Peter Graham (fighter)

Peter Graham (born 5 August 1975) is an Australian karateka, kickboxer, boxer and mixed martial artist.

Peter Graham
Graham at K-1 World GP 2007 in Hong Kong press conference
Born (1975-08-05) 5 August 1975 (age 48)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Other namesThe Chief
Height6 ft 2 in (188 cm)
Weight247 lb (112 kg; 17 st 9 lb)
DivisionHeavyweight
Reach73 in (185 cm)
StyleKyokushin, Kickboxing
StanceOrthodox
Fighting out ofTokyo, Japan
TeamRedfern Gym
Spirit Gym
Boxing Works
IMC
Trainer
  • Larry Papadopoulos (BJJ MMA)
  • Alex Tui
  • Nicholas Pettas (K1 Kickboxing Thai boxing)
  • Paul Grech (Boxing)
  • Graham Porter
  • Paul Zadro (Kempo karate)
RankFirst degree black belt in Kyokushin Karate[citation needed]
Second degree black belt in Kempo Karate[citation needed]
Blue belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu[1]
Orange belt in Judo
Years active
Professional boxing record
Total15
Wins11
By knockout5
Losses3
By knockout1
Draws1
Kickboxing record
Total74
Wins59
By knockout32
Losses14
Draws1
Mixed martial arts record
Total21
Wins11
By knockout10
By decision1
Losses10
By submission8
By decision2
Other information
SpouseSilvia dos Santos
Boxing record from BoxRec
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog
Last updated on: 29 May 2014

Background edit

Originally from North Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, Graham began training in Kyokushin Karate at the age of 18. Graham quickly demonstrated his talents, winning his first tournament in an under yellow belt division about half a year later. In 1999 at the age of 23, Graham won the Amateur Australian and New Zealand Open Weight Championships and soon also became the South Pacific Champion. Graham then moved to Ikebukuro in Tokyo, Japan to further hone his skills and live in a dojo. However, Graham only completed three months of this rigorous training before having to return to Australia after his brother Matthew died of a heroin overdose. Graham would earn his black belt in only five years.[1]

Kickboxing career edit

Graham began kickboxing and boxing at the age of 21 and before turning professional he captured the World Kickboxing Federation World Amateur Heavyweight Championship from New Zealand's Shane Wijohn, finishing his amateur career undefeated (17–0). Graham turned professional in 2000 and attained instant success, defeating Ben Hamilton in K-1 Oceania Revenge by TKO and then Clay Aumitagi.

On 19 November 2000 he became the first Australian to go ten rounds with the legendary Stan "The Man" Longinidis.[2]

In 2001 he defeated Mark Hunt, the K-1 World GP Champion of the year. He won his second WKBF Super Heavyweight title the next year, and won the Kings of Oceania 2004 championship after defeating his long-term rival Jason Suttie.[2]

In 2006, Graham had a feud with Badr Hari in K-1 World Grand Prix 2006 in Auckland. Hari mocked Graham as a has-been, and Hari as the future. A brawl at the press conference instigated by Hari kissing Graham hyped up their match.[3] The real match was won by Peter, who won by knockout via his trademark "Rolling Thunder" spinning kick, which broke Hari's jaw.[4] Hari was sidelined for almost a year.

On 31 December 2006 at K-1 PREMIUM 2006 Dynamite!!, Graham fought against the four time K-1 heavyweight champion, Dutch man from the Seidokaikan dojo Semmy Schilt in a 5-round match and lost by unanimous decision (3–0).[5]

On 5 August 2007, Graham and Hari met for a revenge fight in K-1 World GP 2007 in Hong Kong as one of the three super bouts of the event, held in Hong Kong for the very first time. This time, Hari was more alert to the threat of a Rolling Thunder by Graham. Both fighters could not show their top performances as Hari won the fight by points. Graham tried the Rolling Thunder Kick twice in the last moments of the fight, but could not connect with Hari.[6]

In a rematch with Doug Viney at Kings of Kombat in Keysborough, Victoria on 29 August 2010, Graham won via TKO in the fifth round to claim the ISKA World Heavyweight Championship.[7] Graham lost the title to Paul Slowinski, in the third fight between them, when he lost by a third-round KO at King of Kombat 4 on 20 August 2011.[8]

He has returned to kickboxing to fight Prince Ali at HEAT 24 in Nagoya, Japan on 7 October 2012,[9] winning the fight via decision.

