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Revision as of 09:28, 10 January 2011

Georges St-Pierre
BornGeorges St-Pierre
(1981-05-19) May 19, 1981 (age 43)
Saint-Isidore, Quebec, Canada
Other namesRush
GSP
NationalityCanada Canadian
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight170 lb (77 kg; 12 st)
DivisionWelterweight
Reach76.0 in (193 cm)
StyleKyokushin, Wrestling, Muay Thai, Boxing, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Gaidojutsu
StanceOrthodox
Fighting out ofMontreal, Quebec
TeamJackson's Submission Fighting
Grudge Training Center
Tristar Gym
Zahabi MMA
TrainerFiras Zahabi & Greg Jackson
Rank  3rd degree black belt in Kyokushin
  black belt in Gaidojutsu
  black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
Years active2002–present
Mixed martial arts record
Total23
Wins21
By knockout8
By submission5
By decision8
Losses2
By knockout1
By submission1
Other information
Websitehttp://www.gspfightclub.com/
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog
Last updated on: August 27, 2009

Georges St-Pierre (French pronunciation: [ʒɔʁʒ sɛ̃ pjɛʁ]; born May 19, 1981), often referred to as GSP, is a Canadian mixed martial artist and the current Welterweight Champion of the UFC. St-Pierre is ranked as the number #1 Welterweight in the world according to Sherdog. He is also ranked as the #1 "pound for pound" fighter by Yahoo! Sports and Sherdog.

St-Pierre has been praised by many media outlets for his well-rounded skill and he is currently ranked by multiple MMA publications as the number-one welterweight in the world. In 2008 and in 2009, he was named the Canadian Athlete of the Year by Rogers Sportsnet, as well as the 2008–2009 Most Outstanding Fighter by the Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Georges St-Pierre also won the Fighter of the Year award from the 2009 World MMA Awards.

Biography

Georges St-Pierre was born on May 19, 1981 in Saint-Isidore, Quebec, to Roland and Pauline St-Pierre. St-Pierre had a difficult childhood, attending a school where others would steal his clothes and money. He started learning Kyokushin karate at age seven from his father and later from a Kyokushin Karate Master to defend himself against a school bully. He took up wrestling and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu after his karate teacher died and also trained in boxing. Before turning pro as a mixed-martial artist, St-Pierre worked as a bouncer at a Montreal night club in the South Shore called Fuzzy Brossard and as a garbageman for six months to pay for his school fees.

St-Pierre has trained with a number of groups in a large variety of gyms throughout his fighting career. Prior to his fight with B.J. Penn at UFC 58, he trained at the Renzo Gracie Jiu-Jitsu Academy in New York City. St-Pierre received his brown belt in BJJ from Renzo Gracie on July 21, 2006. In September 2008, St-Pierre earned his black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu under Bruno Fernandes.

St-Pierre began training with Rashad Evans, Nathan Marquardt, Keith Jardine, Donald Cerrone and other skilled MMA fighters at Greg Jackson's Submission Fighting Gaidojutsu school in New Mexico. Some of Jackson's students accompanied St-Pierre to Montreal to help prepare him for his fight at UFC 94 against B.J. Penn at the Tristar Gym, including Keith Jardine, Nathan Marquardt, Donald Cerrone and Rashad Evans. Georges' strength and conditioning coach is Jonathan Chaimberg of Adrenaline Performance Centre in Montréal. Georges' Head Trainer is Firas Zahabi of Zahabi MMA, out of the Tristar gym. The two have cornered all of St-Pierre's most recent bouts and remain as his close friends. Currently, St-Pierre trains in Muay Thai under Phil Nurse at the Wat in New York City.

In September 2010, St-Pierre traveled to the Philippines for the first time to promote Mixed Martial Arts to the Filipinos. He received a warm welcome for his first visit in Manila.

MMA career

Joining the UFC

St-Pierre made his UFC debut at UFC 46, where he defeated Karo Parisyan by unanimous decision. His next fight in the UFC was against Jay Hieron at UFC 48. St-Pierre defeated Hieron via technical knockout in only 1:42 of the first round.

