Jump to content

Phil Baroni: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
+defaultsort
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{MMAstatsbox|name=Phil Baroni
{{MMAstatsbox|name=Phil Baroni
|image=PhilBaroni.png
|image=PhilBaroni.png
|nick=New York Badass
|nick=The New York Bum
|height=5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
|height=5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
|weight=185 lb (84 kg)
|weight=185 lb (84 kg)
Line 18: Line 18:
|}}
|}}


'''"The New York Bad-Ass" Phil Baroni''' (born [[April 16]], [[1976]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[mixed martial arts]] fighter. He has a professional MMA record of 10-8-0. Baroni has fought in the [[Ultimate Fighting Championship]] (UFC) where he holds a record of 3-5-0. He has developed a reputation for his boxing ability and knockout power, although he is an accomplished wrestler as well. He formerly trained with [[Team Hammer House]], whose members include two current PRIDE fighters and former UFC heavyweight champions, [[Mark Coleman]] and [[Kevin Randleman]].
'''"The New York Bum" Phil Baroni''' (born [[April 16]], [[1976]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[mixed martial arts]] fighter. He has a professional MMA record of 10-8-0. Baroni has fought in the [[Ultimate Fighting Championship]] (UFC) where he holds a record of 3-5-0. He has developed a reputation for his boxing ability and knockout power, although he is an accomplished wrestler as well. He formerly trained with [[Team Hammer House]], whose members include two current PRIDE fighters and former UFC heavyweight champions, [[Mark Coleman]] and [[Kevin Randleman]].


== Biography ==
== Biography ==

Revision as of 05:11, 4 March 2008

Template:MMAstatsbox

"The New York Bum" Phil Baroni (born April 16, 1976) is an American mixed martial arts fighter. He has a professional MMA record of 10-8-0. Baroni has fought in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) where he holds a record of 3-5-0. He has developed a reputation for his boxing ability and knockout power, although he is an accomplished wrestler as well. He formerly trained with Team Hammer House, whose members include two current PRIDE fighters and former UFC heavyweight champions, Mark Coleman and Kevin Randleman.

Biography

Phil Baroni grew up in Massapequa Park, Long Island, New York a predominantly Italian neighborhood. Baroni attended Hofstra University before transferring to Central Michigan University where he became a two time All-American collegiate wrestler. Baroni was a double major in biology and psychology, and got his degree in psychology. He was also an amateur bodybuilder from the age of 17 to 20 where he competed in a total of 6 shows in which he placed either first or second.

Baroni had a successful amateur boxing and kick-boxing career. He studied kick-boxing under Keith Trimble, and had 7 kick-boxing matches, winning all 7 by knock out. He also competed in 10 amateur boxing matches, also winning all 10 by knock out. Although Baroni was a big fan of the UFC he did not want to compete in it until the UFC had implemented Weight classes. [1].

Fighting in the UFC

Baroni quickly made a name for himself in the UFC with several impressive knockout victories. His signature match was a decisive knockout victory over former UFC champion Dave Menne on September 27, 2002. He then rematched Matt Lindland to whom he had previously lost to by judges decision. In their rematch, Baroni suffering a second loss to Lindland by another judges decision. He was then matched up against a former teammate of Matt Lindland, Evan Tanner at UFC 45 - Revolution. Baroni dominated the beginning of the match against Tanner, but when the fight was stopped to check a cut on Tanner, Tanner regained his composure and the momentum turned, leading to the referee stopping the fight due to Baroni taking several undefended strikes on the ground. This decision was controversial as the referee Larry Landless had asked Baroni if he wanted to quit which he did not. Landless still stopped the bout, and was struck by a furious Baroni who wished to continue. Baroni got a rematch with Tanner at UFC 48 - Payback but went on to lose via decision. Despite losing 3 fights in a row, the UFC matched Baroni against the relatively unknown Pete Sell. Following training with Enson Inoue, Baroni dominated early on with numerous takedowns and a dominate standup, however, Sell caught him in a guillotine choke and Baroni lost consciousness, thereby ending the fight. Following this loss many people told him to retire, including Dana White.

