UFC 2
UFC 2: No Way Out | ||||
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Information | ||||
Promotion | Ultimate Fighting Championship | |||
Date | March 11, 1994 | |||
Venue | Mammoth Gardens | |||
City | Denver, Colorado | |||
Attendance | 2,000 | |||
Event chronology | ||||
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The Ultimate Fighting Championship Part II (later renamed UFC 2: No Way Out) was a mixed martial arts (MMA) event held by the Ultimate Fighting Championship on March 11, 1994, at Mammoth Gardens in Denver, Colorado.[1] The event was seen live on pay-per-view in the United States,[2] and was later released on home video.
History[]
UFC 2 featured a sixteen-man tournament format, the first and only one in UFC history, with the winner receiving $60,000. The first seven bouts were not aired on the live pay-per-view broadcast, but were on the home video version. The tournament had no weight classes or weight limits. Matches had no time limit or rounds, therefore no judges were used.[3] Competitors could only win a match by submission, by the opponent's corner throwing in the towel, or by knockout.
UFC 2 marked the debut of referee John McCarthy, arguably the most famous referee in the sport of MMA.[4] Since this was the only 16-man tournament in UFC history, Royce Gracie is the only person to have ever fought and won four fights in one night in the UFC.[5]
Stuntman and co-creator of the UFC Ben Perry joined the announcing crew for the first time in UFC 2. He was quoted that evening as introducing Scott Morris into the ring by saying: "We don’t know much about Scott Morris, because he is a Ninja".[6] This event did a buyrate of 300,000.[7]
Results[]
Final | |||||||
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Weight class | Method | Round | Time | Notes | |||
N/A | Royce Gracie | def. | Patrick Smith | Submission (punches) | 1:17 | ||
Semifinals | |||||||
N/A | Patrick Smith | def. | Johnny Rhodes | Submission (guillotine choke) | 1:07 | ||
N/A | Royce Gracie | def. | Remco Pardoel | Submission (lapel choke) | 1:31 | ||
Quarterfinals | |||||||
N/A | Patrick Smith | def. | Scott Morris | KO (elbows) | 0:30 | ||
N/A | Johnny Rhodes | def. | Fred Ettish | Submission (bulldog choke) | 3:07 | [a] | |
N/A | Remco Pardoel | def. | Orlando Wiet | KO (elbows) | 1:29 | ||
N/A | Royce Gracie | def. | Jason DeLucia | Submission (armlock) | 1:07 | ||
Opening Round | |||||||
N/A | Scott Morris | def. | Sean Daugherty | Submission (guillotine choke) | 0:20 | ||
N/A | Patrick Smith | def. | Ray Wizard | Submission (guillotine choke) | 0:58 | ||
N/A | Johnny Rhodes | def. | David Levicki | Submission (punches) | 12:13 | ||
N/A | Frank Hamaker | def. | Thaddeus Luster | Submission (armlock) | 4:52 | ||
N/A | Orlando Wiet | def. | Robert Lucarelli | TKO (corner stoppage) | 2:50 | ||
N/A | Remco Pardoel | def. | Alberto Cerro Leon | Submission (forearm choke) | 9:51 | ||
N/A | Jason DeLucia | def. | Scott Baker | Submission (triangle Choke) | 6:41 | ||
N/A | Royce Gracie | def. | Minoki Ichihara | Submission (armbar) | 5:08 |
- ^ Frank Hamaker was forced to withdraw due to injury. He was replaced by Fred Ettish.
UFC 2 bracket[]
Opening Round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | ||||||||||||||||
Scott Morris (Ninjitsu) | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Sean Daugherty (Karate) | 0:20 | ||||||||||||||||||
Scott Morris | 0:30 | ||||||||||||||||||
Patrick Smith | KO | ||||||||||||||||||
Patrick Smith (Kickboxing) | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Ray Wizard (Karate) | 0:58 | ||||||||||||||||||
Patrick Smith | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Johnny Rhodes | 1:07 | ||||||||||||||||||
Johnny Rhodes (Karate) | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
David Levicki (Wing Chun) | 12:13 | ||||||||||||||||||
Johnny Rhodes | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Fred Ettish (Karate) 1 | 3:07 | ||||||||||||||||||
(Sambo) | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Thaddeus Luster (San Soo) | 4:52 | ||||||||||||||||||
Patrick Smith | 1:17 | ||||||||||||||||||
Royce Gracie | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Orlando Wiet (Muay Thai) | TKO | ||||||||||||||||||
Robert Lucarelli (Kickboxing) | 2:50 | ||||||||||||||||||
Orlando Wiet | 1:29 | ||||||||||||||||||
Remco Pardoel | KO | ||||||||||||||||||
Remco Pardoel (Jujutsu) | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Alberto Cerra Leon (Pencak Silat) | 9:51 | ||||||||||||||||||
Remco Pardoel | 1:31 | ||||||||||||||||||
Royce Gracie | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Jason Delucia (Shaolin Quan) | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Scott Baker (Kickboxing) | 6:41 | ||||||||||||||||||
Jason Delucia | 1:07 | ||||||||||||||||||
Royce Gracie | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
Royce Gracie (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu) | SUB | ||||||||||||||||||
(Karate) | 5:08 |
1 Frank Hamaker was forced to withdraw due to injury. He was replaced by Fred Ettish.
See also[]
- Ultimate Fighting Championship
- List of UFC champions
- List of UFC events
- 1994 in UFC
References[]
- ^ "UFC 2 - No Way Out". Sherdog.com. 1994-03-11. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
- ^ "UFC 2: No Way Out". Tapology. 1994-03-11. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
- ^ Sandomir, Richard (March 8, 1994). "TV SPORTS; Death Is Cheap: Maybe It's Just $14.95". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-08-17.
- ^ "'Big' John McCarthy to referee UFC on Versus". USA Today. June 26, 2010. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- ^ Gentry, Clyde (2005). No Holds Barred: Ultimate Fighting and the Martial Arts Revolution.
- ^ "Prelude to UFC 100: Greatest Quotes In UFC History". July 10, 2009.
- ^ "The Pay per View Revolution in Wrestling". 2015-06-17.
External links[]
- Ultimate Fighting Championship events
- 1994 in mixed martial arts
- Mixed martial arts in Colorado
- Sports competitions in Denver
- 1994 in sports in Colorado