Precursors of modern MMA preparing to throw his opponent during a
lei tai contest in
ancient China In
ancient China, combat sport appeared in the form of
Leitai, a no-holds-barred mixed combat sport that combined
Chinese martial arts, boxing and wrestling. : a statue portraying the
pancratium, an event which took place in the Roman
Colosseum. Even as late as the
Early Middle Ages, statues were put up in Rome and other cities to honor remarkable pankratiasts. This statue, now part of the
Uffizi collection, is a Roman copy of a lost Greek original, circa 3rd century BC. . In
ancient Greece, there was a sport called
pankration, which featured grappling and striking skills similar to those found in modern MMA. Pankration was formed by combining the already established wrestling and boxing traditions and, in Olympic terms, first featured in the 33rd
Olympiad in 648 BC. All strikes and holds were allowed with the exception of biting and gouging, which were banned. The fighters, called pankratiasts, fought until someone could not continue or signaled submission by raising their index finger; there were no rounds. According to the historian E. Norman Gardiner, "No branch of athletics was more popular than the pankration." There is also evidence of similar mixed combat sports in
ancient Egypt,
India and
Japan. Contests occurred in the late 19th to mid-20th century between French
savateurs and other combat styles. Examples include a 1905 fight between French savateur Georges Dubois and
judo practitioner Ernest "Re-nier" Regnier, which resulted in the latter winning by submission with an
armbar, as well as the highly publicized 1957 fight between French savateur and
professional boxer Jacques Cayron and a young Japanese
karateka named Hiroo Mochizuki, which ended when Cayron knocked Hiroo out with a
hook. In turn, catch wrestling went on to greatly influence modern MMA. No-holds-barred fighting reportedly took place in the late 1880s when wrestlers representing the style of catch wrestling and many others met in tournaments and music-hall challenge matches throughout Europe. In the US, the first major encounter between a boxer and a wrestler in modern times took place in 1887 when
John L. Sullivan, then heavyweight world boxing champion, entered the ring with his trainer, wrestling champion
William Muldoon, and was slammed to the mat in two minutes. The next publicized encounter occurred in the late 1890s when future heavyweight boxing champion
Bob Fitzsimmons took on European wrestling champion
Ernest Roeber. In September 1901,
Frank "Paddy" Slavin, who had been a contender for Sullivan's boxing title, knocked out future world wrestling champion
Frank Gotch in
Dawson City, Canada. The judo-practitioner Ren-nierand, who gained fame after defeating George Dubois, would fight again in another similar contest, which he lost to Ukrainian Catch wrestler
Ivan Poddubny. and which saw MMA-style contests throughout England, pitting European catch wrestlers and Japanese judoka champions against representatives of various European wrestling styles. In Japan, these contests were known as
merikan, from the Japanese slang for "American [fighting]".
Merikan contests were fought under a variety of rules, including points decision, best of three throws or knockdowns, and victory via knockout or submission. In 1909,
Erich Rahn opened a
Tsutsumi Hōzan-ryū jujutsu school in Germany where he mixed his style with boxing and wrestling.
Sambo, a martial art and combat sport developed in Russia in the early 1920s, merged various forms of combat styles such as wrestling, judo and striking into one unique martial art. In 1925, the founder of judo,
Jigoro Kano, also created a form of
physical education that included a combative form based in both judo and karate moves. The popularity of professional wrestling, which was contested under various
catch wrestling rules at the time, waned after
World War I, when the sport split into two genres: "
shoot", in which the fighters actually competed, and "
show", which evolved into modern
professional wrestling. 27 years later, Ray Steele's protégé
Lou Thesz fought boxer
Jersey Joe Walcott twice in mixed style bouts. The first match was a real contest which Thesz won while the second match was a work, which Thesz also won. In the 1940s in the Palama Settlement in Hawaii, five martial arts masters, under the leadership of
Adriano Emperado, curious to determine which martial art was best, began testing each other in their respective arts of kenpo, jujitsu, Chinese and American boxing and
tang soo do. From this they developed
kajukenbo, the first American mixed martial arts. Also in 1941, 7th dan judoka Haruna Hoshizaki addressed the topic of fights between judokas and boxers, and instructed judokas to learn boxing to better engage them. On February 12, 1963, three karatekas from
Oyama dojo (
kyokushin later) went to the
Lumpinee Boxing Stadium in Thailand and fought against three Muay Thai fighters. The three karate fighters were
