 24.5 rating in TV.
[6]
By this time, Sapp's media schedule had grown up so much that he found himself without time to properly train for his fighting career. His trainer
Matt Hume
would describe it as, "if he would have had time to dedicate to strict training, he would have been
a better fighter, however K-1 and Bob's priority was media exposure, so we accepted it and worked with it."
[6]
2003
[
edit
]
Sapp's first defeat came at his fourth match, pitted against former K-1 champion
Mirko Cro Cop
on March 30, 2003. Despite being dedicated to mixed martial arts at the moment, Cro Cop had accepted the bout due to a lack of fighters willing to matchup with Sapp after his 2002 performance.
[33]
Sapp also prepared specially for the fight, learning proper
muay thai
and rumoredly training under
Bas Rutten
.
[40]
Although Sapp pushed the fight for a minute, the mobile Cro Cop landed a
liver shot
and followed with a left hand that shattered Sapp's
orbital bone
, causing him to collapse on the mat and give up while in visible pain.
[33]
He would need urgent surgery to repair the damage.
[34]
Both Sapp and Cro Cop later talked about rematching under MMA rules,
[40]
[34]
but this never came to fruition. Before this, Sapp had been placed in an upcoming fight against
Francisco Filho
, which had to be scrapped due to Sapp being ruled out from competition due to the injury.
[34]
A month later, hoping to capitalize on the success of Sapp and others, K-1 made a new fighting division called "Beast" (Sapp's nickname), which featured superheavyweights fighters such as
Choi Hong-man
. However, the division was stopped after two events due to disappointing reviews and gate takes. Still, Sapp was perceived to play a role in popularizing superheavyweights like Choi or
Giant Silva
in the sport, which he considered an accomplishment.
[6]
In August, Sapp participated in a special K-1 event in
Las Vegas
, where he went against
Ultimate Fighting Championship
veteran
Kimo Leopoldo
. Sapp had trained orthodox kickboxing with fellow UFC champion
Maurice Smith
for the match, and it could be noted in several powerful punches and knees that stunned Leopoldo.
[41]
However, Sapp's stamina started to falter, which a slightly better conditioned Leopoldo capitalized on to take his turn, eventually knocking Sapp down at the end of the round.
[41]
Controversy happened before the second, as referee
Nobuaki Kakuda
seemed to be deliberately giving Sapp time to recover, but the match continued anyway.
[6]
Perceiving himself outclassed at a technical level, Sapp decided to return to his old bullrushing style, which paid off quickly by knocking Leopoldo down with a left hand.
[6]
The UFC fighter tried to return the favor, but Sapp was already en route to overpower him and finally rendered him KO with an unchecked
rabbit punch
.
[41]
[6]
In a marked contrast to Japan, American audiences booed Sapp.
[6]
The event in Las Vegas would not end without more controversy, as the victorious Sapp got in a verbal confrontation with former boxing Undisputed Heavyweight Champion
Mike Tyson
, who was sitting at ringside.
[41]
Tyson jumped on the ring after Sapp and caused a brief brawl, after which Sapp and him exchanged challenges for a bout between the two. It was soon announced by K-1 that the match was in talks, with Tyson considering training with kickboxing coach
Jacob Duran
in case the bout was hosted under K-1 rules.
[42]
However, Tyson's status as a convicted
felon
made him unable to get a visa to fight in Japan where the fight would have been most profitable.
[43]
Other locations for the proposed fight were made, but the fight ultimately never happened.
Sapp returned to Japan in September, facing another superheavyweight, Stefan Gamlin, under MMA rules at K-1 Japan Grand Prix 2003. Despite being outweighed by the first time in his career, Sapp won in 0:52 with a
guillotine choke
. He continued challenging Tyson, claiming he would knock him out with
high kicks
, and also proposed a matchup against
Francois Botha
.
[44]
The next month, this time under K-1 rules, he fought Dutch champion
Remy Bonjasky
at the first round of the 2003 K-1 World Grand Prix. The match started with Bonjasky, famous for his
flying knees
and kicks, almost falling out the ring when Sapp threw him on the ropes in response to such attacks. The American chased a covered up Bonjasky through the ring while scoring punches and knees, but his opponent eventually bypassed his defense and landed a sharp
roundhouse kick
to end the first round. Bonkasky kept landing through the second, knocking Sapp down with a combination, but Sapp answered by pushing him to the ground and landing a heavy illegal punch. As Bonjasky refused to continue after the strike, Sapp was disqualified.
At the end of the year, Sapp was involved in a highly publicized matchup at
K-1 PREMIUM 2003 Dynamite!!
with former
yokozuna
Akebono Taro
, who was doing his debut. The combined popularity of Sapp and Akebono attracted a crowd of 45,000 to the
Nagoya Dome
and granted the event a 43% viewership (roughly 54 million of the 127 million people in Japan at the time), making it the first time a combat sports event outdrew the
NHK
music festival
K?haku Uta Gassen
, Japan's traditionally biggest New Year's Eve show.
[45]
The classical matchup of an American foreigner like Sapp against a Japanese national like Taro, a cultural contraposition, also gained comparisons with
Japanese professional wrestling
legend
Rikid?zan
in his bouts against
The Sharpe Brothers
.
[45]
The match itself, however, was short and intense. Though outweighed by over 150 pounds, Sapp had the advantage at experience and stamina, allowing him endure Akebono's initially energetic sumo pushes in order to counterattack. He attacked Akebono with
low kicks
and punching combinations to the head and body, knocking him down twice before finishing him by KO at 2:58.
[46]
[47]
After defeating Akebono, Sapp engaged in another verbal exchange with
Mike Tyson
about a possible match, although nothing came from it.
