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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life  





2 Career  



2.1  Early career (19801983)  





2.2  Light heavyweight and cruiserweight world championships (19841986)  





2.3  Transition to heavyweight (19871991)  





2.4  Fights with Cikatić and Longinidis (1992)  





2.5  Later career (19931999)  







3 Acting appearances  





4 Legal issues  





5 Championships and awards  



5.1  Kickboxing  







6 Boxing record  





7 Kickboxing and Karate record  





8 Footnotes  





9 Notes  





10 References  





11 External links  














Dennis Alexio






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Dennis Alexio
BornDennis Raymond Alexio
(1959-03-12) March 12, 1959 (age 65)
Vacaville, California, U.S.
Other namesDennis The Terminator Alexio
Kaheke
The Menace
The Portuguese Man o' War
Height5 ft 11 in (1.8 m)
Weight203 lb (92 kg; 14.5 st)
DivisionLight Heavyweight
Cruiserweight
Heavyweight
Reach72.5 in (184 cm)
Style
  • Kickboxing
  • Tang Soo Do, Tae Kwon-Do, Muay Thai, Boxing
  • Fighting out ofHonolulu, Hawaii, U.S.
    TrainerAl Lagardo, Nasser Niavaroni, Bob Smith, Jacob “Stitch” Duran
    Years active1980–1999
    Professional boxing record
    Total8
    Wins7
    By knockout5
    Losses1
    By knockout1
    Draws0
    Kickboxing record
    Total72
    Wins68
    By knockout63
    Losses1
    Draws1
    No contests2
    Children5

    Dennis Raymond Alexio (born March 12, 1959) is an American former professional kickboxer and actor who competed in the light heavyweight, cruiserweight and heavyweight divisions. Starting out as a light heavyweight, Alexio kicked off his career with an extensive, knockout-laden undefeated streak before losing a decision to Don "The Dragon" Wilson in a World Kickboxing Association (WKA) World Super Light Heavyweight Full Contact Championship match in 1984. He rebounded from this by winning the Professional Karate Association (PKA) World Light Heavyweight title that same year before moving up to cruiserweight and taking the International Sport Karate Association (ISKA) World Cruiserweight Full Contact strap. In the late 1980s, he began his transition to the heavyweight division where he won six world titles and was considered the undisputed World Heavyweight Champion. He faced the two toughest tests of his career in 1992 against Branko Cikatić and Stan Longinidis - both of whom were heavier fighters - fighting to a controversial draw with Cikatić and losing to Longinidis via an early low kick KO which resulted in a broken leg.

    An aggressive fighter possessing good boxing skills, a powerful spinning back kick and Muay Thai style roundhouse kick to the midsection, head and legs, Alexio retired with an impressive 92% KO ratio.

    In April 2017, he was sentenced to 15 years in prison on multiple counts of fraud and tax evasion.

    Early life

    [edit]

    Dennis Alexio was born and raised in Vacaville, California. He was a standout athlete in his youth, excelling in American football, baseball and basketball. In an interview with Inside Karate magazine, he claimed to have turned down an offer to play baseball with the Los Angeles Dodgers.[1] He began his martial arts training in Kajukenbo and in college, he played American football as a linebacker, using karate to get faster and more flexible for football. Liking karate, he decided to pursue the full contact aspect of it, not just point sparring. So Alexio started learning other styles like tang soo do before moving on to full-contact karate/professional kickboxing, where he added boxing and Muay Thai skills to his kickboxing repertoire along with his karate training. His entrance music was "The Final Countdown" by Swedish rock band Europe.

    Career

    [edit]

    Early career (1980–1983)

    [edit]

    Alexio debuted as a professional kickboxer in early 1980, losing to Mike King via technical knockoutinCulver City, California in his freshman appearance. The outcome of the bout was later overturned to a no contest by the PKA, however, with the fight deemed a mismatch as Alexio was competing for the first time with no amateur fights or any fighting experience, while King was a Professional Full Contact Karate/Kickboxer. Alexio learned from that fight and trained hard, he went on to win seventeen consecutive fights after that, all by knockout with only one going past the third round.[citation needed] In his first international match-up, Alexio stopped Basil Gura with a kick in round three of their contest in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia on November 19, 1983.[citation needed]

    Light heavyweight and cruiserweight world championships (1984–1986)

    [edit]

    Having established himself as a force on the world stage with his extensive winning streak, Alexio was given the chance to fight Don "The Dragon" Wilson for the inaugural WKA World Super Light Heavyweight (-83.2 kg/183.4 lb) Full Contact Championship in Hollywood in Wilson's home state of Florida on March 29, 1984. Televised on NBC's Sports World and with the #1 spot in the STAR System World Kickboxing Ratings on the line, Alexio's straight forward, boxing-based style played into the hands of the counterfighter Wilson, who pelted him with unchecked low kicks throughout the twelve round bout. Wilson won by a unanimous decision 119-106,119-112,118-114.[2] Alexio disputed the result, calling it a "hometown decision."[3] A second bout between the pair would never come to fruition.

