Articles tagged as takanori
Video: Best of PRIDE featuring Takanori Gomi and Shinya Aoki
PRIDE never die, clearly, as it continually comes back to life in a series of ZUFFA-produced highlight video packages on FUEL TV. That includes Takanori Gomi (33-8), former PRIDE Lightweight Champion, who at one time was considered the finest 155-pounder in all of mixed martial arts (MMA).
From the official website:
Takanori "The Fireball Kid" Gomi got back to his winning ways against Chute Boxe fighter Jadyson Costa at Pride: Bushido 2. Gomi unleashed a barrage of fierce ground and pound that stopped Costa in his tracks and put Gomi back on track.
"Best of PRIDE" also showcases the mad submission skills of another Japanese lightweight standout, Shinya Aoki (30-5), after the jump.
Here's what they said about the DREAM deity:
Japanese submission wizard Shinya Aoki tested his skills against American wrestler Clay French at Pride Bushido 13. French spent the majority of the bout valiantly defending against the dazzling jiu-jitsu of Aoki, but ultimately succumbed to an out-of-nowhere flying triangle choke that has to be seen to be believed.
Anyone wish "The Tobikan Judan" would have (or still might) find his way inside the Octagon?
Props: Bloody Elbow
Posted in: gomi, aoki, pride, takanori, shinya
Read the full article at MMA Mania
Best Of Pride Videos: Shinya Aoki and Takanori Gomi Shine In These Classic Bouts
Fuel TV is releasing some nifty videos from their Best of Pride series. The video above is Shinya Aoki vs Clay French from Pride Bushido 13 on November 5, 2006. Here's Fuel TV's description of the action:
Japanese submission wizard Shinya Aoki tested his skills against American wrestler Clay French at Pride Bushido 13. French spent the majority of the bout valiantly defending against the dazzling jiu-jitsu of Aoki, but ultimately succumbed to an out-of-nowhere flying triangle choke that has to be seen to be believed.
After the jump is a video of Takanori Gomi in some vintage Fireball Kid action.
The above is from Takanori Gomi vs. Jadson Costa at Pride Bushido 2 on February 15, 2004. Here's Fuel TV's description of the action:
Takanori "The Fireball Kid" Gomi got back to his winning ways against Chute Boxe fighter Jadyson Costa at Pride: Bushido 2. Gomi unleashed a barrage of fierce ground and pound that stopped Costa in his tracks and put Gomi back on track.
Posted in: video, gomi, aoki, pride, takanori
Read the full article at Bloody Elbow
UFC 144 Prelims: Takanori Gomi Stops Eiji Mitsuoka in Stirring Comeback
Former Pride Fighting Championships lightweight titleholder Takanori Gomi still houses some of the competitive fire that made him a global superstar.
Posted in: championship, gomi, takanori, eiji mitsuoka, eiji
Read the full article at Sherdog
UFC 144 Results: Takanori Gomi Stops Eiji Mitsuoka In The Second
Takanori Gomi defeats Eiji Mitsuoka by TKO. The stoppage came at 2:21 in the second round.
Eiji Mitsuoka landed a short left hand and was quickly counter by Takanori Gomi's own punch. Mitsuoka came forward and was momentarily dropped by Gomi. Mitsuoka shoots for an ankle pick and Gomi defended well by stepping out. Mitsuoka with a leg kick and Gomi landed a combination. Gomi looked loose but kept his hands at his waist looking for the power punch. Mitsuoka landed and stunned Gomi. He followed up with an uppercut which stood Gomi straight up. Gomi lazily threw a punch and was dropped with a straight right hand. Mitsuoka quickly took Gomi's back and set up a very tight inverted triangle. Gomi survived the round but was moments from being forced to submit.
Mitsuoka aggressive as the second round begins. Gomi turned the tables and was able to land several punches on the tired Mitsuoka. Both fighters stood in the pocket taking unnecessary damage but it was Mitsuoka who looked to get the fight to the ground. Gomi sprawled out and took short shots to the head while in the turtle position. Mitsuoka did nothing to defend himself and the referee was forced to stop the fight.