First title shot

Following his second win in the UFC, he faced Matt Hughes at UFC 50 for the vacant UFC Welterweight Championship. Despite a competitive performance against the much more experienced fighter, St-Pierre tapped out to an armbar with only 1 second remaining in the first round. The loss was the first of St-Pierre's career and he has since admitted that he was in awe of Hughes going into the title bout.

Road back to the title

After his loss to Matt Hughes, St-Pierre rebounded with a win over Dave Strasser at TKO 19 by a first-round kimura submission. He then returned to the UFC to face Jason Miller at UFC 52, defeating Miller by unanimous decision in a bloody battle.

St-Pierre was then matched up against top contender Frank Trigg at UFC 54. St-Pierre controlled the fight and eventually snuck in a rear naked choke with less than a minute remaining in the first round. He then faced future lightweight champion Sean Sherk at UFC 56. Midway through the second round, St-Pierre became the second fighter to defeat Sherk and the first to finish him.

At UFC 58, St-Pierre defeated former UFC welterweight champion B.J. Penn to become the number-one contender for the UFC welterweight title. St-Pierre won the match by split decision and was set for a rematch against then-champion Matt Hughes at UFC 63. St-Pierre was forced to withdraw from the match, however, due to a groin injury and was replaced by the man he defeated in March, B.J. Penn. The UFC announced afterward that St-Pierre would have the opportunity to fight for the title when his condition was fully healed.

The Ultimate Fighter

St-Pierre was seen as a trainer on The Ultimate Fighter 4: The Comeback on Spike TV, which featured fighters who were previously seen in UFC events including Matt Serra, Shonie Carter, Pete Sell, Patrick Côté, and Travis Lutter. St-Pierre was seen vocally supporting fellow Canadian and training partner Patrick Côté during the season's airing.

Winning the championship

At UFC 63, St-Pierre made an appearance to support fellow Canadian David "The Crow" Loiseau. At that time he was seen pushing Loiseau to "fight his fight" against Mike Swick. At the same event, after Matt Hughes had defeated B.J. Penn, St-Pierre stepped into the ring to hype up his upcoming title fight against Hughes, stating that he was glad that Hughes won his fight, but that he was "not impressed" by Hughes' performance.

According to both commentator Joe Rogan and Hughes' own autobiography, Hughes was unhappy with St-Pierre's statement. Hughes said that they "had words" off-camera shortly after, at which time St-Pierre apologized, saying he had misunderstood something Hughes had said on the microphone and did not mean to offend him. St-Pierre challenged Matt Hughes again at UFC 65 for the UFC Welterweight Championship. The fight was almost stopped near the end of the first round when St-Pierre sent Hughes to the mat with a superman punch and left hook, but Hughes managed to survive the first round. In the second round, St-Pierre won the fight via technical knockout after a left kick to Hughes' head followed by a barrage of unanswered punches and elbows.. After the fight, on January 30, 2007, St-Pierre signed a new six-fight deal with the UFC.

Losing the title

At UFC 69, St-Pierre lost the welterweight title to The Ultimate Fighter 4 winner Matt Serra when he defeated St-Pierre by TKO at 3:25 of round one. Matt Serra was an 11–1 underdog going into the bout. St-Pierre has said that he lost the match partially due to a lack of focus because of problems in his personal life, including the death of a close cousin and his father's serious illness, and later parted ways with his manager and most of his entourage. St-Pierre has since gone on to say that he should not have made any excuses and that Serra was simply the better fighter that night.

Back into title contention

On August 25, 2007, at UFC 74 St-Pierre won a unanimous decision against Josh Koscheck (30–27, 29–28, 29–28). He outwrestled Koscheck, who is a four-time Division I NCAA All-American and an NCAA wrestling champion, by scoring takedowns, stopping Koscheck's takedown attempts and maintaining top position throughout most of the fight. Many predicted that Koscheck would outmatch St-Pierre on the ground due to his credentials, but St-Pierre was confident that he was a better wrestler and striker and was more well-versed in submissions than Koscheck.

