Matt Hume

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Matt Hume
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Born (1966-07-14) July 14, 1966 (age 57)
Other names The Wizard
Nationality American
Fighting out of Seattle, Washington, United States
Team AMC Pankration
Years active 1994–2002
Mixed martial arts record
Total 10
Wins 5
By knockout 2
By submission 3
Losses 5
By submission 2
By decision 3
Occupation Vice President of Operations at ONE, head trainer at AMC Pankration
University Central Washington University
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Matt Hume (born July 14, 1966) is an American retired American mixed martial artist. He is the founder and head trainer at AMC Pankration in Seattle which is home to UFC flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson,[1][2] ONE bantamweight champion Bibiano Fernandes and he has trained numerous world class fighters including Josh Barnett, Tim Boetsch[3] Bob Sapp, Chris Leben, Hayato Sakurai, Akira Shoji, Matt Brown, Rich Franklin,[4] Mario Miranda, Costas Philippou and Caros Fodor.[5]

Early life

Hume grew up in Kirkland, Washington. His father was a Seattle police officer and his mother a nurse.[6] He graduated from Lake Washington High School, later receiving his college degree in business from Central Washington University. Since his childhood, Hume trained in several disciplines, among them soccer, basketball and baseball, but also amateur wrestling, boxing and karate, given his liking for Bruce Lee.[6] He later explored further arts like judo, sambo, kenpo and kickboxing.

Mixed martial arts career

Pancrase

After being scouted by Ken Shamrock in United States, Hume had his mixed martial arts debut for Japanese promotion Pancrase in April 1994, losing to Katsuomi Inagaki by points lost in rope escapes as the promotion's ruleset stipulated. He bounced back with a victory over Scott Bessac via rear naked choke in under two minutes.

Hume's third match, against Ken Shamrock himself, would be a controversial one. The bout was finished by Shamrock performing a professional wrestling northern lights suplex floated over into a Kimura, and was widely considered to be a worked shoot. When Shamrock was asked about the matter in 1998, he revealed that Hume and him had agreed to work the match in an exhibition format.[7] Later, in 2015, he would anwser to a similar question: "I talked to Matt and I said that we would go in with each other but I wouldn’t hurt him. I wouldn’t hurt him, because he had been so green. [...] So those were understandings I had with guys because I was so much better than they were. And I’m not going to go in there and abuse these guys."[7]

He would also face former Shooto challenger Manabu Yamada, but was defeated, with Hume tapping out to a heel hook.

On December 1994, Hume took part in the first King of Pancrase Championship tournament, but was eliminated by Minoru Suzuki in another controversial match. Hume controlled the fight, scoring fast palm strikes and knees on the stand up, and later capturing Suzuki's back on the ground and forcing him to turtle up for several minutes; Minoru finally capitalized on a failed rear naked choke attempt to try a guillotine choke, but Matt escaped accidentally sliding under the ropes. Hume again got top position, this time full mount, but he had to let it go to check an apparently accidental eye gouge. When the fight resumed, Suzuki dropped for a heel hook, making Hume stagger and fall against the ropes, which the referee counted as a rope escape; Hume protested it was not, but he was instructed to keep on, only for the fight to end shortly after with Suzuki winning due to said point. Hume proceeded to celebrate as the actual winner, and never returned to Pancrase after that.

Post-Pancrase

He holds wins over former Shooto champion Erik Paulson and former UFC Welterweight Champion Pat Miletich. Matt Hume also defeated former Olympic gold medalist Kenny Monday by submission in only 45 seconds in the main event of the pay-per-view world submission wrestling championships "The Contenders".

Matt Hume's grappling talents impressed the Prince, Sheik tahnoun Bin Zayed Al Nayhan of Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates so much, that the Prince requested that Matt come to Abu Dhabi to personally train him and his combat team. Shortly after Matt trained him and his team, the prince was inspired to start the now famous ADCC Submission Wrestling World Championship. Matt participated in the inaugural event, winning all of his matches, but withdrawing after his semifinal victory on the doctor's recommendation after a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament injury.

Hume’s last fight was a win against Shawn Peters by armbar, at Hook n Shoot Absolute Fighting Championships 1, December 13, 2002.

AMC Pankration

Hume founded the American Martial Arts Center (AMC) in Kirkland, WA soon after graduating from college and is currently home to Demetrious Johnson, Bibiano Fernandes, Tim Boetsch, Caros Fodor and numerous other world class fighters.

PRIDE Fighting Championships

Hume was the rule director and official trainer to both PRIDE Fighting Championships and Dream (mixed martial arts).

ONE Championship

Hume was initially appointed as the head official by Singapore-based promotion ONE Championship when it was founded in 2011. The following year he accepted a new role as Vice President of Operations.[8][9][10][11][12]

Mixed martial arts record

Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Win 5–5 Shawn Peters Submission (armbar) HOOKnSHOOT: Absolute FC 1 December 13, 2002 1 1:45 Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States
Win 4–5 Pat Miletich TKO (broken nose) Extreme Fighting 4 March 28, 1997 1 5:00 Des Moines, Iowa, United States
Win 3–5 Erik Paulson TKO (cut) Extreme Fighting 3 October 18, 1996 3 0:44 Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Loss 2–5 Minoru Suzuki Decision (lost points) Pancrase: King of Pancrase Tournament Opening Round December 16, 1994 1 10:00 Tokyo, Japan
Win 2–4 Scott Sollivan Submission Pancrase - Road To The Championship 5 October 15, 1994 1 0:38 Tokyo, Japan
Loss 1–4 Jason DeLucia Decision (lost points) Pancrase - Road To The Championship 4 September 1, 1994 1 15:00 Osaka, Japan
Loss 1–3 Manabu Yamada Submission Pancrase - Road To The Championship 3 July 26, 1994 1 2:31 Tokyo, Japan
Loss 1–2 Ken Shamrock Submission (armlock) Pancrase - Road To The Championship 2 July 6, 1994 1 5:50 Amagasaki, Japan
Win 1–1 Scott Bessac Submission (rear naked choke) Pancrase - Road To The Championship 1 May 31, 1994 1 1:21 Tokyo, Japan
Loss 0–1 Katsuomi Inagaki Decision (lost points) Pancrase - Pancrash! 3 April 21, 1994 1 10:00 Osaka, Japan

Submission grappling record

Result Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Notes
Win Brazil Luis Brito Points ADCC -77 kg 1998 1 10:00
Win United States Micah Pittman Submission ADCC -77 kg 1998 1 5:34
Win United States Kenny Monday Submission (ankle lock) The Contenders 1997 1 0:45

References

  1. [1] Archived February 17, 2014 at the Wayback Machine
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External links