    Alexio rebounded from this defeat by winning the PKA World Light Heavyweight title in his hometown of Vacaville on September 14, 1984, knocking down Rob Salazar twice in round five en route to a decision win. He made successful defences of this belt against Bernard Clark and Neil Singleton the following year before moving up to the cruiserweight division where he was soon crowned the ISKA World Cruiserweight (-88.2 kg/194.4 lb) Full Contact Champion. He also briefly pursued a career in professional boxing between 1984 and 1985, going 7-1 with five KO victories.[citation needed]

    In an ISKA title defence on August 16, 1986, in Denver, Colorado, Alexio survived an early scare as he was dropped with a big right hook from Lowell Nash in the first round, coming back by flooring Nash with a right hook of his own before finishing him with a right cross at the end of the fourth.[4]

    Transition to heavyweight (1987–1991)

    [edit]

    By 1987, Alexio's record consisted of twenty-six wins and one loss, and so he made the transition to the heavyweight class where, at 1.80m/5 ft 11in and just over 91 kg/200 lb, he was one of the smaller competitors. After winning the Karate International Council of Kickboxing (KICK) full contact world heavyweight title, he made one last defence of his ISKA cruiserweight belt on June 3, 1987, when he outpointed Larry McFadden over twelve rounds in Stateline, Nevada. Less than a month later, he defended his KICK Heavyweight belt and also won the vacant ISKA Heavyweight (-96.4 kg/212.5 lb) title against Jeff Hollins on June 20, 1987, in Denver.[5]

    On August 6, 1990, at Harrah's Lake Tahoe in Stateline, Alexio faced Canadian taekwondo stylist Darrell Henegan in a heavyweight unification fight with Alexio's ISKA and KICK titles, and Henegan's Fight Factory Karate Association (FFKA) title on the line. Alexio won via TKO after the referee stopped the fight towards the end of the fifth round.[6]

    At the end of 1990, he re-located to Honolulu, Hawaii where he fought twenty times at the Neal S. Blaisdell Center, winning all twenty by knockout. He also adopted the nickname of "Kaheke" while fighting there and often fought in a Hawaiian grass skirt.[citation needed]

    In another heavyweight title unification bout, Alexio put his ISKA belt on the line against Jerry Rhome with the vacant PKC title also up for grabs at KarateMania III held at Caesars Tahoe in Stateline on August 24, 1991. He floored Rhome with a roundhouse kick on the bell at the end of the fourth before going out and finishing him off early in five.[7] Alexio then defeated a number of middle-of-the-road challengers from around the world under full contact before seeking super fights with champions from other rule sets[broken anchor].

    Fights with Cikatić and Longinidis (1992)

    [edit]

    "Indeed everything about Alexio screamed larger-than-life. He oozed charisma and it wasn't hard to see why he had been offered several more silver screen roles and developed the biggest following in kickboxing history – especially among female fans."

    Michael Schiavello on Alexio's stardom in the early 1990s.[8]

    On March 16, 1992, Alexio faced his toughest opponent to date when he met Croatian Muay Thai fighter Branko Cikatić in at the World Martial Arts Challenge at the Thomas & Mack CenterinLas Vegas, Nevada. Although Alexio still held the ISKA, KICK and FFKA heavyweight world titles, and Cikatić was the WKA/IKBF World Cruiserweight Champion, the only title on the line was the inaugural World Martial Arts Challenge (WMAC) Heavyweight Championship. The rules of the bout were disputed between both fighters right up to the day of the fight. Alexio, who had competed exclusively under full contact rules, wanted both fighters to wear foot pads. Cikatić, a Muay Thai stylist and international rules fighter, wanted low kicks as well as the Thai clinch to be allowed. In the end, low kicks were allowed and Alexio wore foot pads, and knees and the clinch were banned. The duration of the fight was set at eight, three-minute rounds.[9]

