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Resumes don't lie, GSP lost 3 yrs ago by serra and got knocked out, if you compare resumes Silva resume is a lot better, Silva never lost in the UFC silva went up in weight 2 times and beat 2 good light heavyweight and knockout forrest griffin who was a top 5 light heavyweight at the time.


Win Josh Koscheck Decision (Unanimous) UFC 124 - St. Pierre vs. Koscheck 2 12/11/2010 5 5:00
Win Dan Hardy Decision (Unanimous) UFC 111 - St. Pierre vs. Hardy 3/27/2010 5 5:00
Win Thiago Alves Decision (Unanimous) UFC 100 - Lesnar vs. Mir 2 7/11/2009 5 5:00
Win B.J. Penn TKO (Corner Stoppage) UFC 94 - St. Pierre vs. Penn 2 1/31/2009 4 5:00
Win Jon Fitch Decision (Unanimous) UFC 87 - Seek and Destroy 8/9/2008 5 5:00
Win Matt Serra TKO (Knees to the Body) UFC 83 - Serra vs. St. Pierre II 4/19/2008 2 4:45
Win Matt Hughes Submission (Armbar) UFC 79 - Nemesis 12/29/2007 2 4:54
Win Josh Koscheck Decision (Unanimous) UFC 74 - Respect 8/25/2007 3 5:00
Loss Matt Serra TKO (Punches) UFC 69 - Shootout 4/7/2007 1 3:25



GSP- RECORD

Win Chael Sonnen Submission (Triangle Armbar) UFC 117 - Silva vs. Sonnen 8/7/2010 5 3:10
Win Demian Maia Decision (Unanimous) UFC 112 - Invincible 4/10/2010 5 5:00
Win Forrest Griffin KO (Punch) UFC 101 - Declaration 8/8/2009 1 3:23
Win Thales Leites Decision (Unanimous) UFC 97 - Redemption 4/18/2009 5 5:00
Win Patrick Cote TKO (Knee Injury) UFC 90 - Silva vs. Cote 10/25/2008 3 0:39
Win James Irvin KO (Punches) UFC - Fight Night 14 7/19/2008 1 1:01
Win Dan Henderson Submission (Rear-Naked Choke) UFC 82 - Pride of a Champion 3/1/2008 2 4:52
Win Rich Franklin TKO (Knees) UFC 77 - Hostile Territory 10/20/2007 2 1:07
Win Nate Marquardt TKO (Punches) UFC 73 - Stacked 7/7/2007 1 4:50
Win Travis Lutter Submission (Elbows) UFC 67 - All or Nothing 2/3/2007 2 2:11
Win Rich Franklin KO (Knee) UFC 64 - Unstoppable 10/14/2006 1 2:59
Win Chris Leben KO (Knee) UFC - Ultimate Fight Night 5 6/28/2006 1 0:49
Win Tony Fryklund KO (Elbow) Cage Rage 16 - Critical Condition 4/22/2006 1 2:02
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Good homework pirate. Silva's win over Forrest was one of the most impressive wins I've seen but he hasn't been that impressive to me in his last two fights, not to mention loosing four of five rounds to Chael (Juiced) Sonnen.

GSP has totally dominated his opponents (even though his last three have gone to decission) and hasn't lost a round since 2007.

Silva moved up for a couple of fights and has now said he wants to stay in his division (comfort zone).
I am ready for GSP to move up, hopefully after Sheilds.
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Guest baseball25
Who cares that silva lost 4 rounds champions fine ways to win and that's what silva did, he's never lost in the ufc, his resumE is better than gsp, gsp is great  but silva is greater dominatEd Franklin twice, dominated henderson, dominated Leben, moved up to light heavyweight and dominated Forrest!!!!, gsp needs to learn how to finish fights bEc I promise silva would have finish that fight sat night
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I agree Silva's a champion but if you’re trying to prove who the best in the world is, loosing four of your last five rounds does matter. I also agree, I wish GSP would put more effort into finishing a fighter too but Silva didn't finish two of is last four and was criticized by many for his lack of effort. It’s hard to compare five year resumes without considering the recent fight history.
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Guest baseball25
It doesn't matter if you lose 4 of 5 rounds, Silva didn't lose the fight lol, he found a way to win the fight, thats what All-Time Greats do, they over come adversity and battle through and find a way to win!!!!!!


