5 Things You Might Not Know About Niko Price
Holy cow, Niko Price (12-1, 1 NC) knocks out Randy Brown with hammerfists on the bottom! The Floridian moves to 4-1 (1 NC) in the UFC; he has finished 11 of his 12 wins (eight by KO/TKO). #UFCBoise pic.twitter.com/AxCYZT3X8x
— Tanuki Usman (@Hamderlei) July 15, 2018
Niko Price has been quite a find for the Ultimate Fighting Championship. He drew a tough assignment against Brandon Thatch in his promotional debut at UFC 207 and submitted the Elevation Fight Team export in impressive fashion. Fast forward to 2018, and Price owns a 4-1 mark inside the Octagon -- a run that includes a UFC Fight Night 114 thrashing of Alan Jouban, a UFC on Fox 27 submission of George Sullivan and a sensational UFC Fight Night 133 knockout of Randy Brown.
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Before Price graces the Octagon against Alhassan, here are five things you might not know about him:
1. He recently invested in his own gym.
Prior to his highlight-reel knockout of Brown, Price spent his training camps with American Top Team. He recognizes the advantages of having a powerhouse team at his disposal but felt starting a gym was the direction he wanted to go. Price has since opened Futures MMA in Fort Myers, Florida, alongside longtime coach Jeremiah Rodriguez.
2. He fought in only one other promotion outside of the UFC.
Price went 9-0 as an amateur before making his professional debut under the Fight Time banner in 2012. He won all eight of his bouts with the promotion before linking arms with the Ultimate Fighting Championship. Price enjoyed a meteoric rise despite never having trained in the martial arts as a child.
3. He is a firm believer in scouting opponents through film study.
It is not uncommon to hear of fighters who do not watch film on an upcoming opponent, leaving that task to their coaches. Price views that as a mistake. He believes watching film personally is the right approach to take, especially for fighters who game plan around finding an adversary’s flaws as quickly as possible.
4. His top priority for now is to stay active.
Every fighter lines up for a shot at UFC gold, and Price is no exception. However, to get where he wants to go, he understands the process involves piling up meaningful wins. Price has mentioned that he sees competing six times a year as the ideal situation.
5. He was into landscaping before hitting it big as a prizefighter.
In the beginning stages of his career, Price started training as early as 4 a.m. in Rodriguez’s garage so he could maintain his day job as a landscaper. Later, he established his own pressure washing business.
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