Dream (mixed martial arts)

Last updated
Dream11
TypePrivate
IndustryMixed martial arts promotion
Predecessor Pride
FoundedFebruary 13, 2008 (2008-02-13)
Founder Sadaharu Tanikawa (President of FEG)
DefunctJune 3, 2012 (2012-06-03); revived: October 25, 2012 (2012-10-25)
Successor Rizin
Headquarters
Tokyo
,
Japan
Key people
Keiichi Sasahara, Head and Matchmaker
Daisuke Sato, Productions Director
Parent Real Entertainment Co. Ltd.
Website www.dreamofficial.com

Dream (styled DREAM in capitals) was a Japanese mixed martial arts (MMA) organization promoted by former PRIDE FC executives and K-1 promoter Fighting and Entertainment Group.

Contents

Dream replaced FEG's previous-run mixed martial arts fight series, Hero's. It retained many of the stylistic flourishes and personnel from Pride FC broadcasts, including fight introducer Lenne Hardt.

They promoted over 20 shows highlighting Japanese and international talent, establishing or enhancing the careers of fighters such as Shinya Aoki, Gesias Cavalcante, Tatsuya Kawajiri, Ronaldo Jacaré, Eddie Alvarez, Jason Miller, Kazushi Sakuraba, Gegard Mousasi and Alistair Overeem.

History

Formation

After Zuffa acquired Pride, former Dream Stage Entertainment executives put on a collaborative New Year's Eve mixed martial arts event with Shooto, M-1 Global, and the Fighting and Entertainment Group, called Yarennoka! . While the event was intended to be a farewell show for Pride, its success and further petitioning by Japanese MMA fans prompted the FEG and the DSE staff to combine their efforts and form a new promotion.[ citation needed ]

Their new promotion was confirmed on February 13, 2008, along with Hero's dissolution. All of Hero's' fighters were confirmed (such as Hero's champions Norifumi "Kid" Yamamoto, Yoshihiro Akiyama and JZ Calvan) to be part of the new promotion along with the additions of Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipović, Shinya Aoki, Kazushi Sakuraba, Mitsuhiro Ishida, and Hayato "Mach" Sakurai. [1] Another notable announcement was Dream's partnership with M-1 Global, who confirmed that they would allow the last Heavyweight Champion of Pride (and the winner of the 2004 Heavyweight Grand Prix), Fedor Emelianenko, to fight in their events. Emelianenko was present at the Dream press conference to promote the alliance between the two shows. [2]

Partnerships

On May 2, 2008, Dream aired for the first time in the United States with a repeat of Dream 1 on HDNet. A repeat of Dream 2 was aired the following day, while Dream 3 was aired live on May 11. The promotion's later events would air as a part of the network's HDNet Fights series. [3]

On May 10, 2008, Dream announced the working partnership with US promotion EliteXC. The two groups intended to share fighters and eventually co-promote shows. However, with EliteXC went bankrupt before the alliance could materialize. [4]

On August 5, 2009, Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker announced that the two promotions had signed a formal alliance, in-which the two organizations will exchange fighters. [5]

On, November 23, 2011, sources close to ONE Championship announced a new alliance with Dream to copromote shows and participate in fighter exchange. [6]

On January 17, 2012 ProElite announced a partnership with Dream to copromote shows and exchange fighters. [7]

Cease of business operations

On May 16, 2012, Sadaharu Tanikawa officially declared the bankruptcy of FEG. [8] The promotion began to be managed by its proper parental company Real Entertainment Co. Ltd. and as of June 3, 2012, Dream has effectively gone out of business. [9]

The promotion's final show, "Dream.18: Special NYE 2012", was announced for December 31, 2012, under the financial backing of kickboxing promotion Glory Sports International. The event promoted mixed martial arts and kickboxing bouts at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan, carrying on the tradition of fight events every New Year's Eve. [10]

Rules

Weight classes

Dream had 7 weight classes. Unlike Hero's, each weight class had a champion with a defendable title. [2]

Round length

Judging

Attire

Dream allowed fighters latitude in their choice of attire, but open finger gloves, a mouthguard and a protective cup were mandatory. Fighters were allowed to use tape on parts of their body or to wear a gi top, gi pants, wrestling shoes, kneepads, elbow pads, or ankle supports at their own discretion, though each had to be checked by the referee before the fight.