Takanori Gomi is now 2-3 in the UFC. Eiji Mitsuoka was making his UFC debut.
SBN coverage of UFC 144: Edgar vs. Henderson
Posted in: ufc, gomi, takanori, eiji, mitsuoka
Read the full article at Bloody Elbow
Takanori Gomi did his UFC 144 interviews dressed up like a homeless ninja, and it looked awesome
In any given fight, Takanori Gomi has the ability to do this to someone's head. If first-round knockouts were unsuccessful feature-length movies created from videogames, Gomi would be the Uwe Boll of MMA. Granted, Rampage was about a guy that makes a full body suit of kevlar and just kills people for two hours which pretty much makes it the greatest movie ever made. It also makes it a biographical piece if Takanori Gomi made a suit of kevlar and visited Newark, New Jersey.
Takanori Gomi tweets in English, yet refuses to speak the language in his pre -fight interviews. He does, however, have a suave translator who even nails down the idioms used by Gomi. I only wonder if he can translate phrases like '[Expletive] your life', 'ZUFFA Zombies', 'Bozo MMA analysts' and a variety of other terms that would somehow have [expletive] in them. Nevertheless, watch Takanori Gomi dress up like a homeless ninja and still be infinitely cooler than you in this MMAWeekly clip from the UFC 144 pre-fight press conference media scrum.
Posted in: takanori gomi, gomi, takanori, body suit, featurelength movies
Read the full article at Middle Easy
Fight Day: Takanori Gomi UFC 144 Pre-Fight Video Interview
HeavyMMA's Megan Olivi talks to Japanese legend Takanori Gomi about fighting in his native Japan for the first time as a member of the UFC. He takes on Eiji Mitsuoka at UFC 144.
Posted in: ufc, gomi, takanori, eiji mitsuoka, eiji
Read the full article at Heavy MMA
Takanori Gomi Shows Off New Ninja Fashion Style (UFC 144 Video)
Takanori Gomi told the press at Gold's Gym in Tokyo, Japan, that facing a new opponent on short notice does not affect him.
Posted in: takanori gomi, gomi, takanori, tokyo japan, golds gym
Read the full article at MMA Weekly
UFC 144: Takanori Gomi Faces Mitsuoka with Sotiropoulos Hurt
An injury to George Sotiropoulos has produced an all-Japan matchup at UFC 144, as Eiji Mitsuoka has stepped in to face Takanori Gomi in a lightweight bout at the February 26 event in Saitama, Japan, according to MMA Weekly.
Mitsuoka (18-7-2) won his lone DREAM fight over Bruno Carvalho in July for his second-straight win following a 4-2 stint in Sengoku, while the former PRIDE champ Gomi (32-8) is just 1-3 in the UFC after following up a 64-second KO of Tyson Griffin with losses to Clay Guida and Nate Diaz.
UFC 144, which airs in the U.S. on pay-per-view on Feb. 25, is headlined by lightweight champion Frankie Edgar vs. Ben Henderson and also includes Quitnon “Rampage” Jackson vs. Ryan Bader and Jake Shields vs. Yoshihiro Akiyama.
For complete coverage of UFC 144 stay tuned to MMAFrenzy.com.
Pictured: Takanori Gomi
Posted in: ufc, vs, gomi, takanori, mitsuoka
Read the full article at MMA Frenzy
Nate Diaz vs. Takanori Gomi (Full) - Nate's best fight thus far?
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Posted in: vs, takanori gomi, gomi, nate, takanori
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Nate Diaz discusses his victory over Takanori Gomi, says GSP "dodged a bullet"
Lightweight contender Nate Diaz, who secured a first-round submission victory over Takanori Gomi at UFC 135, expresses his admiration for "The Fireball Kid," and talks about transitioning between 155 and 170-pounds. Also a topic of discussion for Diaz is Welterweight champ Georges St. Pierre, who he says "dodged a bullet" by not having to fight his brother, Nick.
