
Benson Henderson
About
Benson Henderson is a former UFC and WEC lightweight champion who defined an era of elite lightweight competition and remains one of the greatest 155-pounders of all time.
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Benson Henderson is a former UFC and WEC lightweight champion widely considered one of the greatest fighters to ever compete at 155 pounds. Born in Colorado Springs and raised in Washington, Henderson built his foundation on wrestling and Taekwondo before turning professional in 2006. He rose to prominence in the WEC, where he claimed both the interim and undisputed lightweight titles in 2009–2010, capping that run with an exciting split-decision victory over Donald Cerrone at WEC 43 that earned 2009 Fight of the Year honors. When the WEC merged with the UFC in 2010, Henderson carried his dominance into the larger promotion, winning back-to-back decisions over Frankie Edgar at UFC 144 and UFC 150 to claim the UFC lightweight crown in 2012. He successfully defended the title four consecutive times, tying the record for most lightweight title reigns alongside B.J. Penn, Frankie Edgar, and Khabib Nurmagomedov.
Henderson's fighting style was built on a relentless, high-volume jab and superior positioning that wore opponents down over five rounds. He paired that striking volume with underrated wrestling credentials and a gift for opportunistic submissions—particularly the guillotine choke and rear-naked choke. His fights with Frankie Edgar showcased the technical, grinding excellence that defined lightweight MMA in the early 2010s, before the sport's evolution favored explosive wrestling and power punching.
A loss to Anthony Pettis in August 2013 ended his title reign and marked the beginning of a long decline. Henderson remained active in the UFC through 2015, dropping bouts to Rafael dos Anjos and Donald Cerrone, before signing with Bellator in 2016. He spent the next seven years competing sporadically across Bellator and other promotions, eventually taking a step back from competition in 2023 after losing a Bellator title fight to Usman Nurmagomedov. However, continuity—he kept training daily at his Arizona gym—meant he was never truly retired. In 2026, at 42, Henderson accepted a comeback offer from the PFL, motivated by former Bellator matchmaker Mike Kogan's pitch to "remind the world" who he was and what he could do. That comeback ethos captures Henderson's enduring appeal: a thinking fighter from an earlier era, stubborn in his work ethic and unafraid to compete across multiple combat sports, even long past his physical prime.
Why fans love Henderson
Exemplary fighter who embodied the grinding, technical excellence of pre-Khabib lightweight competition. Praised for his work ethic—even in semi-retirement he trained daily at his Arizona gym, the MMA Lab, which he positioned as 'the hardest working gym in the world.' His willingness to test himself across multiple sports and disciplines (boxing, karate, wrestling) late in his career earned admiration for his competitive spirit and curiosity.






















































