| Dewey Cooper | |
|---|---|
| Born |
November 10, 1974 Los Angeles, California, United States |
| Other names | Black Kobra |
| Nationality |
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| Height | 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) |
| Weight | 96.6 kg (213 lb; 15.21 st) |
| Division |
Cruiserweight Heavyweight |
| Style | Kickboxing, Muay Thai |
| Stance | Southpaw |
| Fighting out of | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States |
| Team | One Kick's Gym |
| Trainer | Nick "One Kick" Blomgren |
| Years active | 1994-present |
| Professional boxing record | |
| Total | 25 |
| Wins | 19 |
| By knockout | 11 |
| Losses | 3 |
| Draws | 3 |
| Kickboxing record | |
| Total | 67 |
| Wins | 49 |
| By knockout | 28 |
| Losses | 15 |
| By knockout | 0 |
| Draws | 3 |
| Mixed martial arts record | |
| Total | 4 |
| Wins | 3 |
| Losses | 1 |
| Draws | 0 |
| Other information | |
| Notable students |
John Alessio Kevin Lee Jessica Rakoczy Beibut Shumenov |
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Dewey Cooper (born November 10, 1974) is an American kickboxer and boxer who competes in the cruiserweight and heavyweight divisions. After becoming a two-time world champion in 2000 by taking the WKC heavyweight and WKF cruiserweight titles, he would go on to become a regular competitor in the K-1 promotion's US events. The closest he would come to promotional gold was when he lost out to Michael McDonald in the final of the K-1 World Grand Prix 2004 in Las Vegas I.
Born in Los Angeles, California, Cooper started practicing Muay Thai as a youngster and began training under Nick "One Kick" Blomgren at One Kick's Gym in Las Vegas, Nevada in 1994.
After making a name for himself on the American circuit by racking up a record of 15-2 (10 KOs), winning the USMTF and UKC national titles in the process, his services were recruited by K-1, the world's premier kickboxing organization. Debuting on January 22, 1999 at K-1 The Challenge '99 in Tokyo, Japan, Cooper was knocked out in the second round by Tsuyoshi Nakasako. Despite this setback, he went on to have a break-out year in 2000 when he won the WKC World Heavyweight Championship and WKF World Cruiserweight Championship. He also faced the legendary and recently un-retired Don "The Dragon" Wilson for the ISKA North American Cruiserweight (-88.2 kg/194.4 lb) Full Contact Championship at the MGM Grand Las Vegas on March 17, 2000, losing out via majority decision after ten rounds.