Khabibs padded record

Padded record - 1-0 Nurmagomedov made his professional debut in 2008 against Vusal Bayramov, an Azerbaijani who was 0-0 at the time and eventually amassed a record of 2-5. All the losses that Bayramov suffered during a short two-year career came inside the distance.

2-0 Next up for Khabib was a man so bad they named him twice, Magomed Magomedov. It was a fight in itself just to find a database on this Russian with no age or height even known. Magomedov was four fights into his career when he fought Khabib. He was on a four-fight losing streak and all of those defeats came inside the distance. Magomedov finished his career with a negative record of 4-6.

3-0Khabib’s third fight was against fellow Russian, Ramazan Kurbanismailov. Another inexperienced competitor with only one fight to his name. Nurmagomedov won by unanimous decision and his opponent is currently 5-3-2, which more closely resembles a defensive-minded formation on FIFA than a decent fighter’s record.

4-0In his fourth bout, Nurmagomedov took a considerable step-up in competition considering his previous opponents, fighting a man who was 2-0. Shamil Abdulkerimov was defeated by Khabib via unanimous decision and only fought four more times thereafter, finishing up with a mediocre record of 4-3. His only claim to fame being that he once featured on an Emelianenko undercard. Unfortunately for Abdulkerimov it wasn’t the legendary Fedor, it was his lesser known brother, Aleksander.

5-0His fifth fight is laughable. Nurmagomedov faced Said Akhmed, who was making his debut at the time. Akhmed lost by first round TKO and has not fought since. He ended his ‘career’ 0-1, which begs the question; was this guy even a legitimate fighter or just someone they literally dragged in off the street?

6-0The Dagestani continued to be matched up against newcomers in his sixth fight where he fought Eldar Eldarov, who was 1-0 at the time. Eldarov has earned some credibility though, winning seven straight fights since losing to Nurmagomedov, taking his record to 8-1.

7-0The recurring theme of favourable match-ups was evident once again in Nurmagomedov’s seventh outing as he faced Shahbulat Shamhalaev, who only had two fights under his belt at the time. Khabib dispatched of his inexperienced opponent in the first round via kimura.

8-0Nurmagomedov went 8-0 after beating another unproven opponent in Ali Bagov, who was 2-1 at the time and coming off a submission loss. One must question why a seven-fight streaking Khabib was paired against such a green opponent coming off a loss. Bagov can best be described as a journeyman fighter, as he went on to accumulate a lacklustre record of 23-10 with an 80 per cent TKO loss rate.

9-0Khabib extended his winning streak to nine by beating another subpar opponent in Vitaliy Ostrovskiy. The Belarussian came into the fight 3-3, with two of his victories coming against an opponent with 28 losses (20 by submission) and the other against a fighter with a 1-2 record. Top class opposition indeed. Ostrovskiy didn’t fare much better after losing to Khabib as he lost six of his next seven fights and seven of eleven overall before retiring with an 8-11 record.

10-0 Given Nurmagomedov’s record at this stage, you’d expect him to be lined up against adversaries with similar records but this was not the case. For his tenth fight, Khabib dispatched of Alexander Agafonov, a Ukrainian who had competed in half the number of fights that the ‘Eagle’ had. Agafonov retired shortly after his defeat to Nurmagomedov, with an undesirable record of 5-3 having competed for barely two years.

11-0 Khabib scored a submission victory over Said Khalilov to extend his unbeaten run to eleven in April 2011. The defeat to Nurmagomedov was the second of the five-fight losing streak that ended Khalilov’s career. He finished up with an unattractive record of 12-13, with defeats to Dennis Siver and Albert Tumenov along the way.

12-0 Astonishingly, an undefeated, eleven-fight streaking Khabib was somehow matched with a fighter 0-2 for his twelfth contest. Ashot Shahinyan was the fighter in question and he faced the multiple time sambo world champion in the middle of a five-fight losing streak. The Armenian went 0-2 in his next two contests before picking up the first win of his career. He subsequently retired with a record of 1-5.

