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B.J. Penn

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Template:MMAstatsbox Jay Dee "B.J." Penn (born December 13,1978 in Hilo, Hawaii) is an American professional mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu practitioner, currently the UFC Lightweight Champion. He holds notable wins over Matt Hughes, Takanori Gomi, Jens Pulver, Caol Uno, Duane Ludwig, Matt Serra, Rodrigo Gracie, Din Thomas, Renzo Gracie and Joe Stevenson. He is the first American-born winner of the World Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Championship (Mundial) in the black belt category (2000), former Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) welterweight champion, and was a coach on the The Ultimate Fighter 5 reality show. He became UFC lightweight champion at UFC 80, becoming only the second man after Randy Couture to win UFC titles in two different weight classes.

Career

Martial arts background

At the age of seventeen, Penn began training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu after being introduced to it by his neighbor, Tom Callos, and in 1997 began training under Ralph Gracie. After being awarded his black belt by Andre Pederneiras, leader of Nova Uniao, in 2000 he became the first non-Brazilian to win a gold medal in the black belt division of the Mundial World Championships held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[1]

Mixed martial arts career

His accomplishments caught the attention of the Ultimate Fighting Championship, where he began his mixed martial arts career less than a year later in 2001. He demonstrated strong striking skills, knocking out lightweights Din Thomas and Caol Uno before suffering a decision loss in a title fight against UFC lightweight champion Jens Pulver. In 2003, after Pulver left the UFC and relinquished his title, a tournament to crown a new champion flopped when Penn fought Uno to a draw in the finals at UFC 41, a failure which caused the UFC to later suspend its lightweight division. Penn bounced back later in the year with an impressive victory over Takanori Gomi, Japan's current number-one ranked lightweight fighter, in Rumble on the Rock, an MMA organization promoted by his brother.

The crowning achievement of Penn's career came in 2004 at UFC 46. Penn jumped up in weight classes to challenge the five-time defending UFC welterweight champion Matt Hughes to fill a title contention slot in a division where Hughes had already defeated all the available opposition. Heavily favored to win, Hughes lost the fight four minutes into the first round by rear naked choke after giving up his back with only 23 seconds left until the end of the first round.

In K-1 and Hero's

Shortly after defeating Matt Hughes, the new champion signed to fight in the K-1 organization. The UFC promptly stripped him of the welterweight title, claiming Penn breached his contract and that the signing constituted him refusing to defend his title. Penn filed a suit against the UFC and publicized his side of the conflict, claiming his UFC contract had already expired. Penn filed a motion to stop the UFC from awarding a new welterweight title, but that motion was denied.[2][3]

In his first K-1 fight, Penn fought again at welterweight (170 lb) and defeated Duane Ludwig at the 2004 K-1 MMA Romanex show in under five minutes by arm triangle choke. Following the Ludwig fight, Penn moved up in weight class to face the undefeated Rodrigo Gracie at middleweight (185 lb). Penn won by decision, extending his winning streak to four fights.

In 2005, at the K-1 Hero's 1 event in Japan, Penn faced light heavyweight Lyoto Machida, losing by decision. Later that year at K-1 World Grand Prix Hawaii, Penn returned to middleweight to face Renzo Gracie and won by unanimous decision

Return to the UFC

In early 2006 at UFC 56, UFC president Dana White announced that Penn and the UFC had agreed to a settlement and Penn was to return as a top welterweight contender. Penn re-debuted on March 4 at UFC 58, losing against Georges St. Pierre by split decision in a fight that determined the number one welterweight contender.

In July, Penn briefly spoke with KUAM about rededicating himself to earning the lightweight championship, along with the welterweight and middleweight titles.

After St. Pierre, who became the UFC's top contender for the welterweight title since his win over Penn, injured himself during training, the UFC announced that Penn would replace St. Pierre in an upcoming title fight, setting up a highly anticipated rematch with Hughes for UFC 63 on September 23, 2006.[4] In the bout, Penn controlled the first two rounds, but sustained a rib injury during the scramble to take Hughes' back in round two. He was visibly different in the third round, appearing exhausted and missing punches he was landing earlier. Hughes was able to take Penn to the mat, and in side control position rain punches on Penn's head until referee "Big" John McCarthy stopped the fight at 3:53 of the third round, making this the first time that Penn had been stopped in a fight. In an interview found on Penn's personal website, Penn stated that by round three he could hardly breathe and had no "mobility in his core." Despite his injury, he congratulated Hughes, calling him a great fighter, and said he deserved his victory.

