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Great Outdoor Fight
"I just beat the asses of three thousand men. The hell you leave me alone."
A devout Catholic and an avid amateur craftsman who specializes in animatronics and carpentry, many believe that Envelópe Martinez embodies the very essence of the Gentleman Fighter.
A fine fighter himself, Clancy is, however, mostly remembered for his death. Rodney Leonard Stubbs tore off his entire middle, despite the fact that nobody said it could be done.
It's known Sipes has financial and domestic troubles.
Most concept fighters, relying on impractical gimmicks, fall by the end of the first day, and of those who survive, almost none make it past Day 2, but in rare years a concept fighter will enter the fight with a strange plan that is not only distinctive but also comes with a high level of utility and complexity. Refugio is one of these fighters, his concept being "The Power Of Metal."
For the next three days, Brown did not rest. Nor did he participate in any of the Fight's entertainments. Caught in his Fugue, he tore through his competition -- maiming or killing 586 men single handed, including Jynik Gowno, the legendary "Pole Who Won't Fold". Though more organized fighters tried to separate Brown from the main body of the Fight (and more than one blood enemy united to try and stop the now nearly mindless killing machine), in the end Brown thrust his fingers into the eyes of Fancy Joe Comanche, the 2nd last man standing, hooked Comanche's skull eyesockets, and tore off his head and part of his spine to become 1984 Great Outdoor Fight champion.
Stood 3rd last standing in 2006. Has issues with his immediate family.
It was at that 1963 Fight that Stanley Brown received the nickname "Grip," due to his unusual technique of grabbing an extremity of his opponent's, holding on "like the meanest damn vice you ever saw," in the words of one combatant, and spinning, shaking, slamming and otherwise throwing his enemies around like rag dolls.
"You obviously are reading the map wrong. I am not from Sweden. I will rearrange your head to make you see the map clearer."
Always Hungry
Big Guy
Frenzy
Horns
Mighty Blow
Thick Skull
Throw Team Mate
Wild Animal
Guard
John Winstanley Willocks, (July 12th 1941 - Feb 12th 1984) or "Rude Boy" Willocks as he was known, is the Fighter that, to date, has taken part in the largest number of Fights, having fought in 19, spanning from the infamous 1958 Fight to the 1984 Fight, where he was one of those taken out by Fauntleroy Brown's spectacular Dutch fugue. He was a follower of the Rastafari movement, and his sharp dress sense both in and out of the fight, in emulation of the "rude boys" back in his home of Jamaica, earned him his nickname.