
Jamie Varner
21-11-1
About
Former WEC Lightweight Champion who made his name as a gritty, well-rounded fighter before retiring in 2014 after a late-career UFC skid.
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Jamie Varner is a Phoenix native whose wrestling pedigree and well-rounded fighting style made him one of the WEC's most successful lightweights before the organization folded. He captured the WEC Lightweight Championship and successfully defended it twice, including in a white-knuckle battle against Donald Cerrone that was cut short by an illegal knee strike and left Varner with a broken hand and double vision. That fight epitomized Varner's career: tough, competitive, and often caught in the middle of controversial moments.
After the WEC closed, Varner returned to the UFC in 2012 and immediately made an impact. His first-round TKO of undefeated prospect Edson Barboza on short notice was heralded as the Upset of the Year, and he followed it with a split-decision win over Melvin Guillard that, while contested by some judges, proved he could hang with ranked opposition. But it was his epic loss to Joe Lauzon on UFC on Fox in 2012 that truly defined his legacy: a brutal, back-and-forth battle that both fighters won Fight of the Night honors and earned a Fight of the Year nomination. Varner broke his hand in the fight but refused to give an inch.
That peak didn't last. A series of injuries and losses in 2013-2014, including a knockout loss to Abel Trujillo and a submission loss to James Krause (who broke Varner's ankle), signaled the end of his run. He retired after losing via rear-naked choke to Drew Dober in December 2014, having transitioned to his post-fighting life. Varner left the sport as a well-respected, fight-loving veteran whose willingness to engage and whose technical wrestling made him a fixture of lightweight wars that fans still talk about.
Why fans love Varner
Varner earned three Fight of the Night bonuses and a Fight of the Year nomination for his willingness to engage in war. Fans respected his wrestling base, his hand speed, and his refusal to back down even when losing. The Lauzon fight especially cemented his reputation as someone who would bleed for your entertainment.
Why some fans hate Varner
Varner's close decision wins, particularly the split decision over Melvin Guillard where one judge scored 30-27 for Guillard (prompting Joe Rogan to say that judge should never judge again), led some to view his victories as controversial or lucky. Additionally, some fans saw him as falling short against top-tier opposition and getting caught by cleaner hitters later in his career.



























