The world’s top welterweight will be decided this weekend in Montreal at UFC 83. What might be more interesting is what happens next. Several fighters have legitimate claims to the winner of Serra v St. Pierre. Who deserves it most?
1. “The Terror” Matt Serra (9-4)
“If you beat the guy, you’re the guy,” Serra said, and “The Terror” dismantled 170’s heir apparent, St. Pierre, last April for the UFC welterweight title and Fighters.com’s #1 ranking. His slim record makes it hard to predict the length of his reign.
2. “Rush” Georges St. Pierre (15-2)
Barely breaking a sweat stopping Hughes twice and winning a UD over Koscheck fulfilled St. Pierre’s physical promise, but his malfunction versus Serra raises questions great fighters have had to answer before. Does his hype distract from his focus?
3. Jon Fitch (17-2)
While louder fighters have claimed title contendership, Fitch has quietly earned it with a stoppage of Alves and decision over Sanchez, plus UDs over tough Chris Wilson and Kuniyoshi Hironaka. The wrestler is probably next in line for a UFC title shot.
4. “Kos” Josh Koscheck (10-2)
After revenge over Sanchez, Koschek was overwhelmed with a St. Pierre bouncing back from a loss. Like St. Pierre, “Kos” has all the physical tools to be a champion and absorbs new skills like a sponge. Time and continued top competition will tell.
5. Matt Hughes (42-6)
Since getting KO’d by St. Pierre for the first time since ’01, Hughes hasn’t fought the same in a throw-away decision over Christ Lytle and another stoppage by St. Pierre. One wonders if he’s getting the same quality of training since leaving MFS.
6. “Pitbull” Thiago Alves (14-3)
Alves has dealt 3 big stoppages to Parisyan, Chris Lytle, and Kuniyoshi Hironaka to plant himself firmly in the welterweight top ten, and only an ’06 TKO to Fitch keeps him from Fighters.com’s top five. Whoever’s next for Alves will meet a juggernaut.
7. Jake Shields (20-4-1)
Shields may be the world’s top welterweight, but a lack of competition outside the UFC keeps him from breaking through. Still, he’s stopped all opponents in the last two years except in a unanimous decision over WEC champ Carlos Condit.
8. “Nightmare” Diego Sanchez (18-2)
Sanchez is St. Pierre light. All the hype can’t replace a loss in the Octagon, and, in Sanchez’s case, two losses to Fitch and Koschek. An ’06 decision over Parisyan in one of the fights of that year proves he has the talent, but does he have the focus?
9. “The Heat” Karo Parisyan (18-5)
Parisyan has been criticized for his conditioning. Maybe it’s true because the tough, exciting judoka hasn’t been able to break into the top of the division after losses to Sanchez and Alves. A TKO of Thompson shows how hot “The Heat” can get.
10. “The Goat” Nick Thompson (35-9-1)
“The Goat” has bucked eleven straight challengers, ten by stoppage, since leaving the UFC after a TKO by Parisyan; and, though no top tenners, it’s a list including Chris Wilson, Ansar Chalangov, Eddie Alvarez, and Fabricio Monteiro, all tough welterweights.
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Comments
It’s great to see that Nick Thompson made this list. He’s often overlooked since he hasn’t fought in the UFC for a while – but he’s riding a what, 7 fight win streak?
Nick is on an eleven-fight tear in five different promotions. He stopped Chris Wilson, which Jon Fitch wasn’t able to do. He stopped Eddie Alvarez, who looked amazing last month at DREAM. Of course he deserves recognition. I just hope he’s able to find more good competition as a free agent. I’d love to see him fight Jake Shields or Yoshiyuki Yoshida.
Funny to se Serra at the top, even though he is the champ. Didn’t see that one coming…neither did St. Pierre.
No prob with your rankings here, but for the life of me I don’t see how Herring is in the Top 10 for HWs. In my opinion Herring should be way below the top 10ers. Granted he beat Kongo, but even there he had a lot of work to do. I predict a loss for him from whoever he fights next….and I hope it’s Arlovsky.
Rankings mean nothing in the cage/ring. Without hesitation, I’d pick seventh-ranked Jake Shields over four of the six fighters ranked above him, and maybe all six if I had time to think about it. I have a merit-based ranking system, post it, and it’s all for discussion. I mean, what’s really defines the difference between a seventh and eighth ranked fighter anyway? It’s pretty subjective.