
From the octagon to the stage: Former UFC champion Georges St-Pierre ready to share his story
From being bullied as a child to holding down three jobs while going to college. And the stress and challenges he faced in his rise to being a two-division mixed martial arts champion.
The 44-year-old St-Pierre, a native of Saint-Isidore, Que., who is a member of both the Canada Sports Hall of Fame and UFC Hall of Fame, will debut "GSP: The Instinct of a Champion" at Toronto's Meridian Hall on Sept. 29 with other Canadian dates to follow in 2026.
The hope is to then take the show to the U.S. and other countries.
St-Pierre is no stranger to speaking publicly, having made plenty of speeches to corporate and other gatherings. The speaking tour will take the form of a live interview, followed by an audience Q-and-A.
"I will explain how I deal with fear, with stress. Background stories. Different protocol and tricks that I used throughout my career," St-Pierre said from Thailand where he currently filming a reality show to air next year on Netflix.
WATCH | Georges St-Pierre calls Order of Canada his 'greatest honour':
Georges St-Pierre calls Order of Canada his 'greatest honour'
7 days ago
Duration 2:04
The former UFC star's recent appointment was in recognition of his anti-bullying and sports promotion work among young people.
He believes the September show will work for both fans and those who hope to learn something that they can apply to their own lives.
"A lot of what I do is always oriented towards the art of war — in terms of performance, how to be the best. And to be able to reach the top," he explained.
St-Pierre officially retired in February 2019 with a 26-2-0 record, having won the middleweight title in his last fight at UFC 217 in November 2017. He previously was the longtime welterweight champion.
Sharing his story was difficult at first, he acknowledges.
"Now time has passed and I can talk about a lot of things in my life that I was not so comfortable to talk about when I was younger," he said. "Things like my dad when he was drinking and how it would affect me. Because when he quit drinking, he became my No. 1 inspiration. I saw how hard it was [for him].
"So everything started negative in the beginning but then later it became a positive thing, because it became an inspiration for me. When he made that sacrifice [forgoing alcohol], it really reunited my family and it bound us back together. It's something that had a huge impact on my life … I feel very lucky and very privileged to have a great role model."
St-Pierre comes from humble beginnings on Montreal's South Shore. His father spent more than 60 hours a week on a floor-recovering business, installing carpet and ceramics. His mother nursed the elderly.
St-Pierre earned his own floor-recovering certificate before making it big in MMA.
Tony Gattillo, the Montreal-based producer of the show, believes St-Pierre's story can serve as inspiration.
"I think people will leave the show very motivated and will want to apply certain things that Georges is going to share … for the first time. And motivate the people," said Gattillo, a former singer now working behind the scenes in the entertainment industry. "And help them realize that if you want to be a champion in your life or you want to reach a certain goal, there is hard work to do. There's dedication. There's discipline. And mental toughness."
When St-Pierre entered the modern wing of the UFC Hall of Fame in 2020, he was one of seven UFC fighters to win a title in two weight classes. He retired on a 13-fight win streak with a record that included 13 title fight victories, the second most in UFC history, and boasted the most strikes landed (2,591), most significant ground strikes landed (461) and most takedowns (90).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Globe and Mail
23 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Blue Bombers snap losing streak with 40-31 win over Argonauts
