Denis Kang

Denis Kang

Kang (pictured right) at weigh-ins in February 2010
Born (1977-09-17) September 17, 1977
Saint-Pierre, Saint Pierre and Miquelon
Other names The Super Korean[1]
Nationality Canadian
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight 185 lb (84 kg; 13.2 st)
Division Middleweight
Light Heavyweight
Reach 77.0 in (196 cm)[2]
Style Brazilian jiu-jitsu
Fighting out of North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada and Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Team American Top Team
Zahabi MMA
Tristar Gym
Rank Third degree black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
Years active 1998–2013
Kickboxing record
Total 1
Wins 0
Losses 1
By knockout 1
Draws 0
Mixed martial arts record
Total 55
Wins 35
By knockout 13
By submission 16
By decision 6
Losses 16
By knockout 6
By submission 8
By decision 2
Draws 2
No contests 2
Other information
Website http://www.deniskang.com/
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog
Denis Kang
Hangul 데니스 강
Hanja denis 姜
Revised Romanization Denis Gang
McCune–Reischauer Tenisŭ Kang

Denis Kang (Hangul: 강대수, born September 17, 1977) is a French Canadian professional mixed martial artist who most recently competed in the Middleweight division. A professional competitor since 1998, Kang has formerly competed for the UFC, PRIDE, DREAM, Impact FC, M-1 Global, K-1 HERO'S, ROAD FC, and Pancrase. In his prime he scored notable wins over, Pat Healy, Marvin Eastman, Akihiro Gono and Murilo Rua.

Background

Kang was born in the French overseas collectivity of Saint Pierre & Miquelon to a Korean father and French mother.[3] He and his family relocated to the Canary Islands and finally North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, in 1988 when he was 11 years old. After some years from their arrival to Vancouver, he started taking Hapkido lessons by encouragement of his parents. Kang transitioned into Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in high school because he wanted to improve in his ground game more than practice self-defense.

Mixed martial arts career

Early career

Kang's MMA career began in 1998 at the Ultimate Warrior Challenge in Vancouver, Canada. Kang was successful in his debut fight, winning by submission (rear naked choke) over Eric Harcrow. Kang would go on to win his next 2 fights before going 2–5 over his next 8 with one no contest against Dennis Hallman. He would go 7–7 with one no contest in his first 15 fights, with a few convincing defeats.

After winning five of his next six fights, Kang signed a contract with Spirit MC, a South Korea MMA organization. Denis went 5–0 while fighting in Korea and was crowned the Spirit MC Heavyweight Champion. Following this, Denis relocated to Florida and joined American Top Team.

It was at this time that Kang caught the attention of the PRIDE Fighting Championships. Kang signed a contract with PRIDE and made his debut at PRIDE Bushido 6, where he defeated Japanese opponent Takahiro Oba via armbar at 4:24 of round one. Under the Korean banner, Denis went on to win his next two fights in PRIDE, with a victory coming over Englishman Mark Weir at PRIDE Bushido 10. In between fights for Pride, Denis fought American Albert Basconcelles and knocked him out within 12 seconds of the opening bell. At Bushido 11, Kang continued his winning streak by knocking out Chute Boxe member Murilo "Ninja" Rua in 15 seconds in the first round of the PRIDE Bushido Welterweight (183 lb) Grand Prix. At Bushido 12, Denis submitted Armenian Amar Suloev via rear naked choke to advance to the semi-final round of the Welterweight Grand Prix. With this win, Kang was then 18–0–1 in his last 19 contests. However, after advancing through the semi-final round of the Bushido tournament and beating Akihiro Gono on November 5, 2006 he was defeated by Kazuo Misaki in the final at Bushido 13. Kang had torn his right biceps muscle earlier that night in his win over Gono.[4]

Kang had only one match in 2007 after breaking his hand (an injury that will reappear over and over again) in a match against Jungkyu Choi for the Spirit MC Heavyweight Championship on March 11. Kang won via unanimous decision but was unable to compete for several months.

