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PRIDE Fighting Championships (Pride or Pride FC, founded as KRS-Pride) was a Japanese mixed martial arts promotion company. Its inaugural event was held at the Tokyo Dome on October 11, 1997. Pride held more than sixty mixed martial arts events, broadcast to about 40 countries worldwide. [ 1 ]
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
2006 in Pride FC; 2007 in Pride FC; K. K-1 Premium Dynamite!! P. Pride 32; Pride 33; Pride 34; S. Pride Shockwave; Pride Shockwave 2006
Kazushi Sakuraba in 2015. Royce Gracie in 2007. The rivalry between Kazushi Sakuraba from Takada Dojo and the Gracie family of Brazilian jiu-jitsu practitioners started in PRIDE 8, when Sakuraba faced Royler Gracie, though it actually traced back to the first PRIDE Fighting Championships event, PRIDE 1, where Royler's brother Rickson had defeated Sakuraba's stablemaster Nobuhiko Takada. [2]
1998 in Pride FC 1999 in Pride The year 1998 was the 2nd year in the history of the Pride Fighting Championships , a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. 1998 had 3 events beginning with, Pride 2 .
SLC FC, representing Canada, got a goal from Raheem Rose 4:35 into the extra session of the second semifinal to advance to the million-dollar, winner-take-all TST final on Sunday afternoon ...
Kelvin Nunes tapped the game-winner past SLC FC keeper John Smits after a brief back-and-forth passing sequence with Drew Ruggles.
All Lightweight (-73 kg) and Welterweight (-83 kg) bouts were fought under Bushido rules with one ten-minute and one five-minute round. The sole exception however was the fight between Minowa and Tamura, as both had requested to fight under full Pride rules as well as fight in the opening fight of the night.