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Gary Henry Goodridge [1] (born January 17, 1966), nicknamed "Big Daddy", is a Trinidadian-Canadian former heavyweight kickboxer and mixed martial artist fighting out of Barrie, Ontario. Prior to kickboxing and MMA, he was also one of the top ranked contenders in the world of professional arm wrestling . [ 2 ]
Fighter record and notable wins, achievements. Tournament participation and overall Canadian UFC/MMA records ... Gary Goodridge: Big Daddy: 4–4 23–22–1 UFC 8 UFC 9
Another rematch was on tap for Pride Shockwave 2003 on New Year's Eve, 2003 when Frye faced Gary Goodridge for the third time. The fight lasted only 39 seconds; Goodridge scored a vicious high kick to the head, knocking Frye out completely.
Gary Goodridge: TKO (punches) 1 10:14 Openweight Kazushi Sakuraba: def. Royce Gracie: TKO (corner stoppage) 6 15:00 [d] Openweight Mark Coleman: def. Akira Shoji: Unanimous decision 1 15:00 Openweight Kazuyuki Fujita: def. Mark Kerr: Unanimous decision 1 15:00 Other Guy Mezger: def. Masaaki Satake: Unanimous decision 2 15:00
He beat fighters including Don Frye, Gary Goodridge and Dan Severn, en route to winning the UFC 10 and UFC 11 tournaments and the first ever UFC Heavyweight title. Randleman's MMA career began with a call from Coleman to invite him to fight in Brazil where he went on to achieve a record of 7 wins and 2 losses. [2]
Reserve Fight 2: K-1 Rules / 3Min. 3R Ext. 2R. Cyril Abidi vs Gary Goodridge Goodridge defeated Abidi by KO (2 Knockdown, Right Hook) at 3:00 of the 1st Round. Semi Finals: K-1 Rules / 3Min. 3R Ext. 1R. Kaoklai Kaennorsing vs Musashi Musashi defeated Kaennorsing by Extra Round Unanimous Decision 3-0 (10-9.5, 10-9.5, 10-9.5).
After winning at World Vale Tudo Championship 5, Vovchanchyn was invited to Japanese promotion PRIDE, fighting Gary Goodridge in his debut. Vovchanchyn was taken down twice by the larger Goodridge and was left behind on points, but he dominated Goodridge during the stand-up exchanges and knocked him out with two left hooks, 5:58 into the first ...
The event was Semmy Schilt and Glaube Feitosa's first K-1 World Grand Prix final appearance and would be the first of Semmy Schilt's three consecutive K-1 World Grand Prix final victories - a K-1 record. Semmy Schilt would also be the first karate practitioner to win the K-1 World Grand Prix since Andy Hug in 1996.