Before and after the fight, St-Pierre stated his intention to reclaim his lost title, miming the act of placing a championship belt around his waist while still in the octagon. His win over Koscheck had placed him in the number-one contender spot for the UFC Welterweight Championship. That fight was to be against the winner of Matt Hughes and Matt Serra. Matt Serra had to pull out of UFC 79 due to a back injury sustained during training, and instead St-Pierre faced Hughes in a rubber match for the interim UFC Welterweight Championship. Hughes was unable to mount any serious offense against St-Pierre, who again showcased his wrestling skills by not only avoiding all of Hughes' takedown attempts, but also taking Hughes down at will. In a reversal of their first fight, St-Pierre attempted a kimura on Hughes' right arm, then switched to a straight armbar with fifteen seconds left in the second round. Hughes fought the extension, but was forced to verbally submit at 4:55 of the second round, making St-Pierre the interim Welterweight Champion.

Undisputed championship

At UFC 83 on April 19, 2008, St-Pierre fought Matt Serra to determine the undisputed UFC welterweight champion. It was the UFC's first event in Canada and was held at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Québec. Instead of starting with strikes, St-Pierre pressed the action early with a takedown and then mixed up his attack, which never allowed Serra the chance to mount a significant offense. In the second round, St-Pierre continued his previous actions and forced Serra into the turtle position and delivered several knees to Serra's midsection. Near the end of round two, the fight was stopped by referee Yves Lavigne with Serra unable to defend himself from St-Pierre's continuous knee blows or improve his position.

Defending the title

St-Pierre's first title defense since winning the belt back was against Jon Fitch at UFC 87. Fitch was on a 16-fight winning streak and was going in the fight to set a new UFC record for longest winning streak, which would have been nine. St-Pierre defeated Jon Fitch by unanimous decision with scores of 50–43, 50–44, and 50–44, to retain his UFC welterweight title. He dominated Fitch, scoring multiple devastating strikes and taking the former Purdue wrestling captain down seemingly at will.

The win over Fitch set up one of the most anticipated rematches in UFC history, as BJ Penn stepped into the octagon after the fight to essentially challenge St-Pierre to a rematch of their bout at UFC 58 in 2006, which ended in a split-decision victory for St-Pierre. The rematch occurred on January 31, 2009, at UFC 94. The first round of the fight was somewhat even, with Penn exercising elusive head movement, fast hands and good take-down defense, thwarting all of St-Pierre's take-down attempts while both exchanged punches. In the ensuing three rounds, however, Penn turned out a lackluster performance. St-Pierre scored his first take-down of the night midway through the second round and by the end of the round Penn was visibly tired. At the start of round three, St-Pierre landed a superman punch that bloodied Penn's nose and shortly took Penn down again. From that point on, St-Pierre took Penn down almost at will, repeatedly passed Penn's renowned guard and persistently punished the Hawaiian with a ground-and-pound attack. Penn later admitted that he couldn't recall anything that happened during the 3rd and 4th rounds because "I was probably borderline knocked out or something." At the end of the fourth round, after more of St-Pierre's ground-and-pound onslaught, Penn's corner man Jason Parillo requested that the referee stop the fight. Penn failed to attend the post-fight press conference due to having stayed in the hospital. During the fight, Penn complained that St-Pierre was too slippery to hold, which led to suspicion about petroleum jelly being illegally applied to St-Pierre's back. The matter was formally investigated by the UFC and Nevada State Athletic Commission upon the request of the Penn camp. Upon investigation, all claims were dismissed as false and warranted no disciplinary action or further investigation.

Prior to UFC 100, Beau Dure of USA Today stated that St-Pierre was possibly "the best in the world." At the event, St-Pierre defeated number-one contender Thiago Alves. Alves showed promise on his feet standing up in the fight, but St-Pierre's wrestling offensive, endurance and ground control proved too much for the challenger and put St-Pierre en route to a unanimous decision victory, despite suffering a pulled groin muscle in the third round. While St-Pierre said in his post fight interview that the injury was sustained in the third round, he later said on his blog that the injury in fact occurred in the fourth round. On July 18, 2009, it was revealed that St-Pierre's groin injury wouldn't require surgery.

