By The Numbers: Josh Koscheck
Josh Koscheck was undeniably talented and unabashedly abrasive, and he spent the better part of a decade as a lightning rod for the Ultimate Fighting Championship.
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Now nearly four years removed from Koscheck’s departure, a look at some of the numbers that accompanied him throughout his journey:
44: Years of age for Koscheck, who was born on
Nov. 30, 1977 in Waynesburg, Pennsylvania.
4: Organizations in which Koscheck competed. He went 15-10 in the UFC, 1-0 in Ring of Combat, 1-0 in King of the Rockies and 0-1 in Bellator MMA.
24: Koscheck appearances as a UFC welterweight, placing him fourth on the promotion’s all-time list at 170 pounds. Only Matt Brown (28), Thiago Alves (26) and Neil Magny (25) have more.
6: Koscheck wins by knockout or technical knockout, accounting for 35% of his career total (17). His list of victims includes Matt Hughes, Frank Trigg, Yoshiyuki Yoshida and Dustin Hazelett. Koscheck owns four other wins by submission and seven more by decision.
85: Seconds needed for Koscheck to dispatch Trigg with punches at UFC 103 on Sept. 19, 2009. While it occurred nearly nine years before his retirement, it remained the fastest finish on his resume.
345,000: Post-fight bonus dollars banked by Koscheck as a member of the UFC roster. He was awarded “Knockout of the Night” on twice, “Fight of the Night” on two occasions and “Knockout of the Night” once.
12: Calendar years in which Koscheck fought at least once. He went 2-0 in 2004, 2-1 in 2005, 4-0 in 2006, 1-1 in 2007, 3-1 in 2008, 2-1 in 2009, 1-1 in 2010, 1-0 in 2011, 1-1 in 2012, 0-2 in 2013, 0-2 in 2015 and 0-1 in 2017.
5: Consecutive victories for Koscheck between April 6, 2006 and April 7, 2007, as he defeated Ansar Chalangov, Dave Menne, Jonathan Goulet, Jeff Joslin and Diego Sanchez in succession. It was the longest such streak of his 28-fight career.
42: Rounds completed by Koscheck as a professional. He went the distance 11 times and compiled a 7-4 record in those bouts.
.680: Cumulative winning percentage between the 10 men—St. Pierre (twice), Alves, Mauricio Alonso, Erick Silva, Jake Ellenberger, Tyron Woodley, Robbie Lawler, Johny Hendricks, Paulo Thiago and Drew Fickett—who beat Koscheck. They sport a combined record of 240-113.
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