Matt Serra became the unlikeliest of champions at UFC 69. | Photo: D. Mandel
1. Matt Serra vs. Georges St. Pierre
UFC 69 “Shootout” -- April 27, 2007
Toyota Center| Houston
Serra became an unlikely No. 1 contender by emerging from Season 4 of “The Ultimate Fighter,” as the reality show briefly switched gears and featured an entire cast of Ultimate Fighting Championship veterans hoping to make a comeback. After a 4-4 run in his first stint with the promotion, Serra bested Chris Lytle at the “The Ultimate Fighter 4” Finale to earn his shot at St. Pierre, the 170-pound ruler.
“Joe, I’m really hungry, man,” Serra said to UFC color commentator Joe Rogan in the Octagon. “I was wondering if you and [UFC President] Dana [White] had some humble pie in the back?”
It was the closest thing to an MMA version of Buster Douglas-Mike Tyson in the sport’s brief history. In the aftermath, St. Pierre was left grasping for answers.
“Normally when I go to fight, I fight like there is no tomorrow,” St. Pierre said. “I let everything go. And that fight, it was like I felt like I had some stuff to do after the fight. So I didn’t fight like I had no tomorrow. It was weird. I just didn’t fight well.”
Serra would relinquish the welterweight strap to St. Pierre in his first defense approximately one year later at UFC 83. Meanwhile, “Rush” made serious changes to his approach -- notably adding trainer Greg Jackson to his corner -- and has not lost a fight since.
Honorable Mentions: Maurice Smith def. Mark Coleman (UFC 14); Forrest Griffin def. Mauricio Rua (UFC 76); Ray Mercer def. Tim Sylvia (Adrenaline MMA 3); Pete Williams def. Mark Coleman (UFC 17); Randy Couture def. Vitor Belfort (UFC 15)