After the contract termination of PRIDE, Kang moved to K-1 Hero's maintaining the championship of Spirit MC. Kang made his K-1 Hero's debut on October 28, 2007, in "K-1 Hero's in Seoul". His opponent was Yoshihiro Akiyama who was returning to MMA after a 10-month suspension. Kang lost via TKO.

Kang next fight was on April 29, 2008, in the opening round of the Dream 2: Middleweight Grand Prix 2008 First Round, losing to Gegard Mousasi via triangle choke.

On August 30, 2008, Kang defended his Spirit MC Heavyweight Championship by defeating Kim Jae Young by TKO due to strikes at 1:31 of the first round.[5]

Kang defeated UFC veteran Marvin Eastman by TKO on October 25, 2008, at “Raw Combat: Redemption” in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The fight lasted 48 seconds.

Ultimate Fighting Championship

Kang made his UFC debut on January 17, 2009 against Alan Belcher despite suffering from ankle injury.[6] Although Kang controlled the fight, he lost by guillotine choke at the end of round two after a takedown attempt.

Kang redeemed himself with a victory over Xavier Foupa-Pokam at UFC 97 by unanimous decision.

Kang faced Michael Bisping on November 14, 2009 at UFC 105.[7] In an interview about his fight with Bisping, Kang revealed he wanted a title fight with Anderson Silva.[8] Bisping TKO'd Kang in the 2nd round.[9] Even though Bisping was the crowd favourite in his home town Manchester and Kang was being booed on, Kang dropped Bisping with a right hand in the first round.[10] Kang followed Bisping to the floor and attempted submissions, but Bisping defended well and neutralised Kang's attacks despite Kang briefly having full mount.[9] In the 2nd round Bisping secured a single-leg takedown and the momentum of the fight shifted : he unleashed a vicious ground and pound attack on the Canadian, which Kang failed to recover from.[11] The fight was awarded Fight of the Night honours, giving both Kang and Bisping a $40,000 bonus check.[12]

Kang was cut from the UFC on Dec. 9 2009, along with Brock Larson, Rolando Delgado and Jason Dent. Kang recently announced he has signed with W1 MMA and will fight for their vacant middleweight title on December 18, 2010 in Montreal, Quebec.

Post-UFC

Denis defeated Dae Won Kim at W-1: Judgment day.[13] Kang faced off against former WEC Middleweight Champion Paulo Filho on July 18, 2010 at an Impact Fighting Championships event.[14] The fight was declared a split draw.

Denis joined the Korean MMA promotion ROAD FC by signing a multi-fight non-exclusive deal.[15]

Denis lost to Melvin Manhoef by KO due to a knee to the body early in the first round of their DREAM 18 New Year's Eve fight at the end of 2012.[16]

Personal life

His youngest brother, Julien Kang, is an actor and model in South Korea. Kang is engaged to WBFF fitness model Christine Frances (Goudie).