Penn was a coach for The Ultimate Fighter 5, which aired on April 5, 2007. Penn lead a team of eight lightweight fighters, and fought a rematch against Jens Pulver at the conclusion of the series on June 23, 2007. He won with a rear naked choke in the second round after controlling Pulver from the mount and then taking Pulver's back. Although he held the choke for a moment after Pulver tapped out, the two then embraced, with both later saying they no longer held any ill will against each other.

On July 7, 2007, during the post-fight press conference of UFC 73, UFC president Dana White announced that Penn would stay at lightweight to fight current UFC lightweight champion Sean Sherk. However, Sean Sherk subsequently was suspended by the California State Athletic Commission, and the status of the possible title fight was left in limbo as he pursued his appeals. With Sherk's title status still in limbo after months of hearings, the UFC scheduled Penn to fight Joe Stevenson at UFC 80 on January 19th 2008 for an interim lightweight title. The subsequent final decision by the California State Athletic Commission, which did not overturn Sherk's suspension, led to the title being stripped from Sherk and the Penn-Stevenson fight being upgraded to a full title bout, with the winner facing Sherk as their first defense.

Penn knocked Stevenson down seconds into the first round with a right uppercut, then took Stevenson down, eventually inflicting a serious cut near Stevenson's hairline later in the round. In the second round, Stevenson fought more aggressively but was still unable to threaten Penn. Penn worked to back mount and defeated him by rear naked choke at 4:02 of the second round to win the UFC Lightweight Championship. With this win, Penn became only the second man (after Randy Couture) to win UFC titles in two different weight classes.[5]

The UFC has officially announced that Penn's first title defense will be against former champion Sean Sherk in May 2008.[6] No date has been set for the fight at this time.[6]

Penn has hinted that after he defeats Sherk, he would like to move up to Welterweight and fight Georges St. Pierre to try to become champion at two different weight classes.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). He has 4 brothers: Jay, Jaydee, Reagan and Kalani.[7][8] Penn's mother, Lorraine Shin, is a 3rd generation Korean-American.[1]

B.J. Penn, along with Glen Cordoza and Erich Krauss, is the author of Mixed Martial Arts: The Book of Knowledge, an instructional book on mixed martial arts fighting.[9]

Penn can often be seen wearing the brand RVCA at UFC events. As an RVCA advocate, he wears his custom-made Official B.J. Penn trunks for major UFC events.

B.J Penn operates a website called BJPENN.COM which he operates and updates daily with free MMA lessons.

Mixed martial arts record

Professional record breakdown
17 matches 12 wins 4 losses
By knockout 4 1
By submission 5 0
By decision 3 3
Draws 1
Result Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Weight Notes
Win 12-4-1 Joe Stevenson Submission (Rear Naked Choke) UFC 80: Rapid Fire 1/19/2008 2 4:02 155 lb Won UFC Lightweight Championship Becomes 2nd fighter in UFC history to hold two titles in two weight classes
Win 11-4-1 Jens Pulver Submission (Rear Naked Choke) Ultimate Fighter 5 Finale 6/23/2007 2 3:12 155 lb
Loss 10-4-1 Matt Hughes TKO (Strikes) UFC 63: Hughes vs. Penn 9/23/2006 3 3:53 170 lb For UFC Welterweight Championship
Loss 10-3-1 Georges St. Pierre Decision (Split) UFC 58: USA vs. Canada 3/4/2006 3 5:00 170 lb
Win 10-2-1 Renzo Gracie Decision (Unanimous) K-1 World Grand Prix Hawaii 7/29/2005 3 5:00 170 lb
Loss 9-2-1 Lyoto Machida Decision (Unanimous) K-1 HERO'S 1 3/26/2005 3 5:00 205 lb
Win 9-1-1 Rodrigo Gracie Decision (Unanimous) Rumble on the Rock 6 11/20/2004 3 5:00 185 lb
Win 8-1-1 Duane Ludwig Submission (Arm Triangle Choke) K-1 MMA-ROMANEX 5/22/2004 1 1:45 170 lb
Win 7-1-1 Matt Hughes Submission (Rear Naked Choke) UFC 46: Supernatural 1/31/2004 1 4:39 170 lb Won UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 6-1-1 Takanori Gomi Submission (Rear Naked Choke) Rumble on the Rock 4 10/10/2003 3 2:35 155 lb
Draw 5-1-1 Caol Uno Draw UFC 41: Onslaught 2/28/2003 5 5:00 155 lb For UFC Lightweight Championship
Win 5-1 Matt Serra Decision (Unanimous) UFC 39: The Warriors Return 9/27/2002 3 5:00 155 lb
Win 4-1 Paul Creighton TKO (Strikes) UFC 37: High Impact 5/10/2002 2 3:23 155 lb
Loss 3-1 Jens Pulver Decision (Majority) UFC 35: Throwdown 1/11/2002 5 5:00 155 lb For UFC Lightweight Championship
Win 3-0 Caol Uno KO (Punches) UFC 34: High Voltage 11/2/2001 1 0:11 155 lb
Win 2-0 Din Thomas TKO (Strikes) UFC 32: Showdown in the Meadowlands 6/29/2001 1 2:42 155 lb
Win 1-0 Joey Gilbert TKO (Strikes) UFC 31: Locked and Loaded 5/4/2001 1 4:57 155 lb