A scheduled bout between Mike Swick and Martin Kampmann would have determined the number-one contender for the UFC Welterweight Championship. In early September, Swick pulled out of the fight due to an injury, effectively cancelling the title elimination aspect of the fight. After Martin Kampmann lost to Paul Daley at UFC 103, a fight between Swick and Dan Hardy was announced for UFC 105, with the winner, Dan Hardy, earning number-one contendership for St-Pierre's title.

St-Pierre successfully defended his welterweight title against Dan Hardy on March 27, 2010 at UFC 111 which took place in Newark, NJ. St-Pierre dominated the fight with his wrestling. He caught Hardy in the first round with an armbar, but Hardy refused to tap and eventually fought out of the hold. In the fourth round St-Pierre caught Hardy in a kimura while in the reverse-mount position, but Hardy once again refused to tap and St-Pierre released the hold before causing any serious damage. St-Pierre went on to win the fight by unanimous decision (50-43, 50-44 and 50-45). After the fight, he stated that he was glad to win but was not impressed by his performance, stating that he wanted to finish the fight. He also gave credit to Hardy for his toughness.

St-Pierre's next fight was a rematch against Josh Koscheck at UFC 124, where he won by unanimous decision (50-45, 50-45, 50-45). St-Pierre once again dominated the fight, this time relying on superior striking, utilizing accurate boxing. He landed a total of 55 jabs to Koschecks head. Joe Rogan stated it was "the most jabs I've ever seen in an MMA fight." During the first round, Koschecks right eye became very swollen from one of St-Pierre's jabs. By the end of the fight, his right eye was completely swollen shut. St-Pierre stated at the post-fight conference that he wanted to catch Koscheck off guard by striking with him instead of wrestling. Koscheck suffered a broken orbital bone.

UFC president Dana White has stated that Jake Shields is St-Pierre's next opponent and confirmed that the two will meet in the main event of UFC 129 on April 30, 2011, in Toronto.

2012 Summer Olympics London

It was revealed on January 2, 2010 that St-Pierre was considering leaving MMA so he could try out for the Canadian freestyle wrestling team and compete at the 2012 Summer Olympics. Though many sources have stated (his wrestling coaches, Rob "The Caveman" Moore and Cleo "Zulu Man" Ncube, in particular) that he is a great wrestler within the context of MMA, it is generally agreed that he would have to spend many years preparing before he can even make the Olympic team. He has stated that he is a Mixed Martial Artist first, and that MMA and the UFC take precedence over training for the summer Olympics. St-Pierre also personally stated in an interview before his title defense against Dan Hardy at UFC 111 that he is still considering trying to qualify for wrestling in the 2012 Olympic Games, but he has not yet made his mind up 100% either way yet.

Championships and accomplishments

  • Spike Guys' Choice Awards
    • Most Dangerous Man of the Year 2010
  • MMAPayout
    • Fighter of the Year 2009
  • World MMA Awards
    • Fighter of the Year 2009
  • Sports Illustrated (SI.com)
    • Fighter of the Year 2009
  • Inside MMA on HDNET
    • Fighter of the Year 2009
  • MMAJunkie.com
    • Fighter of the Year (2009)
    • Fight of the Year (2010)
  • Fighters Only
    • 2008 Submission of the Year
  • Black Belt Magazine
    • 2008 MMA Fighter of the Year
  • Rogers Sportsnet
    • Rogers Sportsnet Canadian Athlete of the Year (2008)
    • Rogers Sportsnet Canadian Athlete of the Year (2009)
    • Rogers Sportsnet Canadian Athlete of the Year (2010)

