Kennedy grew up the second son in a Christian family in Atascadero, California. He is of Irish descent.[7] As a youth, Kennedy's mother placed him in cooking and piano lessons. To offset her influence on him, Kennedy's father enrolled Tim and his brother in boxing lessons, wrestling teams, and Japanese ju-jitsu classes.[8]
In August 2009, Kennedy transitioned from active duty to the Texas Army National Guard, joined 19th Special Forces Group and served in the position of Special Forces Weapons Sergeant, and has continued to serve with the Texas Army National Guard since then.
On April 16, 2017, Kennedy announced his reenlistment into the U.S. Army Special Forces, praising the leadership of Secretary of Defense James Mattis and National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster.[13]
Mixed martial arts career
Early career
Kennedy began training at Dokan School of Martial Arts in Atascadero, California under Terry Kelly and Barry Smith. In 1999, Kennedy began training with Chuck Liddell, Jake Shields, Gan McGee, and John Hackleman at The Pit in San Luis Obispo, and made his debut in 2001.[14] In 2003 he entered and won a one-night tournament at Extreme Challenge 50. Kennedy only fought once in 2006. He then fought for the now defunct International Fight League in 2007, and did not fight in 2008 due to Army deployments overseas. During this time he wrote a three part series of "Letters from a Foreign Land" that chronicled his time in combat.[15][16][17]
Since his move to Austin, Texas, Kennedy has trained at the Competitive Training Center and with BJJ black belt Phil Cardella at the Relson Gracie Jiu-Jitsu Austin Association.[19] He received his black belt under Paulo Brandao and Royler Gracie at Gracie Humaita Austin.
In January 2013, the Strikeforce organization was closed by its parent company Zuffa. A list of fighters scheduled to be brought over to the Ultimate Fighting Championship was released in mid-January and Kennedy was one of the fighters listed.[23]
Kennedy faced Roger Gracie on July 6, 2013, at UFC 162, he defeated Gracie via unanimous decision after defending Gracie's submission attempts and standing up with Gracie, out striking him.[24]
Kennedy was expected to face Lyoto Machida on November 6, 2013, at UFC Fight For The Troops 3.[25] However, Machida was pulled from the bout in favor of a matchup with Mark Muñoz on October 26, 2013, at UFC Fight Night 30, after Muñoz's original opponent, Michael Bisping was forced out of their bout with an injury.[26] Kennedy instead faced Rafael Natal in the event headliner.[27] He won the fight via knockout in the first round. The win also earned him his first Knockout of the Night bonus award.[28]
Kennedy faced Yoel Romero on September 27, 2014, at UFC 178.[31] He lost the fight via a 'technical knockout' (TKO) in the third round. Kennedy nearly finished Romero in the final seconds of the second round after hooking his fingers in Romero's gloves but Romero was saved by the bell. Yoel Romero, his cornermen, the referee and the UFC cutman have all been criticized for their actions resulting in a 28-second delay after the scheduled start for the third round.[32] Romero later responded to the controversy, stating that Kennedy illegally held his glove during the attack which prevented Romero from being able to block the punches that rocked him.[33] Despite the loss, Kennedy earned a Fight of the Night bonus award.[34]
After two years away from the sport, Kennedy was expected to face Rashad Evans on November 12, 2016, at UFC 205, the first UFC card at Madison Square Garden.[35] However, on November 8, Evans was pulled from the fight after an undisclosed irregularity was found during his pre-fight medical exam. In turn, Kennedy was removed from the card as well.[36][37] The bout was rescheduled to take place a month later at UFC 206.[38] Once again, Evans was unable to obtain medical clearance to compete on the card and was pulled from the bout on November 21.[39] Kennedy faced Kelvin Gastelum.[40] He lost the fight via TKO in the third round.[41]
On January 17, 2017, Kennedy released a social media statement announcing his retirement from MMA.[42] In the post he admitted that he no longer desired to fight professionally and thanked those closest to him for their support. He also thanked the US Army, claiming that there was 'no greater moment' than his victory in the main event of UFC: Fight for the Troops 3.[43]
Kennedy is a co-owner of Ranger Up, a military-based clothing company. He is also the owner and CEO of Sheepdog Response, a tactical training and self-defense company.[46][47] He is a co-founder and board member of Save Our Allies, an organization aiming to rescue and help Americans and their allies in conflict regions around the world.[48]
In 2021, Kennedy opened a charter school in Austin, Texas called Apogee Cedar Park. The school is built off the Acton Academy model which emphasizes student-led learning through Socratic discussion and real world projects.[49][50] The school is currently open for preK through 6th grade, with plans to expand to middle school children in fall of 2024.[51]
Film and television career
Kennedy's first major host role was part of the History Channel television series Hunting Hitler, which explores alternative theories about Adolf Hitler's death. He most recently hosted the show on Discovery Channel Hard to Kill, in which he attempted to explore a day in the life of the world's most dangerous occupations. He helped co-produce the TV documentary Warriors in 2014 and produced Not a War Story in 2017; he also produced and hosted Iron Dragon TV. He's made appearances on Deadliest Warrior and The Ultimate Soldier Challenge.[52]
Kennedy portrayed himself in the Indie film Range 15. He also played Mario and was a producer in the short thriller Slaves. He's also done several military advisor roles & stunt coordinator positions notably with Range 15 as well as works on Steve-O: Guilty as Charged, and short film Next to You.[53]
Kennedy, T., & Palmisciano, N. (2022). Scars and Stripes: An Unapologetically American Story of Fighting the Taliban, UFC Warriors, and Myself. Atria Books.[55]
^Kennedy, Tim; Palmisciano, Nick (2022). Scars and stripes : an unapologetically American story of fighting the Taliban, UFC warriors, and myself (1st ed.). New York. ISBN978-1-9821-9091-0. OCLC1298711570.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)