Ken Shamrock

Wrestler

Birthday February 11, 1964

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Warner Robins, Georgia, U.S.

Age 60 years old

Nationality United States

Height 6 ft 1 in

Weight 212 lb

#6747 Most Popular

1964

Ken Shamrock (born Kenneth Wayne Kilpatrick; February 11, 1964) is an American retired professional wrestler and mixed martial artist.

He is best known for his time in Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and other combat sports.

An inaugural inductee into the UFC Hall of Fame, Shamrock is widely regarded as an icon and pioneer of the sport.

He has headlined over 15 main events and co-main events in the UFC and Pride FC and set numerous MMA pay-per-view records.

In the early part of his UFC career, Shamrock was named "The World's Most Dangerous Man" by ABC News in a special called "The World's Most Dangerous Things".

The moniker has stuck as his nickname.

Shamrock became known early on in the UFC for his rivalry with Royce Gracie.

After fighting to a draw in the inaugural UFC "Superfight", he became the first UFC Superfight Champion when he defeated Dan Severn at UFC 6; the title was eventually replaced by the UFC Heavyweight Championship when weight categories were introduced to the UFC.

He was also the first foreign MMA champion in Japan, winning the King of Pancrase Openweight title.

A "military brat," Kilpatrick was born at Robins Air Force Base, in Warner Robins, Georgia on February 11, 1964, where he lived for his first four years.

His father Richard Kilpatrick was a United States Air Force enlistee, and his mother Diane Kilpatrick was a waitress and dancer who had her first son when she was 15.

Shamrock had three brothers and grew up in a predominantly black neighborhood of Atlanta, Georgia.

He was often left to fend for himself, and, without his parents' supervision or guidance, got into many fights.

His father abandoned his family when Shamrock was five.

His mother married an Army aviator named Bob Nance, and the newly formed family moved to Napa, California, Nance's hometown.

Shamrock and his brothers were outsiders in this community, coming from a poor background and speaking in a Southern accent.

They continued to cause trouble and get into fights and began using drugs.

Nance, who fought in the Vietnam War, joined the local fire department and also worked in roofing and upholstery.

Shamrock became involved in and excelled at sports at a young age, playing in Little League baseball and Pop Warner football.

Nance remembers a veteran coach telling him that he had never seen a player with as much heart and tenacity as the young Shamrock.

Shamrock was not as involved with drugs as his brothers, such as his brother Richie, who enjoyed smoking marijuana and eventually using heroin intravenously, but who also played football.

At age 10, Shamrock ran away from home for the first time, and was stabbed by another child on the run, ending up in the hospital.

When he was 13, his stepfather kicked him out of their home, and each of the brothers went their own ways.

Shamrock lived in stolen cars and would often rob people at knifepoint as a means to survive, before being placed in a foster home.

He went through seven group homes and served time in a juvenile hall.

He moved between several more group homes before being placed in Bob Shamrock's Boys' Home in Susanville, California at age 14, where he turned his life around.

Bob Shamrock legally adopted Ken as his son, and Ken changed his last name from Kilpatrick to Shamrock in Bob's honor.

At Lassen High School, Shamrock (known there as Kenny Nance) excelled in football and wrestling.

Shamrock credits organized sports, as well as his adoptive father, Bob, for his life turning around.

As a senior, he qualified for the state championships in wrestling, but broke his neck in practice days before the competition and underwent neck surgery.

Due to the injury, he received no scholarship offers from any big colleges, and doctors told him his sports career was likely over.

Against doctors' orders, he joined the Shasta College football team, where he was voted team captain in his final season.

1989

The San Diego Chargers of the National Football League later offered him a tryout, but he declined in order to pursue a career in professional wrestling, where he debuted in 1989 in the North Carolina based South Atlantic Pro Wrestling promotion.

1997

He headlined multiple pay-per-view events in both promotions, including 1997's D-Generation X: In Your House, where he challenged for the WWF Championship.

Additionally, Shamrock was also one of the first wrestlers to use the shoot style of wrestling in America, being credited by WWE with popularizing the legitimate ankle lock submission hold.

1998

There, he is a one-time Intercontinental Champion, a one-time World Tag Team Champion and the 1998 King of the Ring.

2008

During his reign as the UFC Superfight Champion, he was widely considered the #1 mixed martial artist in the world, and in 2008, Shamrock was ranked by Inside MMA as one of the top 10 greatest mixed martial arts fighters of all time.

He is the founder of the Lion's Den mixed martial arts training camp, and is the older brother of fellow fighter Frank Shamrock.

In addition to his mixed martial arts career, Shamrock has had considerable success in professional wrestling, particularly during his tenure with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE).

2020

Shamrock also wrestled for Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, where he is a one-time NWA World Heavyweight Champion – the first world champion under the TNA banner – and a 2020 inductee in the Impact Hall of Fame.