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Kiyoshi Tamura

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Kiyoshi Tamura
Tamura at the Masa Saito Memorial event in 2019.
Born (1969-12-17) December 17, 1969 (age 55)
Okayama, Okayama, Japan[1]
NationalityJapanese
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight88.5 kg (195 lb)
DivisionHeavyweight
Light Heavyweight
Middleweight
StanceSouthpaw
TeamRINGS Japan
U-File Camp
Teacher(s)Nobuhiko Takada
Akira Maeda
Billy Robinson
Lou Thesz
Years active1995–2003, 2005–2008
Mixed martial arts record
Total48
Wins32
By knockout6
By submission16
By decision8
Unknown2
Losses13
By knockout4
By submission3
By decision4
Unknown2
Draws3
Other information
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Kiyoshi Tamura (田村潔司, Tamura Kiyoshi, born December 17, 1969 in Okayama, Okayama) is a Japanese retired professional wrestler and mixed martial artist. Once a student of legendary professional wrestlers Billy Robinson, Lou Thesz and Akira Maeda, Tamura was known for his skills in catch wrestling and is considered to be one of the greatest shoot wrestlers of all time.[2] Competing exclusively in shoot style wrestling, Tamura began his career with UWF Newborn and later joined its successor group UWF International before transitioning to mixed martial arts.

A professional MMA fighter from 1995 until 2008, he competed for the PRIDE Fighting Championships, RINGS, DEEP, DREAM, and fought at K-1's 2007 and 2008 Dynamite!! events. He is a two-time RINGS Openweight Champion and holds notable wins over Renzo Gracie, former UFC Welterweight Champion Pat Miletich, former UFC Middleweight Champion Dave Menne, former Pancrase Super Heavyweight Champion Tsuyoshi Kosaka, former Pancrase Openweight Champion Masakatsu Funaki, Olympic judo gold medallist Makoto Takimoto, three-time sambo champion Volk Han, and Kazushi Sakuraba. Tamura currently serves as an executive director for LIDET Entertainment's professional wrestling promotion GLEAT.

Professional wrestling career

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UWF Newborn (1989–1990)

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A former sumo wrestler for the Okayama University of Science High School, Tamura debuted in 1989 in the UWF Newborn in a losing effort against Minoru Suzuki. He soon revealed himself as a promising rookie, but he was forced to put his career in a long hiatus after a match with Akira Maeda on October 25, in which Maeda hit him with a full force knee strike and fractured his orbital bone.[3][4] Tamura took an entire year to return, and he only had time to work in one event before UWF closed.

UWF International (1991–1996)

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After UWF's demise, Tamura followed to its main successor group, UWF International, where he was put under the tutelage of Nobuhiko Takada. Debuting with a victory against Masahito Kakihara, Tamura was spunky and could even demand respect from older veterans, as demonstrated during a bout against Yoji Anjo where Tamura broke a hold, delivered several kicks to Anjo's head and kicked him out of the ring.

In 1992, after making his shootfighting debut before boxer Matthew Saad Muhammad, submitting him with a rear naked choke, Tamura was sent to United States for a few months to learn catch wrestling under Lou Thesz, who helped refine Tamura's submission skills and ground game. He returned to Japan with a new, polished grappling style, defeating Kazuo Yamazaki in a match without shin guards on October 23. Only some months after, on February 14, 1993, Tamura had a high level match with Nobuhiko Takada, after which many pundits (such as Pro Wrestling Illustrated) compared him to Takada himself and considered him as a candidate for the future ace of the company.[3] By this time, however, Tamura had witnessed the birth of mixed martial arts promotion Pancrase and had become interested by real fighting, like the bout he had fought against Saad.[4]

The next year, Tamura took part in the Best Of The World 1994 Tournament, advancing through the rounds by beating Bad News Allen and Naoki Sano, but being eliminated himself by eventual winner Super Vader at the semi-finals. He also went to lose the match for the second place to main eventer Gary Albright, and never challenged Vader for the title.