Fouls and violations

Tournament substitutions

Final champions

DivisionUpper weight limitChampionSinceTitle Defenses
Heavyweight Unlimited Flag of the Netherlands.svg Alistair Overeem December 31, 2010 ( Dynamite!! 2010 )
Light Heavyweight 93 kg (205.0 lb) Flag of the Netherlands.svg Gegard Mousasi September 25, 2010 ( Dream 16 )1
Middleweight 84 kg (185.2 lb) Flag of the Netherlands.svg Gegard Mousasi September 23, 2008 ( Dream 6 )
Welterweight 76 kg (167.6 lb) Flag of Lithuania.svg Marius Zaromskis July 20, 2009 ( Dream 10 )1
Lightweight 70 kg (154.3 lb) Flag of Japan.svg Shinya Aoki October 6, 2009 ( Dream 11 )2
Featherweight 65 kg (143.3 lb) Flag of Japan.svg Hiroyuki Takaya December 31, 2010 ( Dynamite!! 2010 )2
Bantamweight 61 kg (134.5 lb) Flag of Brazil.svg Bibiano Fernandes December 31, 2011 ( Fight For Japan: Genki Desu Ka Omisoko 2011 )0

Tournament finalists

YearWeight DivisionChampionFinalist
2008Lightweight Flag of Norway.svg Joachim Hansen Flag of Japan.svg Shinya Aoki
2008Middleweight Flag of the Netherlands.svg Gegard Mousasi Flag of Brazil.svg Ronaldo Souza
2009Welterweight Flag of Lithuania.svg Marius Zaromskis Flag of the United States.svg Jason High
2009Featherweight Flag of Brazil.svg Bibiano Fernandes Flag of Japan.svg Hiroyuki Takaya
2009Superhulk (openweight) Flag of Japan.svg Ikuhisa Minowa Flag of Cameroon.svg Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou
2010Light Heavyweight Flag of the Netherlands.svg Gegard Mousasi Flag of Japan.svg Tatsuya Mizuno
2011JP Bantamweight Flag of Japan.svg Hideo Tokoro Flag of Japan.svg Masakazu Imanari
2011Bantamweight Flag of Brazil.svg Bibiano Fernandes Flag of the United States.svg Antonio Banuelos

Notable fighters

Events

In America, the promotion was aired on HDNet. [12]

#Event TitleDateArenaLocationAttendeesBroadcast
24 Dream 18 [13] December 31, 2012 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan10,651 SkyPerfect
23 Fight For Japan: Genki Desu Ka Omisoka 2011 December 31, 2011 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan24,606 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
22 Dream 17 September 24, 2011 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan9,270 HDNet
21 Dream: Japan GP Final July 16, 2011 Ariake Coliseum Tokyo, Japan8,142 HDNet
20 Dream: Fight for Japan! May 29, 2011 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan6,522 HDNet
19 Dynamite!! 2010 December 31, 2010 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan26,729 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
18 Dream 16 September 25, 2010 Nippon Gaishi Hall Nagoya, Aichi, Japan9,304 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
17 Dream 15 Jul 10, 2010 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan13,028 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
16 Dream 14 May 29, 2010 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan12,712 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
15 Dream 13 March 22, 2010 Yokohama Arena Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan13,712 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
14 Fields Dynamite!! The Power of Courage 2009 December 31, 2009 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan45,606 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
13 Dream 12: Cage of Dreams October 25, 2009 Osaka-jo Hall Osaka, Osaka, Japan10,112 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
12 Dream 11: Featherweight Grand Prix 2009 Final Round October 6, 2009 Yokohama Arena Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan14,039 [14] Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
11 Dream 10: Welterweight Grand Prix 2009 Final Round July 20, 2009 Saitama, Saitama, Japan Saitama Super Arena 11,970 [15] Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
10 Dream 9: Featherweight Grand Prix 2009 Second Round May 26, 2009 Yokohama Arena Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan15,009 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
9 Dream 8: Welterweight Grand Prix 2009 First Round April 5, 2009 Nippon Gaishi Hall Nagoya, Aichi, Japan9,129 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
8 Dream 7: Featherweight Grand Prix 2009 First Round March 8, 2009 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan19,528 [16] Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
7 Fields Dynamite!! 2008 December 31, 2008 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan25,634 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet
6 Dream 6: Middleweight Grand Prix 2008 Final Round September 23, 2008 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan20,929 SkyPerfect; HDNet
5 Dream 5: Lightweight Grand Prix 2008 Final Round July 21, 2008 Osaka-jo Hall Osaka, Osaka, Japan11,986 SkyPerfect; HDNet
4 Dream 4: Middleweight Grand Prix 2008 Second Round June 15, 2008 Yokohama Arena Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan14,037 SkyPerfect; HDNet
3 Dream 3: Lightweight Grand Prix 2008 Second Round May 11, 2008 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan21,789 SkyPerfect; HDNet
2 Dream 2: Middleweight Grand Prix 2008 First Round April 29, 2008 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan21,397 SkyPerfect; HDNet
1 Dream 1: Lightweight Grand Prix 2008 First Round March 15, 2008 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Saitama, Japan19,120 Tokyo Broadcasting System; HDNet

Event locations

These cities have hosted the following numbers of Dream events as of Dream 18 :

Saitama – 15
Yokohama – 4
Nagoya – 2
Osaka – 2
Tokyo - 1

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References

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  15. Dream Run: Zaromskis Wins Grand Prix
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