Every UFC title fight to end in a draw

It’s rare, but every now and then a UFC championship fight ends in a draw. Here’s a look back at the times it’s happened.

It’s rare, but every now and then a UFC championship fight ends in a draw.

Whether it’s because a title fight is closely contested or a point deduction or a judge’s inexplicable scorecard, we’ve come away from certain title fights with an unfulfilling result.

Below is a list of the draws that have been scored in UFC history.

Every UFC trilogy ranked ahead of Dustin Poirier vs. Conor McGregor 3

Dustin Poirier and Conor McGregor will meet in the 14th trilogy fight in UFC history when they clash at UFC 264.

Another chapter in the long story of UFC trilogy fights takes place Saturday at UFC 264.

[autotag]Dustin Poirier[/autotag] and [autotag]Conor McGregor[/autotag] will clash for a third and likely final time – 2,483 days after they first fought at UFC 178 in September 2014.

McGregor (22-5 MMA, 10-3 UFC) won the initial meeting by first-round TKO. In the rematch more than six years later, Poirier (27-6 MMA, 19-5 UFC) got redemption with a second-round TKO at UFC 257 in January.

Now the two lightweight contenders will compete one final time in the winner-takes-all rubber match.

It will be the 14th trilogy fight in company history, and ahead of UFC 264, we rank the others that have happened so far. Check out our list below, from worst to best.

Why is Gray Maynard speaking out on UFC fighter pay now? ‘I just want things to be more fair’

“It’s time for the rest of this business to improve conditions and come around and treat the athletes like they belong in a big league.”

An old-school amateur wrestling type who believes hard work leads to good things, [autotag]Gray Maynard[/autotag] was never one to complain in public.

Maynard, an All-American at Michigan State, had an 11-year run in the UFC, much of it spent as one of the world’s top lightweights. He’s best remembered for his legendary trilogy with Frankie Edgar. Maynard won the first fight via unanimous decision in 2008, when both were on their way up. The second fight, on New Year’s Day in 2011 at UFC 125, was for Edgar’s lightweight title. The split draw after 25 minutes of furious action is still name-checked on the short list of greatest fights in MMA history. Edgar won the third match at UFC 136 by fourth-round stoppage to retain his title.

With two narrow defeats in title fights, Maynard came as close to making big money without quite getting there as a fighter ever will, but he had little to say about it along the way.

Fast forward to 2020, and change is afoot. The fever that kept fighters silent about pay matters seems to be breaking. Maybe it was the UFC paying a dividend of $300 million to celebrity vanity investors like Ben Affleck and Gisele Bunchen, who never set foot in the cage. Maybe it was UFC president Dana White talking a big game about an extravagant “Fight Island.” Or maybe the coronavirus pandemic just got people to the point they’re tired of keeping their mouths shut on what they see as injustice.

Either way, fighters have started to speak up about money. Documented information in an ongoing antitrust lawsuit against the UFC have pegged the fighters’ share of company revenue at about 18 percent, as opposed to the roughly 50-50 split found in most major sports leagues. Two of MMA’s biggest draws, Jon Jones and Jorge Masvidal, openly have challenged the system. Henry Cejudo retired, Conor McGregor has claimed he’s doing so, too, and Amanda Nunes is pondering the notion.

So the 41-year-old Maynard, a free agent who hasn’t fought since 2018 at UFC 229, has decided to break his silence on his past experiences. 

“When I heard Jon Jones and Jorge Masvidal speak up, I was really glad to hear that,” Maynard told MMA Junkie. “This really isn’t about me. I’m near the end of my career. I don’t resent others who are making money. I just want things to be more fair for everyone.

“My generation got this (sport) to the point where our efforts helped legitimize the UFC in the sports world as a real sport and a real league, but that’s just been for the promotion’s benefit. Now it’s time for the rest of this business to improve conditions and come around and treat the athletes like they belong in a big league.”

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Maynard spoke out on Twitter last week when he opened up about his pay for the two title fights with Edgar. Fans have long been told in vague terms that fighters make considerably more money than the disclosed purses on athletic commission pay sheets.

However, Maynard was only guaranteed $26,000 as show money for his UFC 125 fight with Edgar. For a fight that did a reported 270,000 pay-per-view buys at about $50 a pop, and a live gate of $2.17 million, Maynard got a $100,000 discretionary bonus, otherwise he might have lost money when factoring in taxes and cornermen and training camp costs.