He is competed in a Heavyweight Tournament at GFC Series 1 in Dubai on 29 May 2014, defeating Arnold Oborotov via an extension round majority decision in the semi-finals before losing to Badr Hari by first-round TKO in the final.[10][11]

Mixed martial arts career edit

After training with PRIDE veteran Akira Shoji,[4] Peter made his MMA debut in World Victory Road on 5 March 2008 against the seasoned Japanese MMA fighter Kazuyuki Fujita, and was defeated by submission in the first round.[12] Graham undeterred by the loss returned to for the World Victory Road Presents: Sengoku 4, where he again he fought valiantly in a much closer match against French grappler Moise Rimbon but Graham was submitted early in the second round.

Over the course of the following two years Graham proceed to hone his BJJ skills in Brazil, earning a blue belt, and continued to fight at elite level matches around the globe matched against the likes of Rolles Gracie Jr. In July 2010 Graham defeated American K-1 Champion Carter Williams.

On 8 December 2010, Graham defeated Alexander Emelianenko by TKO via leg kicks halfway through the second round.[13] This marks Graham's biggest win in MMA to date.

In 2012, Graham defeated Konstantin Gluhov twice by KO & TKO.

Following the second Gluhov fight, he returned home to fight at Australian Fighting Championship (AFC) 4, defeating Donnie Lester by TKO 1:50 of Round 1, in December 2012.[14]

Graham was scheduled to fight upcoming MMM star Tai Tuivasa in Combat8 at C8:03,[15] a Mixed Rules Australian MMA organization. Graham defeated Tai Tuivasa[16][17] by TKO in the second round in a back and forth fight, making that his eighth KO/TKO MMA win so far.[18]

Graham Beat Salimgirey Rasulov by TKO due to injury of Rasulov's broken arm in Russia on 2 June.

Bellator MMA edit

He signed with Bellator MMA in July 2013.[19] He debuted at Bellator 104 on 18 October 2013 when he faced Eric Prindle. He won the fight by unanimous decision which marks the first MMA fight Graham had that went the distance.

In late October, Graham was announced as the injury replacement in the Bellator Season Nine Heavyweight Tournament. He faced Cheick Kongo on 8 November 2013 at Bellator 107. He lost the fight via unanimous decision.

On 7 March 2014, Graham faced Mighty Mo in the Bellator Season Ten Heavyweight Tournament at Bellator 111. Despite winning the first 2 rounds, Graham would lose via submission in the third round.[20]

Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki edit

After going 1–2 in Bellator MMA, Graham returned to MMA competition in Poland at KSW 28 versus Marcin Rózalski on 4 October 2014.[21] He won via TKO due to a leg injury in the second round. Graham next faced Karol Bedorf at KSW 31 on May 23, 2015. He lost the fight via unanimous decision.[22] Graham faced Mariusz Pudzianowski at KSW 32: Road to Wembley on Halloween night 2015. Held at the Wembley Arena in London, the event was the first produced by KSW to take place outside of Poland. Graham won the fight via TKO in the second round.[23]

Fight Nights Global edit

On June 17, 2016, Graham faced Vitaly Minakov at Fight Nights Global 50: Fedor vs. Maldonado. He lost the bout via armbar submission at just over a minute into the first round.[24]

Championships and achievements edit

Boxing edit

Karate edit

  • South Pacific Karate Champion
  • 1999 Australian Kyokushin Openweight Champion
  • 1999 New Zealand Kyokushin Openweight Champion

Kickboxing edit

Mixed martial arts edit

Personal life edit

Peter Graham grew up in Sydney NSW Australia he was a street kid that lived in youth refuges till he was 20.[citation needed] Starting karate at 18, in just two short years and with the help from this karate dojo and his own savings, Graham moved to Tokyo that same year, to study Kyokushin as an elite karate prospect. After the tragic heroin overdose of his older brother he returned to Australia to bury him and start his journey back to Japan and to K1 kickboxing greatest heights. Five years later he won the amateur kickboxing world titles undefeated and turning pro he returned to Japan to fight K1 and eventually to married a Brazilian woman living in Tokyo on 22 June 2008. He got a tattoo on his right arm reading her name, "Silvia".[29] They have two daughters together, and in 2010, Graham appeared on the TV program "Find My Family" where he was re-united with his younger brother who he had lost contact with and hadn't seen in 20 years. In 2012 he opened up his own full-time martial arts and combat sports school Prospect IMC at Prospect New South Wales, Australia.[citation needed]

