Naoya_Uematsu

Naoya Uematsu

Naoya Uematsu

Japanese mixed martial arts fighter


Naoya Uematsu (born September 10, 1978) is a retired Japanese[1] mixed martial artist[2] who competed in the bantamweight, featherweight and lightweight[3] divisions in Cage Force, DEEP and Shooto. He is the head instructor of the NEXUSENSE gym. In addition, Uematsu is a director and referee director of the Japan Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation (JBJJF). He is a director and strengthening committee member of the Japan Sambo Federation and chairman of the refereeing committee and the vice Chairman of the Japan MMA Refereeing Organization (JMOC).

Quick Facts Born, Nationality ...

Mixed martial arts career

Uematsu began at the age of 12 in junior high school. He started training in shoot wrestling at Shooto Gym K'z Factory under Kazuhiro Kusayanagi when he was 16 and immediately became an undefeated champion in amateur competitions. He also trained in sumo wrestling, sambo and muay thai at the Crosspoint Gym. He is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt with training under Biviano Fernandez and Leonardo Vieira.

Early career

Uematsu debuted in the Lumax Cup lightweight tournament in 1997 defeating Takashi Ochi and Mitsuo Matsumoto. He made it to the finals, where he defeated Caol Uno via achilles lock under twenty three seconds in the first round.[4]

Shooto

Uematsu would rack up an undefeated 11-0-2 record in 6 years in Shooto defeating luminaries such as Katsuya Toida and Noboru Asahi. His streak came to an end on September 16, 2002 on a loss to Bao Quach at Shooto: Treasure Hunt 10.[5] Uematsu faced Joao Roque on January 24, 2003, losing via unanimous decision. Uematsu would go on to face Jens Pulver, Gilbert Melendez and Hideki Kadowaki later in his Shooto career. He left Shooto in 2006 at a record of 14-5-2, following a loss to Kenji Osawa.

Later career

Uematsu would go 1-3-0 in the final two years of his mixed martial arts career, with losses to Urijah Faber and Marcos Galvao. His only win was over James Doolan at Cage Force, via heel hook. He retired in 2008, following a loss to Daiki Hata at Deep: 39 Impact.

Championships and accomplishments

Mixed martial arts

  • All Japan Amateur Shooto
    • All Japan Amateur Shooto Tournament Runner-up (1996)
  • Lumax Cup
    • Tournament of J Lightweight Tournament (1997)

Sambo

  • All Japan Sambo Championships
    • All Japan Sambo Championship, Senior 68kg, 2nd place (1998)
    • All Japan Sambo Championship, Senior 68kg, 3rd place (2002)
    • All Japan Sambo Championship, 68kg class champion (2008)

Submission wrestling

  • ADCC
    • ADCC JAPAN TRIAL Under 66kg champion (2007)

Mixed martial arts record

Professional record breakdown
25 matches 15 wins 8 losses
By knockout 1 4
By submission 11 0
By decision 3 4
Draws 2
More information Res., Record ...

See also


References

  1. "Naoya Uematsu". Sherdog. Archived from the original on October 16, 2014.
  2. "Naoya Uematsu". mixedmartialarts.com. Archived from the original on November 29, 2014.
  3. "Naoya Uematsu". fightmatrix.com. Archived from the original on November 29, 2014.

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