








Name: | Georges St-Pierre |
Occupation: | MMA Fighter |
Gender: | Male |
Birth Day: | May 19, 1981 |
Age: | 44 |
Birth Place: | Saint-Isidore - Canada |
Zodiac Sign: | Taurus |
DOB in Roman: | V.XIX.MCMLXXXI |
Georges St-Pierre
Georges St-Pierre was born on 19 May 1981(44 years old) in Canada. Georges St-Pierre is MMA Fighter, Zodiac sign - Taurus. More detail about Georges St-Pierre given below.
About Georges St-Pierre
During his stint in the UFC, he was regarded as one of the sport's top welterweights. He was a three-time UFC champion who went 12-2 in title matches. In 2017, he dethroned Michael Bisping for the middleweight belt, becoming the fourth fighter in history to hold multiple titles.
Trivia
He was named Fighter of the Year by several publications in 2009 and was nominated for an ESPY for Best Fighter in 2008, 2010, and 2011. He released his first book in 2013 titled "The Way of the Fight."
Georges St-Pierre before fame
He studied Kyokushin karate from his father when he was seven years old after being bullied at school. Before going pro, he worked as a bouncer and a garbage collector.
Achievement of Georges St-Pierre
Several magazines awarded him Fighter of the Year in 2009, and he was nominated for an ESPY for Best Fighter in 2008, 2010, and 2011.In 2013, he published his first book,"The Way of the Fight".
Salary 2020
$6 Million Per Fight
Net Worth 2020
$30 Million
Georges St-Pierre family life
He was born in Saint-Isidore, Quebec, to Roland and Pauline St-Pierre.
Associations of Georges St-Pierre
Although he retired from the sport in 2013 with a 25-2 record, one of those defeats was a significant upset at UFC 69, when he lost the welterweight belt to Matt Serra.
Georges St-Pierre Height, Weight & Physique Measurements
Weight | in kg - N/A |
Height | N/A |
Eye Color | N/A |
Hair Color | N/A |
Georges St-Pierre Timeline
- 1981
St-Pierre, a French-speaking Quebecer, was born in Saint-Isidore, Quebec, to Roland and Pauline St-Pierre on May 19, 1981. St-Pierre had a difficult childhood, attending a school where others would steal his clothes and money. As a child he played hockey, skated and participated in several sports. He began learning Kyokushin Karate at age seven from his father and later from a Kyokushin Karate Master to defend himself against a school bully. He took up wrestling, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and boxing after his Karate teacher died when he was around 16 years old. Before turning pro as a mixed martial artist, St-Pierre worked as a bouncer at a Montreal night club in the South Shore called Fuzzy Brossard and as a garbageman for six months to pay for his school fees. Already a 2nd dan Kyokushin karate black belt at age 12, his first professional fight was at age 20.
- 2006
St-Pierre has trained with a number of groups in a large variety of gyms throughout his fighting career. Prior to his fight with B.J. Penn at UFC 58, he trained at the Renzo Gracie Jiu-Jitsu Academy in New York City. St-Pierre received his brown belt in BJJ from Renzo Gracie on July 21, 2006. In September 2008, St-Pierre earned his black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu under Bruno Fernandes.
- 2007
According to both commentator Joe Rogan and Hughesu0027 own autobiography, Hughes was unhappy with St-Pierreu0027s statement. Hughes said that they "had words" off-camera shortly after, at which time St-Pierre apologized, saying he had misunderstood something Hughes had said on the microphone and did not mean to offend him. St-Pierre challenged Matt Hughes again at UFC 65 for the UFC Welterweight Championship. The fight was almost stopped near the end of the first round when St-Pierre sent Hughes to the mat with a superman punch and left hook, but Hughes managed to survive the first round. In the second round, St-Pierre won the fight via technical knockout after a left kick to Hughesu0027 head followed by a barrage of unanswered punches and elbows. After the fight, on January 30, 2007, St-Pierre signed a new six-fight deal with the UFC.At UFC 69 in 2007, St-Pierre suffered only his second (and still last, as of May 2018) loss in MMA, when he lost the welterweight title to The Ultimate Fighter 4 winner Matt Serra when Serra forced the referee to step in after a series of unanswered strikes at 3:25 of round one. Matt Serra was an 11u20131 underdog going into the bout. St-Pierre has said that he lost the match partially due to a lack of focus because of problems in his personal life, including the death of a close cousin and his fatheru0027s serious illness, and later parted ways with his manager and most of his entourage. St-Pierre has since gone on to say that he should not have made any excuses and that Serra was simply the better fighter that night.On August 25, 2007, at UFC 74, St-Pierre won a unanimous decision (30u201327, 29u201328, and 29u201328) over Josh Koscheck. He outwrestled Koscheck, who is a four-time Division I NCAA All-American and an NCAA wrestling champion, by scoring takedowns, stopping Koschecku0027s takedown attempts and maintaining top position throughout most of the fight. Many predicted that Koscheck would outmatch St-Pierre on the ground due to his credentials, but St-Pierre was confident that he was a better wrestler and striker and was more well-versed in submissions than Koscheck.
