This Date in MMA History: Matt Hughes tears through Royce Gracie

There was plenty of intrigue when the UFC set up shop in Los Angeles for the first time.

There was plenty of intrigue when the UFC set up shop in Los Angeles for the first time.

After California passed MMA legislation, the UFC went to Anaheim in April 2006 for its first event in the state, UFC 59. And just six weeks later, the promotion was back – but in L.A. proper for UFC 60 at Staples Center.

Not only was the event historic for being the first UFC show in Los Angeles, but it featured legendary OG [autotag]Royce Gracie[/autotag], the winner of the open-weight tournament at UFC 1 in 1993, as well as the tournaments at UFC 2 and UFC 4. The Brazilian, arguably the most famous member of the Gracie founding family of MMA, took on [autotag]Matt Hughes[/autotag] – the UFC’s welterweight champion at the time, who was in his prime.

Because the event was so monumental, and on a long holiday weekend in “Tinseltown,” celebrities were out in ways like they perhaps never had been before for a UFC show. That just made it even more of a spectacle.

The fact that Hughes took out Gracie like a hot knife through butter was in some ways expected and ushered in a proverbial changing of the guard – or at least helped craft the conversation about it.

Check out the Hughes-Gracie historic fight above.

30 greatest UFC fighters of all time: Did enough pioneers make our anniversary list?

A number of fighters who paved the way for the modern era were included in our ranking of the 30 greatest UFC fighters, but was it enough?

The UFC’s 30th anniversary date has come and gone, and in the build-up to the milestone date, MMA Junkie counted down its 30 greatest fighters of all time to compete for the promotion.

There was plenty of debate about the entire list from top to bottom, and one of our big talking points was the inclusion of pioneers.

The final list was tabulated through a points system after voting from MMA Junkie’s 12-person staff. Guys considered to be pioneers who made our list were [autotag]Randy Couture[/autotag] (No. 11), [autotag]B.J. Penn[/autotag] (No. 12), [autotag]Royce Gracie[/autotag] (No. 14), [autotag]Chuck Liddell[/autotag] (No. 18), [autotag]Matt Hughes[/autotag] (No. 21), and [autotag]Tito Ortiz[/autotag] (No. 25).

[lawrence-related id=2698454,2698447,2698438,2698435]

On a special edition of “Spinning Back Clique,” the majority of our staff members came together to discuss and debate the finer points of the list. Did enough fighters who paved the way for the modern era make our list?

Check out the discussion in the video above, or watch the entire 30 greatest UFC fighters of all time podcast below.

MMA Junkie’s 30 greatest UFC fighters of all time: Full list and videos

To commemorate the UFC’s 30th anniversary, this is our definitive list of the promotion’s 30 greatest fighters of all time.

To commemorate the UFC’s 30th anniversary, MMA Junkie has compiled its definitive list of the 30 greatest UFC fighters of all time. We revealed one every day until the anniversary of UFC 1, which took place Nov. 12, 1993.

Our complete rankings, along with videos for each fighter, can be viewed below.

About the list: All 12 members of our staff submitted their own individual 30 greatest UFC fighters list. Each fighter was assigned a corresponding numerical value based on where they were ranked on an individual’s list, i.e. No. 1 = 30, No. 2 = 29, etc. We took those numbers and added them up to get a total number for each fighter to determine the composite ranking of MMA Junkie’s 30 greatest UFC fighters of all time.

30 greatest UFC fighters of all time: Matt Hughes ranked No. 21

Matt Hughes took his game to the next level by sharpening his all-around skills to become UFC champ, making him one of the all-time greats.

The UFC is celebrating its 30th year and to commemorate the milestone, MMA Junkie has compiled its 30 greatest UFC fighters of all time. Every day until the anniversary of UFC 1 on Nov. 12 (1993), we will reveal one fighter on our list.

Today, MMA Junkie Radio host “Gorgeous” George Garcia brings you No. 21: [autotag]Matt Hughes[/autotag].

You can watch Garcia’s career retrospective on Hughes above; video produced by Ken Hathaway.

Also see:

About the list: All 12 members of our staff submitted their own individual 30 greatest UFC fighters list. Each fighter was assigned a corresponding numerical value based on where they were ranked on an individual’s list, i.e. No. 1 = 30, No. 2 = 29, etc. We took those numbers and added them up to get a total number for each fighter to determine the composite ranking of MMA Junkie’s 30 greatest UFC fighters of all time.