“I think that’s deliberate on (the UFC’s) part,” Maynard said. “I think they know what they’re doing. They want to keep their fighters poor because it keeps them hungry, and they’ve gotten away with it all these years. They pay you on a tip system like you’re a stripper or something.”

UFC 125 came just days after Anthony Pettis defeated Benson Henderson for the WEC lightweight belt in the final WEC event after executing the “Showtime kick,” an early MMA viral moment, and Maynard believes he was short-changed on the third fight out of spite for mucking up the plans on what would have been a hot fight between Pettis and Edgar.

“It was a good cop, bad cop thing,” Maynard said. “Dana was all smiles and, ‘Hey, great fight, pal.’ (Then-UFC matchmaker) Joe Silva didn’t want me to get another title shot because he wanted Pettis, but the public demand was too great. Then Joe calls me, and I’m only guaranteed $42,000 for the rematch, but what can I do? I’ve got a contract. I can’t go anywhere else, so you go back into training camp and put your belief in yourself that you’ll get the belt, and that way you’ve finally got a little bit of leverage – or at least you did back then.”

Gray Maynard (blue gloves) and Frankie Edgard at UFC 125. Maynard was guaranteed just $26,000 for the title fight.

This was part of an ongoing learning process about the fight game’s machinery. Maynard, who entered the UFC through Season 5 of “The Ultimate Fighter,” forced his way into the title picture by running through a series of top-elite opponents, including the first Edgar fight, Nate Diaz, Jim Miller, and Kenny Florian.

Meanwhile, Maynard watched the UFC give softer matchups to others who were perceived as more marketable, such as fellow lightweight Roger Huerta, who was on the cover of Sports Illustrated in the venerable magazine’s first-ever major UFC feature in 2007.

But Huerta had fallen out of favor by the time he was matched up with Maynard in 2009 at UFC Fight Night 19, and Maynard claims Silva all but goaded him to Huerta, in a fight Maynard ultimately won by split decision.

“They had me fight Huerta. He was their golden boy, and I guess he fell out of favor, and Joe told me he wanted me to go out and break his arm,” Maynard said. “Joe Silva was the most unprofessional man I’ve ever worked with in my life. He was just an angry little man.”

Reached by MMA Junkie on Wednesday, Silva declined comment. 

After the Edgar fights, Maynard, who was not an extravagant spender, found himself in the same position as many fighters who were respected veterans on the card. He never made superstar money as MMA’s conveyor belt kept moving.

To shake things up, Maynard moved to American Kickboxing Academy, where the Bay Area’s high cost of living didn’t help his finances. His wife was working on her masters degree. Injuries started to pile up. Losing a fight meant he’d make half the pay under the UFC’s show/win money system. Things started to snowball as a fighter who was 10-0 going into the UFC 125 title fight found himself at 11-5-1 in what seemed like the blink of an eye.

“Look, I’m the one who chose to move from Las Vegas, where it’s cheap, to the Bay Area, and the guys at AKA were great,” Maynard said. “But if you make ($50,000) for a fight, and federal and state taxes come out of it, and the cost of your training camp and everything factored in, and you lose and don’t get your win bonus, that’s poverty level in the Bay Area. Why should that be happening when the company makes this much money?”

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Maynard has heard the talk over the years suggesting that fighters should unionize, and he says gym chatter about fighter organization was constant. But the simple reality for any fighter not among the chosen few was having to worry about paying bills.

“People say all the time, ‘Hey, if you guys are so smart, why didn’t you form a union?’ We talked about it!” Maynard said. “We’d talk about it all the time in the gym. But you have to understand that most of us were in a position where we’re just thinking about paying our bills, and I mean, damn, I’m thinking about getting groceries for my family next week. How can I go on strike and not fight?”

Even with the UFC valued at $7 billion, that condition hasn’t changed much, as UFC fighters in the Endeavor era are on contracts that run as low as $10,000 to show and $10,000 to win. Maynard believes the best route is for Congress to extend Ali Act to MMA. The 2000 law protects boxers from exploitation and conflicts of interest. Since 2016, there has been a bipartisan attempt to extend the act to mixed martial arts, although White’s closeness to President Donald Trump doesn’t bode well in the short term, even if the act was to pass.

However this plays out, Maynard wants his fellow fighters to know he’s going to be there. 