- 2008
At UFC 83 on April 19, 2008, St-Pierre fought Matt Serra in a rematch to determine the undisputed UFC welterweight champion. It was the UFCu0027s first event in Canada and was held at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quu00e9bec. Instead of starting with strikes, St-Pierre pressed the action early with a takedown and then mixed up his attack, which never allowed Serra the chance to mount a significant offense. In the second round, St-Pierre continued his previous actions and forced Serra into the turtle position and delivered several knees to Serrau0027s midsection. Near the end of round two, the fight was stopped by referee Yves Lavigne with a visibly gassed Serra unable to defend himself from St-Pierreu0027s continuous knee blows or improve his position.
- 2009
The win over Fitch set up one of the most anticipated rematches in UFC history. B.J. Penn entered the octagon after Fitchu0027s loss and challenged St-Pierre to a rematch of their UFC 58 bout from 2006, which had ended in a split-decision victory for St-Pierre. The rematch took place on January 31, 2009, at UFC 94. The first round of the fight was nearly even, with both men exchanging punches and Penn exercising elusive head movement, fast hands, good take-down defense - thwarting all of St-Pierreu0027s take-down attempts. In the ensuing three rounds, however, Penn put forth a lackluster performance. St-Pierre dominated the rest of the bout, scoring the first take-down of the night midway through the second round and from that point on, taking Penn down at will, repeatedly passing his guard, and persistently punishing the Hawaiian with a brutal ground-and-pound attack.Prior to UFC 100, Beau Dure of USA Today stated that St-Pierre was possibly "the best in the world." At the event, St-Pierre defeated No. 1 contender Thiago Alves by unanimous decision (50u201345, 50u201344, and 50u201345). Alves showed promise on his feet standing up in the fight, but St-Pierreu0027s wrestling offensive, endurance and ground control proved too much for the challenger and put St-Pierre en route to a unanimous decision victory, despite suffering a pulled groin muscle in the third round. While St-Pierre said in his post fight interview that the injury was sustained in the third round, he later said on his blog that the injury in fact occurred in the fourth round. On July 18, 2009, it was revealed that St-Pierreu0027s groin injury would not require surgery.
- 2010
St-Pierre successfully defended his welterweight title against Dan Hardy on March 27, 2010, at UFC 111 which took place in Newark, NJ. St-Pierre dominated the fight with his wrestling. He caught Hardy in the first round with an armbar, but Hardy refused to tap and eventually fought out of the hold. In the fourth round St-Pierre caught Hardy in a kimura while in the reverse-mount position, but St-Pierre was again unable to finish Hardy before he was able to escape. St-Pierre went on to win the fight by unanimous decision (50u201343, 50u201344, and 50u201345). After the fight, he stated that he was glad to win but was not impressed by his performance, stating that he wanted to finish the fight which fans agreed. St-Pierre received harsh criticism for stalling the fight against Hardy and not being able to finish him.
- 2011
UFC president Dana White stated that Jake Shields would be St-Pierreu0027s next opponent and confirmed that the two would meet in the main event of UFC 129 on April 30, 2011, in Toronto. White suggested that if St-Pierre defeated Shields, it could mark a move to middleweight and a superfight against then UFC Middleweight Champion Anderson Silva. St-Pierre defeated Shields via unanimous decision (50u201345, 48u201347, and 48u201347). When asked about fighting Silva during the post-fight interview, St-Pierre stated that he had no desire to pursue it.Dana White confirmed via Twitter that St-Pierreu0027s next opponent would be Nick Diaz at UFC 137 at the Mandalay Bay Event Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. However, at the UFC 137 press conference, White announced that Carlos Condit would no longer face B.J. Penn and instead would replace Nick Diaz, who had failed to show up for any event related press appearances. Condit was to face St-Pierre for the UFC Welterweight Title at UFC 137. On October 18, 2011, it was announced that St-Pierre had pulled out of the fight due to a knee injury. After conferring with management and UFC officials, Condit elected not to compete against a replacement fighter at UFC 137, but face St-Pierre in early 2012. In a strange turn of events, Nick Diaz fought and defeated B.J. Penn at UFC 137 and UFC officials decided to have St-Pierre return and fight Diaz at UFC 143. According to White, St-Pierre said "Heu0027s [Nick Diaz] the most disrespectful human being Iu0027ve ever met and Iu0027m going to put the worst beating youu0027ve ever seen on him in the UFC."However, on December 7, 2011, it was revealed St-Pierre had sustained a torn right ACL, an injury which would force him to be out for up to ten months, forcing him out of the bout with Diaz. At UFC 143, in a fight for the UFC Interim Welterweight Championship, Diaz lost to Condit.