[46]
2004?2007
[
edit
]
Sapp opened 2004 facing
Dolgorsurengiin Sumyaabazar
, multiple wrestling champion and brother to yokozuna
Asashoryu
, under a mixed martial arts ruleset at his own event, K-1 Beast. Showing improvement in his MMA technique, Sapp defended from his
guard
after being taken down, trading short strikes from there and threatening with
Kimura locks
. Sumyaabazar ended up passing his guard, but Sapp reversed and captured his back, almost closing a rear naked choke, Sumyaabazar had to abandon the match before the second round due to a groin injury.
[48]
Only two weeks later, he fought against
Seth Petruzelli
, this time at kickboxing, but the result was similar: although he knocked Sapp down, Petruzelli injured his biceps and was forced to bow out.
After a 0:33 victory over
muay thai
journeyman Tommy Glanville, Sapp was pitted against wrestler
Kazuyuki Fujita
at K-1 Romanex. Although the American looked to strike, Fujita scored an early takedown and initiated a grappling scuffle. Sapp looked to defend from the bottom and at one point pursued a
heel hook
, transitioned into a
toehold
, but the Japanese escaped to his feet and started delivering
soccer kicks
with his
wrestling shoes
to Sapp's head. Fujita kept landing brutal kicks and punches to a desperately covered up Sapp until the latter tapped out at 2:15.
[49]
After this sound loss, Sapp lost again in a two-round fight against
Ray Sefo
.
At K-1 Premium Dynamite!! Sapp faced
Jerome Le Banner
in a special mixed rules match, in which first and third rounds would be under regular K-1 rules and under MMA rules the second and fourth. Sapp spent the first round covering and guarding up, almost being finished, but he recovered in the second one by taking down Le Banner and raining
ground and pound
from the
mount
. He kept the momentum at the third, utilizing a defensive strategy of charging and
clinching
to neutralize Le Banner; however, most of the action would take place at the fourth and last, which saw the two trading dominant positions and ended with Sapp looking for an
armlock
. Under the agreed upon rules, the fight was declared a draw. Sapp dedicated the fight to the memory of sparring partner Masaaki Miyamoto's father who had recently died.
[50]
2005 would be a fruitful year for Sapp, starting by a win over
judo
medalist
Kim Min-soo
at K-1's new MMA sub-promotion Hero's. Although the debutant Kim, clad in a full judogi, managed to cut Sapp with an early punch, the American swiftly overpowered him and knocked him out to punches in a minute. This prepared Sapp for a run to the 2005 K-1 Hiroshima Grand Prix, where he would face three fighters on a single night in order to qualify for the 2005 K-1 World Grand Prix. In a departure from his explosive yet ephemeral performances up to the point, Sapp showcased greatly improved stamina and much better technique, gained both after intensive training under his long time friend
Sam Greco
.
[51]
Sapp met upcoming fighter
Yoshihiro Nakao
in the quarter-final, where he would fight all three rounds in dominant fashion. Nakao taunted Sapp during the fight, but the American kept landing kicks and knees in addition to his personal bullrushing style, including also previously unseen
counterstrikes
.
[51]
After securing a unanimous decision, Sapp advanced round and faced young fighter
Hiraku Hori
, who had just defeated. This time Sapp increased his aggression and came near to finishing Hori early with a barrage of punches and a cut, but the Japanese resisted and kept him at bay with high kicks towards the end of the first round. The second would see Sapp uncharacteristically standing still and inviting his opponent to charge at him, which he capitalized on to knock down Hori with hooks before finishing him.
[51]
The final saw Sapp being pitted against Tatsufumi Tomihira, a
karateka
famous for his own fouls. The American methodically dismantled Tomihira, scoring two consecutive knockdowns in the first seconds and almost finishing him in the last ones with a cornering barrage. After slowing down in the second and third rounds, where they exchanged kicks and punches, Sapp controlled him for a unanimous decision win, taking the victory at the tournament.
[51]
In the post-event interview, Greco praised Sapp's dedication, while Sapp himself gave a speech about his tenure. "I've had low points in my career, now this is a high point and I am enjoying it! I think I've proven I belong in K-1."
[51]
As promised, Sapp won a prize of 5,000,000 yen and a place among the 16 fighters qualified for the K-1 World Grand Prix.
Shortly after, Sapp returned to MMA format for Hero's, where he was pitted against Russian sumo wrestler
Alan Karaev
. With Sapp's former opponent Akebono in attendance, Karaev surprised the American with aggression and a quick takedown to
mount
, but Sapp managed to get out after a failed
rear naked choke
attempt and hold his own mount for a longer time. Restarted the fight on the feet, Sapp knocked Karaev out with a left
jab
.
Come the K-1 Grand Prix 2005, Sapp was paired against fellow superheavyweight
Choi Hong-man
in the first round. Choi's large reach and great size allowed him to land hits regularly through Sapp's charges, but the latter pressed on and got an early knockdown by low kicks to the knee. However, although Sapp came aggressively again in the second round, his stamina started faltering, giving Choi the chance to unload multiple punches. Ultimately, a series of wild battles against an already similarly tired Choi were decided in the latter's favor, granting him a majority decision win.
On May 13, 2006, Sapp was to headline the K-1 show in the
Netherlands
against
Ernesto Hoost
, in which Hoost had stated that it was to be his last match in the Netherlands before his retirement. Sapp attended all the pre-fight press conferences and even attended the opening ceremonies for the show. It is unclear at the moment as to why, but Sapp pulled out of the event midway through the show. K-1 issued a statement claiming Sapp pulled out due to new demands he brought to promoters during the show. Sapp disagreed with K-1's account of events,
[52]
claiming the promotion had tried to delay his payment without any contractual safety.
[6]
However, he did participate in 2007's K-1 event in the
Amsterdam Arena
, fighting as a replacement for
Remy Bonjasky
against
Peter Aerts
. Sapp lost the fight by
KO
within 20 seconds in the first round by a knee to the
liver
.