Tadashi Nakamura,
Kenji Kurosaki and Akio Fujihira (also known as Noboru Osawa), while the Thai fighters were Tan Saren, Haufi Lukkontai and Rawee Dechachai. Japan won 2–1: Nakamura and Fujihira both knocked out their opponents with punches, with Fujihira making usage of
judo techniques to gain advantage over the bigger Lukkontai, while Kurosaki was knocked out by elbows by Dechachai. Kurosaki was an instructor rather than a contender, and that he had stood in as a substitute for an absent chosen fighter. In June of the same year, karateka and future kickboxer
Tadashi Sawamura faced top Thai fighter Samarn Sor Adisorn: Sawamura was knocked down sixteen times on his way to defeat, but he went on to incorporate what he learned in that fight in kickboxing tournaments. In the mid-20th century, mixed martial arts contests emerged in Hong Kong's
street fighting culture in the form of rooftop fights. During the early 20th century, there was an influx of migrants from mainland China, including
Chinese martial arts teachers who opened up martial arts schools in Hong Kong. In the mid-20th century, soaring
crime in Hong Kong, combined with limited
Hong Kong Police manpower, led to many young Hongkongers learning martial arts for
self-defence. Around the 1960s, there were about 400 martial arts schools in Hong Kong, teaching their own distinctive styles of martial arts. In Hong Kong's street fighting culture, there emerged a rooftop fight scene in the 1950s and 1960s, where gangs from rival martial arts schools challenged each other to bare-knuckle fights on Hong Kong's rooftops, in order to avoid crackdowns by colonial
British Hong Kong authorities. The most famous fighter to emerge from Hong Kong's rooftop fight scene was
Bruce Lee, who combined different techniques from different martial arts schools into his own
hybrid martial arts system called
Jeet Kune Do. Lee went on to popularize the concept of mixed martial arts internationally. popularized the concept of mixed martial arts via his
hybrid philosophy of
Jeet Kune Do during the late 1960s to early 1970s. During the late 1960s to early 1970s, the concept of
hybrid martial arts was popularized in the West by
Bruce Lee via his system of
Jeet Kune Do. Lee believed that "the best fighter is not a boxer, karate or judo man. The best fighter is someone who can adapt to any style, to be formless, to adopt an individual's own style and not following the system of styles." In 2004, UFC President
Dana White would call Lee the "father of mixed martial arts" stating: "If you look at the way Bruce Lee trained, the way he fought, and many of the things he wrote, he said the perfect style was no style. You take a little something from everything. You take the good things from every different discipline, use what works, and you throw the rest away". A contemporary of Bruce Lee,
Wing Chun practitioner
Wong Shun-leung, gained prominence fighting in 60–100 illegal
beimo fights against other Chinese martial artists of various styles. Wong also fought and won against Western fighters of other combat styles, such as his match against Russian boxer Giko, his televised fight against a
fencer, and his fight against Taiwanese kung fu master Wu Ming-jeet. Wong combined boxing and
kickboxing into his kung fu, as Bruce Lee did. A fight between
Golden Gloves boxing champion
Joey Hadley and Arkansas Karate Champion David Valovich happened on June 22, 1976, at Memphis Blues Baseball Park. The bout had mixed rules: the
karateka was allowed to use his fists, feet and knees, while the boxer could only use his fists. Hadley won the fight via knockout on the first round. In 1988,
Rick Roufus challenged
Changpuek Kiatsongrit to a non-title
Muay Thai vs.
kickboxing super fight. Roufus was at the time an undefeated Kickboxer and held both the
KICK Super Middleweight World title and the PKC Middleweight U.S. title. Kiatsongrit was finding it increasingly difficult to get fights in Thailand as his weight (70 kg) was not typical for Thailand, where competitive bouts tended to be at the lower weights. Roufus knocked Changpuek down twice with punches in the first round, breaking Changpuek's jaw, but lost by technical knockout in the fourth round due to the culmination of low kicks to the legs that he was unprepared for. This match was the first popular fight which showcased the power of such low kicks to a predominantly Western audience. Regulated mixed martial arts competitions were first introduced in the United States by
CV Productions, Inc. Its first competition, called
Tough Guy Contest was held on March 20, 1980,
New Kensington, Pennsylvania,
Holiday Inn. During that year the company renamed the brand to
Super Fighters and sanctioned ten regulated tournaments in
Pennsylvania. In 1983, Pennsylvania State Senate passed a bill known as the "
Tough Guy Law" that specifically called for: "Prohibiting Tough Guy contests or Battle of the Brawlers contests", and ended the sport.