GSP great, just not the best

By Kevin Iole, Yahoo! Sports
Dec 12, 4:07 am EST


ShareretweetEmailPrintMONTREAL – Georges St. Pierre was brilliant Saturday. He closed Josh Koscheck’s eye in the first round of their match for the UFC welterweight title in front of 23,152 bloodthirsty fans in the main event of UFC 124 at the Bell Centre. There was little his coaches wanted him to do that he didn’t accomplish, running the table by winning all five rounds and racking up a one-sided unanimous decision victory.

By the middle of the third round, Koscheck’s face looked like a bag of ground chuck. He had welts up and down his leg from the kicks that St. Pierre was landing.

When the fifth round began, Koscheck’s right eye was grotesquely swollen so much that he couldn’t see out of it. At that point, as St. Pierre was closing out his eighth consecutive victory, a thought occurred: What would have happened to the opponent if he’d been fighting four full rounds with one eye against champion Anderson Silva and not St. Pierre?

More From Kevin IoleUFC heads to Brazil for Aug. 27 event Dec 15, 2010 UFC 107: Penn mightier than Sanchez Dec 14, 2010 AdChoices 

Georges St. Pierre has impressed in his current run as UFC welterweight champion.

(Getty Images)
Believe me, it wouldn’t have been pretty. And the judges wouldn’t have had to render a verdict, either.

With no one left in his division to measure him against, it’s only fair to measure St. Pierre against the elite of the elite in the game – men like Silva, the UFC middleweight champion, and Jose Aldo, its dynamic young featherweight champ.

Silva has had more than his share of lackluster performances, but when he gets a chance to finish a fight, there is no more cold, calculating or ruthless finisher in the sport.

But St. Pierre’s victory, as technically brilliant as it was Saturday, was little more than a missed opportunity. It was the third fight in a row that St. Pierre has gone the distance, and the fourth in his last five outings. Since regaining the welterweight title by knocking out Matt Serra at UFC 83, St. Pierre has fought 24 of 25 possible rounds. The one fight he finished was against B.J. Penn, a lightweight at the time, when Penn’s corner threw in the towel at the end of the fourth.

From the early moments Saturday, St. Pierre was pummeling Koscheck and had him running for cover, unable to see anything coming from his right side. And yet, St. Pierre never came close to knocking him out and really was never close with a submission attempt.

Asked if he were satisfied with yet another victory by decision, St. Pierre didn’t equivocate.

“No,” he said, sharply. “No. I wanted to finish, with a knockout or a submission. He’s very tough. I closed his right eye, so I was doing a lot with the hook and the high left kick to try to knock him out standing up, but he’s very good, you know. He’s very tough. My punches didn’t land on the chin as much, as I wanted to finish him off. It was a good fight, entertaining, but I wanted to finish it. That was my goal.”

Of course, there are two guys in there fighting, and Koscheck deserves credit for hanging in and not surrendering. He didn’t show up just to collect a paycheck. He took a beating and was still firing haymakers in the waning seconds of the match.

He wasn’t good enough to beat St. Pierre – who at 170 pounds is? – but he didn’t quit. St. Pierre coach Greg Jackson wasn’t buying the argument that St. Pierre came up short by not finishing his trash-talking rival.

