Background
Faaloloto was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, but moved to Long Beach, California as an infant. Soon after, Faaloloto moved back to Hawaii and was reunited with his mother and half-siblings.
Faaloloto was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, but moved to Long Beach, California as an infant. Soon after, Faaloloto moved back to Hawaii and was reunited with his mother and half-siblings.
After graduating high school, Faaloloto joined the United States Navy. He spent five years in the service, originally, based out of San Diego, California working as a bosun"s mate. He was then transferred to Hawaii to work as an admiral"s bodyguard.
He ended his time in the service in October 2008 to pursue a career in fighting.
Aside from the Navy and Mobile Marketing Association , Faaloloto is enrolled in Kapiolani Community College, pursuing a career as an English teacher. Background
At 15, Faaloloto began training martial arts at a local Kajukembo dojo in Hawaii under Paul Padilla.
Faaloloto did not start fighting until his time enlisted in the Navy, taking amateur bouts throughout San Diego. Early career
Faaloloto made his professional debut in 2009, fighting for Hawaii"s X-1 Mobile Marketing Association . He defeated Taylor Cochran via unanimous decision in a welterweight bout.
Six months later Faaloloto again fought for X-1 Mobile Marketing Association , defeating Justin Babbs via kimura only 49 seconds into round one.
World Extreme Cagefighting
In 2010, Faaloloto signed with the World Extreme Cagefighting, also known as the WEC. Faaloloto dropped down to the lightweight division to make his WEC debut against Anthony Njokuani at WEC 52 on November 11, 2010 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Faaloloto was defeated via TKO nearing the end of round 2. Ultimate Fighting Championship
In October 2010, World Extreme Cagefighting merged with the Ultimate Fighting Championship.
As part of the merger, all WEC fighters were transferred to the UFC. Faaloloto made his UFC debut on June 26, 2011 at UFC Live: Kongo versus
Barry against TUF 12 runner-up, Michael Johnson. Faaloloto was defeated via TKO in round one.
In his sophomore outing for the UFC, Faaloloto faced Terry Etim on November 5, 2011 at UFC 138. Faaloloto was defeated by Etim via guillotine choke 17 seconds into the first round.
After going 0-3, Faaloloto was subsequently released from the promotion.