- 2012
St-Pierre was set to return and fight Condit for the undisputed championship on November 17, 2012, at UFC 154. On August 28, 2012, St-Pierre posted to his official Facebook page that he had the green light from his medical team to compete once again. He ended his post by announcing that his return would be in UFC 154, in which he was to fight Carlos Condit.St-Pierre once again successfully defended his welterweight title on November 17, 2012, at UFC 154 against Condit, winning a unanimous decision (49u201346, 50u201345, and 50u201345). Despite being badly hurt in the third round by a headkick, St-Pierre was able to take and hold down Condit repeatedly during the bout, while defending multiple submission attempts and delivering multiple strikes from Conditu0027s active guard. Both participants earned Fight of the Night honors for their performance.
- 2013
Georges St-Pierre defended his title for the 8th time and defeated Nick Diaz at UFC 158 on March 16, 2013, by unanimous decision (50u201345, 50u201345, and 50u201345). In preparation for the bout, GSP retained well-known boxer Lucian Bute as a sparring partner.St-Pierre faced Johny Hendricks on November 16, 2013, in the main event at UFC 167. St-Pierre won the fight by controversial split decision (47u201348, 48u201347, and 48u201347), a win which UFC president Dana White stated was unwarranted immediately after the fight. Additionally, each of the sixteen MMA journalistsu0027 scorecards collected on MMADecisions.com showed a win for Hendricks. In his post-fight interview, St-Pierre said he would step away from fighting u0027for a little bitu0027.St-Pierre officially announced on December 13, 2013, that he voluntarily vacated the title and needed to take some time off from MMA. He left the door open for a possible return to MMA in the future.
- 2014
Via Twitter, St-Pierre announced on March 27, 2014, that he had torn his left ACL while training, further delaying a potential return to fighting. The torn left ACL would require surgery. He was medically cleared to resume training on October 17, 2014, but it remained unclear if he had plans to fight professionally again. In 2015, St-Pierre played a key role in Rory MacDonaldu0027s preparation for his rematch with Robbie Lawler at UFC 189.
- 2016
St-Pierre announced on June 20, 2016, that he was re-negotiating his contract with the UFC with hopes of returning to the Octagon for Decemberu0027s UFC 206 in Toronto.
- 2017
After months of negotiations, on February 15, 2017, St-Pierre and UFC reportedly agreed to financial terms of a multi-fight contract. The next day, UFC president Dana White confirmed St-Pierre had officially re-signed with the organization. In March 2017, St-Pierre revealed the contract was for four fights.While on SportsCenter, Dana White confirmed that St-Pierre would make his return against UFC Middleweight Champion Michael Bisping sometime in 2017. On May 11, 2017, Dana White announced the fight had been canceled. The UFC and Bisping had wanted to have the fight at early Julyu0027s UFC 213 but St-Pierre announced on his Instagram page that he had an eye injury and difficulty moving up a weight class would prevent him from fighting until November. During the post-fight conference at late Julyu0027s UFC 214, Dana White stated the fight was back on. White had intended for St-Pierre to fight current UFC Welterweight Champion Tyron Woodley. However White was critical of Woodleyu0027s performance in his last two fights and with Robert Whittaker, Bispingu0027s next intended opponent, medically suspended until January 2018, White decided to return to the original plan.The pairing with Bisping took place in the main event of UFC 217 on November 4, 2017, nearly four years since UFC 167, when GSP last fought. St-Pierre defeated Bisping via technical submission in the third round to become the Middleweight Champion and the fourth person in UFC history to become a champion in multiple divisions. This win earned St-Pierre his first Performance of the Night bonus award. St-Pierreu0027s return to the octagon set the record for the Canadian pay-per-view market, surpassing the Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor boxing match from August 2017. St-Pierreu0027s win earned him the praise of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.On December 7, 2017, St-Pierre announced that he was vacating his UFC middleweight title after 34 days of holding the belt. Suffering from ulcerative colitis, St-Pierre wanted to avoid holding up the middleweight division.
- 2018
On December 13, 2018, St-Pierre revealed on La Sueur podcast that he had recovered completely from ulcerative colitis, but had not yet decided whether or not he would return to fighting.
- 2019
St-Pierre announced his official retirement on February 21, 2019, at a press conference at the Bell Centre in Montreal.
- 2020
On May 9, 2020 UFC announced St-Pierre will be inducted into the Modern Wing of the UFC Hall of Fame.
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