Championships and accomplishments

Mixed martial arts

Mixed martial arts record

Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 35–16–2 (2) Melvin Manhoef TKO (knee to the body) DREAM 18 December 31, 2012 1 0:50 Tokyo, Japan
Win 35–15–2 (2) Hae Suk Son KO (punches) Road FC 8: Bitter Rivals June 16, 2012 1 4:57 Wonju, South Korea
Loss 34–15–2 (2) Shungo Oyama TKO (knees) Road FC 5: Night of Champions December 3, 2011 1 4:30 Seoul, South Korea
Loss 34–14–2 (2) Seung Bae Whi TKO (knees) Road FC 3: Explosion July 24, 2011 2 3:58 Seoul, South Korea
Loss 34–13–2 (2) Jesse Taylor Submission (rear-naked choke) Battlefield Fight League 8: Island Beatdown May 28, 2011 1 1:57 Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
Win 34–12–2 (2) Eun Soo Lee Decision (unanimous) Road FC 2: Alive April 16, 2011 3 5:00 Seoul, South Korea Light Heavyweight bout.
Draw 33–12–2 (2) Paulo Filho Draw (split) Impact FC 2 July 18, 2010 3 5:00 Sydney, Australia
Win 33–12–1 (2) Dae Won Kim Submission (arm-triangle choke) W-1: Judgment day June 19, 2010 1 1:49 Laval, Quebec, Canada
Loss 32–12–1 (2) Michael Bisping TKO (knees to the body & punches) UFC 105 November 14, 2009 2 4:24 Manchester, England Fight of the Night.
Win 32–11–1 (2) Xavier Foupa-Pokam Decision (unanimous) UFC 97 April 18, 2009 3 5:00 Montreal, Canada
Loss 31–11–1 (2) Alan Belcher Submission (guillotine choke) UFC 93 January 17, 2009 2 4:36 Dublin, Ireland
Win 31–10–1 (2) Marvin Eastman KO (punches) Raw Combat: Redemption October 25, 2008 1 0:48 Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Win 30–10–1 (2) Jae Young Kim KO (punches and stomp) Spirit MC August 30, 2008 1 1:13 Seoul, South Korea Defended the Spirit MC Heavyweight (+80 kg) Championship.
Loss 29–10–1 (2) Gegard Mousasi Submission (triangle choke) Dream 2: Middleweight Grand Prix 2008 First Round April 29, 2008 1 3:10 Saitama, Japan DREAM Middleweight Grand Prix Opening Round.
Loss 29–9–1 (2) Yoshihiro Akiyama KO (punches) Hero's 2007 in Korea October 27, 2007 1 4:45 Seoul, South Korea
Win 29–8–1 (2) Jung Gyu Choi Decision (majority) Spirit MC March 11, 2007 3 5:00 Seoul, South Korea Defended the Spirit MC Heavyweight (+80 kg) Championship.
Loss 28–8–1 (2) Kazuo Misaki Decision (split) PRIDE Bushido 13 November 5, 2006 3 5:00 Yokohama, Japan PRIDE 2006 Welterweight Grand Prix Final.
Win 28–7–1 (2) Akihiro Gono Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Bushido 13 November 5, 2006 2 5:00 Yokohama, Japan PRIDE 2006 Welterweight Grand Prix Semifinal.
Win 27–7–1 (2) Amar Suloev Submission (one-arm strangle) PRIDE Bushido 12 August 26, 2006 1 4:10 Nagoya, Japan PRIDE 2006 Welterweight Grand Prix Quarterfinal.
Win 26–7–1 (2) Murilo Rua KO (punches) PRIDE Bushido 11 June 4, 2006 1 0:15 Saitama, Japan PRIDE 2006 Welterweight Grand Prix Opening Round.
Win 25–7–1 (2) Albert Basconcelles TKO (punches) Spirit MC April 22, 2006 1 0:12 Seoul, South Korea
Win 24–7–1 (2) Mark Weir Submission (knees) PRIDE Bushido 10 April 2, 2006 1 4:55 Tokyo, Japan
Win 23–7–1 (2) Ron Fields Submission (rear-naked choke) Absolute Fighting Championships 14 December 10, 2005 1 2:46 Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States
NC 22–7–1 (2) Robert Villegas No Contest Spirit MC October 29, 2005 1 0:00 Seoul, South Korea
Win 22–7–1 (1) Andrei Semenov Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Bushido 8 July 17, 2005 2 5:00 Nagoya, Japan
Win 21–7–1 (1) Takahiro Oba Submission (armbar) PRIDE Bushido 6 April 3, 2005 1 4:24 Yokohama, Japan
Win 20–7–1 (1) Alexei Vezelozorov Submission (choke) M-1 MFC: Heavyweight GP December 4, 2004 1 1:17 Moscow, Russia
Win 19–7–1 (1) Jin Ho Yang TKO (punches) Spirit MC September 11, 2004 1 0:49 Seoul, South Korea Spirit MC Grand Prix 2004 Final; Won the Spirit MC Heavyweight (+80 kg) Championship.
Win 18–7–1 (1) Jae Young Kim Submission (arm-triangle choke) Spirit MC September 11, 2004 1 1:38 Seoul, South Korea Spirit MC Grand Prix 2004 Semifinal
