Best Wrestlers in UFC: Why Wrestling Dominates MMA
Step inside any UFC octagon on any given fight night and you’ll notice a pattern. The fighters who control where the action happens are almost always the ones who get their hands raised. Wrestling has become the single most valuable martial art in mixed martial arts, and the numbers back it up in ways that go far beyond a single era or weight class.

The Numbers Don’t Lie
Look at the current UFC champion roster. Islam Makhachev, Merab Dvalishvili, Alexandre Pantoja, Belal Muhammad, Dricus du Plessis — these titleholders either come from wrestling backgrounds or have built their championship games around takedown pressure and top control. Even strikers like Alex Pereira rely on sprawl-and-brawl concepts borrowed directly from wrestling.
The trend extends beyond just title holders. According to UFC official rankings, wrestlers and wrestlers-turned-MMA-fighters consistently hold more ranked positions across weight classes than any other single discipline. The data from the past decade shows that fighters with Division I or international wrestling credentials win at significantly higher rates than those without grappling backgrounds.

The Wrestler’s Superpower: Dictating Where the Fight Happens
The core advantage of wrestling in MMA comes down to one concept: positional choice. A skilled wrestler gets to decide whether the fight stays on the feet or goes to the ground. Against a dangerous knockout artist? Shoot a double leg, drive them to the mat, and eliminate their power. Against a submission specialist? Use superior takedown defense to keep the action standing or maintain top position without ever engaging the guard.
This ability to dictate the arena is why coaches like Firas Zahabi and Trevor Wittman call wrestling the “quarterback position” of MMA. It’s not about finishing fights with wrestling itself — it’s about putting every other skill you have into its optimal position.

Khabib Nurmagomedov made this concept famous. His sambo-based wrestling let him drag elite strikers like Conor McGregor and Dustin Poirier into his world, where their precision striking meant nothing under the crushing weight of his top pressure. Khabib retired undefeated at 29-0, and his protege Makhachev has continued the blueprint with even more technical wrestling integrated into a broader skill set.

The Cardio Factor Nobody Talks About Enough
Wrestling practice is absolutely brutal on the body. A typical college wrestling practice involves live drilling, chain wrestling, and positional sparring at intensities that would gas out most MMA fighters within minutes. This training produces fighters with cardio engines that simply outlast strikers.
Watch any five-round title fight featuring a wrestler against a striker. Rounds one and two might be competitive. By round three, the wrestling-based fighter is often accelerating while the striker fades. Makhachev’s pace in the championship rounds is faster than his pace in the first round. Dvalishvili famously threw 20 takedowns against Sean O’Malley and looked fresher in the fifth round than O’Malley did in the third.
This isn’t just about being in shape — it’s about training methodology. Wrestling practice conditions the body for sustained explosive output in a way that pad work and bag sessions simply don’t replicate. The constant scrambling, chain wrestling, and pressure-based training creates fighters who can maintain devastating pace for 25 minutes straight.

Cage Wrestling: A Discipline Within a Discipline
The octagon cage itself has created an entirely new wrestling sub-discipline. Cage wrestling — using the fence for takedowns, returns, and top control — doesn’t exist in folkstyle or freestyle wrestling. It had to be invented and refined within MMA.
Fighters like Arman Tsarukyan, Kamaru Usman, and Colby Covington have mastered cage wrestling to the point where they can hold opponents against the fence, land short strikes, and tire out anyone — even other wrestlers. The foot sweeps, body locks, and clinch trips used against the cage are unique to MMA and give wrestlers yet another dimension their opponents have to prepare for.

Fence returns have become one of the most frustrating techniques to deal with in MMA. A fighter can spend enormous energy standing up from the bottom, only to be immediately driven back into the cage and put right back on the floor. The physical and psychological toll of this cycle has broken many fighters who had no answer for it.

