Sherdog’s Official Mixed Martial Arts Rankings
Flyweight
Flyweight
1. Demetrious Johnson (17-2-1)
As expected, Johnson’s speed played a huge factor in his Jan. 26 title defense against John Dodson, but it was the endurance and late offense from “Mighty Mouse” which won him the day. After recovering from multiple early knockdowns, Johnson took the reins, using wrestling and clinch work to eke out a narrow unanimous decision and remain the UFC’s first and only flyweight champ.
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2. Ian McCall (11-3-1)
After arguably deserving the nod over Demetrious Johnson in their first meeting in March, McCall admittedly undertrained and underwhelmed in their rematch in June. “Uncle Creepy” will need to have his eye on the ball in his next bout, as he meets fellow 125-pound elite Joseph Benavidez on Feb. 2 at UFC 156.
3. John Dodson (14-6)
Dodson showed flashes of the power which many observers felt could win him the UFC flyweight title, though he ultimately came up short on Jan. 26, falling to Demetrious Johnson in a five-round unanimous decision. The loss marks Dodson’s first setback in the UFC and snaps a five-fight winning streak for “The Magician.”
4. Jussier da Silva (14-2)
Though “Formiga” entered the Octagon looking significantly larger than his last outing, it did not help him against John Dodson. The onetime ruler of these rankings caught his second loss at the worst possible time, dropping his UFC debut -- and a chance at the company’s newly forged flyweight title -- in a second-round technical knockout to the “The Magician” on Oct. 5.
5. Joseph Benavidez (16-3)
Benavidez might have lost his bid to become the UFC’s first flyweight champion against Demetrious Johnson in September, but the Team Alpha Male rep is not exactly headed for the dustbin. Benavidez is back in high-stakes flyweight action come Super Bowl weekend, battling Ian McCall at UFC 156 on Feb. 2.
6. Darrell Montague (12-2)
Montague used solid combinations and constant pressure to score a hard-fought split decision victory over former Shooto champion Mamoru Yamaguchi on Christmas Eve in Tokyo. As one of the top 125-pound talents not currently signed to a UFC contract, it seems only a matter of time before the Tachi Palace Fights veteran gets a chance to showcase his skills in the Octagon.
7. Louis Gaudinot (6-2)
Gaudinot used his grappling to thrill in his May comeback win against Brazilian thumper John Lineker. The green-haired New Yorker was set to return against Darren Uyenoyama on Oct. 5 before an unspecified injury knocked Gaudinot from the bout.
8. John Lineker (20-6)
In May, Lineker sizzled but then stumbled in his thrilling fight with Louis Gaudinot. The second performance in the Octagon went much better for the 22-year-old Brazilian prospect, as he hammered Shooto ace Yasuhiro Urushitani for 15 minutes en route to a breakout unanimous decision win.
9. John Moraga (13-1)
The once-beaten Arizona Combat Sports representative has made a serious splash with his first two UFC outings. After joining the promotion on short notice and knocking out Ulysses Gomez in August, Moraga outworked Chris Cariaso at UFC 155, submitting the Californian with a third-round guillotine and solidifying his position as one to watch in the UFC’s newest division.
10. Yasuhiro Urushitani (19-6-6)
After a nasty knockout loss to Joseph Benavidez in his UFC debut in March, the Shooto standout's second stand did not go much better. Though Urushitani made it to the final bell on Nov. 10 in Macau, he was blasted for 15 minutes by Brazilian upstart John Lineker and dropped a unanimous verdict.
Other contenders:
Will Campuzano, Chris Cariaso, Joshua Sampo, Sean Santella, Mamoru Yamaguchi.Related Articles