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Justin McCully
Justin McCully
from Wikipedia

Justin McCully (born February 18, 1976) is a retired American professional mixed martial artist and professional wrestler who most recently competed in the Heavyweight division of the RFA. A professional competitor since 1997, McCully has also formerly competed for the UFC, RINGS, Pancrase, It's Showtime and Jungle Fight.

Key Information

Mixed martial arts career

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McCully trains with Team Punishment, including Tito Ortiz, Kendall Grove, and professional wrestler Samoa Joe. McCully also trained with B.J. Penn in Hilo for Penn's bout with Georges St-Pierre at UFC 94. He has three previous fights inside the UFC, a unanimous decision victory over Antoni Hardonk at UFC Fight Night 9, a submission loss to Gabriel Gonzaga at UFC 86, and a unanimous decision win over Eddie Sanchez at UFC: Fight For The Troops. McCully was also scheduled to fight Christian Wellisch at UFC 76, but McCully was ultimately replaced by Scott Junk. He has also fought a former UFC champion, losing to Evan Tanner by technical submission at a 1998 Pancrase event.[1]

McCully competed against Gabriel Gonzaga at UFC 86.[2] He lost by submission to Gonzaga applying an Americana keylock from the mounted position in the first round.

He then fought Eddie Sanchez at UFC: Fight for the Troops and won the fight by unanimous decision. Most recently, McCully lost to Mike Russow at UFC 102 via unanimous decision.

After his defeat at the hands of Mike Russow at UFC 102, McCully was released by the organization.[3]

Personal life

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Justin has two children, and is also good friends with professional wrestler Rob Van Dam.[4] In 2014 he had a falling out with Tito Ortiz over what McCully claimed was Ortiz owing him money and refusing to pay him back. This fallout culminated with McCully openly supporting and training with Stephan Bonnar who was Ortiz' opponent at Bellator 131.[5] McCully's brother, Sean, is a former professional kickboxer and MMA fighter.

Mixed martial arts record

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Professional record breakdown
18 matches 11 wins 5 losses
By knockout 1 0
By submission 6 4
By decision 4 1
Draws 2
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Win 11–5–2 Justin Grizzard TKO (punches) RFA 1: Elliot vs. Pulver December 16, 2011 1 2:45 Kearney, Nebraska, United States
Loss 10–5–2 Mike Russow Decision (unanimous) UFC 102 August 29, 2009 3 5:00 Portland, Oregon, United States
Win 10–4–2 Eddie Sanchez Decision (unanimous) UFC: Fight For The Troops December 10, 2008 3 5:00 Fayetteville, North Carolina, United States
Loss 9–4–2 Gabriel Gonzaga Submission (americana)[6] UFC 86 July 5, 2008 1 1:57 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 9–3–2 Antoni Hardonk Decision (unanimous) UFC Fight Night: Stevenson vs. Guillard April 5, 2007 3 5:00 Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 8–3–2 Ruben Villareal Submission (front choke) Valor Fighting: San Manuel October 26, 2006 1 3:48 San Bernardino, California, United States
Win 7–3–2 Derek Thornton Submission (rear-naked choke) Extreme Wars 5: Battlegrounds October 6, 2006 1 2:20 Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Win 6–3–2 Ed de Kruijf Submission (armbar) Venom: First Strike September 18, 2004 1 0:48 Huntington Beach, California, United States
Win 5–3–2 Dario Amorim Decision (unanimous) Jungle Fight 1 September 13, 2003 3 5:00 Manaus, Brazil
Loss 4–3–2 Ed de Kruijf Submission (reverse full-nelson) It's Showtime: Exclusive October 22, 2000 1 2:36 Haarlem, Netherlands
Win 4–2–2 Errol Maduro Submission UFO Europe: Free Fight Gala November 28, 1999 N/A N/A Kijkduin, Netherlands
Loss 3–2–2 Mikhail Ilyukhin Technical Submission (achilles lock) RINGS: King of Kings 1999 Block A October 28, 1999 1 4:48 Tokyo, Japan
Win 3–1–2 Mario Neto Submission (kneebar) WVC 9: World Vale Tudo Championship 9 September 27, 1999 1 1:53 Aruba
Loss 2–1–2 Evan Tanner Technical Submission (kimura) Pancrase: 1998 Neo-Blood Tournament, Round 2 July 26, 1998 1 5:07 Aomori, Japan
Win 2–0–2 Martin Emmen Submission (armbar) Pancrase: 1998 Neo-Blood Tournament, Round 1 July 7, 1998 1 1:34 Tokyo, Japan
Win 1–0–2 Daisuke Ishii Decision (unanimous) Pancrase: 1998 Neo-Blood Tournament, Round 1 July 7, 1998 2 3:00 Tokyo, Japan
Draw 0–0–2 Daisuke Ishii Draw (unanimous) Pancrase: Alive 4 March 18, 1998 2 3:00 Tokyo, Japan
Draw 0–0–1 Kenji Akiyama Draw Daidojuku: Wars 4 March 11, 1997 5 3:00 Tokyo, Japan

Championships and accomplishments in professional wrestling

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Justin McCully is an American retired professional mixed martial artist known for his heavyweight career in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and earlier international competitions. Nicknamed "The Insane One," he competed professionally from the late 1990s until 2011, compiling an overall record of 11 wins, 5 losses, and 2 draws. Born on February 18, 1976, in Washington, D.C., McCully began his career in promotions such as Pancrase and Rings, where he participated in early tournaments and events during the formative years of mixed martial arts. He entered the UFC in 2007, earning notable victories over Antoni Hardonk and Eddie Sanchez by unanimous decision before retiring from active competition after a 2011 win in the Resurrection Fighting Alliance. Fighting out of Orange, California, and affiliated with Team Punishment, his style emphasized submissions and grappling, though he also secured a knockout victory during his tenure. In addition to his fighting career, McCully has worked as a professional wrestler, actor, and stunt performer, appearing in films including Force of Execution (2013) and Code of Honor (2016), as well as television episodes of Brooklyn Nine-Nine and Cold Case. He has remained out of professional competition since 2011.

