| Name: | Adam Parkes |
| Nickname: | -- |
| Age: | 30 |
| Height: | 6'3" |
| Location: | United Kingdom |
Surprisingly, the United Kingdom has been absent so far on the 2012 World MMA Scouting Report. Considering the fact that it was one of the UFC's first international destinations, it's difficult to believe the region isn't producing quality talent in numbers by now. As a whole, however, the scene still lacks a higher quantity of quality trainers, and it still suffers from a lack of quality competition, leading many of the region's most promising prospects into a shark tank they aren't prepared to take on. In the case of England's Adam Parkes (3-0), however, there are always outliers to the norm.
The 30-year-old Wolfslair fighter has recorded three victories since going pro in May of 2010. He zapped Nikki Kent with a head kick in only nineteen seconds at Fight UK 1, then punched out Valentin Trifonov in one minute and forty-six seconds at OMMAC 5 a month later. He followed up those impressive performances with a technical knockout victory over Ben Whitehead at OMMAC 11 in November, roughly fifteen months after his win over Trifonov.
If I were to describe those bouts without any video evidence, "comical" is the word I'd use. Parkes annihilated his competition, completely overwhelming each and every opponent put in front of him. He nonchalantly strolled out to the center of the cage and kicked Nikki Kent head off. He nearly did the same to Paul Pestell in an amateur bout under the Knuckle Up MMA banner in 2011, except Pestell actually blocked the kick. Unfortunately, the force of the blow floored him, leaving him wide open for a beating that ended the bout.
Parkes' extensive background in Karate and Muay Thai are his obvious means to demoralizing and destroying his competition. He's an enormous striker with versatility, quickness, and strength in his attacks, battering opponent after opponent with a mix of kicks, punches, and knees that nobody has been able to withstand so far.
Defensively, he's shown a great sprawl and stifling defense to takedowns, usually countering with a strong ground and pound attack. From top control, Parkes possesses a basic understanding of how to control his opponents, enough to keep them at bay while he blasts through their defenses with heavy punches.
For fans hoping to see a brutish heavyweight killer in the Scouting Report ranks, Adam Parkes might be your guy. Concerns do, however, lie in the strength of his competition, but some of that criticism is deflated by the fact that he helps UFC veterans such as Cheick Kongo and Quinton 'Rampage' Jackson train. At the very least, he has a sense of what it takes to compete at the highest level from those sessions.
Parkes could become one of the best prospects on the 2012 World MMA Heavyweight Scouting Report, but he'll need to escape the clutches of England's poor heavyweight talent pool to prove it. As thin as the division is worldwide, the UFC may sign him before that happens. Parkes' next bout will take place at OMMAC 13 in March against Deividas Banaitis. Beyond that, look for Parkes to begin fielding offers for bigger fights internationally.
Footage of Adam Parkes after the jump...
| Flyweight | Bantamweight | Featherweight | Lightweight |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1 - #2 - #3 - #4 - #5 - #6 - #7 - #8 - #9 - #10 - |
#1 - Rony Mariano #2 - Aljamain Sterling #3 - Chris Holdsworth #4 - Josh Hill #5 - Fabiano Fernandes #6 - Claudio Ledesma #7 - Sirwan Kakai #8 - Kyoji Horiguchi #9 - Leandro Hygo #10 - Pedro Munhoz |
#1 - Hacran Dias #2 - Joey Gambino #3 - Brandon Bender #4 - Lance Palmer #5 - Jim Alers #6 - Anthony Gutierrez #7 - Max Holloway #8 - John Teixeira #9 - Cody Bollinger #10 - Bubba Jenkins |
#1 - Fabricio Guerreiro #2 - Alessandro Ferreira #3 - Adriano Martins #4 - Justin Salas #5 - Neilson Gomes #6 - Eduard Folayang #7 - Zorobabel Moreira #8 - Anton Kuivanen #9 - Jordan Rinaldi #10 - J.P. Vainikainen |
| Welterweight | Middleweight | Light Heavyweight | Heavyweight |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1 - Andrey Koreshkov #2 - Dhiego Lima #3 - Brandon Thatch #4 - Nordine Taleb #5 - Hernani Perpetuo #6 - Brock Jardine #7 - Alan Jouban #8 - Mohsen Bahari #9 - Andre Santos #10 - Stephen Thompson |
#1 - Antonio Braga Neto #2 - Marcelo Guimaraes #3 - Claudio Silva #4 - Bojan Velickovic #5 - Ildemar Alcantara #6 - Michal Materla #7 - Elvis Mutapcic #8 - Tor Troeng #9 - Jack Hermansson #10 - Tim Ruberg |
#1 - Wagner Prado #2 - Phelipe Lins #3 - Tom DeBlass #4 - Misha Cirkunov #5 - Kyle Cerminara #6 - Robert Drysdale #7 - Artur Alibulatov #8 - Thiago Perpetuo #9 - Steve Bosse #10 - Juha Saarinen |
#1 - #2 - #3 - #4 - #5 - #6 - #7 - Adam Parkes #8 - Richardson Moreira #9 - Jan Jorgensen 10 - David Oliva |

Adam Parkes vs. Ben Whitehead
Adam Parkes vs. Paul Pestell (Amateur)
Adam Parkes vs. Valerijs Trifonovs
Adam Parkes vs. Nikki Kent
0 recs | 13 comments
Nikki Kent…smh
Afrotikiman - January 24, 2012 via mobile
Dem titties…
GreyedOut - January 24, 2012
Why is this guy fighting amateur bouts after he’s already gone pro?
OwMyArm - January 24, 2012
I believe it was due to coming off an injury. tune-up fight, after a long, long layoff.
Leland Roling - January 24, 2012
The commentary on that Nikki Kent fight is really priceless
Announcer 1: Adam looks a little bit leaner than Nikki Kent. Do you think that’ll be a factor.
(Nikki Kent gets kicked in the head and drops like a fat stone)
Announcer 2: Yes.
Dave Strummer - January 24, 2012
British Heavyweight MMA is almost universally hilarious like that
smoogy2 - January 24, 2012
Yeah I think generally British Heavyweights are hard men so to speak, guys who probably don’t train super seriously but look big and mean so they get loads of fights, and therefore people want to see them fight. I await the day an elite HW BJJ artist comes from the UK from London or Birmingham
StevenGiles - January 25, 2012
So, a Braulio Estima or Roger Gracie trained HW, then?
KJ Gould - January 25, 2012
Well yeah maybe I should have said that. There don’t seem to be a whole lot of good HW grapplers, Phil de Fries is about the only one I can think of that’s fought in the UFC, maybe Ian Freeman fits the bill too. Most UK HWs seem to be brawlers, basically not good at anything
StevenGiles - January 25, 2012
Freeman slimmed down to Middleweight before he retired
He also trained extensively with Josh Barnett for his fight against Frank Mir. To get to the top, you’re still looking at training abroad or bringing guys over.
KJ Gould - January 25, 2012
Yeah I agree. Even finding training partners must be hard for a HW. I think Ross Pearson is a good example for other UK fighters, he did pretty well at Rough House but once his name was out there and he was pretty well known he went to the States
StevenGiles - January 25, 2012
For the most part, I agree. For Parkes, I think he’s an exception. But it doesn’t help him by fighting guys who fit your assessment, that’s for sure.
Leland Roling - January 25, 2012
Comical is definitely one word...
If I had to describe it in two words, “bloody massacre” would be another good description. The Ben Whitehead fight could be mistaken for a crime scene.
plmma - January 25, 2012
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