When someone sits down to write the history of mixed martial arts someday, Scott Coker will have a prominent place in it.
With Bellator 184 approaching on Friday in Thackerville, Oklahoma, here are five things you might not know about Coker:
1. He practices what he preaches.
Coker is a fifth-degree black belt in taekwondo under Ernie Reyes Sr., co-founder of the West Coast World Martial Arts Association.
2. As Strikeforce founder and Bellator president, he burns the midnight oil.
A total of 128 mixed martial arts events -- 63 in Strikeforce and 65 in Bellator -- have been promoted under Coker’s watch with the two organizations. He staged his first MMA show on March 10, 2006. Strikeforce “Shamrock vs. Gracie” featured a main event between Frank Shamrock and Cesar Gracie before 18,265 fans at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, California. Shamrock knocked out Gracie in 21 seconds.
3. Strikeforce under his direction served as a launching pad for some of MMA’s most accomplished fighters.
Daniel Cormier, Cristiane Justino, Amanda Nunes, Luke Rockhold, Tyron Woodley, Germaine de Randamie, Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate all competed in Strikeforce before moving on the become UFC champions.
4. He can call upon a multicultural background.
The second of three sons born to an American father and Korean mother, Coker spent the first nine years of his life in Seoul before his family put down roots in California.
5. He has ties to Hollywood.
Coker had small roles in three feature-length films, according to IMDB.com: “The Last Dragon” (1985) and “Dragon Fight” (1989) and “Surf Ninjas” (1993). “The Last Dragon” brought it nearly $26 million at the domestic box office and became a cult classic.