Mixed martial arts record edit

Professional record breakdown
21 matches 11 wins 10 losses
By knockout 10 0
By submission 0 8
By decision 1 2
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 11–10 Vitaly Minakov Submission (armbar) Fight Nights Global 50: Fedor vs. Maldonado June 17, 2016 1 1:01 St. Petersburg, Russia
Win 11–9 Mariusz Pudzianowski TKO (punches and elbows) KSW 32: Road to Wembley 31 October 2015 2 2:00 London, England
Loss 10–9 Karol Bedorf Decision (unanimous) KSW 31: Materla vs. Drwal 23 May 2015 3 5:00 Gdańsk, Poland
Loss 10–8 Denis Goltsov Submission (kimura) Tech-Krep FC - Ermak Prime Challenge 3 April 2015 2 3:23 Krasnodar, Russia
Win 10–7 Marcin Różalski TKO (Knee Injury) KSW 28: Fighters Den 4 October 2014 2 0:43 Szczecin, Poland
Loss 9–7 Mighty Mo Submission (arm-triangle choke) Bellator 111 7 March 2014 3 2:31 Thackerville, Oklahoma, United States Bellator Season 10 Heavyweight Tournament Quarterfinal
Loss 9–6 Cheick Kongo Decision (unanimous) Bellator 107 8 November 2013 3 5:00 Thackerville, Oklahoma, United States Bellator Season 9 Heavyweight Tournament Final
Win 9–5 Eric Prindle Decision (unanimous) Bellator 104 18 October 2013 3 5:00 Cedar Rapids, Iowa, United States
Win 8–5 Salimgirey Rasulov TKO (injury) K-1 Global MMA 2 June 2013 2 1:00 Krasnodar Krai, Russia
Win 7–5 Donnie Lester TKO (corner stoppage) AFC 4 7 December 2012 1 1:50 Melbourne, Australia
Win 6–5 Konstantin Gluhov TKO (punches) Draka 11 24 November 2012 1 3:20 Khabarovsk, Russia
Win 5–5 Konstantin Gluhov KO (punch) Governor's Cup 2012 11 February 2012 1 2:47 Khabarovsk, Russia
Win 4–5 Alexander Emelianenko TKO (leg kicks) Draka 5 18 December 2010 2 2:59 Khabarovsk, Russia Special rules allowing :30 on the ground.
Win 3–5 Yusuke Kawaguchi TKO (elbows) Xtreme MMA 3 5 November 2010 1 N/A Sydney, Australia
Win 2–5 Carter Williams TKO (strikes) Xtreme MMA 2 31 July 2010 1 4:10 Sydney, Australia
Loss 1–5 Jim York Submission (rear naked choke) Impact FC 2 18 July 2010 1 3:44 Sydney, Australia
Loss 1–4 Dion Staring Submission (armbar) Fury 1: Clash of the Titans 21 May 2010 1 N/A Macau, China
Win 1–3 Felise Leniu TKO (punches) RPA: Return of the Chief 18 April 2010 1 N/A Keysborough, Australia
Loss 0–3 Rolles Gracie Submission (arm-triangle choke) Art of War 14 26 September 2009 1 1:43 Macau, China
Loss 0–2 Moise Rimbon Submission (rear naked choke) World Victory Road Presents: Sengoku 4 24 August 2008 2 0:42 Saitama, Saitama, Japan
Loss 0–1 Kazuyuki Fujita Submission (north-south choke) World Victory Road Presents: Sengoku First Battle 5 March 2008 1 1:23 Tokyo, Japan

[30]

MMA mixed rules record edit

Professional record breakdown
1 match 1 win 0 losses
By knockout 1 0
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Win 1–0 Tai Tuivasa TKO (punches) Combat8:03[17] 27 April 2013 2 2:55 Big Top Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Kickboxing record edit

