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Takanori Gomi (Japanese: 五味隆典, Gomi Takanori, born September 22, 1978) is a Japanese professional mixed martial artist who gained international fame in Pride Fighting Championships. Later in his career, Gomi also competed in the Ultimate Fighting Championship .
Nick Diaz defeated Takanori Gomi in a non-title fight via Gogoplata. The victory was later ruled a No Contest due to a failed drug test (Cannabis) from Diaz. The pay-per-view retailed for $34.99 and was announced by Lon McEachern , Frank Trigg , and Josh Barnett .
Takanori Gomi * Hayato Sakurai: Pride Total Elimination Absolute Pride Critical Countdown Absolute Pride Final Conflict Absolute: Openweight Mirko Filipović: Josh Barnett: September 10, 2006 Pride Bushido 11 Pride Bushido 12 Pride Bushido 13: Welterweight Kazuo Misaki: Denis Kang: November 5, 2006
Takanori Gomi. Hayato Sakurai. Tatsuya Kawajiri. Hatsu Hioki. This is a list of fighters who have participated in the Pride Fighting Championships. [1] [2] [note 1] List
In a lightweight championship bout, Takanori Gomi faced Marcus Aurélio, who had defeated Gomi in a non-title fight at Pride Bushido 10. Originally Gilbert Melendez was set to face Shinya Aoki but an injury during training forced Melendez to withdraw from the fight. Clay French replaced Melendez in the fight. [11]
Takanori Gomi: Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Bushido 9: 25 September 2005: 2 5:00 Win 10–4 Naoyuki Kotani: KO (punches) PRIDE Bushido 9: 25 September 2005: 1 0:11 Loss 9–4 Takanori Gomi: KO (punches) PRIDE Bushido 7: 22 May 2005: 1 3:46 Win 9–3 Luiz Firmino: Decision (split) PRIDE Bushido 6: 3 April 2005: 2 5:00 Win 8–3 Regiclaudio Macedo ...
Gomi (written: 五味) is a Japanese surname. Notable people with the surname include: Gomi Kosuke (五味 康祐, 1921 – 1980), Japanese novelist; Takanori Gomi (五味 隆典, born 1978), "The Fireball Kid", Japanese mixed martial arts fighter; Taro Gomi (五味 太郎, born 1945), Japanese children's book illustrator and writer
Pride has its roots on Japanese Professional wrestling ().In the 1970s, Antonio Inoki rose to pronominance in Japan by founding New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) and introducing his own style of wrestling he dubbed "Strong-style", derived from training in Karate and Catch-As-Catch-Can, an earlier style of legit Professional wrestling and submission grappling, taught by Karl Gotch.