Bas Rutten -Top 5 MMA Finishes - KUNG FU KINGDOM
Coming off the first loss of his professional career, Bas looked to get back to winning ways against Vernon White, former King of the Cage, Light Heavyweight Champion, and it would only take just over a minute for Bas to do so.
At 10 seconds into round 1, White briefly lands a takedown, but Rutten is able to sprawl out and take top position, but the fight is stood up shortly after.
At 1:10, White shoots for another takedown but, in doing so, lands in a suffocating guillotine choke. Rutten begins to constrict tighter and crank on the neck, and White is forced to tap at 1:16 of round 1.
This was the first of 14 of Bas’ submission victories and one of his 3 guillotine finishes demonstrating that he was much more than a Muay Thai kickboxer alone.
Bas Rutten took on Jason DeLucia – who owns the first ever win in UFC history – in their second matchup. The first had ended in under 2 minutes via guillotine choke and here, Bas would get another submission this time, but in even quicker fashion.
At 10 seconds into round 1, a high, right kick from Bas is caught by DeLucia, and he uses this to get the fight to the floor.
At 1:05, DeLucia takes the mount and soon after, tries to spin to take clamp onto a kneebar; however, he leaves himself vulnerable and gets heel hooked by Bas and quickly taps, the fight finishing at 1:32 of round 1.
After his defeat to Ken Shamrock, Bas’ grappling skill improved exponentially as shown here against DeLucia, with this victory making it 3 straight wins via submission.
Bas would further go on to show his grappling development, winning 4 of his next 5 fights by submission showing just how much he had learned from his loss to Ken Shamrock and how a possible trilogy matchup would have seen Bas come out on the winning side.
Here, Bas took on Maurice Smith, a high-level striker with over 70 kickboxing/Muay Thai fights, winning over 50 of these fights as well as being a former WKA Kickboxing (1983) and Muay Thai (1994) champion.
Now, Bas had to face an opponent who could match and possibly even exceed his own stand-up skill, therefore he had to implement all facets of MMA to get the win.
At 30 seconds into round 1, “El Guapo” catches Smith’s kick and takes him to the ground, and at a minute in, starts to attack Smith’s left leg as he looks to crank on a heel hook. However, Smith gets to the ropes and is able to escape (rules of Pancrase state that a fighter must break a submission hold when the opponent reaches the ropes, but a wrestler who claims a rope break forfeits a point).
At 1:30 in, Bas tries to pull guard, but Smith lands in top mount, then, Bas quickly transitions to half guard and soon after, sweeps Smith as he demonstrates his superiority on the ground.
At 2:00, Bas begins to bring focus to the arm and seems to be looking for an Americana, however he swiftly switches his body over and attacks with a kneebar – reminiscent of the same kneebar that Ken Shamrock submitted Bas with earlier in his career – and with it, forces Smith to tap at 2:10 of round 1.
The losses against Ken Shamrock may have been the biggest blessing in disguise and actually seemed to help cultivate Bas’ career as he used Shamrock’s move to gain the victory over Smith, keeping him on his 22-undefeated streak journey.
The undefeated Suzuki, coming in at 7-0 with 7 straight submissions, looked to offer a real threat to Bas Rutten and capitalize on El Guapo’s lack of ground experience at the time – however, Suzuki would have to try and survive Bas’ stand-up onslaught first.
At 25 seconds into round 1, Rutten partially lands a thunderous high kick which is mostly blocked by Suzuki’s forearms, but the sheer force knocks him back, and a snapping palm hook drops him to the floor, yet Suzuki makes it to the ropes to recover.
At 45 seconds in, Bas tries to blitz but is halted by a well-timed double leg takedown, whereupon Suzuki quickly transitions to the mount and is able to control Bas for a significant amount of time, but unable to inflict any damage.
At 3:20 in, Bas clamps on a guillotine choke which he uses to get back to his feet and as he begins to stand, he lands a monstrous knee to Suzuki’ s ribcage, which is enough to stop the fight at 3:43 of round 1.
After a dicey altercation on the ground, Bas did well to survive, get back to his feet and let his trademark striking acumen do the work, preventing Suzuki from getting his 8th straight submission victory.
After an impressive Muay Thai kickboxing career where Bas became the no.2-ranked Thai boxer in Holland, he decided to try his hand at MMA, and his stand-up skill would shine through in his debut against the 45lb (20kg) heavier Ryushi Yanagisawa.
In round 1, Bas immediately starts to chop Yanagisawa’s legs with debilitating quadriceps kicks before switching to a right high kick which opens the guard for a straight palm strike that knocks Yanagisawa off his feet.
Yanagisawa gets back to his feet only to be knocked down again, this time from kicks to the liver and a palm strike which finishes Yanagisawa just 43 seconds into the contest.
Bas Rutten’s debut was an historic one with a 43-second finish, this victory giving birth to the infamous “Rutten jump”. Rutten’s knockout was so brutal that it left Yanagisawa in the hospital for 2 days.
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