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Matt Hughes (fighter)

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Matt Hughes
Born (1973-10-13) October 13, 1973 (age 50)
Hillsboro, Illinois, United States
NationalityAmerican
Height5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Weight170 lb (77 kg; 12 st)
DivisionWelterweight
Reach73.0 in (185 cm)
StyleWrestling, Submission Grappling, Boxing
StanceOrthodox
Fighting out ofHillsboro, Illinois
TeamFinney's HIT Squad[1]
WrestlingNCAA Division I Wrestler
Years active1998–present
Mixed martial arts record
Total53
Wins45
By knockout15
By submission20
By decision10
Losses8
By knockout4
By submission4
Other information
UniversityEastern Illinois University
Lincoln College
Southwestern Illinois College
SpouseAudra Moore-Hughes
Notable relativesMark Hughes, twin brother
Websitehttp://matt-hughes.com
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog
[2]

Matthew Allen Hughes (born October 13, 1973) is an American mixed martial artist, UFC Hall of Famer, and former two-time UFC Welterweight Champion (11/2001-01/2004 and 10/2004-11/2006). Hughes put together two separate six-fight winning streaks in the UFC, won the welterweight title on two occasions, defended the belt a record seven times, and holds the record for most wins in the UFC.

He also holds the record for most UFC fights with 24 and most wins with 18. Hughes was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame on May 2010.[3] A long-time member of Miletich Fighting Systems, Hughes left the Miletich camp in late 2007 to start Team Hughes. Team Hughes fights out of The H.I.T. Squad (Hughes Intensive Training), a Granite City, Illinois gym, which he co-owns with Robbie Lawler, Matt Pena and Marc Fiore.[4]

Early life

Hughes was born in Hillsboro, Illinois.[5] Hughes has two siblings, a sister and his twin brother Mark. He and Mark spent a lot of time on the family farm in their childhood. During their high school days they both played football and wrestled.[6]

Hughes went to college at Southwestern Illinois College, a two-year college located in Belleville, Illinois before transferring to Lincoln College, in Lincoln, Illinois and then on to Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Illinois. His freshman and sophomore years, he made the NJCAA All-American Team, and his final two years he was listed on the NCAA Division I All-American Teams.

Wrestling

Hughes was a two-time 155 lb IHSA (Illinois High School Association) Class A state wrestling champion. He won in 1991 and 1992 while attending Hillsboro (IL) High School. Furthermore, Hughes is a two-time Division I All-American wrestler, with an 8th and a 5th place finish in the 157 lb division.

Hughes has competed in the prestigious ADCC Submission Wrestling World Championship, in which he held a record of 2–2. This consists of wins over Ricardo Almeida and Jeremy Horn, and losses to Jeff Monson and Tito Ortiz.

Ultimate Fighting Championship

Welterweight championship

Hughes won his first UFC World Welterweight title at UFC 34: High Voltage on November 2, 2001. Hughes was caught in a triangle choke by Carlos Newton, but Hughes lifted Newton in the air and slammed him to the mat, causing Newton to hit his head and lose consciousness just as Hughes was on the verge of blacking out himself from the choke.[7] After the match Carlos stated that he felt the reason Hughes fell to the mat was because he was rendered unconscious from the triangle choke.[7] This was confirmed by Hughes himself upon reviewing the tape of the match Hughes can be heard telling his corner after the fight "I was out." In their subsequent rematch, Hughes won by technical knockout when he successfully trapped Newton in a modified crucifix position, which allowed him to rain unanswered blows on Newton's defenseless face.

He successfully defended his championship belt several times thereafter, defeating Hayato Sakurai, Carlos Newton (in a rematch), Gil Castillo, Sean Sherk, and Frank Trigg. He kept the title until UFC 46, when he was submitted by Hawaiian Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu specialist B.J. Penn via rear naked choke. The title was vacated upon a contract dispute between Penn and the UFC. Hughes regained the vacant welterweight title by submitting Canadian contender Georges St-Pierre via armbar in the final second of the first round at UFC 50.