    The first two rounds were a battle but Alexio was winning with his barrage of un-answered uppercuts, hooks to the head and body kicks, but Cikatić was game and did fire back. Alexio utilized his better boxing skills but Cikatić used his powerful low kicks to his advantage. Cikatić was docked a point in the second round for kneeing Alexio in the clinch, which was not legal for this bout. The fight then ended in confusion in the third round when a stoppage was called as Alexio's right foot pad came off. The referee, Pat Burleson, decided to continue the fight without retrieving the foot pad as it had fallen out of the ring. However, before the fight was restarted Alexio hit Cikatić with two left hooks and then kicked at him but missed as he fell to the canvas. The fight was stopped there and, as it had gone less than half of the set eight rounds, was ruled a technical draw.[10]

    Following this, Alexio went on to collect three straight KO wins before agreeing to fight Australian Stan Longinidis, an up-and-coming fighter who had been calling him out for some time.[11] One of the most highly anticipated fights in the sport's history at the time, and a bad-blooded affair, the bout took place in Longinidis' hometown of Melbourne, Victoria on December 6, 1992, with the vacant ISKA International rules[broken anchor] Heavyweight Championship of the World up for grabs. Six seconds into the fight, Longinidis hit Alexio with a right low kick, causing Alexio's fibula and tibia to break. Officially, the fight lasted just fifteen seconds and Longinidis was named the winner via technical knockout.[12][13][14]

    Alexio and his manager, Bob Wall, disputed the fight and claimed that the fracture was caused by Alexio twisting his leg on a depression in the ring floor. Although Wall did initially comment after the fight, that Longinidis clearly won with an excellent legal kick.[15][16] The outcome of the review was divided: the United States division of the ISKA overturned the ruling to a no contest, while the WKA and Australian division of the ISKA upheld the original decision.[17] A rematch between Longinidis and Alexio was discussed but never materialized.[18][19]

    Later career (1993–1999)

    [edit]

    One of kickboxing's biggest stars at the time, Dennis Alexio was offered the opportunity to fight at UFC 1, the first mixed martial arts tournament held in North America, in 1993 but declined because of the money and he was still recovering from his broken leg and a screw was sheared off by accident into his leg which complicated his return to the ring.[20] Alexio recovered from his broken leg and made a comeback on January 22, 1994, in Lake Tahoe, where he defeated England's Heavyweight Kickboxing Champion and K-1 Kickboxer Mark Russell Of England via technical knockout in the second round to defend the PKC World Heavyweight Full Contact Karate/Kickboxing title.[21] His first significant fight since his comeback came on March 26, 1994, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada when he defeated Dick Kimber to defend the PKC belt at KarateMania VIII. He was ordered by the referee to remove his Hawaiian grass skirt at the end of round one, and came out wearing a pair of traditional kickboxing trunks in round two and battered Kimber to a TKO victory.[22]

    He would end out his career fighting mostly in Honolulu and under full contact rules, beating a number of K-1 fighters. During the mid-1990s, he began to face growing criticism of his opponents, with Rick Roufus and Maurice Smith claiming that he was avoiding them and other high-level heavyweights, but he has stated on numerous occasions on television that he would take them on but the promoters couldn't get the fighters together with the money or the cable networks and pay per view to televise the fights with the arrival and popularity of the UFC/MMA American Kickboxing viewership was on the decline and the television ratings and Pay per view buys weren't there any longer for the networks to justify those big money fights so they never happened.[23][24]

    On May 31, 1997, Alexio won the vacant IKF World Heavyweight Championship when he defeated European Super Heavyweight Kickboxing Champion and MMA fighter Barrington Patterson of England who was often referred to as one of Britain's "hardest men" by TKO at the end of the fifth round in Honolulu.[25] His first defense of this title was on November 21, 1997, when he defeated Jeff Gibson. In May 1998 in Sacramento, California, he defeated French Kickboxing/Savate Heavyweight Champion Achille Roger of France by TKO in round five to defend his title for a second time.[26] His title was retired by the IKF on November 24, 2003. The IKF organization had been trying to contact Alexio since June 2003, to discuss what his future plans for the sport were, such as a title defense or a retirement of his title. However, they never received any return phone call.[17]

    His last ever fight came on December 18, 1999, at Honolulu's Neal S. Blaisdell Center, where he knocked out Welshman Gordon Minors to win the WAKO Pro World Heavyweight Full Contact Championship, his eight world title.[27][28]

    Acting appearances

    [edit]

    Alexio starred alongside Jean-Claude Van Damme in the 1989 film Kickboxer.[29] He also had a small role in the 1988 film Picasso Trigger in addition to an appearance in a 1990 episode of Super Force.

