Family is, and always has been, first and foremost for me. I have two
daughters and two step-sons with my wife of more than eleven years,
Stacy. When I first left Texas to train in California, my family was
the hardest thing to leave, but they gave me the motivation to keep
working and they continue to drive me to be my best. The reason I am a
professional fighter is to make my parents proud and to leave a legacy
for my children.
The American Dream is often been spoken about as a vehicle that
motivates people to achieve success. For the last five years, Paul
Buentello has been living his version of the dream by steadily climbing
up mixed martial arts' highly competitive heavyweight ladder.
Buentello's story is reminiscent of others who have made life-altering
sacrifices in order to reach their goals. The lack of a sophisticated
training center anywhere near his home in Amarillo, Texas left the
aspiring champion short of training partners and proper coaching
thirteen years ago when he initially tackled the fight world by
competing in Pancration style bouts.
In
his first official mixed martial arts contest, a single-elimination
format tournament sanctioned by the International Fighting Championship
(IFC), Buentello reached the championship round before losing to 6 foot
10 inch Gan "The Giant" McGee. Following his technical knockout victory
over Larry Parker in his next start for the IFC, Buentello suffered a
downward spiral, suffering three straight defeats. It was shortly after
the third loss that the heavyweight fighter realized he would have to
relocate to a place where he could prepare properly for future fights
or risk the likelihood of being forced into an early retirement.
Refusing
to abandon his career goals, Buentello ventured to San Jose,
California, the home of celebrated mixed martial arts training center,
American Kickboxing Academy (AKA). The commitment required him to leave
a steady contracting job as well as his family, including a three year
old daughter.
Since being
taken under the wing of AKA head trainer, "Crazy" Bob Cook, Buentello
has reaped a substantial payoff from his risky transition. After
scoring a technical knockout win by way of strikes in his first start
under Cook's supervision, Buentello was signed to a three-fight
contract with King Of The Cage. The stint with the prominent west coast
promotion saw Buentello score a thunderous, second round knockout of
highly touted Mike "Mak" Kyle and, later, avenge a previous defeat he
had sustained at the hands of Bobby Hoffman when he forced Hoffman into
submission on November 2, 2003.
Buentello's
success with King Of The Cage caught the attention of the UFC, In his
debut in the UFC, he had an impressive win over Justin Eilers with a KO
in 3:34 of the first round for his debut fight in UFC 51: Super
Saturday on February 2, 2005. His next fight was against UFC veteran
Kevin "The Shaman" Jordan