After regaining his title, Hughes successfully retained it in a rematch with Frank Trigg at UFC 52. After being accidentally hit in the groin early in the first round, Hughes looked to the referee for assistance; however, the referee had not seen the strike and Trigg capitalized on Hughes' distraction by staggering Hughes with a barrage of punches. The fight quickly went to the ground, with Trigg ground-and-pounding Hughes, then attempting a rear naked choke. After nearly two minutes of struggling, Hughes broke free of Trigg's choke attempt, then picked Trigg up, carried him across the Octagon, and slammed him to the ground. Hughes then ground-and-pounded Trigg before securing the victory with a rear naked choke of his own. Hughes' next fight took place at UFC 56, where he was scheduled to fight Judo practitioner Karo Parisyan. After Parysian suffered a hamstring injury and could not fight, Joe Riggs took his place. The match was originally scheduled as a title bout, but since Riggs could not meet the 170-pound weight limit, it became a non-title fight. Hughes defeated Riggs in the first round by kimura. In UFC 60, on May 27, 2006, Hughes defeated Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu legend Royce Gracie in a non-title, catch-weight bout by TKO (strikes). Before the stoppage, Gracie was caught in an armlock from the side mount position; although Hughes appeared to have the submission in place, Gracie would not tap out. Hughes has stated in past interviews that he could not get enough leverage on Gracie's arm to break it, thus he released the hold to pursue a more dominant position.

Hughes and Penn before their match at UFC 63: Hughes vs. Penn

In September 2006, Hughes defended his title in a rematch against B.J. Penn, stopping him in the third round. Hughes trapped Penn's arm and landed approximately 40 blows to the defenseless Penn's unprotected face, forcing the referee to stop the fight.

Loss to St-Pierre

On November 18, 2006 at UFC 65: Bad Intentions, Georges St-Pierre defeated Hughes by TKO via strikes at 1:25 of round two, ending Hughes' title reign.[8] In the first round, Hughes sustained two unintentional kicks near the groin; after Hughes went down from the second kick, St-Pierre was given a warning by referee "Big" John McCarthy.[9] Hughes however stated in his post fight interview that the second kick mainly affected his legs, rather than his groin.[10] Nearing the end of the first round, St-Pierre landed a 'superman' punch, which floored Hughes. St-Pierre then followed up with strikes on his stunned opponent.[9] When it appeared that the fight would be stopped, the bell rang signaling the end of the first round.[9] It was in the second round that St-Pierre ended the fight with a head kick which stunned Hughes and knocked him to the mat, following up with a flurry of punches and elbows that forced McCarthy to call a stop to the contest at 1:25 of round 2.[9]

Return

On March 3, 2007, Hughes returned to the Octagon for UFC 68: Uprising, defeating Chris Lytle by unanimous decision, winning 30–27 on all three judges' scorecards.[11]

Following a championship win by Matt Serra over Georges St-Pierre at UFC 69, it was announced by UFC President Dana White that Hughes will again be fighting for the World Welterweight title in November 2007 against Serra. This fight was later changed to December 29, 2007 in Las Vegas, at UFC 79: Nemesis. On November 24, however, Serra sustained a herniated disc in his lower back and had to inform the UFC that he would not be able to compete for an indeterminate time.[12] As a replacement for the Serra/Hughes title match, the UFC quickly signed a rubber match between Hughes and St-Pierre which would also be for the UFC Interim Welterweight Championship. Despite his best efforts, Hughes was unable to mount any serious offense on St-Pierre, who easily avoided all of Hughes' takedown attempts while also taking Hughes down at will and using Hughes' own ground-and-pound style against him.[13] Near the end of the second round, St-Pierre attempted a kimura on Hughes' right arm that he escaped,[14] but in a reversal of their first fight, St-Pierre was able to twist it into a straight armbar with fifteen seconds remaining in the round. Hughes fought the extension, but with his left hand trapped between the mat and St-Pierre's legs, was forced to verbally submit at 4:54 of the second round.[15] In the post-fight interview, Hughes praised St-Pierre as the better fighter and stated his intention to take some time off and spend with his family.

In late mid 2007, Hughes left the Miletich camp with Miletich stablemate Robbie Lawler, longtime boxing coach Matt Pena, and wrestling/conditioning teacher Marc Fiore to form The H.I.T.(Hughes Intensive Training) Squad in Granite City, Illinois.