    [edit]

    Alexio was charged with two counts of bank fraud in addition to failing to pay child support on July 1, 2003.[30] On December 20, 2005, a federal magistrate ordered that he be detained and returned to California.[31]

    On June 12, 2007, Alexio was arrested at his home in Aiea, Hawaii for failing to appear as a witness before a federal grand jury and on an outstanding federal warrant issued in San Francisco for bank fraud. A federal judge in West Virginia had issued a warrant for his arrest on April 20 when he failed to appear as summoned to testify in a fraud case.[32][33]

    Alexio was again arrested by federal agents at a coffee shop in Aiea, Hawaii on November 21, 2013, and his wife Anitalei was later arrested at their home. The couple was charged with 36 counts of filing false tax claims, wire fraud and money laundering from December 2008 to August 2013. The federal government also accused him of sending false documents to obtain gold bars and coins worth hundreds of thousands of U.S. dollars.[34] Both pleaded not guilty and were scheduled to stand trial on the charges in January 2014.[35][36]

    During his trial, Alexio behaved erratically[37] and used a sovereign citizen line of defense.[38] The court eventually terminated his self-representation.[39] On January 22, 2016, Alexio was found guilty on 28 counts, including tax fraud, theft, money laundering and using false and fictitious financial instruments.[40] On April 27, 2017, Alexio was sentenced to 15 years in federal prison.[41] He is serving his sentence at Federal Correctional Institution, Beaumont under BOP Inmate Number 93052-011 and is scheduled for release in 2027.[42]

    Championships and awards

    [edit]

    Kickboxing

    [edit]

    Boxing record

    [edit]
    Boxing record
    7 wins (5 KOs), 1 loss, 0 draws
    Date Result Opponent Venue Location Method Round Time Record
    1985-11-02 Win United States Kevin Smith Hereford House Sacramento, California, US KO 2 7-1
    1985-06-18 Win United States Tim Jones Sacramento, California, US Decision 6 3:00 6-1
    1985-04-06 Win United States Bernard Clark Hereford House Sacramento, California, US TKO 4 5-1
    1985-02-08 Loss United States Mike Randle Napa, California, US TKO 8 4-1
    1984-11-02 Win United States Tommy Tellery Napa, California, US DQ 2 4-0
    1984-07-13 Win United States Tony Willingham Napa, California, US KO 4 3-0
    1984-06-12 Win United States Philip Rosas Sacramento, California, US KO 2 2-0
    1984-02-22 Win United States Darrell Singleton Santa Rosa, California, US KO 3 1-0
    Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes

