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James Te Huna
New Zealand martial artist

James Te Huna

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
New Zealand martial artist
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Darfield
Age
43 years
Residence
Penrith
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

James Te Huna (born 29 September 1981) is a retired New Zealand mixed martial artist best known for competing in the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

Mixed martial arts career

Early career and background

James Te Huna was born in Darfield, Canterbury, New Zealand, and is of Maori descent.

Te Huna racked up victories on the local circuit, in Australia, as well as suffering a submission loss (via shoulder dislocation) to Bellator season one middleweight champion Hector Lombard.

Te Huna defeated veteran journeymann Antony Rea whilst competing for the Cage Fighting Championship promotion. He became the Cage Fighting Championship Light Heavyweight World Champion at CFC 10 by defeating Anthony Perosh by first round KO. Te Huna was later sanctioned by the promotion for illegally stomping on Perosh after the referee had stopped the bout. Cage Fighting Championship promoter Luke Pezzutti issued the following statement concerning Te Huna's behaviour, "To Anthony Perosh and the supporters/ Fans of Cage Fighting Championship, we apologize and do not condone nor tolerate the un-sportsman like actions of James Te-Huna at the CFC 10 August 21 event where the referee Ivan Walton stepped in to stop the fight between James and Anthony, and as a result of his actions that evening he has been fined 20% of his fight purse and has offered to write a letter of apology to Anthony Perosh, CFC officials and the supporters of CFC. CFC officials will amend rules, regulations to further prevent this type of behavior from our athletes." A formal letter of apology was duly issued on Te Huna's behalf.

Te Huna escaped serious injuries after a twenty-foot shop glass panel fell on top of him while walking to training alongside a Sydney mall.

Ultimate Fighting Championship

Te Huna then signed a contract with the Ultimate Fighting Championship and made his debut at UFC 110 against Igor Pokrajac. Te Huna was victorious via a controversial TKO stoppage. The referee stopped the bout when he hit Pokrajac with nine consecutive punches, which he did with his broken arm.

His next fight was scheduled to be at UFC 120 against UFC newcomer Tom Blackledge, but Te Huna withdrew from the fight due to injury and was replaced by James McSweeney.

Te Huna made his return on 27 February 2011 at UFC 127 against Alexander Gustafsson, where was defeated by first-round submission due to a rear-naked choke. He donated his fight purse to the Christchurch earthquake victims, and the UFC matched his donation.

He faced Ricardo Romero on 24 September 2011 at UFC 135 and won by KO due to punches 47 seconds into the first round.

Te Huna next faced Aaron Rosa on 3 March 2012 at UFC on FX 2. He won by TKO in the first round.

He was expected to face UFC veteran Brandon Vera on 11 July 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 4. However, Vera was tapped to fight Maurício Rua at UFC on Fox 4 and was replaced by returning veteran Joey Beltran. Te Huna knocked Beltran down once and had him rocked throughout the first round. Despite breaking bones in his left hand and left foot and having his endurance tested, Te Huna won the fight via unanimous decision.

Te Huna fought Ryan Jimmo on 16 February 2013 at UFC on Fuel TV: Barao vs. McDonald. He survived an early scare in round one after getting hit with a head kick. Te Huna then rebounded by controlling rounds two and three with his wrestling, winning via unanimous decision.

He next faced Glover Teixeira at UFC 160 on 25 May 2013, coming in as an injury replacement for Ryan Bader. He lost the fight via submission due to a guillotine choke in the first round.

Te Huna faced Maurício Rua on 7 December 2013 at UFC Fight Night 33. He lost the fight via knockout in the first round.

Following those two consecutive losses, Te Huna announced that he would drop down to middleweight for his future fights. He made his middleweight debut and faced Nate Marquardt in his home country of New Zealand on 28 June 2014 at UFC Fight Night: Te Huna vs. Marquardt. He lost the fight via first round armbar.

After being sidelined for all of 2015 due to a litany of injuries, Te-Huna returned to face Steve Bossé on 20 March 2016 at UFC Fight Night 85. Te-Huna lost the bout via KO in the first round.