Hughes fought Thiago Alves at UFC 85: BEDLAM on June 7, 2008. Hughes lost the fight to Thiago Alves due to referee stoppage (TKO strikes) at 1:02 in round 2. After receiving a powerful flying knee from Alves he dropped to the ground with his own left knee pinned behind his hips, ultimately leaving him with a torn MCL and partially torn PCL. Hughes took the fight on short notice as a favor to the UFC. Alves failed to make weight for the match, but Hughes elected to fight him at a catch weight anyway.[16]

The Ultimate Fighter

In 2005, Hughes participated as a coach opposite Rich Franklin in the second season of the Spike TV reality television series, The Ultimate Fighter. In 2007, Hughes participated as a guest coach for long time friend and training partner, Jens Pulver during The Ultimate Fighter 5 season.

Hughes agreed to be head coach again for the The Ultimate Fighter 6, alongside former UFC World welterweight champion, Matt Serra.[17] Despite the fact that after the preliminary round, Team Hughes' record was 2–6, both Mac Danzig and Tommy Speer of Team Hughes made it to the finals.

Hughes vs. Serra and future

Immediately after the Alves fight, Hughes stated that he had "one more fight" left in him, and that he wanted to fight Matt Serra. Their rivalry stemmed from the time when Serra was a contestant on The Ultimate Fighter and Hughes a coach. Serra did not like the way Hughes criticized other contestants on the show, and was disgusted when Hughes constantly picked on Georges St-Pierre during a lunch break and bragged about his submission victory.[18] On January 9, 2009, Hughes confirmed on his web-site blog, that UFC 98 would likely be the day he and Serra met in the Octagon. The fight was confirmed by the UFC.[19]

Hughes won the grudge match against Serra at UFC 98 via unanimous decision. After the fight Hughes and Serra embraced each other and ended their feud. Hughes posted on his blog: "When the fight was over, I was pretty confident I was going to get my hand raised. Some people have asked why I raised his hand at the end. Actually I didn't, he raised mine. He also told me that, no matter what the decision was, he was done with the rivalry".[20] After the fight Matt Hughes said "I think I have a few more fights left in me."

Hughes signed a multi-fight deal with the UFC.[21] Hughes defeated Renzo Gracie via third round TKO at UFC 112, setting the record for most wins in the UFC with 17.[22] On May 28, 2010, Hughes was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame.[3] Hughes choked Renzo Gracie student and 3rd degree Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt Ricardo Almeida unconscious via Farmaconda (Anaconda choke)[23][24] at 3:15 of round 1, on August 7, 2010 at UFC 117.[25][26]

Hughes faced BJ Penn on November 20, 2010 at UFC 123 in what would be their third and final bout to end the 6-year long rivalry.[27] Penn came out strong in the first few seconds of the opening round, catching one of Hughes' kicks and knocking him off balance with a counter hook. Penn then connected with an overhand right that dropped Hughes, following up with three clean shots to the jaw. The bout was ended at 21 seconds into the first round, with his legendary trilogy with Penn ending with 1 win to 2 losses. The fight marked the first time Hughes had been knocked out (he had previously lost via technical knockout). Post-fight Hughes hinted that the loss was one step closer to retirement.

According to long time rival B.J. Penn, Matt Hughes has been training with him for his fight against Jon Fitch.

Personal life

Hughes is a born again Christian and regularly posts Bible verses on his website.[28] Hughes and his wife Audra have two daughters together and they each have a son from a previous relationship.[6] The couple's second daughter was born on January 2, 2010.[29] He published his autobiography, Made in America: The Most Dominant Champion in UFC History.[30]

Championships and achievements

  • Other
    • 2× NJCAA All-American Team
    • Middleweight Advanced Champion at the 2002 Grapplers Quest West Championships (2/23/02)
    • 2× NCAA Division I All-American Team

