Dale Cook | |
Other Names: | Apollo |
Birth Date: | 24 November 1956 |
Birth Place: | Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States |
Fighting Out Of: | Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S. |
Weight: | 73kg (161lb) |
Weight Class: | Middleweight Super Middleweight Light Heavyweight Cruiserweight |
Rank: | black belt in Karate 7th degree black belt in Taekwondo |
Stance: | Orthodox |
Team: | Apollo's Martial Arts |
Years Active: | 1977-1996 |
Box Win: | 19 |
Box Kowin: | 10 |
Box Loss: | 2 |
Box Draw: | 1 |
Kickbox Win: | 93 |
Kickbox Kowin: | 54 |
Kickbox Loss: | 5 |
Kickbox Draw: | 1 |
Students: | Randy Blake, Todd Hays, Maurice Smith, Kevin Morby |
Dale Cook (born November 24, 1958; often billed as Dale "Apollo" Cook) is an American former kickboxer who competed in the middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight and cruiserweight divisions. With a background in karate and taekwondo, Cook debuted professionally in 1977 and spent the early part of his career as a full contact rules fighter. In the 1980s, he began fighting under Oriental and Muay Thai rules and took two world titles under the WKA banner. A short stint in shoot boxing towards the end of his career in the mid-1990s resulted in another world title in that discipline.
An occasional actor, Cook also starred in several action-oriented B-movies in the early 1990s.
Nicknamed Apollo, Dale Cook began practicing martial arts with taekwondo at the age of fifteen and eventually earned the rank of seventh degree black belt.[1] After taking up kickboxing, he turned professional in 1977 and rose to prominence when he won the PKA World Middleweight Championship. Having fought exclusively under the full contact rule set in the beginning of his career, he later ventured into Oriental rules in the 1980s.[2]
He won his second world title and the first with low kicks on June 12, 1987, when he knocked out Donald Tucker in the first round to claim the WKA world middleweight (-72.5 kg/159.8 lb) title.[3] [4] Following this, he added the WKA super middleweight (-76 kg/167.6 lb) strap to his mantle.
During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Cook challenged six Muay Thai stylists from Thailand, defeating five of them and losing once, a second-round KO at the hands of Changpuek Kiatsongrit on June 30, 1990, in Tokyo, Japan. On July 30, 1992, he fought Toshiyuki Atokawa at the Kakutogi Olympics II in Tokyo in a kickboxing/full contact karate hybrid match. Rounds one and three were fought with boxing gloves, and rounds two and four bare-knuckle with punching to the face disallowed. Cook won on points, and the pair rematched under Seido karate rules on October 4, 1992, in the opening round of the '92 Karate World Cup in Osaka, Japan. The first round was ruled a draw and went to an extension round after which Atokawa won on all five judges' scorecards.
He continued to fight in Japan where he won the shoot boxing world title before retiring in 1996.
After his retirement, Cook opened Apollo's Martial Arts karate and kickboxing gym in his hometown of Tulsa. Among his students are K-1 heavyweights Randy Blake, Todd Hays and Ralph White, as well as the Oklahoma Destroyers World Combat League team. Another notable student was 6 year old Kevin Morby. He also runs the Xtreme Fighting League, an Oklahoma-based promotion which features both kickboxing and mixed martial arts matches.[5]
Boxing record | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
19 wins (10 KOs), 2 losses, 1 draw | |||||||||
Date | Result | Opponent | Venue | Location | Method | Round | Time | Record | |
1987-08-14 | Win | Donald Tucker | KO | 3 | 1:47 | 19-2-1 | |||