Mixed martial arts record

Professional record breakdown
23 matches 21 wins 2 losses
By knockout 8 1
By submission 5 1
By decision 8 0
Result Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
United States Jake Shields UFC 129 April 30, 2011 Canada Toronto, Ontario For UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 21–2 United States Josh Koscheck Decision (Unanimous) UFC 124: St-Pierre vs. Koscheck 2 December 11, 2010 5 5:00 Canada Montreal, Quebec Defended UFC Welterweight Championship, Fight of The Night
Win 20–2 England Dan Hardy Decision (Unanimous) UFC 111: St.Pierre vs. Hardy March 27, 2010 5 5:00 United States Newark, New Jersey Defended UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 19–2 Brazil Thiago Alves Decision (Unanimous) UFC 100 July 11, 2009 5 5:00 United States Las Vegas, Nevada Defended UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 18–2 United States B.J. Penn TKO (Corner Stoppage) UFC 94: St Pierre vs Penn 2 January 31, 2009 4 5:00 United States Las Vegas, Nevada Defended UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 17–2 United States Jon Fitch Decision (Unanimous) UFC 87: Seek and Destroy August 9, 2008 5 5:00 United States Minneapolis, Minnesota Defended UFC Welterweight Championship, Fight of the Night
Win 16–2 United States Matt Serra TKO (Knees to the Body) UFC 83: Serra vs. St-Pierre 2 April 19, 2008 2 4:45 Canada Montreal, Quebec Won UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 15–2 United States Matt Hughes Technical Submission (Armbar) UFC 79: Nemesis December 29, 2007 2 4:54 United States Las Vegas, Nevada Won Interim UFC Welterweight Championship, Submission of the Night
Win 14–2 United States Josh Koscheck Decision (Unanimous) UFC 74: Respect August 25, 2007 3 5:00 United States Las Vegas, Nevada
Loss 13–2 United States Matt Serra TKO (Punches) UFC 69: Shootout April 7, 2007 1 3:25 United States Houston, Texas Lost UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 13–1 United States Matt Hughes TKO (Head Kick and Elbows) UFC 65: Bad Intentions November 18, 2006 2 1:25 United States Sacramento, California Won UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 12–1 United States B.J. Penn Decision (Split) UFC 58: USA vs Canada March 4, 2006 3 5:00 United States Las Vegas, Nevada
Win 11–1 United States Sean Sherk TKO (Strikes) UFC 56: Full Force November 19, 2005 2 2:53 United States Las Vegas, Nevada
Win 10–1 United States Frank Trigg Submission (Rear Naked Choke) UFC 54: Boiling Point August 20, 2005 1 4:09 United States Las Vegas, Nevada
Win 9–1 United States Jason Miller Decision (Unanimous) UFC 52: Couture vs Liddell 2 April 16, 2005 3 5:00 United States Las Vegas, Nevada
Win 8–1 United States Dave Strasser Submission (Kimura) TKO 19: Rage January 29, 2005 1 1:52 Canada Montreal, Quebec
Loss 7–1 United States Matt Hughes Submission (Armbar) UFC 50: The War of '04 October 22, 2004 1 4:59 United States Atlantic City, New Jersey For UFC Welterweight Championship
Win 7–0 United States Jay Hieron TKO (Strikes) UFC 48: Payback June 19, 2004 1 1:42 United States Las Vegas, Nevada
Win 6–0 Armenia Karo Parisyan Decision (Unanimous) UFC 46: Supernatural January 31, 2004 3 5:00 United States Las Vegas, Nevada UFC debut
Win 5-0 United States Pete Spratt Submission (Rear Naked Choke) TKO 14: Road Warriors November 29, 2003 1 3:40 Canada Victoriaville, Quebec
Win 4–0 United States Thomas Denny TKO (Cut) UCC 12: Adrenaline January 25, 2003 2 4:45 Canada Montreal, Quebec Non-Title Bout since Denny is a US Citizen.
Win 3–0 Canada Travis Galbraith TKO (Elbows) UCC 11: The Next Level October 11, 2002 1 2:03 Canada Montreal, Quebec Defended UCC Welterweight Championship
Win 2–0 Canada Justin Bruckmann Submission (Armbar) UCC 10: Battle for the Belts 2002 June 15, 2002 1 3:54 Canada Gatineau, Quebec Won UCC Welterweight Championship
Win 1–0 El Salvador Ivan Menjivar TKO (Punches) UCC 7: Bad Boyz January 25, 2002 1 4:59 Canada Montreal, Quebec MMA debut

Entrance music

St-Pierre is noted for using French language rap music (from Québec and France) during his entrance walks.