Early life

Birth and background

Justin McCully was born on February 18, 1976, in Washington, United States. He holds American nationality. No further details about his early life are widely documented in primary MMA sources.

Mixed martial arts career

Early career and training

Justin McCully began his professional mixed martial arts career in 1997. He competed primarily in international promotions during the late 1990s and early 2000s, compiling a record of 11 wins (1 by KO/TKO, 6 by submission, 4 by decision), 5 losses (4 by submission, 1 by decision), and 2 draws. Known by the nickname "The Insane One" or "The Nsane1," McCully trained with Team Punishment, a camp based in Huntington Beach, California, where he was associated with fighters including Tito Ortiz, B.J. Penn, Kendall Grove, and Samoa Joe. His early career featured bouts in various promotions, including notable losses by technical submission to Evan Tanner in Pancrase in 1998, to Mikhail Ilyukhin in RINGS in 1999, and to Ed de Kruijf in It's Showtime in 2000. These fights helped shape his development as a fighter ahead of later opportunities in larger organizations.

UFC fights

Justin McCully competed in the UFC heavyweight division between 2007 and 2009, amassing a 2–2 record across four bouts. He made his promotional debut on April 5, 2007, defeating Antoni Hardonk by unanimous decision at UFC Fight Night: Stevenson vs. Guillard. On July 5, 2008, McCully suffered a first-round defeat to Gabriel Gonzaga via submission (kimura) at 1:57 during UFC 86: Jackson vs. Griffin. He returned to the win column on December 10, 2008, securing a unanimous decision victory over Eddie Sanchez at UFC: Fight for the Troops. McCully's final UFC appearance took place on August 29, 2009, where he lost to Mike Russow by unanimous decision at UFC 102: Couture vs. Nogueira. Following this defeat, he was released by the promotion.

Later career and retirement

Following his release from the Ultimate Fighting Championship in 2009, Justin McCully's professional mixed martial arts activity became limited. His only documented bout after leaving the UFC occurred in the Resurrection Fighting Alliance promotion, where he defeated Justin Grizzard by technical knockout via punches at 2:45 of the first round on December 16, 2011, at RFA 1 in Kearney, Nebraska. This victory brought McCully's professional record to 11-5-2 and proved to be his final fight in the sport. No further professional bouts are recorded after this event. McCully has remained inactive in professional mixed martial arts since 2011, marking the effective end of his career that spanned from 1997 to 2011, although no public or official statement of retirement has been documented.

Professional wrestling career

In-ring work and achievements

Justin McCully competed in professional wrestling under the ring name Justin Sane. He was active primarily in Ultimate Pro Wrestling (UPW), where he established himself as a tag team specialist. In UPW, McCully formed a successful tag team partnership with Hardkore Kidd as Team Hardcore. The duo won the UPW Tag Team Championship twice during their collaboration. McCully developed a friendship with professional wrestler Rob Van Dam, appearing alongside him in various video content and events.

Acting and media appearances

Film and television credits

Justin McCully has credits in film and television, primarily consisting of small acting roles in action films and television episodes, as well as appearances as himself in MMA-related media. His film credits include Force of Execution (2013) as Alexander Guard #8 and Code of Honor (2016) as a bartender, both supporting parts in direct-to-video action productions. He also appeared in Bring Me the Head of Lance Henriksen (2010) as Justin and has an upcoming role as Shane in The Butterfly Guard (2025). In television, McCully had guest roles in Brooklyn Nine-Nine (2013) as Tarzan (1 episode) and Cold Case (2010) as Rob 'Bear' Jacobs '86 (1 episode). He also appeared in Extreme Championship Comedy Takeover (2013). McCully has additional media appearances as himself in MMA programs and events, including guest spots on Inside MMA (2007–2008), Bellator MMA Live (2014), and various fight specials.

Personal life

Family and notable events

Justin McCully has two children. McCully's brother, Sean McCully, is a former professional kickboxer and mixed martial arts fighter. Justin has credited Sean as an influence, stating that he followed his brother into the sport after Sean's debut in the World Combat Championship in 1995. In 2014, McCully became involved in a public dispute with former training partner Tito Ortiz over an alleged unpaid debt for his work as a training partner during several fight camps in the mid-2000s, which ended prior to Ortiz's UFC 84 bout in 2008. McCully claimed he made multiple attempts to recover the funds, including visits to Ortiz's home and discussions in Big Bear, California, but received no repayment. This prompted him to align with Stephan Bonnar ahead of Bonnar's scheduled fight against Ortiz at Bellator 131. At Bellator 123 in September 2014, McCully appeared disguised in a mask during the post-fight faceoff, then revealed himself to join Bonnar in calling out Ortiz, an incident McCully described as having real elements amid a scripted setup. He cited the unresolved debt and Ortiz's handling of obligations to training partners as reasons for his decision, stating there was no remaining allegiance.
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