Terrence McKinney leads UFC history with 13 consecutive finishes, the longest streak of fights without decisions in the promotion. Royce Gracie, Gabriel Gonzaga, Nikita Krylov, and Nico Price are tied for second with 11 consecutive finishes each. Ten fighters, including Andrei Arlovski, Ryan Spann, Luke Rockhold, and Demarques Johnson, share the record of 10 straight finishes. The statistics only count streaks from a fighter's UFC debut onward, which excludes fighters like Renato Moicano. Currently active streaks belong to McKinney and Pat Medich, with Jiri Prochazka and Tom Aspinall both sitting at nine consecutive finishes heading into their next bouts.
Terrence McKinney has etched his name into UFC history by owning the longest consecutive finishing streak in the promotion, with 13 straight fights ended before the judges' scorecards were ever needed.

McKinney stands alone at the top of that list, one clear ahead of the four fighters tied for second place. Royce Gracie, Gabriel Gonzaga, Nikita Krylov, and Nico Price each put together 11 consecutive finishes during their UFC tenures. Behind them, a group of ten fighters — including Andrei Arlovski, Ryan Spann, Luke Rockhold, and Demarques Johnson — share the mark of 10 straight finishes. Rockhold, the 41-year-old American southpaw out of American Kickboxing Academy, compiled his streak across a UFC career that ended with a 16-6-0 record and an average of one submission attempt per 15 minutes of action, reflecting the grappling edge that defined much of his run.

It is worth noting that these streaks are measured only from a fighter's UFC debut, meaning some finishers who arrived with lengthy stoppage runs already on their résumés — such as Renato Moicano — do not appear on the list.

Of the fighters who have reached these marks, McKinney and Pat Medich are the only ones with active streaks still running. Two more names could soon enter the conversation at the top of the record books.

Why it matters
- Jiri Prochazka, ranked second in the light heavyweight division with a 32-6-1 record, sits at nine consecutive finishes heading into his next bout. The Czech striker lands 5.69 significant strikes per minute at 55 percent accuracy.
- Tom Aspinall also enters his next fight at nine straight finishes, putting both men within reach of the all-time mark.
- A finish from either Prochazka or Aspinall would move them to ten, tying the large group in third place and setting up a potential run at McKinney's record.










