Matt Hughes

Wrestler

Popular As Matt Hughes (fighter)

Birthday October 13, 1973

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Hillsboro, Illinois, U.S.

Age 50 years old

Nationality United States

Height 5ft 9in

Weight 170 lb (77 kg; 12 st 2 lb)

#14141 Most Popular

1973

Matthew Allen Hughes (born October 13, 1973) is an American retired mixed martial artist with a background in wrestling.

Widely considered among the greatest fighters in the history of MMA, he is a former two-time UFC Welterweight Champion, UFC Hall of Fame inductee, and NJCAA Hall of Fame inductee.

During his tenures in the Ultimate Fighting Championship, Hughes put together two six-fight winning streaks defeating all of the available opposition in the welterweight division.

Matthew Allen Hughes was born on October 13, 1973, in Hillsboro, Illinois.

Hughes has two siblings, a sister and his twin brother, Mark.

During high school they both participated in football and wrestling.

Hughes went to Southwestern Illinois College in Belleville, Illinois, before transferring to Lincoln College, in Lincoln, Illinois and then on to Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Illinois.

Hughes was a two-time 145 lb IHSA Class A state wrestling champion.

1991

He won in 1991 and 1992 while attending Hillsboro High School.

During his junior and senior years, Matt went undefeated and won back-to-back state championships in the 145 lb class.

Over the final three years of high school, he totaled 131 wins against only 2 losses, both during his sophomore year (sophomore 43–2; junior 43–0; senior 45–0).

His college career started at Southwestern Illinois College.

Hughes placed fifth in the nation at 158 lb. After Southwestern dropped their wrestling program, Hughes transferred to Lincoln College, where he placed third in the nation, notching a 33–3 record for the Lynx.

1996

After graduation Hughes continued wrestling at Eastern Illinois University, where he was a two-time NCAA Division I All-American placing eighth in 1996 and fifth in 1997 at 158 lb. He finished with an 80–15 record for Eastern Illinois.

Hughes competed in the prestigious ADCC Submission Wrestling World Championship, in which he held a record of 2–2, beating Ricardo Almeida and Jeremy Horn, and losing to Jeff Monson and Tito Ortiz.

1998

Hughes made his mixed martial arts debut on January 1, 1998, at Joe Goytia's JKD Challenge.

He slammed his opponent to the ground in just fifteen seconds, winning via KO.

The slam became his signature move.

He won his next fight via submission due to strikes.

Hughes fought three times at Extreme Challenge 21, on October 17, 1998, defeating Victor Hunsaker via TKO and future UFC Middleweight Champion Dave Menne via unanimous decision.

In the third fight of that night he lost to then-undefeated Dennis Hallman by technical submission (guillotine choke) at 0:17 of the first round.

The result was announced as a KO.

In the process, Hallman handed Hughes his first professional defeat.

1999

Hughes made his promotional debut at UFC 22: There Can Be Only One Champion, on September 24, 1999, defeating Bulgarian Valeri Ignatov via unanimous decision after three rounds.

He returned to the promotion at UFC 26: Ultimate Field of Dreams, where he defeated Marcelo Aguiar via TKO, throwing some elbows which cut Aguiar and forced the doctor to end the match.

The stoppage came at 4:34 of the first round.

Hughes faced Dennis Hallman in a rematch at UFC 29: Defense of the Belts.

At this point in their careers, Hallman was the only man to have defeated Hughes in MMA competition.

Hughes lost the fight via armbar in only twenty seconds.

When the bout started, Hughes lifted and brutally slammed Hallman to the mat, but was caught in the submission after landing in side-control.

2001

Hughes won his first UFC World Welterweight title at UFC 34: High Voltage on November 2, 2001.

2007

A long-time member of Miletich Fighting Systems, Hughes left the Miletich camp in late 2007 to start Team Hughes.

2008

In 2008, Hughes published his autobiography, Made in America, which made the New York Times bestseller list.

2010

In May 2010, Hughes became the eighth inductee into the UFC Hall of Fame.

During his reign, Hughes was considered the #1 pound-for-pound mixed martial artist in the world.

He was also regarded by many analysts and several media outlets as one of the greatest welterweight fighters of all time, as well as one of the greatest pound-for-pound fighters in the sport's history.

2011

In 2011, Hughes became host of Outdoor Channel's Trophy Hunters TV.

Hughes has no nickname, although because of his successes against Gracie Brazilian jiu-jitsu (BJJ) practitioners such as Royce Gracie, Renzo Gracie, Ricardo Almeida, and Matt Serra, people often refer to him as "the Gracie Killer" (the same as Sakuraba's nickname).

His mastery of submissions, and having submission wins over various black belt holders, are the reasons why Joe Rogan thinks he deserved to get a black belt for BJJ.

Hughes never liked the idea, however, and considers himself primarily an amateur and submission wrestler.