13-0Unlucky for some, 13, was the complete opposite for Nurmagomedov as he was gifted yet another untested opponent with just two previous fights. Khabib defeated fellow Russian Kadzhik Abadzhyan in the first round. It was the second defeat of what turned out to be a six-fight losing streak for Abadzhyan, who eventually finished with a 3-6 overall record.

14-0Victory number 14 came against Hamiz Mamedov. The Azerbaijan native went 0-3 at the beginning of his career before putting together a decent four-fight winning streak that was eventually snapped by Nurmagomedov. Mamedov was hit and miss and retired in 2014 with a mediocre 8-4 record.

15-0Obviously, by this point of Khabib’s career, overseas MMA organisations would have been scouting the Dagestani with a view to signing him up. Usually, a fight against a noteworthy name is what management seeks to speed up the process but for Nurmagomedov it couldn’t have been more opposite. Bewilderingly, in his 15th professional fight Khabib fought an opponent making his debut. Yes, you read that correctly. At 0-0, Vadim Sandulitsky was the next opponent for the 14-0 Nurmagomedov and needless to say it ended in the first round. Cherry picking at its finest.

16-0Nurmagomedov’s last fight before joining the UFC’s ranks was against Arymarcel Santos, a Brazilian with 72 fights to his name. At the relatively young age of 33, ‘Chocolate’ Santos has a crazy record of 38 wins and 34 losses and is still actively competing. Khabib was the Brazilian’s 51st fight and he was 28-22 at the time. Khabib got the stoppage and is just one of 14 KO/TKO losses for Santos.

came across this on another site, credit to whoever took the time to write this masterpiece , interesting look @ khabibs padded record. Tell me Conor wouldnt be undefeated with a resume like this

Funny to see how many times Khabib has pulled out of UFC fights whenever he is presented with a decent challenge....
guy is a farse and will be exposed october 6 . Cherry picking fighters his entire career, go watch khabib fight, nothing special bout this guy, go watch mcgregor, his movement technique power speed is on another level, once in a lifetime type of fighter , enjoy him while hes here .

FLOL someone should send this to McG's Twitter or something. This is juicy info.

Oh and Chael's too. He was on about how Khabib's 26-0 record meant something cus in MMA we don't have padded records.
 
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Padded record - 1-0 Nurmagomedov made his professional debut in 2008 against Vusal Bayramov, an Azerbaijani who was 0-0 at the time and eventually amassed a record of 2-5. All the losses that Bayramov suffered during a short two-year career came inside the distance.

2-0 Next up for Khabib was a man so bad they named him twice, Magomed Magomedov. It was a fight in itself just to find a database on this Russian with no age or height even known. Magomedov was four fights into his career when he fought Khabib. He was on a four-fight losing streak and all of those defeats came inside the distance. Magomedov finished his career with a negative record of 4-6.

3-0Khabib’s third fight was against fellow Russian, Ramazan Kurbanismailov. Another inexperienced competitor with only one fight to his name. Nurmagomedov won by unanimous decision and his opponent is currently 5-3-2, which more closely resembles a defensive-minded formation on FIFA than a decent fighter’s record.

4-0In his fourth bout, Nurmagomedov took a considerable step-up in competition considering his previous opponents, fighting a man who was 2-0. Shamil Abdulkerimov was defeated by Khabib via unanimous decision and only fought four more times thereafter, finishing up with a mediocre record of 4-3. His only claim to fame being that he once featured on an Emelianenko undercard. Unfortunately for Abdulkerimov it wasn’t the legendary Fedor, it was his lesser known brother, Aleksander.

5-0His fifth fight is laughable. Nurmagomedov faced Said Akhmed, who was making his debut at the time. Akhmed lost by first round TKO and has not fought since. He ended his ‘career’ 0-1, which begs the question; was this guy even a legitimate fighter or just someone they literally dragged in off the street?

6-0The Dagestani continued to be matched up against newcomers in his sixth fight where he fought Eldar Eldarov, who was 1-0 at the time. Eldarov has earned some credibility though, winning seven straight fights since losing to Nurmagomedov, taking his record to 8-1.