Unsatisfied with the symbolic return of UWF to gimmicky puroresu with the victory of Vader, and further inspired by the recent success of Pancrase, Tamura proposed to take a direction towards realistic wrestling again. He would compete in a notable shoot fight against Masahito Kakihara on February 18, 1995, winning by rear naked choke in 2:06. Later, he was granted a victorious rematch against Gary Albright, but the match became infamous for Albright's unwillingness to cooperate, which ruined Tamura's win to the point of having him in tears.[3] The same night, Nobuhiko Takada announced his decision to retire from pro wrestling to pursue a politic career, which was met with harsh words by Tamura. After a new rematch with Albright on August, Tamura addressed the returning Takada and challenged him to a mixed martial arts fight, to no avail.[5]

The same year, UWF International was forced by financial issues into an interpromotional feud against New Japan Pro-Wrestling, but Tamura refused to participate. As a consequence, he was subjected to cold treatment backstage and found himself training alone often.[4] In December 1995, Kiyoshi offered himself instead to represent UWF-i at the event K-1 Hercules, in a mixed martial arts fight against Ultimate Fighting Championship veteran Patrick Smith. It was his first match of any kind in months, and he claimed he would retire if he lost his match to in said event. However, he won the fight.[4]

Tamura returned to UWF-i to feud with Kazushi Sakuraba, but the rivalry was relegated to mid to undercard. He concluded in his intention to leave the company, and asked to be released. He had his final match on May 27, where he defeated Sakuraba and, after the bout, took off his own shin guards and threw them to the audience before leaving the arena.

Fighting Network RINGS (1996–2001)

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After negotiations with Pancrase, Tamura jumped to Fighting Network RINGS, founded by old mentor Maeda, citing a better contract. He was briefly pushed as the top star, being given the first RINGS heavyweight titles. By 1995, RINGS was making the transition from shoot style wrestling to mixed martial arts and Tamura began competing actively in both. In 2001, Tamura fought for the final time in RINGS.

Post-RINGS (2003–present)

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In 2003 he opened his own promotion, U-STYLE. On November 23, 2005, he had his last match for this promotion, defeating Josh Barnett. He briefly came out of retirement for Antonio Inoki's Inoki Genome Federation, the last time being on November 8, 2007, beating Montanha Silva in the latter's IGF debut. In 2020, Tamura joined LIDET Entertainment's GLEAT promotion as an executive director.

Mixed martial arts career

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Overview

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Tamura's 32 career wins[6] include victories over mixed martial arts greats such as Jeremy Horn, Renzo Gracie, Ikuhisa Minowa, Nobuhiko Takada, Pat Miletich[1] and held Frank Shamrock to a draw at a time when Shamrock was reigning UFC champion. However, in spite of his many accomplishments inside the arena of MMA, his record is somewhat marred by a preponderance of match-ups against top heavyweight and light-heavyweight competitors, including Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira, the 350-pound Bob Sapp and the former Olympic gold medalist Hidehiko Yoshida amongst others.

His later mixed martial arts performances have also been criticized as being relatively apathetic compared to the fast-paced bouts that characterized the earlier part of his career. Part of this may owe to an absence of grappling in the bouts in question, where Tamura has often seemed more content to pursue a cautious stand-up game rather than engage in the submission exchanges he was at one point famed for.

Kiyoshi had his first taste of MMA back in professional wrestling promotion Union of Wrestling Forces International, where he choked out boxer Matthew Saad Muhammad in a mixed rules bout in 1992 and also in 1995 where he beat fellow UWF-i wrestler Masahito Kakihara via rear naked choke in a shoot contest. He later offered to fight in the K-1 Hercules MMA event, where he made short work of Patrick Smith via heel hook.

