A Linear History: UFC Middleweight Championship

Mike Fridley Brian KnappJul 08, 2012

Only five men have held the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s middleweight crown since it was brought into existence more than a decade ago.

Dave Menne was the first to wear the title, having defeated Gil Castillo by unanimous decision at UFC 33 on Sept. 28, 2001 in Las Vegas. Murilo Bustamante, Evan Tanner and Rich Franklin followed in his footsteps, as the championship changed hands three times in the next five years. Then, on Oct. 14, 2006, a certain Brazilian introduced the words “Thai plum” to the mainstream lexicon and put an historic stranglehold on the division.

Anderson Silva has successfully defended the middleweight belt a record 10 times since he took it from Franklin at UFC 64. His reign has now surpassed the 2,000-day mark, unheard of in a sport where champions come and go with shocking regularity. Since Silva captured the 185-pound title, there have been at least two different champions in each of the four other traditional UFC weight classes: welterweight (2), lightweight (3), heavyweight (5) and light heavyweight (6).

Sherdog.com has compiled an infographic which chronicles the journey of the middleweight championship, beginning with Menne in 2001 and running through Silva, the current titleholder.

Click on the champions or challengers below to learn more about each fighter's history.



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