Mixed martial arts record

Professional record breakdown
53 matches 45 wins 8 losses
By knockout 15 4
By submission 20 4
By decision 10 0
Result Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 45–8 B.J. Penn KO (punches) UFC 123: Rampage vs. Machida November 20, 2010 1 0:21 Auburn Hills, Michigan
Win 45–7 Ricardo Almeida Technical Submission (anaconda choke) UFC 117: Silva vs. Sonnen August 7, 2010 1 3:15 Oakland, California Won Submission of the Night honors.
Win 44–7 Renzo Gracie TKO (strikes) UFC 112: Invincible April 10, 2010 3 4:40 Abu Dhabi, UAE
Win 43–7 Matt Serra Decision (unanimous) UFC 98: Evans vs. Machida May 23, 2009 3 5:00 Las Vegas, Nevada Won Fight of the Night honors.
Loss 42–7 Thiago Alves TKO (flying knee) UFC 85: Bedlam June 7, 2008 2 1:02 London, England Catchweight fight; Alves weighed 174 lb
Loss 42–6 Georges St-Pierre Submission (armbar) UFC 79: Nemesis December 29, 2007 2 4:54 Las Vegas, Nevada For UFC Interim Welterweight Championship
Win 42–5 Chris Lytle Decision (unanimous) UFC 68: The Uprising March 3, 2007 3 5:00 Columbus, Ohio
Loss 41–5 Georges St-Pierre TKO (head kick and punches) UFC 65: Bad Intentions November 18, 2006 2 1:25 Sacramento, California Lost UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 41–4 B.J. Penn TKO (strikes) UFC 63: Hughes vs. Penn 2 September 23, 2006 3 3:53 Anaheim, California Defended UFC Welterweight Championship; Won Fight of the Night honors.
Win 40–4 Royce Gracie TKO (strikes) UFC 60: Hughes vs. Gracie May 27, 2006 1 4:39 Los Angeles, California Catchweight fight; 175 lb. non-title fight.
Win 39–4 Joe Riggs Submission (kimura) UFC 56: Full Force November 19, 2005 1 3:26 Las Vegas, Nevada Catchweight fight; Non-title fight, Riggs (replacing Karo Parisyan on short notice) failed to make weight; Won Submission of the Night honors.
Win 38–4 Frank Trigg Submission (rear naked choke) UFC 52: Couture vs. Liddell 2 April 16, 2005 1 4:05 Las Vegas, Nevada Defended UFC Welterweight Championship; Won Submission of the Night honors.
Win 37–4 Georges St-Pierre Submission (armbar) UFC 50: The War of '04 October 22, 2004 1 4:59 Atlantic City, New Jersey Won UFC Welterweight Championship; Won Submission of the Night honors.
Win 36–4 Renato Verissimo Decision (unanimous) UFC 48: Payback June 19, 2004 3 5:00 Las Vegas, Nevada
Loss 35–4 B.J. Penn Submission (rear naked choke) UFC 46: Supernatural January 31, 2004 1 4:39 Las Vegas, Nevada Lost UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 35–3 Frank Trigg Submission (rear naked choke) UFC 45: Revolution November 21, 2003 1 3:54 Uncasville, Connecticut Defended UFC Welterweight Championship; Won Submission of the Night honors.
Win 34–3 Sean Sherk Decision (unanimous) UFC 42: Sudden Impact April 25, 2003 5 5:00 Miami, Florida Defended UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 33–3 Gil Castillo TKO (doctor stoppage) UFC 40: Vendetta November 22, 2002 1 5:00 Las Vegas, Nevada Defended UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 32–3 Carlos Newton KO (Slam) UFC 38: Brawl at the Hall July 13, 2002 4 3:27 London, England Defended UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 31–3 Hayato Sakurai TKO (strikes) UFC 36: Worlds Collide March 22, 2002 4 3:01 Las Vegas, Nevada Defended UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 30–3 Carlos Newton KO (slam) UFC 34: High Voltage November 2, 2001 2 1:27 Las Vegas, Nevada Won UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 29–3 Steve Gomm TKO Extreme Challenge 43 September 8, 2001 2 3:18 Orem, Utah
