A Quote by Chris Weidman

Winning the middleweight title was an amazing feeling. — © Chris Weidman
Winning the middleweight title was an amazing feeling.
Becoming world champion is something I have worked at for my entire career. It doesn't matter to me that my first title shot is at a different weight. The opportunity is at super-middleweight and I am going to take it. But that doesn't mean I am forever going to be restricted to the super-middleweight division. I've still got a lot of work to do, a lot of unfinished business at middleweight.
I would never take back winning the WWE Women's title for a moment, but winning the TNA Knockouts title meant a whole lot more to me.
A lot of people, especially performers in wrestling, feel that winning the title is the only statistic that matters, but it's always about the journey. If you don't have the people behind you, believing in you, and the start of a new chapter after winning the title, then you don't have anything.
I can't really explain how high the feeling was winning that world title in California with my family watching me.
I dream of winning the Champions League title with Manchester City and a title with Germany.
Gennady Golovkin is a small middleweight, I'm a big super-middleweight. The fight was maybe talked about a year after I retired and it was never going to happen.
Winning one league title at Roma, to me, is worth winning 10 at Juventus or Real Madrid.
Winning one league title at Roma to me is worth winning 10 at Juventus or Real Madrid.
Winning one Champions League title is a dream come true, so just imagine winning three!
Things can change quickly in the UFC. I lost to Nate Marquardt in my first loss as a middleweight and then I defeated Dan Miller and fought for the title against Anderson Silva.
And it's a big honor to be fighting for the title and to put a Mexican-American on top of the heavyweight division. I can give a lot of people some kind of inspiration by winning this title.
Jose Mourinho has experience of Premier League football and winning the title. He's a European Cup-winning manager so he knows what it is all about.
In 1968, I fought and won the world middleweight karate championship by defeating the world's top fighters. I then held that title until 1974, when I retired undefeated.
I'm fast for a middleweight - I have middleweight speed.
In sports, you simply aren't considered a real champion until you have defended your title successfully. Winning it once can be a fluke; winning it twice proves you are the best.
On my way to winning the title, it was great for me, but once I won the title, it was tough for me to get fights.
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