After his falling out with K-1, Sapp began to get offers from
World Wrestling Entertainment
as well as
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling
to work with them, but his K-1 contract prohibited him from going through with any return to the ring. It was reported WWE was considering an
angle
between Sapp and
Chris Benoit
in case they managed to clear his contract out, but they were unsuccessful.
[6]
Sapp finally made a surprise return to the K-1 ring in Japan after a two-year absence against comedian and part-time K-1 competitor
Bobby Ologun
. Ologun was unable to mount any effective offense as he was quickly run down and overpowered by Sapp in the first round.
[53]
Afterwards, with his K-1 contract finally done, Sapp signed up with
Hustle
and focused on his professional wrestling career.
After K-1; turn into a "tomato can"
[
edit
]
Since his last matches for K-1 in 2007, Sapp continued his career for small promotions in a limited, non-competitive in-ring way that was described as
throwing fights
. He would step into the ring after great amounts of promotion, often against upcoming stars and heavily promoted local fighters, only to turtle down and tap out in a few seconds.
[54]
[55]
This routine, labelled in sports as a "
tomato can
" act,
[56]
[57]
effectively ended his already inconsistent reputation in the sports, attracting large losing streaks and the accusations of "making a mockery of the sport of MMA" and "being a one-man circus".
[54]
His usual commentator Mirko Cro Cop expressed his belief that Sapp was intentionally allowing himself to lose against very inferior opponents.
I asked him, "Bob, why are you doing this?" He is too dangerous, he is such a huge guy. I saw some of his fights, he was fighting in Europe. Ninety-nine percent of the fights he lost here in Europe, he could've kicked their asses easily. Why he didn't do that? To me, it looked like he was doing that with some intention. He just wanted to lose the fight.
[33]
When asked about it, Sapp denied he was throwing fights, and claimed he was doing this routine to collect quick paychecks in a late career he did not deem economically worthy to risk his health.
[54]
[55]
He also pointed out a perceived injustice in contemporaneous MMA business, where fighters carrying accolades and important legacies would be left in economic instability after retiring.
[55]
He explained:
Am I throwing these fights? No. Will I go into that ring and receive large amounts of damage for small paychecks? No. When it came to K-1, at the time, when everyone at K-1 was doing well, they get paid significantly enough to have you go into that ring, and hey, any kind of injury you get, they are going to pay. [...] These small organizations that you see that look so wonderful, they pay none of your bills if you get hurt, period. If you want to get hurt for a small amount of money in a fight, we call that the military.
[54]
You said it yourself, you have UFC fighters who are fighting more, and who are doing harder fights, and are getting less money. So you know what? [...] I do the same thing as everyone else, just as a promoter. They say fight business, and I am in the business of making money. How do I judge whether I have a successful fight? Success is judged by the measure of improvement. The measure of improvement in business is money.
[55]
Cage Rage, Strike Force and BAMMA
[
edit
]
On February 10, 2007, it was announced by the United Kingdom's
Cage Rage
promotion that Sapp would appear on its Cage Rage 21 event on April 21, facing
Gary Turner
. The move was partly a retaliatory one, as the
UFC
had chosen to run its first British show in years that same night at the Manchester Evening News Arena, headlined by
Mirko Cro Cop
,
Andrei Arlovski
and British star
Michael Bisping
. Though Cage Rage promoter Andy Geer said that the UFC show would not affect ticket sales for CR21, the signing of Sapp was a clear sign that the company knew it would need a superstar draw in order to successfully compete with the American promotion. A few days before the event Bob Sapp pulled out of the scheduled fight. On short notice,
Tank Abbott
stepped in for Sapp and lost to Gary Turner.
Sapp faced the South African fighter
Jan "The Giant" Nortje
at the
Strikeforce: At The Dome
event in
Tacoma, Washington
, at the
Tacoma Dome
on February 23, 2008. Sapp was defeated at the 55-second mark of the first round by TKO after receiving an unanswered amount of punches. Sapp then returned to Japan on New Year's Eve 2008 and defeated Akihito Tanaka via first-round TKO.
Sapp lost to Japanese
Ikuhisa Minowa
at
Dream 9
on May 26, 2009,
[58]
due to Achilles lock. He fought and lost to
Bobby Lashley
at Ultimate Chaos in
Biloxi, Mississippi
, on June 27, 2009, due to first round tapout from strikes. On October 6, Sapp stood in for an injured
Gegard Mousasi
to face
Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou
in the semi-finals at
Dream 11
.
[59]
He lost via TKO (punches) in the first round.
On November 27, Sapp fought against Swedish K-1 veteran
Jorgen Kruth
. The fight got a lot of publicity in Swedish and international press, but ended with an anticlimax when Sapp's corner threw in the towel after only 45 seconds, after Kruth hit Sapp with a knee to the liver.
Sapp was next going to face Stav Economou at
BAMMA 5
,
[60]
but the event was canceled due to extreme weather conditions.
[61]
Dynamite, ONE and Legend
[
edit
]
Sapp was scheduled to fight at
K1 Dynamite!! 2010
. He was set to battle Shinichi Suzukawa on New Year's Eve in a Pancrase-style matchup, but pulled out at the last minute due to contract disputes.
[62]
When questioned about Sapp's refusal to fight on the day of the event,
FEG
President
Sadaharu Tanikawa
asked, "Does anyone actually care? I don't know the reasons why, but we did our best to make him fight. He just said he didn't want to. This is typical [of Sapp]."
[63]
Sapp claims he refused to fight after promoters were contracted to pay him $30,000 for the fight, but Tanikawa only offered him $15,000 after he arrived in Japan for the event.
[64]
On February 11, 2012, Sapp debuted for the Asian ONE Fighting Championship promotion. He faced
Rolles Gracie
at
ONE Fighting Championship: Battle of Heroes
in Jakarta, Indonesia and lost via submission to strikes in the first round.