Posted in: diaz, takanori gomi, nate diaz, takanori, fireball kid
Read the full article at Low Kick
UFC 135 Play-by-Play: Nate Diaz vs. Takanori Gomi
UFC 135: Jones vs. Rampage play-by-play of Nate Diaz vs. Takanori Gomi on Saturday, Sept. 24, in Denver.
Posted in: ufc, vs, takanori gomi, gomi, takanori
Read the full article at MMA Weekly
UFC 135: Jones vs. Rampage - Nate Diaz vs. Takanori Gomi Dissection
Another salivating by-product of UFC matchmaker Joe Silva's seething cauldron is the UFC 135: Jones vs. Rampage lightweight match up of Nate Diaz vs. Takanori Gomi.
Diaz seems happy to cast aside his silky grappling in order to be aligned with a fellow gunslinger willing to stand up with him and empty the six-shooters until someone falls over. His wish is granted with Takanori Gomi.
Shattering the Japanese stereotype, Gomi is a thunderous boxer with sound wrestling skills and arguably the heaviest handed lightweight in MMA history. After the UFC shut down their 155-pound division and the talent migrated overseas, "The Fireball Kid" emerged as the sport's elite lightweight after a storybook series of knockouts in Pride Fighting Championships.
After a crippling defeat to B.J. Penn in Hawaii, "The Prodigy" proceeded to gallivant around in higher weight classes, abandoning the lightweight throne where Takanori Gomi would eventually take a seat. Setting up shop in the then-soaring Pride organization, Gomi drilled through ten consecutive adversaries with highlight reel panache to assume the mantle.
Gomi finished eight of those ten opponents in the first round (six knockouts and two submissions), isolating himself atop the heap by crushing the number two and three world ranked lightweights in Tatsuya Kawajiri (rear-naked choke) and Hayato "Mach" Sakurai (KO) along with former UFC lightweight champion Jens Pulver (KO).
His susceptibility to submissions was initially cloaked by his searing wrestle-boxing style, but later came to the forefront in a big way. The first sign was an arm-triangle loss to black belt Marcus Aurelio that snapped his win-streak, but the malady was somewhat salved in his following wins over Aurelio in the rematch, David Baron (eleven career sub-wins including Sakurai and Dan Hardy) and dominant wrestler Mitsuhiro Ishida.
Gomi's turbulent downfall was triggered by his upset loss to Nate Diaz's older brother, Nick, in an epic and mutual massacre. Then, Pride was sold, Gomi went two and two in Sengoku and faded into obscurity. Saturday marks the prime opportunity for a reappearance of "the old Gomi" against Nate Diaz.
Gifs and analysis in the full entry.
Just as we were penciling Gomi in as another incomplete and over-hyped Pride fighter, he brought the apocalypse.
Carelessly hanging out in the slugger's wheelhouse, Tyson Griffin was reminded of the one-shot power that put Gomi on the map.
Though he's struggled with footwork and distance, Gomi proved his devastating presence inside the pocket was still afire.
His overhand left is one of the best in the business, but his favorite follow up -- the right hook -- was what vanquished Griffin.
Exhibiting behavior typically associated with uncoordinated teenage dancing at an all night rave, Clay Guida shucked and jived while assaulting Gomi from all angles with strikes and takedown attempts.
Hitting a nice sprawl early, Gomi seemed unfazed by the whirling spectacle of curly locks and leather, but couldn't get out of defensive mode and eventually succumbed to a guillotine choke.
Gomi's sprawl, (flying) knees and uppercuts have been proven takedown repellants.
He uses his short, upward knee to the right when Guida charges in with his head down, but the result shows exactly why that choice is such a high-risk maneuver.
This type of knee was, however, the way Gomi earned Pride FC's record for fastest knockout with a six-second snuffing of the aggressively shooting Ralph Gracie.
