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Pride FC: Final Conflict 2003 [5] was an event held on November 9, 2003, at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan. This event was host to the semi-finals and finals of the 2003 Pride Middleweight Grand Prix tournament. The first round of the tournament was contested at the Pride: Total Elimination 2003 event the previous August.
Also in 2003, Pride returned to the tournament format, with a middleweight grand prix spanning two events, Pride Total Elimination 2003 and Final Conflict 2003. The format was expanded to three events in 2004, adding Critical Countdown 2004 as the second round. Pride would go on to hold annual tournaments, a heavyweight tournament in 2004, a ...
The first meeting between the two took place in the final round of Pride's Middleweight Grand Prix tournament at Pride Final Conflict 2003 on November 9, 2003. The venue for the fight was the sold-out Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan, with a live audience of 53,000. [18]
Mar 16, 2003 1,663 days NC vs. interim champion Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira at Pride Final Conflict 2004 on Aug 15, 2004 1. def. interim champion Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira at Pride Shockwave 2004 on Dec 31, 2004 2. def. Mirko Cro Cop at Pride Final Conflict 2005 on Aug 28, 2005 3. def. Mark Hunt at Pride Shockwave 2006 on Dec 31, 2006 - Antônio ...
Event Japanese name Date held Venue City Attendance 1 Pride 1 — October 11, 1997: Tokyo Dome: Tokyo, Japan: 47,000 2 Pride 2 — March 15, 1998: Yokohama Arena
Pride Shockwave 2003: December 31, 2003: 2 1:05 Saitama, Japan: Loss 19–4 Wanderlei Silva: TKO (knees) Pride Final Conflict 2003: November 9, 2003: 1 6:28 Tokyo, Japan: 2003 Pride Middleweight Grand Prix Final. Win 19–3 Chuck Liddell: TKO (corner stoppage) 2 3:10 2003 Pride Middleweight Grand Prix Semifinal. Win 18–3 Murilo Bustamante ...
Final Conflict 2003 November 9, 2003: Tokyo Dome Tokyo, Japan ... Final Conflict 2004 August 15, 2004: ... additional terms may apply.
Pride followed Nevada's MMA rules for the most part, however they prohibited elbows to the head. Matches were three rounds of five minutes each, and if a match went the distance, it would be judged by Nevada's 10-point must system with Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC) judges, which was different from Pride's own judging criteria. [1]