Fighting Network RINGS

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Tamura began his MMA career at Fighting Network RINGS in a series of shoot fights against his fellow RINGS Japan teammates in late 1996. After a scarf hold armlock submission win against Mitsuya Nagai, he faced Yoshihisa Yamamoto in the semi-finals of the 1996 Battle Dimensions Tournament. After taking a series of strikes from Yamamoto which left Tamura with a bloodied face, he then managed to control the fight for another submission win. A couple of months later, he submitted a striker in the form of Andre Mannaart, and was then pitted against sambo and kickboxing expert Valentijn Overeem. Outweighed by 25 lbs, Tamura managed to take Overeem down early in the fight and fought for a kimura, however Overeem submitted Tamura multiple times, the Japanese ultimately losing the match by kneebar. It forced the RING executives to make him lose the Openweight Championship to Tariel Bitsadze.

In 1999, Tamura faced former UWFi teammate Hiromitsu Kanehara and won the back and forth grappling affair via armbar. Tamura then faced former Pancrase star Frank Shamrock, who had defeated Tamura's teammate Tsuyoshi Kohsaka years before and become his training partner in The Alliance. Tamura controlled the match, taking down Shamrock and keeping dominant position over him, but he was forced to spend a rope escape when Shamrock caught him in an armbar in his first takedown. The Japanese retaliated by threatening him with a Kimura lock, another armbar and a pair of scarf hold armlocks which almost finished the fight, but the American miraculously escaped from all of them. After twelve minutes, however, Shamrock lost the point for an illegal closed-fisted punch, balancing their respective point scores and forcing him to switch to attack. Shamrock attempted a Kimura lock and an ankle hold, but Tamura defended them successfully and the time of the match ran out. It was declared a draw by points and is considered to be one of the .

The same year, Tamura took part in the King of Kings tournament, facing Dave Menne as his first opponent. He landed several hooks, but lost the advantage upon attempting a flying armbar. After the restart, they exchanged strikes until Menne slipped down on a high kick, which Tamura capitalized in order to mount Menne on the ground and throw punches. Finally, Tamura knocked down Dave again and took his back, ending the match with a unanimous decision.

Following an uneventful second round win over Borislav Jeliazkov, Tamura found himself pitted against Renzo Gracie from the Gracie family. The Brazilian fighter got the earliest of the fight with a guillotine choke from the guard, but Tamura started to dominate thanks to his superior striking and takedown defense. Believing himself to be the superior on the ground, Renzo lied down and challenged Tamura to grapple with him, which the Japanese shooter did, managing to pass his guard and taking the back of the Brazilian jiu-jitsu specialist. After returning to the standing position by the referee's order, Tamura captured the back again by reversing a takedown and locked crucifix, which he used to pursue a choke until the end of the time. Tamura was awarded the unanimous decision, being the second Japanese in defeating a Gracie after Kazushi Sakuraba did it with Royler earlier in the year.

At the semifinals, Kiyoshi fought Brazilian luta livre exponent Renato Sobral, 40 pounds heavier than the Japanese. The stronger Sobral attacked with knee strikes and took his back in some occasions while Tamura landed leg kicks and looked for an opening. Going to the ground, both attempted several kinds of submissions, including an armbar by Sobral and a figure four toehold by Tamura, but they were unsuccessful. Ended the battle, two judges ruled a draw and a third one (Jon Bluming) ruled in Sobral's favor, thus eliminating Tamura from the tournament.

On April 20, 2000, Tamura put in the line his RINGS Openweight Championship (won against Tariel Bitsadze in a professional wrestling match) in a mixed martial arts fight against RINGS Holland fighter Gilbert Yvel. The best wrestler of the two, Tamura was able to take dominant position on the ground multiple times, but the rule against punches to the face on the mat, the referee's quick standups, and Yvel's own defensive grappling acumen impeded him from gaining the advantage. Yvel, the best striker, landed several knees and punches through the match, and towards the end of the second round landed a series of strikes, making the referee stop the match in his favor.

