Some fights are just business. Others are pure chaos. In MMA, rivalries aren’t just about who’s the better fighter—they’re about pride, history, and, sometimes, pure hatred. When two fighters genuinely dislike each other, it adds a new level of intensity. Trash talk gets nastier. The build-up is electric. And when the cage door closes, there’s no turning back.
Let’s dive into the most heated rivalries in MMA history—fights that went beyond competition and became legendary grudge matches.
Conor McGregor vs. Khabib Nurmagomedov – Beyond the Cage
Conor McGregor has had plenty of rivals, but none like Khabib Nurmagomedov. This wasn’t just a fight—it was war.
The tension started long before they met in the cage. McGregor, never one to hold back, insulted Khabib’s team, family, and even his religion. Then came the infamous bus attack, where McGregor and his crew stormed a UFC event, throwing a dolly through Khabib’s bus window.
By the time UFC 229 arrived, the bad blood was boiling over. Khabib dominated the fight, submitting McGregor in the fourth round. But it didn’t stop there. Khabib leaped over the cage to attack McGregor’s corner, sparking one of the craziest post-fight brawls in UFC history.
This wasn’t just a rivalry—it was a battle between two different worlds, two different mindsets. And it remains one of the most personal feuds the sport has ever seen.
Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier – Pure Hatred
Some fighters fake trash talk for the cameras. Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier? They meant every word.
From their first press conference, it was clear these two couldn’t stand each other. The heated interviews, the infamous “Hey pussy, are you still there?” phone call, and the off-air ESPN brawl only fueled the fire.
Jones won both their fights, but the rivalry didn’t end there. Cormier never got the revenge he wanted. Jones, with his controversies and suspensions, never gave him another shot. Even years later, their animosity still lingers.
Darren Till vs. Jorge Masvidal – From Backstage to the Cage
Darren Till had home-field advantage when he fought Jorge Masvidal in London. The crowd was behind him, and everything pointed to a triumphant return. Masvidal had other plans.
Till started strong, but Masvidal turned the tide. In the second round, a perfectly placed left hand sent Till crashing to the canvas. The O2 Arena went silent. It was a shocking moment, but what happened afterward was just as wild.
Later that night, Masvidal got into a backstage altercation with Leon Edwards, coining the now-famous “three-piece and a soda” phrase after throwing punches. Till’s loss and Masvidal’s post-fight antics made this one of the most dramatic nights in MMA history.
Tito Ortiz vs. Chuck Liddell – The UFC’s First Bad Blood Rivalry
Before McGregor and Khabib, before Jones and Cormier, there was Tito Ortiz vs. Chuck Liddell. This was the UFC’s first true grudge match, and it helped put MMA on the map.
Ortiz and Liddell were once training partners, but that friendship didn’t last. When Liddell knocked Ortiz out in their first fight, the feud exploded. Ortiz claimed he didn’t want to fight a friend. Liddell said Ortiz was just afraid.
The second fight? Another knockout win for Liddell. Even after their careers faded, they couldn’t let it go. They fought a third time, years past their primes, in a bout that should’ve never happened. Liddell was a shadow of himself, and Ortiz finally got his win. But the rivalry? That had been settled long before.
Ronda Rousey vs. Miesha Tate – A Grudge That Never Faded
Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate were polar opposites. Rousey, brash and confident, never missed a chance to insult Tate. Tate, the more reserved but equally tough competitor, refused to back down.
Their feud started in Strikeforce, where Rousey snapped Tate’s arm with an armbar. When they fought again in the UFC, the story was the same—another armbar, another dominant win for Rousey.
But the real heat came after the fight. Tate, ever the competitor, extended her hand in sportsmanship. Rousey refused to shake it. The rivalry never died. Even years later, when Rousey’s career faded and Tate returned, the bad blood was still there.
Darren Till vs. Robert Whittaker – A Battle of Snipers
Darren Till doesn’t just talk a big game—he backs it up. When he faced Robert Whittaker, it wasn’t about personal hatred. It was about two elite strikers testing their skills against each other.
The fight was a chess match, with both men looking for the perfect shot. Till even dropped Whittaker with a slick elbow, proving he could hang with one of the best in the division. Though Whittaker won on the scorecards, the respect between them was clear. Sometimes, rivalries don’t need to be filled with trash talk to be memorable.
Brock Lesnar vs. Frank Mir – The Heavyweight Soap Opera
Brock Lesnar wasn’t just a WWE star—he was a freak athlete who entered MMA with one goal: domination. Frank Mir, a submission wizard, was the first to test him.
Mir submitted Lesnar in their first fight, handing the WWE superstar a humbling loss. But Lesnar got his revenge, delivering a vicious beatdown in their rematch. Afterward, Lesnar didn’t hold back, mocking Mir in his post-fight interview.