7-0The recurring theme of favourable match-ups was evident once again in Nurmagomedov’s seventh outing as he faced Shahbulat Shamhalaev, who only had two fights under his belt at the time. Khabib dispatched of his inexperienced opponent in the first round via kimura.

8-0Nurmagomedov went 8-0 after beating another unproven opponent in Ali Bagov, who was 2-1 at the time and coming off a submission loss. One must question why a seven-fight streaking Khabib was paired against such a green opponent coming off a loss. Bagov can best be described as a journeyman fighter, as he went on to accumulate a lacklustre record of 23-10 with an 80 per cent TKO loss rate.

9-0Khabib extended his winning streak to nine by beating another subpar opponent in Vitaliy Ostrovskiy. The Belarussian came into the fight 3-3, with two of his victories coming against an opponent with 28 losses (20 by submission) and the other against a fighter with a 1-2 record. Top class opposition indeed. Ostrovskiy didn’t fare much better after losing to Khabib as he lost six of his next seven fights and seven of eleven overall before retiring with an 8-11 record.

10-0 Given Nurmagomedov’s record at this stage, you’d expect him to be lined up against adversaries with similar records but this was not the case. For his tenth fight, Khabib dispatched of Alexander Agafonov, a Ukrainian who had competed in half the number of fights that the ‘Eagle’ had. Agafonov retired shortly after his defeat to Nurmagomedov, with an undesirable record of 5-3 having competed for barely two years.

11-0 Khabib scored a submission victory over Said Khalilov to extend his unbeaten run to eleven in April 2011. The defeat to Nurmagomedov was the second of the five-fight losing streak that ended Khalilov’s career. He finished up with an unattractive record of 12-13, with defeats to Dennis Siver and Albert Tumenov along the way.

12-0 Astonishingly, an undefeated, eleven-fight streaking Khabib was somehow matched with a fighter 0-2 for his twelfth contest. Ashot Shahinyan was the fighter in question and he faced the multiple time sambo world champion in the middle of a five-fight losing streak. The Armenian went 0-2 in his next two contests before picking up the first win of his career. He subsequently retired with a record of 1-5.

13-0Unlucky for some, 13, was the complete opposite for Nurmagomedov as he was gifted yet another untested opponent with just two previous fights. Khabib defeated fellow Russian Kadzhik Abadzhyan in the first round. It was the second defeat of what turned out to be a six-fight losing streak for Abadzhyan, who eventually finished with a 3-6 overall record.

14-0Victory number 14 came against Hamiz Mamedov. The Azerbaijan native went 0-3 at the beginning of his career before putting together a decent four-fight winning streak that was eventually snapped by Nurmagomedov. Mamedov was hit and miss and retired in 2014 with a mediocre 8-4 record.

15-0Obviously, by this point of Khabib’s career, overseas MMA organisations would have been scouting the Dagestani with a view to signing him up. Usually, a fight against a noteworthy name is what management seeks to speed up the process but for Nurmagomedov it couldn’t have been more opposite. Bewilderingly, in his 15th professional fight Khabib fought an opponent making his debut. Yes, you read that correctly. At 0-0, Vadim Sandulitsky was the next opponent for the 14-0 Nurmagomedov and needless to say it ended in the first round. Cherry picking at its finest.

16-0Nurmagomedov’s last fight before joining the UFC’s ranks was against Arymarcel Santos, a Brazilian with 72 fights to his name. At the relatively young age of 33, ‘Chocolate’ Santos has a crazy record of 38 wins and 34 losses and is still actively competing. Khabib was the Brazilian’s 51st fight and he was 28-22 at the time. Khabib got the stoppage and is just one of 14 KO/TKO losses for Santos.

came across this on another site, credit to whoever took the time to write this masterpiece , interesting look @ khabibs padded record. Tell me Conor wouldnt be undefeated with a resume like this

Funny to see how many times Khabib has pulled out of UFC fights whenever he is presented with a decent challenge....
guy is a farse and will be exposed october 6 . Cherry picking fighters his entire career, go watch khabib fight, nothing special bout this guy, go watch mcgregor, his movement technique power speed is on another level, once in a lifetime type of fighter , enjoy him while hes here .


tenor.gif
 
yeah because every fighter starts at the UFC's top 10. no great fighter has fought someone with similar record/experience when starting up, probably some other local fighter that had 0 fights? lol at you
 
“Hey guys, a fighter from a country I can’t find on the map was fighting guys i’ve never heard of in the mystery country, so those fights don’t count.”
 
