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Frank Mir

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Narwhallrus (talk | contribs) at 19:46, 11 February 2013 (Wins over Cheick Kongo and Tim Sylvia were changed incorrectly from technical submission, reverted). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Frank Mir
BornFrancisco Santos Mir, III
(1979-05-24) May 24, 1979 (age 45)
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
NationalityAmerican
Cuban
Height6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)[1][2]
Weight261 lb (118 kg; 18 st 9 lb)
DivisionHeavyweight
Reach79 in (201 cm)
StanceSouthpaw
Fighting out ofLas Vegas, Nevada, United States
TeamUniversity of Grappling[3] Suffer Training Center
TrainerRicky Lundell[4]
Robert Drysdale
Rankblack belt in Kenpo Karate
black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
Years active2001 –present
Mixed martial arts record
Total22
Wins16
By knockout3
By submission9
By decision3
By disqualification1
Losses6
By knockout6
SpouseJennifer (2004 – present)
Children3
Notable school(s)Bonanza High School
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog
Last updated on: October 11, 2011

Francisco Santos Mir, III[5][6] (born May 24, 1979), better known as Frank Mir, is an American-Cuban mixed martial artist. Mir is a two time UFC Heavyweight Champion. He currently holds the record for most victories and submissions in the history of the UFC heavyweight division. He is also the only man in UFC history to win a bout by toe hold.[7] He holds the distinction of being the first and only man to both knock out and submit MMA legend Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira. Mir is the only person to submit former UFC Heavyweight Champion and WWE superstar Brock Lesnar and highly regarded Muay Thai striker Cheick Kongo. Mir has had more fights in the UFC than anyone else who competed in the heavyweight division. As of February 2013, he is ranked the #7 heavyweight in the world by Sherdog.[8]

Early life

His father convinced him to begin wrestling, on the basis that it could help him avoid submissions. Mir then began wrestling at Bonanza High School in Las Vegas, Nevada where during his junior year he lost his first nine matches.[9] During his senior year (1998) he went 44–1 and won the state championship.[9] He was also on the school's football team that reached the Southern Zone semifinals in 1997 and where he played as fullback and defensive end. He also took up track and field in 1998 where his discus throw of 177 feet, 10 inches is still a Sunset Regional record.[9]

Mixed martial arts career

Mir met UFC matchmaker Joe Silva at a school Silva was visiting. Silva saw potential in Mir as a future UFC fighter and suggested that he first prove himself against some fighters in the mixed martial arts world. Mir would make his professional MMA debut against Jerome Smith at HOOKnSHOOT: Showdown on July 14, 2001. Mir won the bout by judges' decision after two rounds. He won another match by submission against Dan Quinn at IFC Warriors Challenge 15.

After these events, Mir made his UFC debut against Roberto Travern. Traven had fought once in the UFC before (at UFC 11), and was the 1999 ADCC Submission Wrestling World Championship open class champion and 6th degree black belt in BJJ.[10] Mir defeated Roberto Travern by armbar at 1:05 of round one at UFC 34: High Voltage on November 2, 2001. The submission earned Mir the "Tapout of the Night" award.

Mir's next match in the UFC was against Pete Williams and took place at UFC 36: Worlds Collide on March 22, 2002. Mir submitted the veteran Williams (who had never been submitted before)[11] at only 46 seconds into the first round with a shoulder lock that has since been named after Mir.[12]

He faced Ian Freeman, at UFC 38: Brawl at the Hall, held in London, England on July 13, 2002. Despite several leglock attempts by Mir, Freeman achieved side control at around four minutes into the first round, landing numerous elbows and punches on Mir's head. After Freeman separated, the referee signaled Mir to stand back up. A time out was called due to an apparent cut on Mir's face, and the referee stopped the fight when Mir had difficulty standing up. The call is considered controversial by some fans (including Mir himself) because of the fact that he was never officially finished by Freeman and the fight only stopped due to difficulty standing up, which has been suggested was a smart, but bad call by the referee since that loss.

After the considered-controversial loss to Freeman, Mir then faced David "Tank" Abbott at UFC 41 on February 28, 2003. Mir[13] defeated Abbott in only 46 seconds into the first round by submission (Toe Hold).

On June 26, 2003 Mir fought Wes Sims at UFC 43: Meltdown. Mir won by disqualification at 2:55 of round one after Sims stomped down on Mir's face after slamming his way out of Mir's armbar attempt. They would rematch at UFC 46: Supernatural on January 31, 2004. Frank Mir won by KO at 4:21 of round two.

