The GOAT the UFC Fumbled: Fedor Emelianenko

Опубликовано: 04 Апрель 2026
на канале: Lionel Rivera
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#UFC #UFCdocumentary #FedorEmelianenko

Fedor Emelianenko began training in combat sambo and judo as a teenager in Stary Oskol, Russia, earning a Master of Sports distinction before transitioning into professional mixed martial arts in 2000. After early victories in regional competition, Fedor entered the RINGS promotion and established himself with wins over Renato Sobral and Chris Haseman. A bout against Tsuyoshi Kohsaka ended in a controversial doctor stoppage loss due to a cut from an illegal elbow — a result that would later be widely debated given Fedor's dominance in the fight.

Fedor's career reached its apex in Pride Fighting Championships. A dominant first-round TKO of Heath Herring earned him a shot at heavyweight champion Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira. Fedor dethroned Nogueira by unanimous decision, absorbing the Brazilian's best submission attempts while delivering relentless ground-and-pound. The reign that followed was historic. Fedor defended the Pride Heavyweight Championship against Kazuyuki Fujita, Mark Coleman, Kevin Randleman, Mirko Cro Cop, and Nogueira again in a rematch. The Randleman fight became iconic — slammed on his head with a devastating suplex, Fedor immediately reversed position and submitted Randleman with a kimura. The Cro Cop victory, against the most feared striker in heavyweight history, cemented Fedor as the consensus number one heavyweight in the world. He also won the 2004 Pride Heavyweight Grand Prix, stopping three opponents in a single night.

Despite being universally regarded as the best heavyweight alive, Fedor never competed in the UFC. Prolonged negotiations between his management and the UFC collapsed over contract terms, co-promotion demands, and exclusivity disputes — a saga that defined an entire era of heavyweight MMA and remains one of the sport's great what-ifs.

Following Pride's closure, Fedor competed under Affliction and Strikeforce banners. He stopped former UFC champion Tim Sylvia in 36 seconds and knocked out Andrei Arlovski with a flying knee to punch combination. A submission loss to Fabricio Werdum in 2010 snapped a historic unbeaten streak that spanned nearly a decade. Losses to Antônio Silva and Dan Henderson followed. Fedor returned years later under Bellator, knocking out Frank Mir, Chael Sonnen, and Rampage Jackson before closing his career with a knockout of Timothy Johnson.

Fedor's record of 40-7 with one no contest barely captures the magnitude of what he accomplished. A decorated sambo world champion, four-time combat sambo world champion, and Pride Heavyweight Grand Prix winner, Fedor dominated an era when the heavyweight division was at its deepest across multiple organizations. Quiet, stoic, and devastatingly powerful, he carried himself with a humility that stood in stark contrast to his violence inside the ring.

0:00 - Intro
1:46 - Calm
2:59 - Hard Life
4:26 - Ice Cream
6:28 - Boy to Man
8:15 - Faith
9:53 - Cut
11:18 - Glory
15:41 - Sponsor
16:33 - Welcome to Pride
18:14 - Start of an Era
20:10 - Fujita
22:10 - Ready
23:39 - Hammer
25:09 - Slammed
28:09 - Deja Vu
30:29 - For brother
32:26 - Hello America
33:52 - Karaoke
34:34 - Contracts
38:14 - Affliction
43:56 - Island
47:39 - Time Being
51:08 - Rushing
55:17 - Hurt
1:00:09 - H-Bombed
1:05:22 - Bad One
1:06:34 - Return
1:07:48 - A Remark
1:10:14 - Last Stand
1:14:05 - Missile
1:17:40 - Prayers
1:20:10 - World Tour
1:22:20 - End of an Era

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