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Muslim Salikhov

Russian mixed martial artist (born 1984) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Muslim Salikhov
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Muslim Magomedovich Salikhov (Russian: Муслим Магомедович Салихов, Kumyk: Муслим Салигь Мугьамматны уланы; born June 9, 1984) is a Russian professional mixed martial artist and Sanda fighter. He currently competes in the Welterweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). A multiple-time Wushu Sanda world champion, Salikhov occupies a place alongside Hossein Ojaghi as one of only two non-Chinese athletes to have won the Wushu Sanda King's Cup.

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Early life

Muslim Salikhov was born in Buynaksk, Dagestan. His ethnicity is Kumyk.[6] In 1995, he began to practice Wushu Sanda while attending the Five Directions of the World, a school famous for combining general and martial arts education.

Wushu

Wushu Sanda

Salikhov faced Liu Hailong who held the title "King of Sanda" at the 2003 World Wushu Championships in Macau. Both were evenly matched, with Liu Hailong declared the winner.[7] Salikhov was the Sanshou champion at the 2004 European Wushu Championships held in Moscow and he became the World Champion in 2005.

In February 2006, he participated in the first international "King of Sanda" tournament in Chongqing and became the first non-Chinese to win the title.[8] He again won the world title in 2007[9] and 2009.[10] At the World Wushu Championships, he became one of the most decorated sanda athletes of all time and was the first sanda athlete to win five gold medals.[11] He was also a gold medalist at the 2008 Beijing Wushu Tournament,[12] and won medals at the 2009 World Games and the World Combat Games.[13]

Muslim Salikhov is often acknowledged as one of the best Wushu Sanda competitors in history.[9]

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Mixed martial arts

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Early career

Salikhov made his professional MMA debut in July 2011. Over the next year and a half, he earned a record of two wins and one loss.

M-1 Global

By early 2013, Salikhov signed with M-1 Global, preparing with Phuket Top Team for his mixed martial arts debut.[14][15] He fought three times for the promotion, going undefeated during this run.

Other promotions

Beginning in 2015, Salikhov fought for various regional promotions in China and Russia. He fought seven times over two years, going undefeated during this run with six of the seven wins coming via knockout.

Salikhov earned his biggest win to date when he earned a victory over UFC and Bellator veteran Melvin Guillard by spinning hook kick.[16]

Ultimate Fighting Championship

On October 19, 2017, Salikhov signed with the UFC.[17]

In his debut for the promotion, Salikhov faced Alex Garcia on November 25, 2017, at UFC Fight Night 122.[18] He lost the fight via submission in the second round.[19]

Salikhov faced Abdul Razak Alhassan on April 14, 2018, on UFC on FOX 29.[20] However, Alhassan was pulled from the card, citing injury, and he was replaced by promotional newcomer Ricky Rainey.[21] He won the fight via technical knock out in round two.[22]

On July 20, 2018, Salikhov was notified of a potential doping violation by USADA from an out-of-competition sample collected on June 7, 2018.[23] On March 4, 2019, Salikhov was cleared of USADA suspension as USADA could not determine if Salikhov had ingested oral Turinabol a year before he was signed to the UFC and entered the USADA drug-testing program.[24]

Salikhov faced Nordine Taleb on September 7, 2019, at UFC 242.[25] He won the fight via knockout in the first round.[26] This win earned him the Performance of the Night award.[27]

Salikhov faced Laureano Staropoli on October 26, 2019, at UFC on ESPN+ 20.[28] He won the fight via unanimous decision.[29]

Salikhov was expected to face Niko Price on April 11, 2020, at UFC Fight Night: Overeem vs. Harris.[30] However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the event was eventually postponed and pairing scrapped.[31]

Salikhov faced Elizeu Zaleski dos Santos on July 11, 2020, at UFC 251.[32] He won the fight via a split decision.[33]

Salikhov was scheduled to face Cláudio Silva on October 18, 2020 at UFC Fight Night 180.[34] However, on October 4, it was announced that Salikhov pulled out due to undisclosed reasons and was replaced by James Krause.[35]

Salikhov was scheduled to face Santiago Ponzinibbio on January 16, 2021, at UFC on ABC 1.[36] However, Salikhov pulled out of the bout in mid-December citing health issues after contracting COVID-19.[37]

Salikhov faced Francisco Trinaldo on June 5, 2021, at UFC Fight Night 189.[38] He won the fight via unanimous decision.[39]

Salikhov was scheduled to face Michel Pereira on January 15, 2022, at UFC on ESPN 32.[40] However, Salikhov withdrew from the bout for undisclosed reasons and the bout was cancelled.[41]

Salikhov faced Li Jingliang on July 16, 2022, at UFC on ABC 3.[42] He lost the fight via technical knockout in the second round.[43]

Salikhov faced André Fialho on November 19, 2022, at UFC Fight Night 215.[44] He won the fight via technical knockout in round three.[45] With this win, Salikhov earned the Performance of the Night award.[46]

Salikhov faced Nicolas Dalby on June 17, 2023, at UFC on ESPN 47.[47] He lost the bout via unanimous decision.[48]

Salikhov was scheduled to face Randy Brown on December 16, 2023, at UFC 296.[49] However, the bout was scrapped after Brown withdrew due to illness.[50] The pair was rescheduled to meet at UFC Fight Night 235 on February 3, 2024.[51] Salikhov lost in the first round by knockout.[52]

Salikhov faced Santiago Ponzinibbio on July 13, 2024 at UFC on ESPN 59.[53] He won the fight by split decision.[54] 9 out of 13 media outlets scored the bout for Ponzinibbio.[55]

Salikhov faced Song Kenan on November 23, 2024 at UFC Fight Night 248.[56] He won the fight via a spinning wheel kick knockout in the first round.[57] This fight earned him another Performance of the Night award.[58]

Salikhov faced Carlos Leal Miranda on July 26, 2025 at UFC on ABC 9.[59] He won the fight via knockout in the first round.[60] This fight earned him another Performance of the Night award.[61]

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Championships and accomplishments

Mixed martial arts

Muay Thai

Wushu - Sanda

  • Kung Fu King Tournament
    • 2006 KFK Tournament (80kg).
    • 2009 KFK Tournament Runner Uo (80kg).
  • Sanda World Cup
    • 3rd Sanda World Cup Winner
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Mixed martial arts record

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Professional record breakdown
27 matches 22 wins 5 losses
By knockout 15 2
By submission 2 2
By decision 5 1
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[63]

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Sanda and kickboxing professional record (incomplete)

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Sanda amateur record (incomplete)

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More information Date, Result ...

[69][70][71][72][73][74][75][76]

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References

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