Carlos Newton

Carlos Newton (born August 17, 1976) is an Anguillian-born Canadian retired mixed martial artist. He is a former UFC Welterweight Champion and Pride FC Japan MMA Legend. Known as "The Ronin", he competed worldwide in the biggest MMA organizations including UFC, Pride FC, IFL, K-1, Shooto and most recently W-1. He is a 3rd Degree Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Black Belt alongside his coach Terry Riggs under Renzo Gracie, at Warrior MMA in Newmarket, Ontario. Newton has always been considered a fan favourite and a "Submission Master" and has dubbed his personal fighting style — an amalgam of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Judo, Wrestling, Karate, Krav Maga, and Boxing — as "Dragon Ball Jiu-Jitsu" in tribute to Dragon Ball, a Japanese manga and anime franchise. Newton is one of only a few MMA athletes to ever be allowed to compete in the UFC and Pride FC at the same time. In Canada he was the first Canadian UFC Champion at UFC 31 (Welterweight) defeating Pat Miletich.

Carlos Newton
Born (1976-08-17) August 17, 1976 (age 47)
The Valley, Anguilla
Other namesThe Ronin
ResidencePickering, Ontario, Canada
NationalityCanadian
Height5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Weight174 lb (79 kg; 12.4 st)
DivisionWelterweight
Middleweight
Light Heavyweight
StyleBrazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Wrestling, Boxing, Taekwondo, Judo, Karate, Juko Ryu Jiu-Jitsu, Krav Maga, Kali, Aikido
Fighting out ofNewmarket, Ontario, Canada
TeamNewton MMA, Warrior MMA
Rank  3rd Dan Black Belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
  Black Belt in Juko Ryu Jiu-Jitsu
Years active1996–2010
Mixed martial arts record
Total30
Wins16
By knockout2
By submission10
By decision4
Losses14
By knockout3
By submission4
By decision7
Websitehttp://www.newtonmma.com
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Early life edit

Carlos Newton was born in Anguilla and moved to Canada at a young age. He attended Westview Centennial Secondary School in the Jane and Finch area of Toronto, Ontario. Newton competed in numerous Jiu-Jitsu and BJJ competitions in Canada and across the world, starting under the legendary Tom Sharkey. Notably, the prestigious Abu Dhabi Combat Club in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, against Rodrigo Gracie of the legendary Gracie family. Newton started his Jiu-Jitsu competing career out of the Samurai Club in Toronto. Shortly after, in 1996, Terry Riggs founded Warrior Mixed Martial Arts in Newmarket, Ontario, which was Canada's first official MMA Academy; Newton followed his long-time training partner and made it his home. Out of Warrior MMA, Newton's career flourished under the coaching of Terry Riggs and Everton McEwan. Newton, a Toronto York University student, did his study on geriatric medicine, having done research at Baycrest Hospital, one of the world leaders in geriatric care.

Mixed martial arts career edit

Newton's professional mixed martial arts career began at the early age of 19, as the youngest no-holds-barred extreme fighter ever. His first match was one of the most memorable "David vs Goliath" NHB fights in history, with Newton giving up over 100 lbs to a much larger Jean Rivière on the Extreme Fighting 2 card in April 1996. After dominating much of the fight, it ended with a submission loss due to sheer exhaustion for Newton, however, the spectacle of the brave smaller fighter launched his career. Newton competed in the world's top mixed martial arts organizations such as Shooto, K-1 and Pride Fighting Championships in Japan, UFC in America and W-1 in Canada.

Pride FC and Shooto Japan edit

Newton started his Japan fight career with a win over Erik Paulson to become the Vale Tudo Japan World Champion. After a few dominating fights in the Shooto organization, he then moved on to PRIDE FC, considered to be the top MMA show in the world along with the UFC. In June 1998, Newton lost a technical bout in Pride Fighting Championships against Kazushi Sakuraba. The Sakuraba vs. Newton fight is remembered today as a classic and one of the best MMA fights ever for submission grappling fans. This legendary fight propelled both fighters to MMA superstardom. Newton went on in the PRIDE Japan to rack up wins over Daijiro Matsui, Naoki Sano, Johil de Oliveira, all on his way to a spectacular armbar victory over "Pelé" José Landi-Jons at Pride 19 in February 2002. After this win Pride President Naoto Morishita declared, "Newton is considered the unofficial PRIDE middle weight Champion".[citation needed] In October 2003, Newton gained a split-decision victory over Renzo Gracie at Pride Bushido 1.