Sapp fought in the main event of the
Super Fight League
's inaugural event,
SFL 1
, against
James Thompson
on March 11, 2012. Sapp tapped out due to a Thompson takedown that caused a leg injury to Sapp in the first round.
[65]
He also fought
Y?suke Nishijima
in Nishijima's retirement fight under kickboxing rules
Legend 4
in Kumamoto, Japan on November 17, 2013. Sapp was dropped with a body shot, stood back up but was then finished with body shots followed by couple of right hooks.
[66]
[67]
[68]
Sapp announced his retirement in April 2014 citing that he'd paid off big medical bills and will be retiring with several million dollars in savings (including money doing work outside of fights).
[69]
Returning to kickboxing after a nearly two-year hiatus, Sapp appeared at Fight Night Saint Tropez on August 4, 2017, in
Saint Tropez
, France.
[70]
He faced Greg Tony and lost the bout via TKO in the first round.
On January 27, 2018, Sapp faced Selcuk Ustabasi at MFC 24. Sapp lost the bout via TKO in the first round.
Rizin Fighting Federation
[
edit
]
Sapp had a rematch against
Akebono
with
shoot boxing
rules on December 31, 2015, at
Rizin Fighting Federation
Grand Prix event.
[71]
Unlike his usual performances, he won the fight by technical decision.
He returned in September 2018 at Rizin 13, where he fought former sumo
Osunaarashi
. Sapp received intense striking during the first round and was taken down at the second, but he reversed Osunaarashi as they fell and gained top position, from which he controlled the rest of the round. He went to dominate an uneventful last round for a unanimous decision and his first MMA win in nearly nine years.
[
citation needed
]
Boxing
[
edit
]
Sapp was said to go up against
Mike Tyson
in a 8-round
exhibition boxing
match, however no personal terms were agreed and Tyson fought
Roy Jones Jr.
instead.
[72]
Clout MMA
[
edit
]
Sapp was scheduled to fight Piotr Piechowiak at Clout MMA 2: Omiela?czuk vs. Bad Boy, but the bout was cancelled.
Fighting style
[
edit
]
Having no background in martial arts prior to his fighting career, Sapp's fighting style was relatively devoid of technique, and was more so distinguished by an aggressive usage of size and strength, pressuring his opponents with an unorthodox "bullrush" technique (which he dubbed as "NFL Style"), whereby he would rush an opponent, usually at the beginning of the round, and overwhelm them with a barrage of punches.
Although defined by his brute strength, Sapp's wins over opponents such as Yoshihiro Takayama and Stefan Gamlin showed that he did possess a knowledge of basic submission techniques.
Personal life
[
edit
]
In December 2017, it was reported in Japanese newspaper
Shukan Bunshun
that a woman claiming to be Sapp's girlfriend accused him of
domestic violence
. She provided photographs of the alleged injuries and told how she had been abused by Sapp for six years.
[73]
Although the article included an apology message supposedly sent by him, Sapp did not make public comments about the accusation.
[74]
No civil suit was filed, and no criminal proceedings were announced as a result of the allegations.
Championships and accomplishments
[
edit
]
Kickboxing and mixed martial arts
[
edit
]
Professional wrestling
[
edit
]
Kickboxing record
[
edit
]
12 wins (9 KOs), 19 losses
|
Result
|
Record
|
Opponent
|
Method
|
Event
|
Date
|
Round
|
Time
|
Location
|
Notes
|
Loss
|
12?19
|
Selcuk Ustabasi
|
TKO (punch)
|
MFC 24
|
January 27, 2018
|
1
|
0:56
|
?zmir
, Turkey
|
|
Loss
|
12?18
|
Gregory Tony
|
TKO (punch)
|
Fight Night Saint-Tropez
|
August 4, 2017
|
1
|
1:40
|
Saint-Tropez
, France
|
|
Win
|
12?17
|
Akebono
|
Technical Decision
|
Rizin Fighting Federation 2
|
December 31, 2015
|
2
|
0:49
|
Saitama (city)
, Japan
|
Shoot boxing
rules.
|
Loss
|
11?17
|
Y?suke Nishijima
|
TKO (punches)
|
Legend 4
|
November 17, 2013
|
1
|
2:36
|
Kumamoto
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
11?16
|
Taishan
|
KO (punch)
|
IGF GENOME 24
|
February 23, 2013
|
1
|
1:39
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
11?15
|
Rok ?trucl
|
TKO (punch)
|
WFC 16
|
April 22, 2012
|
1
|
1:35
|
Ljubljana
, Slovenia
|
|
Win
|
11?14
|
Tofan Pirani
|
TKO (injury)
|
DIBC 2012
|
February 2, 2012
|
2
|
N/A
|
Dubai
, United Arab Emirates
|
Pirani injured himself while kicking Sapp.
|
Loss
|
10?14
|
Alexandru Lungu
|
KO (left hook)
|
SUPERKOMBAT World Grand Prix IV 2011
|
October 15, 2011
|
1
|
0:56
|
Piatra Neam?