Tamura bounced back from his title loss representing RINGS in the Colosseum 2000 event, where he was pitted against Jeremy Horn. The bigger American managed to difficult Tamura's takedowns, but the Japanese gained dominance with striking despite not wearing gloves (which forced him to use only open-handed strikes). At the second round, action slowed down in Tamura's butterfly guard, and although the American passed it at the last minutes and sought to establish a submission, time went out for a decision win for Tamura. In August 2000, Tamura fought as well Pat Miletich, Horn's teammate. Unlike the previous match, Tamura controlled the striking, landing several leg kicks. The contenders exchanged takedowns at both rounds, but Tamura achieved positional control more often, thus winning a majority decision.

In October 2000, Tamura partaked in the King of Kings tournament as well, eliminating Zaza Tkeshelashvili before going against another Brazilian, Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira. The jiu-jitsu expert opened the match taking Tamura down and trying to pass his guard, eventually performing an armbar which Kiyoshi countered rolling outwards and taking his back. The Japanese fighter then avoided a kneebar and attacked Nogueira's guard until the standup. The action repeated itself, with Nogueira taking him down and Tamura capitalizing on a kneebar attempt to get dominant position, but this time Nogueira reversed and attempted a Kimura lock for the end of the round. At the second one, the Brazilian pressed Tamura with a takedown and slowly climbed up his way through positions to an armbar from the back. Kiyoshi defended it for minutes, but at the end, Nogueira repositioned and got the hold, making Tamura tap out.

After his King of Kings tenure, Tamura was granted a rematch against Renato Sobral, but as in the first time, the bigger Brazilian controlled the bout with wrestling and positional dominance. Kiyoshi had his last fight for RINGS facing Gustavo Machado, losing an uneventful decision again.

PRIDE Fighting Championships

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Tamura made his debut in PRIDE Fighting Championships in a title fight against Wanderlei Silva for the PRIDE Middleweight Championship. Silva blocked Tamura's takedowns and attacked him with hard punches and a knee to the face. In one instance, Tamura landed a punch which stunned Wanderlei, but it was short-lived, and the Brazilian fighter recovered and continued with the brutal ground and pound, bloodying Kiyoshi's face. The second round saw the same action, with Silva counterstriking with a right hook which knocked out Tamura for the win.

After the bout, there were suggestions for Tamura to portray the Tiger Mask professional wrestling gimmick in the Pride ring, having his first match against Ryan Gracie. However, those plans were abandoned.[7]

Tamuras next match would be a similarly tough matchup, facing the large Bob Sapp, who almost doubled Tamura's weight. The match was short and shocking, and saw Sapp charging at Tamura and knocking him out with looping punches at 0:11.

At PRIDE 31, Tamura got a desired rematch against Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira, who had bested him years before in RINGS. The result would be the same, as Nogueira took him down, gained his back and locked an armbar for the tap out.

In an event for related promotion Deep in September 2002, Tamura defeated another shoot-style fighter, Ikuhisa Minowa, by unanimous decision. They had a rematch in PRIDE two years later, which was much shorter, with Tamura overwhelming Minowa with leg kicks and a knee strike, followed by soccer kicks to the head. Tamura and Minowa shook hands as a sign of respect after the match, though Tamura featured an incident in which he shoved the referee for what was believed to be a late stoppage.

In August 2003, Tamura fought judo medalist Hidehiko Yoshida in the latter's third MMA fight. Showing his experience, Tamura knocked him down with a left cross and worked through his guard before returning to their feet. Afterwards, the shoot wrestler landed continuous kicks to Yoshida's legs and body, also capturing his back once during a failed judo throw. Finally, Yoshida threw Tamura down and forced him to tap to a quick sode guruma jime.[8] The strange sequence of the choke brought accusations of a fixed fight performed to increase Yoshida's popularity,[9] but Dave Meltzer and other pundits considered it dubious, attributing it to Tamura's own inexperience with gi chokes.[10]

For several years, efforts have been made by PRIDE to put Tamura and fellow UWFi alum and mixed martial artist Kazushi Sakuraba together in a fight due to their status as two of the best Japanese fighters of their time as well as a rumored rivalry. An announcement was made at PRIDE 34 by Nobuyuki Sakakibara that promised the fans a future fight between the two. However, PRIDE ceased being an active promotion after that event.