59 Wins (31 (T)KO's, 25 Decisions), 14 Losses
Date Result Opponent Event Method Round Time
13 April 2018 Loss   Marcin Różalski DSF Kickboxing Challenge 14 TKO
29 May 2014 Loss   Badr Hari GFC Fight Series 1 - Heavyweight Tournament, Final, Dubai, UAE TKO (punches) 1 1:33
29 May 2014 Win   Arnold Oborotov GFC Fight Series 1 - Heavyweight Tournament, Semi Finals, Dubai, UAE Extension round decision (majority) 4 3:00
23 March 2013 Win   Erik Nosa Capital Punishment 7, Canberra, Australia KO (right low kick) 1 1:43
7 October 2012 Win   Prince Ali HEAT 24, Nagoya, Japan Decision 3 3:00
20 August 2011 Loss   Paul Slowinski Kings of Kombat 4, Keysborough, Australia, I.S.K.A. Heavyweight World Title KO 3
2 April 2011 Win   Andre Meunier Kings of Combat 3, Keysborough, Australia TKO (low kicks and punches) 3
29 August 2010 Win   Doug Viney Kings of Combat, Keysborough, Australia, I.S.K.A. Heavyweight World Title TKO (leg kicks) 5
5 August 2007 Loss   Badr Hari K-1 World Grand Prix 2007 in Hong Kong Decision (unanimous) 3 3:00
28 April 2006 Win   Jerrel Venetiaan K-1 World Grand Prix 2007 in Hawaii, USA Decision (unanimous) 3 3:00
31 December 2006 Loss   Semmy Schilt K-1 Premium 2006 Dynamite!!, Japan Decision (unanimous) 5 3:00
18 November 2006 Loss   Doug Viney K-1 Kings of Oceania 2006 Round 3, New Zealand Decision 3 3:00
11 November 2006 Win   Yuki Kamikaze Macau X-plosion, Macau TKO (low kicks) 2
16 September 2006 Win   Andrew Peck K-1 Kings of Oceania 2006 Round 2, New Zealand TKO (low kicks) 2
18 August 2006 Win   Andrei Malchanau X-plosion 13, Sydney, Australia TKO (referee stoppage) 1
24 June 2006 Win   Matt Samoa K-1 Kings of Oceania 2006 Round 1, New Zealand KO (right hook) 1 2:16
5 March 2006 Loss   Paul Slowinski K-1 World Grand Prix 2006 in Auckland, New Zealand TKO (low kicks) 2 1:42
5 March 2006 Win   Badr Hari K-1 World Grand Prix 2006 in Auckland, New Zealand KO (rolling thunder) 3 2:54
10 December 2005 Win   Ricardo van den Bos K-1 Kings of Oceania 2005 Round 3, Australia KO (punches) 1 1:19
8 October 2005 Win   Jay Hepi K-1 Kings of Oceania 2005 Round 2, New Zealand Decision 3 3:00
30 July 2005 Win   Rony Sefo K-1 Kings of Oceania 2005 Round 1, New Zealand Decision (unanimous) 3 3:00
30 April 2005 Win   Alexey Ignashov K-1 Battle of Anzacs II, New Zealand 2nd Ext. R Decision 5 3:00
5 November 2004 Loss   Jason Suttie K-1 Oceania MAX 2004, New Zealand Decision (unanimous) 3 3:00
16 July 2004 Win   Jason Suttie Kings of Oceania 2004, New Zealand Decision (unanimous) 3 3:00
16 July 2004 Win   Paul Slowinski Kings of Oceania 2004, New Zealand Decision (unanimous) 3 3:00
16 July 2004 Win   Hiriwa Te-Rangi Kings of Oceania 2004, New Zealand KO (rolling thunder) 1 1:59
6 March 2004 Loss   Xhavit Bajrami Kings of the Ring, Pristina, Kosovo, Serbia Decision 5 3:00
6 December 2003 Loss   Remy Bonjasky K-1 World Grand Prix 2003, Japan TKO (referee stoppage) 1 2:58
11 October 2003 Win   Sam Greco K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 Final Elimination, Japan TKO (leg injury) 2 0:30
27 July 2003 Win   Jason Suttie K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 in Melbourne, Australia Decision (unanimous) 3 3:00
27 July 2003 Win   Mitch O'Hello K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 in Melbourne, Australia Ext.R TKO (punch) 4 0:47
27 July 2003 Win   Josip Bodrozic K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 in Melbourne, Australia Decision 3 3:00
27 April 2003 Win   Chris Chrispoulides License to Thrill, Australia Decision 3 3:00
24 April 2003 Win   Mike Angove Fights in Dunedin, New Zealand TKO (knees) 2 0:55
31 August 2002 Win   Hiriwa Te-Rangi WKBF World Super Heavyweight Title, Dunedin, NZ Decision 5 3:00
12 July 2002 Loss   Jason Suttie KB4 Fightnight, Sydney, Australia Decision 3 3:00
12 July 2002 Win   Chris Chrispoulides KB4 Fightnight, Sydney, Australia Decision 3 3:00
1 September 2001 Draw   Jason Suttie JNI Promotions, Star City, Australia Draw 3 3:00
21 July 2001 Win   Mark Hunt K-1 New Zealand Grand Prix 2001 Decision 5 3:00
29 April 2001 Loss   Adam Watt K-1 World Grand Prix 2001 in Osaka, Japan KO (left punch) 2 1:29
29 April 2001 Win   Jan Nortje K-1 World Grand Prix 2001 in Osaka, Japan Ext. R Decision 4 3:00
7 April 2001 Win   Fadi Hadara Australia vs USA, Sydney, Australia Decision 3 3:00
24 February 2001 Loss   Mark Hunt K-1 World Grand Prix 2001 Preliminary Melbourne, Australia KO (right uppercut) 3 2:10
24 February 2001 Win   Rony Sefo K-1 World Grand Prix 2001 Preliminary Melbourne, Australia Decision 3 3:00
24 February 2001 Win   Phil Fagan K-1 World Grand Prix 2001 Preliminary Melbourne, Australia TKO (2 knockdowns) 2
19 November 2000 Loss   Stan Longinidis K-1 Oceania Star Wars 2000, Australia Decision (unanimous) 10 2:00
10 September 2000 Win   Gurkan Ozkan K-1 Oceania Dream, Australia Ext.R TKO (3 knockdowns) 4
24 June 2000 Win   Clay Aumitagi Bradford's Show, Sydney, Australia Decision 3 3:00
14 May 2000 Win   Ben Hamilton K-1 Revenge Oceania, Australia TKO (doctor stoppage) 2
8 April 2000 Win   Shane Wijohn Bound for Glory, NSW, Australia TKO (leg kicks and punches) 1