How BJJ Fighters Are Adapting
The wrestling takeover hasn’t gone unnoticed in the jiu-jitsu community. The best BJJ practitioners competing in MMA have been forced to evolve their games to deal with wrestling-heavy opponents.
Charles Oliveira, arguably the most dangerous BJJ black belt in UFC history, developed his wrestling to the point where he’s comfortable on both sides of the takedown exchange. He can stuff takedowns from elite wrestlers and shoot his own when needed. His evolution from a bottom-guard specialist to a complete mixed martial artist is a blueprint for every BJJ fighter entering MMA.
Demian Maia spent the second half of his UFC career developing his own wrestling entries specifically to set up his BJJ game. His body lock system — a wrestling-based approach to clinch fighting that leads directly into back takes — influenced an entire generation of grapplers. UFC BJJ has further highlighted how grappling specialists are integrating wrestling into their arsenals.

The Wrestler’s Path From Mat to Cage
One of the biggest reasons wrestling dominates MMA is the pipeline. In the United States, wrestling is the most accessible combat sport — it’s offered in most high schools and has a deep college infrastructure through NCAA Division I, II, and III programs. This means there’s a massive talent pool of trained athletes who can transition into MMA.
Daniel Cormier went from Olympic wrestling to UFC double champion. Henry Cejudo won Olympic gold before becoming UFC flyweight and bantamweight champion. Curtis Blaydes, a former NCAA Division I wrestler, has some of the most devastating takedowns in heavyweight history. The list goes on and on.
Outside the United States, the pipeline runs through freestyle wrestling powerhouses like Dagestan, Iran, and Turkey. Fighters from these regions — Zabit Magomedsharipov, Khabib, Makhachev, Movsar Evloev — bring a style of pressure wrestling that has proven nearly impossible to stop at the highest levels of MMA.

Can You Beat a Wrestler Without Wrestling?
It’s not impossible — but it’s getting harder every year. The fighters who have cracked the wrestling code typically do it through one of three paths.
First, elite takedown defense. If you can keep the fight standing, the wrestler has to strike with you. Sprawling, underhooks, and cage positioning are the fundamental skills here. Fighters like Israel Adesanya and Max Holloway have built careers on making wrestlers fight their fight through exceptional defensive wrestling.
Second, dangerous off-your-back games. If you can threaten submissions every time a wrestler takes you down, you create hesitation. The wrestler may start second-guessing their takedown entries, which opens the door for strikes.
Third, pure knockout power. If one clean shot can end the fight, wrestlers have to respect the striking and can’t just barrel in with reckless takedown attempts. Derrick Lewis has made a career out of forcing wrestlers to stand and trade through sheer knockout threat.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth for non-wrestlers: all three of these approaches are reactive. You’re building your game around what the wrestler does to you, rather than imposing your own will. And in a sport where the person who dictates the fight’s location usually wins, that’s a fundamental disadvantage.

Wrestling For BJJ Practitioners: Where to Start
If you’re a BJJ practitioner looking to compete in MMA — or just want to round out your grappling game — wrestling is the most important addition you can make. Here’s where to focus:
Single and double leg takedowns: These are the bread and butter. Master the level change, penetration step, and finish from both sides. In MMA, the double leg against the cage is particularly effective because it limits the opponent’s sprawl space.
Underhook fighting: The clinch in MMA is won and lost through underhook battles. Getting the underhook means you control whether the fight stays standing or goes to the ground. Lose the underhook and you’re getting pressed into the fence.
Chain wrestling: This is the concept of linking takedown attempts together. If the single leg gets stuffed, you switch to a high crotch. If that fails, you snap to a front headlock. Wrestlers who chain three or four attempts together are nearly impossible to stop because the defender has to be right every single time.
Stand-ups and escapes: Even if you primarily train BJJ, knowing how to stand up from bottom position in an MMA context is critical. The technical stand-up, the wrestling switch, and the wall walk are essential tools that keep you from being controlled on the ground.
The sport is evolving, but the fundamentals of combat haven’t changed. The fighter who decides where the battle takes place holds the advantage, and wrestling is the art of making that choice. Until something replaces it — and nothing on the horizon suggests anything will — wrestling will remain the most dominant force in mixed martial arts.