Heavyweight championship

On June 19, 2004, Mir faced Tim Sylvia for the vacant UFC Heavyweight Championship at UFC 48: Payback.[14] Referee Herb Dean stopped the fight at 50 seconds into the first round when Mir's armbar visibly broke Sylvia's right forearm. Mir trapped Sylvia's right arm in an armbar attempt. When Sylvia tried to pull out of the hold, Mir jerked back harder and Sylvia's radius bone snapped about 3 inches below his elbow. Sylvia repeatedly claimed his arm was not broken, even touching it and moving it around to show he was O.K.[15] Sylvia was taken to the nearby hospital where an x-ray showed that his arm was in fact broken in four different places, two in both the radial and ulna bones in his right forearm. Sylvia underwent surgery later in the week.[15]

With this technical submission win Mir became the new UFC Heavyweight Champion and later received his Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black-belt from Ricardo Pires for his performance in the fight.[16]

Motorcycle injury

On September 17, 2004, Mir was knocked off his motorcycle by a car. The accident caused a break in Mir's femur and tore all the ligaments in his knee.[17] The bone had broken in two places but the injury did not end Mir's career as a fighter. Major surgery was needed to repair the bone in his leg. An interim heavyweight title was created while Mir was recovering from the injury, which Andrei Arlovski won by defeating Tim Sylvia by way of a first round submission.[18] On August 12, 2005, the UFC learned that Mir was not able to fight Andrei Arlovski in October as scheduled, thus Mir was stripped of the title after 14 months, and Arlovski was promoted to be the undisputed UFC heavyweight champion.[19] In 2010, Mir told FIGHT! Magazine that he was grateful for the motorcycle accident.[20]

Return to the UFC

Mir recovered from his motorcycle accident and fought Márcio Cruz at UFC 57: Liddell vs. Couture 3 on February 4, 2006.[21] In a shocking upset, Mir was defeated by the relative newcomer in the first round by TKO due to strikes. Initially, referee Herb Dean called for a break to check a large cut on Mir's face. Mir was given the opportunity to continue, and did so.[22]

Mir returned to the Octagon on July 8, 2006 at UFC 61: Bitter Rivals and faced Dan Christison.[23] Mir had gained a considerable amount of weight and quickly became exhausted. Mir won in a lackluster fashion by unanimous decision after three rounds; the judges all scored the bout 29–28.[24] Criticism began to flourish with Mir not looking like the same fighter as he was before, both physically and technically.

Mir next faced Brandon Vera at UFC 65: Bad Intentions, in a fight that would determine the number one contender.[25] Mir showed slightly improved sharpness on his feet, and boxed well until being stunned by a straight right from Vera.[26] He was then dropped by knees from Vera's Muay Thai clinch, where the smaller Vera delivered elbows & punches from side control, forcing the referee to stop the fight.[26] Mir lost by TKO at only 1:09 of the first round.[26] While preparing for UFC 140, Mir explained that the reason why he suffered the 2 losses to Cruz and Vera was because even after having 14 months of recovery, he was still feeling the effects of the motorcycle accident he had.[27]

Rise back to title contention

Frank Mir was scheduled to fight Antoni Hardonk at UFC Fight Night 9 on April 5, 2007, but had to drop out due to a shoulder injury.[28] Mir recovered from the shoulder injury and fought Antoni Hardonk at UFC 74 and won via kimura in 1:17 of the first round.[29] At the end of the bout, Mir walked to the cameras pointing at himself saying "I'm back!". Frank's wife Jennifer was shown on the replay screaming and crying with joy when Frank secured the kimura and the fight was stopped.

After the fight with Hardonk, Mir stated that his long period of time away after his loss to Brandon Vera not only helped him recover from the shoulder injury, but helped recover from his motorcycle accident and while fighting Mirko Cro Cop at UFC 119 UFC commentator Mike Goldberg stated: "Mir, in that motorcycle years ago and, he's fought his way back".

Mir fought Brock Lesnar at UFC 81 on February 2, 2008. Early in the first round, Lesnar took Mir down and,[30] while striking from Mir's guard, landed illegal punches to the back of Mir's head, drawing a foul and a one-point deduction from referee Steve Mazzagatti.[31] They were stood up and Mir was given a brief recovery period, but Lesnar quickly took Mir down again. When Lesnar escaped an armbar attempt, Mir caught him with a kneebar, causing Lesnar to tap out at 1:30 of the first round.[32] Mir was awarded with Submission of the Night honors.[33]

The Ultimate Fighter Season 8

Spike TV on 12 May 2008 announced that the UFC Interim Heavyweight Champion Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira and former champion Frank Mir would be the coaches for the eighth season of The Ultimate Fighter.[34]