Ultimate Fighting Championships edit

Newton's fourth and fifth fights marked his UFC debut at UFC 17, defeating Bob Gilstrap and losing a controversial decision to Dan Henderson on the same night for the middle weight tournament title. Newton's greatest professional accomplishment in his career was capturing the UFC Welterweight Championship from Pat Miletich in May 2001 at UFC 31. The reign was short-lived however, as Newton lost his first title defense in November of that same year at UFC 34 against accomplished wrestler Matt Hughes. Newton had a triangle choke locked in on Hughes, but Hughes picked up Newton, walked him to the corner, and attempted to slam him. Newton placed his arm over the side of the cage to prevent the slam, causing John McCarthy to warn him, before Hughes seemed to lose consciousness and fall to the mat while still holding Newton, causing Newton to hit his head and also lose consciousness. With Hughes slow to get up and Newton out cold on the mat, McCarthy would award the victory to Hughes via KO. The ending of the fight proved to be controversial, as many believed that Hughes was unconscious before Newton, who should have been awarded the victory as a result.[citation needed]

K-1 HEROs edit

Newton was set for a comeback fight at K-1's HEROs MMA promotion against Melvin Manhoef at the Ariake Coliseum on August 5, but had to pull out of the fight at the last minute due to a torn ligament in his knee. He made a second attempt at a comeback in K-1 HEROs, this time facing Tokimitsu Ishizawa. Newton made short work of the Japanese fighter, needing only four punches to score the TKO victory in just 22 seconds. He then faced Shungo Oyama at Hero's Korea 2007 where he lost by submission due to punches.

International Fight League edit

Newton and Riggs were the coaches of the Toronto Dragons in the IFL in the 2005 and 2006 seasons. Based out of Warrior MMA in Newmarket, the Dragons were made up of international notable fighters such as Claude Patrick, Wagnney Fabiano, Brent Beauparlant, Rafael Cavalcante, Leo Santos and Dennis Hallman. The Dragons made the playoffs in the 2006 season and went on as far as the semifinals round. Wagnney Fabiano from the team qualified and won the IFL Lightweight Championship. Newton fought in a superfight that year and lost to Renzo Gracie by way of an extremely controversial split decision at the IFL Championship Final. Gracie himself questioned the call after the fight.

W-1 edit

Carlos, motivated by a chance to compete in Canada, made a return to MMA again in 2009 at Warrior-1: Inception. He scored a first round victory by way of KO against Nabil Khatib, this was Carlos's first fight on Canadian soil in 13 years. He again returned to action on October 10, 2009, against former UFC veteran "Mr. International" Shonie Carter at Warrior-1: High Voltage. The bout was to be for the Warrior-1 Welterweight Championship, but because Newton did not make weight, it was a non-title bout. Newton beat Carter by unanimous decision after three rounds.

In 2009, after his win over Shonie Carter, he stated in an interview to Sherdog that he was anticipating his return to fighting abroad, with particular interest in Japan. However, after one more fight in Australia, Newton decided, that after a successful fight career that spanned 14 years, it was finally time to take a break and focus on coaching.

Following his retirement, Newton had coached at his home gym, Warrior Mixed Martial Arts, in Newmarket, Ontario, until he eventually opened and began coaching at his own gym, Newton Mixed Martial Arts, in Pickering, Ontario.[1]

