Sherdog’s Official Mixed Martial Arts Rankings

Sherdog.com StaffApr 05, 2015



Welterweight


1. Robbie Lawler (25-10, 1 NC)

In a fight just as closely contested as their first, Lawler prevailed over Johny Hendricks in a five-round championship rematch at UFC 181, as the “Ruthless” veteran finally captured UFC gold after 13 years as a mixed martial artist. Lawler is now 6-1 in his second Octagon run -- a stint marked by brutal knockouts and hard-nosed victories against the likes of Rory MacDonald, Matt Brown and Jake Ellenberger. Lawler will put his title on the line in a rematch with MacDonald at UFC 189 on July 11.

2. Johny Hendricks (17-3)

While it was a far cry from his thrilling scraps with Robbie Lawler, Hendricks was dominant in earning a ground-based unanimous decision over Matt Brown at UFC 185. The win put “Bigg Rigg” back on track and moved him one step closer to a rematch with Lawler, the man who took Hendricks’ belt in December.

3. Rory MacDonald (18-2)

MacDonald capped an outstanding 2014 campaign on Oct. 4 with a punishing third-round knockout of former Strikeforce champion Tarec Saffiedine. Wins over Saffiedine, Tyron Woodley and Demian Maia put the 25-year-old Canadian in line for a title shot, and he will challenge divisional ace Robbie Lawler at UFC 189 in July. MacDonald lost a split decision to Lawler in November 2013.

4. Tyron Woodley (14-3)

Woodley fought off his back foot for most of his three-round encounter with Kelvin Gastelum at UFC 183, but a steady diet of big right hands helped “The Chosen One” earn a split decision against his overweight opponent. The win was Woodley’s second straight since having his title hopes derailed in a unanimous decision loss to Rory MacDonald in June.

5. Carlos Condit (29-8)

Condit missed out on a December 2013 bout with Matt Brown and then was handed an equally tough task in Tyron Woodley at UFC 171. Despite an exciting start to the fight, Condit’s leg gave out midway through the second round, putting an end to any immediate title hopes and giving Condit his third defeat in four fights. “The Natural Born Killer” remains sidelined following surgery to repair a torn ACL but has been penciled in to return against Thiago Alves at a UFC Fight Night event on May 30.

6. Ben Askren (14-0)

Askren added another belt to his collection on Aug. 29, as the former Bellator welterweight ace claimed the 170-pound title in One Fighting Championship with an 84-second decimation of Nobutatsu Suzuki. Unbeaten in 14 fights and rapidly shedding the “blanket” reputation which once plagued him, Askren currently sits poised as the most dangerous 170-pounder outside of the UFC. The Roufusport fighter will put his title on the line against 70-fight veteran Luis “Sapo” Santos in April.

7. Matt Brown (19-13)

He spent the better part of two years slugging his way from the back of the pack to welterweight title contention with seven straight wins -- but nothing lasts forever, and “The Immortal” may have hit his ceiling. Brown has come up short against elite 170-pounders in his last two outings, dropping unanimous decisions to current UFC champ Robbie Lawler and ex-titleholder Johny Hendricks.

8. Jake Shields (31-7-1, 1 NC)

Shields has made it look easy in his first two bouts with new promoter World Series of Fighting. After forcing Ryan Ford to submit to a rear-naked choke in October, the American jiu-jitsu practitioner took out Brian Foster with a first-round neck crank at WSOF 17 in January. The latter win earned Shields a future shot at reigning WSOF welterweight champ and fellow submission specialist Rousimar Palhares.

9. Demian Maia (20-6)

Maia made a successful return from a 10-month layoff on March 21, defeating Ryan LaFlare in the makeshift main event of UFC Fight Night in Rio de Janeiro. Despite fading hard in the fifth round, the Brazilian jiu-jitsu ace racked up enough points through the first four frames to earn his second consecutive unanimous decision.

10. Rousimar Palhares (17-6)

Palhares has looked impressive in back-to-back bouts since joining World Series of Fighting, first snatching the promotion’s welterweight title from Steve Carl and then tapping fellow UFC vet Jon Fitch in his first defense. Both wins came by way of leglock, the Brazilian’s submission of choice. “Toquinho” is next expected to face another of the division’s most dangerous ground specialists, Jake Shields, though the bout is yet to be scheduled.

Other Contenders: Thiago Alves, Jake Ellenberger, Dong Hyun Kim, Douglas Lima, Rick Story.

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