Brandon Mills, son of UFC legend Matt Hughes, loses professional debut

The highly anticipated debut of Matt Hughes’ son Brandon Mills did not go as he planned when he came up short vs. Jordan Clark.

[autotag]Brandon Mills[/autotag] was confident his MMA debut would be a successful one, but the MMA gods had other plans.

Mills (0-1) is the son of UFC Hall of Famer [autotag]Matt Hughes[/autotag], and competed Saturday at Caged Aggression 36 in Davenport, Iowa. He lost a hard-fought and competitive unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-26) to Pura Vida BJJ’s [autotag]Jordan Clark[/autotag] (3-1).

The bout served as the co-main event for an event involving Hughes’ former coach Pat Miletich, who returned at 55 to fight former UFC fighter Mike Jackson in a politically-charged matchup.

With a Hall of Fame corner that included Hughes and former Strikeforce champion “King Mo” Muhammed Lawal, Mills displayed strong grappling skills. However, Clark seemed to have an answer for much of what 21-year-old American Top Team prospect Mills threw at him.

Mills scored a takedown early, but Clark’s jiu-jitsu shined through – a theme throughout the fight, particularly in Round 1. Mills connected with a big spinning wheel kick to start Round 2, but Clark once again neutralized the attack with a quick clinch on the cage, a takedown, and an eventual back-take on the mat. Clark even mounted Mills at one point.

In Round 3, Mills one again resorted to his wrestling. For five minutes, Mills and Clark traded advantageous positions on the mat. Neither found themselves in any particular danger, though.

As the judges’ decision was read, both fighters seemed confident but visibly confused by the 30-26. After Clark was named the victor, the two fighters shook hands and showed much respect to one another.

Prior to his pro debut Saturday, Mills dominated on the amateur scene. He went 4-0 with three submissions, but struggled to find opponents. Mills told MMA Junkie his father never pushed him into fighting and didn’t really enjoy the decision, but was supportive and proud of him nonetheless.

Like UFC Hall of Famer, like son: Brandon Mills making name for himself with father Matt Hughes by side

Being the son of a UFC Hall of Famer has advantages and pressures, budding pro Brandon Mills (the son of Matt Hughes) explains.

B.J. Penn was trapped – and the crowd at Arrowhead Pond began to sense it. The energy was palpable and climbed audibly.

No matter how hard Penn tried, he couldn’t get [autotag]Matt Hughes[/autotag] off him. The clock wound down in Round 3 of the UFC 63 main event, but there was no saving the Hawaiian challenger. Hughes had Penn in a crucifix as left hands landed one after the next.

Thud… thud… thud.

As referee “Big” John McCarthy spectated from an increasingly close position, Hughes continued to pound away. And as McCarthy dove in, the crowd erupted – as did a five-year-old boy 1,700 miles away in Fort Dodge, Iowa. The boy had shadowboxed in his underwear for the duration of the fight and upon its conclusion let out a cheer. His father just regained the UFC welterweight title.

For as long as he can remember, [autotag]Brandon Mills[/autotag] wanted to be like his father Matt Hughes, even if he wasn’t really sure exactly what Dad did.

“I knew Dad fought, but I thought it was more into WWE, is what I thought it was when I was younger,” Mills recently told MMA Junkie. “It didn’t take until much later in life to figure out the whole gravity of the situation and how good and dominant he was.”

As soon as he could, Mills signed up for wrestling. Many long, grueling practices in the hot and sticky Iowa wrestling rooms followed – none of which included jumping off the top turnbuckle, much to Mills’ initial surprise and perhaps disappointment.

It’s not shocking in the least bit Hughes’ son would end up there, of course. For as long as he can remember the attention was on him.

The questions flowed from friends and strangers alike. Would he follow in the footsteps?

There was, however, one person who never put that pressure on Mills, and that was Hughes, who never pressured his son down this road. In fact, Hughes preferred Mills didn’t follow the same path.