Fighting in PRIDE

Baroni joined Hammer House soon thereafter and rebounded in Japan's PRIDE Fighting Championships promotion with several knockout victories against Ikuhisa Minowa, Ryo Chonan, and Yuki Kondo. On June 4, 2006, Baroni was summarily defeated by Ikuhisa Minowa via unanimous decision in the Bushido Welterweight Grand Prix 183-lb tournament in 2005.

On October 21st 2006 Baroni captured a victory over boxer turned MMA fighter Yosuke Nishijima via kimura in the first round at PRIDE 32, PRIDE's first American show.

Feud with Frank Shamrock

Frank Shamrock and Baroni had engaged in a war of words following Shamrock's fight with Renzo Gracie. The two faced off at Strikeforce Shamrock vs. Baroni, a co-promotion between EliteXC and Strikeforce on June 22nd, 2007 on Pay-Per-View.[2] Shamrock defeated Baroni, knocking him down with punches in the first round and finishing him off with a rear naked choke in the second round. It was considered a TKO victory for Shamrock, as Baroni was choked unconscious.

Steroid use

Following the Shamrock fight the California State Athletic Commission announced that Baroni tested positive for two types of anabolic steroids, Boldenone and Stanozolol. Baroni has appealed against the $2500 fine and faced a one year suspension. Ultimately, the fine was upheld although the suspension was reduced to six months.[3] Subsequently, Baroni tested negative for steroids with the same sample that the CSAC tested, as well as 3 other samples taken prior to, and after the fight. One such was administered under the eye of the media, including sherdog.com editor Josh Gross. His suspension was not overturned by the CSAC by a vote of 3-2, however it was reduced to 6 months as opposed to the original sentence of one year.


ICON Sport

Baroni will face Hawaii's Kala Hose on March 15, 2008 for the vacant Icon Sport Middleweight title. Former champion Robbie Lawler was stripped of the title do to his inability to defend the title on numerous occasions.

MMA record

10 Wins (7 KO, 2 submissions, 1 decision), 8 Losses (5 decisions, 1 TKO, 2 submissions), 0 Draws.
Date Result Opponent Event Method Round Time Notes
6/22/2007 Loss Frank Shamrock Strikeforce Shamrock vs. Baroni Technical Submission (Rear Naked Choke) Round 2 4:00
10/21/06 Win Yosuke Nishijima PRIDE 32: The Real Deal Technical Submission (kimura) Round 1 3:20
6/4/06 Loss Kazuo Misaki PRIDE Bushido Survival 2006 Decision (unanimous) Round 2 5:00
4/2/06 Win Yuki Kondo PRIDE Bushido 10 TKO (strikes) Round 1 0:25
9/25/05 Loss Ikuhisa Minowa PRIDE Bushido 9 Decision Round 2 5:00
7/17/05 Win Ryo Chonan PRIDE Bushido 8 KO (punching) Round 1 1:40
5/22/05 Win Ikuhisa Minowa PRIDE Bushido 7 TKO (Referee Stoppage) Round 2 2:40
3/5/2005 Win Chris Cruit Extreme Fighting Challenge 11 Submission (Armbar) Round 2
2/5/05 Loss Pete Sell UFC 51 Technical Submission (Guillotine choke) Round 3 4:50
6/19/04 Loss Evan Tanner UFC 48 Decision (Unanimous) Round 3 5:00
11/21/03 Loss Evan Tanner UFC 45 TKO (strikes) Round 1 4:42
2/28/03 Loss Matt Lindland UFC 41 Decision (Unanimous) Round 3 5:00
9/27/2002 Win Dave Menne UFC 39 KO Round 1 :18
5/10/2002 Win Amar Suloev UFC 37 KO Round 1 2:55
11/02/2001 Loss Matt Lindland UFC 34 Decision (Majority) Round 3 5:00
8/10/2001 Win Robert Sarkozi WMMAA 1 - MegaFights TKO Round 1 1:05
2/23/2001 Win Curtis Stout UFC 30 Decision (Unanimous) Round 3 5:00
8/25/2000 Win John Hayes Vengeance at the Vanderbilt 9 TKO Round 1 0:35

See also

References


External links