    Kickboxing and Karate record

    [edit]
    Kickboxing record
    68 wins (63 KOs), 2 losses, 1 draw, 1 no contests
    Date Result Opponent Event Location Method Round Time Record
    1999-12-18 Win Wales Gordon Minors Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 5 68-1-1 (3)
    Wins the WAKO Pro World Heavyweight (-94.1kg/207.5lb) Full Contact Championship.
    1999-05-08 Win United States Anthony Elmore Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 12 67-1-1 (3)
    1999-03-06 Win Wales Ricky Nickelson Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 66-1-1 (3)
    1998-05-01 Win France Achille Roger Memorial Auditorium Sacramento, California, US TKO 4 65-1-1 (3)
    Defends the IKF World Heavyweight (-97.73kg/215.5lb) Full Contact Championship.
    1997-11-21 Win United States Jeff Gibson Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 64-1-1 (3)
    Defends the IKF World Heavyweight (-97.73kg/215.5lb) Full Contact Championship.
    1997-05-31 Win England Barrington Patterson Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US TKO 5 63-1-1 (3)
    Wins the IKF World Heavyweight (-97.73kg/215.5lb) Full Contact Championship.
    1996-11-02 Win United States Larry Cureton Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO (spinning back kick) 2 62-1-1 (3)
    1996-08-17 Win Japan Masaaki Miyamoto Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US TKO 6 1:01 61-1-1 (3)
    Defends the ISKA World Heavyweight (-96.4kg/212.5lb) Full Contact Championship.
    1996-05-11 Win France Stephane Revellion Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 5 60-1-1 (3)
    1995-12-01 Win United States Dennis Lane Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO (kick) 1 59-1-1 (3)
    1995-11-12 Win New Zealand Hiriwa Te Rangi Guam KO 3 58-1-1 (3)
    1995-07-01 Win England Stuart Green Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 6 57-1-1 (3)
    1994-11-01 No Contest Brazil Sérgio Batarelli Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US No contest (injury) 1 2:00 56-1-1 (3)
    1994-03-26 Win United States Dick Kimber KarateMania VIII Montreal, Quebec, Canada KO (punches and left body kick) 2 2:26 56-1-1 (2)
    Defends the PKC World Heavyweight Full Contact Championship.
    1994-01-22 Win England Mark Russell KarateMania Stateline, Nevada, US KO (left hook) 2 1:40 55-1-1 (2)
    Defends the PKC World Heavyweight Full Contact Championship.
    1993-08-27 Win United States Dennis Downey Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO (right high kick) 3 54-1-1 (2)
    1992-12-06 Loss[17][note 1] Australia Stan Longinidis Clash of the Titans, Melbourne SEC Melbourne, Australia (leg kick) 1 0:15 53-1-1 (2)
    For the ISKA World Heavyweight (-96.4kg/212.5lb) International Rules Championship.
    1992-11-10 Win United States Lawrence White Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 2 53-1-1 (1)
    1992-09-06 Win Russia Dmitry Kochergin Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US TKO (stoppage) 2 52-1-1 (1)
    Originally ruled a KO victory for Alexio in round one. The match is restarted and ends via stoppage in round two.
    1992-07-11 Win United States Dennis Downey Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO (kick) 4 51-1-1 (1)
    1992-03-16 Draw Croatia Branko Cikatić World Martial Arts Challenge, Thomas & Mack Center Las Vegas, Nevada, US Technical draw 3 1:25 50-1-1 (1)
    For the WMAC World Heavyweight Championship.
    1992-02-05 Win France Clement Salles Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 5 50-1 (1)
    1991-12-20 Win France David Coradini Pirae, Tahiti KO (kick) 1 49-1 (1)
    1991-12-07 Win United States Larry Cureton Arco Arena. Sacramento, California, US KO 5 48-1 (1)
    1991-10-17 Win Brazil Espedito da Silva Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO 4 47-1 (1)
    1991-08-24 Win United States Jerry Rhome KarateMania III, Caesars Tahoe Stateline, Nevada, US TKO (referee stoppage) 5 0:26 46-1 (1)
    Defends the ISKA World Heavyweight (-96.4kg/212.5lb) Full Contact Championship and wins the PKC World Heavyweight Full Contact Championship.
    1991-06-08 Win Ahmad Jihad Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO (kick) 2 45-1 (1)
    1991-04-03 Win United States Barry Boom Boom Byers Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO (kick) 3 44-1 (1)
    1990-11-29 Win United States Horace Craft Neal S. Blaisdell Center Honolulu, Hawaii, US KO (kick) 4 43-1 (1)
    1990-11-01 Win Canada Michael McDonald Sacramento, California, US KO 3 42-1 (1)
    1990-08-06 Win Canada Darrell Henegan Harrah's Lake Tahoe Stateline, Nevada, US TKO (punches) 5 1:54 41-1 (1)
    Defends the ISKA World Heavyweight (-96.4 kg/212 lb) Full Contact Championship and the KICK World Heavyweight Full Contact Championship, and wins the FFKA World Heavyweight Full Contact Championship.