1986-09-09 | Win | Marcellus Jackson | Decision | 6 | 3:00 | 18-2-1 | |||
1986-06-17 | Win | Ed O'Ryan | TKO | 3 | 17-2-1 | ||||
1985-08-18 | Win | Carmelo Garcia | Decision | 8 | 3:00 | 16-2-1 | |||
1984-11-07 | Draw | Franklin Owens | Draw | 6 | 3:00 | 15-2-1 | |||
1984-06-18 | Win | Leroy Barnes | KO | 3 | 15-2 | ||||
1984-03-29 | Win | Henry Drummond | Decision | 4 | 3:00 | 14-2 | |||
1984-02-03 | Loss | Nathan Dryer | Decision | 6 | 3:00 | 13-2 | |||
1983-10-08 | Loss | Tony Harrison | Decision | 10 | 3:00 | 13-1 | |||
1983-09-17 | Win | Joseph Humphrey | KO | 2 | 13-0 | ||||
1983-06-12 | Win | Rocky Pidgeon | Decision | 6 | 3:00 | 12-0 | |||
1983-03-12 | Win | Clyde Spencer | Decision | 4 | 3:00 | 11-0 | |||
1983-01-27 | Win | Mike Lair | Hilton Inn West | Decision (unanimous) | 6 | 3:00 | 10-0 | ||
1982-11-21 | Win | Larry Smith | Rock Palace | KO | 3 | 9-0 | |||
1982-08-07 | Win | Clyde Spencer | Little Dixie's Ballroom | Decision | 4 | 3:00 | 8-0 | ||
1982-06-15 | Win | Clyde Spencer | Decision | 4 | 3:00 | 7-0 | |||
1982-02-07 | Win | Rocky Brown | Decision | 4 | 3:00 | 6-0 | |||
1981-11-11 | Win | Bobby Knight | KO | 4 | 5-0 | ||||
1981-07-17 | Win | Leslie Smith | KO | 3 | 4-0 | ||||
1981-04-10 | Win | William Curtis | KO | 1 | 3-0 | ||||
1981-02-22 | Win | William Curtis | KO | 2 | 2-0 | ||||
1981-01-15 | Win | Larry Smith | KO | 3 | 1-0 | ||||
Legend: |
Karate record | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Result | Opponent | Event | Location | Method | Round | Time | ||
1992-10-04 | Loss | Toshiyuki Atokawa | '92 Karate World Cup, First Round | Decision (unanimous) | 2 | 2:00 | |||
Legend: |
Kickboxing record | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
94 wins (54 KOs), 4 losses, 1 draw | |||||||||
Date | Result | Opponent | Event | Location | Method | Round | Time | ||
1996-00-00 | Win | Mark King | Decision (unanimous) | 5 | 3:00 | ||||
1992-07-30 | Win | Toshiyuki Atokawa | Kakutogi Olympics II | Decision | 4 | 3:00 | |||
1990-06-30 | Loss | AJKF: Inspiring Wars Heat 630 | KO (punches) | 2 | 1:28 | ||||
1990-00-00 | Win | Superman Osotsapa | Decision | 5 | 3:00 | ||||
1989-00-00 | Win | M Penchandei | Decision | 5 | 3:00 | ||||
1989-00-00 | Win | Harnsu Premchai | Decision | 5 | 3:00 | ||||
1989-00-00 | Win | Ismael Changani | KO | 2 | |||||
0000-00-00 | Win | Prasert Sitsoi | KO | 3 | |||||
0000-00-00 | Win | Sikki Taira | |||||||
0000-00-00 | Win | Moon Do-Sang | |||||||
0000-00-00 | Win | Song Ki-Padula | |||||||
0000-00-00 | Loss | John Moncayo | United States | ||||||
0000-00-00 | Win | David Humphries | Decision (unanimous) | 10 | 2:00 | ||||
1987-06-12 | Win | Donald Tucker | KO | 1 | |||||
1987-00-00 | Win | Pascal Leplat | |||||||
0000-00-00 | Win | Dwyne Wyatt | Decision (unanimous) | 7 | 2:00 | ||||
1984-11-00 | Win | Brad Rischer | KO (left hook) | ||||||
1984-04-00 | Win | Babe Gallegos | KO (punches) | 2 | 2:00 | ||||
0000-00-00 | Win | Dan Magnus | Decision (unanimous) | 9 | 2:00 | ||||
1981-00-00 | Win | Babe Gallegos | Decision | ||||||
0000-00-00 | Win | Gene McComb | |||||||
0000-00-00 | Win | Ernie Hart, Jr. | |||||||
0000-00-00 | loss | Billy Jackson | |||||||
1980-00-00 | Win | Arthur O'Laughlin | Decision (unanimous) | 9 | 2:00 | ||||
1979-03-07 | Loss | Decision | 9 | 2:00 | |||||
Legend: |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1991 | Fist of Glory | Jake Reynolds | |
Blood Ring | Max Rivers | ||
1992 | Eternal Fist | Amp | |
Deadend Besiegers | Gaijin who beats Wuwech | ||
Triple Impact | Dave Masters | Direct-to-video | |
1993 | American Kickboxer 2 | Mike Clark | |
1994 | Double Blast | Greg | Direct-to-video |
1995 | Raw Target | Johnny Rider | |
Blood Ring 2 | Max Rivers |