Jump to content

Eugenio Tadeu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eugênio Tadeu
Eugênio Tadeu on the far right, 1990s
Born1965
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
NationalityBrazil
Height1.73 m (5 ft 8 in)
Weight170 lb (77 kg; 12 st 2 lb)
DivisionWelterweight
Openweight
StyleLuta livre
Muay Thai
Capoeira
Fighting out ofRio de Janeiro, Brazil
Rank  9th Dan Black Belt in Luta Livre Esportiva
Years active1984-2003
Mixed martial arts record
Total6
Wins2
By knockout1
By submission1
Losses3
By knockout3
No contests1

Eugenio Tadeu is a Brazilian grappler, Vale Tudo[1] and mixed martial arts fighter.[2] Tadeu was born in 1965.[3] He was famous as a practitioner of Luta Livre, or Brazilian Submission wrestling[4] and was one of the last representatives of this art form.[5]

Tadeu is notable for representing Luta Livre in Vale Tudo/MMA events. Especially on the feud between Luta Livre and Brazilian jiu-jitsu.[6]

Biography

[edit]

In the JJ vs Martial Arts Challenge Vale Tudo event in 1984. Tadeu defeated BJJ representative Renan Pitanguy by TKO.[7]

In 1991, he fought BJJ representative Wallid Ismail at the Desafio - Jiu Jitsu vs Luta Livre Vale Tudo event. The match saw both fighters extensively exchanging strikes, Ismail used his aggressive jiu-jitsu to takedown Tadeu and apply an early form of Ground-and-Pound, punishing him with headbutts and by throwing him outside the ring multiple times. After 16 minutes of fighting, Ismail threw him outside the ring one last time and the tired and injured Tadeu wasn't able to come back in, giving the victory to Ismail by TKO.[7][8]

In 1988, as a retaliation for the street fight between Rickson Gracie and Hugo Duarte. Tadeu together with a group of 60-70 other Luta Livre fighters, some armed with knives and firearms, did a Dojo storm on Gracie Academy, seeking a rematch for the fight. Tadeu choose to fight Royler Gracie but the match was cancelled as police was called. A couple of days later, Rickson and Royler went to Tadeu's academy to settle the score and Tadeu fought Royler into an hour long draw.[7][9] He was scheduled to fight Ralph Gracie but this never materialized.[10] This was because Tadeu did not submit his visa in time.[11]

Renzo Gracie fight

[edit]

His most famous fight was with Renzo Gracie. Renzo and Tadeu were long time rivals.[12] The rivalry has been described as being a Hatfield vs McCoy style rivalry because in South America machismo is the rule.[13] Renzo once said "my name is not a bone to be carried in the jaw of a dog," before slapping the guy and declaring "you don't deserve my fist."[14] This was Renzo's last bare knuckle fight.[4] The riot from this fight led to MMA being banned from Rio de Janeiro.[15] Renzo claimed he was dominating the fight, but was having issues due to the oil that was on Tadeu's body.[4] After 15 minutes Renzo refused to rise and beckoned Tadau to grapple.[16] Renzo punched a fan in the face, causing more fans to riot.[14] The fight has been ranked one of the best fights to be ruled a no contest.[17] The riot was featured on World's Dumbest Criminals and is listed as the #8 Worst Moment In MMA History by ESPN.[3]

UFC

[edit]

Eugenio Tadeu continued to represent Luta Livre, now in international events. He was invited to the Ultimate Fighting Championship where he participated at UFC 16 on the organization's inaugural Welterweight tournament. Tadeu fought Lion's Den graduate Mikey Burnett and lost to TKO after a 9:46 round.[18]

Mixed martial arts record

[edit]
Professional record breakdown
6 matches 2 wins 3 losses
By knockout 1 3
By submission 1 0
No contests 1
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 2–3 (1) Marcelo Giudici TKO (corner stoppage) Meca World Vale Tudo 8 May 16, 2003 2 5:00 Curitiba, Brazil
Loss 2–2 (1) Mikey Burnett TKO (punches) UFC 16 March 13, 1998 1 9:46 Kenner, Louisiana
NC 2–1 (1) Renzo Gracie NC (fans rioted) Pentagon Combat September 27, 1997 1 14:45 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Win 2–1 Nigel Scantelbury Submission (kimura) UVF 3 August 14, 1996 1 2:20 Tokyo, Japan
Loss 1–1 Wallid Ismail TKO (injury) Desafio - Jiu-Jitsu vs. Luta Livre September 26, 1991 1 16:18 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Win 1–0 Renan Pitanguy TKO (corner stoppage) Desafio - Jiu-Jitsu vs. Martial Arts November 30, 1984 1 5:02 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

[19]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Jon Wertheim, L. (2010-01-05). Blood in the Cage. ISBN 978-0547347226.
  2. ^ "Eugenio Tadeu". Sherdog.
  3. ^ a b "MMA HOF". mmahalloffame.com.
  4. ^ a b c Matthew Kaplowitz (2013-05-08). "The riot over Renzo Gracie vs Eugenio Tadeu". Bloody Elbow.
  5. ^ Fraser Coffeen (2011-08-24). "Renzo Gracie vs. Eugenio Tadeu and the Show Ending Riot". Bloody Elbow.
  6. ^ "The Ur-Brazilian MMA Feud: BJJ vs Luta Livre and the Style They Never Saw Coming". Bloody Elbow. 2007-08-07. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  7. ^ a b c BJJ Heroes. "The Biggest Rivalry in Martial Arts History: BJJ vs Luta Livre - BJJ Heroes: the jiu jitsu encyclopedia". bjjheroes.com.
  8. ^ Sherdog.com. "Desafio - Jiu-Jitsu vs. Luta Livre". Sherdog. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  9. ^ Snowden, Jonathan; Shields, Kendall (November 2010). The MMA Encyclopedia. ISBN 9781554908448.
  10. ^ T.P. Grant (2014-04-22). "MMA Origins: Extreme Fighting blazes trail for MMA in the US". Bloody Elbow.
  11. ^ "Black Belt July 1997". google.com. July 1997.
  12. ^ "Black Belt January 1998". google.com. January 1998.
  13. ^ Sheridan, Sam (2008-02-19). A Fighter's Heart. ISBN 9781555847357.
  14. ^ a b Polly, Matthew (2011-11-17). Tapped Out. ISBN 9781101535813.
  15. ^ Guilherme Cruz (2013-09-29). "Renzo Gracie, Eugenio Tadeu and the riot that got MMA banned in Rio de Janeiro". MMA Fighting.
  16. ^ Jon Wertheim, L. (2010-01-05). Blood in the Cage. ISBN 978-0547347226.
  17. ^ Blane Ferguson. "The List: Greatest Fights to be Ruled No Contest". The MMA Corner. Archived from the original on 2015-06-30.
  18. ^ "UFC 16: Battle in the Bayou | MMA Event". Tapology. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  19. ^ Sherdog.com. "Sherdog". Sherdog. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
[edit]