, Romania
|
|
Loss
|
10?13
|
Florian Pavic
|
Decision (unanimous)
|
Steko's Fight Night
|
August 26, 2011
|
3
|
3:00
|
Karlsruhe
, Germany
|
|
Loss
|
10?12
|
Tivadar Kunkli
|
TKO (elbow)
|
Fight Code: Dragons Round 3
|
May 1, 2011
|
1
|
N/A
|
Budapest
, Hungary
|
|
Loss
|
10?11
|
Masayoshi Kakutani
|
KO (knee)
|
Inoki Genome Federation 15
|
April 28, 2011
|
1
|
1:19
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
10?10
|
Jorgen Kruth
|
TKO (corner stoppage)
|
K-1 Scandinavia Rumble of the Kings 2010
|
November 27, 2010
|
1
|
1:19
|
Stockholm
, Sweden
|
|
Loss
|
10?9
|
Patrice Quarteron
|
KO (knee)
|
A1 World Combat Cup
|
November 28, 2009
|
1
|
2:32
|
Lyon
, France
|
|
Loss
|
10?8
|
Alain Ngalani
|
Decision
|
Planet Battle IV
|
October 7, 2009
|
3
|
3:00
|
Wan Chai
, Hong Kong
|
|
Loss
|
10?7
|
Peter Aerts
|
KO (left knee)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2007 in Amsterdam
|
June 23, 2007
|
1
|
0:26
|
Amsterdam
, Netherlands
|
|
Loss
|
10?6
|
Musashi
|
Decision (unanimous)
|
K-1 PREMIUM 2005 Dynamite!!
|
December 31, 2005
|
3
|
3:00
|
Osaka
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
10?5
|
Choi Hong-man
|
Decision (majority)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2005 in Osaka ? Final Elimination
|
September 25, 2005
|
3
|
3:00
|
Osaka
, Japan
|
2005
K-1 World Grand Prix
opening round.
|
Win
|
10?4
|
Tatsufumi Tomihira
|
Decision (unanimous)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2005 in Hiroshima
|
June 14, 2005
|
3
|
3:00
|
Hiroshima
, Japan
|
2005 Hiroshima Grand Prix final.
|
Win
|
9?4
|
Hiraku Hori
|
KO (strikes)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2005 in Hiroshima
|
June 14, 2005
|
2
|
1:54
|
Hiroshima
, Japan
|
2005 Hiroshima Grand Prix semi-final.
|
Win
|
8?4
|
Yoshihiro Nakao
|
Decision (unanimous)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2005 in Hiroshima
|
June 14, 2005
|
3
|
3:00
|
Hiroshima
, Japan
|
2005 Hiroshima Grand Prix quarter-final.
|
Loss
|
7?4
|
Ray Sefo
|
KO (body shot)
|
K-1 Beast 2004 in Shizuoka
|
June 26, 2004
|
2
|
0:29
|
Shizuoka
, Japan
|
|
Win
|
7?3
|
Tommy Glanville
|
KO (left hooks)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2004 in Las Vegas I
|
April 30, 2004
|
1
|
0:33
|
Las Vegas, Nevada
, United States
|
|
Win
|
6?3
|
Seth Petruzelli
|
TKO (elbow injury)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2004 in Saitama
|
March 27, 2004
|
1
|
0:57
|
Saitama
, Japan
|
|
Win
|
5?3
|
Akebono
|
KO (right hook)
|
K-1 PREMIUM 2003 Dynamite!!
|
December 31, 2003
|
1
|
2:58
|
Nagoya
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
4?3
|
Remy Bonjasky
|
DQ (punch on the ground)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 Final Elimination
|
October 11, 2003
|
2
|
1:20
|
Osaka
, Japan
|
2003
K-1 World Grand Prix
opening round.
|
Win
|
4?2
|
Kimo Leopoldo
|
KO (punch)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 in Las Vegas II
|
August 13, 2003
|
2
|
1:11
|
Las Vegas, Nevada
, United States
|
|
Loss
|
3?2
|
Mirko Cro Cop
|
KO (left cross)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 in Saitama
|
March 30, 2003
|
1
|
1:26
|
Saitama, Japan
|
|
Win
|
3?1
|
Ernesto Hoost
|
TKO (referee stoppage)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2002 Final
|
December 7, 2002
|
2
|
2:53
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
2002
K-1 World Grand Prix
quarter-final.
|
Win
|
2?1
|
Ernesto Hoost
|
TKO (doctor stoppage)
|
K-1 World Grand Prix 2002 Final Elimination
|
October 5, 2002
|
1
|
3:00
|
Saitama
, Japan
|
2002
K-1 World Grand Prix
opening round.
|
Win
|
1?1
|
Cyril Abidi
|
TKO (referee stoppage)
|
K-1 Andy Spirits Japan GP 2002 Final
|
September 22, 2002
|
1
|
1:17
|
Osaka
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
0?1
|
Tsuyoshi Nakasako
|
DQ (punch on the ground)
|
K-1 Survival 2002
|
June 2, 2002
|
1
|
1:30
|
Toyama
, Japan
|
|
- Legend
-
Win
-
Loss
-
Draw/No contest
|
Mixed martial arts record
[
edit
]
Professional record breakdown
32 matches
|
12 wins
|
20 losses
|
By knockout
|
8
|
15
|
By submission
|
3
|
4
|
By decision
|
1
|
0
|
By disqualification
|
0
|
1
|
Res.
|
Record
|
Opponent
|
Method
|
Event
|
Date
|
Round
|
Time
|
Location
|
Notes
|
Win
|
12?20
|
Osunaarashi
|
Decision (unanimous)
|
Rizin 13
|
September 30, 2018
|
3
|
3:00
|
Saitama
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
11?20
|
Aori Gele
|
TKO (punches)
|
Road FC 32
|
July 2, 2016
|
1
|
0:35
|
Changsha
, China
|
|
Loss
|
11?19
|
Edson Franca
|
Submission (rear-naked choke)
|
OX MMA
|
August 8, 2013
|
1
|
0:35
|
Fortaleza
, Brazil
|
|
Loss
|
11?18
|
Aleksander Emelianenko
|
TKO (punches)
|
Legend Fighting Show
|
May 25, 2013
|
1
|
1:18
|
Moscow, Russia
|
|
Loss
|
11?17
|
Dusan Panajotovic
|
TKO (submission to punches)
|
Night of the Champions 2012
|
September 15, 2012
|
1
|
1:28
|
Belgrade
, Serbia
|
|
Loss
|
11?16
|
Jong Dae Kim
|
TKO (punches)
|
Road FC 8
|
June 16, 2012
|
2
|
1:58
|
Wonju
, South Korea
|
|
Loss
|
11?15
|
Tolegen Akylbekov
|
TKO (submission to punches)
|
Bushido Lithuania vol.51
|
June 8, 2012
|
1
|
1:29
|
Astana
, Kazakhstan
|
|
Loss
|
11?14
|
Soa Palelei
|
TKO (punches)
|
Cage Fighting Championship 21
|
May 18, 2012
|
1
|
0:12
|
Sydney, Australia
|
|
Loss
|
11?13
|
Mariusz Pudzianowski
|
TKO (punches)
|
KSW 19
|
May 12, 2012
|
1
|
0:40
|
Łod?