“Jon and Jorge are both guys who have put in their time and have the respect of everyone,” Maynard said. “You have a limited window to compete and an even smaller window to make real money. So if you’re someone like Jorge, who has worked as hard as he had, he shouldn’t be going backwards on his contract. You never heard me complain during my career. I’m not going to get rich from this. I just think if everyone else is starting to speak up, then I should be there and stand with them.”

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Ali Abdelaziz upset at ‘cowards’ bashing ‘brutally honest’ Joe Silva

Ali Abdelaziz admits he and Joe Silva don’t exchange Christmas cards but isn’t happy with people bashing the former UFC matchmaker.

Ali Abdelaziz admits he and Joe Silva don’t exchange Christmas cards, but the Dominance MMA head isn’t happy with people currently bashing the former UFC matchmaker.

“I see a lot of things about Joe Silva, and it’s not true,” Abdelaziz told MMA Junkie. “Joe Silva, yes, he was too honest for some of these cowards, and I think it’s very cowardly when a man is no longer even with the company and people come out and talk (expletive) about him.

“The thing is, if you have a problem with Joe Silva, that’s fine. Why didn’t you go public when he was there? Why didn’t you do it? Sean Shelby, too. I talk (expletive) to Sean Shelby all the time. I say it in his face, and he talks (expletive) to me, too. I am man enough to go to him.”

Silva spent nearly 20 years with the UFC, joining the promotion well before the Fertitta brothers launched the Zuffa-era with a 2001 purchase of the organization from SEG. Silva then retired from his position after collecting a hefty payout from the UFC’s 2016 sale to current owners Endeavor.

In recent days, several fighters have begun to speak out about their past experiences with Silva, launching a #JoeSilvaStories hashtag on Twitter.

For his part, Abdelaziz admits Silva’s blunt evaluations of talent were often on display but said that was simply part of his personality.

“Joe Silva, in my opinion, is one of the pioneers of the sport – a (expletive) legend, but he was a little nutty,” Abdelaziz said with a laugh. “For a guy that’s 5-foot-4 to walk up to [autotag]Fabricio Werdum[/autotag] when he was the heavyweight champion of the world and go tell him, straight up, he didn’t like some of his fights? I was right there. Rafael Cordeiro was right there, and Joe was talking (expletive) to Werdum in front of his face. He was able to go to people’s face and talk (expletive) to them, and Fabricio laughed at him. He didn’t take it to heart.”

Werdum wasn’t the only one of Abdelaziz’s clients to receive such treatment, either. How about the time Silva decided [autotag]Khabib Nurmagomedov[/autotag] should have finished an opponent faster than he actually did?

“As far as I know, Joe Silva never lied to me, never did anything wrong for me,” Abdelaziz. “Maybe sometimes he told me my fighter was not good. ‘He sucks. The fight was boring.’ I’ll tell you an example: Khabib fought Darrell Horcher in Orlando, when Khabib was coming from a layoff. Khabib finished the fight, but he ran after Khabib – and Sean Shelby grabbed him – but he said, ‘Hey, it took you two rounds to finish this guy?’

“For me, it’s awesome. Khabib became a world champion. I respect that. Joe speaks his mind. He’s not going behind closed doors, talking with Dana White about how we’re going to cut this guy.”

Of course, much of the public discussion regarding Silva’s prickly disposition was launched as part of a bigger discussion about fighter pay. Former UFC lightweight title challenger [autotag]Gray Maynard[/autotag] revealed he was paid just $42,000 to show (with the prospect of making another $42,000 to win) for his October 2011 rematch with Frankie Edgar.

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Abdelaziz agrees that sum isn’t acceptable but puts the blame on Maynard’s representation (or lack of it, as he also revealed via social media).

“At the time, he’s fighting for a world title, I agree with you, $42K/$42K is not a good deal,” Abdelaziz said. “But at the end of the day, it’s Joe’s job to get a fighter for the least amount of money. Whoever Gray’s manager at the time was (expletive) sucked. He should not be managed by him. Gray Maynard is a legend, but also, too, I don’t think it was Joe’s fault. It was whoever managed Gray’s fault – whoever guided Gray. Gray is one of the most exciting fighters we’ve seen. I love Gray, and he’s one of my friends, but I also see a lot of guys talking (expletive). The problem is, why didn’t you talk (expletive) to him when he was still there? That’s the question.

“It just pisses me off because they’re trying to smear – he was an honest man. He was brutally honest. Sometimes too (expletive) honest, but some of these (expletive), they should not be talking (expletive) because he was right there. Why didn’t you talk (expletive) to him? A lot of times, Joe told me, ‘Take it or leave it,’ and I told him, ‘(expletive) off.’ I didn’t bend to him. Sometimes I took it because I didn’t have any other options, but Joe Silva was a good man. He was honest. I never heard anybody say Joe Silva lied to him.”

