Fighters.com's August Light Heavyweight Rankings
“The Ultimate Fighter” is now truly the ultimate fighter in the UFC’s ultimate weight class.
In Las Vegas 4 July, Fighters.com’s new Light Heavyweight Champion Forrest Griffin (16-4) worked over now top contender “Rampage” Quinton Jackson (28-7) with leg kicks in a close unanimous decision.
Though Griffin hopped seven spots to take the championship, the decision loss was close enough that Jackson only drops one rank.
Jackson has declared his next opponent to be sixth-ranked “Axe Murderer” Wanderlei Silva (32-8-1), who drops a rank on Griffin’s ascension; but, no official word has come from the UFC.
Jackson versus Silva would make a trilogy that Silva dominated 2-0 in PRIDE.
Griffin will probably fight the winner of fourth-ranked “Iceman” Chuck Liddell (21-5) versus “Sugar” Rashad Evans (11-0-1), which gets on in Atlanta 6 September, but may also take on the winner of fifth-ranked “Dragon” Lyoto Machida (13-0) versus tenth-ranked Thiago Silva (13-0) in Birmingham 18 October.
The debate rages across Internet message boards about who the top contender to Griffin’s title is: Jackson, Liddell, or Machida?

It seems third-ranked “Hollywood” Dan Henderson will stay at 185-pounds after an impressive three-fight run at light heavyweight.
Seventh-ranked “Dean of Mean” Keith Jardine (13-4-1) will fight former heavyweight “The Truth” Brandon Vera (9-2) in Birmingham.
On the same card, eighth-ranked “African Assassin” Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou (5-2) will fight rising dark horse “Banha” Luis Arthur Cane (8-1).
Ninth-ranked “Shogun” Mauricio Rua (16-3) remains on the DL with a knee injury.
August Light Heavyweight Rankings
1. Forrest Griffin (16-4)
“The Ultimate Fighter” is now truly the ultimate fighter after a close decision over Jackson, but now carries a target on his back in MMA’s most competitive division with Jackson, Liddell, and Machida taking aim.
2. “Rampage” Quinton Jackson (28-7)
Jackson returned from a 10-month holiday to lose a close UD to a hungry Griffin, but is 4-1 since bringing his “Rampage” to the cage. He’s out-wrestled Olympian Hendo and became the only man to put Liddell on ice twice.
3. “Hollywood” Dan Henderson (22-7)
To think 205 is Hendo’s other weight class is astounding. A UD to Vitor Belfort paved a path for him to hold the PRIDE belt after a KO of long-time champ Silva. Henderson came up just short of unifying titles in a slog with ‘Page. Until next time?
4. “Iceman” Chuck Liddell (21-5)
Liddell has faced the toughest schedule the last two years, but fell consecutively to Jackson and Jardine. He looked tough in his return to winning in the long-awaited face-off with Silva.
5. “The Dragon” Lyoto Machida (13-0)
Versus Sokou, the undefeated “Dragon” proved he could fly high and finish; but, his UD over Tito Ortiz was back to boring. His measured style is as tough for opposition to decipher as it sometimes is for fans to watch. His “W” column reads like a who’s who of MMA, but Machida needs stoppages to excite.
6. “Axe Murderer” Wanderlei Silva (32-8-1)
It’s been a bloody mess for “The Axe Murderer” the last two years, but a 36-second slaughter of Jardine in May means the division still has to deal with one of it’s most popular names.

7. “Dean of Mean” Keith Jardine (13-4-1)
A 36-second knockout loss to Silva, the third time he’s been kayoed in under a minute, left the “Dean” exposed amidst a division of big punchers. But, wins over Liddell and Griffin keep him in the 205 mix.
8. “African Assassin” Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou (5-2)
Sokou had been punching fighters out of their top ten ranking until he ran into Machida, but there’s no shame in tapping to “The Dragon”. Another big punch knocking out Kaz Nakamura in June stamped Sokou firmly in the top ten.
9. “Shogun” Mauricio Rua (16-3)
Whether injury, energy, or focus was the issue, Rua debuted in the UFC with a loss to then-struggling Griffin after earning the kudos of many with PRIDE wins over the likes of Alistair Overeem and Kazuhiro Nakamura. His injured knee leaves him out of active duty until December.
10. Thiago Silva (13-0)
Undefeated in four Octagon appearances, Silva was the first to expose Houston Alexander’s ground game and recently made “Antonio Mendes scream “uncle” beneath a brutal first-round G’n'P barrage. He’s only seen the second round once in the last two years.




I think Rampage deserves a rematch at the title he lost.
i want to see anderson silva fight griffin
why dont they give machida the chance to fight for the title he deservs it…
Not according to Chuck Liddell…