, Poland
|
|
Loss
|
11?12
|
James Thompson
|
TKO (leg injury)
|
SFL 1
|
March 11, 2012
|
1
|
1:56
|
Mumbai
, India
|
|
Loss
|
11?11
|
Rolles Gracie
|
TKO (submission to punches)
|
ONE Fighting Championship: Battle of Heroes
|
February 11, 2012
|
1
|
1:18
|
Jakarta
, Indonesia
|
|
Loss
|
11?10
|
Alexander Otsuka
|
DQ (illegal slams)
|
Accel ? Vol. 18: X'mas Seiya Matsuri
|
December 25, 2011
|
2
|
1:43
|
Kobe
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
11?9
|
Maro Perak
|
TKO (punches)
|
Noc Gladijatora 6
|
December 16, 2011
|
1
|
3:04
|
Dubrovnik
, Croatia
|
|
Loss
|
11?8
|
Attila Ucar
|
Submission (achilles lock)
|
Premium Fight Night
|
April 30, 2011
|
1
|
0:56
|
Vienna
, Austria
|
|
Loss
|
11?7
|
Stav Economou
|
TKO (punches)
|
ADFC: Round 3
|
March 11, 2011
|
1
|
1:45
|
Abu Dhabi
, United Arab Emirates
|
|
Win
|
11?6
|
Sascha Weinpolter
|
Submission (forearm choke)
|
K-1 ColliZion 2010 Croatia
|
March 27, 2010
|
1
|
2:03
|
Split
, Croatia
|
|
Loss
|
10?6
|
Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou
|
TKO (punches)
|
Dream 11
|
October 6, 2009
|
1
|
1:31
|
Yokohama
, Japan
|
DREAM Super Hulk Grand Prix Semi-final. Replaced
Gegard Mousasi
.
|
Loss
|
10?5
|
Bobby Lashley
|
TKO (submission to punches)
|
Fight Force International: Ultimate Chaos
|
June 27, 2009
|
1
|
3:18
|
Biloxi, Mississippi
, United States
|
|
Loss
|
10?4
|
Ikuhisa Minowa
|
Submission (achilles lock)
|
Dream 9
|
May 26, 2009
|
1
|
1:16
|
Yokohama
, Japan
|
DREAM Super Hulk Grand Prix Quarterfinal.
|
Win
|
10?3
|
Akihito Tanaka
|
TKO (punches)
|
Fields Dynamite!! 2008
|
December 31, 2008
|
1
|
5:22
|
Saitama
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
9?3
|
Jan Nortje
|
TKO (punches)
|
Strikeforce: At The Dome
|
February 23, 2008
|
1
|
0:55
|
Tacoma, Washington
, United States
|
|
Win
|
9?2
|
Bobby Ologun
|
TKO (punches)
|
K-1 Premium 2007 Dynamite!!
|
December 31, 2007
|
1
|
4:10
|
Osaka
, Japan
|
|
Win
|
8?2
|
Kim Jong Wang
|
TKO (punches)
|
Hero's
2005 in Seoul
|
November 5, 2005
|
1
|
0:08
|
Seoul
, South Korea
|
|
Win
|
7?2
|
Alan Karaev
|
KO (punch)
|
Hero's
2
|
July 6, 2005
|
1
|
3:44
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
|
Win
|
6?2
|
Min-Soo Kim
|
KO (punches)
|
Hero's
1
|
March 26, 2005
|
1
|
1:12
|
Saitama
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
5?2
|
Kazuyuki Fujita
|
TKO (submission to soccer kicks)
|
K-1 MMA ROMANEX
|
May 22, 2004
|
1
|
2:15
|
Saitama
, Japan
|
|
Win
|
5?1
|
Dolgorsurengiin Sumyaabazar
|
TKO (foot injury)
|
K-1 Beast 2004 in Niigata
|
March 14, 2004
|
1
|
5:00
|
Niigata
, Japan
|
|
Win
|
4?1
|
Stefan Gamlin
|
Submission (standing guillotine choke)
|
K-1 Japan Grand Prix 2003
|
September 21, 2003
|
1
|
0:52
|
Yokohama
, Japan
|
|
Win
|
3?1
|
Yoshihiro Takayama
|
Submission (armbar)
|
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2002
|
December 31, 2002
|
1
|
2:16
|
Saitama
, Japan
|
|
Loss
|
2?1
|
Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
|
Submission (armbar)
|
Pride Shockwave
|
August 28, 2002
|
2
|
4:03
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
|
Win
|
2?0
|
Kiyoshi Tamura
|
KO (punches)
|
Pride 21
|
June 23, 2002
|
1
|
0:11
|
Saitama
, Japan
|
|
Win
|
1?0
|
Yoshihisa Yamamoto
|
KO (punches)
|
Pride 20
|
April 28, 2002
|
1
|
2:44
|
Yokohama
, Japan
|
|
Mixed rules record
[
edit
]
Professional record breakdown
1 match
|
0 wins
|
0 losses
|
Draws
|
1
|
Filmography
[
edit
]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
"Bob 'The Beast' Sapp MMA Stats, Pictures, News, Videos, biography"
. Sherdog.com. September 22, 1973
. Retrieved
October 18,
2012
.