Event Entrance Music
UFC 50 "Jesus Walks" by Kanye West
UFC 52 "X Gon' Give It to Ya" by DMX
UFC 54 "Ambitionz Az a Ridah" by 2Pac
UFC 56 "Tout Le Monde Debout" by Neg' Marrons
UFC 58 "Tout Le Monde Debout" by Neg' Marrons
UFC 65 "Samurai" by Shurik'n
UFC 69 "Samurai" by Shurik'n
UFC 74 "Dirty Hous" by Rohff (feat. Big Ali)
UFC 79 "Territoire Hostile" by Sans Pression
UFC 83 "Numéro 1" by Sans Pression
UFC 87 "Boulbi" by Booba
UFC 94 "L'Homme a Abattre" by Sinik
UFC 100 "Mornier 4 Life" by Imposs
UFC 111 "Juicy" by The Notorious B.I.G.
UFC 124 "Ca Fait Mal (Remix)" by La Fouine (feat. Sefyu & Soprano)

Acting career

St-Pierre has acted in two films, both written by martial artist Hector Echavarria. He plays Shaman in Death Warrior, and Georges in Never Surrender.

See also

References

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  2. http://www.sherdog.com/news/articles/5/Sherdog-Official-Mixed-Martial-Arts-Rankings-28893
  3. http://ca.sports.yahoo.com/mma/news;_ylt=AmI7kmyAYMcj3DAMcTwDh_8ONwU6?slug=dd-mmaranks081310>
  4. http://www.sherdog.com/news/rankings/Sherdogcoms-Pound-for-Pound-Top-10-28930
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  6. "MMA's Top Ten". MMAWeekly.com. May 9, 2007. Retrieved February 11, 2009.
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  9. Trudel, Jonathan (December 6, 2010). "Georges St-Pierre, gentleman gladiateur". Lactualite.com. Retrieved 13 December 2010.
  10. Tousignant, Isa (March 2, 2006). "Georges St.-Pierre leads Montreal to UFC glory". Hour.ca. Retrieved 6 July 2007.
  11. Wickert, Marc. "Montreal's MMA Warrior". Knucklepit.com. Retrieved 6 July 2007.
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  15. watgear.com http://www.watgear.com/aboutus.php. Retrieved August 10, 2010. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)
  16. fighttime.net http://fighttime.net/2010/09/24/gsp-hits-manila-meet-pacquiao-qa-and-dance/. Retrieved September 27, 2010. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)
  17. Sherwood, Jeff (June 22, 2004). "UFC 48 Pictures: Georges St-Pierre vs Jay Hieron". Sherdog.com. Retrieved 4 February 2009.
  18. ^ Cotterill, Andy (January 16, 2008). "Weighty Issues". Sherdog.com. Retrieved 4 February 2009.
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  27. Georges St.-Pierre suffers loss to underdog Matt Serra at UFC 69: Shootout, Canadian Press, April 8, 2007, retrieved 2 March 2009
  28. Meltzer, Dave (18 April 2008). "Georges St-Pierre's time to shine". MMAjunkie.com. Retrieved 4 February 2009.
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  43. Pugmire, Lance (February 4, 2009). "B.J. Penn requests "comprehensive investigation" of St-Pierre". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 10, 2010. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  44. Dure, Beau (July 11, 2009). "Sharp-dressed St. Pierre man in the middle at UFC 100 in Vegas". USA Today. Retrieved August 6, 2010. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  45. St. Pierre, Georges (July 15, 2009). "UFC 100 Notable Moments". YardBarker.com.
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  48. Montreal 5-0; GSP Shuts out Hardy to retain Welter Title
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  60. "Death Warrior (2009)". imdb.com. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
  61. "Never Surrender (2009)". imdb.com. Retrieved 2009-11-18.

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded byMatt Hughes 6th UFC Welterweight Champion
November 18, 2006 – April 7, 2007
Succeeded byMatt Serra
New championship 1st UFC Interim Welterweight Champion
December 29, 2007 – April 19, 2008
VacantWon UFC Welterweight Championship
Preceded byMatt Serra 8th UFC Welterweight Champion
April 19, 2008 – present
Current holder

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Ultimate Fighting Championship current champions
Men's
Heavyweight
Light heavyweight
Middleweight
Welterweight
Lightweight
Featherweight
Bantamweight
Flyweight
Women's
Featherweight
  • Vacant
Bantamweight
Flyweight
Strawweight

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