Rookie Trey Vaval dazzled a sold-out crowd of Blue Bombers fans when he returned a kickoff 93 yards for a touchdown and followed up with a 97-yard punt return for a major that helped Winnipeg snap a three-game losing streak with a 40-31 victory over the Toronto Argonauts on Friday. It was the first and second TDs of the CFL season for the defensive back from Montana. Chris Streveler started for Winnipeg (4-3) after quarterback Zach Collaros left last week's 31-17 loss in Toronto with a neck injury. The backup completed 17 of 21 pass attempts for 173 yards with three interceptions. He also ran four times for 25 yards and one touchdown in front of the team's ninth consecutive sellout at Princess Auto Stadium. Nick Arbuckle was 22-of-39 passing for 327 yards with one interception and two TDs for the Argonauts (2-6). The game kicked off on time after the Blue Bombers and CFL were monitoring the smoky air quality caused by forest fires in Manitoba and Saskatchewan. The Air Quality Health Index was seven at game time, under the threshold of eight that would have delayed or postponed the contest. It had a very high risk of 10-plus in the morning. Winnipeg defensive end Jay Person also got the crowd cheering when he returned an Arbuckle fumble 28 yards for a score. Bombers kicker Sergio Castillo connected on field goals from 46, 49, 34 and 31 yards, but hit an upright on a 45-yard attempt. He was good on four converts. Toronto receiver Damonte Coxie had touchdown catches of 16 and 56 yards, as he hauled in nine passes for 187 yards. Linebacker Cameron Judge returned an interception 47 yards for a TD. Kicker Lirim Hajrullahu was good on field goals from 44, 25 and nine yards and made three converts. John Haggerty booted an 85-yard punt for a single. The Bombers led 14-7 after the first quarter, 31-13 at halftime and 34-24 heading into the fourth. After Castillo missed a 45-yarder on Winnipeg's first possession, big plays had the crowd groaning again and then cheering. Toronto defensive lineman Anthony Lanier II tipped a Streveler pass, the ball bounced into Judge's hands and he took it into the end zone at 5:53. On the kickoff, Vaval showed his speed for his 93-yard TD return. Winnipeg finished the first quarter with Streveler running the ball nine yards across the goal line. The second quarter featured Person and Vaval. After defensive end Willie Jefferson forced Arbuckle to fumble, Person scooped up the ball for a 28-yard score at 12:57. Vaval followed that up a minute later with his 97-yard punt return. The Argonauts scored on their first two possessions of the third quarter with Coxie's 16-yard TD catch and a nine-yard field goal by Hajrullahu after Toronto was stopped from one and two yards out. Castillo sailed through a 33-yarder early in the fourth, but Toronto responded with Coxie's 56-yard TD. After Arbuckle was intercepted by linebacker Tony Jones, the Bombers got to the red zone but Streveler was intercepted in the end zone by defensive back Tarvarus McFadden with just under three minutes remaining. Winnipeg's defence stood tall on Toronto's final possessions and Castillo nailed a 31-yarder with 38 seconds left.


CBC
24 minutes ago
- CBC
Rookie returner's 2 TDs help offensively challenged Blue Bombers hold off Argos
Social Sharing Rookie Trey Vaval dazzled a sold-out crowd of Blue Bombers fans when he returned a kickoff 93 yards for a touchdown and followed up with a 97-yard punt return for a major that helped Winnipeg snap a three-game losing streak with a 40-31 victory over the Toronto Argonauts on Friday. It was the first and second TDs of the CFL season for the defensive back from Montana. Chris Streveler started for Winnipeg (4-3) after quarterback Zach Collaros left last week's 31-17 loss in Toronto with a neck injury. The backup completed 17 of 21 pass attempts for 173 yards with three interceptions. He also ran four times for 25 yards and one touchdown in front of the team's ninth consecutive sellout at Princess Auto Stadium. Nick Arbuckle was 22-of-39 passing for 327 yards with one interception and two TDs for the Argonauts (2-6). The game kicked off on time after the Blue Bombers and CFL were monitoring the smoky air quality caused by forest fires in Manitoba and Saskatchewan. The Air Quality Health Index was seven at game time, under the threshold of eight that would have delayed or postponed the contest. It had a very high risk of 10-plus in the morning. Winnipeg defensive end Jay Person also got the crowd cheering when he returned an Arbuckle fumble 28 yards for a score. Bombers kicker Sergio Castillo connected on field goals from 46, 49, 34 and 31 yards, but hit an upright on a 45-yard attempt. He was good on four converts. Toronto receiver Damonte Coxie had touchdown catches of 16 and 56 yards, as he hauled in nine passes for 187 yards. Linebacker Cameron Judge returned an interception 47 yards for a TD. Kicker Lirim Hajrullahu was good on field goals from 44, 25 and nine yards and made three converts. John Haggerty booted an 85-yard punt for a single. The Bombers led 14-7 after the first quarter, 31-13 at halftime and 34-24 heading into the fourth. After Castillo missed a 45-yarder