Dayne Aristizabal Crossing Over to MMA
by Scott Sherman
15 months ago | 971 views | 10 10 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Being a professional archaeologist means spending painstaking time, using your hands slowly and with precision so as not to break the object in front of you. Being a professional fighter means spending time taking pain, using your hands with speed and precision to break your opponent. Dayne Aristizabal isn't sure which one he wants to do yet.

The 21-year-old Spanish Fork native has spent five years training jiu-jitsu with Pedro Sauer, sharpening a ground game that has become among the best in the state. He's shown well in nine regional grappling tournaments, but until now hasn't tested how well those skills hold up when someone is trying to punch him in the face.

He'll get his chance Saturday at Jeremy Horn's Elite Fight Night against striker Dustin Collins, whose 7-1 record sports four TKOs.

“The thing people don't realize about jiu-jitsu is just because you can ice skate doesn't mean you can play hockey,” Aristizabal said. “You have to learn a lot of skills and broaden your game.”

While still training with Sauer's camp, he's been teaching some classes at Throwdown ETC in Orem and working with Griffen Reynaud and Derek Downey to do just that. It's only been a few months since Aristizabal started to learn standup, but already he's broken a few sparring partners' noses.

“He throws good hard punches, straight punches. He's just not real fluid with it yet,” Reynaud said. “For sure he's like a whole other level than most guys at jiu-jitsu, but that transition isn't always that easy for people.”

Whether Aristizabal decides to stand with a powerful, experienced striker like Collins remains to be seen. It's no secret that his strength and comfort zone is on the ground. Getting Collins there will be difficult, and doing so without opening himself up for a heavy shot will be another test.

“I don't like putting guys in over their head, but I like to test them and test them early because that's going to be a deciding factor in what they show and whether they want to fight,” Reynaud said. “If you go out and just get guys that you can submit or beat up in 35 seconds, it doesn't give you an idea of where you're at or a real sense of what the game really is. I like to give the guys opponents who can test them. Dustin's a really hard-nosed, tough dude. If Dayne shows well against that it gives him a good idea of where he's at and whether he wants to be a fighter.”

Aristizabal was home-schooled by a family of scientists, and he took a few semesters of classes at Utah Valley State University in 2006 with the thought of transferring to an archaeology program. It's a career path he's recently thought about picking back up. Whether he becomes the next big thing at 155 or the next big thing at the dig site could very well depend on Dustin Collins.

“I think I'll be one of his toughest fights that he's had for sure, but I'm still coming in with a lot less experience in a cage than he is. It's a good first fight,” Aristizabal said. “Win, lose or draw no one can say I took an easy first fight.”

IF YOU GO

What: Jeremy Horn's Elite Fight Night

When: 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23

Where: South Towne Expo Center, 9575 S. State St., Sandy

Tickets: $25 general admission, $75 VIP seats, at www.hornselite.com
comments (10)
« Drax the Destroyer wrote on Sunday, Aug 24 at 04:55 AM »
Dayne was winded after the first minute of the fight. He seriously needs some cardio work, but pulled off an awesome head kick to knock down Dustin and finish him off with strikes. Dayne was also taking quite a beating there for a bit. Dayne will be ever better in his next fight.

I trained with Dayne at Pedro Sauers club in Salem years ago. It's amazing to see how far he has gone in just a few years.

Kudos to Dayne.
« Risky wrote on Saturday, Aug 23 at 08:32 PM »
I am just glad to know most sponsors want someone with class and respect for the sport. Not shaking hands with an opponent then getting TKO'd says a lot about someone's character. I just hope he learns from this experience and uses sportsman like conduct next time. Well until then, I have a slew of advertisers that are ready to sponsor "Dayne the King of Pain!!!"
« Risky wrote on Saturday, Aug 23 at 08:29 PM »
I am just glad to know most sponsors what someone with class and respect for the sport. Not shaking hands with an opponent then getting TKO'd says a lot about someones character. I just hope he learns from this experience and uses sportsman like conduct next time. Well until then, I have a slew of advertisers that are ready to sponsor "Dayne the King of Pain!!!"
« anonymous wrote on Saturday, Aug 23 at 08:16 PM »
Demon got KO'd I told y'all Dane would beat him. Even if I expected it off the back.
« neddles wrote on Saturday, Aug 23 at 12:57 PM »
i am going with the demon in 2 with some serious GNP.
« ballofhate wrote on Friday, Aug 22 at 10:52 PM »
Oh boy, Dayne is gonna open a few eyes in this fight.......The kid is slick...Dustin is a bad dude...but Dayne is THE MAN!!! My pick is Dayne in the first round by submission!! (Dustin, i got nothin but love you...and Mrs.Demon!!!) See ya at the fights.
« Abstraktt wrote on Thursday, Aug 21 at 05:16 PM »
Have you guys seen Dayne's jits skills? Dustin is tough but I have a feeling he's getting subbed in this one.
« Randy Moore wrote on Thursday, Aug 21 at 03:06 PM »
I hope Dayne wasn,t home schooled in jiu-jitsu by your mom. The demons going to home school your ass on the mat! Archaeologist isnt a bad idea.
« silverspade wrote on Wednesday, Aug 20 at 02:30 PM »
Dustin is one of the toughest SOB's around and I think he TKO's Dayne first round. Tough first fight for Dayne!
« anonymous wrote on Wednesday, Aug 20 at 02:06 PM »
Dayne by flying triangle