In the halcyon days of Pride, Japan was the center of the MMA world. That era is over, but the Land of the Rising Sun still produces fighters who are worthy of attention...

In Brief

Shinya Aoki

Dream lightweight champion. Submission specialist and wearer of multicolored tights

Yushin Okami

Leading middleweight contender in the UFC

Tatsuya Kawajiri

Former Shooto welterweight champion. Currently starring in the Dream lightweight division

Michihiro Omigawa

Eight wins in the last two years have propelled Omigawa up the featherweight rankings

Takanori Gomi

In the Pride era, he was touted as the top lightweight in the world by many. Currently plying his trade in the UFC

Katsunori Kikuno

A fighter who’s proving that the traditional arts have a place in MMA. Deep lightweight champion

Hiroyuki Takaya

Shooto, K-1 Hero’s and WEC veteran, currently fighting in the Dream featherweight division

KNOWN FOR

Shinya Aoki

His love of flying submissions and incredible flexibility enable him to produce truly memorable moments

Yushin Okami

Grinding down opponents. A decision specialist

Tatsuya Kawajiri

Goes by the name of ‘The Crusher’ because of his strength in the clinch and his aggressive ground ‘n’ pound

Michihiro Omigawa

The judoka has added classy boxing and submissions off his back to his game to become a dangerous all-arounder

Takanori Gomi

Although he is an accomplished grappler, it’s the heavy hands of the ‘The Fireball Kid’ that made him a fan favorite

Katsunori Kikuno

Kikuno fights out of a karate stance and throws kicks that Mr Miyagi would approve of

Hiroyuki Takaya

Claims that his all-action style.developed from his street-fighting past

HIGH

Shinya Aoki

The shin-to-neck submission he pulled on Katsuhiko Nagata at Dream 4 was dubbed the ‘Aokiplata’ by fans

Yushin Okami

Although far from a classic, he kept to his plan against Nate Marquardt at UFC 122 to get the nod from the judges and earn the all-important win

Tatsuya Kawajiri

His finest hour came in a defeat. Kawajiri’s slugfest with Eddie Alvarez at Dream 5 was a peach of a fight

Michihiro Omigawa

Stole the show at Dream 16 with his first-round straight armbar win over Cole Escovedo

Takanori Gomi

The first-round KO of Tyson Griffin showed doubting UFC followers that there was plenty of life left in Gomi

Katsunori Kikuno

Knocking out Koichiro Matsumoto to win the Deep Lightweight Tournament in April 2009

Hiroyuki Takaya

Ironed out the highly rated ‘Hellboy’ Hansen in the opening round of their Dream 14 bout

LOW

Shinya Aoki

After declaring himself the great hope.of Japanese MMA before his Strikeforce debut, Aoki was dominated by Gilbert Melendez

Yushin Okami

His three-round mauling at the hands of Chael Sonnen was so one-sided it was painful to watch

Tatsuya Kawajiri

Losing to arch rival Aoki inside two minutes at Dream 15 was a major blow

Michihiro Omigawa

After a slow start, he dropped a decision against Thiago Tavares on the undercard of UFC 76 and was cut by the promotion

Takanori Gomi

His loss to the unheralded Sergey Golyaev at Sengoku 6 seemed to confirm that The Fireball Kid was on the skids

Katsunori Kikuno

His momentum slowed when he lost his.Dream 15 bout against Gesias ‘JZ’ Calvancante

Hiroyuki Takaya

90 seconds into his WEC debut, one of Leonard Garcia’s trademark winging right-hand shots connected with Takaya’s chin and it was all over

FUTURE

Shinya Aoki

Must defeat a name American before he can be regarded as a top lightweight again

Yushin Okami

Front of the line for a shot at the UFC middleweight title

Tatsuya Kawajiri

His defeat against Aoki was a setback, but Kawajiri is still a fixture in most lightweight top ten lists

Michihiro Omigawa

His recent winning streak means he’s.back on the UFC’s books, this time ten pounds under lightweight at 145lb

Takanori Gomi

His following in the Orient and among hardcore fans means the UFC will be keen to put him in big fights

Katsunori Kikuno

By repping the traditional Japanese arts, he is guaranteed a following at home

Hiroyuki Takaya

There will always be an audience for a scrapper as exciting as ‘Streetfight Bancho’

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