on Winnipeg's first possession, big plays had the crowd groaning again and then cheering. Toronto defensive lineman Anthony Lanier II tipped a Streveler pass, the ball bounced into Judge's hands and he took it into the end zone at 5:53. On the kickoff, Vaval showed his speed for his 93-yard TD return. Winnipeg finished the first quarter with Streveler running the ball nine yards across the goal line. The second quarter featured Person and Vaval. After defensive end Willie Jefferson forced Arbuckle to fumble, Person scooped up the ball for a 28-yard score at 12:57. Vaval followed that up a minute later with his 97-yard punt return. The Argonauts scored on their first two possessions of the third quarter with Coxie's 16-yard TD catch and a nine-yard field goal by Hajrullahu after Toronto was stopped from one and two yards out. Castillo sailed through a 33-yarder early in the fourth, but Toronto responded with Coxie's 56-yard TD. After Arbuckle was intercepted by linebacker Tony Jones, the Bombers got to the red zone but Streveler was intercepted in the end zone by defensive back Tarvarus McFadden with just under three minutes remaining. Winnipeg's defence stood tall on Toronto's final possessions and Castillo nailed a 31-yarder with 38 seconds left. Up next


Winnipeg Free Press
an hour ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Tough debut for Jays newcomers, but Schneider points to home runs as bigger issue
TORONTO – The noise the Toronto Blue Jays made before Thursday's trade deadline was silenced in their first game with three of their four newbies in the lineup. With four homers and a crafty three-hitter from veteran Michael Wacha (5-9), the Kansas City Royals (55-55) hammered Toronto 9-3 in Friday's opening game of their three-game series. Seranthony Dominguez did not pitch in his new home after his two scoreless relief innings against his old team, the Baltimore Orioles, earlier in the week. Ty France was slotted in as the designated hitter, but went 0-for-4 with two strikeouts. Reliever Louis Varland performed as expected with a 1-2-3 seventh inning. 'It's a tough day for them, travelling this morning and getting here,' Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. 'Ty hits the ball hard right to (shortstop Bobby) Witt, who makes a great play in the hole. But his bats were fine. 'I thought Louis looked outstanding. That's legit stuff, his curveball and fastball. I thought he was really good. We wanted to get his feet underneath him a little bit. But going forward, you can look for him in bigger spots.' The other significant trade-deadline addition, right-handed starter Shane Bieber, will continue his comeback from Tommy John surgery (April 12, 2024) with his fifth rehab start for triple-A Buffalo on Sunday. The hope is he will pitch five innings and between 70 and 75 pitches. After their remarkable run to the top spot in the American League East, the Blue Jays (64-47) have floundered with five losses in six outings. They have surrendered 57 runs in those six games, including 15 homers. 'I think the biggest part we have to get going is on the mound,' Schneider said. 'It's tough to catch a ball when it's in the seats.' Toronto starter Kevin Gausman (7-8) surrendered a two-run homer to Kansas City newcomer Mike Yastrzemski in the second inning, and a three-run shot to Witt Jr. in the third inning. 'Just two bad pitches with guys on base,' Gausman said. Toronto reliever Mason Fluharty gave up a solo shot to veteran Salvador Perez and a two-run blast to Adam Frazier in the Royals' four-run ninth before 41,492 at Rogers Centre. The Blue Jays could be forgiven for a terrible outing after all the roster adjustments over the past few days. But Gausman wasn't buying it. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. 'I feel real excitement more than anything with the guys we got,' he said. 'I was traded to a first-place team and was super excited.' Daulton Varsho also made his return to the lineup after two months off to recover from a hamstring injury, but the veteran outfielder went 0-for-3. In other roster news, George Springer missed a fourth straight game after getting beaned in the head in Baltimore. He was placed on the seven-day concussion injured list on Friday, retroactive to July 29. Catcher Alejandro Kirk (concussion) had a two-run single in three at-bats in a rehab assignment in triple-A Buffalo on Friday. He also picked off a runner at third base. Schneider expects to have him in the lineup on Sunday. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 1, 2025.