Accomplishments edit

Mixed martial arts record edit

Professional record breakdown
30 matches16 wins14 losses
By knockout23
By submission104
By decision47
Res.RecordOpponentMethodEventDateRoundTimeLocationNotes
Loss16–14Brian EbersoleDecision (unanimous)Impact FC 1July 10, 201035:00Brisbane, Australia
Win16–13Shonie CarterDecision (unanimous)Warrior-1: High VoltageOctober 10, 200935:00Gatineau, Quebec, CanadaOriginally for W-1 Welterweight title; Newton failed to make weight and the match was ruled as a non-title bout.
Win15–13Nabil KhatibKO (punches)Warrior-1: InceptionMarch 28, 200913:12Gatineau, Quebec, Canada
Loss14–13Shungo OyamaSubmission (punches)Hero's 2007 in KoreaOctober 27, 200732:42Seoul, South Korea
Loss14–12Matt LindlandSubmission (guillotine choke)IFL – HoustonFebruary 2, 200721:43Houston, Texas, United States
Loss14–11Renzo GracieDecision (split)IFL Championship FinalDecember 29, 200634:00Uncasville, Connecticut, United States
Win14–10Tokimitsu IshizawaTKO (punches)Hero's 7October 9, 200610:22Yokohama, Japan
Loss13–10Ryo ChonanDecision (unanimous)Pride Bushido 5October 14, 200425:00Osaka, Japan
Loss13–9Daiju TakaseDecision (split)Pride Bushido 3May 23, 200425:00Yokohama, Japan
Loss13–8Renato VerissimoDecision (unanimous)UFC 46January 31, 200435:00Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win13–7Renzo GracieDecision (split)Pride Bushido 1October 5, 200325:00Saitama, Japan
Loss12–7Anderson SilvaKO (flying knee and punches)Pride 25March 16, 200316:27Yokohama, Japan
Win12–6Pete SprattSubmission (kimura)UFC 40November 22, 200211:45Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Loss11–6Matt HughesTKO (punches)UFC 38July 13, 200243:35London, EnglandFor the UFC Welterweight Championship.
Win11–5Jose Landi-JonsSubmission (armbar)Pride 19February 24, 200217:16Saitama, Japan
Loss10–5Matt HughesKO (slam)UFC 34November 2, 200121:27Las Vegas, Nevada, United StatesLost the UFC Welterweight Championship.
Win10–4Pat MiletichSubmission (bulldog choke)UFC 31May 4, 200132:50Atlantic City, New Jersey, United StatesWon the UFC Welterweight Championship; Voted to the Top 20 of the greatest submissions in UFC history.
Loss9–4Dave MenneDecision (unanimous)Shidokan Jitsu – Warriors War 1February 8, 2001110:00Kuwait
Win9–3Johil de OliveiraDecision (unanimous)Pride 12 - Cold FuryDecember 9, 2000210:00Saitama, Japan
Win8–3Yuhi SanoSubmission (armbar)Pride 9June 4, 200010:40Nagoya, Japan
Win7–3Karl SchmidtSubmission (armbar)WEF 9 – World ClassMay 13, 200011:12Evansville, Indiana, United States
Win6–3Daijiro MatsuiDecision (unanimous)Pride 6July 4, 199935:00Yokohama, Japan
Win5–3Kenji KawaguchiSubmission (armbar)Shooto - 10th Anniversary EventMay 29, 199915:00Yokohama, Japan
Loss4–3Kazushi SakurabaSubmission (kneebar)Pride 3June 24, 199825:19Tokyo, Japan
Loss4–2Dan HendersonDecision (split)UFC 17May 15, 1998115:00Mobile, Alabama, USUFC 17 Middleweight Tournament Final.
Win4–1Bob GilstrapSubmission (triangle choke)UFC 17May 15, 199810:52Mobile, Alabama, USUFC 17 Middleweight Tournament Semifinal.
Win3–1Kazuhiro KusayanagiSubmission (armbar)Shooto - Las Grandes Viajes 2March 1, 199812:17Tokyo, Japan
Win2–1Haim GozaliSubmission (armbar)Israel Fighting Championship - Israel vs. CanadaJanuary 1, 19981N/AIsrael
Win1–1Erik PaulsonSubmission (armbar)Vale Tudo Japan 1997November 29, 199710:41Tokyo, Japan
Loss0–1Jean RivièreSubmission (exhaustion)Extreme Fighting 2April 26, 199617:22Montreal, Quebec, Canada

References edit

  1. ^ "Newton MMA | BJJ | Grappling | Kickboxing | Muay Thai | Jiu Jitsu". www.newtonmma.com. Retrieved 2019-03-05.

External links edit

Preceded by 2nd UFC Welterweight Champion
May 4, 2001 – November 2, 2001
Succeeded by