“I know the lows of this sport just as much as I know the highs,” Hughes told MMA Junkie. “I can’t imagine any father would actually want their child to become a cage fighter. Those that do, have obviously not lived the life. I think there are a lot better and smarter ways to earn a living. And actually being good enough in this sport to make a living out of it is very rare. So yes, I did not want Brandon to choose this path. It’s a tough life and you need thick skin. Not something I wanna see my kid go through. … However, if he wants it, I’m going to support it.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CNOEk-NJzgv/?img_index=1

While Mills could only focus on wrestling through his youth, MMA was always in the back of his mind. A trip to Hawaii to visit one of Hughes’ old rivals all but solidified what he already knew.

“When it actually became a reality and I knew I was determined that this was going to be my future and career was me and my Dad went out to Hawaii to visit B.J. Penn when he was opening up one of his gyms,” Mills said. “For the half a week or so we were out there, watching those two train together and do seminars and traveling and watching the practices, that was the defining moment of, ‘This is what I want to do for the rest of my life as a career.'”

As it stands today, Mills is desensitized to the “pressure” of having a UFC Hall of Famer as a father. Meanwhile, Hughes is proud of his son, particularly the work ethic that led to reaped fruits of labor during the budding pro’s undefeated amateur career.

Hughes set Mills up at American Top Team in Coconut Creek, Fla. He’s happy to support and guide his son, advising him – but from a distance.

“He always told me I was allowed to do these things and if I wanted help, I just had to ask for it,” Mills said. “… He kind of just stepped back and let the coaching staff at American Top Team do what they do best.”

There’s no shortage of advice from Dad.

“Don’t ever say no to a coach,” Hughes said, of what he tells his son. “Listen to your corner. Don’t get cocky. Keep your mouth shut and work hard. I always said when I fought, ‘When you lose say little, when you win, say less.'”

While they had a “normal” father-son rapport growing up, Mills said he and his father have become much closer since Hughes’ retirement. The bond strengthened even further after Hughes’ 2017 collision with a train.

Mills doesn’t take for granted the relationship he has with his father and appreciates the advantages that come with having a UFC Hall of Famer as a father.

“I know that he is not quite the biggest fan of me fighting,” Mills said. “When he’s in the cage, it’s up to him. He knows he can win, he can do everything in his power. But when his son’s in the cage, he just has to sit there and watch. He can bark all the commands that he wants but he has to sit there and watch to where he’d rather be inside fighting the fight for me. I know he’s told me multiple times. I think he enjoys it, though.”

Hughes confirmed the butterflies flow a lot more as a close spectator than they did when he fought some of the toughest men on the planet himself.

“I was always more nervous cornering my teammates than I was for my own fights,” Hughes said. “I had the urge to jump in the cage and help them. I don’t like that helpless feeling when I have to sit on the sidelines and scream what to do. So guaranteed, I’ll be feeling the same thing when Brandon and Pat are fighting this weekend.”

Through Hughes’ connections, Mills has trained at ATT since 19 years old. He was embraced by the Dagestani fighters in particular, as well as former Strikeforce light heavyweight champion “King Mo” Muhammed Lawal, who serves as Mills’ head coach.

Lawal will corner Mills’ professional debut Saturday at Caged Aggression 36 in Davenport, Iowa. Ironically enough, the event is headlined by Hughes’ old coach and mentor, Pat Miletich. Ironically, Penn will color-commentate the broadcast.

“I couldn’t have written a better script for who’s headlining it, where it’s at, who’s on the commentary team,” Mills said. “If you’d told me this 10 years ago, I’d have told you you’re out of your mind. It’s all coming together.”

With a professional career about to get underway, Mills – just like always – isn’t letting outside pressure interfere. With zero pro fights under his belt, UFC titles aren’t on his mind quite yet. Regardless of who his father is, Mills remains level-headed and focused.

“We’re just kind of playing it by ear, actually. It’s just one fight at a time, one day at a time. We don’t overemphasize anything or have any massive plans. We have our own goals and whatnot but I don’t have any massive plans, we’re just taking it fight by fight.”

UFC Hall of Famer Matt Hughes’ son Brandon Mills set for professional debut

Brandon Mills is following in his father Matt Hughes’ footsteps, looking to continue a UFC championship lineage.

A UFC championship bloodline could one day continue.

There’s still a long way to go, but [autotag]Brandon Mills[/autotag], son of UFC Hall of Famer [autotag]Matt Hughes[/autotag], will make his professional MMA debut Oct. 14 after an undefeated amateur career.

