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Chris Dolman


Chris Dolman
Christiaan Dolman (1945-02-17) 17 February 1945Amsterdam, Netherlands
"Akaoni" ("The Red Demon")
6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
273 lb (124 kg; 19 st 7 lb)
Heavyweight
Judo, Sambo, Kyokushin Karate, Greco-Roman Wrestling
Dolman Gym
Jon Bluming
.mw-parser-output .legend{page-break-inside:avoid;break-inside:avoid-column}.mw-parser-output .legend-color{display:inline-block;min-width:1.25em;height:1.25em;line-height:1.25;margin:1px 0;text-align:center;border:1px solid black;background-color:transparent;color:black}.mw-parser-output .legend-text{}  10th Dan Black Belt in Kyokushin Budokai
1972–1996
Bas Rutten, Gilbert Yvel, Valentijn Overeem, Alistair Overeem, Gegard Mousasi, Joop Kasteel, Dick Vrij, Hans Nijman, Willie Peeters
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog
Last updated on: October 3, 2014 (2014-10-03)
Medal record
1974 London+93 kg
1966 Lyon+93 kg
1971 Haarlem+100 kg
1985 London+100 kg
1985 San Sebastián+100 kg
1981 Madrid+100 kg
1969 Moscow+100 kg
1985 Sochi+100 kg
1976 Leningrad+100 kg

Christiaan "Chris" Dolman (born 17 February 1945) is a Dutch retired judoka, sambo fighter and wrestler. He won a silver medal at the 1974 European Judo Championships and a gold at the 1985 World Sambo Championships, counting as the first non-Russian sambo world champion, and has over 40 national and 10 international championships. He is known for his career in Fighting Network Rings and for his role training several Dutch Mixed Martial Artists and Kickboxers, among them Bas Rutten, Alistair and Valentijn Overeem, Gilbert Yvel and Gegard Mousasi.

Dolman started training judo under Jon Bluming at the Tung-Yen dojo while in college. He became a professional competitor shortly after. In 1970, he extended his competition to sambo by taking part in an international tournament in Moscow. Reportedly, Dolman had no sambo experience, having watched his first practice session of the art two days before the event, and still he dominated the tournament with just his judo and wrestling training.

His first visit to the Japanese rings was in 1976, backing Willem Ruska during his professional wrestling match against Antonio Inoki in New Japan Pro-Wrestling. Inspired by this kind of competition, he celebrated a tournament of modern pankration in Holland in 1981. In 1984, Dolman had his own professional wrestling debut in Universal Wrestling Federation, wrestling Kazuo Yamazaki in a different style fight which Dolman won by armbar.

After UWF's demise, Dolman was contacted by Akira Maeda for his Fighting Network Rings promotion. Leading a stable of Dutch apprentices, which included Dick Vrij, Gilbert Yvel, Valentijn Overeem and other names, Dolman became Maeda's first rival in Rings. He would win the inaugural Rings Mega Battle Tournament in 1993 defeating Maeda in the finals, although the Japanese got revenge on him eliminating him from the 1993 edition. After being eliminated by Yoshihisa Yamamoto the next year, Dolman would stop competing in the tournament, dedicating himself fully to his stablemaster role. His final in-ring match was in 1995, defeating his underling Joop Kasteel.

According to Jon Bluming, Dolman challenged the Gracie family several times during his stint in Rings, but they never answered his letters.

He currently teaches at the Chakuriki/Pancration Gym along with Thom Harinck and leads the RINGS Holland promotion.

  • 1966 Benelux Championship

  • 1967 Benelux Championship

  • 1968 Benelux Championship

  • 1969 Benelux Championship

  • 1974 European Judo Championship 93 kg class silver medalist

  • 1966 European Youth Judo Championship

  • 1965 Netherlands Youth Judo Championship

  • Eight times Netherlands Judo Championship

  • Fighting Network Rings

    • Mega Battle Tournament (1992)
  • 1969 World Sambo Championship gold medalist

  • 1985 World Sambo Championship gold medalist

  • World Games 1985 Sambo Championship 100 kg class gold medalist

  • National A.A.U. Sambo Championship (1978)

  • Chris Dolman at JudoInside.com

  • Chris Dolman at Sherdog

  • Chris Dolman at Tapology.com

  • Chris Dolman at WrestlingData.com

  • Chris Dolman at InterSportStats

  • Chris Dolman at The-Sports.org

  • Chris Dolman on Facebook

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