    1990-05-18 Win United States Dino Homsey Vacaville, California, US KO (kick) 8 40-1 (1)
    1990-04-27 Win United States Curtis Jackson Sacramento, California, US KO 4 39-1 (1)
    1990-02-19 Win United States Horace Craft Radisson Hotel Sacramento, California, US KO (punches and left high kicks) 2 38-1 (1)
    1989-11-07 Win United States Paul Madison Stateline, Nevada, US KO (kick) 3 37-1 (1)
    1989-06-05 Win United States Jeff Hollins Inglewood, California, US Decision 11 2:00 36-1 (1)
    Defends the KICK World Heavyweight Full Contact Championship.
    1988-11-16 Win United States Maurice Tornisi Madison Square Garden New York City, New York, US KO 3 35-1 (1)
    1988-08-27 Win United States Tim Jones Tampa, Florida, US KO (kick) 2 34-1 (1)
    1988-06-03 Win United States Jeff Buck Stateline, Nevada, US KO 5 33-1 (1)
    1988-05-15 Win United States Tom Mouton Miami, Florida, US KO (kick) 3 32-1 (1)
    1987-11-17 Win United States Al Mims Denver, Colorado, US KO (kick) 2 31-1 (1)
    1987-06-20 Win United States Jeff Hollins Denver, Colorado, US Decision (unanimous) 12 2:00 30-1 (1)
    Defends the KICK World Heavyweight Full Contact Championship and wins the ISKA World Heavyweight (-96.4 kg/212 lb) Full Contact Championship.
    1987-06-03 Win United States Larry McFadden Stateline, Nevada, US Decision 12 2:00 29-1 (1)
    Defends the ISKA World Cruiserweight (-88.2kg/194.4lb) Full Contact Championship.
    1987-04-04 Win United States Mike Winklejohn Denver, Colorado, US Decision (unanimous) 7 2:00 28-1 (1)
    1987-03-15 Win United States Pete Master Richmond, California, US KO (kick) 5 27-1 (1)
    1987-02-11 Win United States Zinnie Reynolds Vallejo, California, US KO (kick) 3 26-1 (1)
    1986-08-16 Win United States Lowell Nash Denver, Colorado, US KO (right cross) 4 2:00 25-1 (1)
    Defends the ISKA World Cruiserweight (-88.2kg/194.4lb) Full Contact Championship.
    1986-07-17 Win United States J.D. Johnson Dixon, California, US KO 6 24-1 (1)
    1985-12-14 Win United States Neil Singleton Sacramento, California, US KO 5 23-1 (1)
    Defends the PKA World Light Heavyweight Championship.
    1985-11-02 Win United States Kevin Smith Sacramento, California, US KO 2 22-1 (1)
    1985-04-06 Win United States Bernard Clark Sacramento, California, US TKO (left high kick and punches) 4 1:19 21-1 (1)
    Defends the PKA World Light Heavyweight Championship.
    1984-12-08 Win United States Cedric Rogers Sacramento, California, US KO 9 20-1 (1)
    1984-09-14 Win United States Rob Salazar Vacaville, California, US Decision (unanimous) 12 2:00 19-1 (1)
    Wins the PKA World Light Heavyweight Championship.
    1984-07-11 Win United States Al Mims Reno, Nevada, US KO (kick) 2 18-1 (1)
    1984-03-29 Loss United States Don Wilson Hollywood, Florida, US Decision (unanimous) 12 2:00 17-1 (1)
    For the WKA World Super Light Heavyweight (-83.2kg/183.4lb) Full Contact Championship and the STAR World Super Light Heavyweight (-83.2kg/183.4lb) Championship.
    1983-11-19 Win Australia Basil Gura Newcastle, Australia KO (kick) 3 17-0 (1)
    For the Pacific Cruiserweight Title.
    1983-10-22 Win United States Al Mims Vallejo, California, US KO 3 16-0 (1)
    1983-09-10 Win United States Cedric Rogers Sacramento, California, US KO 3 15-0 (1)
    1983-05-09 Win United States Jerold Curry Vallejo, California, US KO 3 14-0 (1)
    1983-03-11 Win United States Neil Singleton Chicago Fights Chicago, Illinois, US TKO (referee stoppage) 2 13-0 (1)
    1982-11-05 Win United States Mike Duvall Boise, Idaho, US KO 1 12-0 (1)
    1982-08-05 Win United States Rick Dunn Sparks, Nevada, US KO (kick) 1 11-0 (1)
    1982-06-02 Win United States Bill Holmes Sacramento, California, US KO (kick) 1 10-0 (1)
    1982-05-26 Win United States Ed Taft Sacramento, California, US KO 2 9-0 (1)
    1982-04-30 Win United States Ron Jenkins Sacramento, California, US KO (kick) 1 8-0 (1)
    1982-04-28 Win United States Jess Addison Sacramento, California, US KO (kick) 1 7-0 (1)
    1982-02-02 Win United States John Knight Santa Rosa, California, US KO (kick) 2 6-0 (1)
    1981-11-13 Win United States Bruce Leamer San Jose, California, US KO (kick) 4 5-0 (1)
    1981-02-25 Win United States Van Palacio Oakland, California, US KO (kick) 2 4-0 (1)
    1980-11-25 Win United States Wayne Taylor Culver City, California, US KO 1 3-0 (1)
    1980-09-06 Win United States Bill Norman Stockton, California, US KO 2 2-0 (1)
    1980-06-30 Win United States Reggie Eaton Stockton, California, US KO 3 1-0 (1)
    1980-00-00 No Contest United States Mike King Veteran's Auditorium Culver City, California, US No contest (overturned by the PKA) 0-0 (1)
    Originally a TKO loss for Alexio. Overturned to a no contest by the PKA as the fight was deemed a mismatch.
    Legend:   Win   Loss   Draw/No contest   Notes