Win 28–3 Hiromitsu Kanehara Decision (majority) RINGS: 10th Anniversary August 11, 2001 3 5:00 Tokyo, Japan
Win 27–3 Chatt Lavender Submission (arm triangle choke) Extreme Challenge 41 July 13, 2001 3 2:31 Davenport, Iowa
Win 26–3 Scott Johnson KO (punch) Extreme Challenge 40 June 16, 2001 1 3:24 Springfield, Illinois
Win 25–3 John Cronk Submission (strikes) Gladiators 14 May 11, 2001 1 N/A Omaha, Nebraska
Win 24–3 Bruce Nelson Submission (strikes) Freestyle Combat Challenge 4 March 31, 2001 1 3:01 Racine, Wisconsin
Win 23–3 Brett Al-azzawi Submission (armbar) RINGS USA: Battle of Champions March 17, 2001 1 3:27 Council Bluffs, Iowa
Loss 22–3 Jose Landi-Jons TKO (knee) Shidokan Jitsu: Warriors War 1 February 8, 2001 1 4:45 Kuwait
Loss 22–2 Dennis Hallman Submission (armbar) UFC 29: Defense of the Belts December 16, 2000 1 0:20 Tokyo, Japan
Win 22–1 Maynard Marcum Submission (keylock) RINGS Australia: Free Fight Battle November 12, 2000 1 6:29 Brisbane, Australia
Win 21–1 Robbie Newman Submission (arm triangle choke) RINGS USA: Rising Stars Final September 30, 2000 1 1:40 Moline, Illinois
Win 20–1 Chris Haseman Decision (unanimous) RINGS: Millennium Combine 3 August 23, 2000 2 5:00 Osaka, Japan
Win 19–1 Joe Guist Submission (armbar) Extreme Challenge 35 June 29, 2000 1 2:45 Davenport, Iowa
Win 18–1 Marcelo Aguiar TKO (strikes) UFC 26: Ultimate Field of Dreams June 9, 2000 1 4:34 Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Win 17–1 Shawn Peters Submission (arm triangle choke) Extreme Challenge 32 May 21, 2000 1 2:52 Springfield, Illinois
Win 16–1 Alexandre Barros Decision (unanimous) WEF 9: World Class May 13, 2000 3 5:00 Evansville, Indiana
Win 15–1 Eric DaVila Submission (keylock) SuperBrawl 17 April 15, 2000 2 3:24 Honolulu, Hawaii
Win 14–1 Jorge Pereira TKO (cut) WEF 8: Goin' Platinum January 15, 2000 1 6:00 Rome, Georgia
Win 13–1 Daniel Vianna KO (slam) JKD Challenge 3 November 20, 1999 1 2:16 Chicago, Illinois
Win 12–1 Laverne Clark Submission (rear naked choke) Extreme Challenge 29 November 13, 1999 2 1:35 Hayward, Wisconsin
Win 11–1 Tom Schmitz Submission (injury) Extreme Challenge 29 November 13, 1999 1 0:48 Hayward, Wisconsin Eye injury.
Win 10–1 Joe Doerksen Submission (strikes) Extreme Challenge 29 November 13, 1999 2 0:25 Hayward, Wisconsin
Win 9–1 Valeri Ignatov Decision (unanimous) UFC 22: Only One Can Be Champion September 24, 1999 3 5:00 Lake Charles, Louisiana
Win 8–1 Akihiro Gono Decision (unanimous) Shooto: 10th Anniversary Event May 29, 1999 3 5:00 Yokohama, Japan
Win 7–1 Erick Snyder TKO (slam) Jeet Kune Do Challenge 4 April 24, 1999 1 N/A Chicago, Illinois
Win 6–1 Joe Stern Submission (strikes) Extreme Challenge 23 April 2, 1999 1 2:30 Indianapolis, Indiana
Win 5–1 Ryan Stout TKO (corner stoppage) Extreme Shootfighting December 11, 1998 2 5:00 Waukesha, Wisconsin
Loss 4–1 Dennis Hallman Technical Submission (guillotine choke) Extreme Challenge 21 October 17, 1998 1 0:18 Hayward, Wisconsin
Win 4–0 Dave Menne Decision (unanimous) Extreme Challenge 21 October 17, 1998 1 15:00 Hayward, Wisconsin
Win 3–0 Victor Hunsaker TKO (strikes) Extreme Challenge 21 October 17, 1998 1 1:39 Hayward, Wisconsin
Win 2–0 Craig Quick Submission (strikes) Jeet Kune Do Challenge 1 April 25, 1998 1 N/A Chicago, Illinois
Win 1–0 Erick Snyder Submission (slam) JKD – Challenge 2 January 1, 1998 1 0:15 Chicago, Illinois