- ^
"Bob Sapp NFL Football Statistics"
.
Pro-Football-Reference.com
. September 22, 1974
. Retrieved
October 18,
2012
.
- ^
Bob Sapp (September 22, 1973).
"Bob Sapp, G at"
. National Football League
. Retrieved
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2012
.
- ^
"Scheduled Fighters"
.
RIZIN FIGHTING FEDERATION
. Archived from
the original
on November 22, 2015
. Retrieved
December 1,
2015
.
- ^
"The Bob Sapp Story: A former Bear's rise to Japanese stardom"
.
sports.yahoo.com
. April 18, 2017
. Retrieved
February 28,
2022
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
Jonathan Snowden (2010).
Total MMA: Inside Ultimate Fighting
.
ECW Press
.
ISBN
978-15-549033-7-5
.
- ^
"1997 NFL Draft Listing"
.
Pro-Football-Reference.com
. Retrieved
March 30,
2023
.
- ^
"Chicago Bears: Best and worst draft picks"
.
NFL.com
. Retrieved
August 15,
2023
.
- ^
Mayer, Larry (April 25, 2013).
"These Bears draft picks gained fame in other areas"
.
Chicago Bears
. Archived from
the original
on April 28, 2013
. Retrieved
April 25,
2013
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
"A Muscle & Fitness Interview with K1 Fighter, Bob Sapp | Muscle & Fitness"
. Archived from
the original
on March 11, 2017
. Retrieved
April 1,
2014
.
- ^
"Profile at Puroresu Central"
. Puroresu Central
. Retrieved
April 13,
2013
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
"October 2002 News Archive"
.
Ichiban Puroresu
. October 2002
. Retrieved
January 1,
2019
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"August 2002 News Archive"
.
Ichiban Puroresu
. August 2002
. Retrieved
December 30,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
Manning, Jason.
"WRESTLE-1 SKY PerfecTV! PPV"
.
Puroresu Central
. Retrieved
January 5,
2019
.
- ^
Wilson, Kevin.
"New Japan Nexess"
.
Puroresu Central
. Retrieved
September 21,
2015
.
- ^
"スポ?ツナビ"
. Sportsnavi.yahoo.co.jp. Archived from
the original
on September 29, 2011
. Retrieved
October 18,
2012
.
- ^
"スポ?ツナビ"
. Sportsnavi.yahoo.co.jp. Archived from
the original
on September 29, 2011
. Retrieved
October 18,
2012
.
- ^
a
b
"World Wrestling Association World Heavyweight Title"
. Wrestling-Titles.com
. Retrieved
January 16,
2024
.
- ^
Sergio Non (February 1, 2011).
"Bob Sapp back to pro wrestling"
.
USA Today
.
- ^
??ピ?タ?パン2011~二度あることは三度ある~
.
Dramatic Dream Team
(in Japanese). Archived from
the original
on May 30, 2012
. Retrieved
December 23,
2012
.
- ^
DDT「??ピ?タ?パン2011~二度あることは三度ある~」
.
Sports Navi
(in Japanese).
Yahoo!
. July 24, 2011. Archived from
the original
on November 6, 2011
. Retrieved
December 23,
2012
.
- ^
"NJPW 40th anniversary Tour Road to Tokyo Dome"
.
New Japan Pro-Wrestling
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
December 23,
2012
.
- ^
"Wrestle Kingdom 7 ~Evolution~ in 東京ド?ム"
.
New Japan Pro-Wrestling
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
January 4,
2013
.
- ^
"Invasion Attack"
.
New Japan Pro-Wrestling
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
April 7,
2013
.
- ^
"武藤新??「Wrestle-1」旗揚げ?"
.
Sports Navi
(in Japanese).
Yahoo!
. September 8, 2013. Archived from
the original
on September 11, 2013
. Retrieved
September 8,
2013
.
- ^
a
b
"Infinity Fitness | Articles"
. Archived from
the original
on June 1, 2013
. Retrieved
April 1,
2014
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Johnson visits with Bob 'The Beast' Sapp"
.
247sports.com
. Retrieved
December 15,
2018
.
- ^
"Yoshihisa Yamamoto MMA Stats, Pictures, News, Videos, biography"
. Sherdog.com. July 4, 1970
. Retrieved
October 18,
2012
.
- ^
"Kiyoshi Tamura MMA Stats, Pictures, News, Videos, biography"
. Sherdog.com. December 17, 1969
. Retrieved
October 18,
2012
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
Keith Vargo,
Courage and Controversy Reign at Shockwave Event
, Black Belt magazine, January 2003
- ^
a
b
c
d
"MMA Review: #37: Pride/K1 Shockwave 2002"
.
The Oratory
. January 5, 2005
. Retrieved
December 30,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"February 2003 News Archive"
.
Ichiban Puroresu
. February 2003
. Retrieved
January 1,
2019
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
Shaun Al-Satti (March 4, 2014).
"Mirko Cro Cop reflects on Pride, the UFC, and why 'everybody was terrified of fighting Bob Sapp'
"
.
MMA Fighting
. Retrieved
December 30,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
"April 2003 News Archive"
.
Ichiban Puroresu
. April 2003
. Retrieved
November 19,
2018
.
- ^
"September 2002 News Archive"
.
Ichiban Puroresu
. September 2002
. Retrieved
January 1,
2019
.
- ^
Archived at
Ghostarchive
and the
Wayback Machine
:
"K-1 Classics: Ernesto Hoost vs. Bob Sapp Feud"
.
