#4 Vitor Belfort – UFC Light-Heavyweight title
A true UFC legend, the title of ‘previous UFC Light-Heavyweight champion’ essentially moves off the tongue with regards to Vitor Belfort, who resigned not long ago following two many years of activity inside the Octagon. Inquisitively however, few individuals most likely recall how awful Vitor’s title rule was.
It started at UFC 46 in January 2004. Belfort had come back to the UFC in 2003 and tore through Marvin Eastman in his arrival coordinate, abandoning him with one of the most exceedingly bad cuts in MMA history.
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Soon after Belfort’s arrival, Randy Couture unseated Tito Ortiz for the Light-Heavyweight title, thus the UFC set up together a Couture/Belfort coordinate for the title, recollecting that the two had battled in an extraordinary tilt in 1997, with Couture giving Belfort his first misfortune.
The rematch was not exactly as energizing, however. Couture endeavored to snatch a secure and as he did, an errant Belfort left snare missed him, yet some way or another the sewing of the Brazilian’s glove gotten his left attention – and nearly detached his lower eyelid, cutting into the eye itself.
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The battle was ceased to support Belfort – making him the new hero with the most flukey ending in UFC title history. It never felt like Belfort was the genuine boss – and that inclination was just aggravated when Couture beat him in uneven form a couple of months after the fact to recover the title.
Belfort would go ahead to a further three UFC title difficulties yet never again won UFC gold, implying that because of its fluke-like start and its climactic end, his solitary title reign stays up there with the most exceedingly terrible in limited time history.
For the #3 worst title reigns in the history of UFC, move on to the next page!