Win 17–7–1 (1) Junpei Hamada Submission (armbar) Spirit MC September 11, 2004 1 2:35 Seoul, South Korea Spirit MC Grand Prix 2004 Quarterfinal
Win 16–7–1 (1) Kobus Huisamen TKO (punches) Spirit MC June 12, 2004 1 1:06 Seoul, South Korea
Win 15–7–1 (1) Hyun Chul Cho Submission (rear-naked choke) Spirit MC April 10, 2004 1 2:06 Seoul, South Korea
Win 14–7–1 (1) Hyung Jun Kim TKO (punches) Spirit MC February 7, 2004 1 1:13 Seoul, South Korea
Win 13–7–1 (1) Jae Young Kim TKO (punches) Spirit MC February 7, 2004 1 0:38 Seoul, South Korea
Draw 12–7–1 (1) Andrei Semenov Draw M-1 MFC: Russia vs. The World 7 December 5, 2003 1 10:00 St. Petersburg, Russia
Win 12–7 (1) Stephan Potvin TKO (punches) TKO Major League MMA September 6, 2003 3 2:22 Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Win 11–7 (1) Kaipo Kalama Decision (majority) SB 30: Collision Course June 13, 2003 3 3:00 Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Win 10–7 (1) Brendan Seguin Submission (armbar) SB 30: Collision Course June 13, 2003 1 2:24 Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Win 9–7 (1) Keith Rockel KO (punch) USMMA 3: Ring of Fury May 3, 2003 2 2:59 Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Win 8–7 (1) Chris Peak Submission (rear-naked choke) World Freestyle Fighting 4 April 4, 2003 1 0:57 Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada
Loss 7–7 (1) Jason Miller Submission (rear-naked choke) Extreme Challenge 50 February 23, 2003 2 1:41 Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Loss 7–6 (1) Joe Doerksen Submission (triangle choke) UCC 11: The Next Level October 11, 2002 1 4:49 Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Win 7–5 (1) Pat Healy Submission (guillotine choke) Rumble in the Ring 7 July 20, 2002 1 3:42 Auburn, Washington, United States
Win 6–5 (1) Shane Biever Submission (armlock) World Freestyle Fighting 2 July 20, 2002 1 3:03 Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada
NC 5–5 (1) Dennis Hallman No Contest World Freestyle Fighting 1 April 13, 2002 2 3:15 Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada Hallman accidentally headbutted Kang & opened a cut above the eye.
Loss 5–5 Marty Armendarez TKO (punches) Pancrase: Proof 3 May 13, 2001 3 3:45 Oroville, California, United States
Loss 5–4 Osami Shibuya Submission (rear-naked choke) Warriors Challenge 15 August 31, 2001 1 3:52 Tokyo, Japan
Loss 5–3 Keiichiro Yamamiya Decision (majority) Pancrase: Trans 7 December 4, 2000 2 3:00 Tokyo, Japan
Win 5–2 Minoru Suzuki Submission (back injury) Pancrase: 2000 Anniversary Show September 24, 2000 1 3:43 Yokohama, Japan
Win 4–2 Lonnie Canida TKO (punches) Western Canada's Toughest March 18, 2000 1 4:06 Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada
Loss 3–2 Joe Slick Submission (arm-triangle choke) Extreme Challenge 24 May 15, 1999 1 5:53 Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Loss 3–1 Jacen Flynn Submission (guillotine choke) Bas Rutten Invitational 2 April 24, 1999 1 4:07 Littleton, Colorado, United States
Win 3–0 Tom Bolger Submission (triangle choke) Bas Rutten Invitational 2 April 24, 1999 1 1:55 Littleton, Colorado, United States
Win 2–0 Fadi Habib TKO (punches) Ultimate Warrior Challenge 2 November 1, 1998 1 0:53 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Win 1–0 Eric Harcrow Submission (rear-naked choke) Ultimate Warrior Challenge August 2, 1998 1 0:15 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Kickboxing record

Kickboxing record
0 wins, 1 loss
Result Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss Thailand Kaoklai Kaennorsing KO (Right Hook) K-1 World Grand Prix 2004 in Seoul July 7, 2004 1 1:48 Seoul, South Korea
Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest

Submission grappling record

Result Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Notes
LossUnited States Andy Reese Points (Under 87.9 kg)

See also

References

External links

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