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PRIDE or PRIDE Fighting Championships is a major mixed martial arts organization based in Japan. It is currently promoted by Dream Stage Entertainment (DSE). Its inaugural event was held at the Tokyo Dome on October 11, 1997, promoted by Kakutougi Revolution Spirits (KRS).[link] It is the most popular MMA organization in the world based on the number of event attendees: the PRIDE Final Conflict 2003 event had over 67,000 people in the audience. The audience record is 91,107 people on the PRIDE and K-1 co-production Shockwave/Dynamite, held in August 2002.

On June 5, 2006, Fuji Network announced that they were terminating their television contract with PRIDE Fighting Championships effective immediately due to a breach of contract by DSE. [link]. This leaves PRIDE with only SKY PerfectTV, a pay-per-view carrier, as a television outlet in Japan, and the lack of the substantial revenues from the Fuji deal threatens its sustainability. DSE has been surrounded by speculation in the Japanese media, especially in Japanese tabloid Shukan Gendai, that it may be a front by a notorious yakuza group. DSE responded to the loss by stating they will continue with their schedule as currently planned, including an event in Las Vegas, Nevada on October 21 2006, PRIDE's first event outside of Japan.[link]

PRIDE announced it will cooperate with the Ultimate Fighting Championship, North America's largest MMA organization, and will be showcasing their fighters, including Wanderlei Silva and Kazuyuki Fujita, at a UFC event in November 2006.[link]

Rules

PRIDE's rules result in similar styles of fighting as seen in Ultimate Fighting Championship in the United States. Unlike the UFC, where matches take place within a cage, PRIDE holds its bouts within a boxing style ring. Other notable differences between PRIDE FC and the UFC are:

Weight classes

Match length

Most PRIDE FC matches are broken down as follows:
:Round 1 - 10 minutes
:Round 2 - 5 minutes
:Round 3 - 5 minutes
There are two-minute breaks between rounds.

Victory

Matches are won via:
A fighter taps either his opponent or the mat three times.
A fighter may also verbally submit
  • Technical Knockout
  • * Referee Stoppage---If the referee sees that one fighter is completely dominant to the point of endangering his opponent, the referee will stop the match.
  • * Doctor Stoppage---In the event that a fighter is injured (via fair methods) and cannot continue the match, his opponent will be declared the winner. The ring doctor will be the one to determine whether the fighter can continue or not. In the event that an injury was caused by illegal methods, the perpetrator will be disqualified.
  • * Forfeited Match---A fighter's corner throws in the towel.
  • Decision
  • If the match goes the distance, then the outcome of the bout is determined by the three judges. A decision is made according to the following: the effort made to finish the fight via KO or submission, damage given to the opponent, standing combinations & ground control, aggressiveness and weight (in the case that the weight difference is 10 kg/22 lb or more). The above criteria are listed according to priority. The fight is scored in its entirety and not round by round. After the third round, each judge must decide a winner. Matches cannot end in a draw.
  • Disqualification
  • A "warning" will be given in the form of a yellow card (along with a 10% deduction in fight purse) when a fighter commits an illegal action or does not follow the referee's instruction. Three warnings will result in a disqualification.
  • No Contest
  • In the event that both sides commit a violation of the rules, the bout will be declared a "No Contest."

    Notes

    Middleweight Class: Weight less than 93 kg/205 lb. Heavyweight Class: Weight more than or equal to 93 kg/ 205 lb.

    Additional notes

    Rules for the BUSHIDO events are generally the same as PRIDE FC rules with some exceptions: GRAND PRIX tournament events follow the same rules as standard PRIDE FC events with one exception:

    PRIDE current champions

    Fedor Emelianenko, current PRIDE Heavyweight Champion
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    Fedor Emelianenko, current PRIDE Heavyweight Champion

    Division Champion

    Heavyweight Fedor Emelianenko
    Middleweight Wanderlei Silva
    Welterweight Dan Henderson
    Lightweight Takanori Gomi


    Recent Tournament champions:
    Year/Weight Champion

    2004 Heavyweight Fedor Emelianenko
    2005 Middleweight Mauricio Rua
    2005 Welterweight Dan Henderson
    2005 Lightweight Takanori Gomi

    Notable PRIDE fighters

    Note: some fighters occasionally change their weight class.

    Heavyweight

    Middleweight

    Wanderlei Silva, current Middleweight Champion.
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    Wanderlei Silva, current Middleweight Champion.

    Welterweight

    Lightweight

    PRIDE events

    See also

    References

    External links

     


    From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
    All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

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