8-0Nurmagomedov went 8-0 after beating another unproven opponent in Ali Bagov, who was 2-1 at the time and coming off a submission loss. One must question why a seven-fight streaking Khabib was paired against such a green opponent coming off a loss. Bagov can best be described as a journeyman fighter, as he went on to accumulate a lacklustre record of 23-10 with an 80 per cent TKO loss rate.

23 and 10 is lackluster?

Randy Couture had less wins and more losses. Tito Ortiz has less wins and more losses. Shogun has a similar win percentage. Mark Kerr has a much worse winning percentage, as does Mark Coleman, Frank Mir, Mark Hunt, and so many others...nothing lackluster about winning almost 70 percent of your fights.
 
Now look at Conor's first 14 MMA fights. Only one of note is Joe Duffy who is good but Conor lost to a guy who was 5-4 at the time and finished his career at 15-16.
 
23 and 10 is lackluster?

Randy Couture had less wins and more losses. Tito Ortiz has less wins and more losses. Shogun has a similar win percentage. Mark Kerr has a much worse winning percentage, as does Mark Coleman, Frank Mir, Mark Hunt, and so many others...nothing lackluster about winning almost 70 percent of your fights.
umm whos Ali Bagov fighting...??? Tito Couture Shogun Coleman were fighting top guys in the world, not scrubs on some underground russian promotion, big difference buddy
 
By Max Holloways first 16 fights, he already faced Porier, Conor, Benevidez, and Cub Swanson.

And he still became a champ. So excuse khabib's record all you want, some guys get thrown to the wolves and still make it to the top.

Khabibs undefeated record is like a boxing undefeated record. Padded and manufactured.

Still has the belt and could very likely still beat the piss out of Conor. There would be nothing manufactured about that. We will have to see how it plays out. Once the cage door closes, it won't matter who has fought who in the past or who has what record.

I would be interested to see how many guys who are calling Khabib overrated and trash right now will be making excuses for Conor if he gets ragdolled. Guess we will have to see how that turns out as well.
 
umm whos Ali Bagov fighting...??? Tito Couture Shogun Coleman were fighting top guys in the world, not scrubs on some underground russian promotion, big difference buddy

So what you are saying is that you believe Khabib sucks and his record pre ufc is proof? What about his ufc record? Do those guys all suck as well?
Does everyone but your favorite fighter suck? Good thing Conor is intelligent enough to take this more seriously than you are.

Say what you want, those guys are getting locked in a cage together to sort this out. I am betting that Conor will gas out after a couple rounds of being grappled and that will be all she wrote. Then we get to hear about not being efficient and he was tree times bigger, of course you guys won't bring up the can crushing after that.
 
By Max Holloways first 16 fights, he already faced Porier, Conor, Benevidez, and Cub Swanson.

And he still became a champ. So excuse khabib's record all you want, some guys get thrown to the wolves and still make it to the top.

Khabibs undefeated record is like a boxing undefeated record. Padded and manufactured.

You found a single fighter who fought notable opponents early in their career and had success. How impressive. That must mean everything every fighter who doesn't have those same accomplishments has ever done is meaningless right?

Except it's one fighter out of millions, and that one fighter had set the record for youngest UFC fighter in history and took him 5 years of ups and downs.

You sound like a child.
 
Mcgregor fought 15 no wiki bums in all of his fights prior to the ufc and lost to 2 of them. Fail.
 
Mcgregor fought 15 no wiki bums in all of his fights prior to the ufc and lost to 2 of them. Fail.

Fail.

Ivan Buchinger had a record of 21-2 when Conor dusted him in the first round to get the Cage Warriors title.

Buchinger then went on a 10 fight win streak after losing to Conor.
 
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