By Joe B. Skotzou

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Welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre comes in as one the three best pound-for-pound fighter in polls, next only to heavyweight champion Fedor Emelianenko and middleweight champion Anderson Silva. B.J. Penn, on the other hand is a great lightweight who entered the octagon a lot lighter at 20 lbs, and smaller than the formidable St. Pierre, who is comfortable at 187 against Penn’s forced 168 pounds.

The “Prodigy,” who has been eyeing the much lucrative welterweight (more bigger-named fighters and bigger purses) has been neglecting his advantage in the lightweight division. The devastation he suffered from St. Pierre must have brought him back to his senses: get back to where he is king – the lightweight division.

While it can be said that B.J. Penn worked harder and trained himself like he never did before anywhere during his entire career, it was not enough to realize his dream of being the first dual-titled mixed martial arts warrior.

St. Pierre came more mentally prepared with his game plan. The first round was to tire him down, and the game was stopped by ref Herb Dean, the ringside physician and by Penn’s corner at the end of the fourth round. The devastation was so…devastating that Penn has to be rushed to the hospital later.

A slight controversy threatened to mar St. Pierre’s win when one of his cornermen rubbed Vaseline to his body (which fight officials corrected by having the slippery substance towelled off St. Pierre’s body). While it was obvious that the Vaseline-rubbing did not have any bearing on St. Pierre’s win, Dana White maintained it was wrong and said the cornerman involved (Phil Nurse) shouldn’t be allowed to corner another fighter again.

St. Pierre did not only come to this fight bigger and heavier (not a guarantee to a win) but he also came with a better game plan, “My strategy was that he has small shoulders, which is good for hand speed, so I went to make him carry my weight and cause his shoulders to tire,” said St. Pierre. “You’ll notice I didn’t rush him right away going for the takedown (his style in his last few matches),” he added. “The idea was to cause him to have to hop on one leg and get tired, and push off, having to carry my weight in the clinch. That was the idea in the first round…… I knew I broke him mentally after the first round.”

St. Pierre, who earned $420,000 in this fight (excluding his share for the pay-per-view earnings), could boast of being a part of one of the biggest pay-per-view draws in mixed martial arts at more than 900,000. To give you a better perspective, the December 2008 Oscar de la Hoya vs. Manny Pacquiao tiff drew 1.25 million PPVs (tied-in with the Mike Tyson vs. Razor Ruddock battle in 1991). UFC president Dana White must be ecstatic. Gate sales went as high as $4.3 million.