Dan Magnus


Daniel Magnus is an American martial artist, athletic trainer, celebrity bodyguard, fugitive recovery specialist and businessman. He is a two-time world kickboxing champion and is best known for being the only person to ever defend his championship title after open-heart surgery. He is an 8th-degree Black Belt and has owned and operated five Martial Arts schools. He is a veteran of WWE and WCW and also started his own professional wrestling promotion, Central Wrestling Organization, in Denver, Colorado.

Early Life

Dan Magnus was born in New York, New York, the son of Everett and Elizabeth Magnus.
He is the oldest of 3 children: Daniel, Connie and Lee. He attended George Washington High School in New York, New York and graduated from the Class of 1974.
As a teenager, Magnus was a competitive roller skater from 1973 to 1976. He won third-place for Junior Men Figures at the 1974 National Roller Skating Championships.

Early Career

After finishing his studies at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Police Science, Magnus became a New York City police officer. It was during this time that Magnus started training full-contact fighting with future world karate champion Jeff Smith.. This training helped him as he moved onto being a contract fugitive recovery specialist. Magnus concurrently competed, owned his own martial arts schools and also trained police officers. During his time in fugitive recovery and private bounty hunting, he had been shot and stabbed many times while on duty. In 1983, he was hit by a car during a chase which caused him to fall over a 4-foot retaining wall, breaking his ribs, which pierced his heart, and subsequently severing his aortic valve.

Kickboxing And Coming Back From Heart Surgery

Magnus began his martial arts training in 1969, learning from big names in the martial arts field such as Peter Urban, Jeff Smith, Rodney Batiste and Bill "Superfoot" Wallace. He won 35 of his 45 full-contact fights and became the United States light-middleweight full-contact karate champion in 1982 and the #3 contender in the world.
Shortly after winning the championship title in 1982, Magnus was chasing a fugitive and was hit by a car which sent him tumbling over a 4-foot retaining wall. In April 1983, Magnus was preparing for a world title bout in Denver against Tom Dalton when doctors detected a heart murmur an hour before the match. The doctors did not allow him to fight, even after he protested and choked the doctor. Despite threatening everyone, there was no title bout and the world championship title was given to someone else.
The doctors discovered that he was bleeding internally. The accident from the previous year had broken his ribs which punctured his heart and tore his aortic valve. After undergoing surgery, about a quarter of his heart was now made of metal. In 1984, the Professional Karate Association vacated his US championship title because of a policy where if a fighter is injured and cannot defend their title within that year, they are stripped of their title. At the same time, his wife filed for divorce, he lost his house, lost his dog and his finances were dwindling. Seven different cardiologists had also told him that he would never fight again. He set out to prove them wrong and trained to regain his strength back, walking out of the hospital 10 days later. He fought the following year--one year to the day of the surgery--and defeated Tom Dalton in Atlantic City and gained back his title in a unanimous judges' decision. After seeing how he got back into shape, two of the doctors started to take martial arts lessons from him.
As of 2020, Magnus is still the only person on the planet to come back to competition from open heart surgery and win a fight.

Life After Kickboxing

10 years after his first heart surgery, the valve ripped again in June 1994. In the original procedure, the doctors were hoping to avoid replacing the heart valve so they stitched it back together but now there was irreparable damage so it was replace with a mechanical valve. After being given a 50/50 chance of survival, Dan Magnus walked out of the hospital 4 days later.
In 1997, Magnus, along with Ryan Katz, co-founded Central Wrestling Organization in Colorado. To coincide, Magnus opened Slam City Wrestling School, the first pro-wrestling training school in Colorado. Magnus wasn't looking for professional wrestlers for the wrestling school. He just wanted people who wanted to "try out their dreams." Beyond expectation, Slam City's popularity exploded.
Since the early 2010s, Magnus has periodically offered self-defense trainings around the country. Originally named "R.E.A.C.T. Before You A.C.T.," he renamed the personal protection seminars "Victim No More." He also wrote a book in 2014 on self defense, The M.A.G.N.U.S. Method: R.E.A.C.T. B 4 U A.C.T. He also contributed to a book for students heading off to college with a bonus chapter: "How to Keep Your Teen Safe on Campus."
In 2018, Magnus underwent another heart surgery but, like the previous two times, bounced back after doctors had given him dim diagnoses.
In 2019, Magnus was nominated for a Los Angeles Broadway World Award for Best Choreography for "Afterglow: 80s Musical Experience," a musical play based on the real-life stories of the original Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling. He also acted in the role of "Referee" in the show.

Trainees

Dan Magnus has trained many martial artists over the years.
Brandon Magnus is Dan Magnus' son from his second marriage. Born in 1989, he is an award-winning photographer who has worked for UFC, San Jose Sharks ice hockey team, Ronda Rousey and Conor McGregor, among many other stars and sports organizations.
After two marriages and divorces, Magnus has partnered with Tracee Meltzer since 2013.