    Footnotes

    [edit]
    1. ^ The WKA and ISKA-Australia record the outcome as a win for Longinidis, while the ISKA-US records it as a no contest.

    Notes

    [edit]
    1. ^ page 27, Inside Karate
  • ^ VideoonYouTube
  • ^ DENNIS ALEXIO & THE LAST BASTION OF A TEENAGE MEMORY By Michael Schiavello[permanent dead link]
  • ^ Dennis Alexio vs. Lowell NashonYouTube
  • ^ Alexio Defends World Kickboxing Title. Active Interest Media, Inc. September 1989. pp. 77–78. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • ^ Dennis Alexio vs. Darrell HeneganonYouTube
  • ^ Dennis Alexio vs. Jerry RhomeonYouTube
  • ^ "DENNIS ALEXIO & THE LAST BASTION OF A TEENAGE MEMORY By Michael Schiavello". Archived from the original on July 17, 2012. Retrieved March 24, 2013.
  • ^ Wallace, Bill (September 1992). Ringside at the Worlds Martial Arts Challenge. Active Interest Media, Inc. p. 12. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • ^ Puzzled by Alexio–Cikatic Bout. Active Interest Media, Inc. November 1992. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • ^ "Interview with Stan The Man Longinidis". muaythaionline.org. December 2000. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013.
  • ^ "This sport's really kicking on". The Age. February 17, 2003. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  • ^ Alexio breaks leg, loses kickboxing title. Active Interest Media, Inc. April 1993. pp. 14–16. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • ^ VideoonYouTube
  • ^ "Past IKF Champions | International Kickboxing Federation - IKF Asia". www.ikf-asia.com. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  • ^ Stan Longinidis vs Dennis Alexio Post Fight Media Coverage. YouTube. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021.
  • ^ a b c Past IKF Champions: Dennis Alexio Archived July 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ Rematch set for Longinidis, Alexio
  • ^ Longinidis' title 'in dispute' says ISKA
  • ^ Catching up with the founders and participants of UFC 1
  • ^ 1994 IKF news
  • ^ Alexio Looks Sharp at KarateMania VIII
  • ^ Alexio Dominates Elmore
  • ^ Rick Roufus reflects on his career and the future of kickboxing
  • ^ ALEXIO CAPTURES IKF WORLD HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE
  • ^ Hawaii Sports News
  • ^ Alexio returning to Blaisdell to tangle with 'Welsh Warrior'
  • ^ Minors hopes to be a major threat to Alexio's crown
  • ^ Willman, Chris (September 11, 1989). "'Kickboxer' Takes a Giant Step Backwards". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 23, 2010.
  • ^ Bail denied for former kickboxer Alexio
  • ^ Ex-champ kickboxer ordered to California
  • ^ Alexio jailed for defying Virginia subpoena
  • ^ Feds arrest ex-kickboxing champ Alexio
  • ^ Former kickboxing champ Dennis Alexio arrested Archived December 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ Ex-kickboxing champion Dennis Alexio faces tax, other charges
  • ^ Former Kickboxer Dennis Alexio and wife arrested
  • ^ Dominic Pruett (January 27, 2017). "Vacaville's prized kickboxer, Alexio found guilty of fraud, money laundering". Honolulu Star Advertiser. Retrieved March 26, 2024.
  • ^ "United States v. Alexio". Casetext. July 2, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2024.
  • ^ "ORDER EXPLAINING COURT'S TERMINATION OF DEFENDANT'S SELF-REPRESENTATION" (PDF). govinfo.gov. April 18, 2016. Retrieved March 26, 2024.
  • ^ "Former kickboxing champion found guilty of tax fraud, money laundering". Archived from the original on June 20, 2017. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  • ^ Dennis Alexio Sentenced For Tax Fraud, Money Laundering, And Commercial Fraud
  • ^ Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator
  • References

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