YouTube
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Keith Vargo,
Hoost Captures Fourth K-1 Grand Prix Title
, Black Belt magazine, April 2003
- ^
"November 2002 News Archive"
.
Ichiban Puroresu
. November 2002
. Retrieved
January 1,
2019
.
- ^
"Bob Sapp's Life Story too Good for Reality TV (Story from Yahoo! Sports)"
. MMAJunkie.com. February 23, 2008
. Retrieved
December 15,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
"March 2003 News Archive"
.
Ichiban Puroresu
. March 2003
. Retrieved
January 5,
2019
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
J. Michael Plott,
Bob Sapp Confronts Mike Tyson in K-1 event
, Black Belt magazine, December 2003
- ^
Zac Robinson, Jacob "Stitch" Duran,
From the Fields to the Garden: The Life of Stitch Duran
, Black Mesa Publishing, 2010
- ^
"K-1 Reports Official Mike Tyson Fight"
. Tysontalk.com. Archived from
the original
on November 18, 2011
. Retrieved
October 18,
2012
.
- ^
"September 2003 News Archive"
.
Ichiban Puroresu
. September 2003
. Retrieved
January 5,
2019
.
- ^
a
b
Jayson Makoto Chung,
A Nation of a Hundred Million Idiots?: A Social History of Japanese Television
, Routledge, 2006
- ^
a
b
Former NFL Player Bob Sapp Trades the Field for the Fighting Ring
, Jet magazine, January 2004
- ^
Mark Panek,
Gaijin Yokozuna: A Biography of Chad Rowan
, University of Hawaii Press, 2006
- ^
Monty DiPietro,
Sapp and Japanese Strikers Win at K-1 Beast 2004
, Black Belt magazine, June 2004
- ^
Monty DiPietro,
Sapp Crushed at K-1 ROMANEX Show
, Black Belt magazine, September 2004
- ^
"Brazilian Dynamite: Gracie Submits Akebono"
. Sherdog.com
. Retrieved
September 25,
2016
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
"The Beast is Back! Sapp Wins Japan K-1 GP"
. Sherdog.com
. Retrieved
January 4,
2019
.
- ^
"MMA Ring Report"
. Archived from
the original
on December 17, 2007
. Retrieved
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2012
.
- ^
Monty DiPietro (January 1, 2008).
"Sakuraba Still Dynamite!!"
.
Onthemat
. Retrieved
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2019
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Adam Guillen Jr. (May 22, 2012).
"Bob Sapp: 'I'm not throwing fights, but I will not receive bodily damage for a small paycheck'
"
. mmamania-com
. Retrieved
December 31,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Shaun Al-Satti (May 21, 2012).
"Bob Sapp Denies Throwing Fights, Calls Himself 'a Pioneer' of MMA"
. mmafighting-com
. Retrieved
December 31,
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.
- ^
Mario Yanitelli (November 14, 2009).
"Top Five Tomato Cans in MMA History: Fighters Meant For The Meat Grinder"
. Bleacherreport
. Retrieved
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2019
.
- ^
Scott Harris (March 1, 2012).
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. Bleacherreport
. Retrieved
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2019
.
- ^
"DREAM | OLYMPIA DREAM.9 フェザ?級グランプリ2009 2ndROUND 第1試合/ス?パ?ハルクト?ナメント1回?"
. Dreamofficial.com
. Retrieved
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2012
.
- ^
"Bob Sapp To Face Sokoudjou at Dream 11"
.
MMA Weekly
. September 9, 2009.
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"Welcome to BAMMA ? Home"
. Bamma.com. Archived from
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. Retrieved
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.
- ^
"MMA News | BAMMA 5 Cancelled; Weather Conditions Cited | Your MMA ? Our Passion"
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- ^
Dave Meltzer (December 31, 2010).
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. Yahoo!.
- ^
Tony Loiseleur.
"
'Dynamite' Notebook: FEG Restructures for Spring 2011 Return"
.
Sherdog
.
- ^
Steven Marrocco.
"Bob Sapp explains DREAM "Dynamite!! 2010" no-show, says DREAM is "broke"
"
. MMAjunkie. Archived from
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on January 21, 2011.
- ^
"Weekend Rundown-Leg Injury Forces Bob-Sapp to Submit to James Thompson in India"
. Sherdog.com. March 11, 2012.
- ^
Nishijima meets Bob Sapp in Retirement Match with Legend kickboxing promotion
- ^
"LEGEND 4 ? 11/17/2013: Nishijima retires after KO victory over Sapp"
. Archived from
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- ^
"【LEGEND】西島、引退試合でボブ?サップを秒殺KO (イ?ファイト) - Yahoo!ニュ?ス"
. Archived from
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- ^
"Sapp says he can retire now that he has $10mil"
. May 18, 2014.
- ^
Parviz Iskenderov
(June 16, 2017).
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.
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- ^
"Rizin FF ? Rizin Fighting Federation 2"
.
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- ^
Sarkar, Raj (July 25, 2021).
"Mike Tyson Reveals Why He Never Fought Bob Sapp"
.
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Victor Rodriguez (December 21, 2017).
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.
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"Bob Sapp accused of domestic violence by ex-girlfriend"
.
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. Retrieved
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.
- ^
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.
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. Archived from
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.
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. February 17, 2016.
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.
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"Pro Wrestling illustrated 500 ? 2004 :26 Bob Sapp".
Pro Wrestling Illustrated
. Blue Bell,
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- ^
東京スポ?ツ プロレス大賞
.
Tokyo Sports
(in Japanese)
. Retrieved
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- ^
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(January 26, 2011). "Biggest issue of the year: The 2011 Wrestling Observer Newsletter Awards Issue".
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. Campbell, CA: 1?40.
ISSN
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. K-1 Grand Prix Website. Archived from
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. Retrieved
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2009
.
External links
[
edit
]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Bob Sapp
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