Posted by Kpro
They can't make it at 150 for both belts, or even 146 since one pound over's aren't allowed in title fights. As far as I know there's no way to have both titles on the line. As soon as they get as low as 145 it's no longer a LW bout, and once they hit 155, it's no longer a FW bout. No exceptions in title fights in any state. But one title could be on the line for sure. I don't see any way it would be Edgar moving down though so it'd have to be Aldo moving up and he'd have to vacate his belt to do it which would make Kenny Florian very happy. But not as happy as Keith Florian.
Posted by BustedKnuckle
GSP/Silva is a long way off weight wise from both ends of the spectrum. But at 155 Edgar and Aldo are both about at natural weight. For this fight lovers money that is the best match up in history!!! Make it at 150 and make it for both belts. Frankie could easily make 145 to defend the Fly Weight belt and Aldo would be at natural weight to defend the Light Weight belt. [b]This makes sense and could be hypd a the BIGGEST FIGHT IN UFC HISTORY!!!!! [/b]
Posted by postman
I think Aldo would put Frankie to bed. Hands would be too fast.
Posted by timothyera
The UFC has too many champions especially when they add the 125 weight class. It's watering down the belts, look at boxing. You don't see a 255, 245, and 235 weight class do you?
Posted by prozacnation1978
I think edgar still has a few more title contenders he needs to face and
Aldo needs to at least face mendes
Posted by Kpro
Posted by timothyera
The UFC has too many champions especially when they add the 125 weight class. It's watering down the belts, look at boxing. You don't see a 255, 245, and 235 weight class do you?
Boxing has 105, 108, 112, 115, 118, 122, 126, 130, 135, 140, 147, 154, 160, 168, 175, 200, and unlimited divisions. The UFC has 7 divisions/titles and would have 8 divisions/titles with a 125 addition. Boxing has 17 divisions (18 for the sanctioning bodies that have a super-cruiserweight division). 17 divisions with 4 widely recognized sanctioning bodies (WBA, IBF, WBC, WBO). So that's 68 world titles widely recognized, not counting The Ring's 17 world titles which makes 85. Then if we look into less recognized sanctioning bodies we're well into the hundreds. Any boxer that gets a few wins is already a "champ" somewhere before their promoter even steps them up to average competition.