Dana White and matchmaker Joe Silva will have some interesting bouts to book following UFC 154. | Photo: Sherdog.com
Georges St. Pierre was given precious little time to savor his first victory in 19 months, as talk inevitably shifted to a potential super fight with middleweight champion Anderson Silva. Such is life at the top of the mountain.
St. Pierre unified the welterweight crown with a stirring unanimous decision over interim titleholder Carlos Condit in the UFC 154 main event on Saturday at the raucous Bell Centre in Montreal. The 31-year-old had not set foot in the cage as a competitor since April 2011, a career-threatening knee injury and subsequent surgery shelving him for nearly two years.
On a career-best streak of 10 consecutive wins, St. Pierre looked like his old self. He struck for takedowns in all five rounds against Condit, and opened a gnarly cut on the “Natural Born Killer” with a short elbow strike from top position in the first round. St. Pierre also answered lingering doubts regarding his resilience, as he survived an encounter with a Condit head kick in round three. It was the first time he had been knocked down since his stunning 2007 upset defeat to Matt Serra.
Though St. Pierre remained non-committal on the subject of a Silva super fight, UFC President Dana White reaffirmed his intent to put together the catchweight blockbuster. He has tentatively targeted a May date, with the bout being held at either the Rogers Centre in Toronto, Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, or an undisclosed soccer stadium in Brazil.
Silva has carved out a path of utter devastation since entering the Ultimate Fighting Championship six-and-a-half years ago. The 37-year-old Brazilian has won his last 17 fights, a record 16 of them inside the Octagon. Silva -- who moved up to 205 pounds to wipe out Stephan Bonnar at UFC 153 in October -- has held the UFC middleweight title for a ridiculous 2,226 days.
In the wake of UFC 154 “St. Pierre vs. Condit,” here are six other matchups that ought to be made:
Johny Hendricks vs. Nick Diaz:
Hendricks deserves a better fate, having cemented his position as the No. 1 contender at 170 pounds with his eye-popping 46-second knockout of Martin Kampmann in the co-headliner. A four-time All-American and two-time NCAA national champion wrestler at Oklahoma State University, he now lets his jackhammer of a left hand do the talking inside the cage. However, with the St. Pierre-Silva super fight a virtual certainty, Hendricks becomes the odd man out at 170 pounds, likely in need of another fight to stay sharp and relevant. Diaz will be eligible to return from suspension in February and has longed desired a crack at St. Pierre. The 29-year-old Cesar Gracie protégé has won 11 of his past 12 fights.J. Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images
Condit gave it his all against GSP.