Books

  • (2008) Made in America: The Most Dominant Champion in UFC History. Simon Spotlight Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-4169-4883-4.

Notes and references

  1. ^ "Fight Finder: Matt Hughes". Sherdog. 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-15.
  2. ^ Hughes' official website & Sherdog profile record one less win than his UFC profile. The record listed here represents the one given on his official website & Sherdog profile.
  3. ^ a b http://www.mmamania.com/2010/5/29/1492622/matt-hughes-inducted-into-ufc-hall
  4. ^ "Matt Hughes opens H.I.T. Squad, starts Team Hughes". MMAFighting.com. Retrieved 2007-09-15.
  5. ^ "Fighter Detail - Matt Hughes". Ultimate Fighting Championship. Retrieved 8 November 2007.
  6. ^ a b "Biography & Testimony". matt-hughes.com. Archived from the original on 1 December 2007. Retrieved 8 November 2007.
  7. ^ a b http://redsweat.proelite.com/stuff/blog/106221/Top_5_Devastating_Slams_in_MMA_History
  8. ^ http://www.sherdog.com/events/UFC-65-Bad-Intentions-4313
  9. ^ a b c d http://www.sherdog.com/news/news/UFC-65-ampquotBad-Intentionsampquot-Play-by-PlayPresented-by-Sprawl-Fight-Short-Company-6171
  10. ^ "The second time I went down, it wasn't really because of my groin, but it affected my legs more than my groin. I don't know if it's a nerve thing or what happened." Matt Hughes, UFC 65 post-fight press conference
  11. ^ UFC 68: The Uprising
  12. ^ http://www.altnation.com/forums/combat-sports/129259-matt-serra-injured-out-ufc-79-a.html
  13. ^ http://mmajunkie.com/news/3420/ufc-79-round-by-round-updates-and-live-results.mma
  14. ^ http://news.proelite.com/84942
  15. ^ http://www.sherdog.com/news/news/UFC-79-Nemesis-Play-by-Play-10598
  16. ^ http://mmajunkie.com/news/4524/ufc-85-recap-alves-rocks-hughes-bisping-cruises-to-tko-victory.mma
  17. ^ http://www.ufc.com/index.cfm?fa=news.detail&gid=8794
  18. ^ http://www.mmaroot.com/matt-hughes-vs-thiago-alves-ufc-85-video/
  19. ^ http://mmajunkie.com/news/14150/ufc-officially-announces-ufc-98-lesnar-vs-mir-ii-for-may-23.mma
  20. ^ Hughes, Matt. "UFC 98 recap". Retrieved 2009-05-26.
  21. ^ http://mmajunkie.com/news/16076/matt-hughes-signs-multi-fight-last-contract-with-ufc-still-uncertain-of-next-bout.mma
  22. ^ http://www.mmafighting.com/2010/04/10/ufc-112-matt-hughes-kos-renzo-gracie/
  23. ^ http://www.sherdog.com/fighter/Matt-Hughes-232
  24. ^ http://www.sherdog.com/events/UFC-117-Silva-vs-Sonnen-13310
  25. ^ "Matt Hughes vs. Ricardo Almeida Possible for UFC 117 on August 6 in Oakland". mmafrenzy.com. Retrieved 2010-04-23.
  26. ^ "MMA Roundtable with Ricardo Almeida". versus.com. Retrieved 2010-05-20.
  27. ^ "Matt Hughes, BJ Penn to Complete Trilogy at UFC 123 in Michigan". mmafighting.com. Retrieved 2010-09-13.
  28. ^ http://www.matt-hughes.com/
  29. ^ "Katelyn Mae Hughes". Matt-Hughes.com. Retrieved 2010-01-05.
  30. ^ http://www.matt-hughes.com/blog1/?page_id=617
Preceded by 3rd UFC Welterweight Champion
November 2, 2001 – January 31, 2004
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
BJ Penn
5th UFC Welterweight Champion
October 22, 2004 – November 18, 2006
Succeeded by

Template:The Ultimate Fighter 2 Template:The Ultimate Fighter 6

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