Jiu-Jitsu career highlights

  1. May, 1997 Enters first tournament in Bakersfield, CA and wins both his weight and the open weight class.
  2. June, 1997 Enters the Joe Moreira tournament as a blue belt winning his weight class.
  3. June, 1997 Wins submission grappling tournament
  4. 1997 Enters Brasileiro and places 4th in his weight class, blue belt category
  5. 1997 Continues to enter tournaments upon return from Brazil placing first consistently
  6. 1997 Receives blue belt from Ralph Gracie
  7. 1998 Silver medal at Brazilian Mundials competition in his weight division; receives purple belt upon return
  8. 1999 Bronze medal at Brazilian Mundials in heavier weight class as a newly promoted Nova Uniao brown belt.
  9. 1999 Gold medal, Copa Pacifica Tournament in Los Angeles, CA
  10. 1999 Receives Black belt from Andre Pederneiras just 3 weeks before the 2000 Mundials
  11. 1999 Joins Nova Uniao Competition Team (reserved for the four top team competitors)
  12. 2000 First non-Brazilian to win gold medal in black belt division of the Mundial World Championships held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

References

  1. ^ "Biography". BJPenn.com. Retrieved 2006-10-10.
  2. ^ Sloan, Mike (2004-07-23). "BJ Penn Sues Zuffa Over Stripping of Welterweight Title". Sherdog.com. Retrieved 2006-08-24.
  3. ^ "Court Sides with Zuffa Against BJ Penn". Sherdog.com. 2004-10-01. Retrieved 2006-08-24.
  4. ^ Iole, Kevin (2006-09-22). "Penn will not be content with welterweight title". Las Vegas Journal-Review. Retrieved 2006-09-22.
  5. ^ Smith, Michael David (January 19, 2008). "UFC 80: B.J. Penn Beats Joe Stevenson, Wins Lightweight Championship in Bloody Battle". AOL Sports. Retrieved Januar 21, 2008. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  6. ^ a b Wilkins, Matt (January 20, 2008). "Dana White Confirms Penn vs. Sherk and More". MMA Weekly. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
  7. ^ Pearl Harbor Day, BJ Penn, voted one of the best pound-for-pound fighters ever by Elite Fighter magazine, gave his own time and expertise to some Green Berets at Fort Lewis, Wa. simply because he wanted to contribute to the war on terror. At his own expense and with his younger brother Reagan, also a Brazilian Jiu Jitsu black belt, in tow,
  8. ^ Business is something that Penn, who is single, understands. His parents, JD Penn and wife Lorraine Shin, are prominent property owners in the Pu'ueo neighborhood of Hilo. They instilled a strong work ethic in BJ, the youngest - short for "Baby Jay" - and his brothers Jay, Jaydee, Reagan and Kalani.
  9. ^ "Mixed Martial Arts: The Book of Knowledge Review". Lockflow.com. 2007-05-01. Retrieved 2008-01-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

External links

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