Modern MMA Modern mixed martial arts began in two places: the
vale tudo events in Brazil in 1920s, and Japan's
Shoot wrestling in 1970s. The modern form of Mixed Martial Arts had mainstream exposure in United States along with an initial international exposure when the
Gracie family created
UFC in the early 90s. In the mid-90s, after the first event of
UFC, the sport went through a process of globalization, spreading to different countries. Finally, in the beginning of the 21st century, the modern MMA became a sport that enjoys worldwide recognition. Vale tudo began in the 1920s and became renowned through its association with the "
Gracie challenge", which was issued by
Carlos Gracie and
Hélio Gracie and upheld later by descendants of the
Gracie family. The "Gracie Challenges" were held in the garages and gyms of the Gracie family members. When the popularity grew, these types of mixed bouts were a staple attraction at the carnivals in Brazil. by Alfredo Storni featuring capoeirista
Ciríaco defeating jujitsu fighter
Sada Miyako with a
rabo de arraia kick,
O Malho, 1909. The fight between
capoeirista Francisco da Silva Ciríaco and jujitsu fighter
Sada Miyako in Brazil stands as one of the earliest recorded interdisciplinary martial arts clashes in the country. In 1920, capoerista
Mestre Sinhozinho opened his martial arts school, where he taught
capoeira carioca mixed with judo, wrestling and other styles. , a 1951 bout between Japanese
judo fighter
Masahiko Kimura and
Brazilian jiu jitsu founder
Hélio Gracie in Brazil, was an early high-profile mixed martial arts bout. The "
Gracie challenge" at times used rules other than that of MMA. In 1951, a high-profile grappling match was
Masahiko Kimura vs. Hélio Gracie, which was wrestled between
judoka Masahiko Kimura and
Brazilian jiu jitsu founder
Hélio Gracie in Brazil. Kimura defeated Gracie using a
gyaku-ude-garami armlock, which later became known as the "Kimura" in Brazilian jiu jitsu.
Muhammad Ali vs. Antonio Inoki took place in Japan in 1976. The classic match-up between professional boxer and professional wrestler turned sour as each fighter refused to engage in the other's style, and after a 15-round stalemate it was declared a draw.
Muhammad Ali sustained a substantial amount of damage to his legs, as
Antonio Inoki slide-kicked him continuously for the duration of the bout, causing him to be hospitalized for the next three days. The fight played an important role in the history of mixed martial arts. Japan had its own form of mixed martial arts discipline,
Shooto, which evolved from shoot wrestling in 1985, as well as the shoot wrestling derivative
Pancrase, which was founded as a promotion in 1993.
Pancrase 1 was held in Japan in September 1993, two months before
UFC 1 was held in the United States in November 1993. The basis of modern mixed martial arts in Japan can be found in
Shooto, a combat sport promotion founded by
Satoru Sayama in 1989. Sayama was part of the
shoot-style professional wrestling movement, born in 1984 in the promotion
Universal Wrestling Federation, that attempted to create a
combat-based style which blended
wrestling,
kickboxing and
submission grappling. Another promotion formed around the same time by
Akira Maeda called
Fighting Network RINGS initially started as a shoot-style professional wrestling promotion but it also promoted early mixed martial arts contests. From 1995 onwards it began identifying itself as a mixed martial arts promotion and moved away from the original shoot style. Professional wrestlers
Masakatsu Funaki and
Minoru Suzuki founded
Pancrase in 1993 which promoted legitimate contests initially under professional wrestling rules. These promotions inspired
Pride Fighting Championships which started in 1997. Pride was acquired by its rival Ultimate Fighting Championship in 2007. In 1993, the sport was reintroduced to the United States by the
Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). UFC promoters initially pitched the event as a real-life
fighting video game tournament similar to
Street Fighter and
Mortal Kombat. The sport gained international exposure and widespread publicity when jiu-jitsu fighter
Royce Gracie won the
first Ultimate Fighting Championship tournament, submitting three challengers in a total of just five minutes. sparking a revolution in martial arts. fights
UFC 1 finalist
Gerard Gordeau at
Vale Tudo Japan 1995. Early mixed-match martial arts
professional wrestling bouts in Japan (known as
Ishu Kakutōgi Sen (異種格闘技戦), literally "heterogeneous combat sports bouts") became popular with
Antonio Inoki only in the 1970s. Inoki was a disciple of
Rikidōzan, but also of
Karl Gotch, who trained numerous Japanese wrestlers in
catch wrestling. The first
Vale Tudo Japan tournaments were held in 1994 and 1995 and were both won by
Rickson Gracie. Around the same time, International Vale Tudo competition started to develop through (World Vale Tudo Championship (WVC),
VTJ,
IVC, UVF etc.). Interest in mixed martial arts as a sport resulted in the creation of the
Pride Fighting Championships (Pride) in 1997. The sport reached a new peak of popularity in North America in December 2006: a
rematch between then
UFC light heavyweight champion
Chuck Liddell and former champion
Tito Ortiz, rivaled the
PPV sales of some of the biggest boxing events of all time, and helped the UFC's 2006 PPV gross surpass that of any promotion in PPV history. In 2007,
Zuffa LLC, the owners of the UFC MMA promotion, bought Japanese rival MMA brand
Pride FC, merging the contracted fighters under one promotion. Comparisons were drawn to the consolidation that occurred in other sports, such as the
AFL-NFL Merger in
American football.