Abdelaziz said he believes the matchmaking position, by nature, will always lead to some strained relationships due to the stakes of the negotiations. But he believes it is incumbent upon managers to uphold their clients’ needs in the face of promotional pushback.

“A lot of (expletive) happens between managers and matchmakers, and I’m saying this to young managers: Young managers coming into this business, 90 percent of the (expletive) the UFC tells me, I never tell my fighters,” Abdelaziz said. “You know why? Because my fighters have to step inside the cage and take all this anger and frustrations towards the UFC instead of going towards their opponent. That’s one thing I did throughout my career.

“When you’re in negotiations, the UFC is going to try and chop you up. Ninety percent of the conversation, I don’t even tell my fighters because this (expletive) is not even true. You just try to make the best deal for them, and it’s my job to do the best deal for me. Mangers and promoters, we’re always going to be trying a (expletive) robbery. For the rest of our lives, it’s always going to be them and us. But in a way, when you make a deal, everyone has to be happy. When everybody is happy, nobody tries to (expletive) somebody after. But when you leave a deal not happy, either side, they’re going to try to find a way to (expletive) you.”

With some 75 of his fighters currently under contract with the UFC, it certainly behooves Abdelaziz to maintain a friendly relationship with company brass. That said, he insists his current anger has nothing at all to do with strengthening company ties. Instead, he said he simply wants the record on Silva to be conveyed correctly.

“Me and Joe Silva are not best friends, but I’m just tired of people smearing other people for the fighters not handling their career right,” Abdelaziz said. “If you suck, Joe Silva told you that you (expletive) suck. … (but) he did a lot for the sport. You like him, you don’t like him, you have to respect him. It’s OK not to like Joe Silva. It’s OK to (expletive) Joe Silva. But you have to respect Joe Silva. If he hurt your feelings, you’re in the wrong (expletive) business. That’s it.

“Did Joe cross the line sometimes? I’m sure he did. Many times. But my problem is why didn’t you say it then? … It’s sad to see someone have such an amazing career and have done so much for the sport and people talk (expletive) about him. He was a short, angry (expletive), but I loved him for his honesty.”

10 of the greatest UFC championship fight comebacks

From strawweight all the way to heavyweight, these are 10 of the greatest comebacks in UFC championship fight history.

There have been some remarkable performances in UFC championship bouts, but some fighters had to dig deep to get the job done.

Some of the greatest comebacks have come in title fights, whether from a defending champion or a title challenger who showed the heart of a champion to weather the storm and turn things around for the finish.

From strawweight up to heavyweight, here are 10 of the greatest comebacks in UFC championship fight history.

Without further ado …

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Frank Shamrock vs. Tito Ortiz – UFC 22
Sept. 24, 1999

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After defending his title three times, UFC light heavyweight champion [autotag]Frank Shamrock[/autotag] drew a young [autotag]Tito Ortiz[/autotag] at UFC 22. It proved to be one of the toughest battles of his career, as Ortiz really took it to Shamrock from the opening bell.

Ortiz dropped him with a straight right just seconds in, and the next 15 minutes would be a nightmare for Shamrock. Ortiz landed numerous takedowns, putting heavy pressure in top position, while landing brutal ground-and-pound.

In Round 4, Ortiz started to slow down. Shamrock pushed forward with hard leg kicks, but Ortiz capitalized on Shamrock’s forward pressure, landing another takedown. With less than a minute remaining in the round, Shamrock reversed position, unloading a barrage of punches on Ortiz who ducked under for a desperation takedown.

Shamrock used a mounted guillotine to get back up, dropping big hammer fists on Ortiz, who was holding onto his leg. A couple more shots and an exhausted Ortiz was unresponsive, prompting the referee to call the fight. Shamrock never gave up, throwing everything he had in the small windows he got throughout the fight, showing incredible heart.

Up next: Hughes delivers a moment for the ages

Off Guard: With Gray Maynard by his side, Emil Meek vows to be better than ever at UFC Auckland

Norway’s Emil Meek says he’s back better than ever and hails Gray Maynard’s influence in his improvement.

Seventeen months after his last octagon appearance, Norwegian welterweight [autotag]Emil Meek[/autotag] is ready to return to action, and he has a UFC legend in his corner.