Post-PRIDE

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At K-1 Premium 2007, Tamura faced Hideo Tokoro, an apprentice of former RINGS wrestler Kenichi Yamamoto. Outweighing his opponent by 17 kg (38 lbs) and showing a brilliant submission defense, Tamura kept control over him in the grappling exchanges, taking his back several times and grinding him with punches and ground and pound, until he locked a stretch armlock from a keylock position in round 3 to make him tap out.[11]

A year after, Tamura would fight yet another shoot-style fighter, this time the Pancrase legend Masakatsu Funaki. Despite the hype surrounding the fight, caused by RINGS' and Pancrase' former rivalry, the bout was swift, with Tamura outstriking him and tripping him to the mat for the ground and pound TKO.

Finally it was announced that Kiyoshi Tamura and Kazushi Sakuraba were set to fight at the K-1 Dynamite!! event on December 31, 2008. The fight was characterized by Tamura generally countering take-down and submission attempts by Sakuraba while applying ground and pound from the top position throughout the bout. At the end of the first round, Sakuraba appeared to have an armbar locked in, but Tamura held on and in the second controlled much of the action until being taken down by Sakuraba in the final minute. Ultimately, Tamura was awarded a unanimous decision.

Personal life

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On July 7, 2007, Tamura married tarento and pro wrestling host Yumiko Sakurai.