Professional boxing record edit

11 Wins (6 TKOs), 3 Losses.
Date Result Opponent Event Method Round Note
27 February 2016 Win   Julius Long Darwin Convention Centre, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia TD 5 Wins vacant World Boxing Foundation World heavyweight title
28 November 2015 Win   Alphonce Mchumiatumbo Suzhou Sports Center, Suzhou, China TKO 4 Wins the WBO Asia Pacific heavyweight title
11 July 2015 Win   Ben Edwards Hellenic Club, Woden, Australian Capital Territory, Australia SD 10 Wins the Australian heavyweight title
22 February 2013 Win   David Levi Entertainment Centre, Hurstville, New South Wales, Australia TKO 6 Defended the New South Wales State heavyweight title
19 May 2012 Win   George Poulivaati Croatian Club, Punchbowl, New South Wales, Australia Decision 5 Won the New South Wales State heavyweight title
15 November 2002 Win   Pat Kennedy Club Nova, Newcastle, NSW, Australia TKO (punch to the body) 5
9 August 2002 Win   Pat Kennedy Club Nova, Newcastle, NSW, Australia Decision 6
10 May 2002 Win   Joseph Semeatu Mayfield Ex Services Club, Newcastle, NSW, Australia KO (punches) 1
1 April 2002 Draw   Phil Gregory Sports Complex, Carrara (Gold Coast), Queensland, Australia Draw 8
4 March 2002 Win   Paul Withers Entertainment Centre, Townsville, Queensland, Australia KO (right hook) 6
15 February 2002 Win   Andrew Fepuileai Woonona Bulli RSL Club, Wollongong, NSW, Australia Decision (split) 4
12 October 2001 Win   Glen Sewell Sydney, NSW, Australia Decision 4
28 September 2001 Loss   Simon Paterson The Octagon, Sydney, NSW, Australia Decision (majority) 4
21 July 2000 Loss   Caine Melbourne Hornsby RSL Club, Sydney, NSW, Australia KO (punches) 2
23 April 2000 Loss   Caine Melbourne Wyong Leagues Club, Wyong, NSW, Australia Decision 4

