ANDRE ARLOVSKI

Biography
Andre only took up martial arts at the age of 18 having previously been
interested in football. It was an interest in personal fitness and
conditioning that led Arlovski to take an interest in combat sports.
Enrolling at the police academy in Minsk, Arlovski combined his interest
in a career in law enforcement with his growing martial arts
participation by taking up the required police defence course of Sambo.
He showed himself to be a highly competent Sambo exponent. In 1999,
Andre won the European Youth Sambo Championship and the World Youth
Championship. He also took a silver medal at the Sambo World Cup and
another silver medal at the World Sambo Championship.
Arlovski began taking a greater interest in other martial arts, studying
with kickboxing and developing striking skills to complement his Sambo-based
grappling abilities.
M1 Mix-Fight
With mixed martial arts competitions taking off around the world,
Arlovski began his professional MMA career at the Mix Fight M-1 in St
Petersburg, Russia in April 1999. It was a fairly inauspicious start,
losing by KO to the un-heralded Viacheslav Datsik. Not deterred,
Arlovski returned in 2000 to M-1 at the European Championships, taking
the heavyweight crown with a submission victory and a knock-out victory.
UFC
Arlovski made his Ultimate Fighting Championship debut at UFC 28: High
Stakes, defeating Aaron Brink by submission. Arlovski was thrown in
against top class opposition early on in his UFC career, taking tough
losses against Ricco Rodriguez and Pedro Rizzo. Despite those defeats,
big wins versus Ian Freeman and Vladimir Matyushenko propelled Arlovski
back into the UFC elite.
The out-of-competition injury suffered by UFC heavyweight champion Frank
Mir led to the creation of an interim title. The match-up was between
the previous heavyweight champion, Tim Sylvia and Arlovski on February
5, 2005. The two competitors had become known for hard hitting, Sylvia
having won the eight matches prior to facing Mir all through striking
prowess. As the fight unfolded, Arlovski showed greater mobility and
accuracy when striking. He connected with an overhand right and followed
up with an ankle lock on the ground that forced Sylvia to tap out after
47 seconds of the first round.
Arlovski made a subsequent defence of the interim title in June, when
his opponent Justin Eilers suffered a non-contact anterior cruciate
ligament injury. On August 12, 2005, the UFC announced that it now
recognized Arlovski as the Heavyweight champion outright, as Mir had not
fully rehabilitated from his injury. The first defense of that title
took place on October 7 of that same year, with Arlovski knocking out
the top contender, Paul Buentello, in 15 seconds of the opening round.
In a rematch with Tim Sylvia on April 15, 2006, Arlovski knocked Sylvia
down with an right hand punch. Sylvia was able to protect himself and
get up. While Arlovski tried to finish Sylvia with a right lead, Sylvia
countered with a right hook to the chin. Arlovski collapsed on the
ground stunned, with Sylvia peppering the side of Arlovski's face until
referee Herb Dean stopped it at 2:43 of the first round, ending
Arlovski's title reign.
Current Training
Andre currently lives and trains in Chicago, Illinois. His boxing coach
is Mike Garcia, and he trains Brazilian Jiu Jitsu with Dino Costeas at
POW Martial Arts. Dino teaches the Rickson Gracie system of jiujitsu. He
also has been training with UFC legend Randy Couture.
MMA Record
9 wins (6 KO's, 3 submissions), 4 losses (4 KO's), 0 draw.
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