Akira Shoji
14-17-5
About
Japanese MMA veteran and "Mr. Pride" who fought the best of early heavyweight MMA with heart, submission defense, and mic skills despite a losing record.
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Akira Shoji is a Japanese mixed martial artist born in 1974 who became a fixture of Pride Fighting Championship during its most formative years. A national-ranked judoka who trained at the prestigious Wajyutsu Keishukai gym, Shoji made his worldwide MMA debut at Pride 1 in 1997 against the legendary Renzo Gracie. Though outmatched on paper, he held his own for 30 minutes, escaping multiple submission attempts including a nearly locked armbar and omoplata, and grabbed the microphone afterward to defiantly yell at the Gracies: "What do you say now, Gracies? Who said the Japanese were the weakest?" That moment set the tone for his entire career.
Despite compiling a losing record of 14-17-5 over a decade-plus career, Shoji earned the nickname "Mr. Pride" for his popularity and unwavering loyalty to the promotion. He fought in nearly every early Pride event from 1997 to 2007 and competed in the 2000 Grand Prix, moving between weight classes as he aged. What made Shoji legendary was his ability to pull off shocking upsets against elite competition: he caught unbeaten Brazilian jiu-jitsu specialist Wallid Ismail with ground-and-pound in the second round at Pride 4, and scored a controversial split-decision victory over UFC heavyweight champion Guy Mezger through clinch work and takedowns. His submission defense, particularly his ability to escape armbars, became the stuff of legend.
Shoji's fighting style blended his judo foundation with technical grappling and strategic clinch work. Against strikers, he played conservatively to avoid the knockout, but the moment he got leverage on the mat, he would unleash ground-and-pound. Fans loved him not just for his technique but for his persona: a never-say-die warrior who would fight anyone, anywhere, and who famously prepared his will before every competition, demonstrating an almost samurai-like commitment to the sport. His final MMA match came at DEEP 53 against Kazuo Misaki in 2008, a TKO loss in the second round that moved both fighters to tears, a fitting goodbye for a man who had given everything to mixed martial arts.
Why fans love Shoji
Shoji's die-hard spirit and refusal to back down from any opponent made him a crowd darling despite a losing record. His exceptional submission defense and armbar escapes were technical marvels. He was beloved for his post-fight mic work, including his famous call-out of the Gracies after his Pride 1 draw, and for his loyalty to Pride when the promotion was defining the sport. He embodied the underdog willing to take on all comers.