The season, which premiered on Spike TV on September 17, returned to the two-weight class format. It featured light heavyweight and lightweight fighters.[35] Production on season eight began in late May, with the entire cast announced in September, and concluded in December.[35]

Interim Heavyweight Championship

Frank Mir fought Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira at UFC 92 for the Interim UFC Heavyweight Championship.[36] This bout was part of a mini-heavyweight tournament, often hyped by UFC president Dana White. The winner of this fight would then face the winner of the match between the heavyweight champion Randy Couture and Brock Lesnar. Lesnar won by TKO in the second round,[37] gaining him the heavyweight championship belt in the process and then setting him to face the winner at UFC 100 to unify the belts.

"I wish I could make the statement that 'the odds were against me but you never quit', It was not true. I wanted to give up."

-Frank Mir, talking about his career ups and downs.[38]

Frank Mir then defeated Nogueira in the second round via TKO due to strikes,[38] showing vastly improved striking (particularly his boxing), by knocking down the Brazilian twice in the first round, and once in the second. He also scored a Judo-trip takedown in round one.[39] Herb Dean stopped the match at 1:54 of the second round.[39] Nogueira's loss marked the first time he had lost a fight by TKO.[40] In a post fight interview, Mir credited his improved striking to a drastic improvement in conditioning.[41]

Two days after the fight Dana White revealed in an interview that "Nogueira had just gotten over a Staph infection".[42] Nogueira himself verified this fact several months later in his own interview, stating that he had a Staph infection "20 days before the fight, [requiring] 5 days in the hospital." When asked if this infection affected his fight, Nogueira answered: "For sure." In addition to this significant illness, his knee was injured during training for which he had surgery in February 2009. Despite these legitimate handicaps, Nogueira offered strong praise for Frank Mir's performance, with particular credit given to Mir's ability to maintain "very good distance".[43]

Heavyweight Championship unification

Frank Mir's victory over Nogueira set in place a re-match with the UFC Heavyweight Champion Brock Lesnar for the UFC Heavyweight championship.[44] However, Mir stated, that in his opinion, holding victories over former Interim Heavyweight Champion Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira at UFC 92 and current UFC Heavyweight Champion Brock Lesnar at UFC 81 is enough to recognize him as the owner of the "real belt".[45] On May 23, 2009 in Las Vegas, Nevada, Frank Mir was scheduled to fight Brock Lesnar at UFC 98, however Mir sustained a knee injury during training which required arthroscopic surgery and the removal of bone chips from his knee. Mir's rematch against Brock Lesnar was rescheduled for UFC 100, July 11, 2009.[46]

At UFC 100, Mir was lively on his feet but proved unable to counter Lesnar's wrestling and positional dominance. In the second round, after being allowed to standup, he landed a combo ending with a turning right elbow which forced Lesnar to clinch—proceeding to land a jumping right knee to rock his opponent—he was still unable to prevent the takedown. After a period of recovery from the knee Lesnar pinned Mir up against the cage and delivered multiple unanswered blows to his face, forcing Herb Dean to stop the fight via TKO at 1:48 in the 2nd round. With the win, Brock Lesnar became the Undisputed UFC Heavyweight Champion.[47]

Mir vs. Kongo

"A lot of individuals are so worried about being politically correct. I'd rather go ahead and say what's on my mind than to sit there and come up with some PC 'Oh, the guy is a great fighter and I have a lot of respect for him.' If I don't mean it, why is it even coming out of my mouth? ... I want to fight Lesnar. I hate who he is as a person. I want to break his neck in the ring. I want him to be the first person that dies due to Octagon-related injuries. That's what's going through my mind."

-Frank Mir after UFC 107.[48]

Mir had his next fight against Cheick Kongo on December 12, 2009 at UFC 107. Mir was expected to weigh 20 to 25 lbs heavier than usual, due to the strength and conditioning program that he had undertaken to largely improve his muscular frame. This meant he would have to cut weight to get to the 265 lb limit.[49] As expected, Mir weighed in for his fight against Kongo at 264.5 lbs. At the weigh-ins, Kongo refused to face Mir during the traditional staredown before the fight. During the fight, Mir stunned Kongo with an overhand left early, dropping him and swarming to secure a guillotine choke victory at 1:12 in the first round. Kongo refused to tap and was rendered unconscious by the choke.[50]

In the post-fight press conference Mir expressed his desire to fight a rubber match with Brock Lesnar.[51] Mir later created controversy after commenting that he wanted to break Brock Lesnar's neck, so that he would become the first mixed martial artist to die in competition.[52] Mir later made an apology for his comments.[53]

