Georges St-Pierre made his professional MMA debut in 2002. From 2002 through 2013, he amassed a record of 25-2 and became the longest reigning UFC Welterweight champion in history. One of his two losses in that span came at the hands of Matt Hughes in 2004, a future UFC Hall of Famer and multi-time champion, widely considered the greatest Welterweight on the planet prior to St-Pierre's rise to prominence. His other loss came in 2007 to Matt Serra in what is widely regarded as one of the biggest upsets in MMA history. St-Pierre would avenge that loss in dominating fashion just over a year later in April of 2008, after defeating Josh Koscheck and Matt Hughes in back to back fights in 2007. The victory over Koscheck at UFC 74 moved St-Pierre's record to 14-2. That victory came in 2007. He would remain undefeated in 11 more fights between 2007 and 2013, moving his record to 25-2. Most of his wins came in dominating fashion despite not finishing an opponent since UFC 94 in ...
With Halloween just around the corner, everyone is getting into the Holiday spirit. But what's the best part about Halloween? Is it the decorations? The costumes? The pumpkins? All of those are good, but there's only one right answer. The candy. With that said, let's compare the current UFC champions to their Halloween candy counterparts. Women's Strawweight Champion: Joanna Jedrzejczyk = Pop Rocks Jonna Jedzrejczyk is one of the top fighters in the game today. She's not known for winning fights with a single punch or submission. She wears you down and peppers you with a series of shots over the course of the fight. Combinations and volume are her keys to success. The same could be said for Pop Rocks. Pop Rocks aren't going to knock you out with flavor or be overpowering from the start. Rather it's the series of pops and "shots" and the sheer volume of the flavor and "pops" that can make this candy hard to handle if...