Philippou was born in Limassol on 29 November 1979.
Career
Boxing
Philippou began boxing in 1994 and had his first fight six months later. In 2005, his best friend and coach Polis encouraged him to move to the United States to become a professional. Costas fought in the Golden Gloves two months after coming to the United States, but lost in the finals at Madison Square Garden by a split decision to Nagy Aguilera. Philippou then turned pro and had three fights three wins, the third being featured on ESPN. Costas transitioned to MMA after disputes with his manager and coach.
MMA
Philippou made his professional MMA debut in May 2008 for the Ring of Combat promotion, losing to fellow future UFC fighter Ricardo Romero by split decision. However, he subsequently amassed a record of 7 wins, 1 loss and 1 no contest within that promotion. Philippou had previously trained with the Serra-Longo Fight Team, but as of May 30, 2013, he decided to switch camps to Bellmore Kickboxing Academy. According to Matt Serra, Philippou left the team on good terms.[3]
The Ultimate Fighter 11
Philippou first made his appearance in the UFC on The Ultimate Fighter: Team Liddell vs. Team Ortiz. However, he never made it as part of the cast to move into the house after losing to Joseph Henle via submission in the opening elimination bout.
Ultimate Fighting Championship
Philippou got a second chance in the UFC after stepping in as a late replacement for Dan Miller, who was moved up the card to face Nate Marquardt, facing Nick Catone at UFC 128 in a catchweight bout of 195 pounds.[4] He lost the fight via unanimous decision.
Philippou was expected to face BJJ black belt Rafael Natal on August 6, 2011, at UFC 133, replacing an injured Riki Fukuda.[5] However, an injury forced Alessio Sakara out of his main card bout against Jorge Rivera, and Philippou was pulled from his bout with Natal and named as Sakara's replacement against Rivera.[6] Philippou won the fight via split decision, earning his first UFC victory.
Philippou faced off against Jared Hamman on December 10, 2011, at UFC 140.[7] He won the match via KO at 3:11 in the first round.
Philippou fought TUF 11 winner Court McGee on March 3, 2012, at UFC on FX 2.[8] He won the fight via unanimous decision after a back and forth bout.
Philippou next defeated Riki Fukuda via unanimous decision on July 7, 2012, at UFC 148.[9]
Philippou was expected to face Nick Ring on November 17, 2012, at UFC 154[10] however, the fight was cancelled on the day of the event as Ring fell ill.[11]
Philippou replaced his injured training partner Chris Weidman against Tim Boetsch at UFC 155 on December 29, 2012.[12] Philippou was victorious with a third round TKO stoppage.
Philippou was expected to face Ronaldo Souza on May 18, 2013, at UFC on FX 8.[13] However, Philippou pulled out of the bout in early May, citing a cut above his eye, and was replaced by Chris Camozzi.[14][15]
Philippou next faced Francis Carmont at UFC 165.[16] He lost the fight via unanimous decision (30–26, 30–27, 30–27).
Philippou was expected to face Uriah Hall on January 18, 2015, at UFC Fight Night 59,[20] however, Philippou would be forced out the bout due to injury.[21]
On July 7, 2015, Philippou retired from MMA. Earlier in the day, he made his Twitter account private, with an avatar that read, "THIS ACCOUNT IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. PLEASE UNFOLLOW."[23] The UFC then confirmed via Twitter that he had told them of his retirement.[24][25]