Championships and accomplishments

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Mixed martial arts

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Professional wrestling

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Mixed martial arts record

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Professional record breakdown
48 matches 32 wins 13 losses
By knockout 6 4
By submission 17 3
By decision 8 4
Unknown 1 2
Draws 3
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Win 32–13–3 Kazushi Sakuraba Decision (unanimous) Fields Dynamite!! 2008 December 31, 2008 2 5:00 Saitama, Saitama, Japan
Win 31–13–3 Masakatsu Funaki TKO (punches) DREAM 2: Middleweight Grand Prix 2008 First Round April 29, 2008 1 0:57 Saitama, Saitama, Japan
Win 30–13–3 Hideo Tokoro Submission (straight armbar) K-1 Premium 2007 Dynamite!! December 31, 2007 3 3:08 Osaka, Japan
Loss 29–13–3 Taiei Kin Decision (unanimous) HERO'S 9 July 16, 2007 2 5:00 Yokohama, Japan
Win 29–12–3 Ikuhisa Minowa KO (soccer kicks) PRIDE FC: Shockwave 2006 December 31, 2006 1 1:18 Saitama, Saitama, Japan Middleweight debut.
Loss 28–12–3 Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira Submission (armbar) PRIDE 31: Dreamers February 26, 2006 1 2:24 Saitama, Saitama, Japan Heavyweight bout.
Win 28–11–3 Makoto Takimoto Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Critical Countdown 2005 June 26, 2005 3 5:00 Saitama, Saitama, Japan 88.5 kg bout.
Win 27–11–3 Aliev Makhmud TKO (retirement) PRIDE 29 February 20, 2005 1 7:09 Saitama, Saitama, Japan 88.5 kg bout.
Win 26–11–3 Rony Sefo Submission (armbar) PRIDE Shockwave 2003 December 31, 2003 1 2:20 Saitama, Saitama, Japan
Loss 25–11–3 Hidehiko Yoshida Submission (Ezekiel choke) PRIDE Total Elimination 2003 August 10, 2003 1 5:06 Saitama, Saitama, Japan
Win 25–10–3 Nobuhiko Takada KO (punch) PRIDE 23 November 24, 2002 2 1:00 Tokyo, Japan Return to Heavyweight.
Win 24–10–3 Ikuhisa Minowa Decision (unanimous) DEEP: 6th Impact September 7, 2002 3 5:00 Tokyo, Japan Openweight bout.
Loss 23–10–3 Bob Sapp KO (punches) PRIDE 21 June 23, 2002 1 0:11 Saitama, Saitama, Japan Super Heavyweight bout.
Loss 23–9–3 Wanderlei Silva KO (punch) PRIDE 19 February 24, 2002 2 2:28 Saitama, Saitama, Japan For the PRIDE Middleweight Championship.
Loss 23–8–3 Gustavo Machado Decision (unanimous) RINGS: World Title Series 1 April 20, 2001 2 5:00 Tokyo, Japan
Loss 23–7–3 Renato Sobral Decision (majority) RINGS: King of Kings 2000 Final February 24, 2001 2 5:00 Tokyo, Japan
Loss 23–6–3 Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira Submission (armbar) RINGS: King of Kings 2000 Block A October 9, 2000 2 2:29 Tokyo, Japan
Win 23–5–3 Zaza Tkeshelashvili Decision (unanimous) 2 5:00
Win 22–5–3 Pat Miletich Decision (majority) RINGS: Millennium Combine 3 August 23, 2000 2 5:00 Osaka, Japan
Win 21–5–3 Jeremy Horn Decision (unanimous) C2K: Colosseum 2000 May 26, 2000 2 5:00 Japan
Loss 20–5–3 Gilbert Yvel TKO RINGS: Millennium Combine 1 April 20, 2000 1 13:13 Tokyo, Japan Lost RINGS Openweight Championship.
Loss 20–4–3 Renato Sobral Decision (majority) RINGS: King of Kings 1999 Final February 26, 2000 2 5:00 Tokyo, Japan
Win 20–3–3 Renzo Gracie Decision (unanimous) 2 5:00
Win 19–3–3 Borislav Jeliazkov Submission (rear-naked choke) RINGS: King of Kings 1999 Block B December 22, 1999 2 1:17 Osaka, Japan
Win 18–3–3 Dave Menne Decision (unanimous) 2 5:00
Win 17–3–3 Joop Kasteel Submission (armbar) RINGS: Rise 5th August 19, 1999 2 2:17 Japan
Draw 16–3–3 Yoshihisa Yamamoto Draw RINGS: Rise 4th June 24, 1999 3 5:00 Japan
Win 16–3–2 Tariel Bitsadze Submission (rear-naked choke) RINGS: Rise 3rd May 22, 1999 1 9:19 Japan Won the RINGS Openweight Championship.
Draw 15–3–2 Frank Shamrock Draw RINGS: Rise 2nd April 23, 1999 1 20:00 Japan
Win 15–3–1 Hiromitsu Kanehara Submission (armbar) RINGS: Rise 1st March 20, 1999 3 0:14 Japan
Win 14–3–1 Valentijn Overeem Submission (armbar) RINGS: Final Capture February 21, 1999 1 6:08 Japan
Win 13–3–1 Kenichi Yamamoto TKO RINGS: World Mega Battle Tournament December 23, 1998 2 1:26 Japan
Draw 12–3–1 Tsuyoshi Kohsaka Draw RINGS: Fourth Fighting Integration June 27, 1998 1 30:00 Tokyo, Japan
Loss 12–3 Tariel Bitsadze TKO RINGS: Third Fighting Integration May 29, 1998 1 3:39 Tokyo, Japan Lost the RINGS Openweight Championship.
Win 12–2 Mikhail Ilyukhin Submission RINGS: Battle Dimensions Tournament 1997 Final January 21, 1998 N/A N/A N/A Won RINGS 1997 Mega Battle Tournament; became the inaugural RINGS Openweight Champion.
Win 11–2 Akira Maeda N/A N/A N/A RINGS 1997 Mega Battle Tournament Semifinals.
Win 10–2 Joop Kasteel KO N/A N/A RINGS 1997 Mega Battle Tournament Quarterfinals.
Win 9–2 Hans Nijman Submission (kimura) RINGS: Mega Battle Tournament 1997 Semifinal 1 October 25, 1997 N/A N/A N/A
Win 8–2 Volk Han Submission (armbar) RINGS: Extension Fighting 7 September 26, 1997 N/A N/A N/A
Win 7–2 Tsuyoshi Kohsaka Submission (toe hold) RINGS: Extension Fighting 2 April 22, 1997 N/A N/A N/A
Win 6–2 Andre Mannaart Submission (rear-naked choke) RINGS Holland: The Final Challenge February 2, 1997 N/A N/A N/A
Loss 5–2 Volk Han N/A RINGS: Budokan Hall 1997 January 22, 1997 N/A N/A N/A
Loss 5–1 Volk Han N/A RINGS: Battle Dimensions Tournament 1996 Final January 1, 1997 N/A N/A N/A
Win 5–0 Yoshihisa Yamamoto Submission (neck crank) N/A N/A
Win 4–0 Mitsuya Nagai Submission (scarf hold armlock) 1 6:13
Win 3–0 Mikhail Ilyukhin Submission RINGS: Battle Dimensions Tournament 1996 Opening Round October 25, 1996 N/A N/A N/A
Win 2–0 Maurice Smith Submission (armbar) RINGS: Maelstrom 6 August 24, 1996 N/A N/A N/A
Win 1–0 Patrick Smith Submission (heel hook) K-1 Hercules December 9, 1995 N/A N/A N/A