“Praise Koscheck for taking punch after punch and kick after kick,” Jackson said. “If you get hit with some of those right hands that would knock down a horse, credit goes to Koscheck for withstanding that kind of a beating. His eye was closed because he kept getting hit with left hooks, straight rights. He wasn’t able to impose his game plan, because when he would sit down to get his game plan going, he was eating right hands, head kicks. If any credit should go anywhere, it should be to Koscheck’s toughness for absorbing an amazing amount of damage.”

True enough. But then, think of Silva and think of the killer instinct he shows whenever he senses even the least little bit of an opening. St. Pierre had his openings, but he chose to be wary, to think of defense first, and he was unwilling to take even a little risk.

That will win him a lot of fights and keep him as the champion perhaps for as long as he’s interested in holding the belt, but it’s hard to make an argument that you’re the best fighter in the world when you can’t put a one-eyed, beaten-up opponent away.

“Josh Koscheck throws his punches circular, and to beat him, I had to stay on the outside behind my jab,” St. Pierre said. “If I would have stood in the pocket with him and started throwing circular, it would have been the same thing as if I took a coin and flipped it and saw who landed first on the target. It was a risk of getting knocked out.

“My game doesn’t rely on chance. I don’t get bold when I fight. I try to put all the odds on my side. That’s why I tried to use my jab and stay on the outside.”

Thiago Alves, who lost a five-round decision to St. Pierre at UFC 100, raved about St. Pierre’s talent and wasn’t willing to be critical of the lack of a finish. He said that sometimes, the openings don’t appear.

He said St. Pierre deserved to be praised for his dominance.

“Georges has proven a lot that he’s the best in the weight division for a long time,” said Alves, who won a unanimous decision over John Howard in an entertaining scrap earlier on the card. “When you’re inside of there, it’s a little different. Sometimes things don’t go the way you want, but he still put in a great performance. He won all five rounds, so I think he did great.”

No right-minded person could have watched St. Pierre pick apart Koscheck and not leave thinking he is a magnificent fighting machine.

The best in the world, though, he is not. That honor should once again belong to Silva, the oft-criticized middleweight who showed his ability to close the show at UFC 117 against Chael Sonnen. Sonnen pounded on Silva for 4 1/2 rounds and was on the verge of a monumental upset when Silva seized the moment and locked in a fight-ending triangle choke.

That’s the kind of a move that the top fighter in the world makes. Fighters aren’t going to get knockouts every time out, nor are they going to be at their best each time.

But St. Pierre was at his best Saturday. No less an authority than Jackson, arguably the sport’s finest coach, said as much. Asked how he rated St. Pierre’s performance, Jackson didn’t hesitate.

“As one of his highest,” Jackson said. “Here’s the thing you don’t understand: Koscheck is not an easy man to beat, first of all. When he’s in shape and focused and ready to go, he’s the best in the world. There’s a reason he’s the No. 1 contender. To be beaten, to be dominated like that, I think is the height of martial arts.”

The 23,152 fans jammed into the Bell Centre watched a marvelous display of mixed martial arts and saw one of the greatest fighters who ever lived perform.

After yet another fight without a finish, though, it’s clear there should be no more debate.

George St. Pierre is very good. Anderson Silva is the best in the world.

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Sounds like a pretty biased writer to me. He acknowledges Silva lost 4 ½ rounds and no one in GSPs division can come close to him but Silva is still the best? He admits Silva has been criticized for his lack luster performances and still talks about Silva’s killer instinct? Does anyone remember him not finishing Thales Leites and how pissed Dana was? Sounds pretty biased to me. He says no one will win them all or fight as their top every time but GSP has not lost a round since 2007. That’s pretty close. No one can come close to GSP in his weight class but the same can’t be said about Silva.

By the way Basketball. Thanks for your input. Not a lot posters on these threads lately.
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Guest baseball25
This was from Kevin iole from yahoo sports a highly respected guy, remember gsp got knocked by serra, silva has never lost a ufc fight, Floyd mayweather has lost rounds in boxing, everyone is going to lose rounds but greats find a way to win and that's what matters
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