Mark Bocek has officially joined amongst the ranks of Randy Couture, Chuck Liddell, Chris Lytle, and many others, as he just recently took to his twitter account this past Tuesday to officially announce his retirement from the sport.
Bocek last defeated Mike de la Torre by Split Decision back at The Ultimate Fighter Nations Finale back in April 2014, prior to that he'd only fought a total of 3 times within the elapsing two years. He leaves the octagon with a compiled record of 8-5
Bocek officially posted on his twitter account:
Mark Bocek is credited for being the first Brazilian Jiu Jitsu black belt on Canadian soil while also owning a black belt in Kempo Karate. Bocek first started fighting professionally in 2004 and racked up three first round finishes with 3 of those being via submission.
Bocek entered the UFC in July 2007 where he was unsuccessful against future Lightweight Champion Frankie Edgar losing via first round TKO. He rebounded by beating Doug Evans in December but lost in his next fight to Ultimate Fighter winner Mac Danzig.
A three fight win streak followed where Bocek won all of his fights by rear naked choke submission and racked up his first submission of the night bonus in the process. He was then matched up against lightweight standout Jim Miller who handed Bocek his third career loss at UFC 111.
His next fight was quite arguably the most impressive performance of his career where he submitted notable grappler Dustin Hazelette in Hazelette's 155 debut with a mounted triangle choke which earned Bocek his second submission of the night bonus.
Next Bocek faced another future lightweight champion and WEC export Benson Henderson who was making his debut in the octagon in front of Bocek's hometown of Toronto at UFC 129. Bocek put up an impressive effort but ultimately lost a unanimous decision to the future champ in front of 55,000 plus fans.
Bocek got one back in front of his home town defeating Nik Lentz by unanimous decision and giving the carny his first loss in 8 fights and then also ground out a decision win over fellow Canadian John Alessio before putting on a lack luster performance against top contender Rafael dos Anjos. Prior to his next and last fight against Mike de la Torre which he won via Split Decision, he was absent from MMA competition for almost one year and a half years.
All the power to you Bocek, good luck with all your future endeavours.
Author: Alex Cochrane
Cited source: The Canadian Press/TSN.com
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I trained under Bocek for a few months and I can truly say he's probably one of the best grapplers I've ever done so with, although I'm not a fan of it myself.
I can also see why he retired from competition, his style didn't offer much outside the ground game and with as many fighters being trained the way they are today he probably knew he wasn't gonna be able to measure up.
Regardless, he certainly was quite the stepping stone for future top contenders.
Bocek last defeated Mike de la Torre by Split Decision back at The Ultimate Fighter Nations Finale back in April 2014, prior to that he'd only fought a total of 3 times within the elapsing two years. He leaves the octagon with a compiled record of 8-5
Bocek officially posted on his twitter account:
Mark Bocek (@MarkBocek) said:I'm retiring from pro mma. I would like to thank everyone who has helped me and supported me throughout this journey. Onto the next chapter.
Mark Bocek is credited for being the first Brazilian Jiu Jitsu black belt on Canadian soil while also owning a black belt in Kempo Karate. Bocek first started fighting professionally in 2004 and racked up three first round finishes with 3 of those being via submission.
Bocek entered the UFC in July 2007 where he was unsuccessful against future Lightweight Champion Frankie Edgar losing via first round TKO. He rebounded by beating Doug Evans in December but lost in his next fight to Ultimate Fighter winner Mac Danzig.
A three fight win streak followed where Bocek won all of his fights by rear naked choke submission and racked up his first submission of the night bonus in the process. He was then matched up against lightweight standout Jim Miller who handed Bocek his third career loss at UFC 111.
His next fight was quite arguably the most impressive performance of his career where he submitted notable grappler Dustin Hazelette in Hazelette's 155 debut with a mounted triangle choke which earned Bocek his second submission of the night bonus.
Next Bocek faced another future lightweight champion and WEC export Benson Henderson who was making his debut in the octagon in front of Bocek's hometown of Toronto at UFC 129. Bocek put up an impressive effort but ultimately lost a unanimous decision to the future champ in front of 55,000 plus fans.
Bocek got one back in front of his home town defeating Nik Lentz by unanimous decision and giving the carny his first loss in 8 fights and then also ground out a decision win over fellow Canadian John Alessio before putting on a lack luster performance against top contender Rafael dos Anjos. Prior to his next and last fight against Mike de la Torre which he won via Split Decision, he was absent from MMA competition for almost one year and a half years.
All the power to you Bocek, good luck with all your future endeavours.
Author: Alex Cochrane
Cited source: The Canadian Press/TSN.com
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I trained under Bocek for a few months and I can truly say he's probably one of the best grapplers I've ever done so with, although I'm not a fan of it myself.
I can also see why he retired from competition, his style didn't offer much outside the ground game and with as many fighters being trained the way they are today he probably knew he wasn't gonna be able to measure up.
Regardless, he certainly was quite the stepping stone for future top contenders.