Mixed rules

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Professional record breakdown
2 matches 2 wins 0 losses
By submission 2 0
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Win 2–0 Masahito Kakihara Submission (rear-naked choke) UWF-i Sakigake February 18, 1995 1 2:06 Urayasu, Chiba, Japan
Win 1–0 Matthew Saad Muhammad Submission (rear-naked choke) UWF-i Combat Sport Yokohama May 8, 1992 1 0:38 Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan

Submission grappling record

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KO PUNCHES
Result Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Notes
Draw Japan Kazushi Sakuraba and Japan Hideo Tokoro Draw Rizin FF 1 2016 1 15:00 Partnered with Brazil Wanderlei Silva.
Loss Brazil Ricardo Liborio Submission (armbar) ADCC 2001 –88 kg 2001 1 1:02

References

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  1. ^ "PRIDEFC Official Website". Archived from the original on 2014-11-12. Retrieved 2009-03-03.
  2. ^ Snowden, Jonathan (13 October 2018). "Kiyoshi Tamura and the Case for the Wrestling Observer Hall of Fame". Post Wrestling. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  3. ^ a b c "Kiyoshi Tamura".
  4. ^ a b c d Kaminoge Vol.65, Toho Publishing
  5. ^ Tatsuhito Kaneko, Nakimushi, Gentosha 2002
  6. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-12-07. Retrieved 2006-12-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ Pride: The Secret Files (in Japanese). Kamipro. 2008.
  8. ^ Keith Vargo, PRIDE Total Elimination 2003, Black Belt magazine, November 2003
  9. ^ "PRIDE Grand Prix 2004: Critical Countdown - Hidehiko Yoshida vs. Mark Hunt". Sherdog. June 18, 2004. Retrieved November 15, 2019.
  10. ^ Wrestling Observer Newsletter, 9/25
  11. ^ Monty DiPietro (January 1, 2008). "Sakuraba Still Dynamite!!". Onthemat. Retrieved November 15, 2019.
  12. ^ "Pro Wrestling Illustrated's Top 500 Wrestlers of the PWI Years". Wrestling Information Archive. Archived from the original on 2011-07-07. Retrieved 2010-09-15.
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