Meek (9-4 MMA, 1-2 UFC) takes on Australia’s Jake Matthews in a welterweight contest Saturday (Sunday locally) at UFC on ESPN+ 26 in Auckland, New Zealand, and says the guidance he’s received from former UFC lightweight title challenger Gray Maynard has taken him to a new level.

“I’ve got [autotag]Gray Maynard[/autotag] in my corner, and that’s something special for me,” Meek told MMA Junkie in Las Vegas. “He’s a legend of the sport, and everything he does it’s like he tailor-made for me. It’s like he makes up the tricks just for me.

“He’s done all the mistakes, and he’s done all the right things that he can do. Stupid Vikings like me, I go full retard all day, training my butt off, always wanting to do more, more, more, more. He’s good at pulling me back.”

The key to Meek’s improvement under Maynard is the ability to identify small tweaks and improvements to “Valhalla’s” game that he thinks will prove decisive the next time he steps into the cage.

“I was doing a lot of the right stuff, but then I got over here and started working with Gray, and it was like an epiphany,” Meek said. “Everything is coming together now, and he’s been telling me, ‘It’s small adjustments here and there, (and) you can beat the top guys.’ Everything is coming together and yeah, it’s like Valhalla 2.0 this time.”

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Meek is making his return on a two-fight skid after 2018 losses to current champion Kamaru Usman and Poland’s Bartosz Fabinski. But in Matthews (15-4 MMA, 8-4 UFC) he thinks he has the perfect opponent to return against.

“The UFC I think finally were like, ‘Hey, we’re going to give this guy something he really wants,'” Meek said with a laugh. “Jake Matthews has won four of his last five fights. He’s probably one of the better non-ranked fighters in the UFC. He’s just getting up there. This is a great matchup for me.”

Meek’s unanimous decision loss to Usman at UFC Fight Night 124 in January 2018 may have put an L on his record. But on reflection, he said, the experience of going the distance with the man who later claimed the title is one that gives him optimism for his future prospects in the UFC’s 170-pound division.

“When I fought Kamaru, no one else wanted to fight him,” he said. “He has been dominating everyone in the UFC; he has won every single round. With me, I couldn’t wait to get in there and prove myself against one of the best in the world. He crushed a couple of ranked UFC welterweights, then he claimed the title from the champion, Tyron Woodley, in very good fashion. Now he’s smashed Colby’s face luckily. I’ll never be satisfied with a loss, but I also see where my value is. I can actually be there with the very best guys, and that gives me a chip on my shoulder. It’s just small adjustments.”

Off Guard: No longer with UFC, free agent Gray Maynard trying to figure out what’s next

Free agent Gray Maynard is trying to figure out his next move and which promotion he’ll compete for next.

LAS VEGAS – [autotag]Gray Maynard[/autotag] no longer is with the UFC.

“The Ultimate Fighter” Season 5 alum has competed almost his entire pro MMA career under the UFC banner, but now is ready to move on to the next chapter.

Maynard (13-7-1 MMA, 11-7-1 UFC) told MMA Junkie he has parted ways with the UFC and is still trying to figure out which promotion he’ll end up with next.

“I don’t know – we’re trying to work some stuff out,” Maynard said. “(I’m) not with the UFC anymore, so I’m trying to work some stuff out, check what’s going to make sense, and probably be at featherweight. So that’s the next step.

“It’s wide open. I’ve always dealt with the UFC like on a contractual term, and just kind of who I’m going up against, and basically, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, let’s do it.’ And now that I’m done, I kind of wanted to have a manager and let them deal with it.”

It’s been more than a year since Maynard last fought. He made the move back up to 155 pounds and suffered a second-round TKO loss to Nik Lentz at UFC 229. The two-time UFC lightweight title challenger said he likely will be moving back down to featherweight, where he went 2-1 in the UFC with wins over Fernando Bruno and Teruto Ishihara.

Maynard, who’s managed nearly his entire career himself, said he probably should have moved on from the UFC a while back, but was unable to because he was tied up contractually.

“Man, it was time,” Maynard said, “It’s been time for a while. And you know, great fights – I had a good time there. But it just really wasn’t doing it for me anymore. I was in my last contract with eight fights. At the beginning, I was in a nine-fight contract. So it’s been a lot of long holds, and there weren’t really a lot of options as I was coming up. Lately, there’s been a lot more options, and it was a mutual deal, and I just moved on.”

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