Mehdi Baghdad


Mehdi Baghdad is a French mixed martial artist who fights out of Los Angeles, California. He previously fought for the UFC in the lightweight division. He was a contestant on.

Mixed martial arts career

Baghdad started training at the age of 16 and had his first fight at the age of 20. He went on to become a world champion in Muay Thai, WKBC also lightweight champion in RFA MMA. Baghdad is inspired by his father who died when he was young, and former world champion boxer Prince Naseem Hamed. Baghdad's first loss was handed to him by UFC competitor Charles Oliveira. Baghdad's nickname is Sultan, which in Arabic means High King / Emperor.

''The Ultimate Fighter''

Baghdad joined . Baghdad defeated Artem Lobov via majority decision after two rounds. He then joined McGregor's team. Unfortunately Julian Erosa defeated Mehdi Baghdad via majority decision after two rounds in the preliminary fights, this would eliminate him from the tournament.

Ultimate Fighting Championship

Despite losing Baghdad would still be signed by the promotion and would have his first match against Chris Wade on UFC Fight Night 81 on January 17, 2016. Baghdad would lose 4 minutes and 30 seconds into the first round by tapping out to the rear - naked choke.
Baghdad was expected to face John Makdessi on June 4, 2016 at UFC 199 but was rescheduled to July 7, 2016 at UFC Fight Night 90. Makdessi was awarded a split decision victory.
Baghdad was scheduled to face Jon Tuck on October 15, 2016 at UFC Fight Night 97. However, Baghdad pulled out of the fight in mid-September citing injury and was replaced by promotional newcomer Alex Volkanovski. In turn, Baghdad was released from the promotion.

''The Ultimate Fighter: Redemption''

In February 2017, it was revealed that Baghdad would again compete on the UFC's reality show in the 25th season on . Baghdad was the second pick overall for Team Garbrandt. He faced Jesse Taylor in the opening round and lost via unanimous decision.

Mixed martial arts record

Mixed martial arts exhibition record