Ray Mercer
Ray Mercer | |
---|---|
Born | Jacksonville, Florida, United States | April 4, 1961
Other names | Merciless |
Nationality | American |
Height | 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) |
Weight | 256 lb (116 kg; 18.3 st) |
Division | Heavyweight |
Style | Boxing |
Fighting out of | Fayetteville, North Carolina |
Team | Fayetteville Boxing Team |
Years active | 1988-present |
Professional boxing record | |
Total | 44 |
Wins | 36 |
By knockout | 26 |
Losses | 7 |
Draws | 1 |
Kickboxing record | |
Total | 2 |
Wins | 0 |
Losses | 2 |
Draws | 0 |
Mixed martial arts record | |
Total | 1 |
Wins | 1 |
By knockout | 1 |
Losses | 0 |
By disqualification | 0 |
Other information | |
Boxing record from BoxRec | |
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog |
Olympic medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's Boxing | ||
Representing United States | ||
Olympic Games | ||
1988 Seoul | Heavyweight |
"Merciless" Ray Mercer (born April 4, 1961 in Jacksonville, Florida) is an American professional boxer, former Olympic Gold Medalist and WBO heavyweight title holder who resides in Fayetteville, North Carolina. He has also competed in kickboxing and mixed martial arts.
Boxing career
Amateur
Mercer was the 1988 United States Amateur Champion at Heavyweight while in the US Army and compiled an Amateur record of 64-6. He won Gold in the 1988 Olympics in Seoul as a heavyweight. In 1989, Mercer fought Barry Flowers (USAF) which contributed to a K.O. win in the 7th round.
Olympic results
- 1st round bye
- Defeated Rudolf Gavenčiak (Czechoslovakia) RSC 3
- Defeated Luigi Gaudiano (Italy) KO 1
- Defeated Arnold Vanderlyde (Netherlands) RSC 2
- Defeated Baik Hyun-Man (South Korea) KO 1
Professional
Mercer turned pro in 1989 with a 3rd TKO of Jesse Hughes. He scored a series of knockouts and in August 1990 knocked down and outpointed big punching Smokin' Bert Cooper in a spectacular 12 round brawl that earned him Cooper's NABF title. In January 1991 he challenged undefeated Francesco Damiani for the WBO heavyweight title, scoring a one punch knockout victory in the 9th when behind on points. Later that year he brutally demolished undefeated puncher Tommy Morrison in five, and with a major world title fight on the horizon vacated his WBO belt and fought 42 year old legend Larry Holmes rather than mandatory challenger Michael Moorer. It proved an unwise decision, as the crafty Holmes conned Mercer out of the fight, outjabbing the puzzled youngster and gaining both the points decision, and Mercer's world title fight with heavyweight king Evander Holyfield.
Having split fights with dangerous veteran Jesse Ferguson, laboured when overweight to a draw with trialhorse Marion Wilson, and seen a proposed 1994 bout in Hong Kong with Frank Bruno fall through, Mercer enjoyed an unexpected run of form in major fights, losing on points in a thrilling brawl with Holyfield in May 1995, losing a controversial decision in another wild punch up, this time with Lennox Lewis, in June 1996, and scoring a controversial points win over ex-champ Tim Witherspoon in yet another high action bout in December 1996. In the frame for a bout with Andrew Golota in 1997, Mercer suffered a neck injury and was out of action for 14 months. He returned February 1998 with a 2 round kayo of Leo Loiacono, but contracted Hepititis B and was again inactive, this time for 20 months.
Comeback
In February 2001 a 42 year old Mercer launched a final comeback, knocking out four journeymen before being matched with WBO title holder Wladimir Klitschko in a high profile bout on HBO. Once famed for his incredible iron chin, Mercer looked his age and was knocked down in the first and stopped in the 6th. A brief dalliance in the mixed martial arts nixed a 2004 bout with DaVarryl Williamson, however he did return to boxing in 2005, now aged 44, but was stopped in seven by Shannon Briggs.
