Herb Dean

Herb Dean
Born (1970-09-30) September 30, 1970
Pasadena, California, United States
Other names The Predator
Residence Pasadena, California
Nationality American
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight 225 lb (102 kg; 16 st 1 lb)
Division Heavyweight (265 lb)
Style Mixed Martial Arts
Fighting out of Los Angeles, California
Team Submission Factory
Years active 2001–2007 (MMA)
Mixed martial arts record
Total 5
Wins 2
By knockout 1
By submission 1
Losses 3
By knockout 1
By submission 2

Herb Dean (born September 30, 1970) is an American mixed martial arts referee and former fighter. UFC president Dana White, UFC color commentator Joe Rogan, articles covering MMA in ESPN.com, Foxsports.com, Bleacher Report, SB Nation (mmamania.com), Vice Media, Inc. (Fightland.vice.com), and other publications have called Dean the best referee in MMA.[1]

UFC and notable matches

At UFC 48, held on June 19, 2004, Herbert Dean refereed a bout between Tim Sylvia and Frank Mir for the vacant UFC Heavyweight Championship. At 0:50 of round one, Herbert Dean called a stop to the fight when he saw Sylvia's right forearm break due to an armbar. Due to the close proximity of a UFC cameraman , a shocked Herbert Dean can be heard shouting "Oh, shit!" when he saw the break, and he immediately moved in to stop the fight. This proved difficult, because Sylvia, who was still trying to defend the armbar, argued with him for several seconds, despite Herbert Dean's repeatedly telling him "Stop, stop, stop! The fight is over!" Once freed from the armbar, Sylvia again began to argue with Herbert Dean, who continually told him, "It's fucking broken! Your arm is broken." Sylvia protested, claiming his arm was perfectly fine and even moving it around with no problems. Herbert Dean, however, insisted that "I heard it snap. I saw it go." Ringside physician Dr. Margaret Goodman agreed with Herbert Dean's assessment, and the fight was not restarted. In the post-fight interview, Sylvia again denied that his arm was broken, however an X-Ray that evening showed significant damage to Sylvia's arm, which required surgery and a long recovery.[2] Sylvia later admitted that he knew his arm was broken and wanted to keep fighting in spite of that, but he thanked Dean for saving his career by ending the fight when he did.

At UFC 61, held on July 8, 2006, Herbert Dean served as referee of the highly anticipated rematch between Tito Ortiz and Ken Shamrock. At 1:18 into the first round, Herbert Dean stepped in and stopped the fight following several consecutive unanswered elbows to the head of Shamrock by Ortiz, giving the victory to Ortiz by TKO. Shamrock, visibly angered, immediately protested the decision. However, it was not overturned and Shamrock was subsequently ushered out of the Octagon. A rematch was held during Ortiz vs. Shamrock 3: The Final Chapter with Ortiz once again claiming victory in a very similar fashion to the second fight, although Shamrock did not question this decision.

At UFC 70, held on April 21, 2007, Dean was the referee during the bout between Mirko "Cro cop" Filipović and Gabriel Gonzaga. Late in the first round, Dean stood the fight up from the guard position, a measure typically used against inactivity. Some fight analysts claim that Gonzaga was in fact administering ground and pound and had just maneuvered his opponent against the cage for an additional advantage. Shortly after the stand up, Gonzaga knocked out Filipović with a kick to the head.[3] Filipović collapsed awkwardly after receiving the blow, pinning his right foot, which was rotated 180 degrees backwards, underneath his body. Dean quickly freed the pinned foot which helped prevent serious injury. Filipović has stated since that the elbows on the ground confused and damaged him enough that he was disoriented after the stand up, contributing to the subsequent knockout.

UFC President Dana White stated after UFC 109 and UFC 160, that he thinks Dean "is one of the best referees in this business. Actually, I think he's the best" in reference to his stoppage in the fight between Mike Swick and Paulo Thiago.[4] He added that after Dean's stoppage of the Mir vs. Sylvia fight he never questions Dean. "When Herb Dean does shit, I don't even question it anymore. I wait for the replay. This guy sees shit that I can't see sitting there watching the monitor."[5] At UFC 169, Dean caused controversy over his stoppage of the main card fight Renan Barão vs. Urijah Faber for the UFC bantamweight title. UFC President Dana White criticized Dean saying, "he made a mistake".[6]

Awards

Dean has won Fighters Only Magazine's World MMA Awards Referee of the Year in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014, thus far being the only referee to win the award since the category was first introduced.[7][8][9]

Mixed martial arts record

Dean is 2–3 in professional MMA with one win coming via submission and the other via knockout.

Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 2–3 Dave Legeno TKO (eye injury) Cage Rage 22 July 14, 2007 1 5:00 London, England
Loss 2–2 Jung Gyu Choi Submission (americana) Spirit MC 9 October 8, 2006 2 3:51 South Korea
Win 2–1 Timothy Mendoza TKO (knee and punches) KOTC 39: Hitmaster August 6, 2004 2 3:31 San Jacinto, California, United States
Loss 1–1 Joe Riggs Submission (punches) Rage in the Cage 43: The Match January 18, 2003 1 0:52 Arizona, United States
Win 1–0 Randy Halmot Submission (front choke) Gladiator Challenge 6 September 9, 2001 1 0:43 Colusa, California, United States MMA Debut.

See also

References

  1. Josh Gross. "Sylvia's Break is Mir's Fortune; Shamrock KO's Kimo". Sherdog.
  2. Paul Concannon. "Cro Dropped: Gonzaga Shocks Croat". Sherdog.
  3. John Morgan. "White's latest officiating rant focuses on praise for Dean (but Mazzagatti still gets ripped)". MMAjunkie.
  4. http://fightparrot.com/20-years-ufc-greatest-personalities/
  5. Mindenhall, Chuck (February 2, 2014). "Dana White on Renan Barão stoppage: Herb Dean ‘made a mistake tonight’".
  6. Mrosko, Geno (December 2, 2010). "2010 World MMA Awards Winners and Results". MMA Mania.
  7. Leslie, Chris (December 1, 2011). "2011 World MMA Awards: Jon Jones wins Fighter of the Year". MMA Frenzy.
  8. Tucker, Bryan (January 11, 2013). "World MMA Awards 2012 Results". MMA Fighting.

External links

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