Henry Cejudo: By the Numbers
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Henry Cejudo was a worthy challenger for Ultimate Fighting Championship flyweight titleholder Demetrious Johnson at UFC 197. Though lacking a deep mixed martial arts resume, the Fight Ready standout was a 2008 Olympic gold medalist and was though to possess the skills necessary to give Johnson a run for his money.
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As Cejudo prepares to challenge Johnson for a second time, here are some of the numbers that have come to define him:
4: Wins without a loss in freestyle wrestling at
the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Cejudo defeated wrestlers from
Azerbaijan, Georgia and Bulgaria to claim the gold medal.
21: Years of age when he captured Olympic gold, becoming the youngest American to achieve the feat.
1: Round needed to beat Michael Poe in his professional MMA debut on March 2, 2013. Cejudo struck Poe into submission at 1:25.
2: Fights in one month to kickstart his career in 2013. Cejudo fought Poe on March 2 and Sean Henry Barnett on March 24. Both fights ended in TKO victories.
4: Consecutive first-round finishes to start his professional MMA run. After Poe and Barnett, Cejudo also stopped Anthony Sessions and Miguelito Marti with punches.
2: Fights under the Legacy Fighting Championship banner. Cejudo decisioned Ryan Hollis and Elias Garcia.
72: Significant strikes landed against Dustin Kimura, per FightMetric. Kimura connected with only 25. Cejudo was pitted against the Hawaiian in his organizational debut at UFC on Fox 13 and earned a unanimous decision.
6: Takedowns completed on Chris Cariaso in a unanimous decision win at UFC 185, a personal-best inside the Octagon.
2: Divisions in which he has fought. Cejudo debut as a bantamweight but now competes at 125 pounds.
2: Losses in the UFC. Cejudo suffered his first defeat to Johnson and then wound up on the wrong side of a split decision against Joseph Benavidez at “The Ultimate Fighter 24” Finale in December 2016.
68: Significant strikes landed against Benavidez, who connected for 69. It illustrates the closeness of their match. Cejudo managed to secure a takedown but could not curry enough favor from the judges.
34: Significant strikes landed on Wilson Reis in his UFC 215 technical knockout against the longtime Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt. Reis connected for only five before being stopped 25 seconds into the second round. The win earned Cejudo a $50,000 “Performance of the Night” bonus.
0: Submission wins to his credit. Cejudo has 12 victories on his resume, seven by decision and five by knockout or technical knockout.
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