A 21-year-old featherweight up-and-comer, Mills (0-0) will fight [autotag]Jordan Clark[/autotag] (2-1) at Caged Aggression 36: Bad Blood Night 2, promoter Mike Goodwin recently told MMA Junkie.

The event takes place at River Center in Davenport, Iowa and is headlined by [autotag]Pat Miletich[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Mike Jackson[/autotag].

https://www.instagram.com/p/CVVgxxMrGFu/?img_index=1

Mills went 4-0 as an amateur from June 2021 to April 2023 with three wins for Caged Aggression and one for LFA. Three of his four victories were rear-naked choke submissions and the fourth a unanimous decision. Mills trains out of American Top Team in Coconut Creek, Fla.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=103]

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.

Matt Hughes details what led to train accident, surviving ‘worst brain injury possible’

Matt Hughes’ life forever changed on June 16, 2017, but he

Sure, [autotag]Matt Hughes[/autotag] can make light of it now, but the truth is that the UFC Hall of Famer was in a dire situation almost four years ago.

“Pissed me off I didn’t put ChapStick on for 19 days,” Hughes joked.

Those 19 days were spent in a medically induced coma after Hughes’ truck was hit by a train on June 16, 2017. As a result, Hughes suffered a Grade 3 diffuse axonal injury – a brain bleed. The outlook was grim.

“I had the worst brain injury possible,” Hughes said.

Hughes managed to survive his brush with death, but he had to start all over and re-learn how to walk, talk and function normally. His recovery is still ongoing, with physical therapy three times a week and cognitive therapy twice a week.

In the latest episode of “Legend 2 Legend,” Hughes opened up about what happened that day, what it took to survive, and how his life has changed since the accident.

You can watch that discussion in the video above. For the full episode, check out the video below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhjS1nDtsSk

Legend 2 Legend with Burt Watson: Matt Hughes

Former UFC site coordinator Burt Watson returns with the fourth installment of “Legend 2 Legend,” as he sits down with two-time UFC welterweight champion and UFC Hall of Famer Matt Hughes.

4:51 — On his humble upbringing as a “country boy” and shining as a wrestler
8:24 — On the impact of Miletich Fighting Systems and his relationships with team members today
13:31 — On entering the UFC and reflecting on his first title fight win over Carlos Newton
18:25 — On his two memorable wins over Frank Trigg and how Trigg blew it
26:12 — On his memorable fight with Royce Gracie, wishing they had a rematch
30:02 — On the train accident that nearly killed him and changed his life forever
38:11 — On which fighter had the best Brazilian jiu-jitsu, comparing himself to Khabib Nurmagomedov, and his relationship with Dana White

Fight footage courtesy of UFC Fight Pass, the UFC’s official digital subscription service, which is currently offering a seven-day free trial. UFC Fight Pass gives fans access to exclusive live UFC events and fights, exclusive live MMA and combat sports events from around the world, exclusive original and behind the scenes content and unprecedented 24-7 access to the world’s biggest fight library.

Special thanks to Bioxcellerator.com for use of their footage

Former UFC site coordinator Burt Watson returns with the fourth installment of “Legend 2 Legend,” as he sits down with two-time UFC welterweight champion and UFC Hall of Famer Matt Hughes.

4:51 — On his humble upbringing as a “country boy” and shining as a wrestler
8:24 — On the impact of Miletich Fighting Systems and his relationships with team members today
13:31 — On entering the UFC and reflecting on his first title fight win over Carlos Newton
18:25 — On his two memorable wins over Frank Trigg and how Trigg blew it
26:12 — On his memorable fight with Royce Gracie, wishing they had a rematch
30:02 — On the train accident that nearly killed him and changed his life forever
38:11 — On which fighter had the best Brazilian jiu-jitsu, comparing himself to Khabib Nurmagomedov, and his relationship with Dana White

Fight footage courtesy of UFC Fight Pass, the UFC’s official digital subscription service, which is currently offering a seven-day free trial. UFC Fight Pass gives fans access to exclusive live UFC events and fights, exclusive live MMA and combat sports events from around the world, exclusive original and behind the scenes content and unprecedented 24-7 access to the world’s biggest fight library.

Special thanks to Bioxcellerator.com for use of their footage