Interim Heavyweight Championship bout

Mir faced Shane Carwin for the Interim UFC Heavyweight Championship on March 27, 2010 at UFC 111.[54] After a brief standup exchange, Carwin pushed Mir against the cage where he delivered to Mir's chin several short upper-cuts. Mir was knocked out unconscious and lost the fight via KO at 3:48 of the first round.[55]

At a UFC Fan Expo, Mir said he briefly considered dropping down to the Light Heavyweight division, although he later confirmed he will remain at heavyweight.[56]

Second rise back to title contention

Mir was expected to face Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira on September 25, 2010 at UFC 119 in a rematch from the Interim Championship bout, which Mir won via TKO at UFC 92.[57] Nogueira pulled out of this fight due to knee surgery and was replaced by Mirko Filipović.[58] Mir defeated Filipović via third round KO, earning the win with a knee from the clinch in a largely uneventful fight where neither fighter was able to deliver any significant offense.[59]

Mir faced Roy Nelson on May 28, 2011 at UFC 130. He won via unanimous decision by using superior control and constant pressure. Pushing against the cage, completing a Judo hip throw and securing several takedowns in the third round, showing improved wrestling. Mir landed several hard knees and elbows from the Muay Thai clinch throughout the entire bout, but was unable to finish the very tough Nelson.[60][61]

"I had a strong inclination that he was not going to tap, so I took a deep breath and you guys saw what happened. I was being a little too reactionary. When he caught me with the right hand, at that point, it turned into a war. I started to move around and he wanted to play jiu-jitsu with me. I’m pretty good on the ground."

-Frank Mir at the post-fight press conference.[62]

A rematch with Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira took place on December 10, 2011 at UFC 140.[63] In the bout, Mir was dropped in the middle of the first round by a punch from Nogueira and the bout nearly stopped. Mir quickly recovered and gained superior positioning, defeating Nogueira by kimura at 3:38 of round 1, snapping Nogueira's arm in the process and causing Nogueira to tap out. Mir is now the first only one of two fighters (the other being Cain Velasquez) to have finished Nogueira via knock out, and the first and only one to finish him via submission. This marked the first time Nogueira had been stopped via submission in mixed martial arts. The victory also earned Mir Submission of the Night honors.[64] UFC President Dana White called it the "submission of the century" at the post fight press conference.[62]

Third title shot and beyond

Mir was expected to face Cain Velasquez on May 25, 2012 at UFC 146.[65] However, on April 20, 2012, Dana White announced that Mir would face Junior dos Santos for the UFC Heavyweight Championship, replacing Alistair Overeem. On May 11, 2012 UFC Primetime returned to promote the fight between Mir and Junior dos Santos, and concluded on May 25.[66] Dos Santos was able to use superior foot work to strike on and out before Mir could mount any significant offense.[67] Mir lost the fight via TKO in the second round.[67] and has since said he will continue his career and go back to the drawing board.

The UFC announced that Mir had been given a one fight sabbatical to compete under the Strikeforce banner to challenge Strikeforce Grand Prix tournament winner Daniel Cormier.[68]

The bout with Cormier was expected to take place on November 3, 2012 at Strikeforce: Cormier vs. Mir.[69] However, on September 19 it was revealed that Mir suffered an injury in training and was forced to pull out of the bout.[70]

The bout with Cormier has been rescheduled for April 20, 2013 at UFC on Fox 7.[71]

Personal life

Frank Mir's father is Cuban, born of Moroccan immigrants of Russian descent. The surname "Mir" translated from Russian, means "world" or "peace" (depending upon the context). The family name was never "Miranda" as the fighter and his father already explained to the press.[72] Mir and his wife Jennifer have three children together and Jennifer has a son from a previous relationship, whom Mir helps raise and is in the process of formally adopting.[4][73]

Frank Mir is an atheist[74] and a libertarian.[75] He followed a vegan diet for a year[76] but then switched to Paleo diet for supposedly better athletic outcome.[77]

Mir worked as a bouncer at the Spearmint Rhino strip club in Las Vegas before entering the UFC,[78] and continued to work as Director of Security there while pursuing his UFC career.[79]

Color commentary

Frank Mir was a color commentator for the World Extreme Cagefighting until WEC 47, where he was officially replaced by Stephan Bonnar who had filled in for Mir due to training commitments.[80][81]

Frank Mir announced on May, 2012 at MMAjunkie.com Radio show that he is set to commentate for Strikeforce in the future. He was unsure of exact dates, but did confirm that he would be the color commentator.[82]