Kickboxing career
Continuing to seek a fighting career, Mercer opted to travel to Japan and challenged Musashi in the kickboxing combat sport K-1 on June 6, 2004. He was knocked down in the first round and went on to lose via unanimous decision. On March 19, 2005, he had one more K-1 bout against Remy Bonjasky, to whom he lost via verbal submission, the first and only strike of the night, a head kick, would land on the square on the head of Mercer. It wasn't your typical fight; Mercer took one head kick and then quit in what was one of the most bizarre fights of all time as the kick didn't even seem to hurt him. As Mercer put it, "I got the shit kicked out of me". [1]
Mixed martial arts career
After a series of scheduled boxing matchups fell through (including a proposed bout against former champion Hasim Rahman), Mercer decided to try mixed martial arts (MMA) and approached Felix Martinez, co-founder of Cage Fury Fighting Championships, about working with the promotion. On March 21, 2007, Cage Fury announced that Mercer had signed to face underground street fighter and Internet legend Kimbo Slice at Atlantic City's Boardwalk Hall on June 23, 2007, as part of Cage Fury Fighting Championship 5. The bout was a non-sanctioned exhibition under the New Jersey Unified MMA rules.[1]
Kimbo Slice won the fight in the first round with a guillotine choke submission.
Mercer later stated in the press conference at Adrenaline III: Bragging Rights when he was scheduled to fight Tim Sylvia under MMA rules instead of Boxing rules that he had expected Kimbo Slice to box with him and said that he did not really train in any other aspect of MMA and was unprepared for the guillotine choke.
On June 13, 2009, Mercer made a big splash when he defeated former UFC Heavyweight Champion Tim Sylvia at Adrenaline III: Bragging Rights. He won the fight via knockout in 9 seconds with a huge right hand to the chin, becoming the first man to ever defeat Sylvia by knockout. He then called out Eric Esch after the fight.
In March 2010, it was announced that Mercer had signed with the King of the Cage organization.[2]
Professional boxing record
Kickboxing record
0 Wins (0 (T) KO's, 0 decision), 2 Losses | ||||||||
Date | Result | Record | Opponent | Event | Method | Round | Time | Location |
March 15, 2005 | Loss | 0–2 | Remy Bonjasky | K-1 World Grand Prix 2005 in Seoul | TKO (Right High Kick) | 1 | 0:22 | Seoul, South Korea |
June 6, 2004 | Loss | 0–1 | Musashi | K-1 World Grand Prix 2004 in Nagoya | Decision (Unanimous) | 3 | 3:00 | Nagoya, Japan |
Mixed martial arts record
1 match | 1 win | 0 losses |
By knockout | 1 | 0 |
By submission | 0 | 0 |
By decision | 0 | 0 |
Draws | 0 |
Res. | Record | Opponent | Method | Event | Date | Round | Time | Location | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Win | 1–0 | Tim Sylvia | KO (punch) | Adrenaline MMA 3: Bragging Rights | June 13, 2009 | 1 | 0:09 | Birmingham, Alabama, USA |
Mixed martial arts exhibition match record
1 match | 0 wins | 1 loss |
By knockout | 0 | 0 |
By submission | 0 | 1 |
By decision | 0 | 0 |
Draws | 0 |
Res. | Record | Opponent | Method | Event | Date | Round | Time | Location | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loss | 0–1 | Kimbo Slice | Submission (guillotine choke) | Cage Fury Fighting Championship 5 | June 23, 2007 | 1 | 1:12 | Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA |
Boxing accomplishments
References
- ^ "Freak Show or Convert? Kimbo Slice Interview". MMAWeekly. June 22, 2007.
- ^ "Ray Mercer Returns to Fight Undefeated Ron Sparks". MMAFighting.com. March 12, 2010.
External links
- Boxing record for Ray Mercer from BoxRec (registration required)
- K-1 record
- Articles needing cleanup from January 2010
- Cleanup tagged articles without a reason field from January 2010
- Wikipedia pages needing cleanup from January 2010
- Living people
- 1961 births
- Boxers from Florida
- Heavyweight boxers
- American kickboxers
- Kickboxers from Florida
- Super heavyweight kickboxers
- American mixed martial artists
- Mixed martial artists from Florida
- Heavyweight mixed martial artists
- People from Jacksonville, Florida
- African American boxers
- African-American mixed martial artists
- Boxers at the 1988 Summer Olympics
- Olympic boxers of the United States
- World Boxing Organization Champions
- Winners of the United States Championship for amateur boxers
- World heavyweight boxing champions
- Olympic medalists in boxing