15 UFC Knockouts Everyone Still Talks About
There’s no cookie-cutter way to end a fight, but some UFC legends turned the art of the finish into their personal signature. They made a habit of ending things their way and leaving a mark in the process. These UFC fighters won and made sure the crowd felt it. One took it to an entirely different level. Here’s how they stack up.
Nate Diaz’s Submission Pressure

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Nate Diaz doesn’t look like the kind of guy who’ll put you away with one shot, but he doesn’t need to. He grinds you down with volume, pressure, and that Stockton swagger until suddenly you’re gasping and he’s wrapping his arms around your neck. His submission win over Conor McGregor was pure chaos. His 11 UFC finishes were all about damage.
Andrei Arlovski’s Early Fury

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Andrei Arlovski wasted no time. Nine knockouts and two submissions earned him 11 UFC finishes, many in under a minute. His quick hands and willingness to engage created some of the heavyweight division’s fastest endings. At his best, Arlovski brought speed, aggression, and unpredictability to the heavyweight division.
Matt Hughes’ Wrestling-Fueled Damage

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Matt Hughes won with force. His 13 UFC finishes, many of them in title fights, came from grinding his opponents into the mat and pounding away until the ref stepped in. His legacy includes dominating some of the division’s best.
Randy Couture’s Timed Domination

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Randy Couture didn’t rush because he didn’t need to. He dismantled opponents round by round. His top pressure was as suffocating as his clinch work demoralizing. Eleven UFC finishes later, including big ones over Chuck Liddell and Gabriel Gonzaga, and Couture didn’t rely on flashy technique alone.
Frank Mir’s Submissions with Intent

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Frank Mir’s 13 UFC finishes included some of the most jarring submissions ever seen at heavyweight. There was a crack when he snapped Tim Sylvia’s arm, a hush when he made Antonio Nogueira tap. Mir’s UFC finishes came with a kind of brutality that made even submission wins feel like knockouts.
Donald Cerrone’s Bonus-Worthy Finishes

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If you ever needed a reason to never blink during a “Cowboy” fight, just look at the stat sheet—head kicks, armbars, and just about everything in between. Donald Cerrone could flip the script in a second and often did, racking up post-fight bonuses like they were part of his contract. You never knew what was coming, but you knew it was coming fast.
Joe Lauzon’s All-Offense Style

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There’s a reason Joe Lauzon was always must-see TV. He didn’t care much for slow starts or technical feeling-out rounds. Once the bell rang, it was go-time. He is among the top UFC fighters with the most post-fight bonuses.
Matt Brown’s Gritty Knockout Record

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There’s no polite way to describe how Matt Brown fights. He moved forward like a horror movie villain while throwing everything with malicious intent. Thirteen knockouts in the UFC, and a couple of submissions for good measure, made him one of the most dangerous welterweights in the game.
Carlos Condit’s Relentless Creativity

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Carlos Condit made violence look methodical. He earned 28 career stoppages with varied attacks that came from odd angles or unpredictable scrambles. Inside the UFC, Condit’s ability to finish from nearly any position kept him dangerous until the last horn.
Robbie Lawler: The Comeback King of Carnage

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A single mistake from his opponent, and boom: the lights go out. Robbie’s resurgence in the mid-2010s was about finishing fights with fire and raw power. His highlight reel is a tribute to chaos done right.
BJ Penn’s Dual-Threat Finishes

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BJ Penn never needed a Plan B—Plan A usually worked just fine. He could drop you with his crisp boxing or strangle you with that black belt-level jiu-jitsu. His 11 UFC finishes spanned two divisions and showcased a fighter who didn’t just rely on one path to victory. His rear-naked choke of Matt Hughes remains a shock moment in UFC history.
Royce Gracie’s Era-Defining Tapouts

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Before the gloves, before the rounds, before the rules really had rules—there was Royce Gracie. He showed up in a gi and proceeded to turn jiu-jitsu into the foundation of MMA. All 11 of his UFC wins came by submission, and he didn’t need a punch to end most fights. His early tournament dominance forever shaped how MMA approached ground fighting.
Charles Oliveira: Submissions in Stereo

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When Charles Oliveira gets your neck, leg, arm—or honestly, any limb—it’s probably already too late. With the most submissions in UFC history, “Do Bronx” ends fights and redefines how dangerous the ground game can be in modern MMA.
Vitor Belfort’s Blitz Finishes

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Vitor Belfort overwhelmed opponents before they had a chance to react. Belfort scored 14 UFC finishes, including highlight-reel knockouts over Michael Bisping and Wanderlei Silva. He was a pioneer of fast starts and violent bursts, and during his prime, few could survive that opening storm.
Anderson Silva’s Finishing Masterclass

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When Anderson Silva fought, you held your breath. More than the 14 UFC finishes, it was how he did it, especially the front kick that folded Vitor Belfort, and the triangle that stunned Chael Sonnen in the final seconds. Silva understood space, timing, and intent like no one else.