On 24 May 2016 Te Huna announced on both his Instagram and Twitter accounts that he would be retiring from mixed martial arts.

Championships and accomplishments

  • Ultimate Fighting Championship
    • First New Zealander to compete in the UFC
    • Fight of the Night (One time)
  • Cage Fighting Championships
    • CFC Light Heavyweight Championship (One time)
    • CFC Light Heavyweight Grand Prix Champion

Mixed martial arts record

Res.RecordOpponentMethodEventDateRoundTimeLocationNotes
Loss16–9Steve BosséKO (punch)UFC Fight Night: Hunt vs. Mir20 March 201610:52Brisbane, Australia
Loss16–8Nate MarquardtSubmission (armbar)UFC Fight Night: Te Huna vs. Marquardt28 June 201414:34Auckland, New ZealandMiddleweight fight.
Loss16–7Maurício RuaKO (punch)UFC Fight Night: Hunt vs. Bigfoot7 December 201311:03Brisbane, Australia
Loss16–6Glover TeixeiraSubmission (guillotine choke)UFC 16025 May 201312:38Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win16–5Ryan JimmoDecision (unanimous)UFC on Fuel TV: Barao vs. McDonald16 February 201335:00London, England
Win15–5Joey BeltranDecision (unanimous)UFC on Fuel TV: Munoz vs. Weidman11 July 201235:00San Jose, California, United StatesFight of the Night.
Win14–5Aaron RosaTKO (punches)UFC on FX: Alves vs. Kampmann3 March 201212:08Sydney, Australia
Win13–5Ricardo RomeroKO (punches)UFC 13524 September 201110:47Denver, Colorado, United States
Loss12–5Alexander GustafssonSubmission (rear-naked choke)UFC 12727 February 201114:27Sydney, Australia
Win12–4Igor PokrajacTKO (punches)UFC 11021 February 201033:26Sydney, Australia
Win11–4Anthony PeroshKO (punches)CFC 10: Light Heavyweight Grand Prix Finals21 August 200912:21Sydney, AustraliaCFC Light Heavyweight Grand Prix Final.
Win10–4Priscus FogagnoloTKO (punches)CFC 9: Fighters Paradise11 July 200922:37Gold Coast, AustraliaCFC Light Heavyweight Grand Prix Second Round.
Win9–4Antony ReaTKO (punches)CFC 8: Light Heavyweight Grand Prix22 May 200911:52Sydney, AustraliaCFC Light Heavyweight Grand Prix First Round.
Win8–4David GibbTKO (punches)XFC: Return of the Hulk14 March 20091N/APerth, Australia
Win7–4Sam BrownDecision (unanimous)EFG: Weapons of Mass Destruction3 May 200835:00Penrith, Australia
Loss6–4Hector LombardSubmission (shoulder injury)Warriors Realm 823 March 200713:50Geelong, Australia
Win6–3Takahiro ObaTKO (corner stoppage)X-plosion18 August 200625:00Sydney, Australia
Loss5–3Lee AntakySubmission (rear-naked choke)KOTC: Gunfather10 February 200611:37Sunshine Coast, AustraliaFor the KOTC Light Heavyweight Championship.
Win5–2Edwin AguilarTKO (punches)Kumite 211 November 20052N/ASydney, Australia
Win4–2Adrian LeatunaTKO (punches)Kumite 12 July 20053N/ASydney, Australia
Loss3–2Matt KnightDQ (fence grabbing)KOTC: Australia4 February 200514:01Sydney, Australia
Win3–1Kym RobinsonSubmission (rear-naked choke)XFC 6: Ultimate Fighting Returns20 November 200412:19Gold Coast, Australia
Win2–1Rocky HuniSubmission (rear-naked choke)XFC 5: When Worlds Collide13 August 20041N/AGold Coast, Australia
Win1–1Matt KnightSubmission (rear-naked choke)Xtreme Fight Club 25 June 200421:20Gold Coast, Australia
Loss0–1Api HemaraSubmission (armbar)Spartan Reality Fight 65 April 200312:20Perth, Australia

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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