Against the lanky Nate Diaz, Gomi will be tasked with deflecting an absurd amount of unorthodox strikes to assume his preferred range in the pocket.
Despite spending most of the fight getting his head bounced back by long, stiff jabs, Gomi had a small assortment of encouraging sequences against Kenny Florian.
Again, we see the distance factor here, as Gomi was a stationary target from outside but transferred his massive power well at close range.
With his right hook, which is almost like a shovel punch here, Gomi adjusts for the distance by unrolling it from his waist and extending it outward. Gomi had a well earned reputation for going to the body and this was his preferred weapon to do so.
Gomi's left hand lands almost immediately after his right connects. Take a second to time how quickly the left makes contact -- with plenty of heft -- after the right connects on Florian.
For Nate Diaz, this fight has two divergent angles: the obvious sizzle of replicating his brother's historic clash with Gomi, yet Nate is also coming off the most convincing, one-sided defeat of his UFC career to Rory MacDonald.
The sport vs. entertainment debacle rears its ugly head as Diaz's unquestionable advantage lies on the ground, but avoiding a standing brawl is just very un-Diaz.
Marcus Davis, a brick-fisted southpaw boxer just like Gomi, is a nice frame of reference.
Capitalizing on his condor-like wingspan was critical against Davis just as it will be versus Gomi.
In the later rounds, Diaz found his range and pinged telephone-pole punches through Davis' defense. Timing his footwork and head movement to penetrate inside and pepper with strikes was what propelled Diaz to victory.
In the animations above and to the left, Diaz is liquid-like in slipping punches while pelting with his high volume boxing.
Things get interesting when we recall the trouble that Davis presented with his jabs and overhand left early in the fight.
The pivotal change was that Diaz began by marching straight ahead while looping wide hooks -- which Davis neatly countered with tight, on-balance combinations -- but adjusted to setting up his advances with baiting punches.
Once Diaz got Davis in motion, he was able to create angles and target openings with a very deliberate in and out strategy. Whenever Diaz took the primitive approach of walking forward and swinging, he was tagged consistently by Davis' textbook boxing.
In these last two examples, we see Davis emulating what Takanori Gomi specializes in.
He lays back, poised and ready to spring, countering Diaz's first strike with his overhand left and right jabs and hooks.
If you were to create the perfect opponent for Gomi, that's what he would do.
The downfall of the unusual striking of the Diaz brothers is that they have a tendency to plant their feet and absorb wayward blows in the pocket while volume-punching.
Regardless if he's old, decrepit, or even past his prime, Takanori Gomi will still prey on that mentality. It's the same scenario from which he clocked Nick Diaz with the infamous Hadouken Punch in Pride (right).
I'm guessing, with his back against the wall and fresh off a humiliating defeat, Nate Diaz will be too smart.
In modern day MMA, it's just too hard for a limited fighter to survive at the top level.
I didn't even take the time to discuss Nate's highly under-rated Judo in the clinch or his ultra-technical grappling game.
Even if a significant portion of Nate Diaz's style plays into Gomi's hands, his chin is as solid as they come and there's an entire universe of alternatives he can exercise beyond trading on the feet.
I really don't want to see either of these exciting fighters lose. Normally I would pick either by sheer fanboy default. The hard steer for Diaz on the betting lines is pretty accurate, as Gomi's chances boil down to that of a puncher ... but even in that facet, he hasn't looked the sharpest.
Throwing all logic and reason aside, I have to throw out a prayer for Takanori Gomi to overcome the odds and actualize the impossible. I'm not ready to let go. As a highly revered wise man once said: "It's still real to me, dammit!"
My Prediction: Takanori Gomi by TKO
Guida vs. Gomi gifs via Zombie Prophet of IronForgesIron.com
Davis vs. Diaz gifs via Chris Nelson for BloodyElbow.com
Poll
Nate Diaz vs. Takanori Gomi
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Posted in: diaz, takanori gomi, gomi, nate, takanori
Read the full article at Bloody Elbow