Explore about the Famous MMA Fighter Martin Kampmann, who was born in Denmark on April 17, 1982. Analyze Martin Kampmann’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Martin Kampmann dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Martin Kampmann?
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Martin Kampmann Biography
Former Cage Warriors Middleweight Champion was ranked the #7 welterweight by Sherdog in 2013.
He made his professional MMA debut at age 31.
He was awarded the UFC Submission of the Night after applying a guillotine choke to Thiago Alves on March 3, 2012.
He was born in Aarhus, Denmark.
He was knocked out by Johny Hendricks at UFC 154.
Martin Kampmann Frederiksen (born April 17, 1982) is a retired Danish professional mixed martial artist who competed in the Ultimate Fighting Championship. He is a former Cage Warriors World Middleweight Champion.
Originally from Aarhus, Denmark, Kampmann began training in wrestling at the age of eight and trained for two years moving to karate at the age of 14 before transitioning into Muay Thai and boxing, competing in both as an amateur. In 2000, Kampmann began training in submission wrestling and Brazilian jiu-jitsu, before turning to mixed martial arts.
Kampmann compiled an amateur mixed martial arts record of 8-1 before turning professional in 2003 while attending college as an engineering student. Kampmann then compiled a professional record of 9–1, capturing the Cage Warriors Middleweight Championship in the process, before being signed by the UFC.
Kampmann competed for many years in the Ultimate Fighting Championship. He initially fought as a middleweight, where he made his debut at UFC Fight Night 6 as a late replacement for Kalib Starnes. In his debut fight with the UFC, Kampmann defeated Crafton Wallace by first-round submission. His next victory came by way of unanimous decision over future top contender Thales Leites in The Ultimate Fighter 4 Finale on November 11, 2006. At UFC 68, after being rocked and knocked down numerous times, Kampmann showed his toughness and resilience by defeating Drew McFedries via arm-triangle choke late in the first round.
Kampmann was to fight Mike Swick on September 19, 2009 at UFC 103. The winner was to receive a title shot against Georges St-Pierre. On September 4, it was announced that Swick had suffered an injury while training for their upcoming bout. Paul Daley replaced Swick for the fight. With Swick pulling out, the fight was not for the number-one contender spot anymore, as Daley was making his UFC debut. In an upset, Kampmann fell to the British fighter by TKO due to punches just 2:31 into the bout.
Kampmann faced former EliteXC Welterweight Champion and former Strikeforce Middleweight Champion and UFC debutant Jake Shields, on October 23, 2010 at UFC 121. He lost a controversial split decision to Shields.
Kampmann was expected to face Rory Markham on January 2, 2010 at UFC 108. However, Markham was forced out of the bout with an injury and replaced by Jacob Volkmann. Kampmann won via first-round submission using a modified guillotine choke that he calls the “Deathchoke”.
Kampmann defeated Rick Story via split decision on November 19, 2011 at UFC 139. Dana White incorrectly reported at the post fight press conference that the judge’s scores had been tabulated incorrectly and should have been announced as unanimous decision in favor of Kampmann. According to the California State Athletic Commission’s website and confirmed by MMADecisions.com, judge Susan Thomas-Gitlin in fact scored the fight in favor of Story.
Kampmann was expected to face John Howard on June 26, 2011 at UFC on Versus 4 However, Kampmann was forced out of the bout with an injury and replaced by Matt Brown.
Kampmann then lost another controversial decision to Diego Sanchez on March 3, 2011 at UFC Live: Sanchez vs. Kampmann. The bout saw Kampmann outstrike and stagger Sanchez over three rounds (including dropping Sanchez with a punch in the first round), with Sanchez’s relentless pace and aggression giving him the nod on all three scorecards. Kampmann stopped 14 out of Sanchez’s 15 takedown attempts, and also out-landed him 79–51 in total strikes (according to FightMetric, which scored the fight 29-28 Kampmann). The bout earned Fight of the Night honors.
Kampmann faced Johny Hendricks on November 17, 2012 at UFC 154. He lost the fight via knockout in the first round.
Kampmann faced Jake Ellenberger on June 1, 2012 at The Ultimate Fighter 15 Finale. After a first round which saw Kampmann nearly finished after being knocked down by Ellenberger, Kampmann defeated Ellenberger via second-round knockout due to a series of knees. The performance also earned Kampmann Knockout of the Night honors.
Kampmann then faced former number-one contender Thiago Alves on March 3, 2012 at UFC on FX 2. After being rocked late, Kampmann latched a guillotine choke onto Alves with one minute remaining in the third round, forcing him to tap. For his performance, Kampmann was awarded Submission of the Night honors.
Kampmann faced Carlos Condit in a rematch on August 28, 2013 at UFC Fight Night 27. After Kampmann controlled the action for most of the first round, Condit dominated the remainder of the fight, finishing Kampmann via TKO in the fourth round. Despite the loss, Kampmann was rewarded for his efforts by earning his second Fight of the Night bonus award.
Kampmann’s next fight was against Brazilian Paulo Thiago at UFC 115. Kampmann controlled and dominated Thiago en route to a unanimous decision victory by a score of 30–27 on all three judges scorecards.
In 2014, Kampmann began playing poker with Ultimate Poker with the help of professional poker player, Jason Somerville. Kampmann began this relationship as a guest on Somerville’s show, Run it UP. Kampmann went on to play in multiple online and live tournaments with the sponsorship of Ultimate Poker including the Nevada Poker Challenge and the World Series of Poker Main Event. Kampmann took down the Nevada Poker Challenge and pocketed over $52,000. Although, he didn’t place inside the money in the 2014 WSOP Main Event, Kampmann made an extremely deep run outlasting fellow Ultimate Poker pros Jason Somerville, Antonio Esfandiari, Danielle Andersen, Dan O’Brien and Bruce Buffer.
On January 9, 2014 Kampmann said that he was going to take a hiatus from fighting; he was not retiring, but needed a break. While still maintaining a “hiatus,” and not ready to publicly announce his retirement from fighting, Kampmann was named full-time coach of Team Alpha Male, based in Sacramento, California in September 2014.
On January 6, 2016, Kampmann publicly confirmed his decision to retire.
What's Martin Kampmann Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Martin Kampmann Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |