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Rob Kimmons
American mixed martial arts fighter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Rob Kimmons (born January 30, 1981) is a retired American mixed martial artist who last competed in the Welterweight division. A professional from 2000 until 2013, he competed for the UFC, WEC, and Titan FC.
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Background
Raised in the small town of Rosedale, Kansas, Kimmons wrestled his junior and senior high school seasons, earning first-team all-state honors his senior year.
Mixed martial arts career
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After compiling an amateur MMA record of 16–0, Kimmons made his professional mixed martial arts debut on November 21, 2003, for the HOOKnSHOOT promotion. He knocked out David Webster in the first round to notch his first professional win. Rob won two more times in 2004, was signed to World Extreme Cagefighting, and was given a fight against Joe Riggs for the vacant middleweight title. Kimmons lost the fight in the first round. After winning six straight fights since the loss to Riggs, Kimmons took his second loss, this time to Ryan Jensen.
Kimmons fought for the title of World Series of Rumble Welterweight in 2006 and defeated Steve Schneider to become champion. He then fought in Shooto's American Welterweight Grand Prix, defeating all the competition with first-round knockouts or submissions to win the 16-man tournament.
In July 2007, Kimmons faced UFC veteran Marvin Eastman for the International Fighting Organization's middleweight title. Kimmons lost the fight by decision. Kimmons dropped down to the welterweight division two months later to face Tristan Yunker for the IFO's welterweight title. Kimmons won the title in the first round.
Ultimate Fighting Championship
Kimmons made his debut, defeating Rob Yundt on the undercard of the TUF 7 Finale. Kimmons submitted Yundt with a guillotine choke in round 1.
He had his second fight for the company on the UFC Fight Night 15 card, taking on Dan Miller. Miller dominated the fight and submitted Kimmons early in round one. Kimmons bounced back with a win on the UFC Fight Night 18 card by choking Joe Vedepo unconscious. Kimmons won submission of the night honors.
After suffering a TKO loss to Jorge Rivera, Kimmons plans to move to the UFC welterweight division instead of middleweight.
Kimmons was scheduled to face Mike Pierce on March 21, 2010, at UFC Live: Vera vs. Jones[1] but was forced off the card with an injury. Pierce is now set to face UFC newcomer Julio Paulino.[2]
Kimmons then faced Steve Steinbeiss on August 1, 2010, at UFC on Versus 2[3] and won unanimously.
Kimmons lost to Kyle Noke on November 13, 2010, at UFC 122 via submission (rear-naked choke) at 1:33 of round 2.
Kimmons next faced Dongi Yang on March 3, 2011, at UFC Live: Sanchez vs. Kampmann.[4] He lost the fight via TKO due to punches near the end of the second round and was subsequently released from the promotion.[5]
Post UFC
He faced Chuck Parmelee on September 10th, 2011, winning the fight in 53 seconds via Guillotine Choke.[6]
He faced Andre Kase on October 6th, 2012, winning the fight 3:14 in the first round via TKO due to Knees.[6]
He faced Dan McGlasson on November 17th, 2012, winning the fight via Submission due to strikes.[6]
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Championships and accomplishments
- International Fighting Organization
- IFO Welterweight Championship (One time)
- Ultimate Fighting Championship
- Submission of the Night (One time) vs. Joe Vedepo (technical guillotine choke)
Mixed martial arts record
35 matches | 26 wins | 9 losses |
By knockout | 6 | 4 |
By submission | 16 | 3 |
By decision | 4 | 2 |
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Amateur mixed martial arts record
7 matches | 7 wins | 0 losses |
By knockout | 4 | 0 |
By submission | 3 | 0 |
By decision | 0 | 0 |
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See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
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