World Victory Road
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2015) |
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Mixed martial arts promotion |
Founded | 2007 |
Defunct | 2011 |
Headquarters | , |
Website | http://www.src-official.com/pc/ |
World Victory Road (WVR) was a Japanese mixed martial arts (MMA) organization which promoted the Sengoku Raiden Championship (SRC) in Japan. The organization was formed in 2007 following the purchase of PRIDE FC by Zuffa. It operated in conjunction with the Japan Mixed Martial Arts Federation (JMM). The Sengoku championship was broadcast on Fuji TV and pay-per-view in Japan, and on HDNet in United States. Beginning with the December 31 show, Sengoku was known as Sengoku Raiden Championship. "Raiden" means "thunder and lightning" and refers to legendary 18th century rikishi, Raiden Tameemon. WVR exec Kokuho said they hoped the initials "SRC" will be more palatable to international audiences.[1] On March 12, 2011, it was reported that Don Quijote, a Japanese discount store chain serving as the primary sponsor of the promotion, had ceased all funding to WVR. That same day, WVR officials issued a press release stating that, barring the sudden emergence of a new primary sponsor, the promotion was effectively finished.
Broadcast
The promotion received a boost in visibility in their endeavor to compete with DREAM when it reached a broadcast agreement for Fuji TV to televise matches in Japan. It was significant given the fact that this is the first MMA promotion to be televised on the network since it dropped PRIDE FC from its lineup in mid-2006. The events will be shown live on Fuji TV 739 and then a two-hour version later in the night on Fuji TV.[2] On February 6, 2009, HDNet announced they had reached and agreement with WVR to broadcast its Sengoku-events in America starting March 20, 2009.[3]
Rules
WVR's rules differ somewhat from the Mixed martial arts rules#Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts. Among the differences are the allowance of knees and stomps to the head of downed opponent while elbows to the head and soccer kicks are prohibited.[4] Similar to the Unified Rules, fights have three rounds each lasting five minutes.
Sengoku events
Notable fighters
Final champions
Division | Upper weight limit | Champion | Since | Title Defenses |
---|---|---|---|---|
Featherweight | 65 kg (143.3 lb) | Vacant | 25 June 2011 | |
Lightweight | 70 kg (154.3 lb) | Vacant | 7 March 2010 (Sengoku Raiden Championship 12) | |
Welterweight | 77 kg (169.8 lb) | Japan Keita Nakamura | 30 December 2010 (Soul of Fight) | 0 |
Middleweight | 84 kg (185.2 lb) | Vacant | 8 February 2011 |
Notable fighters
- Japan Yoshihiro Nakao – Former PRIDE fighter
- Japan Sanae Kikuta – Former ADCC Submission Wrestling World Champion
- Japan Hidehiko Yoshida – 1992 Judo Olympic Gold Medalist -78 kg
- Japan Kazuo Misaki – 2006 PRIDE Welterweight Grand Prix winner
- Japan Makoto Takimoto – 2000 Judo -81 kg Olympic Gold Medalist
- Japan Satoru Kitaoka – Sengoku Lightweight Grand Prix and former Lightweight champion
- Japan Hatsu Hioki – Current TKO Featherweight Champion
- Japan Satoshi Ishii – 2008 Olympic Judo Gold Medalist +99 kg
- Japan Eiji Mitsuoka – Former PRIDE fighter
- Japan Kazuyuki Fujita – Former PRIDE fighter
- Japan Satoshi Ishii − 2008 Judo Olympic Gold Medalist +100 kg
- United States Muhammed Lawal – a.k.a. King Mo Former NCAA Division II Champion, 2004 U.S. Olympic alternate -84 kg
- United States Kevin Randleman – Former UFC Heavyweight Champion
- United States Travis Wiuff – YAMMA Pit Fighting Heavyweight Tournament Champion
- United States Nick Thompson – Former BodogFight welterweight champion
- United States Josh Barnett – former UFC heavyweight champion, PRIDE veteran
- United States Jeff Monson – 2005 –99 kg ADCC champion
- United States Dave Herman – Elite XC, and Bellator veteran
- United States Logan Clark – UFC and WEC veteran
- Brazil Antônio Silva – Last EliteXC Heavyweight Champion
- Brazil Xande Ribeiro – 2007 –99 kg ADCC champion
- Brazil Antonio Braga Neto – 2008 World Jiu-Jitsu Gold Medalist
- Brazil Evangelista Santos – Former PRIDE fighter
- South Korea Chan Sung Jung – 2007 Pancrase Korea Neo-Blood Tournament Champion
- South Korea Mu Bae Choi – 1990 Asian Games -100 kg Greco-Roman Wrestling Medalist
- Poland Paweł Nastula – 1995 and 1997 Judo World Champion, 1996 Olympic Gold Medalist, -99 kg
- Poland Mamed Khalidov – KSW champion, EliteXC veteran
- Bulgaria Stanislav Nedkov – Bulgarian jiu jitsu champion
- Bulgaria Blagoi Ivanov – 2008 World Sambo champion, +99 kg
- Morocco Badr Hari − K-1 World Grand Prix 2008 & 2009 Finalist
- Venezuela Maximo Blanco -2007 Pan American Games Bronze Medalist, Lightweight King of Pancrase and current UFC fighter.
References
- ↑ Nelson, Chris (Sep 23, 2009). "Snapshot of the Day: Sengoku Raiden Championship". BloodyElbow.com. Retrieved 2009-02-07.
- ↑ "World Victory Road on Fuji TV?. MMA on Tap. March 21, 2008". Retrieved 2008-04-09.
- ↑ Mendoza, Ricardo (February 6, 2009). "HDNET REACHES DEAL TO AIR SENGOKU EVENTS". MMAWeekly.com. Retrieved 2009-02-07.
- ↑ [1] Archived December 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine