Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Kevin Rosier

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Kevin Rosier

Reach
  
79 in (201 cm)

Role
  
Boxer


Style
  
Kickboxing, Boxing

Height
  
1.93 m

Fighting out of
  
Weight
  
120 kg

Kevin Rosier UFC 139 Veteran Passes at Age 53 MMA Latest News amp Fights

Born
  
January 6, 1962Buffalo, New York, United States (
1962-01-06
)

Residence
  
Lancaster, New York, United States

Division
  
Heavyweight (Boxing and MMA)Super Heavyweight (Kickboxing)

Died
  
April 14, 2015, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, United States

Movies
  
UFC Classics: Ultimate Fighting Championship: Vol. 1, Caged Combat: Vol. 4: Biloxi, Mississippi

Children
  
Michael Anthony Rosier, Madisun Rosier, Melissa Rosier, Lauren Reyelts, Maximillion Rosier

tye fields kevin rosier 2000 04 28


Kevin Rosier (January 6, 1962 – April 14, 2015) was an American kickboxer, boxer and mixed martial artist. He had much success as a kickboxer, winning a number of titles, but did not transition particularly well into the world of boxing and was mostly seen as a journeyman fighter. Notably, he also took part at the inaugural Ultimate Fighting Championship event in 1993 where he reached the semi-finals.

Contents

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Kevin rosier tribute


Career

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Rosier spent the majority of his fighting career in kickboxing where he held a record of 66 wins, all by knockout, and 8 losses. He was also the 3x WKA World Super Heavyweight Champion and ISKA North American Super Heavyweight Champion. His kickboxing career began in the 1980s and his last bout came in 1999 when he lost to Mike Labree in a fight for the vacant IKF International Kickboxing Federation Pro Full Contact Rules Super Heavyweight World Title on May 15, 1999 in Lowell, Massachusetts, USA. At 26 seconds into round 10, LaBree caught Rosier with a short left to the head and Rosier went down to his knees and the bout was stopped.

Kevin Rosier Kevin Rosier retired MMA fighter and bodyguard City

He also had a 12-year career as a professional boxer in which he held a 7-17 record. He fought between 1989 and 2001 and came up against a number of high-profile opponents including Josué Blocus, Roman Bugaj, Tye Fields, Vincent Maddalone, Joe Mesi, Nikolai Valuev, Taurus Sykes and Paea Wolfgramm.

In 1993, with only 5 weeks notice Rosier elicited the help of his former student World Kickboxing Champion A.J. Verel to coach and train him for UFC 1, the very first mixed martial arts event held by the Ultimate Fighting Championship. and He defeated karateka Zane Frazier by TKO in the quarterfinals when the towel was thrown in. In the semifinals, he came up against Dutch savate fighter Gerard Gordeau and lost via TKO. After this, he continued to compete in MMA and next fought at UFC 4 where he lost via submission 14 seconds into his bout with "The Ghetto Man" Joe Charles. He competed five more time in MMA, losing four and winning one, and retired with a record of 2 wins and six losses.

After retiring from competition, Kevin suffered several bouts of illness (including open-heart surgery and a nearly fatal fall while already in intensive care). As of August 2013, Kevin was in stable health & reportedly residing in a retirement resort in Nashville.

In April 2015 Rosier died of an apparent heart attack.

Kickboxing

  • 1994 WKKC (World Karate and Kickboxing Council) World Superheavyweight Champion
  • 1990 WKA (World Karate Association) World Superheavyweight Champion (above the waist)
  • 1990 ISKA (International Sport Karate Association) North American Superheavyweight Champion
  • 3X WKA (World Kickboxing Association) World Superheavyweight Champion
  • 1989 All-Japan World Champion
  • 1987 United States Kung-Fu Karate National No-Rules Tournament Champion
  • References

    Kevin Rosier Wikipedia