In June, 2012, Mir stated on an interview with The Chronicle-Journal that he wants to go into commentary when he retires from the UFC.[83] "I like analyzing fights and I like doing color commentating" - said Mir. "It’s an opportunity I would take advantage of when I run into it. Hopefully it’s something I can do full time".[84]

Championships and achievements

Mixed martial arts

  • FIGHT! Magazine
  • 2012 World MMA Awards
    • Submission of the Year (2011) vs. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira on December 10[92]
    • Comeback of the Year (2011) vs. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira[92]

Submission grappling

Amateur wrestling

  • Nevada State Wrestling
    • Nevada State Wrestling Champion (1998)

Mixed martial arts record

Professional record breakdown
22 matches 16 wins 6 losses
By knockout 3 6
By submission 9 0
By decision 3 0
By disqualification 1 0
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
United States Daniel Cormier UFC on Fox: Henderson vs. Melendez April 20, 2013 San Jose, California, United States
Loss 16–6 Brazil Junior dos Santos TKO (punches) UFC 146 May 26, 2012 2 3:04 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States For the UFC Heavyweight Championship.
Win 16–5 Brazil Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira Technical submission (kimura) UFC 140 December 10, 2011 1 3:38 Toronto, Ontario, Canada Submission of the Night; Submission of the Year (2011).
Win 15–5 United States Roy Nelson Decision (unanimous) UFC 130 May 28, 2011 3 5:00 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 14–5 Croatia Mirko Filipović KO (knee) UFC 119 September 25, 2010 3 4:02 Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Loss 13–5 United States Shane Carwin KO (punches) UFC 111 March 27, 2010 1 3:48 Newark, New Jersey, United States For the Interim UFC Heavyweight Championship.
Win 13–4 France Cheick Kongo Technical Submission (guillotine choke) UFC 107 December 12, 2009 1 1:12 Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Loss 12–4 United States Brock Lesnar TKO (punches) UFC 100 July 11, 2009 2 1:48 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States For the Unified UFC Heavyweight Championship.
Win 12–3 Brazil Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira TKO (punches) UFC 92 December 27, 2008 2 1:57 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Won the Interim UFC Heavyweight Championship.
Win 11–3 United States Brock Lesnar Submission (kneebar) UFC 81 February 2, 2008 1 1:30 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Submission of the Night; Submission of the Year (2008).
Win 10–3 Netherlands Antoni Hardonk Submission (kimura) UFC 74 August 25, 2007 1 1:17 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Loss 9–3 United States Brandon Vera TKO (punches) UFC 65 November 18, 2006 1 1:09 Sacramento, California, United States
Win 9–2 United States Dan Christison Decision (unanimous) UFC 61 July 8, 2006 3 5:00 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Loss 8–2 Brazil Márcio Cruz TKO (punches) UFC 57 February 4, 2006 1 4:10 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States First fight after motorcycle accident.
Win 8–1 United States Tim Sylvia Technical Submission (armbar) UFC 48 June 19, 2004 1 0:50 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Won the UFC Heavyweight Championship.
Win 7–1 United States Wes Sims KO (punches & knees) UFC 46 January 31, 2004 2 4:21 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 6–1 United States Wes Sims DQ (illegal stomping) UFC 43 June 6, 2003 1 2:55 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 5–1 United States Tank Abbott Submission (toe hold) UFC 41 February 28, 2003 1 0:46 Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States
Loss 4–1 United Kingdom Ian Freeman TKO (punches) UFC 38 July 13, 2002 1 4:35 London, United Kingdom
Win 4–0 United States Pete Williams Submission (inside shoulder lock) UFC 36 March 22, 2002 1 0:46 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 3–0 Brazil Roberto Traven Submission (armbar) UFC 34 November 2, 2001 1 1:05 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 2–0 United States Dan Quinn Submission (triangle choke) IFC 15 August 31, 2001 1 2:15 Oroville, California, United States
Win 1–0 United States Jerome Smith Decision (unanimous) SF 11 July 14, 2001 2 5:00 Evansville, Indiana, United States

See also

References

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Awards and achievements
Preceded by 10th UFC Heavyweight Champion
June 19, 2004 – August 12, 2005
Vacant
Stripped of title due to motorcycle accident injury
Title next held by
Andrei Arlovski
Preceded by 3rd UFC Interim Heavyweight Champion
December 27, 2008 – July 11, 2009
Vacant
Lost unification bout against Brock Lesnar
Title next held by
Shane Carwin

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