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Rolling Thunder: Peter Graham". Theme Park at its Darkest. 13 September 2010.
  2. ^ a b Profile of Peter Graham Archived 19 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Sengoku Raiden Championship (in Japanese)
  3. ^ "As we all expected the brawler causes a brawl!! Badr Hari pounces on Graham"[permanent dead link], 4 March 2006, K-1 (in Japanese)
  4. ^ a b "Sengoku : 5 March, Fujita's opponent will be Peter Graham, who broke Badr Hari's jaw" Archived 5 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine, 21 February 2008, Livedoor Sports (in Japanese)
  5. ^ "K-1 PREMIUM 2006 Dynamite!! Round 7 : Semmy Schilt vs. Peter Graham" Archived 24 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 31 December 2006, Sportsnavi – Yahoo! Japan (in Japanese)
  6. ^ "Fujimoto Defends K-1 Asia GP Title in Hong Kong". K-1 Official Website. 8 June 2007. Retrieved 11 November 2007.
  7. ^ "Peter Graham Overcomes Doug Vinney". Iskaworldhq.com. 6 October 2010. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  8. ^ Kings of Kombat 4 - Slowinski wins by KO prokick.com (21 August 2011)
  9. ^ Dave Walsh. "Japanese Kickboxing Scene: October Preview". LiverKick.com.
  10. ^ Dave Walsh. "Badr Hari Wins Big in Dubai, Aerts and Cooper Draw". LiverKick.com. Archived from the original on 15 March 2016.
  11. ^ "Global FC 3 Live Results - Ergebnisse - Stefan Leko, Badr Hari & Peter Aerts". Fighterheart.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  12. ^ "Peter "The Chief" Graham MMA Stats, Pictures, News, Videos, Biography". Sherdog.com. 5 August 1975. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  13. ^ Platinum Arena, Khabarovsk, Khabarovsk Krai, Russia (18 December 2010). "Draka - Governor's Cup 2010". Sherdog.com. Retrieved 11 April 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ "AFC 4 Results: Soa Palalei Finishes McCorkle; Continues Push For UFC Contract". Mmaweekly.com. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  15. ^ "- YouTube". YouTube. [dead link]
  16. ^ "Peter Graham proves too good for Tai Tuivasa". 28 April 2013.
  17. ^ a b "- YouTube". YouTube.
  18. ^ "Live results and blog: Sydney's Combat 8 via epicentre.tv | MMA Kanvas". Archived from the original on 15 October 2014. Retrieved 10 November 2014.
  19. ^ "Australian Kickboxing Icon Peter Graham Signs with Bellator FC | FSA - FightSport Asia". Archived from the original on 26 July 2013. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  20. ^ "Bellator 111 results: Dantas vs. Leone". Mmafighting.com. 7 March 2014.
  21. ^ "Peter Graham-Marcin Rozalski Heavyweight Bout Completes KSW 28 Lineup". Sherdog.com. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  22. ^ "Karol Bedorf vs. Peter Graham, KSW 31". www.tapology.com. 16 November 2021.
  23. ^ "Graham vs Pudzianowski KSW 32". www.sherdog.com. 16 November 2021.
  24. ^ "Vitaly Minakov vs. Peter Graham". www.tapology.com. 16 November 2021.
  25. ^ "BoxRec Australian Heavyweight Title". Boxrec.com. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  26. ^ "BoxRec Australia - New South Wales State Heavyweight Title". Boxrec.com. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  27. ^ "BoxRec World Boxing Foundation World Heavyweight Title". Boxrec.com. 5 August 1975. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  28. ^ "BoxRec WBO Asia Pacific Heavyweight Title". Boxrec.com. 5 August 1975. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  29. ^ "Sengoku : Peter Graham, let's get the first MMA victory with a newlywed power" Archived 5 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine, 26 June 2008, Livedoor Sports (in Japanese)
  30. ^ Sherdog.com. "Peter". Sherdog. Retrieved 20 December 2018.

External links edit

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Australian heavyweight Championship Succeeded by