Origin of the term MMA The first documented use of the name
mixed martial arts was in a review of
UFC 1 by television critic,
Howard Rosenberg, in 1993. The term gained popularity when the website, newfullcontact.com (one of the biggest websites covering the sport at the time), hosted and reprinted the article. The first use of the term by a promotion was in September 1995 by Rick Blume, president and CEO of Battlecade Extreme Fighting, just after UFC 7. UFC official
Jeff Blatnick was responsible for the Ultimate Fighting Championship officially adopting the name mixed martial arts. It was previously marketed as "Ultimate Fighting" and "No Holds Barred (NHB)", until Blatnick and
John McCarthy proposed the name "MMA" at the
UFC 17 rules meeting in response to increased public criticism. The question as to who actually coined the name is still in debate.
Regulation ", movement where the fighter kicks the head of a downed opponent. While common in
vale tudo, early MMA and Japanese promotions, the soccer kick has been banned from the
Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts. The first state-regulated MMA event was held in Biloxi, Mississippi on August 23, 1996, with the sanctioning of IFC's Mayhem in Mississippi show by the Mississippi Athletic Commission under William Lyons. The rules used were an adaptation of the kickboxing rules already accepted by most state athletic commissions. These modified kickboxing rules allowed for take downs and ground fighting and did away with rounds, although they did allow for fighters to be stood up by the referee and restarted if there was no action on the ground. These rules were the first in modern MMA to define fouls, fighting surfaces and the use of the cage. In March 1997, the Iowa Athletic Commission officially sanctioned
Battlecade Extreme Fighting under a modified form of its existing rules for
Shootfighting. These rules created the three 'five-minute round/one-minute break' format, and mandated shootfighting gloves, as well as weight classes for the first time. Illegal blows were listed as groin strikes, head butting, biting, eye gouging, hair pulling, striking an opponent with an elbow while the opponent is on the mat, kidney strikes, and striking the back of the head with closed fist. Holding onto the ring or cage for any reason was defined as a foul. While there are minor differences between these and the final Unified Rules, notably regarding elbow strikes, the Iowa rules allowed mixed martial arts promoters to conduct essentially modern events legally, anywhere in the state. On March 28, 1997, Extreme Fighting 4 was held under these rules, making it the first show conducted under a version of the modern rules. In April 2000, the
California State Athletic Commission voted unanimously in favor of regulations that later became the foundation for the
Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts. However, when the legislation was sent to the California capital in Sacramento for review, it was determined that the sport fell outside the jurisdiction of the CSAC, rendering the vote meaningless. On September 30, 2000, the
New Jersey State Athletic Control Board (NJSACB) began allowing mixed martial arts promoters to conduct events in New Jersey. The first event was an IFC event titled Battleground 2000 held in Atlantic City. The intent was to allow the NJSACB to observe actual events and gather information to establish a comprehensive set of rules to regulate the sport effectively. On April 3, 2001, the NJSACB held a meeting to discuss the regulation of mixed martial arts events. This meeting attempted to unify the myriad rules and regulations which had been utilized by the different mixed martial arts organizations. At this meeting, the proposed uniform rules were agreed upon by the NJSACB, several other regulatory bodies, numerous promoters of mixed martial arts events and other interested parties in attendance. At the conclusion of the meeting, all parties in attendance were able to agree upon a uniform set of rules to govern the sport of mixed martial arts.
Canada formally decriminalized mixed martial arts with a vote on Bill S-209 on June 5, 2013. The bill allows for provinces to have the power to create athletic commissions to regulate and sanction professional mixed martial arts bouts.
Globalization, worldwide recognition, and popularity The event,
UFC 1, became the beginning of the international exposure of this sport. Since then, the growth of mixed martial arts (MMA) globally has been remarkable over the past few decades. MMA has evolved from being a niche combat sport to one of the most popular and commercially successful sports worldwide. In the mid-90s following
UFC 1,
Frederico Lapenda, a film producer and fight promoter, helped the modern MMA expand further internationally, thus playing a pivotal role in the process of the sport's globalization.
Dana White became the CEO of
UFC in 2001 and brought success to the promotion. This caused the modern MMA to become known worldwide from the early 21st century and afterwards. ==Timeline of major events==